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PeterParticipantA note on the parable. Perhaps it would be helpful to add that I was originally trying to make an argument about how we often mix up our spiritual lives and our politics. I was wondering if we’ve started asking them to do things they weren’t built for: we load spiritual practice with an urgency it canāt always carry, and we expect political action to give us a kind of “awakening” that it canāt really deliver.
I was getting so tangled up in those big, heavy words I felt like the mirror-maker in the storyātrying to decide if I should be making a “shield” or just holding the “glass.”
The parable was the only way I could find to step out of the argument and just breathe. Itās exactly like you said, Anita: sometimes we just need to find a way to be human again when the “abstract” starts to feel like a wall.
Still, I notice that the parable is abstract… for me, it is my emotional language, a attempt to paint a picture. Itās how I feel my way through.
PeterParticipantHi Anita,
That is a very common response to the way I communicate! Please donāt feel itās a lack of intelligence; itās really just a mismatch in the “tools” weāre using. Language is funny like that, it can trap us and free us, and half the time we donāt even notice which one is happening.The phrase “Prison House of Language” actually comes from a famous Nietzsche quote about how we are constrained by the words we use. Iāll admit, I was heading into deep waters and probably got a bit over my head!
The other day, I tried to make a serious argument following all the logical rules, and it was ripped apart for relying too much on metaphors. I realized I was trapped in my own way of speaking. I eventually turned the whole thing into a short parable just to make sense of it for myself.
Itās interesting: I use symbols, and you use emotional concrete language, but we both end up in the same place, telling a story.
Your brain scan story is actually the perfect example of what I was trying to say. When you said ānothing was found,ā the words were so “slippery” they made it sound like you had no brain! For a second, the language trapped you in a meaning you never intended. Thatās the secret, I think. Language often shuts things down, but also open them back up just by changing the delivery. Whether itās a parable or a story about a broken computer, the story is how we finally hear each other.
Iām glad youāre finding that “emotional language” makes you feel more human. Itās a much better way to get out of the “prison” of big words than anything I was writing. I’m often frustrated by it myself.
Here is that parable… don’t worry about “deciphering” it. Itās just an image to sit with.
The Three Mirrors
There was a man who lived in a burning city. He carried a mirror so the people might see the fire was not the whole world.Early in life he learned he had to keep a mirror within his own heart, knowing that if he let his heart catch fire, the mirror would melt and he would see only the flames. He heard of those whose hearts could burn without being consumed, and that left him wondering…
He also belonged to a guild of mirror makers. Some in the guild wanted to melt the mirrors to make shields for the soldiers. He wished them well but refused. He told them, āA shield can stop a sword, but only a mirror can remind the soldier why he should lay the sword down.ā
Later, the city took some of the guildās mirrors and built them into the walls. But once a mirror was part of a wall, it could no longer be moved to face the truth. It became just another stone.
The man witnessed all these things as he sat on the edge of the city and held the glass. His heart burned but was not consumed. He trusted that the coolness of the glass was more powerful than the heat of the flame. And every now and then, others would come to sit beside him, find rest, and share something to eat.
PeterParticipantThomas your latest Zen story made me laugh. Was it a matter of perspective? Or just a good laugh? I think both š
It just reminded me of a answer to a question I no longer remember… but was probably full of angst: āWe work for that which no work is required.ā Somehow those words made it possible to enjoy the struggle a little more, and worry about it a little less. The effort is real, but the destination isnāt somewhere else as We “return home discovering we never left, only seeing it for the first time”.
PeterParticipantPlease I continue to explore…
What struck me reading through this exchange was how clearly it showed that language isnāt only the words we speak. Itās a tool that opens our world, yet itās also a boundary. In this dialogue I kept seeing how we donāt just use words; we live inside them.
A song became a distraction, then a doorway.
A worry became a trap, then a truth.
A poem became a mirror.
Even the backāandāforth carried its own quiet rhythm, painted its own picture.The Sufis say everything speaks, all arising from and returning to the ‘Word’ weāve forgotten and keep trying to remember. If thatās true, then even the mindās noise belongs to the conversation… Art is language. Song is language. A tree growing is language. Even Taxes are language. Sometimes these things confine us; sometimes they open us. Often they do both at once. (the intention of the topic was to notice, when it was a relationship to a word and or event holding us back.)
