From the unreal, lead us to the Real
From death, lead us to Immortality
Reach us through and through ourselves
And evermore protect us by Thy sweet, compassionate face.
--Vedantist
prayer derived from the Vedas
Master Peace Sigil September 11 2015 |
Although the satsang
took place on a campgrounds, I roomed on a compound that was part Buddhist
abbey, part Druid sanctuary, and part organic farm with a fabulous view of
Mount McAdams and the Clackamas mountain range. I would’ve been happy enough to
just meditate and muck-about at that place, but I did sit through about 28 hrs
of lecture/discussion (the satsang)
that didn’t need to be more than 3. Still, it was insightful, and I think I
returned home a little changed. A bit more dispassionate, temperate, and observant
perhaps . . . reflective of what spaciousness is like and what the imposition
of a middle-aged human body and its personal circumstances is like, too.
I came home to the 9-11 anniversary, the Syrian refugee
crisis, a media circus surrounding a serially adulterous Christian
fundamentalist anarchist “martyr” who refuses to do her job and issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples, conflagrations across the US West Coast, and the usual
morass of American anarchy, zombie apocalypto, and anti-intellectualism.
I got the idea to make an image of being at peace in the midst of the horrific mayhem we too eagerly like to remind each other that life
is—even when it is not in our personal world sphere.
I
pulled out my tin of Caran d’ Arche wax crayons and had a little fun building the image. Then I goaded some friends who follow a kind of New Agey, Wicca lite, manifestation spirituality into building a Chaos Magic-type sigil with me by embellishing the crayon sketch with stickers and cabochons. I then made a series of digital and painted images of the sketch.
Digital version of my sketch (upper left) and two versions of being at peace within that ferocity. Images print as 18 x 24 Copyright Dee Rapposelli 2015 |
At Peace in the World Maw Acrylic on stretched sail cloth 24 x 36 copyright Dee Rapposelli 2015 |
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