Play comes from within – When we are told to play it becomes seriousness, And seriousness does not allow the freedom that play easily produces, The freedom required to help us navigate the complexity that seriousness-alone struggles with: We cannot analyse our way through this level of complexity, but we can play with it.^
For the one who believes it, a blessing can signal the start of a journey of transformation.* John O’Donohue
An artist knows the aesthetic choices only come alive on paper. As a writer, it’s your job to write draft after draft, to improvise, to play one beat against the next, toss ideas around in your imagination and then write them down.** Robert McKee
A blessing is encouragement, permission,^ and grand hope that may be all a person needs to set upon a journey of actioning their dreams, finding themselves transformed in the process – So it is for me, I think.
We do not have to be a writer or artist to appreciate that drafts are how we move forward – If we wait for the perfect there will be no forward momentum – so we explore, experiment, Fail, and try again and again.
You don’t need my blessing – But you have it: Bless yourself.
*John O’Donohue’s Benedictus; **Robert McKee‘s newsletter: Why Creativity Takes Work; ^Or the promise not to put up barriers
That we might awaken, To live to the full The dream of the earth Who chose us to emerge And incarnate its hidden night In mind, spirit and light.* John O’Donohue
It is about waking up to a knowledge that is deep in the very fabric of our being, and it is about living in relation to this wisdom.** Philip Newell
Some sleep, or sleep-walk, through life, Others awaken to the possibilities of their singular life, presenting themselves with options, choices, decisions – a freedom to go where they want; They travel to the deep-rootedness of their being: To find the roots of our responsibilities we must go to the roots of our abilities, a journey into a core sense of ourselves where we can put together an understanding of how we are made, why we have the responsibilities we have, and, just as important, the images that formed us in our growing.^
When a person comes to this later in their lives there is often a great deal more to discover than they know – They have done much of the hard work, perhaps unknowingly, and now have the possibility of curating: that is, to select, arrange, and enhance their story, which is also their soul: Today it appears more important to remind man that he has a spirit, that he is a spiritual being.^^
Each new day is a path of wonder, a different invitation.* John O’Donohue
We feel most comfortable when things are certain; but we feel most alive when they’re not.** Tania Luna
Clarissa Pinkola Estés raises the two critical questions: What am I really? What is my work here?^ – Though I would open them to the influence of the future, As well as the past and the present: What am I really becoming? What is my work becoming?
When our future rearranges us then our past becomes the fuel for our art and artisanship.
What counts is not so much whether a person actually achieves what they set out to do; rather it matters whether effort has been expended to reach the goal, instead of being diffused or wasted.* Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi
You can’t save today’s energy for the next day – tomorrow comes with its own vivacity; And if we need a guarantee of success before we begin then we’ll never embark on much of anything.
Here are some playful ways in which to engage our energy: Curiosity, turning into observation, but then moving on to notice more, before turning to thoughtfulness, resulting in making something skilfully* – Which may or may not be just what you had in mind, And you may also find that you’ve increased your energy for tomorrow.
*Mihaly Ciskszentmihalyi’s Flow; **Rohit Bhargava’s five steps for innovation and creativity are: Curiosity, Observation, Fickleness (not over-focusing on one thing), Thoughtfulness, and Elegance:Non Obvious 2019).
When one is at home in oneself, one is integrated and enjoys a sense of balance and poise. In a sense that is exactly what spirituality is: the art of homecoming.* John O’Donohue
Living in accordance with our values is never finished; it is a lifelong journey.** Steven Hayes
I love the energy and thrill of balance and poise, Of knowing just where I am in myself and in the work I do, But I also love learning new things, and trying to bring these into me and bring them before others – And then I am clumsy and unbalanced again; But this is all a part of the homeward journey towards new balance and poise, Before I journey outwards once more.
The thing that gets us stuck isn’t us. It’s the script that we’ve decided is our only option. Call it out. Realise that it’s not the only option … Rewrite the script, rewrite the outcome.* Seth Godin
We have already heard that the fulfilment of meaning is possible in three main directions: humans are able to give meaning by doing something, by acting, by creating – by bringing a work into being; secondly, by experiencing something – nature, art – or loving people; and thirdly, human being are able to find meaning even where finding value in life is not possible for them in either the first or the second way – namely, precisely when they take a stance toward the unalterable, fated, inevitable and unavoidable: how they adapt to this limitation, react towards it, how they accept their fate.** Viktor Frankl
Every life comes with a script – Where we are born and to whom, for starters – But it is incomplete, and if there’s one thing that we’re adept at, it’s bringing some imagination and creativity to bear, rendering the original narrative unrecognisable; Where we take our stories is up to us.
In terms of character traits, other studies have found that awe is correlated to traits like gratefulness, a love of learning, creativity, and appreciation for beauty.* Jonah Paquette
And now to the question of the meaning of our imbalances: let us not forget that each person is imperfect, but each is imperfect in a different way, each “in his own way.” And as imperfect as he is, he is uniquely imperfect. So, expressed in a positive way, he becomes somehow irreplaceable, unable to be represented by anyone else, unexchangeable.** Viktor Frankl
Water is H₂0, hydrogen two parts, oxygen one, But there is also a third thing, that makes it water And nobody knows what it is.* D. H. Lawrence
Ultimately the goal is to become the best in the world at being you. To bring useful idiosyncrisity to the people you seek to change, and to earn a reputation for what you do and how you do it. The peculiar version of you, your assertions, your art.** Seth Godin
Whilst the Enlightenment sounded the death knell for traditional myths, in reality it substituted its own: What the Enlightenment did was to develop its own set of myths, striking pictures whose attraction usually centres on the lure of Reduction – the pleasure of claiming that things are much simpler than they seem.^
I understand this to be a highlighting of how humans need myths or stories to live by – We cannot imagine a world, Or our existence within it, without our stories; The good myth retains the mystery, though a helpful definition of a myth reminds us in timely fashion: a partial truth based on an imaginative vision fired by a particular set of ideals, a dream that can help us to shape our enterprises, but will mislead us if we trust it on its own.^
To be our fullest self, though, We shall require our myths that allow for more than the ordinary, connecting us to the mystery we encounter within.
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