Further updates:
Having been refined in recent years into a freegan Taoist, I am currently considering three new living options:
1. A friend's invitation to stay at a ranch atop Larch Mountain in the Gorge. I would be staying in a tent that was given to me.
2. One of two rooms in one of two houses in a housemate scenario in Portland.
3. Independently sought out space, be it a studio or my tent pitched somewhere secluded.
The tent option would work as a viable living situation, especially since I am now a member of the Independent Publishing Resource Center (IPRC). Having this physical workspace will significantly increase my resourcefulness and speed up the production of publication. For anyone who has been following my life, they will know this is HUGE.
With love as always,
Jory
obvious.ob(li)vious.[liv].ob[li]f(e)ious.[lIf]. oblivious mid-15c., from L. obliviosus 'forgetful, producing forgetfulness,' from oblivionem (see oblivion). Meaning 'unaware, unconscious (of something)' is from 1862, formerly regarded as erroneous, this is now the general meaning and the word has lost its original sense of 'no longer aware or mindful.'--www.etymonline.com

25 August 2011
24 August 2011
So, once again, as the Arc is transforming, expanding out into satellite rafts, each one a perfect expression of creative individuality interwoven into a universal and symmetrical awareness, the Ob(life)ious project also expands its horizons....
Goodbye big blue house! So many memories stored up in our house! And all good things must come to an end, as all things thrown up must also come down. All things familiar tend to become forgotten.
What is most perfect seems imperfect;
yet it is complete.
What is most full seems empty,
yet it can be emptied forever.
What is great art seems artless;
what is great wisdom seems foolish.
Movement overcomes cold;
and staying still overcomes heat.
The Wise One by his serene calm
lets Heaven move in him.
--Tao Te Ching, Lao Tzu, from The Legend of Lao Tzu
and the Tao Te Ching, by DEMI
"Contradiction is perhaps the subtlest of all spiritual forces."--Albert Camus
Goodbye big blue house! So many memories stored up in our house! And all good things must come to an end, as all things thrown up must also come down. All things familiar tend to become forgotten.
What is most perfect seems imperfect;
yet it is complete.
What is most full seems empty,
yet it can be emptied forever.
What is great art seems artless;
what is great wisdom seems foolish.
Movement overcomes cold;
and staying still overcomes heat.
The Wise One by his serene calm
lets Heaven move in him.
--Tao Te Ching, Lao Tzu, from The Legend of Lao Tzu
and the Tao Te Ching, by DEMI
"Contradiction is perhaps the subtlest of all spiritual forces."--Albert Camus
20 March 2011
The Ob(li)fious Project finally has found a home base at the Arc: Shelter for the Rising Waters. The Media Room (catchier name, please?) on the top floor, adjacent to our Meditation Room, is a dedicated space for regular dialog-oriented salons in order to generate material to consensually publish, and other demonstrations for engaging our community in the necessary process of discovery, a return to simplicity, to group awareness of what is happening, what needs to happen, radical redefinition, genuine fulfillment of creativity coming through openness and willingness to comprehend each other in rejuvenated layers of our shared interdependent coexistence. To link up with the Arc and the Ob(li)fious Project, check back here often, as well as the Arc's blog: thearchouseblog.blogspot.com. Thanks for your continued patience and participation! Every little bit counts!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)