Mythos & Marginalia

2015 – 2025: a decade of days


  • Blended With The Heavens

    I’m not sure I can kneel down before you, or
    give in to your power. Not like before.
    A situation such that I am unsure whom or what
    I can trust, let alone myself. Still I look up.
    Here I stand, pockets full of dust, starry eyes
    gazing through the ozone. Toxins leech freely
    into the atmosphere. Degradation of the night sky
    deprives us of opportunity to see
    what we once believed. You are there.
    See me for what I am as I try to listen
    through misaligned radio frequencies.
    I cannot know where you have been.
    You hide. It is your way.
    My hands are not big enough
    to grasp the message.
    I’m not looking for the sky to save me, nor
    am I waiting for the time to be right. I need
    to go home now and find what is so far away.
    I’ve lost my balance.
    I’m losing my fear of heights.

    Equality may never be, the darkness and bright
    allow us only to see what we want, not what
    we could have been. A level of light is expected,
    my immeasurable impatience is being taunted.
    However you look at it, whether you believe
    in you, or believe me, this poetic justice
    is all I have known. Your shadow remains
    blended with the heavens. A starry night
    will not dissuade your presence
    in the lives you alter, or the ones you destroy.
    Yet, in this moment, I know I would try again.
    How could I not?
    The option of a moonless night
    is more of what I have been living, than how I
    want to live. Between particles of unknown origin
    in an ever-increasing pool of light pollution, space
    junk, and refracted thought of a thousand
    nameless faceless constellations,
    you are still there.
    I’m not looking for the sky to save me.

     

    © 2016 j.g. lewis

     

     

    © 2016 j.g. lewis

  • Knowing The Unknown

    When does patience turn to procrastination?
       For weeks now (almost) I have been plotting a painting onto a canvas. Thoughtfully, decisively, carefully, consciously, marking each line. Deliberately.
       It is a large canvas. It had to be; this is a big project.
       I have not painted in oils for decades. I’ve thought about it (a lot), and this pandemic seemed to provide opportunity, or an outlet, to make it happen.
       I was slow getting started, but 12 days ago I finally began taking the design from my head and mapping it out.
       I was incrementally inspired.
       I am now at the point — actually, I am hesitating — where I need to mix my medium, take up my brush and begin to apply colour to the canvas.
       But really, for days now, I stare at the lines on the white surface and I see what it could be, but only in my mind.
       Is this now a mental block?
       Like the lines on the surface, I am at the intersection of design, desire, and fear.
       That’s it: fear.
       It is not fear of starting (because, technically, I have begun) but there is the fear of this not looking as I imagined it would look.
       Exactly.
       Can I be that exacting? Will this work live up to my expectations or will it be even better than I imagined?
       There is that doubt.
       Right now, I can only know the unknown. That invokes this fear.
       This is how I struggle, linearly, creatively, even spiritually, when I take on any artistic project.
       Hesitation.
       I keep talking myself out of the next step. Is it lack of confidence; or is it lack of control?
       I have come to know myself. I know, knowing myself, that the moment I mix the paint, the moment I apply some life to the canvas, what has only been a project will become an obsession. It is the way I am with all things creative.
       I know, or I feel, the initial underpainting will pull me in.
       If I — and I will — take the next step, will it take me further from, or closer to the realization that I am an artist?
       If it takes time, that time is now. Today.

    © 2021 j.g. lewis

  • Over and Over

    Do you feel stuck where you are?

    Are you content with your state of being: emotionally, physically or spiritually?

    Can you tell the difference between a routine and a rut?

    Do you do what is expected, or intended? Are you surprised when you don’t?

    Over and over we settle for the words, or the life, presented to us.

    Change is always possible, but it has to begin within.

    It is easy to take the same steps or drive the same route, to do, again, what you did yesterday.

    It is not always comfortable. It is not always right.

    It is a habit.

    We are limited by habits, and patterns, no matter how routine. No matter how uncomfortable.

    Are you comfortable with change to your lifestyle or living situation?

    Has it become too comfortable?

    Are you ready for change? Have you even thought about it?

    Have you settled?

     

    ©2019 j.g. lewis

  • Like Dandelions

         Scarcely a whisper,

                a breath, a slight breeze, and
             the seeds will scatter

                                   effortlessly.

          We only know where we can go;
             when we allow the wind will take us.

    If we submit ourselves to unknown persuasion,

         in time
                       we evolve.

             Savour the journey
        settle when you are able.

    Plant roots,

                 grow and blossom.

         Show us your natural beauty.

  • Connect With The Context

    Is it the sunset you enjoy, or the shadows it casts? Have you stopped for a moment to
    figure it out?
       In reality, it is how you choose to see it.
       Perception changes, and you with it. It is not the reverse. To shift your perspective
    requires an influence, but despite what you hear, read or see, the viewpoint of the world
    surrounding you will come from within.
       Yes, we listen to others: educators, politicians, salesmen or solicitors, and whether we
    are told that the world is flat, which automobile is the safest, or how a policy will dramatically reduce carbon emissions over the next decade, it is the personal processing
    of this information that will determine your ultimate answe
       We, all too often, rely on the words of others when trying to understand anything
    around us.   Explanation involves thinking outside of yourself and considering the
    consequences, values and benefits. In trying to listen to the flood of information coming
    at you, it is assumed knowledge that will form your opinion.
       What if I told you that when watching a sunset, you are actually paying more attention
    to the clouds, than you are to the actual Sun? Would you stop for a moment and wonder
    what you’ve always taken in?
       The Sun never changes (well, not in immediate terms); it burns, full power, 24 hours a
    day. We see it more or less, depending on where we are located in relation to the time of
    the year. It is us that moves and not the sun
       The Sun, quite boring really, is always there. Always in the same place. It’s always
    round, always bright, and generates radiation that is constant, and powerful enough to
    light up this world and any other star, planet and galaxy in the universe.
       As it appears to dip below the horizon at the end of each day, the Sun setting is not your focus. All those colours and the glorious view you scramble to capture on your camera or mobile device is more the result of the Sun’s light reflecting and refracting through the atmosphere, precipitation or condensation, or the puffy polluted haze of our ever expanding cities.
       The view is altered, mostly by your perception. It is still the same Sun it was hours
    earlier, it is still doing the same bloody thing, but somehow it is more beautifu
       Perception.
       The Sun glows, alters the shade of buildings, the shadows of trees, and even makes
    common weeds, like dandelions, appear magical.
       Perspective. It is how we see things. More importantly how we see ourselves, and how
    we connect with the context.
       Our greatest strength should be admitting we don’t know everything and being open to learning what we need to know. Change comes with knowledge, and challenging yourself comes with connecting to your soul, investigating your id and ego and, through the process, discovering your own mythos.
       Seek answers, or self-explanation for who you are, and why you do what you do.
    Discover solutions, or check your hypothesis for why something didn’t turn out the way
    it was supposed to, or why success is likely, in whatever area you chose.
       Context.
       You can make things happen, but you need to unearth what is happening and why.
    Those are answers you won’t get from teachers, lawyers or policy wonks. You may not
    even find the answers within, but you will be stronger for looking.
       The inner voice is an inner choice.

     ©2017 j.g. lewis