Posts Tagged ‘ insights ’

Storytime!

I’m a sucker for a story–preferably a good one!

I remember many an evening, when I was a little girl, spent in the kitchen listening to my grandmother’s stories. That was about the only time I got along with my grandmother, when she drew back the the curtains on another time and place, on relatives I would never meet and events I would someday read about in history books.  She made them all come alive in my head!

Later, when I learned to read, books worked the same magic on me.  I would get lost in one of Scheherezade’s tales, or Grimm’s, or Andersen’s, and watch the magic unfold on the movie screen in my mind.  The real world would recede.  No fights with my brother.  No taking care of my sister. No helping my mother.  The story unfolding on the page never failed to entertain me, to inform me, to charm me. Well, almost never…

And I must ‘fess up: I love T.V.

I love shows with stories that weave in social commentary, whose characters develop with each episode, whose plots offer some surprises and make me happy to suspend disbelief for a little while.  I have a few new favorites that I’ve been enjoying…A LOT!

We’re into season 5 of Breaking Bad, a show that captured my imagination from its start. Like everyone else, I was intrigued by the concept of what a man would do to see his family provided for while facing his imminent mortality.  The twists and turns of that journey are none that I would have anticipated, and each season has upped the ante exquisitely.  We are not allowed to watch this show in its normal 10 p.m. airing slot, since I like to get a good night’s sleep and this sucker scares the shit out of me.  So my sweet husband humors me and we watch this together in the bright light of day.

Common Law, the newest kid in USA Network’s line-up, has quickly become a favorite.  The main characters have gone from caricatured stereotypes to conflicted, multi-dimensional,  living, breathing guys and the season isn’t over yet.  I’m enjoying the layer-by-layer revelations of these guys’ lives and how that colors and shades who we see.  LOVED the episode that aired Aug 9!

Then there’s Perception over on TNT.  The whole concept of perception is one that fascinates me anyway and it provides many hours of conversation with my sweet husband since we generally have different perceptions on most topics.  While we frequently arrive at similar conclusions, we always travel different paths to get there.  It’s fun to watch a show that illustrates our own experiences!

We’re eagerly awaiting the new season premiere of Hell On Wheels.  Sweet husband says it’s pretty historically accurate – and he would know.  I’m looking forward to watching the stories!


Simple… Is Not Easy

I have a tendency to think that simple and easy are interchangeable terms.  My small still voice says “Not so much…”

To put us all on the same page, the definition of simple I’m referring to, according to Merriam-Webster, is: Having only one main clause and no subordinate clauses.  From the same source, the definition of easy is: Requiring or indicating little effort, thought, or reflection.

Another gun-related calamity yesterday, at a Sikh temple in Wisconsin, within just two weeks of the one at the cineplex in Aurora, Colorado.

We are all One.  It is impossible to do harm to someone else without harming myself.  Separation is an illusion. Fear is the delusion that drives us to make choices that appear to protect us…yet time and time again, we see the harm it does…to all of us.

We are all One: simple concept.

Remembering we are all One: not so easy.

Remembering Why I Read

I learned to read in Spanish first.

When I arrived at my first grade classroom, I did so without any preparation or idea of what would be taking place there. The school I went to belonged to my aunt, my mother’s sister-in-law, and I thought it was just a fun family thing.  Living in Venezuela, all parties were fun family things, and I thought this was just an extension of that. So when I arrived in the classroom and a primer was put in front of me with the teacher sitting by my side trying to drum into me that letters actually meant something, and that combinations of letters formed words, I was at a loss.

Once I understood what the teacher was trying to get across, I breezed through that primer so that I could get on to the next book, the one that had stuff about the history, geography, and civics of Venezuela in it.  And I wanted to be able to sit with my dad and read the newspaper just like he did. And I wanted to read comic books, not just look at the pictures.  And books!  Wow! I would also be able to read books! And I was off!

