Thursday, April 25, 2019

the Rubric

The sound of art is found in God's voice.
I possess the art of sound in mine.
I often wonder it out loud in my mind.
But you cannot hear it.
Only touch.
It is a scope that nears its target.
And is whispering in doubt...
Like a prayer.
It entitles me to find where it is
God might dwell.
What it is
that God may feel.
Quite a curious thought,
into imagining the feelings of god.
Whether good or not or whether or not bad.
To imagine feelings is a powerful concept.
The actions which make up sound.
Not just of god but of songs.
Songs make you feel and feed off nostalgia.
What does god do to you,
to make you feel,
to make you wonder.
What does it sound like.
It sounds like speaking in gods voice.
Every little thing being gods.
To learn how to speak.
Speaking to learn gods name of secrets.
It's a long time coming.
A long long time.

Like a song or that prayer you've learned to participate in.

In gods name.

What is thinking.
What is being.
What seeing is believing.
What noise does a sound make.
Thinking in gods name.
In thinking you learn how to think in sounds,
as though you've never heard that song before.
On repeat.
The sound lives on forever.
In your mind,
in your body.
In your core,
in your energy.
In your image,
in your psyche.

What caused it.

Learning in gods name.
Thoughts born out loud.
Such a song found in silence.
The concert of your dreams,
in orchestra.

Much the same way your thoughts are born,
You must first master silence.
This is the sound of nature.
The mother of sound in gods voice.
That is the final solution.

You must channel your inner awareness,
As if Hamlet's rubix cube.

2 comments:

BigC said...

The highest form of thinking-feeling is negative comprehension and its very basis is insecurity.

J. Krishnamurti

BigC said...

If we do not seek power and domination, if we are not self-assertive, there will be peace; but as long as we are using things, relationship or ideas as means to gratify our ever increasing psychological cravings, so long will there be contention and misery.

J. Krishnamurti