Perhaps thatās where the old line comes in: For those with ears, let them hear…
For the last twenty plus years Iāve lived with tinnitus, so for a long time my silence has never been silent. The ringing is always there, a thin thread of sound running through everything, everything. Over time I learned, (had to learn?) that silence isnāt the absence of sound itās the absence of being pulled around by sound.
The ringing never stops, but the struggle around it softened… most days. Itās pushed me to let go, to breathe through it, to find a different kind of quiet.
In that way itās become a language too. When it grows louder, itās a warning: somethingās tightening, pay attention.
Even noise has something to say. Even distraction can be a doorway. So maybe the āprison house of languageā isnāt a place we escape, but a place we learn to notice and listen to differently, where everything speaks, even the things we once thought were in the way.
PeterParticipantThomas, I appreciate your honesty, and it reminded me of a poem by Rick Cain
“The ancient of Man ponders his curiosity. Questions arise as he wonders of his own significance… How time moves as sands of an hour glass, not to be grasped, but reckoned with by the moment. The focus of a single crystal houses Hope, Love and the rainbow multitude of Life’s involvement. We see these things as in passing… we feel them as now. The Master of these sands is he who loves each crystal.”
Iāve never been great at zazen myself. I used to approach the silence as if I were building a fortress, trying to keep the “world” out so I could finally be “spiritual.” I had to let that go. Part of the letting go was changing my relationship to the word “spiritual” to a experience of “Harmony”.
So when you say a pop song breaks in, wonder if that song isn’t a wall but a Gate?
When you sit in the silence and a song arises, it feels like encountering that “rainbow multitude of Lifeās involvement.” That lyric in your head a crystal of sand, a opportunity to “reckon with the moment,” where the silence turns out to be big enough to carry the song.
Your instinct to writing those lyrics out feels like an act of loving the crystal. Acknowledging that right now, the universe is singing a popular tune through you. I don’t think the SandMaster would tell you to be quiet; heād probably just start humming along.
PeterParticipantThomas, I have the same curiosity and fear. Begging the question: what is the etiquette around tattoos?
Some are works of art and I really want to look and hear their story, but I never ask. Caution being the better part of Valor. š
PeterParticipantThanks Thomas. you remind me that the ‘original key’ is always here, just waiting for us to tune the instrument.
I think my own path is a bit of a trinity of Prayer, Meditation, and Contemplation.
Meditation’ is often defined as quieting the mind until thoughts stop, however, Iāve come to see it more as a flow. A act of ‘pondering and treasuring’ that notices how they pass and holding them lightly.
In this flow, Prayer is the opening of the heart; Meditation is the movement; and Contemplation is the silence… I try not to get too wrapped up in those specific labels, though. I donāt want the words to define the experience, only to act as a shorthand for the way the heart opens.
Less Zen, I guess and perhaps more Hermetic – AI describes as:
— Prayer (Opening): Not a petition for “things,” but a turning of the will. It is the Mary-like “Yes” that makes the heart receptive.
— Meditation (Pondering): This is where you “hold words lightly.” It is a rhythmic, imaginative thinking that doesn’t try to “solve” the world, but simply “treasures” the images until they begin to speak.
— Contemplation (Silence): This is the “Virgin Birth” of meaning. The words fall away, the “shore” of language vanishes, and you are left in the Splendor of Silence. It is no longer “about” God; it is the presence of G_d. It is here I wonder that ‘new consciousness’ arises?Iāll be sure to check out that Seals and Crofts song, itās a beautiful reminder that we are all just passing through together.
PeterParticipantIām reminded of Rumiās image of words as waves on a vast sea. Sometimes those waves are gentle, and sometimes they arrive as a storm, like the one Pi (Life of Pi) faces in the middle of the ocean. In the moment, the storm is terrifying as it breaks our rafts and strips us bare. Than in the quiet that follows is a different kind of beauty. Itās the silence of a heart that has stopped fighting the waves and finally learned to breathe with the ocean. Both the storm and the quiet are beautiful, but only when we stop trying to name them and simply learn to float.
“My words are like a ship, and the sea is their meaning. Come to me and I will take you to the depths of spirit.” Rami
“Silence is an ocean. Speech is a river. When the ocean is searching for you, don’t walk into the river. Listen to the ocean.” Rami
‘Heart is sea, language is shore. Whatever sea includes, will hit the shore.’ Rami
PeterParticipantThanks Alessa
Hi Thomas, thank you for that. I agree language is a profound gift and one I think is intimately tied to the gift of consciousness itself. It is indeed the bridge that keeps us from being truly alone.
