6 posts tagged “liberty”
'Each of us is the curator of his or her life. In our galleries of meaning, certain displays may be chaotic at times, but meaning emerges by the very act of trying to arrange our treasures, even by accepting what cannot be rearranged. More important than the final result is our willingness to work at our lives in the same way a curator might work on his or her collection, keeping the storage rooms in order, rehanging this gallery or that. As curators we are also artists. We can paint new canvases and restore old ones, as well as mounting and displaying them. Setting priorities and holding to them is more important even than the materiel given us to shape or the talent we are born with. There are limits to life itself, but no expiration date on making of finding meaning within it. For the things that matter most - the parent project, the child project, the partner, friend, and God projects - the only limit lies in our willingness to take such projects seriously. When instead we neglect them, reacting helter-skelter to every little demand life imposes, we squander the most important gift we are given both as artists and as curators of meaning, the gift of time.'
'It is in our idleness, in our dreams, that the submerged truth sometimes comes to the top.'
--John Brzostoski via whiskey river via The Wit of the Staircase circa July 3, 2007.
http://theresalduncan.typepad.com/witostaircase/2007/07/the-view-from-t.html
By far, the most true and inspiring words of the evening came from the amazingly creative Tarina Tarantino, a.k.a. High Duchess of the Fuschia Tresses. To wit, "Here in LA, we all march to the beat of our own drummer." As she said this, our heart swelled with joy because that is exactly why we've chosen to make our home in Los Angeles, the wildest west of the west; where you are free to create your life in any manner you choose. Civic pride does not often rise up in us and yet last night we felt very fortunate to reside in the city of angels. In the words of the illustrious chanteuse Jenny Lewis, "LA, you always let me back in."