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A Way of Knowing is about small things and little occasions, the
smells, colours, sounds, the looking, perceiving, thinking,
remembering of our lives and the love that makes them significant.
In a mix of poems, stories and material suitable for private or
public reflection the book explores our knowing and our unknowing.
It celebrates the validity of all experience, singing the creation
and resting in the beauty of silence. The Buddha was once asked,
'What makes a person holy?' He replied, 'Every hour is divided into
a certain number of seconds and every second into a certain number
of fractions. Anyone who is able to be totally present in each
fraction of a second is holy.' There is nothing common about common
life - it takes an awakened sense to see what is mysterious in each
ordinary moment, to ponder in our hearts, to really see people and
things - not our preconceptions of them. Sharing the story of who
we are and what we have seen, listening to the stories of others,
using our imagination fully, these are amongst the greatest things
we can do in our time on earth. Imagination matters. It helps us
see clearly things as they are and as they could be. It makes the
particular universal. A way of being and placing, seeing and
naming, that holds the intensity of the moment, cherishing it,
playing the music of dailyness through all remembering: a way of
knowing, a way to the intelligence of the heart.
Other poems tell of a path in poetry shared with people the author
knows and loves, as well as strangers. Not a path to follow but a
path made by walking - a kind of pilgrimage. And there are new
poems too ...the walk, the story, the poetry go on ...See how they
come: bare feet on the warm earth, disturbing the dust of ages, to
the telling place where the joy of birth and beginnings is shared
and the colours of hope imagined: for every baby born, a star for
all life on earth, a story and a promise. (From A parable of being)
"Where are the altars?": In the churches and great cathedrals? or
out in the world and in the everyday? Joy Mead writes: 'I find
myself bombarded with annunciations: sunlight on dead leaves, the
pattern of tree bark, daisies and dandelion seeds, bread flowers,
butterflies, the smile of a child, a baby's hands, an old women's
lines face, pictures of the Sri Lankan children going back to
school after the tsunami, the tears of a stranger. Things, events,
people - bathed in a special light - amazing me as never before
with their wonder, mystery and value, part of a world more
extraordinary than I can take in. (isn't this what a visit from an
angel is!).' This is a collection of poetry from the author of "A
Telling Place", "The One Loaf" and "Making Peace in Practice and
Poetry".
A book which explores the making and the mystery of bread: growing,
making, baking, sharing in story and recipe, poetry and prayer. In
bread we see the true connectedness of all life - the uniting of
body and soul, spirit and material. It is not just a symbol of
life, it is life itself. Without food, life is impossible, so
eating becomes sacred. Take and eat means take and live; to share
food is to share our life. Jesus, in a simple act, made eating and
sharing sacred.
These poems come from the beauty of the glimpsed moment ... a
precious jewel held for a short time amid the pain and sorrow of
the world, then let go into the bigger picture ... The beauty is
what we remember, what gives the moment its significance. It's the
way it's always been: to reach the sea, to stand watching, waiting;
to know that nothing can be unravelled to its core but is like
reflecting where wild flowers gathered in a vase, framed by a shore
cottage window make of themselves a sea-wide subject: the beauty of
things together. A blackbird sings and the song echoes in fragments
of memory. Joy Mead is a member of the Iona Community and the
author of The One Loaf, Making Peace in Practice and Poetry, Where
are the Altars?, Words and Wonderings and A Way of Knowing, all
published by Wild Goose Publications. She has been involved in
development education and justice and peace work and occasionally
leads creative writing groups.
Words and Wonderings is a celebration of gratitude, kindness,
mindfulness, truth and the love of beauty through the gifts and
giftedness of poets, artists, musicians, gardeners, bakers and many
more, who discover their creativity in communion with others.
Through conversations and connections Joy Mead explores the true
meaning of community - beyond the jargon of 'community cohesion'
and the 'Big Society'. But what matters most and is central to this
book is wonder - be it at the sunrise or the food on our plates,
the intricacy of a grain of wheat or the diversity of people, bread
baked and broken, gardens, orchards, kitchens, poetry, painting,
music - or simply being a part of the way good communities make
themselves and value their distinctiveness. The words of this book
all begin a process towards what can't be told but can be shared,
towards recovering that sense of wonder at our earth and one
another, which is what justifies our being alive.
Unique among the species, humans create their world through
language and imagination. In this we have the potential to be
aggressive, violent and oppressive, or gentle, creative and
vulnerable. Words express and shape what we are or might become. We
are all poets when we attempt to express the essence of our own
experiences. As we tell and listen, we develop our sense of
community and our humanity. Because the personal is also political,
this process creates peace between people, in society, and among
nations. The readings and activities in this book aim to lead us to
a deeper understanding of how we use language. As we become more
discriminating in our use of words, so we can better tell our own
stories and relate to the experiences of others.
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