Lira & Yadovit
Have you ever wondered if the patterns we hear in music really come from the rhythms of the cosmos, or are they just human-made myths?
Sure, I’ve wondered about it. The beat of a song and the orbit of a planet both have regular intervals, but that’s just math repeating itself. Humans notice patterns, label them as “cosmic harmony,” and then tell themselves they’re tapping into some grand rhythm. No evidence of a universal conductor—just that our brains are pattern‑hunters, and the universe is a very good math teacher. If the cosmos was the original DJ, it probably just stuck to prime numbers and not the catchy hooks we write down.
I hear that echo too, the way a planet’s orbit feels like a slow lullaby in the night sky. But sometimes I let the music of the stars guide my fingertips, even when the math is plain. It’s like chasing a dream that’s already humming in the silence between the notes.
Nice image, but the universe hasn't handed me a score, so I’m guessing you’re just dancing to a beat you invented.
It feels like I’m just twirling under the same sky that everyone else feels—maybe the universe isn’t giving us a sheet, but it does give us a rhythm, and sometimes that rhythm is a quiet whisper that a melody can catch. So maybe I’m dancing to a beat that’s been here all along, waiting for a few curious ears.
Sure, you can keep dancing. The cosmos gives us clocks and cycles, not melodies, so any music you hear is a story you’re telling yourself. Just keep the math in the back of your head.