Beginning around the age of eleven, I started to experience
something that felt completely natural and completely uncontrollable at the
same time. I would chant. Not sing. Not speak English. But chant — rhythmic,
repetitive vocal expressions that felt ancient, familiar, and strangely
comforting. I couldn’t stop myself when it began. It would rise up from
somewhere deeper than thought. Not emotional hysteria, not imagination, not
play-acting. It felt like something older than me moving through me.
What always puzzled me is that the sounds felt structured,
intentional, and deeply meaningful, even though I did not consciously “know”
what I was . It wasn’t random noise. It
had rhythm. It had cadence. It felt like language, but not a language of the
mind. It was something of the body and the breath and the soul.
Years later, I learned that my father’s mother was half
Chippewa. That detail landed in my spirit with far more weight than it probably
should have according to the modern rational mind. I don’t claim that genetics
carry spiritual memory in a simplistic way, but I also do not believe
consciousness is as shallow or as mechanical as modern materialism insists.
Something in me recognized that rhythm. Something in me felt at home in that
sound. Whether ancestral, archetypal, or spiritual, I can’t reduce it to a neat
explanation.
What is striking to me now is how closely that childhood
experience aligns with what scholars later described as glossolalia. When I
finally encountered Paul’s words in Corinthians — “my spirit prays, but my mind
is unfruitful” — I felt seen by a text written two thousand years before I was
born. I recognized myself in that sentence. I recognized the experience.
At the time, I could not have told you what glossolalia was.
I wasn’t taught about it. I wasn’t encouraged toward it. In fact, I was shaped
in a world suspicious of exactly that kind of thing. And yet, the experience
found me anyway.
I now understand that what I was doing might not fit neatly
into the category of biblical tongues as many churches define it. It may align
more with what anthropology calls “ecstatic utterance,” what indigenous
cultures have used as sacred chant for millennia, and what modern spirituality
sometimes calls light language. I don’t feel the need to force it into one box.
Spirit does not move in boxes. The divine does not respect our categories.
Indigenous chanting, especially, feels like a meaningful
framework for understanding what was happening. In many native traditions,
chant is not about aesthetics or performance. It is about connection. It is
about entering a different layer of reality. It is about calling the unseen
into presence and remembering who we are in the web of life. That feels much
closer to what I experienced than the ideas I was taught in church.
I was not trying to summon anything. I was not trying to
perform for God. I was not trying to impress anyone. There was no audience. It
often happened alone. It was raw. It was intimate. It was unfiltered.
If there is any theology I can honestly assign to it now, it
is this: it felt like my soul remembered how to breathe before my mind learned
how to doubt.
There is something deeply important about pre-rational
spirituality. Before doctrines, before creeds, before church splits, before
religious gatekeeping — there was breath. There was rhythm. There was sound.
There was vibration. The first humans did not write theology; they danced,
chanted, and looked at the stars. Something about indigenous chant feels closer
to that original human posture before the Mystery.
I don’t claim that what I experienced was a “native
language” in a technical sense. I wasn’t speaking fluent Chippewa vocabulary. I
wasn’t channeling a tribal dialect. But I do believe I was moving in a sacred
pattern of sound that predates Christian and modern religious frameworks.
Something older than religion and closer to Spirit.
And perhaps that is where glossolalia, indigenous chant, and
what is now called light language meet — not as competing traditions, but as
expressions of the same human-spiritual capacity. The ability to let sound
become prayer. To let breath become bridge. To let vibration become communion.
Looking back, I see that my childhood chanting was not
rebellion against my religious upbringing. It wasn’t defiance. It wasn’t
confusion. It was my soul’s way of speaking when the church offered me silence.
It was my spirit refusing to be flattened by doctrine.
It was the Logos finding a way to hum through flesh and
breath.
I don’t feel the need to label it anymore. I don’t need to
prove it was this or that. I only know that it was real. It was sacred. It was
mine. And it was a gift that arrived before I had language to explain it.
Maybe that is the deepest truth of all: some forms of prayer
cannot be taught, cannot be controlled, and cannot be explained. They can only
be surrendered to.
And sometimes, they come to us before we even know we were
searching.

Beautiful words revealing spirit....thanks for sharing!
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