You are viewing a single comment's thread from:
RE: 🎨 Space-Warp Machine - original painting + drawing
I have noticed a curious sensation that I get while observing your artwork. Well, my interpretation at least. The bodies 'trapped' in the woody looking structures feels like a visual manifestation of the 'normal' perception that we have as humans that we're bound and constrained by the habit patterns of the mind.
It's funny because I would have had a completely different perspective 10 years ago before intensive vipassana/concentration meditation practice.
To me, the artwork personifies a strong sense of being stuck because of an incorrect perception of solidified self. But of course I am projecting. You probably have a completely different idea about it!
I hope that didn't sound like a pile of nonsense.
@nuthman, your thoughts absolutely make sense to me. I see as one of the biggest challenges of our human experience the way how we perceive and deal with our past and memories. The older we get the heavier our past experiences seem to constrain us. It's like the past is clogging our perception of reality, limiting our creativity, rendering us rigid and inflexible. Most people don't deal with it at all, they just petrify. Others confuse letting go with destruction and in their attempt to free themselves they keep burning and destroying everything in their lives they believe is restraining them. I believe the only way to free oneself is to deeply understand that the only reality is the present moment.
Absolutely! One of the first things that I noticed when I started to seriously investigate my reality was how difficult it is to stay with the present moment - and how peaceful it feels to just to exist right now. And of course, as you said - this instant is all that really exists.
And yes, I wholeheartedly agree with you on how past experiences constrain us. When I was a kid, it was as if the negativity of the world just bounced right off of me. I happily continued on with whatever I was doing, just to show people that they were wrong. The world relentlessly tries to beat the creativity out of you until it finally starts to chip it away. You ever notice the bizarre satisfaction that people get when they tell you that you'll fail at something - and then you do? "I told you so!"
I suppose it's the whole misery loves company thing.
I think my current goal is to try to deprogram my mind in an attempt to process information like I did as a child. Insight Meditation seems to be leading me in that direction. More than anything I would just love to get back that feeling of wonder, creativity and excitement about life that I had in my youth.
The exhausting back and forth between reliving the past and panicking over the future seems to be at the root of all suffering and misery in this life.