TLDR: "Viento" is a kirtan composition exploring wind as both a literal and metaphorical force—a vehicle for breath (prana), an expression of invisible spiritual movement, and a symbol of the life force that animates chant practice. Wind, untethered and omnipresent, mirrors how sacred sound travels through the body and consciousness, making the intangible tangible in devotional music.
What Does Wind Represent in Spiritual Practice?
In yogic and contemplative traditions, wind (viento in Spanish) is far more than meteorology. Wind represents prana—the vital life force that flows through the body's energy channels, or nadis. When we breathe, we are drawing wind into ourselves; when we chant, we are riding that wind outward as sound. "Viento" as a kirtan subject invites practitioners to become aware of this invisible current that sustains life and consciousness.
Wind is untethered. It cannot be contained, owned, or controlled—it simply moves. This quality makes wind a powerful symbol for the nature of consciousness itself: boundless, present everywhere, and impossible to grasp through force. In spiritual practice, recognizing wind means recognizing that some forces are meant to be surrendered to rather than mastered.
How Does Breath Connect to Sacred Sound?
Kirtan is fundamentally a practice of breath made audible. Every note emerges from the breath; every phrase depends on the rhythm of inhalation and exhalation. When Ajeet sings "Viento," the song itself becomes an instruction in breathing—a meditation on how prana (life force) moves through the vocal cords and into the space around us.
The breath is the bridge between body and spirit, between the physical and the subtle. In traditional yoga philosophy, the breath is the closest we come to directly perceiving prana itself. Through chanting, practitioners learn to synchronize their breath with the rhythm of the mantra, creating a feedback loop where the song teaches the breath how to move, and the breath sustains the song.
Why Is Wind a Metaphor for Consciousness?
Wind moves. Wind changes direction. Wind carries seeds, scents, and sounds across vast distances. These qualities mirror how consciousness operates—it is not static, but flowing; not singular, but pervasive. Just as wind connects distant places, consciousness connects the individual self to the larger whole.
In many spiritual traditions, wind or air is associated with the mental realm, thought, and communication. The Sanskrit element vayu (wind) governs the nervous system and the capacity to perceive and process experience. Meditating on wind, whether through chant or breath awareness, develops sensitivity to the subtle movements of mind and the ways that awareness itself moves through different states and dimensions of being.
What Is the Role of Invisibility in Spiritual Teaching?
We cannot see wind, yet we feel its effects constantly. We cannot see prana, yet we feel alive because of it. We cannot see consciousness, yet it is the only thing we truly know. This paradox—that the most vital forces are invisible—lies at the heart of spiritual practice.
Kirtan acknowledges this paradox by making the invisible audible. Through song, we make tangible what cannot be touched. This is why sound is so central to devotional practice: sound is the bridge between the invisible and the perceptible. When we chant "Viento," we are singing about something we cannot see, yet the act of singing makes us acutely aware of its presence.
How Does Viento Function as a Complete Practice?
As a kirtan composition, "Viento" is not merely a song about wind—it is an instrument for experiencing wind directly. The rhythmic structure, melodic contours, and harmonic resonance guide the practitioner's awareness into increasingly subtle dimensions of breath and consciousness.
When sung in a group setting, "Viento" creates a collective wind—a shared breath and shared consciousness. The individual voice merges with others, and what emerges is a unified sound that no single person could produce alone. This is the essence of kirtan: the recognition that consciousness and breath are not private, isolated phenomena, but shared and communal forces that can be amplified and refined through collective practice.
Where to go from here
Listen to "Viento" with attention to your own breath. Notice how the melody invites you to inhale and exhale in particular patterns. Practice singing the mantra without concern for perfection—the goal is to feel the wind moving through your voice, to experience breath as the foundation of consciousness. Over time, the distinction between self and wind, between individual consciousness and universal prana, may begin to dissolve. This is the quiet teaching of wind: not to assert or conquer, but to flow and be present.



