Monday, May 9, 2011

Begin Anywhere

This Buddha is called "Begin Anywhere" for the words I stamped on the canvas. They are words from designer, Bruce Mau's "Incomplete Manifesto For Growth" which I love. They are words attributed to composer John Cage.

Sometimes we just impart too much meaning on things. We turn problems or tasks into their own planetary systems and then we get overwhelmed by their orbit. Sometimes we just have a hard time getting out of "think" mode. Begin Anywhere is advice for taking the stickiness out of places we get hung up rather than advice that supports rash, careless behaviour.

Begin anywhere is an antidote to our old friends sloth and torpor those comfy Buddhist bedfellows (snuggled in their with the other hindrances of desire, doubt, anger, and restlessness ). Inertia has it's own weight (originally I typed wait, which may be more accurate!) And if I were a science nerd (I'm just a garden variety nerd) I'd regale you with the science of inertia but alas I was too slothful at school to pay much attention to science.

So "Begin Anywhere" Buddha offers us the lightness of, it's no big deal, just start somewhere. This reminds me of the Robert Motherwell quote, "I begin each painting with a series of mistakes." With some stunning results, I might add! Anyone who writes or paints is familiar with the fear of that perfect, empty blankness, the one we are sure we are going to ruin. So we avoid. We clean the toilet, we take the dog for a walk, we do this and that until we've used up all the time or worn ourselves out. Anything to avoid our imagined failure.

Begin Anywhere reminds us to get the energy moving which is often all that is needed. I remember a story James Baraz told in his "Awakening Joy" course. He said when he was young he came to a point in his life where he had a few directions he could go. When he couldn't decide he went to see a fortune teller hoping to get an answer. And the wise fortune teller said, just do something, it doesn't matter what. I know I have often seen this principle at work in my own life. What is that quote by Appollinaire, "Come to the edge,'' He said. They said, ''We are afraid.'' ''Come to the edge,'' He said. They came. He pushed them... and they flew."

So whatever you are thinking of doing, wondering if you should, puzzled how to go about it, this little painting is offering a wink and a nudge, "begin anywhere"

15 comments:

  1. thanks for the wink and nudge soon i shall fly

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  2. Beautiful image!

    "just do something." Wonderfully simple & just what I needed to read this morning!

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  3. Don't push yet......later today's okay!

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  4. Just what I needed to read, too. Thank you!

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  5. Good words for this artist staring at a huge blank canvas! Thank you.

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  6. Thanks Jann! Yes, sometimes I think we write (or say) what we need to hear ourselves!

    David - begin anywhere later? it is about using our sense of what's right too, isn't it?

    David A - Bows to your beginnings.

    Carole - I have 3 canvases with grounds on them, that's where I get caught, something started that I like and the worrying mind thinks I might ruin them. I shall think of you as I march bravely into the studio.

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  7. oh this comes just at the right time... thank you for your wonderful image and your so so so wise words :) ! And as I said : Just at the right time! Will go NOW and do it !!!

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  8. Wow- I really need to hear this today. Thank you for your wise advice.

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  9. I struggle with this so much, and at each step of a project. First the drawing is good, but I will probably mess up the applique. Then, when that's OK, the quilting may be a problem, then the embellishment. Of course it can all be redone, so its really no big deal. Now I'm looking at a new step, painting a finished quilt. NOT reversible, so extra scary. Thanks for the reminder that even mistakes here may just lead to better opportunies. Guess I'd better jump!

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  10. Michele & Mary - Thanks for dropping by! Glad the words on this little painting spoke to you!

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  11. Karen - You describe the process beautifully. I am at that point in a painting as we speak. And I have to say sometimes I make the wrong choice and sometimes I can't go back but I know I must be cautious about these thoughts, about seeing anything as too precious because it is at this point that the creative process becomes stifled and the true possibilities are limited by this timid self! And the truly surprising creative thing comes from taking the leap. Otherwise I know I stay safe and predictable and inevitably less that I might become! hmm, sensing a whole other post in this! Thanks for your wonderful comment.

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  12. My antenna perked up as you addressed inertia...a huge issue in this Art/Life and leaping is truly the antidote...Quantum Leap!!

    Begin Anywhere is sublime.

    thanks!

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  13. Merci -merci! I like that, let's take a quantum leap!

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  14. That's it -- the only direction is ahead, even if it's backwards.

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