The shaman's rattle is used to invoke the assistance of
power animals and helping spirits. It is also possible to direct energy with
rattles, much like a magician with a magic wand. Healing energy can be mentally
transmitted through the rattle and out into the environment or into a patient's
body. Prayer and intention can be broadcast to the spirit world. Moreover, you
can create sacred space by describing a circle with the rattle while shaking
it.
Among Iroquois medicine societies of present-day central and
upstate New York , the gourd
rattle is described as the sound of Creation. The creation stories tell of the
first sound, a shimmering sound, which went out in all directions; this was the
sound of "the Creator's thoughts." The seeds of the gourd rattle
embody the voice of the Creator, since they are the source of newly created
life. The seeds within the rattle scatter the illusions of the conscious mind,
planting seeds of pure and clear mind.
In South America , the shaman's rattle
is a most sacred instrument. The rattle is believed to embody the sacred forces
of the cosmos through its sounds, structural features, contents, and connection
to shamanic trance. The various parts of the rattle also symbolize the
structures of the world. The handle is the vertical axis that ascends into the
Celestial Realm. The Upper World is represented by the rattle's great
head-gourd, which contains spirits. Joining the head of the rattle to the
handle symbolizes the joining of masculine and feminine elements in the
universe, an act of fertilization that bestows the sound of the instruments
creative shamanic power. From a shamanic perspective, caretaking the rattle and
playing it properly during ritual fulfills the destiny of the human spirit -- to
sustain the order of existence.
Rattles and drums work well together. The repetitive sound
of the rattle, like that of the drum, helps induce trance states. The shaking
of rattles creates high-pitched frequencies that complement the low frequencies
of drumbeats. The high tones of rattles resonate in the upper parts of the body
and head. The low tones of drums act primarily on the abdomen, chest, and
organs of balance, while stimulating an impulse toward movement. Rattles
stimulate higher frequency nerve pathways in the cerebral cortex than do drums.
This higher frequency input supplements the low frequency drumbeats, thereby
boosting the total sonic effect. Try a rattle and drum shamanic
journey.