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Rich Day's avatar

LOVE the community comments you’ve shared here!

And on the Incantation, it makes me think of a book I love, written by Hemingway. I’m not really a Hemingway fan, but he wrote one book that is in the top tier of my favorite books of all. I think it is possible that there is a book, or perhaps a piece of music that is the piece of all pieces that the author was meant to write, like for John Williams the Theme to Schindler’s List. For Hemingway it is “The Old Man and the Sea”

Filled with the humanity of self talk the old fisherman confronts the elements and his age, and the fading of his strength. How more human can we be than this inner voice that speaks.

I have an inner voice. I call this aspect of inward reason and reflection, “The little man who lives in my head”. Most of the time he sleeps, but he awakens in times of trouble, confusion, or despair. “He” is that part of me that is a total emulsion of self compassion and self criticism, inseparable. He raises question that I had not thought of, and patiently waits for my answer, then leads me on to his next question, until at the end, I’ve learned something. The key ingredient is compassion, and because it is there, I feel he is lifting my feet back on the correct pathway, and is never bothered by how obtuse I can be. Anyway, I love this book by Hemingway, and I love those troubled moments when my own form of self talk awakens.

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Juliana's avatar

Hi there, when I first read the poem, especially the beginning, I felt a whole lot of fear. I think I have tortured myself with reason... that it is that that has fuelled a lot of the shame and worry that have dominated my life. Reason itself has felt like a cage condemning me. As I read through the rest though, especially the mention of poetry as an ally, and learning about Philos-Sophia and Wolfgang Smith, it brought to me the thought that perhaps it isn't reason that has been the difficulty, but instead the doctrine mine has followed and the lack of art and heart. I do think reason without heart, curiosity and imagination often is a loveless, lifeless prison, that misses the beauty and wonder that is present in our world, each other, reality - especially the bittersweet kind... and that reason can be hijacked. But I now also see how as an ally with curiosity, heart and imagination, it has an important role to play, as we humans navigate the world. Especially its' ability to remain neutral... approach everything as new, rather than tainted by all the baggage which can obscure the present moment.

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