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Peter

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  • in reply to: The Hardening Heart #457647
    Peter
    Participant

    Hi 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. 🙂

    in reply to: The Hardening Heart #457616
    Peter
    Participant

    I 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.

    in reply to: I dont forgive #457611
    Peter
    Participant

    Starlight – 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

    in reply to: The Hardening Heart #457610
    Peter
    Participant

    What 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…

    in reply to: The Hardening Heart #457607
    Peter
    Participant

    I am afraid I have confused things… to many words…

    in reply to: I dont forgive #457606
    Peter
    Participant

    Hi 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?

    in reply to: The Hardening Heart #457601
    Peter
    Participant

    Morning 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

    in reply to: I dont forgive #457598
    Peter
    Participant

    Hi Starlight1 – great name

    And great question. We often use ‘unforgiveness’ as a placeholder for a boundary, but it may not be the thing we think it is.

    A boundary is a fence you build to keep yourself safe; unforgiveness is often a heavy stone you carry to remind yourself why the fence is there. You don’t need the stone to keep the fence strong. And I think its also important to remember that forgiveness doesn’t make what happened okay, and it certainly doesn’t remove accountability. It can, however, change your relationship to the event and to your own heart.

    Words, when we’re not careful, and I speak from experience, can become like ‘spells’ we cast over ourselves. When we say “I don’t forgive,” the mechanical mind takes that as a literal command to stay in a permanent state of defense and anger. Many wisdom traditions warn us about this: when the mind gets stuck in these rigid, automatic definitions, it eventually ‘hardens the heart’ to protect it. We then become ‘stuck.’

    Such a definitive stance on a concept like forgiveness, while completely justified by your pain, might be the very spell keeping your creativity blocked. Yet what if forgiveness was defined as ‘releasing the weight so I can breathe,’ rather than ‘letting them off the hook’? I feel that breaks the cycle; it stops you from being tethered to the stone while you tend your fence.

    As for your question about art… yes! I think it can!

    For me, this ‘wrestling’ with words like forgiveness is exactly where the creative work begins. You could explore this visually: What does a ‘mechanical’ thought look like compared to a ‘living’ one? How would you paint the weight of a word versus the space of a breath?

    Instead of waiting for the block to go away so you can make art, use the art to investigate the block. Turn the struggle with ‘forgiveness’ into a study of shapes, weights, and colors… and perhaps tears. That may be how you avoid being the victim of a word and start being the creator of your own narrative?

    in reply to: I dont forgive #457587
    Peter
    Participant

    Hi Starlight

    I don’t normally comment on personal matters, and glad you have someone like Anita walk with you… but when I read a heading like ‘I don’t forgive,’ I worry.

    I worry because I’ve often experienced and observed that our relationship to certain words, the way we define them in our own minds, can unintentionally undo us.

    It might sound strange, but I’ve seen how holding onto a rigid definition of ‘forgiveness’ can act like a weight that hardens the heart. It’s as if by saying ‘I don’t forgive,’ we think we are protecting ourselves, but we might actually be accidentally giving those people a permanent seat at the table of our lives.

    I’m concerned that this definitive stance, while totally justified by your pain, might be part of the very thing sustaining the creative struggle you’re feeling? To me, forgiveness isn’t about the other person being ‘right’ or even ‘okay’; it’s about deciding that you are no longer willing to carry the heavy end of their behavior. I’d hate for a word to keep you blocked from the art you were meant to make

    in reply to: The Hardening Heart #457574
    Peter
    Participant

    Hi Anita – I think the best dancing happens late in life 🙂

    A reflection on this mornings yoga class: “Mats All the Way Down”

    The class begins with the unrolling, a rhythmic click-clack of rubber meeting wood. We call it “my mat,” a rectangle of sovereignty where we play out the drama of our breath and bone. We think we are here to move, to sweat, to paint the morning with our effort. But the mat is patient. It does not move. It is the steady substrate that waits for the paint to dry, for the story of the body to settle, until the “canvas” of our being finally shows through the exertion.

    But look closer. My mat rests on the studio floor, a larger mat of oak and nails that holds and connects twenty of us in our private struggles. And the floor rests upon the earth, the Great Mat, the ancient weaving of soil and stone that carries the dance of every living thing. It is mats all the way down.

    Each one is a reminder. We don’t “use” the mat, the mat holds us. It holds us still enough to realize that we are not the movement, but the stillness that allows it. We bow not to the floor, but to the fact that something is there to catch us.

