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Deborah J. Brasket, life, music, poem, poetry, seamless Being, spirituality

Seamless Being
I’m not sure what there is to say anymore about being me,
Who I am-was-will-be.
We flow together seamlessly
Without end.
Where to pinpoint the whole of it,
Or snip the seam and end this bliss of being
Would be like cutting vapor.
Was ever there anything more meaningful than this very moment,
This here and now, this seamless seeming,
Seemingly without end?
No words can contain it. Not one.
The space between words,
Perhaps.
Deborah J. Brasket, August 2023
Heaven and Earth, music that captures the mood of this poem
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“seamless seeming” – thank you for this thought-provoking, reassuring poem, Deborah
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My pleasure! Thank you for responding. It’s nice to know when a poem resonates with readers.
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Agreed. You are welcome
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Lovely. Thank you. I also always enjoy the artwork of Joseph MW Turner. So evocative!
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I am so glad you liked it. It’s always fun looking for the right painting to go with a poem, and I was absolutely entranced by this one from Turner.
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Same . Turner is so very enchanting.
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Lovely poem, Deborah! Goes perfectly with that beautiful mystical Turner painting! “The space between the words,” seems to contain it all. That gap, from where all thoughts and words spring forth, our own inner unending seamless Being.
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Thank you Ken. Yes, I think that line does capture all I wanted to express. And the Turner painting too. Wow. Talk about capturing something “without words.” I can get lost in it. That music too came up on my playlist as I was working on the post, and that too really resonated with me and seemed to fit the spirit of the poem so well I couldn’t resist adding it to the post as well.
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You might be interested to know (if you don’t already) that mathematics pays attention to continuity and discontinuity. The graphs of some mathematical functions have “snips” in them.
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Interesting. I didn’t know that. But I’ve often felt that the space between words, sentences, musical notes, and strokes in paintings, etc, are potent. A connecting force perhaps. The same with the empty space between atoms and galaxies. So I’m not surprised that this is true in mathematics as well.
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I feel blest reading about your integration; all in one.
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Thank you, Teresa. That means a lot to me.
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First time I have seen this Deborah, but I really like it.
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