At first, learning was something that happened in school, reading the various text books – and 50+ years ago in Venezuela, we had text books starting in first grade.  It was also clear to me that learning happened from reading the newspaper, too.  My dad was the smartest man I knew and he read the newspaper every day, front to back.  I remember how proud he was when I read my first article out loud to him!  Made me pretty proud, too!

Books, on the other hand, were to escape.  I loved them.  They took me to a whole other world.  Mostly because the books my parents bought for me were what they considered appropriate for a little girl:  fairy tales and myths and legends.  I loved curling up in a chair with my book and imagining the worlds and the actions that were being described.  It was like having a movie screen in my head…and I loved movies, too!

Over the years, I realized that I could learn from books, and so I evolved from reading for entertainment to reading with a purpose: to gather information.  As you can imagine, 50+ years encompasses a LOT of reading–and a lot of different reasons to read!

I read your blogs, as many as I possibly can, because I’m interested in what you have to say. Each one of you perfect expressions of self has a unique way of experiencing and understanding this dream that we call life, and I’m interested in knowing how that’s unfolding for you. Even though we may have similar feelings and understandings about certain things, the key word there is “similar.” They are not the same.  They can’t be the same because our frames of reference are not the same. And while I’m comforted by our similarities, I revel in our differences.  “Ah,” I might think, “so THAT’s how So-And-So experienced that particular thing. I would have never thought of that!”

I suspect that I’m not much different from anyone else in that respect: we all read because we’re interested. I already know what’s going on inside my head and that’s what I’m attempting to write and express.  Another point of view, however, is ALWAYS interesting.  I don’t have to like it.  I don’t have to enjoy it. I don’t have to agree with it.  And I ALWAYS learn something from it!

So, I urge all of you: Please keep writing so that I can keep reading! Write what’s true for you.  Write your hopes and dreams, your doubts and fears.  Write it all because someone, somewhere will read it and be enriched. Be generous with your thoughts and ideas. Remember that when someone judges your writing, they are judging from and for their own experience–it really has very little to do with you, personally. Even as writing is a very intimate, revelatory experience, so it is for the reader as well: what it reveals to the reader about the reader, not the writer.

Hmmm, I’m going to sit and ponder that for a while…and then I’ll go read YOUR blogs!

Remembering Why I Write

I’ve been reading a lot lately about fellow bloggers’, and writers’, self-doubts: how do I get my numbers up? How do I use tagging more effectively? I feel like I’ve lost my mojo. Will I ever finish my novel? Am I even qualified to write in the first place?

I hear you!

And I thank you! I thank you for leading me on a journey of introspection.  This is some of what I got:

I write because I have something to say.

Thoughts and ideas constantly flow through my mind.  The practice of writing helps me to put some order into the hot mess in my head. When I write, I have the opportunity to develop a concept, to examine a belief, to express…something.  Sometimes that expression is more cogent than others.  Frequently I struggle to find the words that perfectly express what I mean, often I fail.  When I succeed, however…bliss!

Then I hit “publish” and what I’ve written enters a whole different world.

There are readers who like what I have to say, and those who don’t.  Those who agree, and those who disagree.  Those to whom the writings bring clarity and act as a springboard for their own creativity (I like that best!) and those who come away shaking their heads because I’ve failed to communicate to them what I was thinking.

And I’m fine with that.  ALL of it.

We are, each and every one of us, a perfect expression of the animating principle that created, and continues to create, that which we call “the universe.” For example, Pluto is just as perfect an expression of that animating principle as Earth is.  It’s human perception that recently took another look at that bit of perfect expression and found it wanting, so it is no longer categorized as a planet.  It’s been demoted.  It really doesn’t matter how it’s perceived, however, because Pluto continues being Pluto, a perfect expression of the animating principle, regardless.

Just like writing.  A perfect expression of my essence at that particular moment, regardless of perception.

