Editor's Picks |
Crazy Wisdom
Legend has it that once a sage has passed a certain point on the spiritual journey, all wisdom becomes 'crazy wisdom.' What I think this means is that the sage has reached the point of knowing that she/he knows nothing for sure and besides, the only things worth knowing were already inside her/him when he was born. Sort of a "it's all here, all now" carpe diem kind of wisdom. I grow more certain of this as time goes by.
Assistant Editor Izzy, ready for lunch break |
Matisse
The Purple Robe, Henri Matisse |
Everything you can and should have in a great piece of writing -- point of view, subject, talent, texture, character -- is there in a great painting as well. Sometimes I literally shiver with delight when I'm looking at a Matisse creation. Looking at this right now makes me want to run outside to the garage into my newly created art studio and whip out the paints and brushes. Look, draw, choose, enter, commune....well, you know the rest...crazy wisdom calling!
Suza
Sometimes crazy wisdom is lurking right around the corner, just open a book and there it is. Suza Francina, 66, is someone I deeply admire and a couple of years struck up a friendly email correspondence with her about her yoga teaching and writing workshops. I visited her studio last time I was in Ojai where she specializes in yoga for Wisdom's Edge-age women. A follower of the late, great yoga master B.K.S. Iyengar, she's quite the mover and shaker in her adopted hometown of Ojai, California where she was at one time the mayor. She's got several books out including The New Yoga for Healthy Aging which has a dedication page with a quote from Malchia Olshan who reminds us to "Start your morning with yoga, wear beads while baking, make brownies and enjoy life!!" (I did the wearing beads part this morning, I generally do my yoga in the evening and am taking a pass on the brownies). Suza's The New Yoga For People Over 50: A Comprehensive Guide for Midlife and Older Beginners inspires, entertains, uplifts on lots of levels, reminding us all that with a yoga practice, a whole new life can begin. Here's a review:
Yoga is a gift for older people. One who studies yoga in the later years gains not only health and happiness, but also a freshness of mind since yoga gives one a bright outlook on life. One can look forward to a satisfying, more healthful future rather than looking back into the past. With yoga, a new life begins, even if started later. Yoga is a rebirth which teaches one to face the rest of one's life happily, peacefully, and courageously.
-- Geeta S. Iyengar, YOGA, A Gem For Women
With artist and humanitarian Adele Seronde at Sedona Arts Center |
Adele
Adele Seronde is a lovely 90-year-old artist I met last year at the Sedona Arts Center's reception and retrospective of her work. She looks super next to one of her paintings of our red rocks here in Sedona and I was so pleased to have a few minutes to chat with her at the show, she gave me hope that class, talent, courtesy and generosity of spirit were not things of the past. Renewed my sense that certain individuals who have spent years cultivating a sense of connection with a higher sensibility can make a real difference in the lives of so many. She started Gardens For Humanity and writes searing poetry about her love of nature. That's her book of poems on the stack in the photo up there, Living Bridge. I especially like Sacred Voices, a paen to the red rock country where we live:
Sacred Voices
By Adele Seronde
I can believe tall spirits touched this sky
tangential to fire and finding it
imprisoned the holy flame forever in these cliffs.
I can believe these mountains cry
to all the reaching citadels of sun
and hold their bent prism
of rainbow to the storm.
Who are the answering voices of our shadow fate?
Where are the speaking cauldrons of our lives?
I can believe tall spirits cleanse--in torrential rains--
the inertia of our dreams and quiet
the aching Earth
with new fecund seed.
Paulo
My good friend Kris, the artist, kindly sent me a copy of Paulo Coelho's book Aleph, the story of a spiritual seeker's zigzag journey to enlightenment. She was certain I would like it and she was right. Supposedly based on the author Paulo Coelho's own life, this book is a great read, a sort of fictive memoir (I don't know, is there such a genre?) with a solid narrative voice that hooks you from the get go. Sometimes I grow weary of first person 'how it was, what happened, how it is now' tales, but here is a story of the transformation quest in fictional form and its message has the power to resonate. This excerpt has crazy wisdom written all over it:
In magic--and in life--there is only the present moment, the now. You can't measure time the way you measure the distance between two points. "Time" doesn't pass. We human beings have enormous difficulty in focusing on the present; we're always thinking about what we did, about how we could have done it better, about the consequences of our actions, and about why we didn't act as we should have. Or else we think about the future, about what we're going to do tomorrow, what precautions we should take, what dangers await us around the next corner, how to avoid what we don't want and how to get what we have always dreamed of. -- Paulo Coelho
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