life: acoustic & amplified

poetry, quotes & thoughts about life

Archive for the category “Blog”

Flowering

In the lengthening days of early spring,

among the vanishing snowshadows,

I hear new bird songs, see geese overhead,

and greet the long-awaited return of smells.

Trees light their little green sparklers,

and I walk among them.

Then the great flowering procession begins:

first the gentle, snow-defiant crocuses,

and the hyacinth, low and easy to miss,

then the forsythia, the dogwood, dandelions

and daffodils, followed in proper order

by the tulips and the flowering trees,

crabs and cherries, and the azaleas.

Little purple things, and white ones, dot the yard.

Finally the lilacs bloom, and I walk among them.

The catalpa tree will blossom much later,

and I will stand beside it as well.

Among flowering beings, softly opening,

with billowing wonders, I, too, live,

with my own great unfolding.

______________________

Steve Garnaas-Holmes – Unfolding Light – used with permission –  www.unfoldinglight.net 

The Highest Goal of Any Art

Is so simple, despite thoughts to the contrary.

I was reading through some old content on this site recently – posts, quotes and postcards. In all honestly, I was dumbfounded. A lot of it just didn’t make sense to me. “What did I mean by that?”, I kept asking myself. And I started to get dejected because I just couldn’t reconnect to the emotions that inspired each piece of writing.

I began to think about my writing process and realized that I have never once planned a post. Sometimes I have an idea about what I want to write, but more often than not, I’ll be running or reading or otherwise engaged and a thought will pop into my head that inspires me to write. So I do. I begin to type and I just see where the words take me.

And that’s when it hit me. Just as art is simply the expression of one single moment, one idea, one inspiration, the appreciation of art isn’t possible in every moment, from every perspective, by everyone. Because I, as the artist, can’t fully appreciate each art form I’ve created at any given time, doesn’t make it any less valuable. To the contrary, it makes it that much more critical to create when inspiration strikes because that unique form of art may only be possible in that moment. Wait a minute, a day, a week, and it’s gone. Something may replace it, sure, but not the same thing.

All of which brings me to what I’ve come to believe is the highest goal of any art. Not to be revered by millions of people or to earn a steep financial reward. But simply to connect with one person, in that one moment when they’re ready to receive it. On any other day, at any other time, they might glance at it and move on. But on that day, at that moment, it might just change everything.

How to Matter
howtomatter.com

A Philosopher’s Notes – Little By Little‏

The  Buddha tells us that one becomes good little by little—as a water pot is filled  with water, drop by drop by drop. (He also tells us that one becomes evil, little by little, drop by drop by little decision drop.)

Little by little. Drop by drop.
Little by little. Drop by drop.
After years of trying to fill my water pot ALL! AT! ONCE!, I’m finally
understanding that my attempts to change everything NOW were like trying to fill
a beautiful, delicate water pot with a fire hydrant. Rather than winding up with
a full pot, I pretty much sprayed the thing all around the room (and nearly
cracked it!).
Little by little. Drop by drop.
That’s the way to roll.
Moment by moment. Little decision by little mundane decision. Day in and day
out. THAT’s where it’s at.

Brian Johnson, Chief Philosopher

www.philosophersnotes.com

Art and Love are man’s greatest gifts to himself.

There is no art without love. Art is
always the making of the soul, the craft
of man’s touch, whether that touch is
corporeal or the touch of the mind and
spirit; so it has been since Neanderthal
times, and so it will always be.

Excerpt from Power vs. Force

Dr. David Hawkins

I believe God wants you to know…

…that the best things in life are free.

  That is just about the oldest, most trite, most hackneyed
 “saying” you could come across today. But it is so, so
 true. And it is important never to lose sight of that. So
 look around you. Wherever you see friendship, loyalty,
 laughter, love…there is your treasure.
Neale Donald Walsch

Today is my Birthday!

Here I am on another birthday sitting alone with myself and enjoying it! I do not need anything. Company would be nice – but it is not necessary. I am very blessed and happy as I continue to let go and let go of everything I love on this earth – surrended into the hands of God, as I have practiced so often in the past 14 years. It does not get easier in one way – it always starts with a punch to the gut, but now I face it as soon as my gut alarms me. I don’t fight it anymore – I welcome reality as I know it is for my betterment.

