tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2377252801421681569.post3205149763748978574..comments2023-10-28T04:53:32.505-07:00Comments on View From The Northern Wall: Weaver's Workchristopherhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04201537517464996231noreply@blogger.comBlogger7125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2377252801421681569.post-38854147456827461352011-01-15T15:50:47.923-08:002011-01-15T15:50:47.923-08:00Joseph, yes, I visited your site and got the idea ...Joseph, yes, I visited your site and got the idea of Zhambala and chased him down, so he is not here by serendipity but because I especially like how the Tibetans have kept at least remnants of their old pre-Hindu religious tradition, adding Buddhism and Hinduism both to it.<br /><br />Rachel, unfortunately this space beyond the weave must be found and cannot be easily shared without considerable magic. There are some who think magic is imaginary and its results do not exist. That's why magic fits in poems and stories but maybe not so much in the pocket of my apron.<br /><br />I had to google gobstopper to discover the jawbreakers of my childhood.christopherhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04201537517464996231noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2377252801421681569.post-81060278300360426022011-01-15T13:15:17.279-08:002011-01-15T13:15:17.279-08:00Oh, and like Jozien, I skipped straight to the poe...Oh, and like Jozien, I skipped straight to the poem. I always do that. :) Sometimes I go back and read the rest, and the other comments as well. I suppose that means I'm the kind of person who would bite into a gobstopper, just to get at the seed in the middle.RachelWhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18225401230724459199noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2377252801421681569.post-21369586325528294572011-01-15T13:13:33.768-08:002011-01-15T13:13:33.768-08:00Do you still have it? I could use that space, righ...Do you still have it? I could use that space, right about now.RachelWhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18225401230724459199noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2377252801421681569.post-21175525746214366392011-01-15T12:15:09.755-08:002011-01-15T12:15:09.755-08:00Glad to see Zambhala making an appearance. ^_^
An...Glad to see Zambhala making an appearance. ^_^<br /><br />And as always, you find these wonderfully expressive ways to write a poem about concepts that are so ephemeral and abstract... you tickle me right in the jealousy!Joseph Harkerhttp://namingconstellations.wordpress.comnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2377252801421681569.post-594142238213323302011-01-15T10:19:27.350-08:002011-01-15T10:19:27.350-08:00This post falls because I try to say too much at o...This post falls because I try to say too much at once. And yet, I wanted to clarify the man as well as share what he said, and I wanted to say a little too.<br /><br />When I read, it still says all that and then the poem says all that too.<br /><br />Jozien chooses to only read the poem and that's a good response. Love you Jozien.<br /><br />Ms RZ, you spell "diest" with the vowels reversed and spelled your way, it is nothing. When you spell it deist it comes from deus = god with "little g", god at his most generic, and when the term is used in a more formal sense than I have, Deist means a specific sort of belief in a distant creator God who works through science and reason now, a God who is absent from His creation because He is only necessary at Creation. All we can ever know of Him is the knowable science, the shadow of His original Presence.<br /><br />As Deus, there is a separate stream as that is the formal Latin for God, as used in Catholic Liturgy, as an example, Deus Irae, the Wrath of God, literally God + Wath Of, the ae being the possessive of Ira, (holy) wrath. Thus Deus in this stream is the Christian God the Father.<br /><br />That shows how Deism arose as a Christian heresy, replacing reason and science for the Trinity and Christian faith. Deism was held in America by some of the founding fathers (Thomas Jefferson for one) who would attend Christian services out of social necessity but would nonetheless prefer to engage in or contemplate science on most days.christopherhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04201537517464996231noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2377252801421681569.post-18922854495106994752011-01-15T05:27:22.628-08:002011-01-15T05:27:22.628-08:00Well.......
Your prose for a poem.
waiting.........Well.......<br /><br />Your prose for a poem.<br /><br />waiting......<br />O O I'm a hippie, late stage, but still.<br />Oh, just what is a diest??????Recovered Zombiehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18102456300981024628noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2377252801421681569.post-51935338632369207272011-01-14T22:32:24.205-08:002011-01-14T22:32:24.205-08:00i just read the poem, because i hope that lets me ...i just read the poem, because i hope that lets me know the space, in between the weave, that you are in.<br />beautiful poemjozienhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10212900310477832041noreply@blogger.com