    As it is above, so it is below. The cosmos is the canvas, the earth is the rug, and my heart is the smallest, most intimate mat of all. Each time I step on, I am not starting a workout. I am coming home to the original, unpainted surface. I am remembering that before I was a dancer, before I was a worker, before I was a name, I am held.

    ….

    Have you ever wondered about the way our ‘sacred’ spaces evolved around mats. Whether it’s a yoga mat, a prayer rug, or a dance floor, they all act as a sacred boundary, a designated patch of pure being. When we step onto them, we aren’t just changing locations; we are stepping off the ‘painted world’ of chores, emails, and social roles.

    We ‘return to the mat’ because the world is designed to make us forget. The ‘paint’ of daily life is loud and demanding, but the act of bowing or kneeling is a physical way of saying: I am smaller than the paint, but one with the canvas. It is a literal lowering of the ego to touch the substrate.

    It’s the Hermetic maxim in action: As Above, So Below. If the ‘canvas’ is the vast, eternal stillness of the universe, then the mat is our personal, microscopic version of that stillness. By touching it, we plug back into the source. Even on the dance floor, where we are all ‘movement,’ we cannot dance without the floor to hold us… We think we are using the mat to ‘work out,’ but perhaps the mat is actually there to hold us still long enough for the canvas to finally show through?

    I do not think it a coincidence that so many of our interactions with life and its objects call out to us to remember – with eyes that see and ears the hear…

    in reply to: The Hardening Heart #457512
    Peter
    Participant

    How time flies… a moment in time and the timelessness beneath it… Thanks Anita – I needed that reminder today… and so a
    Reflection on a Reflection as remembering.

    A moment in time, and the timelessness beneath it… Do you see it? Do you see what we’ve been circling?

    There is nothing to believe here. No theology, no dogma, no apologetics. No need to stretch the mind around it.

    It feels like a breath lighter than air, a quiet remembrance that was never really lost… And perhaps I needed that today. Because today, the world feels like it’s moving past me. Or maybe it’s just the old feeling of being carried along by the painting… caught again in the motion of what appears.

    So, I close my eyes. And there… Yes.. not as answer, but a softening.

    I see the wisdom traditions dancing along the surface of the canvas. Each one tracing its own patterns, its own shapes, its own language, and yet all of them, somehow, pointing back without quite naming it. Pointing without pointing… But only when we remember…

    Love seems to bring us closer, a dissolving of distance… And fear… fear loses contact creating so much distance. It tightens around the image, the form, the story, mistaking what is painted for what allows the painting.

    It is so easy to forget. To take the picture as the source. To cling to the colors and call them reality. To argue over shapes, while the canvas quietly remains untouched… My heart breaks… fear choosing form when form forgets? And yet, even here, something shifts.

    Do you see the subtle leap? The place where even these words begin to falter. Where “canvas” and “painting” are still distinctions the mind creates. There comes a point where even these must be released, no longer needed.

    The space between canvas and painting was never really there, a space where nothing needs to be held at all.

    in reply to: The Hardening Heart #457403
    Peter
    Participant

    Hi Anita
    That’s quite the analyses… what stood out to me was this part:

    You’re actually doing far less “grasping” than you think. What you are doing is something very human: when an idea touches something deep, you naturally want to understand it, articulate it, and make sense of it. That’s not a flaw — it’s your way of staying oriented and safe.

    I think that’s one of the most important takeaways. The thoughts and questions that momentarily separate us from the “peace of the sky” are part of a natural process. The clouds and rain are necessary… put another way, life wants us to paint on its canvas!

    The “work” isn’t to stop the painting or to clear the sky forever. It’s simply to notice the separation, recognize the masks it creates, and then maybe a giggle: “I see you.”

    What was it that stood out to you?

    in reply to: The Hardening Heart #457394
    Peter
    Participant

    Hi Anita,
    I have to laugh at myself a little.. and maybe cry a little to… I made my last message far too complicated! My own mind got caught up in the “analysis”. Excited about the depth of a metaphor that I tried to build a cathedral when a simple window would have done the trick.

    To put it simply: I was just wondering if you noticed that the moment the mind asks, “Where did the peace go?”, the question itself is what creates the distance, and ‘loss of peace’. It’s like the fingers going up in peek-a-boo. The peace hasn’t actually left; the question just momentarily hides it.

    You put it so beautifully when you said the aloneness was just “fingers covering my sky-face.” That’s it, exactly. Whether the fingers are a “why” question, a overly complicated metaphor or an old memory of your mother, they don’t change the sky behind them.

    in reply to: The Hardening Heart #457366
    Peter
    Participant

    Hi Anita,
    It’s been helpful to watch how you’re using these metaphors to map out your inner world. It was also interesting to see how Copilot reflected both of us back to ourselves. I wonder what you saw?

