a pregnant pause

A pregnant pause..........is a metaphorical pregnancy that builds tension, in communication used to  build suspense.  In expanding the notion beyond communication it becomes a moment full of possibilities, full of as yet unrealized creative power. 

All creative processes are preceded by such a period - when ideas are churning, perhaps somewhat chaotically, awaiting order by the creator.  The pregnant pause may be understood as the quiet before the creative storm, or the perhaps somewhat random accumulation of information and materials from which a new creation will be born.  This period feels full of energy, full of impatience about the tension between the lack of order of all the accumulated ideas or materials, and the desire to build artistic order from it.  The intriguing thing about the pregnant pause is that the outcome is as yet unknown, yet is full of potential and possibilities.

It's not about the destination but the journey, as you know.  The pregnant pause is the time before the journey actually begins.  It's the point when you revve up the engine but have to hold back until it's time to start.  Winter is a pregnant pause before spring's burst of growth and unfolding.   Standing in in my kitchen in the evening, contemplating my dinner supplies and knowing I need to make a meal from what's in the fridge, is a pregnant pause.  I can create any number of meals from the many available ingredients, it's up to me to decide which ingredients to use, and what to make with them.

Culturally we are somewhat in the midst of a pregnant pause, a tumultuous time full of change, chaos, possibilities, chance for reconfiguration and redefiniiton, an incredibly creative time full of potential and possibilities.  What is your dream for the future?

delicious words

Words can be expressive beyond their attributed meaning.  While we associate a specific meaning with the word flour, the word itself is not exactly remarkable.  But there are words beyond those mundane ones like flour, or dog, or tree.

An onomatopoeia is the first kind of word that comes to mind when I'm thinking of fun words, delicious words, words that taste good in my mouth when I say them out loud, or that are delightful in my mind when I read them.  An onomatopoeia is a word based on the sound it expresses.  Yikes is such a word - it sounds like lightening strikes.  When you hear meow you can imagine that cute kitty sidling up to your leg and talking to you, and you can hear that croaking frog croaking when you read the word ribbit.

Of course there are synonyms for the word delicious, and they are delicious in their own right.  Taste them in your mouth, slowly - luscious, scrumptious, or ambrosial.

Then there are delicious words that convey such a wonderful experiences that I call them delicious.  Enjoy these words for wonderful feelings - exuberant, tickled, giddy, glorious, euphoric, on cloud nine, in seventh heaven, elated, and enraptured.  Wouldn't you want to feel like that?  Now savor some words for wonderful sights - exquisite, fantastic, stupendous, wondrous, and sublime.   Just leaves me speechless....

To close, here are words of mysterious meaning because they are so uncommon that we don't know them, hence can't use them.  Enjoy these funny sounding words -  absquatulate, bobsy-die, floccinaucinihilipilification, haruspex, kinnikinnick, luculent, ogdoad, peely-wally, snollygoster, and finally triskaidekaphobia.  Just delicious....

 

watch the millennials

Did you know that creativity and innovation thrive much more under challenge and chaos than under privilege?  Did you know that the plague in middle age Europe helped to propel the Renaissance because it completely upset the apple cart?  And that the wealth and stability of Golden Ages promotes complacency?  Eric Weiner says so in his The Geography of Genius, which I am currently reading.

This is of relevance to our current cultural, political, and environmental drama, and seems to promise more creativity and innovation than in the relatively stable decades we have come out of.  As a matter of fact, as we watch the deconstruction of a very long yang-dominated era, an era characterized by warfare, domination, and competition, things seem to become quite a bit more messy out there.  This is a climate (pun intended) ripe for birthing new values, new ways of doing things, and leaving outmoded conventions behind.

The millennials are showing the way.  They've got it.  Look to the younger generation how they do things, how they think.  Tiny houses, cash instead of credit, sharing, less stuff and more sustainability, animal rights, women's rights, minority rights, hour exchanges, less work and more play - these are all examples of what's to come.  Sounds good to me.

 

inspirited

            I had encountered this word previously in an eco-spiritual context.  Now I read it again in Braiding Sweetgrass, Robin Wall Kimmerer's melding of her Native American background's eco-spiritual understanding of the natural world and her scientific education as a botanist.

            The best of both worlds, in my perception, involves indeed the broadening of our scientific worldview, which is naked and somewhat devoid on its own, and doesn't tell the whole story.  We are slowly coming around to understanding that.

            As an example, Kimmerer tells of a two-year scientific investigation into the link between depletion of sweetgrass in particular areas and the lack of harvesting it for the purpose of weaving baskets in that same area.  Put differently, there is a link between ongoing tending to and harvesting of sweetgrass, and its increased vigor and growth.  This is something science can't explain because, according to its paradigm, harvesting equals depletion, not the other way round.  Yet Native Americans, and all who have a green thumb and speak to their flowers, or pets for that matter, or biodynamic farmers who farm "spiritually" and "homeopathically," know that we are connected to Nature, we are in ongoing communication with Nature, and that Nature is inspirited in some way, not dead.  In order to live sustainably we must recognize the reciprocal relationship with Nature we exist in, and the inspiritedness of it.  It's a win-win for both side.