bike spokes #2 copyright erie chapman 2012"…things that are standing still tend to stand still unless you push on them hard."The Pleasure of Finding Things Out

    Something in me considers inactivity to be immoral. Unless I am "doing" something, I feel worthless.

   Of course, this flies in the face of my own philosophy that our worth is not dependent upon what we do.

   Sometimes, when I listen for inspiration to write a Journal essay I hear nothing. It's then that I feel have to push – sometimes hard. 

   Today Richard Feynman provided the help with his terrific book, The Pleasure of Finding Things Out. Ironically, in my state of inertia, the first page I turned to addressed exactly that condition.

   The static bicycle spokes in the photograph seem to move. Why do some things appear in motion and others inert? Why do some people accept what appears to be a near-static life and others are constantly moving and sometimes innovating.

   Activity, of course, can be mindless rather than mindful. Many of us find it so hard to change a pattern that we stay in the same one every day.

   Indeed, doctors sometimes advise that staying "regular" helps our health. Supposedly, our bodies, like machines, prefer steady patterns.  

   Caregivers must follow protocols. This is good. But, it can also be stultifying.

   The heart does not listen to protocols. Healers must often break rules to find new solutions to complex problems. Artists who follow the status quo rarely create great art.

   We need protocols – patterns that keep us in a steady state. We also need to listen for and sometimes nudge ourselves along so we may find new answers when old ones don't work.

   In other words we need balance.    

   Balance lives in Love's song. Fear cannot birth Love. Balance comes from letting Love's energy move through us.

   One way to understand Love is to ask: How many of my actions are motivated by fear? How much of my life is guided by anxiety?

   How much of my life is guided by a genuine desire to help others through hearing their need?

   What if, right now, you listened for how you can be a pathway for Love's light?

 -Erie Chapman

photograph: Bike Spokes 2 – copyright erie chapman 2012

5 responses to “Days 331-333 – Action & Inertia”

  1. Deacon Dan Avatar
    Deacon Dan

    I always find my own inertia a struggle when it comes to loving action.Sometimes it feels like a “sin of inertia”, although not offically a sin.Wwhen I get stuck in my own routine it is as if I have blinders on. Or prefer my own rut!

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  2. ~liz Wessel Avatar

    Erie, I love how your photo’s surprise us by taking something ordinary and creating it anew. The iron spokes amid the lined shadows on the wall are a poignant reminder of how easy it is to imprison ourselves though inertia or fear. You have expressed it many times; we only have two choices Love or fear. I am afraid I do not always choose well…but maybe that is it, rather than trying to be in control, listening for Love’s guidance and wisdom to prevail is best. For when left to my own conflicted thoughts and feelings things can get pretty confusing. Recently, a little voice within encourages, ‘remember, it is not about you.’ I find this is helpful in expanding my thoughts beyond self to thinking a little more about others. I am grateful for your remarkable insights and encouragement to see beyond the confines of self…

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  3. Stephanie Avatar
    Stephanie

    I’ve learned that in life I often have a higher-self position and a fall-back position to many concerns. My fall-back position, which is my fear based self, tends to want to act NOW! Do something, anything, to relieve the anxiety. My higher-self takes the time to wait for the whisper within, that feeling of confidence that, finally, I know that the action that I’m going to take is my most grounded, peaceful effort, or perhaps the action is that of doing nothing. Your photo of the bicycle spokes catches that tension beautifully, thanks, Erie!

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  4. Leeann Avatar
    Leeann

    This journal has become an important part of my morning meditation. I hesitate to put my voice into the conversation very often but am always encouraged, challenged and inspired here. I’m guessing I’m not alone in this. Today’s photograph stunned me in its detail. The fluid stillness mirrors something just out beyond that which I can clearly say, and, it makes me feel known. Thank you.

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  5. ~liz Wessel Avatar

    Leeann,
    Please don’t hesitate and do continue to join in the conversation; when a comment is offered it is exponentially expansive in nature and creates an even more meaningful experience.

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