
“When We Love” | Anthony Satori
“When we love, we always strive to become better than we are. When we strive to become better than we are, everything around us becomes better, too.”
— Paulo Coelho

“When We Love” | Anthony Satori
“When we love, we always strive to become better than we are. When we strive to become better than we are, everything around us becomes better, too.”
— Paulo Coelho

“Santa Claus” | Anthony Satori
Shine your light, give of your heart, and, most of all, be kind to one another… and to yourself. Because, in the quiet of the night, as we lay our heads to sleep, this is all that really matters.
Merry Christmas, everyone!


“Chemistry” | Anthony Satori
“The meeting of two personalities is like the contact of two chemical substances: if there is any reaction, both are transformed.”
— C. G. Jung

“La Vie En Rose” | Anthony Satori
“The richness of the world is always available to the poet.”
— Goethe

“Abandoned Car” | Anthony Satori
“You’re going to pass something down no matter what you do, or if you do nothing. Even if you let yourself go fallow, the weeds will grow and the brambles. Something will grow.”
— John Steinbeck
Deliberately envision how you wish your world to look, and then take thoughtful, focused action toward that result. Choose to make the world a more beautiful place. Choose to make it a more peaceful, free and compassionate place. Be an active agent of light.

“Gary Snyder, Zen Poet” | Santa Barbara, California, 2015 | Anthony Satori
“In the mountains, there you feel free.”
— T. S. Eliot
Campbell Hall, UCSB, California, November, 2015
It is an odd juxtaposition to watch a poet whose primary subject matter is nature, mountains and wilderness put on a tie, stand at a podium, and talk about his work in one of the least wilderness-like places conceivable: a university lecture hall. You get the feeling of a creature out if his element, a proverbial fish-out-of-water… handling the environment with admirable aplomb, yet periodically, and involuntarily, gasping for air.
The evening began strangely enough, with Snyder delivering a seemingly unprovoked 20-minute lecture on how we (the audience) were all inept at water conservation — although arguably from a place of authority, since he does live on a self-sustaining commune.
This was followed (thankfully) by some enjoyable, yet seemingly random, readings of poetry from some of his more obscure collections (oddly excluding both the entire “Beat Generation” era and his most recent book release).
The event then proceeded to attain new heights of awkwardness upon the introduction of an inexplicably antagonistic interviewer. To paraphrase a sample exchange: Interviewer: “One farmer said that he grew the best oranges by looking at everyone around him and doing exactly the opposite of what they did. Is this essentially what you are doing on the commune?” Snyder: “No. We’re not that dumb.” Ouch.
Almost regardless of venue, however, to hear a veritable institution of literature speak, read and discuss poetry and articulate his views on writing and life is a worthy experience. Up until now, Gary Snyder has inhabited the status of an almost quasi-fictional Beat Poet/Zen Madman character to me, someone who existed only on the pages of Jack Kerouac novels and in my imagination. Now, by virtue of this experience, his glowing apparition has been immortalized in my mind, and has, simultaneously, been made real.


“Serenity” | Anthony Satori
“Words exist because of meaning. Once you’ve gotten the meaning, you can forget the words. Where can I find someone who has forgotten words? This is who I wish to speak with.” — Chuang Tzu
When someone tunes out the noise of the outer world, allows their thoughts to become still and calm, and immerses themselves in the experience of a work of art, they are speaking with someone who has “forgotten” words. This is because art exists in a mode that goes beyond mere language, reaching directly into the realm of pure meaning.

“Sea of Humanity” | Anthony Satori
“A breaking up of foam and of quicksand, / a rustling of salt withdrawing, / the grey cry of sea-birds on the coast.”
— Pablo Neruda

“Horse Soul” | Anthony Satori
“I see something of God each hour of the twenty-four, and each moment then.”
— Walt Whitman

“The Eternal Hush of Silence” | Anthony Satori
“Listen closely… the eternal hush of silence goes on and on throughout all of this… this is because the world is nothing but a dream.”
— Jack Kerouac