A page from one of my journals – I am using an old St James Bible
Now is the time to remember that all you do is sacred – Hafiz
All of life is to be held in anointed hands – Joan Chittister
An awareness of the sanctity and sacred nature of our daily lives and ourselves, lead to an inner blooming and creativity that flows over into everything we touch and do.
It is important to have a daily practise which brings you to a place of standstill; a place of contemplation and silence. Repeating any practise by rote, or as a habit, becomes very lifeless and pointless.
One wonderful exercise that I was introduced to many years ago, is the practise of Lectio Divina. Lectio Divina is when you take a very short piece of writing and contemplate on it. It can be a poem that speaks to you, or a piece from A Course in Miracles, or any other book that inspires you.
You can choose a poem for the week and take a verse per day. Start the day by reading the verse over and over. You can then take it into meditation with you.
Or take it with you on your morning walk, repeating it as you walk. When one word or phrase jumps out at you or starts to create a ‘shimmer’, then repeat only this word or verse.
After your meditation, or your walk, take a piece of paper and draw something. Anything. No judgement. Just let it flow. Use colours, or different pieces of paper, or cut outs from magazines. Over time you can collect a cache of images and crayons and pencils to play with.
Create a journal and work in it daily.
Becoming enlightened, that is, waking up to the real world behind the veil of your mind, takes consistent commitment; it demands discipline, daily work, daily focusing on what is spoken within yourself with such a small little voice that it is drowned out by your thoughts and by life.
In order to grow this small voice into a thundering river of inspiration and intense vitality, you have to nurture it, play with it, make art, and change your routine.
Silence is never merely the cessation of words ….. Rather it is the pause that holds together – indeed, it makes sense of – all the words, both spoken and unspoken. Silence is the glue that connects our attitudes and out actions. Silence is the fullness, not emptiness; it is not absence, but the awareness of a presence. – John Chryssavgis
I picked a piece for your Lectio Divina for this week. Please use it daily. Make a journal. You can use any exercise book, or an old diary, or make your own journal. write free flow thoughts, a poem,a song.
IN SILENCE by Thomas Merton Lodewicus Maria
Be still listen to the stones of the wall. be silent, they try to speak your
Name. Listen To the living walls. Who are you? Who Are you? Whose Silence are you?
Who (be quiet) Are you (as these stones Are quiet). Do not Think of what you are Still less of What you may one day be. Rather be what you are (but who?) be The unthinkable one You do not know.
O be still, while You are still alive, And all things live around you Speakng (I do not hear) to your own being, Speaking by the Unkown That is in you and in themselves.
‘I will try, like them To be my own silence: And this is difficult. The whole World is secretly on fire. The stones Burn, even the stones They burn me. How can a man be still or Listen to all things burning? How can he dare To sit with them when All their silence Is on fire?”
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