Waterfall Angel #5 erie chapman 2020 When I heard this play on a word it signaled a joyful idea: Why do not all of us become full-blown citizens of a country all of us have visited: Imagi-Nation?

   Hard as 2020 has been every year disgorges its own range of suffering. Whatever infects the world outside, one place can always offer solace: Our imagination. 

   As a veteran day-dreamer I am always shocked to discover something: Most adults have given up one of their best gifts by dismissing imagination as child's play.

   The Imagi-Nation is the only country that lives entirely inside us. The passport enables crossing any border that grounds true flights of fancy.

   My childhood citizenship in Imagination's nation enabled me to watch the boring minister swinging from the chandeliers like a monkey. The stained glass windows were not static to me. Jesus smiled, laughed & once gave me a wink. 

   You knew as a child how to populate your world with made-up characters. My older sister had an imaginary friend. Adulthood kills such friends. 

   Most censor the magic they saw as children. Artists do not. Some of the pictures I make ((like the one here) are of angels-citizens of my Imagi-nation.

   Caregivers: Study the map of your imagi-nation the way you would prepare for a trip to the Orient. Consider different roads & rivers to the paradise of your longing. Travel them as you lie in bed or are stuck in traffic or just plain stuck. 

   Where attention goes, energy flows. December delivers the shortest days. Why not conjure images of light in the middle of the darkness the way the ancients did as they developed the great religions of the world. As Liz Wessel pointed out in her weekend essay, every faith puts light at the center.

   Who personifies light for you? Invite them to your Imagi-Nation. The real world has no power there. No police can arrest you. Let love rule & you will be free. 

-Erie Chapman

"Water Angel Impression #5" by Erie, 2020

3 responses to “Days 355-359 – Citizens of Imagi-Nation”

  1. Terry Chapman Avatar
    Terry Chapman

    I imagine you sitting quietly and smiling as you recollected diverse plays of fancy and wrote this wonderfully playful post! I fondly remember a TV show from my childhood, long forgotten until I read your words: Mr. I-Imagination was a middle aged man, tall and thin in memory’s eye, who took me to places never dreamed of: the Sphinx, the Tower of London, the Panama Canal! And he did all this with a wink of his eye and before the modern media wizardry! In childhood, we play games such as hide and seek, one of my favorites. I often found a hiding spot where no one could find me and as I sat, once, in an animal nest of shrubs, I’m sure I imagined all types of strange, vivid, and fun visions of sword fighters, heroes of all descriptions, and imagined that I was them.
    As adults, our hobbies reflect our need to dream, hope, and have fun, whatever our caregiver,vocational or personal fates dictate. I am a dream fisherman and always will be; thanks for reminding me!

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  2. ~liz Wessel Avatar

    Thanks for this encouragement to reconnect with our imagination, the wonder and playfulness that offers companionship.
    I love the play on words in imagi-nation. My mind went to imagining a new world order, a global nation (is that an oxymoron) where all are welcome and we recognize each other, remembering who we are and who we are called to become, one with all of creation.
    Great words of wisdom offered to all caregivers, thank you, Erie for sharing from a place of open heartedness and Light.

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  3. teresa Reynolds Avatar
    teresa Reynolds

    Creatively on fire , I enjoy every one of your posts!

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