“The bottom of the mind is paved
with crossroads,” wrote the French poet Paul
Valéry. This marvelous, mysterious line stirs up the imagination. It
encourages us to think about how on the surface of the mind we may have been
shortchanging ourselves. We may have been snagging ourselves in limited, linear
thinking, even trapping ourselves in mental boxes.
Life is full of
crossroads. We often rush through them without noticing the choices that were
open in a Kairos moment. Or else we see our choices in false absolutes, duty
versus pleasure, good versus bad, black or white. In the deeper mind, we are
ready to take a more spacious view and roam with more freedom in the garden of
forking paths, even to see that Yogi Berra may have spoken truth when he said, “If
you come to a fork in the road, take it.”
Kairomancers take
care of their poetic health by developing a tolerance for ambiguity and a
readiness to see more angles and options than the surface mind perceives. They
grow poetic health by cultivating that “talent for resemblances” that two wise
Greeks, Aristotle and Artemidorus, both held to be the primary qualification
for a dream interpreter — and that is no less a vital prerequisite for
recognizing signs and symbols in waking life.
Mark Twain is
supposed to have said that history rhymes. I don’t know whether he really said
that or not. The words have not been found in the canonical texts of this
wonderfully noncanonical humorist. I do know that life rhymes. We notice
recurring themes and symbols in dreams: running late for the plane, not
prepared for the test, trying to keep the bear out of the living room. In the
same way, we notice that themes and situations recur in everyday life
Pay attention when
the same theme, or symbol, or image comes up again and again, just as you might
pay attention to recurring dreams. When a theme or situation comes at you again
and again in dreams, that is often a signal that there is a message coming
through that you need to read correctly — and that, beyond merely getting the
message, you need to do something about it, to take action. It is the same with
rhyming sequences and repeating symbols in waking life.
When you begin to
notice a repetition of a certain situation in life, you may say, “Okay, we’re
going around the track again. Maybe I want to make sure that I’m not just going
around and around in my life in circles of repetition, but that I am on a
spiral path.” Which would mean that each time life loops around to where you
think you were before, you’ve risen to a slightly higher level, so you can see
things with greater awareness and, hopefully, make better choices.
There is a whole
education in the art of poetic living in Baudelaire’s poem “Correspondances”:
La
Nature est un temple où de vivants piliers
Laissent
parfois sortir de confuses paroles;
L’homme
y passe à travers des forêts de symboles
Qui
l’observent avec des regards familiers.
Nature is a temple whose living
pillars
Sometimes let slip mysterious
messages;
We walk here through a forest of
symbols
That watch us with knowing eyes.
[My free translation]
Baudelaire, the
urban dandy, has it exactly right: we are walking in a forest of living symbols
that are looking at us. When we are in a state of poetic health, we understand
that “the imagination is the most scientific of the faculties, because it is
the only one to understand the universal analogy, or that which a mystical
religion calls correspondence.”
Les
parfums, les couleurs et les sons se répondent.
Perfumes, colors, and sounds
correspond.
Text adapted from Sidewalk Oracles: Playing with Signs, Symbols and Synchronicity in Everyday Life by Robert Moss. Published by New World Library.
Portrait of Baudelaire by Gustave Courbet (1848)
In ancient Indian teachings the conceptual mind had always been under close scrutiny.It was considered indirect because unlike sense minds, was never able to recognize objects directly. It uses language, names objects nad in that way keeps distance between us and a "real world."
ReplyDeleteSerge Charchoune, one of the French avantgard painters with Slavic roots, somewhere said "I like most to speak languages I don´t speak at all." For me it beautifully resonates with the state of being in which words are not known but flow efortlessly. Charchoune was called by his friends a "modest loner" and he must have been. In his poetic loneliness he could step beyond linear mind and create paintings without words and yet speaking volumes to all who can listen to pure silence.