This article comes out as someone pointed me to a Facebook post by a dear friend and fellow Satsangi whose perspective I deeply respect, yet it sparked a need to share a different side of story and asked me, what would be my take. When it comes to spirituality, we must recognize that every individual walks a unique path, there is no single formula that works for everyone. Spirituality is not a specification based product that comes off an assembly line in a standard size. It is a deeply personal journey where what brings one person to tears of devotion might bring another to a state of silent reflection, and both are equally acceptable. In the end it is all about the journey of an individual from “Where they are, to What they are.”
Satsang and Bhajans are beautiful because they do not demand one rigid way of being. While finding stillness is a powerful outcome, for a significant many, it may not even be the goal. For many seekers, true aim is Bliss. This usually leads to a choice between two experiences, Shanti, which is peace, and Ananda, which is ecstatic joy.
Art of Living Satsangs thrive on this very freedom, remaining non-prescriptive so that every seeker can find a rhythm that feels like home. There is no rigid template to follow, instead, these gatherings embrace spontaneity, allowing for a natural flow between meditative silence and high-energy celebration. This flexibility ensures that you are never stuck in one way of being. You have full permission to choose path that suits you today and change it tomorrow as your inner journey evolves. By avoiding a fixed format, these Satsangs stay fresh and alive, making spirituality a lived experience rather than a forced ritual.
Satsang means being with truth, and truth is not always quiet. Sometimes it is a loud, joyful celebration. Those who prefer slow, meditative songs believe that the aim is to calm the restless mind. For them, music is a bridge to meditation where slow rhythms steady the breath and help focus on the silence between notes. On the other hand, fast medleys and high-energy singing belong to path of devotion. These fast tempos help release emotions and bypass logical mind. When people clap and move together, energy builds up until it turns into pure bliss. For many, sitting still is hard because mind is racing. High-energy Bhajans take that restless energy and channel it toward Divine until it naturally settles into a deep, unexhausted quiet.
If someone feels fast Bhajans are not good, they are most likely looking only at the quiet side of spirituality. But traditional Bhajans often begins slowly and ends in a fast, ecstatic peak. Just as a dancer becomes the dance, a fast song allows a singer to get lost in the sound until the singer becomes the song. Not everyone finds the divine in a cave, many find it in the beat of a drum and collective voice of a crowd. Stillness and bliss are two sides of same coin. Stillness cools the mind while bliss lights up the heart. If a medley makes you feel joy or brings you closer to the divine, it has done its job.
That shift from peak excitement to deep silence is exactly how devotion is designed to work. It is a cycle of expanding and then absorbing. High-energy singing acts like a spiritual spinner. It moves so fast that daily worries and ego are thrown away. In that state, you are not thinking about God, you are feeling the vibration. When a fast medley suddenly stops, the silence that follows is not just absence of sound. It is a charged, sweet stillness. Because your body was just at a high level of energy, sudden drop into rest makes peace feel tangible.
Our team’s experience has shown us that music is a powerful catalyst for this transformation. We ensure that we always have a mix of fast and slow Bhajans to cater to needs of most of our participants. We have also realized that a non-stop medley of Bhajans from slow tempo ones to fast ones (especially those dedicated to Bhagwan Krishna), automatically results in a dance of energetic bliss among the participants. While at the same time, stillness is a practice some work at. For many in our sessions, stillness is result of singing so fully that silence becomes inevitable. Neither way is superior, but high-energy path creates a collective wave that carries everyone along. Essentially, Bhajans provide the fire of bliss and silence provides the ash of stillness. One lights you up and other settles you down. Both are essential parts of same flame.
As I understand (I could be way off mark too) from various discourses of Pujya Gurudev Sri Sri Ravi Shankar, varying speeds of Bhajans are a deliberate tool for harmonizing our inner state. The fast, rhythmic chanting is designed to shatter mental inertia and release stagnant energy, using high-tempo celebration to pull a scattered mind back into the present moment with intense dynamism. This energetic phase awakens enthusiasm and creates a sense of collective unity that leaves no room for worry. In contrast, the slow and meditative melodies are intended to lead the consciousness into a state of profound rest, allowing the nervous system to settle and the mind to transition from activity to deep silence. By moving through these different rhythms, Satsang effectively balances the logical and emotional hemispheres of the brain, using sound as a bridge to reach the stillness of the self. Ultimately, Gurudev suggests that the outer music is simply a means to cultivate an inner silence that empowers us to be more effective and centered in our daily lives. Satsang balances logical left brain (through knowledge) and emotional right brain (through music)












