Serenity

"Serenity"  |  Anthony Satori

“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.BlogImage-footd

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

The Eternal Hush of Silence

"Girl in the Desert"  |  Anthony Satori

“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

Dancer Soul

"Dancer Soul"  |  Anthony Satori

“Dancer Soul”  |  Anthony Satori

“The philosopher’s soul dwells in his head.  The poet’s soul is in his heart.  The singer’s soul lingers about his throat.  But the soul of the dancer abides in all of her body.”

— Khalil Gibran

Jack Kerouac: Beat Prophet

“Vesuvio”  |  (San Francisco, CA)  |  Anthony Satori

Some people say that Jack Kerouac wasted his life.  At some level, perhaps this is true.  I certainly wish that he had lived longer.  I certainly wish that he had achieved more balance in his life while he was here.  I certainly wish that he had found more sustained happiness, experienced more enduring love, enjoyed a more consistent flow of success.  And I cannot help but wish that something or someone might have somehow kept him from drowning in depression and alcoholism toward the end.  

All of that being said, I still believe that it is a vast injustice to say that Kerouac wasted his life.  Because, for me, there is an immense redemption to be found:  it is in his words, in his books, in the substance of his work.  He was a writer, an artist, a poet.  He was given a gift by the universe, and he used it.  He had a true talent and he immersed himself in it.  He had a spark of magic inside of him and he spent every day of his life striving to share this light with the world.  This, in my opinion, is enough.  This, in my opinion, is the opposite of a wasted life.

The image above depicts a bar in San Francisco called Vesuvio, one of the favorite watering holes for the Beat Poets in the 1950’s and 1960’s.  Vesuvio is right next door to the famous City Lights Bookstore, owned and run by the great poet/publisher Lawrence Ferlinghetti.  City Lights Bookstore was the location of numerous live readings by Jack Kerouac, Allen Ginsberg, Gary Snyder and other members of the Beat Generation, and after these readings they would often walk across the alley and have a drink (or two) at Vesuvio.  If you look closely enough at the picture above, you can see the reflection of City Lights Bookstore in the window.  And if you go inside and listen closely enough, you can still feel the spirit of Jack Kerouac spinning tales of joy, kicks and beatific mad love for life.

So, in the words of the Beat Prophet himself, “Live, travel, adventure, bless, and don’t be sorry.”

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Grand Oak Tree

"Grand Oak Tree"  |  Anthony Satori

“Grand Oak Tree”  |  Anthony Satori

“Everyone who steeps themselves in the spiritual possibilities of their art is a valuable helper in the building of the spiritual pyramid which will someday reach to heaven.” 

— Kandinsky

Mystery

"Mystery"  |  Anthony Satori

“Mystery”  |  Anthony Satori

“A poet’s pleasure is to withhold a little of his meaning, to intensify by mystification.  He unzips the veil from beauty, but does not remove it.”  

— E. B. White