mahalo for your writing, brother michael. i really enjoy this new format of yours.
re: leftovers--
some of us have actually felt futures and/or deep past (before birth), our own or collective. whether these manifest as daydreams, dreams, visions, holotropic experiences, or just a vague nagging feeling of something more. contemporary philosopher charles eisenstein calls these (positive possible futures), "the more beautiful world our hearts know is possible." for some, our idealism seems foolish or absurd. "how do you know that's possible?" well, i know it because i've seen it. i've experienced it, at least a small morsel enough to know that it's real.
to live our lives in a way which puts us squarely in service to such a vision of the future... isn't that what we all want, really? to dedicate our lives to something great that we know is possible? food for thought.
mahalo for your writing, brother michael. i really enjoy this new format of yours.
re: leftovers--
some of us have actually felt futures and/or deep past (before birth), our own or collective. whether these manifest as daydreams, dreams, visions, holotropic experiences, or just a vague nagging feeling of something more. contemporary philosopher charles eisenstein calls these (positive possible futures), "the more beautiful world our hearts know is possible." for some, our idealism seems foolish or absurd. "how do you know that's possible?" well, i know it because i've seen it. i've experienced it, at least a small morsel enough to know that it's real.
to live our lives in a way which puts us squarely in service to such a vision of the future... isn't that what we all want, really? to dedicate our lives to something great that we know is possible? food for thought.
grateful for your musings