Creativity Magazine

Tangled

Posted on the 17 September 2015 by Rarasaur @rarasaur
Originally written 09-25-14, from Central California's Women's Facility, a state prison colloquially known as Chowchilla. It was posted by Dave in November, and turned to a draft on my return. I wasn't going to repost it, but it was the message I think I needed to hear today. It should be tagged #HowIWidow, but as I wasn't one at the time of writing, well...

I believe in fixed points of time. The idea that some things are inevitable.

Yes. Free will is rampant, and - yes - daily choices are made at the micro-level in the span of a nanosecond, over and over again.

But in the ever-evolving tapestry of life, some points are tied up by fate in advance, destined to make a knotted appearance no matter what the thread before it chooses to be or do.

A butterfly may decide to flap into a tornado, and all of China could jump up and down at the same time, and a little girl could blow dandelion fluff straight into a morning rain cloud, but none of these things would stop the world from sneezing- or make it quake- if the movement or stillness was intended to be a fixed point of time.

Moments, like choices, are sometimes unnoticed and often small, but never unimportant. Some of the most vital, ancient knots of destiny pass us by in a precious blink.

A breath of life. A step forward. A signature. A smile.

We can perceive the coming of these inevitable moments by paying attention to the appearance of extraordinary patterns in ordinary life. No matter how many threads appear- or how different they are- the closer to the core of kismet-kissed knot, the more they interrupt each other's stories. Tangles stand out. Maybe not at a cosmic level, but definitely from our solitary view- the perspective of one frayed part of one small string.

In those moments, I find comfort.

From my micro-view of Everything Ever, I can see that nothing I did threw life-as-we-know-it wildly off course.

You have probably experienced the phenomenon too. It works like this:

On Monday, you dream of yellow roses for no good reason. Maybe you've never even seen a yellow rose.

On Tuesday, a stranger whistles "Yellow Rose of Texas" till you want to step on his toe to make it stop.

Later that day, your car breaks down and you wait on a road you've never traveled- only to find yourself right beside a wild yellow rose bush. It makes you smile. In that moment, you find intuitive understanding. This is your part in the knot.

The string of yellow roses was just temporarily twisted into your path, held tightly next to your journey. A glorious glitch in the Universe's great show.

And you had front row seats.

I've experienced these twists with alarming frequency lately and it's made me wonder how many glitches the dinosaurs witnessed before confronted with the fatal pop that faded them from emperors to memories.

Destiny is happily ambivalent to the casualties of their manifestations. But that's a worry best left to a more connected strand, or better yet- the Weaver-
the maker of looms-
the mother of the Fates herself.

The best I can do is string along and not be frayed down by the passing or fixing of time. And- when lucky enough to catch the Fates at work- bear witness to the journeys threaded through my own, take notice, and applaud.

Casualties aside, destiny deserves all the credit due any great artist.

Fate is a marvelous choreographer, and life is a frightfully wondrous- sometimes heartbreakingly shocking- show.

_______________________

Can you whistle songs? Do you like yellow roses?


Back to Featured Articles on Logo Paperblog

Paperblog Hot Topics