life: acoustic & amplified

poetry, quotes & thoughts about life

Archive for the category “Beginning”

leaking love 

 Sometimes you just need someone to storm heaven for you

Sometimes you just need someone to hoarse whisper it for you —

“Father of the Tired & Broken-Hearted…

oh, hear our prayer….

Give Your Child the wisdom to know it this week:

Hiding when you’re hurting won’t heal you and growing isolated can just let infection grow.

Give Your Child the love to live it: 

The secret way to heal a broken heart is to let love leak out like an ocean through all the cracks.

When you’re most wounded by words, run to the only Word that always brings healing.

And may all the trials be but a trail,

all the stones on the way be but grace stairs to God.

In the name of Jesus —

who broke His heart to heal ours…”

💔💔💔💔💔💔💔💔💔💔💔💔💖

    – Ann Voskamp (edited) read full post at aholyexperience.com

 
   

Listen to Natasha Bedingfield sing Unwritten http://youtu.be/TtGY4G7II6s

💌💌💌💌💌💌💌💌💌💌💌

Photo sources found at www.pinterest.com/al513

💞💞💞💞💞💞💞💞💞💞

Listen to Plumb sing Exhale http://youtu.be/dOgUjSW4agg

it is the duty and calling of an artist to speak their truth     – unknown 

  

   

  
 

   

  

Listen to Sara Barelleis sing Vegas http://youtu.be/HOHK2sXoIVw

🎼🎼🎼🎼🎼🎼🎼🎼🎼🎼🎼 
photo sources found at www.pinterest.com/al513

 You don’t need patience to do what you love. You need passion.      – Michael Barata

 
  

  

  

   

  

 
  

   


  

  

Listen to Bon Jovi sing It’s My Life http://youtu.be/9SKFwtgUJHs 

photo sources found at www.pinterest.com/al513

 

Note to Self:   

 
Inspiration from

 my son, Brandon (he’s made my mamma-heart very happy this morning)…LISTEN to Paul Baribeau sing Ten Things! http://youtu.be/9X_o_BAUJ-c 

 
 

 Those who contemplate the beauty of the earth find reserves of strength that will endure as long as life lasts. There is something infinitely healing in the repeated refrains of nature–the assurance that dawn comes after night, and spring after winter.     – Rachel Carson

 

Photo by Fisherman Dan @ Branford, CT

🌊🌊🌊🌊🌊🌊🌊🌊🌊🌊

Beauty can be hidden between folds, in cracks in hard hearts. Beauty exists in softening, in ground fertile, expectant, wanting to be watered. Beauty is possibility, the expectation of pushing through the rough patches until there is ever greater softening. Hardness—a hard heart— is the opposite of beauty.

 

There is no becoming more beautiful. 

     – Loop

 

photo source found at www.pinterest.com/al513 
💖💖💖💖💖💖💖💖💖

Listen to Travis Tritt sing Can I Trust You With My Heart http://youtu.be/aQQlQIjVMoI

on growing strong bones 

  

backbones get built

vertebrae by vertebrae

with every victory

with every heartache

with every triumph

with every shattering

with each awakening
they become sturdy

bearing the weight of new consciousness

embodying self-love

strengthened, emboldened
yet still flexible, yet still able

to make flowing and fluid movement

undulating with pulsing life

able to stand firm in the face of a challenge or adversity
backbones don’t magically appear because we wish them into being
backbones need nurturing and kindness and discipline and conviction and intention

and desire

to form and develop
they help us be stalwart and valiant

protecting the soft, vulnerable, tender inner parts of our being
robust, hearty boundaries that

don’t cut us off from nourishment — they make sure we’re getting the right kind
the fortitude to love, not blindly, but with courage. 

💪🏻💪🏾💪🏽💪🏼💪🏿💪🏼💪

    How Backbones Get Built by Eloiza Jorge

   https://deepeningwisdom.wordpress.com/2015/05/25/how-backbones-get-built-a-poem/
   
   

  
Never quit. Never. Rest when you need to, then get back up. Strength comes as you walk. Backbones come one good choice at a time. 

