Inviting what you cannot
What can you invite in others
that they can do and you cannot?
:- Doug.
The baton rising
brings coherence
to tuning of instruments
two senses engage
sense is engendered
:- Doug.
How are you greatest talents related to your biggest awkwardness?
:- Doug.
My art is poetic conversation. Poetic as a way to get beyond the easy and the shallow. Conversation as a way of stirring up new possibilities.
:- Doug.
What might we gain if we could converse with old souls of the future?
:- Doug.
There are many human organizations, but not enough fulfill human roles.
:- Doug.
Here is fruit of my life: an apple, a pear, a banana. Inside the food, and central, the seed. Imperfectly round, the skin touches vaster outsides. I grow and then ripen and die. So much to touch, to bring inside. So much with which to exchange.
:- Doug.
Over my life so far I appear to have been gathering fuel and calibrating my trajectory. Now is launch.
:- Doug.
Words are imprecise conveyors of meaning. Why else write a whole book to express one idea?
:- Doug.
There are light blue skies all about, and not much movement at the moment. The oak leaves next to me are deep green with many shadows and some sitting in the sunlight. Most are waiting their turn.
:- Doug.
Metaphor has unexpected value to us: to our spirituality. I saw that Clean Language questions, What kind of {path} is that? What else is there about {being rather than doing}?, can deepen our understanding of own spirituality. We can ask ourselves.
That leads us to how we think about grandchildren: who are we in our relationship to ourselves as well as to the eleventh generation? Who are we in relation to our immediate grandchildren, and what even can we discover about our spouses?
:- Doug.