Showing posts with label balance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label balance. Show all posts

Sunday, October 28, 2012

Intermission--The Art of Finding

Seems things have been getting heavier around here as I've been getting lighter. Obviously there's more to be said about that--perhaps I owe an explanation--but let's have an intermission. I have lost so many things--objects, people, opportunities; and I choose to live without so many things--amenities, luxuries, status... As such, much of what is delightful and nourishing in my life comes from things found...

Things like wild blueberries, tiny, almost hidden, full of goodness and deliciousness that couldn't be bought.
 Things like this rock. I pick up rocks every time I hike the beach, which is several times a week. Generally, all the rocks I pick up fall into a very similar category in terms of size and color. Occasionally there's one with a special shape or color. But this one I picked up two weekends ago, with the tiger face that can also be a sheep face and also many other faces and expressions is the most amazing rock that's eve come to my hands. It was washed up on the Homer Spit, and who knows how deep in the ocean it has been, from how far it has traveled, to be a found object and muse for me.
Things like this--what is it? Magnifying glass? Telephone receiver? Goofy toy, anyway.
 Things like the potato people, slightly different every harvest.
 Things like a whole sea urchin, whole except for the life force, every geometrically placed spine present, delicate filigree.
 Things like this chip of fir bark with its own little figure drawing inside. I found it when I was down in WA at the Sandwich Academy.
Things like this piece of charred wood found a little way up from Bishop's Beach in Homer. Does that or does that not look like a fish?
I end with the rock again, since its coming into my life feels almost mystically significant. It's an odd kind of significance that I haven't yet figured out for myself--I've never been a cat person especially, although I have always been a rock person and a person who finds faces in objects without objective faces.


Mastery of the art of losing may not lead to disaster, suggests Elizabeth Bishop. But perhaps living with the daily losses that are life, I -- perhaps we -- can come into a space where loss is exhalation, finding is breathing back in. And perhaps, somewhere in there, is balance. That's my prayer for today.

Monday, April 9, 2012

HAWMC #9: Keep Calm and Carry On Ulterior-Harmonically

Heads-up: today and tomorrow, I'm on the road to Anchorage, so my posts will be short and sweet! I have several "other bloggers' recipes" that I tried and tweaked for this holiday, and will share when I'm home and settled.


Today's HAWMC prompt is to make our own version of a "Keep Calm and Carry On" poster. I'm sure I'm missing some essential cultural information here, as I'd never heard of the poster before (shoot me)! (Updated right before we hit the road--WEGO's blog provides the history lesson, and essentially what we're doing is a parody.) Additionally, as you all know by now, I'm not a very visual person--words and sounds all the way, so I wasn't very confident about this activity. Additionally, the computer's misbehaving, and I'm getting the 'spinning pinwheel' every few letters I type (and I type fast normally)... not conducive to poster creation!


OK--this was supposed to be short and sweet! I wanted my poster to recognize the "ulterior harmony" philosophy that often, unseen connections are the most powerful ones, and the importance of sound and silence in grounding me. Generally, if I'm listening to the silence behind the words and sounds, I run a little less crazy. I also wanted to include the wordplay on:
mediate/meditate/medicate
because, hard as it can be to accept, the torrent of input/output and garbled reactions needs to be mediated! I need to find ways to be in the middle of the stream, not submerged, not careening through the rapids, not running aground. Meditation and medication are both key for that. My favorite color is green, next is purple, closely followed (sometimes surpassed) by rusty orange-brown. 


So, here's my poster:
I love how the bird has three strands on its right wing but only two on its left! Balance despite asymmetry. 

I wish I could have manipulated the font sizes--my small "mediate" corresponds to "and" in "Keep Calm and Carry On," I guess--but in a way, having it small at the center makes sense, in an inverse sort of way.

Thanks for looking! What would YOUR poster say?