What I love about poems, and yours was beautiful) and Zen stories is how they invite us to hold that gifts lightly, so the words are less likely to become cages. In my own meditation, Iāve noticed a strange paradox: the very words I use to make my experience conscious can sometimes create a wall against that experience. There have been moments where I wasnāt sure when I was using the words, or when the words were using me.
For example, my relationship with the word Forgiveness, and it is a relationship, actually kept me from the act itself for a long time. The word arrived like a commandment, already shaped by other hands. I found myself bowing to it, forgetting it was mine to rename. Iāve learned that when a word tightens around the heart, no doorway opens.
I once thought I had to heal the past. But Iāve come to see that the past was never the wound, only the mirror. It was the lens I carried that needed tending, a lens made of words that had become too heavy for the truth. When we hold them lightly, the silence beneath them finally begins to breathe.
PeterParticipantHi Alessa -a wonderful lead into to similar thoughts I had – (I’ve been pondering this subject for a few weeks)
āIn the beginning was the Word.ā I have always imagined that Word not as language, but as a living movement⦠creative, spacious, and uncontained.
Into this Word, Adam appears and I imagine him running through the garden with the delighted curiosity of a child, touching creatures gently, laughing as names rise in him like small miracles. āFather,ā he says, breathless, āI called this one hare. Do you like it?ā And I imagine God smiling, not because it is correct but because it is alive. In that moment, naming is participation, a joining in the unfolding music of creation. Nothing is fragile. Nothing is broken, Nothing is judged. Even “wrong” names shine with an unguarded radiance.
But there is another version that lives just as vividly. In this one, Adam returns from that same joyful day only to meet a God whose face has hardened. āNo,ā the voice says. āYou named it wrong; are you trying to brake everythingā¦
Suddenly, the garden tightens. The air thins. The freedom of naming collapses into anxiety, and the Word that once created begins to contain. Naming becomes a duty weighted with the fear of error. This is a different kind of fall, a quiet exile that happens not by leaving Eden, but by losing the relationship to the Word that made Eden open.
Yet the story doesn’t end in exile. I imagine Adam years later, walking the garden with careful steps, still convinced that a misplaced syllable might fracture the world. He kneels beside a trembling creature, and something soft and familiar stirs, the primal urge to greet, to name, to share delight.
For a moment, he braces for the reprimand, for the familiar tightness of judgment. But the garden is quiet. And then, like a memory carried on a breath, he hears it: the warm, untroubled laughter of the first God. The One who delighted in every name, even the awkward ones.
Something loosens. He remembers naming as play; he remembers God as companion; he remembers that nothing was ever fragile. Adam touches the creature and lets the name rise the way it once did, freely, gently, without the fear of breaking creation. And as the name leaves his lips, the world does not shatter.
It inhales. It breathes.
———-
“In the beginning, the Word created; after the fall, words contained; and when remembered, the Word is too alive to speak.”
Sufi wisdom suggests that our deepest suffering is not a lack of doctrine, but forgetfulness, a loss of the original resonance beneath the sound. We have forgotten the intimacy behind the naming.
The path, then, is Remembrance: a return not to a concept, but to a vibration of Being. It is a state of such profound life that to speak it is to diminish it… We do not find the Truth by defining it; we find it by becoming the silence in which it breathes.
And so sometimes the wound is not the past, but the word weāve been using to approach it. And sometimes healing begins not with speaking, but with remembering the silence beneath the speech.
PeterParticipantPrison House of Language
The walls are built of vowels and iron nouns,
A mortar mixed from should and must and when.
I pace the cell while all the world renowns
Arrive as echoes scratching from my pen.I feel a grief without a face
A tidal ache that never finds
Yet lonely is the closest word,
A hollow key that fits no door.I hunger for a truth too soft for speech,
A pulse beneath the grammar of the mind;
But since my youth, Iāve bartered what I reach
For definitions where the lies are signed.The āIā I speak is not the āIā I know,
Just syntax haunting bones it cannot feel;
And what we call a āwoundā can never show
The raw, unworded space that waits to heal.We cease to think the moment we agree
To walk the narrow halls the lexicons command.
To stay within the lines is to be āfreeā
Yet here I am, exiled in my native land.So let the āhurt,ā and āforgiveā fall past;
Let the unfinished sentence hang in open air.
For only when the final word has breathed its last
Will I be found in the silence waiting there.
