| "A Year in the Life" | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| Reflecting on a year on the road - what does it mean? | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Since I get this question everywhere; thus far, my favorite places include: - Antarctica: the sheer desolation and vastness of the icefields, glaciers and mountains force us to recognize the limited geography of our own minds and worlds. - Serengeti/Ngorongoro Crater: National Geographic comes to life here with every large wild animal you had as stuff toys when a child. The horizon to horizon wildebeast migration boggles the mind. - Namibia: the red painted desert landscapes and starry skies, juxtaposed with the German heritaged towns come as a hidden surprise in Southern Africa. - Antigua and Oaxaca: (Guatemala & Mexico, respectively) - these old Spanish colonial towns offer respites from the grueling third-world travel of these poverty stricken countries and harken back to a more sophisticated lifestyle, albeit of the ruling class. Time Time plays its funny Hermes tricks on us all the time. From dragging interminably and to disappearing imperceptibly. Time and space is very much a paradigm in our minds - the interstices of our relationship with the outside world brought to us through our five limited senses. The mind easily slips these bonds. |
I perceive my days as ranging from mind-blowing overload to mind-numbing boredom. Yet as the trip progressed, I allowed my mind to drift on its moorings, giving out more leash, paying out more line - letting it meander along it's subtle path, with me as silent, often baffled, observer. I witnessed scenes from my past, reliving and feeling into past loves, past mistakes, past triumphs, past joys, and past despairs. I reminisce endlessly about friends and good times in the past, from grade school to the Marine Corps to golfing with buddies in New York. Good times bring a warm glow in rose-tinted memories, paradoxically, even bad memories' hard cutting edge dulls in retrospect. With each visit to the past I gain greater clarity into the meaning of each, at a personal and an archetypal level. Understanding that every experience carries both layers; and by freeing myself from the narrow personal aspect and embracing the eternal and universal, I came into a greater understanding of the harmony and natural rythyms of the world around me. As counting angels on the head of a pin, how much time can pass in any instant? Is that time well used or carelessly discarded? I am convinced it all depends on how conscious we are during each passing moment, summarized in the Zen proverb: BE HERE NOW but continued on the next page. |
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| © Copyright 2006 Michael W. Seto. All rights reserved. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||