 Listen to Katy Perry sing Roar http://youtu.be/CevxZvSJLk8

photo sources found at www.pinterest.com/al513

 

practice

    listen to Kate Earl sing Nobody http://youtu.be/imIxwxpd04E

💑💑💑💑💑💑💑💑

photo sources found at www.pinterest.com/al513

songs of gold 

 

Photo by Fisherman Dan @ Branford, CT

  A yellow flower

(Light and spirit)
Sings by itself
For nobody. 

A golden spirit
(Light and emptiness)
Sings without a word
By itself. 

Let no one touch this gentle sun
In whose dark eye
Someone is awake. 

(No light, no gold, no name, no color
And no thought:
O, wide awake!)
A golden heaven
Sings by itself
A song to nobody.


🎵🎵🎵🎵🎵🎵🎶🎵
Song for Nobody by Thomas Merton
 
Listen to Sarah McLaughlin sing Ordinary Miracle http://youtu.be/m4j_wrmpMnU 
🎵🙏🎵🎵🎵🎵🎵🎵🎵🎵
photo sources found at www.pinterest.com/al513

draw me in…light me up

  CHARISMATIC PRESENCE

You really become aware of the force and light of human presence when you are in the company of a charismatic person. In theology, “charisma” means “divinely conferred favour.” A charismatic presence is one that inspires people. It has a natural balance between the personality and the vision that the person represents. In some way, the luminosity in the person is an aura that tangibly reaches out and affects others. In German one speaks of “eine grosse Ausstrahlung,” i.e., a great streaming forth of radiance. The charismatic person does have a radiance that stirs us. It is given to some people to be carriers of huge spirit. This is not something they have sought out or earned. It is not something that they have worked up in themselves. It seems to belong deeply in their nature. I remember once speaking to a friend about a family we both knew who had such spirit and he said, “If you put one of them in a house on her own, you would fill it.” Charisma reminds us that there is no system or frame large enough to hold the secret immensity that is in each person. — John O’Donohue, “Eternal Echoes”

  

   

   

listen to Neil Diamond sing Brother Love’s Traveling Salvation Show http://youtu.be/U5va1iaLj2M

😻😻😻😻😻😻😻

Photo sources found at www.pinterest.com/al513

sounds like a memory

Gather all your memories
inside your circled arms
and clasped hands.
Be still and breathe deeply.
Gaze down and place
them all in order.
Let times of joy
and exhilaration
rise to the top.
Make room
for days of grief
and make a special place
for when you reached out
and helped another.
Let darker memories
sink to the bottom,
hidden in haze.
An expiation,

each soul owes to itself.

😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊

Sorting Things Out by Edward Hujsak

Memory is not just a then, recalled in a now, the past is never just the past, memory is a pulse passing through all created life, a waveform, a then continually becoming other thens, all the while creating a continual but almost untouchable now. But the guru’s urge to live only in the now misunderstands the multilayered inheritance of existence, where all epochs live and breathe in parallels. Whether it be the epochal moment initiated by the appearance of the first hydrogen  atoms in the universe or a first glimpse of adulthood perceived in adolescence, memory passes through an individual human life like a building musical waveform, constantly maturing, increasingly virtuosic, often volatile, sometimes overpowering. Every human life holds the power of this immense inherited pulse: holds and then supercharges it, according to the way we inhabit our identities in the untouchable now. Memory is an invitation to the source of our life, to a fuller participation in the now, to a future about to happen, but ultimately to a frontier identity that holds them all at once. Memory makes the now fully inhabitable.  The genius of human memory is firstly its very creation through experience, and then the way it  is laid down in the mind according to the identity we inhabited when we first decided to remember, then its outward radiating effect and then all its possible future outcomes, occurring all at the  same time. We actually inhabit memory as a living threshold, as a place of choice and volition and imagination, a crossroads where our future diverges according to how we interpret, or perhaps more accurately, how we live the story we have inherited. We can be overwhelmed, traumatized, made smaller by the tide that brought us here, we can even be drowned and disappeared by memory; or we can spin a cocoon of insulation to protect ourselves and bob along passively in the wake of what we think has occurred, but we also have other more engaging possibilities; memory in a sense, is the very essence of the conversation we hold as individual human beings.  A full inhabitation of memory makes human beings conscious, a living connection between what  has been, what is and what is about to be. Memory is the living link to personal freedom.  If, in the full beautiful potency of nostalgia- the letting go of a child into the adult world for instance- memory can overwhelm us at times, we can also, through a closer discipline, through a  fierce form of attention, through a learned and shaped intentionality and presence, become a  more courageous stepping into the center of things, we can open up the silent interiority at the  core of our story, and become a brave, living representation of its trajectory: we can be the ground  of our birth, the journey from the place where the memory began and most especially the unfolding drama of its emanating, far traveling energy, all at the same time. We can be equal to the story we have inherited, no matter its difficulty, by stepping into its very center.   Sitting at my grandfather’s knee as a seven year old, I was the first, solitary human being to hear him speak- after fifty long years of silence- the heart breaks, terrors and close encounters he had experienced so traumatically in the trenches of the First World War. His voice was elegiac, almost newly innocent, as regretful for those he had killed as for those comrades he had lost, he was also

Astonished that he had been put in such a position, he was humbled, shocked and wondering all  at the same time, as if it could not be possible for an individual human being to have experienced so much, so young, and to have  carried it unspoken for so many years.  Looking back to that small cottage room in Yorkshire, the clock ticking slowly in the background, my Grandfather staring into the middle distance, the times at his knee seem like a profound and necessary ritual, a handing on, his speech almost trance like, of a past that was certainly not a past, but by speech and physical presence alone, a living essence passed down to me, something for a future world to resolve, heard first through a child’s wondering ears.  His speaking and my listening must have allowed the younger man he had been to come to life again, the explosive memory to be relived; the journey to be contemplated a new and the future entertained again in one movement, so that through telling me he could overhear himself and become conscious of what now lived inside him, no matter that I hardly replied, no matter that he was in his last days. He left this life in a better place having rejoined his previously isolated memory with the future my young ears represented. I remember his lined old hand gripping mine almost in thanks as I would walk him up the lane to the shops, his companion, his grandson, his holder of secrets and his restorer of the future, all at the same time.  Through the gift of an inheritance truly inhabited, we come to understand that memory is as much about creating and influencing what is about to happen, as it has to do with what we quaintly and unimaginatively call the past. We might recall the ancient Greek world where Memory was always understood to be the mother of the muses, meaning that of all of her nine imaginative daughters, all of the nine forms of human creative endeavor recognized by the ancient Greek imagination, and longed for by individuals and societies to this day, in all the difficulties and secret triumphs of an average life- were born from the womb and the body of memory.  The first draft written at my study desk in Seattle in a long sitting, the drone of the Seaplanes beyond the  French doors, and taking off and landing on Lake Union, a far traveling outer symmetry to my own internal journey into memory. Second draft worked on by the first fire of the fall season. Third, much clearer draft finished on first opening my eyes in bed the next morning and completed back at the study desk, coffee in hand.  I had carried the image of memory inside me ever since seeing Brian Swimme’s and Mary Evelyn Tucker’s recent film, Journey of the Universe, the previous week, which depicted, with brilliant visual effect, the immense wave forms of the physical and biological world that have travelled not only down to us but through us since the explosive inception of the created world.  A French film chiefly about the link between memory and personal freedom helped me to concentrate further on an Air Canada flight to Edmonton.  The physical sense of memory was made all the more palpable during that last week with a revision of many of the poems in River Flow for its eBook appearance. As I immersed myself in the very present physical experience of such intense representations of my past- the past, the present and the possible future seemed to concentrate into one live and habitable frontier.

By David Whyte

 

Listen to Eric Church Springsteen http://youtu.be/HP2MKYGggd8

 

Photo sources found at www.pinterest.com/al513 

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