These things I know are true – the choices are mine every moment and I have peace no one can shake or take. I am Amy Carol = I am the beloved song of God!

www.songsfromthevalley.com

Choices

We sometimes seem to forget how important our choices are. Each day we are faced with a multitude of choices and all of those choices matter.

Even the smallest of choices can have a huge impact on us and those around us.

Even at our most aware, it is a difficult balance to live to our fullest and also be very aware of the choices we are making.

I believe it is extremely important –

every minute

every day

every choice!

Make it matter!

Beginning Every Day

I used to believe a lot of things that no longer seem to fit into my strategy for making sense of this world. Considering some of those beliefs, I consider this progress. For instance, I’ve heard it said that beginning something is the hardest part. That if we can just get the ball rolling, momentum alone will take us from there. “Once begun, half done…”

I used to believe that.

But in my experience, we’re not much like boulders rolling down a hill. Well, except when things go badly, then, it seems, we roll with the best of them, right on down to the bottom. But as it concerns the finer things – those that we know will elevate us, make us better people, allow us to contribute more to the world and its people, experience more genuine love and joy – in those cases, it’s been my experience that in fact, beginning is very easy.

One small choice followed by action and it’s done. I don’t wish to minimize this, there’s amazing power in beginning something that brings a little bit more of us into the world. What I love most is the sense of peace and calm and contentment I feel in that moment. It’s perfect and abundant and feels like it will easily spill over into the next moment, the next day, and replace whatever it was that had been holding its place before. But beginning, while significant, is nowhere near the hardest part.

Have you ever started a rigorous physical training of any sort, after a long break?

There’s a certain excitement in it. And it’s easy to harness that excitement and turn it into resolve, into a determination to begin.

Our creative endeavors are like that, too. It’s easy to get excited about a new web project or a story idea or countless other outlets for that energy. And it’s even pretty easy to begin again on day two, to roll with the alleged momentum that starting seemed to initiate. But as with muscles that haven’t been worked in years, day two isn’t the problem. We feel it, but just enough to be proud of ourselves for beginning. For starting down a road that, while not perfectly paved, surely leads somewhere good. But day three? Day three makes us question our initiative. It reminds us what it’s like to get hurt and it encourages us to doubt our determination, to fear where it might take us.

Day three exists to help us justify mediocrity. To agree with us when we begin to defend cowardice or explain failure’s inevitability or judge others. Day three is there to help us forget the reasons for day one in the first place, and to keep us from getting to day four unscathed.

But damn it, we need day four.

Why? Because it means we beat day three, at least this once, and if we did it once, we can do it again. Because it’s just enough of a victory to remind us what’s possible. Because without it, good things become just like the things that came before them, instead of becoming something more. Something great. Something worthy.

Does day five and beyond get any easier? Not really, at least not for me, at least not so far. But I think that’s alright. Easy may indicate mastery, but not growth. To the contrary, I think. And this is where things seem to have gotten a bit tricky. Our culture, our society, celebrates mastery but, frankly, it ignores the growth that led to it. The daily regimen of effort that made it all possible, and that continues to do so (you didn’t think the masters sit back w/ their feet up, having ‘arrived’?).

Which means many either see mastery as a skill that others are born with and, so, don’t even bother to try, or we see it as an entitlement, erroneously believing that it will ‘just happen’. Neither option, in my view, seems to gush with wonder. With amazement. With a proper reverence for the miracle of life or our duty to expand it by way of our very existence.

And without wonder and amazement and duty, what have we? Well, we have this. And by ‘this’ I mean mediocrity. Dissatisfaction. Disenchantment. Apathy. Fear. Despair. It’s understandable or course, which is precisely why it persists. We can justify it, rationalize it. But if we ever want something more, we need to get past the starting line and get on with the hard work that being wonderful and amazing and dutiful require.

We need to begin, and then begin again. And again. Everyday. Forever.

From How to Matter Blog   http://howtomatter.com/beginning-every-day/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+Howtomattercom+%28HowToMatter.com%29

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