So I will continue to write when I have something to say. My hope is that you will get something from it, as I do, and you will come back.

Let’s see how that goes!

That’s all I have to say now.

All The World’s A Stage…

I like my drama on the stage. Or the movie screen. Or the television screen. I don’t like it in my life! With that said, I find the movie screen drama sucks me in with greatest abandon and suspension of disbelief, while the stage drama really has to work it to suck me in.

We got to see War Horse recently, courtesy of my friend Peggy, who works on the current production at Lincoln Center. The play opens with the puppet of the colt Joey scampering about the stage.  Joey is manipulated by three puppeteers/actors who bring Joey’s personality to life. Throughout the play, Joey exhibits little mannerisms: pawing the ground, whinnying, tossing his mane, flicking his ears.  As the play unfolds, the audience forgets that we are watching a puppet and we believe we are watching a horse!

I got sucked in big time!

While the drama was unfolding on the stage, I got so caught up in it that I was experiencing the emotions.  I went “awww” when the colt Joey came on stage. I was angry when Ted got sucked into that stupid bet with Arthur.  And I was in total despair at the realization that in 2012 we are still thinking that military might equals a solution to our problems.  It’s 93 years since World War I ended…and we appear to have learned nothing! No matter how real my feelings and my identification with the characters, that was a play, not reality.

Then I heard it: my small still voice reminding me: “All the world’s a stage…”

Many schools of thought propound the idea that life as we experience it is not reality, but a shadow of reality. Plato’s “The Allegory Of The Cave” is an example of this concept.  Joel Goldsmith tells us in his book The Infinite Way that anything we perceive with the senses – sight, taste, touch, smell, and hearing – is a false reading of reality because the physical world that we perceive is but a projection of the animating principle.

Goldsmith goes a little further, saying that we are each a perfect expression of the animating principle, and as such we have all the capabilities of the principle from which we’ve sprung. We’ve just forgotten whence we’ve sprung. We’ve forgotten that we are, simultaneously, playwright, actor, director, stage manager, audience. So life appears to be something over which we have no say.

As I sat in the emptying auditorium of the Vivian Beaumont Theater, with my sweet husband drying my tears, I realized I’d just had a direct experience of the concept that Shakespeare, Plato, and Goldsmith describe. For a couple of hours, I was so involved in the drama unfolding on the stage that I forgot myself and became invested in the characters, actions, emotions and events taking place there.

At the end of the play, I, of course, remembered that no matter what I felt and thought, the play was not my life, but a tiny part of it, a small experience of my life. Just as my life is but one experience of the Universe unfolding eternally.

Welcome On My Journey Of Remembrance!

Dear Reader:

If you’re reading this post, you most likely arrived through the link in Serenity In The City.  Thank you for coming!

When I first contemplated the idea of blogging, I kept hearing an internal message, from  what I call my small still voice, to get on with it already.  I used that URL and it became Serenity In The City.  At first I thought it would be a combination of words and pictures depicting and expressing the search for, and finding of, that sense of peace amid a busy life in a busy place.

Well, it’s turned out to be more pictures than words. Actually, since each picture is worth a thousand words, or so they say, each post is a thousand words, plus the few words that my small still voice prompts me to add.

Recently, my small still voice is at it again, this time prompting me to write more words.  So, I’ve been contemplating this direction and this is what came to me: Serenity In The City will remain the predominantly picture blog that it is and, on the occasions when I have something more to express, you will see a prompt inviting you to check out my latest ponderings…if you feel so inclined.

Why a journey of remembrance? Remembrance of what?

As I’ve stated in my profile, I’ve been a student of holistic and spiritual practices for a long time.  Over the years, my views and understandings have evolved, and they continue to evolve and unfold.  And it is this evolution, this continuing journey, that I will be sharing here.

I hope you’ll join me from time to time, share your own evolution, comments, and insights, and see where this goes!

Thanks for checking in!

All the best, Margarita