15 September 2007

Dedicated to the perennial dream of breaking free…

Written by Iris Watts Hirideyo ( Contact the author of this post )
Published on September 15th, 2007 @ 11:17:57 am, using 0 words, 250 views

Ocean Ants

You and I are a lot alike. You… whoever you are. The way we zero in on the ant speech even though we are ants ourselves. We are ants a little bit, aren’t we? We grab the ant quote almost as a lifeline or a shot at redemption - a last chance without the finality that the title conveys. As though loving it would set the seeping process in motion, would steep us in that beautiful rose-colored Utopia of people bumping into each other (and bravely going against the pre-established norms of what’s expected behavior) by asking to ‘do that again’; then sitting down as if by a campfire and sharing their ideas (a little bit of their most private selves) with complete strangers. Opening up space and making room for the ‘confrontation between their souls.’

Sort of what I’m attempting here. Even though, from this distance, it’s not nearly as brave.

Hey, could we do that again? I know we haven’t met but… I don’t want to be an ant, you know? I mean, it’s like, we go through life with our antennas bouncing off one another continuously on ant autopilot, with nothing really human required of us. Stop. Go. Walk here. Drive there. All action basically for survival. All communication simply to keep this ant colony buzzing along in an efficient, polite manner. “Here’s your change.” “Paper or plastic?” “Credit or debit?” “Want ketchup with that?” I don’t want a straw. I want real human moments. I wanna see you. I want you to see me. I don’t wanna give that up. I don’t want to be an ant, you know?

(Waking Life)

Waking Life

Waking Life

Waking Life

[More:]

Why are there so many things that are undoable?

Undoable…

Says who?

Ruby in Paradise

How to deal with the image of an ocean for the very first time? How to look at something you’ve never seen before? So many options, so many possible reactions. To laugh, to cry, to breathe in and out, to close your eyes, or simply to squat, place the palm of your hand on the surface of the water and bring it back to your mouth… tasting it – looking into the distance as though it were something of a mirror, as though you had found something more… just to incorporate into the inherent vastness of who you are.

What follows are two separate thoughts written down on two separate occasions that became two separate journal entries and for some reason seem relevant now.

Citizen Kane

Prostrate sounds like a good word. No humility in this context, though… No conceit, but no humility, either.
Right now… to me… the word is literal. Directly connected to the coolness of the floor I’m standing on. It feels good to be barefoot. It feels good to be squatting, with my hands spread on that coolness. It feels rebellious of me. It feels improper. It feels freeing. I’d like to do more. I’d like to lie on the floor, arms stretched, left cheek squished against the coolness. I don’t, only because I wouldn’t be able to justify it. What we can’t justify becomes embarrassing if witnessed. There must be a lot of value to justification if we can’t do without it. I’m feeling quiet - desperately craving solitude but having to manage without it. When you feel like that, any word can be a form of trespassing. Someone’s mere physical presence can feel like trespassing.

What is that voice? Whose voice is it that stops you right when you’re tempted to do something impulsive? It’s not conscience. Conscience oversees the bad deeds department. This is different. If you were in a dark room looking up at a screen and something impulsive became a possibility, that voice would say ‘Go for it!’ to whomever was up on that screen. And with a mischievous squinty-eyed daring at that. But not to you. Not when your life is the context. It’s like a parent in a way. It talks like you have to be more careful than the average person. Either because it thinks you’re more fragile or less entitled. Either way, it sabotages your will.

On the way to work a couple of days ago, at 6:55am – the ungodly hour of swollen eyes and quick feet – I patted a stranger on the shoulder in the middle of the street and asked a question. As recently as two years ago, I would’ve kept both the question and the curiosity behind its conception all to myself. A little understated triumph, that was. Every day it seems, a little piece of this shell I wear as a garment gets detached from the whole to reveal a little more of this chick, to stand in my way towards that rose-colored Utopia a little bit less. Until I can talk to virtually anyone and be at home virtually anywhere. Until I can utter the words ‘I say’ with no hesitation whatsoever.

Currently shattering window panes with a rendition of…
Bruce Springsteen - Born to Run (Live)/

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Comments, Trackbacks, Pingbacks:

Comment from: Mo [Visitor] Email
I believe knowing ourselves and having compassion for ourselves is the key to all of life.
It was the one piece of advice carved outside the front of the oracle at the Temple of Apollo at Delphi, "Know Thyself."
When we know ourselves and accept ourselves as we are, we can then have compassion and love for others. We can see and accept others' flaws if we can see and accept them in ourselves.

We feel alienated from others because we don't show our real selves for fear of rejection. The result is an internal dissonance. We can connect with our inner selves only by accepting the totality of our being. And to do that, we must be compassionate towards ourselves. Accepting our flaws is a vital part of life. And when we can then extend that acceptance and compassion to others, when we can look at everyone and realize "I am unique, yet I am part of all of you and all of you are part of me," then I believe that is the answer.

In his essay, "Self-Reliance" Emerson said, "There is a time in every man's education when he arrives at the conviction that envy is ignorance; that imitation is suicide; that he must take himself for better, for worse, as his portion; that though the wide universe is full of good, no kernel of nourishing corn can come to him but through his toil bestowed on that plot of ground which is given to him to till. The power which resides in him is new in nature, and none but he knows what that is which he can do, nor does he know until he has tried."

Ironically, we spend a major part of our lives looking for love from others. We believe we will feel better if people love us. But the love I want begins with me. I can experience real love only when I fill myself with love and am willing to give it to others. The more I give, the more I receive - for the best way to get something is to give it.

The key to find happiness for me personally is by helping people.
But I believe one way we can help people is by respecting their individually unique goals for happiness.
George Burns once said that happiness is "a good cigar, a good meal, and a good woman... or a bad woman, depending on how much happiness you can handle."
Who am I to say George was wrong?

I believe we exist to give to each other; to learn from each other; and to love each other. But I also think it is part of human nature to want what we can't have. So that is why we are attracted to mates who don't seem to love us enough.
In the book, "The Ordeal of Richard Feverel," George Meredith wrote a great line, "the task of reclaiming a bad man is extremely seductive to good women." So that's why I think we just need to gather our self-love/respect to be able to realize if that mate can't give us what we need, then we must not sacrifice our happiness. We must love (and respect) ourselves to be able to walk away from a relationship that can not give us what we need. And we can still walk away loving that person for their limitations by loving ourselves.

In the Tao Te Ching, it is written that "Compassion is the finest weapon and best defense. If you would establish harmony, Compassion must surround you like a fortress."
When we try not to exercise control and become compassionate for everything as it is, then we build the same harmony that is in nature.

For we are all uniquely wonderful. And we are all one.
PermalinkPermanent Link 09/19/07 @ 05:47

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