Monday 28 February 2011

But You, O You, so Perfect and so Peerless, Are Created of Every Creature's Best!

Perhaps it is desirable to stop whatever quest or mission you are on and just enjoy the breath of life, the tingle of being. These complex tales of a life well lived or wasted are so compelling and ensnaring that the simple pleasure of consciousness is often overlooked. Whatever enticing form and quality, light and texture being seems to take, it is ever wondrous, ever fascinating, ever miraculous in its simple existence. Here you are; this is it; partake or deny, relish or resist it. This everlasting moment, always now, ever here, is its own sweet self before any thought judges it to be otherwise.

Always impossible to describe because it is simpler than description, usually elusive to the mind despite being all-pervasive; sometimes mistaken for a mirror of itself and often missed because its omnipresence defies observation, is simply what is. All the questing, longing, searching, missing, needing, emptiness, frustration, incompleteness and yearning for more are just crafty, mischievous stand-ins for This: the current guise, the fleeting quality. There is never ever anything that is not This.

Have fun trying to describe it; crawl into it, become it; you are it. What is aware of it, is it as well. Sink into despair and be it; rise into the helium of transformative joy. All is This; this is all. There is no need for anything to be other than it is, including the strong feeling that it should be otherwise.


This clip is the simply brilliant opening of the endlessly fun film, Pulp Fiction. Everything about it is fabulous; the casting of Amanda Plummer and Tim Roth; the dialogue, natural yet almost a parody of itself; the headlong progression from empirical discussion to sudden action; the juxtaposition of a sweet loving couple and a couple of ruthless bandits; Honey Bunny's vicious, unexpected transformation from timid and mousy to brutal and dangerous; and the technical brilliance of the segue from opening scene to titles, aided by the inspired choice of Misirlou, a Greek dance tune, by surf guitarist extraordinaire Dick Dale. Do more than enjoy it - be it!


10 comments:

Bob Seal said...

LUV IT! :)
The movie of life.

Suggestion: If you do decide to rob a restaurant, have a meal there first, that way when you get caught you still get to keep the meal. lol.

Brenda said...

"This everlasting moment, always now, ever here, is its own sweet self before any thought judges it to be otherwise."

such a lovely sentence -- the title too

Burma said...

i in past would not watch this movie--though my husband loves it--
i thought it too violent ala Bonnie & Clyde-ish, Yet NOW i get some of the delightful humor---thank you and....
is your book going to be "Kindleized"?
Kindleing is the Best---

Mary said...

Thank you for describing this so well...am thoroughly enjoying "it," especially your writing! :-)

Love,
Mary

Darla said...

Love the flowing stream of your writing...

No One In Particular said...

Hey Bob, great suggestion!

No One In Particular said...

Hey Brenda, thanks.

No One In Particular said...

Hi Burma, Pulp Fiction is indeed violent but I have to admit I like a bit of well-done movie violence if not the real thing so much. Good question about Kindle, I just got one too, I know it's going to be available as an e-book but not sure about Kindle! I'll ask the publisher.

No One In Particular said...

Hi Mary, right back atcha.

No One In Particular said...

Hey Darla, thanks so much.