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The Solace, Nourishment and Underlying Meaning
CLOSE
is what we almost always are: close to happiness,
close to another, close to leaving, close to tears, close to God, close
to losing faith, close to being done, close to saying something, or
close to success, and even, with the greatest sense of satisfaction,
close to giving the whole thing up.
Our human essence lies not in
arrival, but in being almost there, we are creatures who are on the
way, our journey a series of impending anticipated arrivals. We live by
unconsciously measuring the inverse distances of our proximity: an
intimacy calibrated by the vulnerability we feel in giving up our sense
of separation.
To go beyond our normal identities and become
closer than close is to lose our sense of self in temporary joy, a form
of arrival that only opens us to deeper forms of intimacy that blur our
fixed, controlling, surface identity.
To consciously become close
is a courageous form of unilateral disarmament, a chancing of our arm
and our love, a willingness to hazard our affections and an unconscious
declaration that we might be equal to the inevitable loss that the
vulnerability of being close will bring.
Human beings do not find
their essence through fulfillment or eventual arrival but by staying
close to the way they like to travel, to the way they hold the
conversation between the ground on which they stand and the horizon to
which they go. What makes the rainbow beautiful, is not the pot of gold
at its end, but the arc of its journey between here and there, between
now and then, between where we are now and where we want to go,
illustrated above our unconscious heads in primary colour.
We are
in effect, always, close; always close to the ultimate secret: that we
are more real in our simple wish to find a way than any destination we
could reach: the step between not understanding that and understanding
that, is as close as we get to happiness.
―
David Whyte,
Consolations: The Solace, Nourishment and Underlying Meaning of Everyday Words
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