PeterParticipantWhat surprised me most, in the days after stepping into that room, was realizing that the barrier had never been the past itself. The memories werenāt what kept me circling the same ache. It was my relationship to the words like forgiveness, the weight I had given them, the shape I insisted they take, the way I kept holding them up like a key that refused to turn.
Itās counterintuitive, almost disorienting, to discover that a single word can stand between you and your own healing. But thatās the quiet trick of language: when a word grows rigid, we start mistaking its limits for our own. I had been trying to enter the past through a concept that had long since stopped carrying the life of what it pointed toward.
Only when I set the word down, when I stopped asking it to do what it could not do, did the past begin to soften on its own. The healing didnāt come from naming, but from stepping into the space that appears when naming falls away. The story is simply the moment I realized that the door I couldnāt open was made of language, not memory. And once the word stopped trying to hold what it could never hold, the room behind it finally let me in.
PeterParticipantOn the Word That Would Not Open
There is a room in me where language never learned to walk. I used to think the door was locked, but now I see it was only held shut by the weight of words I carried, all the forgive meās and I should haves pressed together like stones in a satchel.I believed each word was a key. But every time I reached for one, it turned to dust in my hand. So I sat in the doorway of my own silence, too weary to speak, too afraid not to.
One day, while tracing the grooves of an old wound, I whispered the word āforgivenessā the way you whisper the name of someone who left years ago. The word echoed back to me, thin, obedient, harmless. Nothing in it moved.
It was then I understood: The word had become a wall. And I had been kneeling before it, thinking it was a gate. I felt a loneliness then, not the ache of being unseen, but the ache of seeing at last that I had mistaken the symbol for the thing itself.
So I placed the word on the ground, gently, like setting down a cup I no longer needed. It did not break. It simply stopped trying to hold what it could not hold. The silence that followed was not empty. It was spacious, like a lung discovering its first breath. In that space, something shifted, a soft loosening in the center of my being. As if the truth, long patient, had been waiting for me to stop talking.
I realized then that forgiveness is not a word you say, but a room you return to. A room where nothing must be named, and nothing is held against you. Not even the years you spent trying to open a door that was never meant to be opened with language.
I stepped inside. And the moment I did, the loneliness slipped from my shoulders like a garment I no longer needed to wear. In the quiet, I finally felt found.
PeterParticipantI found a word lying in the dust today. It had grown tired of being spoken. When I picked it up, it broke into light just enough to show that the door I kept pushing was only a shadow on the wall. So I walked through the place where the word used to be. On the other side, nothing waited. And somehow, that was the first kindness I had felt in years.
When definitions become the walls that keep our hearts in prison is this not the truest loneliness?
The Word That Bars the Door
These walls are made of languageā¦
vowels mortared with should,
nouns sharpened to a point.There is a grief here
that no syllable can hold,
a tide with no shoreline
except the thin word lonely,
a key that has no door.I have traded my life
for definitions,
for the safety of names
that keep me from the truth
breathing beneath them.The āIā I speak
is only the shadow
of the one who feels.
Every word for āwoundā
is a veil over the wound.And when we walk the path
the dictionary lit for us,
we call it freedomā¦
though every step
shrinks the world.So let āforgivenessā fall away.
Let the sentence collapse
into its own silence.Only thereā¦
where nothing is saidā¦
Will I be foundā¦This falling away is not meant to silence pain, only a doorway Iāve found beneath my words.
The silence is mine; may every heart speak its pain in the way it needs.
PeterParticipantMy first reaction to what James said was that even the idea of āsurrenderingā eventually gets surrendered. Itās not something you do so much as itās something that happens when you stop holding on. Even the ‘you’ dissolves. And yeah, that can absolutely feel like a loss at first.
When I first started meditating, based on what I thought meditation was supposed to be, the silence that met me felt almost indifferent and so painful. Than as my constructs, my stories, and what I believed myself to be started falling away, it honestly felt like I was disappearing too.
But over time I noticed something important: when the constructs fell away⦠I didnāt. There was still a presence in that ānothingness.ā A kind of spacious, quiet awareness… the same stillness AUM rises from and returns to. And in that space, “I” wasnāt abandoned. “I” was held.
From that sense of being held, compassion began to arise on its own. And I realized that the ānothingnessā weāre so afraid of isnāt a loss or a void in the frightening sense. Itās the openness that holds everything. Itās what allows everything to appear and dissolve.
That, to me, is the Love James is pointing to, not an emotional love, but the underlying presence thatās always here when everything else drops away.
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