“Splash” | Anthony Satori
“I don’t believe people are looking for the meaning of life as much as they are looking for the experience of being alive.”
– Joseph Campbell
“Sketchbook” | Anthony Satori
“Creating a life that reflects your values and satisfies your soul is a rare achievement. In a culture that relentlessly promotes avarice and excess, a person happy doing their own work is usually considered eccentric, if not subversive. Cultivate resources within yourself that bring you happiness outside of what others define as success and failure. To invent your own life’s meaning is not easy, but I think you’ll be happier for the trouble.”
– Bill Watterson (creator of the comic strip, Calvin and Hobbes)
“Lizard” –|– Anthony Satori
“Eternity isn’t some later time. Eternity isn’t a long time. Eternity has nothing to do with time. Eternity is that dimension of the here and now which ‘thinking’ and ‘time’ block out. Understanding the relationship between mortality and something within you that is transcendent of mortality is the big job. The experiencing of eternity – right here and now – is the function of life.”
– Joseph Campbell

“Fountain” –|– Anthony Satori
“They both listened silently to the water, which to them was not just water, but the voice of life, the voice of Being, the voice of perpetual Becoming.”
— Hermann Hesse

“The Contented Goat” | Anthony Satori
[a parable]
Once there was a farmer who had a goat that he loved very much. The goat was good-natured and worked hard on the farm. It helped carry things, didn’t make noise or cause trouble, and was a pleasant companion to him and his children. The farmer marveled at how good the goat was, considering how little food and care it needed.
One day, the farmer accidentally fed the goat only half of its normal daily meal. At first the farmer was worried, but the next morning he found that the goat seemed fine, despite having only eaten the smaller amount of food. Amazed at his discovery, the farmer continued to feed the goat the new smaller amount every day, and the goat continued to do well, regardless.
With time, the farmer began to experiment with giving the goat less and less food each day, waiting to see at what point the goat would begin to cry and complain. He was amazed, however, to find that the goat continued to be productive and good-natured no matter how often he reduced the goat’s meal, and that it never complained. The farmer was delighted, because he could give the extra food to the other farm animals, who would moan loudly at even the slightest diminishment or delay in their allotment; but the goat never complained, seeming always to be content with however little it received.
One day, the farmer awoke to discover that the goat had starved to death during the night. The farmer could not believe his misfortune, having lost this most special animal. He also couldn’t imagine how it had happened, since the goat had always seemed to be content with so little.
[the moral]
If you have a valued project, person, or relationship in your life that seems to be content with very little, instead of imagining how you can give it less and less without worry, imagine how much better things could be if you gave it more.
