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PeterParticipantThank you, Alessa.
Perhaps the nuance is knowing when to put the map down. We need it to find the ocean, but we don’t carry it into the water when we swim.Thomas, you caught it exactly. The thought that we have “failed” at sitting is heavy piece of luggage. Yet the floor remains beneath us.
PeterParticipantThank you all.
I’m realizing that if I try to list what I’m dropping, or try to measure whether this home is positive or negative, I’m packing new bags to carry.
Thomas asked if it feels good to be home. The truth is, the moment I try to label the feeling, it slips into form… and the shadow slumping in the corner starts to get up.
So I think I’m just going to sit here quietly on the floor for a while, next to the luggage, and listen to the room…
PeterParticipant“You don’t need to define the sky to live under it. You just have to be willing to sit still long enough to belong to it.” Anonymous
PeterParticipantHi 🚶♀️ Anita,
It’s powerful to hear how you’ve reclaimed your ability to move and become ‘the walker’ in your own life. We all have different ways of relating to and finding the ground beneath us. I’m glad you found a way to stand and keep moving forward.
PeterParticipant🌄 Anita – to close the loop
It is the great irony of the human condition: we work tirelessly for that which no work requires. We treat being present (and so love) as a destination to be reached, a ‘how-to’ to be mastered, forgetting that the question itself is a measure of time, while ✨️presence✨️ is eternal. We are already the canvas; we are already the still point.
As T.S. Eliot suggested, the end of all our exploring is to arrive where we started and know the place for the first time. Perhaps ‘unconditional love’ is simply the name we give to that arrival. When we stop trying to ‘be’ present and simply recognize that we are presence, the burden of performance vanishes. Language, with all its metrics and conditions, finally falls away. We are no longer managing a relationship or meeting a standard; we are simply home. We have returned to the origin, seeing for the first time that the love we were trying to achieve was actually the ground we were standing on all along.
PeterParticipantWe have come full circle!
If presence is the still point, the silent canvas upon which the messy paintings of our lives are layered, then the ‘quiet tension’ of unconditional love finally resolves. We see that love is not a feeling we generate or a benchmark we hit, but a sustaining reality we simply inhabit.
To say that presence is our destiny is to admit that we are moving toward a total transparency, where the ‘smoke and mirrors’ of our evaluations finally clear. In this light, the ‘I’ and the ‘You’ aren’t separate entities negotiating a contract; they are the intimate immediacy of a single, infinite gift. We are being poured out into one another. When we are truly present, we aren’t just observing the other person, we are returning to the love that was our origin all along.
PeterParticipant🙂
PeterParticipantThe phrase unconditional love has always carried a quiet tension for me. (so I thought I’d try dancing with the words to see where they might land)
In my observation, the pursuit of being “unconditionally loving” all too often leads to immense pressure. The moment we ask for unconditional love, from ourselves or others, we turn it into a rigid benchmark, a condition one must meet in order to be considered “good” at loving or even being loved. In this way, unconditional love can quickly become one heck of a condition.
Part of this comes from the nature of language itself. The moment we say “I love you,” we create an “I” and a “you.” Love slips into relationship, and relationship easily becomes evaluation. “I love you because…” becomes the contract. Then comes the moral correction: “I must love you without…” Now love is no longer something lived, it becomes something managed.
We begin watching ourselves: “Am I being unconditional enough right now?”
In that moment, a split forms. We are no longer with the other person; we are standing beside ourselves, judging our ability to love. What began as connection turns into performance.
What if, instead, we understood ‘unconditional love’ as Presence?
Not a standard to achieve, but a way of being.
When love is Presence, the pressure eases. It is no longer about maintaining a moral ideal, but about arriving—again and again—at what is actually here. To be present is to see the other person as they are: their habits, their evasions, their peculiarities, the parts we don’t fully understand. And to meet that without the immediate reflex to fix, improve, or measure them against who they should become.
Presence is not passive. It is attentive, responsive, quietly engaged. It allows care to arise without forcing it into shape. In that kind of seeing, conditions temporarily fall away, not because they’ve been solved, but because they aren’t being imposed. The past loosens its grip. The future softens. There is only this person, as they are, in this moment.
Of course, none of us can live there all the time. We are human. Our nervous systems scan, compare, react. We evaluate constantly.
But perhaps the practice shifts here. Not toward perfect, unconditional love, but toward a willingness to notice when we’ve left presence and to return.The “condition” is no longer that love must be flawless. It becomes the willingness to come back when we’ve drifted into judgment.
