It starts with a question. A hope or desire. It starts
with the feeling that growth is imminent, that things are going to change. Then
you plug that question, hope, or desire into the machine, the machine of
self-discovery which turns using the cogs that you have built. One cog might be
your yoga practice, another meditation, another, your daily walk or run. And don’t
turn the machine off at night. Pay attention to your dreams. And when you wake
up in the morning, continue holding this question in your mind and heart. As
you carry this inquiry throughout your day, it becomes the practice of your
life, it becomes a living prayer. It becomes the way through which start you
start to pay attention to the world. Poetry is merely the sound of cogs
turning. And there’s maintenance. Daily (or more) you’ve got to come to your
mat, meditation cushion, your chosen craft (woodworking, poetry, dance,
whatever) that engages your creativity, your talents, your insight. Part of
maintenance is to keep the cogs clean by dusting them of fear, worry,
negativity, and untruth. Then listen. Regularly find a place where everything
can be quiet, where the ripples on the water can subside and you can see down to
your own depths, even for a few minutes a day.
Eventually, you will gain new insight, often in ways you
hadn’t expected. You’ll come up with new questions, hopes or desires. You’ll
plug them, too, into the machine and you’ll realize that your whole life, this
living prayer, is one constant flow of self-discovery. Maybe the process is
more important than the inquiry. Maybe to be human is to ask the question, “What?”
And through the process, the jigsaw puzzle of your life will start to materialize
and come into focus.
Like a jigsaw puzzle the image sometimes doesn’t materialize
in any particular order. Eudora Welty said, “The events in our lives happen in
a sequence in time, but in their significance to ourselves they find their own
order, a timetable not necessarily--perhaps not possibly--chronological. The
time as we know it subjectively is often the chronology that stories and novels
follow: it is the continuous thread of revelation.”
Join me this week on your mat with your question, hope,
or desire as we all plug it into the machine and co-participate in this continuous
thread of revelation.
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