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Liz Reiser's avatar

Thank you for this.

I have been reading Jack Kornfield's, A Path with Heart, and the following reminds me of what your mother may have experienced He wrote,

"I encountered a powerful image of the connection of these two teachers [Buddha and Jesus] in Vietnam, during the war years. In spite of active fighting in the area, I was drawn to visit a temple built by a famous master known as the Coconut Monk on an island in the Mekong Delta. When our boat arrived, the monks greeted us and showed us around. They explained to us their teachings of peace and nonviolence. Then they took us to one end of the island where on top of a hill was an enormous sixty-foot-tall statue of a standing Buddha. Just next to Buddha stood an equally tall statue of Jesus. They had their arms around each other’s shoulders, smiling. While helicopter gunships flew by and war raged around them, Buddha and Jesus stood there like brothers expressing compassion and healing..."

Kornfield, Jack. A Path with Heart (pp. 40-41). Random House Publishing Group. Kindle Edition.

I think that art, both the experiencing of it and the act of creating, can be a way of empathizing with what we see and experience enough to try to bring it to life and share that feeling/experience with others.

To a new year of connecting...

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Becky's avatar

It is my birthday today, and to start the day immersed in a beautiful poem that touched my heart was magical. So many images and phrases I connected with. I read it out loud several times, and I copied Nye’s poem into my journal and it is one I will return to. I shared it with my children too - felt like a gift for the new year to share it with them. Very happy to be here.

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