Seen this way, unconditional love is not a free pass for harmful behavior that it to often becomes. Presence does not blur clarity, it sharpens it. When we are not clouded by resentment or idealization, we can see another person more honestly, both their limitations and their beauty.
And from that clarity, a different kind of choice becomes possible: not “How do I love you perfectly?”, but something quieter and more grounded – Is this a reality we can stand within?
PeterParticipantHi Anita – I can’t say I’ve can see myself as CoPilot describes but I’ll take it 🙂 at least it didn’t say I was nuts.
I’m glad you have been able to join in the Dance. 🙂
PeterParticipantI didn’t notice your last comment – Thanks for saying that Anita – You should see me try to verbalize an idea; I’m usually met with a blank stare. I don’t mean to be so wordy, but I’ve found that I learn more from ‘feeling’ and ‘dancing’ with words than trying to logically understand them. Take the words ‘black-and-white’, I know you mean straight talk – but playing with them I wonder if for society in general the ‘and’ isn’t really heard as a ‘AND’ but has become an OR? LOL that made my own eyes glaze over.
LOL time to retreat and sit under a tree.
PeterParticipantStarlight – I too have struggled with those words – to forgive as I forgive… here I feel we are bigger then big in a universe we are smaller then small. If I were a painter that is what I would try to paint… and now I picture a hand pointing at itself…
Trust the questions, or better yet continue to paint them… your instincts, are pretty grounded, let them guide you…. Star-light
PeterParticipantWhat I’m trying to say is that as a child, the chaos was so loud that the distance between you (the observer) and your life (the observed) was just too great to feel the ‘canvas’… you were just trying to survive.
Yet, that foundation was always there. Today, in your stillness, the distance is closing… I want to say, with all compassion, let the child breath. You won’t lose her; she is part of the canvas and no longer needs to keep watch anymore… because the ground is holding you both…
PeterParticipantI am afraid I have confused things… to many words…
PeterParticipantHi Starlight
’m so sorry for being confusing. I want to be very clear: I am not saying you need to find a way to forgive. Your boundaries and your anger are completely valid, especially given what you’ve been through.
My “worry” was less about the specific events and more about how the words we use to frame such events can unintentionally trap us. In my own experience, I’ve used the words “I will not forgive” as a way to say (without really noticing) that “I will use anger to protect myself.” It turned out to be incredibly exhausting and, honestly, it didn’t actually protect me, it just kept me tethered to the pain. To be clear I’m not saying your are doing that, only that that was the ‘source’ of a concern, triggered by the topic heading.
Let us bring it back to the Art. As an artist, I was wondering if exploring the words like “forgiveness” or ‘block’… could be a way to unblock your creativity? Not to change how you feel about the past, but to see what a ‘word’ might looks like. Does it have a shape or a color? Is it a cage, a stone, or a breath? What might it look like, to look at the world though the shape being drawn? Investigating the “spell” of a word visually might be a way to move it out of the mind and onto the heart?
PeterParticipantMorning Anita.
It is heartbreakingly sad to have grown up without that first ‘mat’ of maternal and or paternal safety to hold us…
I am reminded of a line by Mitch Albom that says, “All parents damage their children… Youth, like pristine glass, absorbs the prints of its handlers.” The prints left on your glass were so heavy and chaotic that they obscured the floor beneath you. But the glass is still there, and the fact that you are now cleaning it—looking through it to find that ‘sacred boundary’—is your great creative act.
When you describe the fear of disappearing into the chaos, you’re describing what happens when the floor we were promised simply wasn’t there. It makes perfect sense that your body still senses danger in stillness; for a child in chaos, being ‘still’ can feel like being a target.
Yet, as we have been circling… Underneath that missing mat, the ‘mother’ who wasn’t there as you needed, was actually another, much older mat. Even when the human floor was chaotic, the Earth was still holding the floor, and the Universe was still holding the Earth.
You might ask, ‘How do I know that a deeper mat was actually there?’
I know because you are still here. Despite the chaos and the lack of a human floor, you remained present to yourself. You survived the abyss, with a heart that was broken, yes… but also a heart broken open with compassion for others. That spark of ‘Anita’ that stayed alive and is now seeking stillness is the evidence that a deeper, more ancient mat holding you all along
As the ‘chaos’ of the human layer is moving out of the way, you are able to recognize that unwavering foundation now. The danger your body feels is a memory, but the ‘designated patch of pure being’ you are finding today? That is the original mat. It was always there, patient and unmoved, waiting for you
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