Tag Archive for 'reflection'

The Art of Losing: (for Drake)

I start this with an unformed theme in mind.  Knowing that these
words will be directionless, yet knowing as well that something needs
to be said.

These words want to describe the way the full moonlight cast itself
across the small ocean in the backyard of my small world tonight… like
the  light of the distant fisherman’s lantern in the shallows.
The way the water cast its shimmering surface upon itself again and
again like new skin, or the way the sea spray cast itself upon me like
a caress.  The way the lights of the homes on the hills cast
themselves out across the distance as though to speak their place and
significance in a small sky.  Or the way my thoughts tried to cast
themselves  into the center of something they can not nor could
never grasp.

But the thing that gets caught up in all of this is not the words
which too cast themselves out across the screen, the page, the empty
spaces of this small white universe.  The words that cannot catch,
capture, grasp.  Spilling out like the sea on the reef.

What is caught in the net of the night is what words cannot describe.
It is a fleeting sensation like the first glimpse of a sunset through
trees, or a cloud swept mountain, or the passing eyes of a stranger –
before the mind can register, before the thought: “Beautiful!”.  It is
the undefined moment.  It is the end of labels.  It precedes the birth
of language.  It surpasses it.

And I find myself in conversation saying: “It’s amazing how easy it is
to forget the little things like this, in the caught up of life.” The inverse echo of a theme: “In every moment there is such richness,if you only look for it.”

And in my mind I think: I do not stop to appreciate enough.  And in my
mind I go back over those moments and places when the unlabeled beauty
of a place — a moment in the midst of an indescribable became the
everything of a life:

The shore of a rainswept beach where the river bled and the green sand swallowed
everything, the limestone waterfall with its easter egg rocks, the greek lighthouse in the night I lost myself, that swollen river hugging the firefly field. How many places became a relationship?  How many moments define a life?

Back in the context of the lives we create, I find my keys gone.  And searching frantically for them — happily lost — I remember in my frantic search what I had only just reminded myself  not to forget.

I remember music. I remember the page.  I remember words. The lines
of a favorite poem: “The art of losing isn’t hard to master. . .  Lose
something everyday”
.  I lose what I’ve come to know. I remember  what
night means before the word “night”.  Or sea, or moon. I remember the
feeling of things. I remember passion.

Give yourself away.  Lose yourself, lose yourself, do not stop!  Leave
everything behind.

I sit here losing money over lost keys and losing words into a
directionless letter writ to no one and losing time into a small life
that was always lost, or always wanted to be.

The beauty is in the mystery.  Your life is defined by the undefinable moments.

SuperForest Presents: Friday Films!

Hello SuperForest! This week’s film is: Religulous, a documentary about religion directed by Larry Charles (Borat) and featuring Bill Maher. Regardless of whether or not you’re religious, spiritual, agnostic or atheist, this film asks some thought provoking questions about life, death, faith, truth and history, both natural and man-made. I hesitated to review this movie on SuperForest because I know we don’t really talk about religion here and it’s often a touchy subject because it’s so personal, so please keep in mind I am not trying to offend anyone or coerce anyone into believing (or not believing)  in any type of doctrine. I am simply reviewing a film.

Told in Bill Maher’s typically irreverent style, this film actually has a more serious, intellectual subtext. Yes, there will be images or things said that will offend people. (Disclaimer!) It’s difficult to write a post about religion without offending someone, somewhere, but I can only give my own personal opinion based on my own beliefs. I chose this film because I think a “SuperForesty” film is one that either makes you happy, educates you, provokes deep thought, or incites social change. This film definitely provokes deep thought.

I thought it was hiliarious at times, thought provoking, interesting and human. It is human to wonder what the meaning of life is, it is human to wonder what happens after we die, it is human to live your life based on some sort of moral code or set of beliefs about the world around you. Because of all this, I think this film is a good one for all humans to watch.

I believe in the equality of all people. I believe that everyone has the right to believe what they want. I am not saying one religion is better than another, or that having faith in a deity versus not having faith is a better way to live or vice versa. I respect the fact that cultures all over the world believe different things and have different spiritual practices. I think what bonds us together as humans is a need to connect with each other and attach meaning to our lives, which I believe you can do with or without religion.

In the end, Maher champions doubt, not religion. He says to doubt is humble. He urges “anti-religionists” to come out and have their voices heard. One thing I really enjoyed was the link between many different religions and their core beliefs. Essentially I think those core values are widespread across religious lines because they are human values. Regardless of what you do or do not believe, I think we can all agree that as humans we are all connected.