Drumming is as fundamental a form of human expression as speaking, and likely emerged long before humans even developed the capability of using the lips, tongue and vocal organs as instruments of communication.
To understand the transformative power of drumming you really must experience it, which is something I have had the great pleasure of doing now for twenty years. Below is one of the circles I helped organize in Naples Florida back in 2008, which may give you a taste of how spontaneous and immensely creative a thing it is (I’m the long haired ‘hippie’ with the gray tank top drumming like a primate in the background).
Anyone who has participated in a drum circle, or who has borne witness to one with an open and curious mind, knows that the rhythmic entrainment of the senses and the anonymous though highly intimate sense of community generated that follows immersion in one, harkens back to a time long gone, where tribal consciousness preempted that of self-contained, ego-centric individuals, and where a direct and simultaneous experience of deep transcendence and immanence was not an extraordinarily rare occurrence as it is today.
This experience is so hard-wired into our biological, social and spiritual DNA that even preschool children as young as 2.5 years appear to be born with the ability to synchronize body movements to external acoustic beats when presented in a social context, revealing that drumming is an inborn capability and archetypal social activity.
Even
Bugs Know How to Drum
But drumming is not a distinctively
human technology. The use of percussion as a form of musicality, communication,
and social organization, is believed to stretch as far back as 8 million years
ago to the last common ancestor of gorillas, chimpanzees and humans living
somewhere in the forests of Africa.
For instance, recent research on the
drumming behavior of macaque monkeys indicates that the brain regions
preferentially activated by drumming sounds or by vocalizations overlap in
caudal auditory cortex and amygdala, which suggests “a common origin of primate
vocal and non-vocal communication systems and support the notion of a gestural
origin of speech and music.”
Interestingly, percussive
sound-making (drumming) can be observed in certain species of birds, rodents
and insects. Of course you know about the woodpecker’s characteristic
pecking, but did you know that mice often drum with their feet in particular
locations within their burrow, both for territorial displays and to sound
alarms against predators? Did you know that termites use vibrational
drumming signals to communicate within the hive? For instance, soldiers threatened
with attack drum their heads against tunnels to transmit signals along
subterranean galleries, warning workers and other soldiers
to respond accordingly.
6 Evidence-Based Health Benefits of
Drumming
Drumming has been proven in human
clinical research to do the following six things:
- Reduce Blood Pressure, Anxiety/Stress: A 2014 study published in the Journal of
Cardiovascular Medicine enrolled both middle-aged experienced drummers
and a younger novice group in a 40-minute djembe drumming sessions. Their
blood pressure, blood lactate and stress and anxiety levels were taken
before and after the sessions. Also, their heart rate was monitored at 5
second intervals throughout the sessions. As a result of the trial, all
participants saw a drop in stress and anxiety. Systolic blood pressure
dropped in the older population post drumming.
- Increase Brain White Matter & Executive Cognitive
Function: A 2014 study published in the
Journal of Huntington’s Disease found that two months of drumming
intervention in Huntington’s patients (considered an irreversible, lethal
neurodegenerative disease) resulted in “improvements in executive function
and changes in white matter microstructure, notably in the genu of the
corpus callosum that connects prefrontal cortices of both hemispheres.”
The study authors concluded that the pilot study provided novel
preliminary evidence that drumming (or related targeted behavioral
stimulation) may result in “cognitive enhancement and improvements in colossal
white matter microstructure.”
- Reduced Pain:
A 2012 study published in Evolutionary Psychology found that active
performance of music (singing, dancing and drumming) triggered endorphin
release (measured by post-activity increases in pain tolerance) whereas
merely listening to music did not. The researchers hypothesized that this
may contribute to community bonding in activities involving dance and
music-making.
- Reduce Stress (Cortisol/DHEA ratio), Increase Immunity: A 2001 study published in Alternative Therapies and
Health Medicine enrolled 111 age- and sex- matched subjects (55 men
and 56 women; mean age 30.4 years) and found that drumming “increased
dehydroepiandrosterone-to-cortisol ratios, increased natural killer cell
activity, and increased lymphokine-activated killer cell activity without
alteration in plasma interleukin 2 or interferon-gamma, or in the Beck
Anxiety Inventory and the Beck Depression Inventory II.”
- Transcendent (Re-Creational) Experiences: A 2004 study published in the journal Multiple
Sclerosis revealed that drumming enables participants to go into
deeper hypnotic states, and another 2014 study published in PLoS
found that when combined with shamanistic instruction, drumming enables
participants to experience decreased heartrate and dreamlike experiences
consistent with transcendental experiences.
- Socio-Emotional
Disorders: A powerful 2001 study published in the journal Evidence-Based
Complementary and Alternative Medicine found that low-income
children who enrolled in a 12-week group drumming intervention
saw multiple domains of social-emotional behavior improve
significantly, from anxiety to attention, from oppositional to
post-traumatic disorders.
Taking into account the beneficial
evolutionary role that drumming likely performed in human history and
prehistory, as well as the new scientific research confirming its psychosocial
and physiological health benefits, we hope that it will be increasingly looked
at as a positive medical, social and psychospiritual intervention. Considering
the term recreation in its root etymological sense: re-creation,
drumming may enable us to both tap into the root sense of our identity in the
drumming-mediated experience of being joyous, connected and connecting,
creative beings, as well as find a way to engage the process of becoming, transformation
and re-creation that is also a hallmark feature of being alive and well in this
amazing, ever-changing universe of ours.
New
to drumming and want to try it?
Fortunately, drum circles have
sprouted up in thousands of locations around the country spontaneously, and
almost all of them are free. You will find them attended by all ages, all walks
of life and all experience levels. The best way to find one is google the
name of your area and “drum circle” and see what comes up. Also, there is an
online directory that lists drum circles around the country: http://www.drumcircles.net/circlelist.html
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