Night, the Beloved

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“Night, the Beloved”  |  Anthony Satori

“Night, the beloved.  Night, when words fade and things come alive.  When.. all that is truly important becomes whole and sound again.  When man reassembles his fragmentary self and grows with the calm of a tree.”

— Antoine de Saint-Exupery

This Happiness

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“This Happiness”  |  Anthony Satori

“This happiness consisted of nothing else but the harmony of the few things around me with my own existence, a feeling of contentment and well-being that needed no changes and no intensification.”

— Hermann Hesse

A philosophy of simplicity, and the cultivation of inner/outer harmony, these are the sources of true happiness.  The contented one knows that happiness is not something “out there” that needs to be chased and pursued, but rather, if one understands and internalizes the principles of simplicity and harmony, everything that is needed for happiness is right here, right now, within reach, right in our own backyard.

This does not, however, mean that the contented one does not appreciate and savor every moment of new experience, of elevated quality, of unique elegance and beauty.  In fact, it is quite the opposite.  Because the contented one does not need these things to be truly happy, such treasures can be openly welcomed into their world, and the greatest pleasure and value and joy can be derived from them — naturally and purely — when they arrive.

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By the Sigh of the Sea

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“By the Sigh of the Sea”  |  Anthony Satori

“Happy.  Just in my swim shorts, barefooted, wild-haired, in the red fire dark, singing, swigging wine, spinning, jumping, running—that’s the way to live… free, in the soft sands of the beach, by the sigh of the sea out there.”

— Jack Kerouac

Embrace life, every moment of it.  Immerse yourself in the wonder of it all.  Pursue the sublime, it is hiding behind every corner, and it desires nothing more than to be sought, found and inhaled by you.

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Sea of Humanity

"Sea of Humanity"  |  Anthony Satori

“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

O me! O life!

“Ocean Light”  |  Anthony Satori

“O me!  O life!  Of the questions of these recurring; of the endless trains of the faithless, of cities fill’d with the foolish — what good amid these, O me, O life?

Answer.  That you are here — that life exists, and identity; that the powerful play goes on, and you may contribute a verse.”

— Walt Whitman

Passionate Zen

"Passionate Zen"  |  Anthony Satori

“Passionate Zen”  |  Anthony Satori

Live your life fully, every day.  Be in the moment.  Smile, laugh, dance and dream.  Slow down and take a breath.  Pay attention.  Soak it all in.  Cherish where you are, who you love, and everything good about this moment.  Don’t wait.  Cherish it all now, feel it all now, love it all now.  And as you go, remember to be kind to yourself and to each other.  Because kindness, gratitude and love are the fuels that make the Karmic engine thrive. 

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Distant Shore

“Distant Shore”  |  Anthony Satori

I was driving up the coast, enjoying the unusual mix of cloud and sun, cool and warm, stillness and motion which constituted the day.  I decided to stop and have lunch.  I parked, grabbed my backpack and walked onto the beach.  I looked out over the water and marveled at the sea and the clouds.  The sky appeared to me almost like the atmosphere of Jupiter, a mysterious swirl of forces and counter-forces.  It looked surreal and other-worldly to my eyes.  The surface of the water seemed dense and heavy, like a choppy lake that you might find somewhere deep in the mountains, far and remote from where I stood.  As I watched, the sun broke through the clouds and began to pour its light against the other side of the bay, creating a brilliant strip of light along the opposing shore.  I stared into the distance, unable to figure out what it was that I was looking at.  Were those buildings?  Were they cliffs of stone?  Were they docks or container ships?  I started to take a picture, but then I delayed, attempting to identify what I was seeing.  I stood for several minutes, watching the sunlight expand and glitter along the opposing coast, immersing myself in the pleasure of the light, the patterns, the sensation of beauty, all the while remaining unable to identify the objects across the bay.  And then it struck me: the sensation that I was feeling was enough.  I didn’t need to be able to identify every detail of what I was seeing before I could be entirely “in the moment.”  I did not need to know everything, before I could savor the beauty of it all.  If fact, this hybrid mix of knowing and not knowing, combined with an appreciation of beauty throughout, was an entirely satisfying experience.  I lifted my camera and took a picture.  It was a picture of the ocean, the sky, the light, the opposing shore.  It was a picture of Jupiter, a distant mountain lake, wind on the water.  But it was also a picture of mystery.  It was a picture of wonder.  It was a picture of how it feels to be fully absorbed in the pleasure of beauty even in the face of not knowing, and to be entirely content in the completeness of that experience.

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Beauty Vérité

"Beauty Vérité"  |  Anthony Satori

“Beauty Vérité”  |  Anthony Satori

“She was beautiful, but not like those girls in the magazines. She was beautiful for the way she thought. She was beautiful for that sparkle in her eyes when she talked about something she loved. She was beautiful for her ability to make other people smile, even if she was sad. No, she wasn’t beautiful for something as temporary as her looks. She was beautiful, deep down to her soul.” 

– F. Scott Fitzgerald