Thursday, January 16, 2014

Pond face

I am beginning to feel that aside from all the other factors that contribute to your well being (e.g. watermelons and sunshine), good company is the most precious.

You have thoughts, you have a mouth, you have language, you have been made to communicate and you have been doing so ever since your gummy little jaws first parted to scream with pain.

Keeping company is like giving birth to yourself all over again, because in all conversations you are divesting the cloak of silence and expressing what you think, feel and know. You become someone. Others become someone when you talk with them, so keeping company is like manifesting not only yourself, but providing space for others to bring themselves to the surface and be witnessed also. Of course your actions also express your thoughts, feelings and knowledge, but talking offers the opportunity to articulate these things coherently. A person can cry, and I can only guess as to why unless they tell me.

So much of ones self is enshrined in the company they keep. Engaging with people on a surface level provides nothing but a cage to contain your self with bars through which you can offer piecemeal bits of ideas and opinions. To be looked at and listened to and asked questions of provides an arena where you can be recognised, you can explore, question, collaborate. If you offer your ears and eyes to people it's beautiful how others blossom in front of you, and how you act as a body of water in which others can grow and bloom. When you are generous with your self the invaluable gift of good company seems to attract itself to you.





Sunday, January 5, 2014

Humans hug and trees breathe

You can’t hug a wall, because a wall is flat and large so your arms can’t hold it. Walls also have no arms, so they can’t embrace you.
To show a wall that you appreciate it and the building it’s part of, rest the flattest part of you against it. Rest your back against the wall. Leaning on a wall is the best way to show a wall your love. You need to think about how to use your anatomy to express affection that will be recognised by the still, vertical plane of a wall. A lean shows that you’re comfortable, that you plan to be there for a while. These are behaviours walls recognise. Plenty of people lean on walls and don’t realise they are showing affection.


The best way to show a tree your love is to tilt your head up and hyperventilate. Hugging a tree means nothing to a tree whereas carbon dioxide means something to a tree.