[Image: cover from the catalogue of the “Focus on Imaging” exhibit of 2010. Photo by artist Nick Veasey, who specializes in X-ray photography; found it on Flickr, uploaded by user Karen Roe. The image seems straightforward at first, but the more you look at it the less plausible it seems. For more information, see the note at the foot of this post.]
From whiskey river:
People don’t do what we want, things don’t happen quickly enough, the weather doesn’t cooperate, our bodies don’t cooperate. Why are these moments so painful? Because our minds are focused on a static, unchanging, me-centric picture while the dynamic unfolding of a broader life continues around us. There is nothing wrong with expectations per se, as it’s appropriate to set goals and work, properly, towards their fruition. But the instant we feel pain over life not going “my way,” our expectations have clearly taken an improper turn. Any moment you feel resistance or pain, look for the hidden expectation. Practice giving yourself over to what “you” don’t want. Let the line at the store be long. Let the other person interrupt you. Let the nervousness make you shake. Be where your body is, not where your mind is trying to take you.
(Guy Finley [quoted everywhere, but unsourced anywhere that I can find!])
…and:
To the Happy Few
Do you know who you are
O you forever listed
under some other heading
when you are listed at allYou whose addresses
when you have them
are never sold except
for another reason
something else that is
supposed to identify youwho carry no card
stating that you are—
what would it say you were
to someone turning it over
looking perhaps for
a date or for
anything to go byyou with no secret handshake
no proof of membership
no way to prove such a thing
even to yourselvesyou without a word
of explanation
and only yourselves
as evidence
(W. S. Merwin [source])