LIVING TOGETHER
We are like children in the
master's violin shop
not yet allowed to touch the tiny planes or the rare
wood
but given brooms to sweep the farthest corners
of the room, to gather
shavings, mop spilled resins
and watch with apprehension the tender
curves
emerging from apprenticed hands. The master
rarely shows
himself but whenever he does he demonstrates
a concentrated ease so different
from the willful accumulation
of experience we have come to expect,
a
stripping away, a direct appreciation of all the elements
we are bound, one
day, to find beneath our hands.
He stands in our minds so clearly now, his
confident back
caught in the light from pale clerestory windows
and we
note the way the slight tremor of his palms
disappears the moment they
encounter wood.
In this light we hunger for
maturity, see it not as stasis
but a form of love. We want the
stillness and confidence
of age, the space between self and all the objects
of the world
honoured and defined, the possibility that everything
left
alone can ripen of its own accord,
all passionate transformations arranged
only
through innocent meetings, one to another,
the way we see resin
allowed to seep into the wood
in the wood's own secret time. We intuit
our natures
becoming resonant with one another according
to the grain of
the way we are made. Nothing forced
or wanted until it ripens in our
own expectant hands.
But for now, in the busy room, we stand in the
child's
first shy witness of one another, and see ourselves again,
gladly
and always, falling in love with our future.
~ David Whyte ~
(Everything is Waiting for
You)
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