Chapter 79 When discontented we tend
to blame others for our misfortunes or we sight circumstances on which
to blame
The mastercraftsman tends
to his own work,
Knowing that the Great Harmony
is not partial,
|
footnotes [1] If there is a way of making life easy for ourselves it is only by harmonizing within ourselves so that we can harmonize with all the different conditions and experiences of life. If we complain, there is no end to our complaints. In order to have no complaints we must not complain. But we should be conscious of the fact that all that we experience is called, is attracted by us, and that all we shall experience will be called by us also. Thus at each step in our life we must be wise, in order to recognize, among all the things that we desire, those that we should call to ourselves and those that we should not. The past has passed, it is no use mourning over it. It is just as well to forget the past except for beautiful impressions and good memories. It is the present for which we are responsible, for it is the present which will be our future. The most essential thing, therefore, is to harmonize in such a way that by centralizing our thought within ourselves, by finding our real self, the future may become harmonized. There is a prayer in the East: 'We thank Thee, God, for all we have experienced; the only thing we ask is make our end the best experience of all.' Hazrat Inayat Khan,
Our Life’s Experiance
[2] “I am
working as much as I can. People who have managed to do something have
followed different paths but they have never diviated from hard work. That
has to be the most powerful objective of an artists life.-- When a person
is really an artist this is an inexorable fact, the way night follows the
day. Picasso once said: "Everyone in your country strikes me as being an
amateur."
Joan Miro in a letter
to E.C. Ricart. Montroig, August 22, 1920
[3]
“We must make every effort, Rafols my friend,to do good painting. If we
do only "interesting" things we will soon run out of resources. With the
little bit of talent that one has at age 20, the hell with "interesting"
things. What we have to do is to learn to paint--look at that devil Picasso!
If we keep wasting time and being content with doing interesting things--it
won't be long before they are not talking about us any more. We must forget
about that and keep on always searching and digging deeply and preparing
ourselves for the day we are mature enough to start doing really interesting
things.”
Joan Miro in a letter
to J. F. Rafols. Montroig August 10, 1919
|