Ridge Crossing, Cliff River to East Eagle (VII.22.2010), Eagle Cap Wilderness . . .
On the road in the Northwest of America. [ click photo for next . . . ]
TWO PATHS
“It is no longer the choice between violence
and non-violence in this world;
it’s non-violence or non-existence.”
from Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s
last major address,
April 3rd, 1968,
“I Have Been to the Mountain Top.”
One of the most persistent illusions of human consciousness is that it
is possible to come to peace by way of war. It is the tacit assumption of
this thought that conflict is inescapable—an idea that is largely hidden
under the surface of awareness, yet actively shapes our perception and
actions—that itself leads us to incessantly prepare for war. Yet, prepar-
ing for war is not like preparing for fire, or for a hurricane. In contrast
to the prudent readying for the inevitability of natural disaster, prepar-
ing for war has become itself a primary cause of war.
There are evidently only but two alternative paths: One follows the
drumbeat of leaders so lost that they are marching us straight off the
precipice of non-existence; The other path is the still largely untried,
and unknown path of peace.
Nowhere do these two paths cross; Nowhere do they meet.
The great and historic challenge before us, both individually and
collectively, is the demonstration of the necessity of this truth.
DEEP WATER
In an adverse cultural climate, with its perennial waste,
and war, and utterly mindless violence against the Earth,
it's good to mimic the alpine plants:—grow close to the ground,
keep a tight cushion of friends clustered around you, wear a coat
of densely woolly white hairs, and especially, send roots
through every crack and crevice down to deep, reliable
water.
MIRACLE
The miracle of intelligence is that it
does not require miracles.
CENTERS OF LEARNING
That which cannot be touched by force—Love, Intelligence,
Compassion—forms together the basic triangle at the center
of all learning.
Because they cannot be achieved by force,
they are best approached negatively, by taking away the
blocks that are in the way.
The task is clear: perfectly tuned octaves, fourths and fifths
you leave alone;
what you go after are the broken strings.
.TWO PATHS is part of
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All Photographs & texts by Cliff Crego © 1999-2011 picture-poems.com
(created: VII.27.2008)