We say, "This right HERE is who I am and have always been and will always be. If I dream a dream of being different, I should tuck that Self away to be glimpsed only on those dark days of looking for a way to not feel lost." Glimpsed but not embraced because embracing would mean changing in a public way... would mean maybe sacrificing our place on the orchestrated skyline of other people.
Again from YEARNINGS by Irwin Kula:
"As cognitive scientists are now discovering, the notion of a single enduring self is just a way to describe how we've temporarily domesticated our inner world. Identity is just a provisional arrangement. Our self is really a container for our multiplicity. It is a resting place, a makom; yet another name for God. Nonetheless we yearn for that place to be permanent; to feel an inner coherence and completion; to feel settled down and rooted."
We like to be that same person day after day because we mistake sameness for security, predictability for comfort. I like the idea that we are actually containers for our multiplicity.
To me, that part is not as much a challenge as this: finding a way to allow for other people's multiple selves to exist without my judgment or reproach. To me if everyone else stays the same, I can predict my role. I can plan better. I can be the one to change and grow and color myself a million colors.
I am sad that I am so selfish. I am hopeful that I can change that.
I had that same dream when I was in my mid thirties, getting a divorce, and moving back to San Antonio without a clue as to how proceed. Somehow, Daisy, we are always provided for. If there were one message I could emblazon on the heart and soul of the world it would be to trust-self, the Universe, God-"all shall be well, and all shall be well, and all shall be very well"! Hildegard de Bingen
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