
Some friends live in this farm setting near Bucyrus, Kansas. The hay bales are actually "cover" for paintball, but they add atmosphere nonethless!
Culture, photos, life's nagging questions. Books, coffee, spirituality. With trashtalk thrown in absolutely free.
God said, “LET THERE BE LIGHT...”
Ken and April had heard the rumors. His relatives were always making allusions, vague as they were dark, about his parents, The Builder, and The House. Just jealous old people, Ken would shrug. The estate snapshots were what stopped him short, captivated him. When he surveyed the house, unseen since infancy, he couldn’t help himself. This is the place they say is tainted? Haunted by grandeur, maybe. And then the deeds of property had been unearthed.
For me there are no “good old days.” I don’t look over my shoulder much as a rule. Once you’ve stared a troll or harpy in the eye—much less a dragon—memories are like old debts, best forgotten. But my tongue outruns me. There is something you should know about dragons.
Walking the Talk
I talk a lot about life's BitterSweetness, but mostly in terms of allusion. I say, "Time has a bittersweet quality," or "Guess how sorrow and joy converged today?" But if BitterSweetness is as inescapable as I make it out to be, shouldn't we be proactive? I mean, wouldn't this phenomenon have implications for living—not merely referential, but operative? I think it would.
Here are a few thoughts to get us started, some guidelines for the BitterSweet life. But to avoid overwhelming the blog with a 24-point outline, I'll be posting my thoughts one "article" at a time. So pull on your battered thinking caps and precede at your leisure. Here's the first:
::1: Ask hard questions of life.
And sooner rather than later. Ingrained in the bittersweet ethos is an impulse to account for both good and evil, darkness and light. There's no use in barricading ourselves off from apparent mysteries, paradoxes, puzzles or contradictions—often, the heart of bittersweetness lies in such places. So be an persistent interrogator on every consequential front. Consider, for example, spirituality (Is the soul eternal?), ethics (What is the morality of cloning?), and, inevitably, personal decisions (Should I break up with my boyfriend?).
Don't be naive about truth and consequences. We're in this game for more than laughs. Ultimately, realize that all questions—and answers—have spiritual ramifications, determined by how you answer—or ignore—life's first order questions. Who am I? Where am I from? Why am I here? As Einstein queried, "Is the world a friendly or unfriendly place?" These inquiries refuse to remain shelved.
Update: Jump to "article 2."
If you're wondering why bittersweetness is a good thing, or if it's really a discernible phenomenon, I refer you to the "must read" posts on the sidebar.
We have become a people with an aversion to quiet and an uneasiness with being alone.
Few men truly know themselves as they really are. Most people have seen themselves in a looking glass, but there is another looking glass, which gives true reflections, into which few men look.