Sunday, October 4, 2015

Welcome Back

The hiatus is over.  It has been too long, but the past couple of years have been filled with wonderful changes and serendipity.  I learned, among many things, to come to terms with uncertainty and yet to also simultaneously remember and project the core of who you are.  The latter is very important.  In fact, it is the singular KEY to Everything.  No other tenet in my life has had so much evidence supporting it, and held so much infallibility.  Time and time again, it holds true -- no matter the circumstance.

What have you done lately to get back in touch with your true self?



"How can a man know himself?  It is a dark, mysterious business: if a hare has seven skins, a man may skin himself seventy times seven times without being able to say, "Now this is truly you; that is no longer your outside."  It is also an agonizing, hazardous undertaking thus to dig into oneself, to climb down toughly and directly into the tunnels of one's being.  How easy it is thereby to give oneself injuries such that no doctor can heal.  Moreover, why should it even be necessary given that everything bears witness to our being -- our friendships and animosities, our glances and handshakes, our memories and all that we forget, our books as well as our pens.  For the most important inquiry, however, there is a method.  Let the young soul survey its own life with a view of the following question: "What have you truly loved thus far?  What has ever uplifted your soul, what has dominated and delighted it at the same time?"  Assemble these revered objects in a row before you and perhaps they will reveal a law by their nature and their order: the fundamental law of your very self.  Compare these objects, see how they complement, enlarge, outdo, transfigure one another; how they form a ladder on whose steps you have been climbing up to yourself so far; for your true self does not lie buried deep within you, but rather rises immeasurably high above you, or at least above what you commonly take to be your I."

- Nietzsche, from the essay Schopenhauer as Educator




Peace.
SM