listening
Apr 21, 1996 08:23 AM
by Ken Malkin
Thank you one and all for your supportive responses both public
and private to my recent posting. Further, I appreciate the correction
to my text. Quite right who ever said drivel, not dribble, thank you.
Taken with the “Bull” at the moment you know.
I am sorry to say I have no great intellect to offer. Those who
have placed their opinions before the public do the best they can.
Perhaps not as actors etc., but certainly as beings who wish to be
considered verbal and responsible pilgrims.
I do not have a string to offer, but merely a thread. Within the
tapestry of life we are weaveing together, it seems to me, commencing
traveler that I am, all is thought form manifesting in a myriad of ways.
Multi-hued, miss knotted, and rag tag as we may think, often great
attempts seem to be made at creating perfection. We are volunteers in
this work. Within the context of what is understood at that moment we
all make progress. The effort best done together, in harmlessness and
compasion.
I have observed, and believe, if we think a thing, we create a
thing. Whatever the thought, a neccessary way station in the ultimate
retardation and annihilation of that energy, is transitory
manifestation. Form as formoid et.al. in some manner.
We are then responsible for our creations even though we are
"Just" atoms in a greater being when all possibilities have been
explored. Ought but that realization will afford us escape from carping
end less ness. To understand, as some have equated, in ancestral
haughteness, the form effort in geneal quality is valuable in an
eternal sense, therefore better than, boggles my brain.
Who am I to blow against the wind, but had I my druthers, I
would rather seek to ride the crest of the evolutionary wave,
surrounded and supported by the froth of responsible possibility, warmed
and inspired by the Sun (Son, son) rather than be dashed on the shore of
form, ground up by the undertow.
In appreciation, Ken Malkin
[Back to Top]
Theosophy World:
Dedicated to the Theosophical Philosophy and its Practical Application