Experience,
when fully encountered,
is the grind of eventfulness.
That list of the hundred things
that simply have to be done
before death
with a kind of rigor,
that somehow qualifies one
as having lived a full life
yet perceptually etched
in movie like full recall
until memory fails
in its full task
of enhancement.
Experience, when fully assumed,
is the grand illusion
of spectatorship.
That experience is happening
as if it were happening to you,
sort of an outside-in type of job.
Something like
the report from our skin.
Namely we are over-focused
on surface information
by orientation
and yet quizzically challenged
by skin’s representation
from the inside-out.
That is to say,
we can easily account
for bruise, rash, or cut
but are challenged by
blush, tingle, or flush.
Experience, when full attended,
is the past confining the present.
The tasks of proof, documentation,
accountability, and authenticity
can fully consume
as an experience style.
It can become a form
of custodial imprisonment
just keeping the experience story
alive and lively to oneself.
Experience, when fully indulged,
seems dedicated
to prove its worth
by identification,
even if this is a manner
of duplication
that has become so primary
as to be just task and habit
tending towards repetition
as story strokes
formulated to be told.
And yet,
experience, when fully expressed,
is the art of gratefulness.
Yet gratefulness is not
a passive receptive state.
There is no time in gratefulness.
It isn’t a pause and reflect existence.
Gratefulness is a permission
to be as if channeled from on high.
And that gratefulness is upping
the self-presence in the moment
as if a radiance is put forth
in reverence to be wholly share.
No comments:
Post a Comment