Friday, October 19, 2012

WHERE Do You Look For The Meaning of Life?




The Real Question….

Where Do You Find the Meaning of Life? 

Read that again! 
The question is not—“WHAT is the meaning of life.” 
The question is “WHERE do you find the meaning of life?”
The difference is that if you ask “what,” then you have to state an objective value—of the mind.   If you ask “where” do you find it—then you know subjectively—of the heart.  That may not sound like a big difference.  But if you settle for “what it may be,” then the discussion is over.  Whereas—if I know where to find the meaning of life—then, I am on a journey.  Got it?  Life is not a problem to solve in the present, it is a journey toward ultimate meaning.
Here are two authors.  Which side of the balance do you come down on?  Where do you place the weight of your experience?  




EXAMPLE 1: 
Leo Buscaglia & The Fall of Freddie the Leaf

The theme is that Life is stronger than individual lives which pass away.  Our joy comes from the moment of knowing we are a part of Life.  Death is to be an accepted part of life in the “fall season of death.”  So Freddie the leaf falls from the tree and has a momentary glimpse of the whole tree before passing into nothingness. 
Freddie asks his friend, Daniel: "Then what has been the reason for all of this? Why were we here at all if we only have to fall and die?"
Daniel answered in his matter-of-fact way, "It's been about the sun and the moon. It's been about happy times together. It's been about the shade and the old people and the children. It's been about colors in Fall. It's been about seasons. Isn't that enough?"
What do you, the reader think—is that enough?  For many—it is enough to make your own meaning in the present. The rest is “pie in the sky.”  When Freddie does fall from the tree, the narrator repeats the great theme of enduring Life: 
Freddie landed on a clump of snow. It somehow felt soft and even warm. In this new position he was more comfortable than he had ever been. He closed his eyes and fell asleep. He did not know that Spring would follow Winter and that the snow would melt into water. He did not know that what appeared to be his useless dried self would join with the water and serve to make the tree stronger. Most of all, he did not know that there, asleep in the tree and the ground, were already plans for new leaves in the Spring.

 EXAMPLE 2:William Blake & Auguries of Innocence


Notice how he moves out of the natural world into the spiritual.  He does not stop in the physical realm, but journeys toward the ultimate.  The same could be said of William Wordsworth and Intimations of Immortality.  The natural world leads to the spiritual, ultimate one. 

 
To see a world in a grain of sand,
And a heaven in a wild flower,
Hold infinity in the palm of your hand,
And eternity in an hour.
 


So What Do You Think?  Or Feel?  
Remember the real question—not “what” but “where” do you find the meaning of life?   
You can easily stop with Buscaglia and “Freddie” in the immediate world—we pass this way once, 
are aware of Life, and that’s that—blunt but honest.  Or, is there a sense in the natural world, a deeper 
vision or intimation that we are going with Life on a journey.  Not just passing away, but passing on….
Think of it, feel with it--every time you see the fall colors. 
 
 


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