A rush of warmth and trembling and joyful excitement softens all my body edges and boundaries and I expand into the disappearing bed. It is the same light-filled and life-filled sacred space which shakes me in prayer and also the nurturing darkness of a star-filled innerverse into which I disappear at other times my limbs no longer compactly discernible but dissolved deliciously into utter spaciousness.
My coach has suggested I play with my body postures this week opening where I am tending to close and rounding in where I tend toward outwardness. I think of it as a form of integration similar to the yin-yang integration of Dylan Newcomb's 16 ways which I am also practicing as part of my program to release the constraints which often stop me from moving. I am afraid of losing my equilibrium, afraid that I no longer can respond gracefully to those things which might push me out of a comfortable balance, far too enamoured of the familiar and clinging to what I remember and have solidified as me while I feel the power of the waters of life rushing through uncharted canyons and out into open ocean. May I please have just a small pool to play in while the sun warms it and turns it to salt. I will end up a statue on the plains of Gomorrah if I do not engage more fully in the evolutionary rush. So I breathe and write and allow each day to morph into a slightly different shape.
There is always a pile of books by my bed. They are for transitions: into sleep, into the day, to be taken on my bus rides from one place to another. One of them now is Thomas Metzinger's The Ego Tunnel. He is a philosopher interested in the discoveries of neuroscience and in this book he is asking the question, What is the self? What he describes is the way in which we filter what comes in from outside and what we generate ourselves internally to construct or create a continuing sense of self. He calls it the ego tunnel because of its limiting nature. We never see all of what is around us, the matrix in which we live, but must create from the wealth inherent in that matrix a manageable shell, a safe container that is possible. Yet in the plenum of the matrix are infinite unformed possibilities.
In a paper titled "Life in the Interstices: Systems Biology and Process Thought" Joseph E. Earley, Sr. suggests "that what Whitehead calls 'empty space' should be considered to be a metaphorical space of indeterminacy, rather than some gap in extension in Newtonian absolute space." Monday I realized I was imaging my interstitial space visually and by doing that I was falling naturally into a Newtonian conception. Now I am asking myself what other sort of imaging I might practice so that I can realize the experience of a fuller plenum and expand my range of possibilities. I believe this is not only an individual journey but I trust that others are on similar journeys and that we are sharing a larger play space as well, one very much needed for breaking out of the cultural limitations which keep us from responding to our planetary anguish. What may enter my consciousness as abstracted onto a headspace screen needs to be breathed into my body and there co-create liberating action even while the abstract symbolizations may fade into a nurturing darkness.
What is my palette of possibilities and what new mixtures can I discover or create? Right now I have improvisational and compositional music. I have my life with plants and with foods. I have words. I need to dance more. I can sketch and create my living space. I recast my imaginal possibilities as I read science and philosophy and a scattering of ideas gleaned from across the net. I have my small group of friends I can throw these ideas around with. I have my night play and dreaming which ties it all together in sometimes kaleidoscopic ways. And this play space. Hopefully some more companions will join me so we may play together.