Quote from: Bryce2009link=topic=58349.msg370781#msg370781 date=1239424596That was riveting! So many highs and lows... Call me crazy but the tone poem Also sprach Zarathustra, Op. 30 by Richard Strauss came to mind while reading this. From such high's to such low's you have in one post traversed such diverse territory: From the self-reflective, to the clinically practical; from the imaginative, philosophical and speculative to the exclusively physical and analytic; from the soulful, hopeful and romantic to the doubtful and despairing! Such complexity! Such angst and yearning! Excuse me for being so effusive, perhaps I am overly so... But I really connected with your sentiment. After all that you have said, to end it as you did, is how Strauss ended the above named musical composition in the final score, which contrasts all of the sound and fury expressed in the preceding sections. There is reflected in that final section, Nachtwandlerlied (Song of the Night Wanderer), the same ambiguity. Perhaps life has meaning only in the struggle, as if there is an ongoing battle that goes on simultaneously on all levels, from the sublime to the ridiculous, from the personal to the societal, the quantum to the cosmic; an ongoing conflict between day and night, good and evil, happiness and despair, love and apathy. How will it resolve for you? Which side will prevail? What is the more fitting note: the sweet sweet highs of the violin, or the deep deep lows of the bass fiddle?
As you have requested...You are Crazy.
Now that, that is out of the way...
I welcome you to Susans.
Thank-you for the articulate and educated critique of my work.
I feel that you realized the very sentiments I was seeking to convey.
I have only recently found my release in writing.
May I invite you to read some of the other things that
I have written on this site, in my posts and in my blog?
I look forward to reading some more of
your thoughts of your own journey.
Once again, Welcome.