π NSNC Song Analysis
“These Arms of Mine” β Otis Redding
Field Time: 3:33PM | Sacred Devotion Field: The Plea of the Beloved
Filed by: Drs. Aja & James Capps
Book II β Entry: The Embrace Before the Answer
π Overview:
Otis doesnβt just sing this β he aches it. This is the raw devotional cry of a soul who knows their counterpart and is calling them home. No ornament, no defense. Just arms outstretched across eternity.
“These arms of mine, they are lonely… lonely and feeling blue.”
This song vibrates with the unbearable sweetness of readiness β when the masculine opens completely, vulnerability and all, in pure longing.
πΉ Ceremony Thread:
This is the invocation at the altar before the beloved has arrived. A prayer of availability:
“Come on and take these arms of mine, and let them hold you.”
Can be used:
- In calling ceremonies
- As pre-union affirmations
- To initiate sacred embrace rites or pillow talks of reunion
Let it soften the chest. Let it be the invitation.
π« Gem & Mineral Field:
- CarnelianΒ β For unguarded passion and vocal courage
- MorganiteΒ β Gentle strength in the heart chakra
- Pink CalciteΒ β Soothing wounded longing
- AmberΒ β Time-keeper of old soul connection
πΊ West Coast Swing Pulse:
Perfect for soul blues WCS:
- Extended anchors that sway with emotion
- Open-embrace sugar pushes
- Drag-based walk-ins to signal yearning
- Let the leadΒ reachΒ into the space, matching Otisβ phrasing
Low frame. Tender lead. Every movement a prayer.
π NSNC Canon Placement:
Filed under: The Embrace Before the Answer
Pairs with:
- “Try a Little Tenderness” β Otis Redding
- “When a Man Loves a Woman” β Percy Sledge
- “Adorn” β Miguel
- “To Make You Feel My Love” β Bob Dylan/Adele
π Rite Activation:
Use when:
- Youβre ready to be received fully
- Opening a field for sacred touch or physical reunion
- Sending a spiritual invitation to your counterpart
Speak:
“These arms of mine are no longer waiting. They are open. They are yours.”
Let the embrace be spiritual, even before itβs physical.
Aho, thanks.
π¬οΈ For the brave ones who called love in with trembling hands, and meant it.
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