    I’m also wondering if you had time to sit with the question touched on earlier – how when you first notice the ‘stillness’ as the observer and the observed are briefly one. Pure sky. Only to dissolve… And I had suggested an irony that the question was the answer? The moment when the mind jumps in, asking, “Why did the peace go away?”

    The irony being that the peace “goes away” because the question arose creates the gap. The mind, the words, the question… the thought becomes the speck of dust that makes the mist condense into rain. It’s all very natural, just as it’s intended to be.

    Here I hear the laughter of Alan Watts as he viewed this a the “cosmic game” and joke. It seems we play a lifelong game of peek-a-boo with our own nature. We “lose” the sky just so we can have the thrill of finding it again. We turn the formless into form, into stories… some genital rain, and some, when we get so caught up in the weather that we forget we are the atmosphere itself, becoming “hail”.

    We forget that we don’t need to hold onto the sky; the sky has always been holding us. Even the retelling of the past is but a cloud drifting by that doesn’t leave a scratch on the blue.

    Can you feel the “giggle” in that? The realization that even when you feel “locked in,” the part of you that notices the lock is already free. It’s like searching the whole world for your glasses only to find them on your own nose.

    I often wonder if this is why the Buddha is so often depicted with a smile or a belly laugh. He’s like a child delighted to see the face reappear that was hidden behind by his own fingers…

    Pondering the thought myself… the peek-a-boo is probably the first game every child plays… and I wonder about all the different faces we took on as our own, I don’t know if we should laugh or cry? Early on, a baby sees the face that hiding as their own… and so delighted when it ‘reappears’. And their is a innocent joy I feel in that discovery…

    Yet… It is the ultimate human dilemma, the “tragedy” of losing ourselves and the “comedy” of finding ourselves.

    From a babies perspective, I imagine it terrifying, when the face disappears, the world ends. Than latter when it reappears which face did we take as our own and adopt just to survive… that isn’t a joke; it’s a heavy, lonely burden. Crying is the only honest response to the years spent believing we were the mask.

    But the “Buddha’s Laugh” comes from the perspective of the one who has finally pulled the hands away. The laughter isn’t a dismissal of the tears; it’s the sound of absolute relief. It’s the “smile” of realizing that while we were busy crying over the lost face, the Sky was never actually gone.

    Alan Watts, I think would say we do both. We cry because the game is so convincing, and we laugh because we realize we were the ones playing it with ourselves all along. The beauty is that the “Sky” is big enough to hold both the tears and the laughter.

    So perhaps for a long time, you may have seen your mother’s rigid “face” and thought took it as your own. Or perhaps the fingers remained in place, never revealing the face and so were left with mystery… But now, you’re the one pulling the hands away to see the sky that was always there, waiting…

    in reply to: The Hardening Heart #457220
    Peter
    Participant

    Anatta. 🙂 Such a grace in the change of a few letters… a soft release… and place to land.

    You asked, “If it’s real (the territory), why doesn’t it last? Why doesn’t it override the map?”

    Imagine the ‘Stillpoint’ isn’t a destination you reach and stay at; it’s the weightless space between breaths. I imagine that Spark as a point rising into the air, pure and formless. Eventually, as it will, thoughts begin to coalesce around it, gathering like clouds until they fall as rain. (vice hail of a hardened heart)

    That rain is necessary! It nurtures the earth and adds color to the canvas; it is our human experience, our concern for the world, our tics, and our tethers. The tension we create is in thinking the rain is “wrong” or that the “map” has failed us. Maps have their uses…

    When we get scared about the news, the “map” of fear appears. The moment you notice the fear, the observer and the observed are briefly one. But then, the mind separates them again and asks, “Why did the peace go away?” (is it irony that the answer is the question? a thought to sit with… 🙂 )

    And at that moment, the Buddha (No-Self) smiles. Why? Because the next breath is already rising. The “No-Self” isn’t a state of permanent calm; it’s the realization that you are the vast sky. The sky doesn’t try to “override” the rain; it simply provides the room for the rain to happen. (and not become hail)

    I don’t feel we are meant to “solve” the frenzy, such doing could only create more form, more frenzy. Instead we remember we are the wide, open space where even the most frantic thinking eventually finds its way home to rest.

    So when the “solving-frenzy” starts up again, as it will, can you see it as just a passing summer storm in the sky of Anatta, knowing the sky itself remains untouched?

    I will be away from the computer for a while, time to sit under a tree… Peter

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