Longing, we say, because desire is full
of endless distances.”

11 August 2008


Bright Idea #72: "enroll in [the] sublime, ball-busting course of Spirit Love."
"The babe is more than swaddling bands;/Every farmer understands./Every tear from every eye/Becomes a babe in eternity;/This is caught by females bright,/And return'd to its own delight./The bleat, the bark, bellow, and roar,/Are waves that beat on heaven's shore." Changing Woman, Mary, Artemis, Hecate. The connections. wholeness, transformation, grain. the corn grows tall and tells me secrets as i pass at ease and peaceful breathing deep and saying prayers. #4 went out on his skateboard holding my hand pushing off balancing reaching back for my hand holding on it was wonderful. a surge of industry, shifting moving doing something always the reward of running water and the white bed. blessed be i go out to the garden and pick dinner. i see the bombardment of ego and artifice and am horrified. i look back as bravely as i can and say my how youve evolved, dearie. good for you. good for everyone around you. tentative connections tenuous strands that collect rain add-a-bead upsidedown world we walked home and i tried to explain how we see everything upside down and then our brain translates it into something we can understand and i had one of those sucking psychedelic moments where i understand what guru said about everything being an illusion. how we could very well be existing in some elaborate hologram but its good enough for me. make art. drink wine. tomorrows the meteor shower. share the sky. breathe.
"And if the question were asked: What is more real, the mundane or the sublime? most would hesitate before they gave an answer. On the one side, details: say, the aftermath of a breakfast, dirty chipped plates in the sink, their rims encrusted with egg yolk. Against this, the unnameable: small aching heart with boasts, what can you know? Outside the cage of everything we ever heard or saw, beyond, outside, above, there lies the real, hiding as long as we shall live, there stretch and trail the millions of names of God burning across the eons. When all through this our end will come before we even know the names of us.

For many the egg yolk prevails." -L.M.

"Love many things, for therein lies the true strength, and whosoever loves much performs much, and can accomplish much, and what is done in love is done well."
-V.V.G.

"The perfection of the Absolute where all Becoming stops and pure Being, immutable, timeless, unchanging, hangs forever like a ripe peach upon the bough." -E.A.

"...and the whole incident was incredibly frazzling and angst-rod and filled almost a whole mead notebook and is here recounted in only its barest psycho-skeletal outline." -D.F.W.

"At the top of the mountain, we are all snow leopards." -H.S.T.

"Only when we are no longer afraid do we begin to live." -D.T.
"Cometh a voice: My children, hear; From the crowded street and the close-packed mart I call you back with my message clear, back to my lap and my loving heart. Long have ye left me, journeying on by range and river and grassy plain, to the teeming towns where the rest have gone - come back, come back to my arms again. So shall ye lose the foolish needs that gnaw your souls; and my touch shall serve to heal the fretted nerve. Treading the turf that ye once loved well, instead of the stones of the city's street, ye shall hear nor din nor drunken yell, but the wind that croons in the ripening wheat. I that am old have seen long since ruin of palaces made with hands for the soldier-king and the priest and prince whose cities crumble in desert sands. But still the furrow in many a clime yields softly under the ploughman's feet; still there is seeding and harvest time, and the wind still croons in the ripening wheat. The works of man are but little worth; for a time they stand, for a space endure; but turn once more to your mother - Earth, my gifts are gracious, my works are sure. Instead of the strife and pain I give you peace, with its blessing sweet. Come back, come back to my arms again, for the wind still croons in the ripening wheat."
-John Sandes, The Earth-Mother (excerpt, 1918)