Today I heard an inspiring interview with American artist Wayne Wright on Q on CBC radio. He is best known for his work designing puppets and sets for Pee Wee's Playhouse but he has gone on to do a range of creative projects. He features in a documentary about his work called "Beauty is Embarrassing". In the trailer (below) he says at one point that something is "so beautiful it hurts my feelings". I strive to be that vulnerable to beauty. I can't wait to see the documentary.
We talk to ourselves everyday, all day (and night) for the whole of our lives. We started talking to ourselves before we knew we were a self, we forget what we said because we forget everything from before...when we were too young and busy developing our brain to remember those early years. There is still lingering residue of long forgotten conversations I have had with myself as a toddler sitting around in the crevices...sloughing off occasionally into words I tell myself still. We talk non-stop, and not just with dialogue. Our goosebumps communicate to us, our tingly feelings, our neurons, our peripheal vision. They are all submitting data into our self and expecting us to react, respond or all to often, expecting what they are sending us will be ignored. After all that talking, you'd think we'd know what we think about most things, but occasionally we are stumped. Unless we stop what we are doing and really concentrate sometimes that voice(s) ...
ooh, looks good... will check it out ...
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