All posts by PS MacMurray

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About PS MacMurray

Paschal'Simon MacMurray, the scribe, specializes in providing a no nonsense Facebook and Blog presence for small business owners who want quality without breaking the bank. PS MacMurray, the artisan, creates art on a whim using fabric, paper, beads, twine and wire.

Hangman

Stopped for lunch by the bike path. I was drawn to this table because of the blue chair lift, secured to a post that suddenly reminds me of a hangman game. 

No one hangs here, thankfully, not even the beginnings of a stick figure. 

The phrase, “hang in there” comes to mind as I contemplate the out of place chair lift that goes nowhere, so that “in there” truly invites one to go within. 

What word prompted this game, this invitation to skip the violence of a proper hanging in favor of releasing the soul to swing on a chair? Was it a four-letter word gone astray, but for good instead of ill? 

“F this!” She thought. But instead of calling it all quits, she sat and reflected, because the gallows suddenly revealed themselves to be a resurrected chairlift bench. Surely, if this otherwise inanimate object could have a second chance, why not any human at the end of their rope. After all, the chairlift never reaches the end of the cable. It just goes round and round for a fresh perspective. And one is free to hop on or off. Though one must wait to do so at the proper beginning or end. There’s another obvious metaphor for life right there.

No. It must have been a ten-letter word: Continuity. That’s a much harder one to decipher. Thank goodness for this place to sit and ponder.

Little Bear

These poor little bears sat in a box for months. I see my table now, this new table in my new home, centered between two windows with the sun beaming in, and all the months that went by do not seem to matter so much. I am doing this now. Maybe it was meant to be done now.

Ah, but that’s such a cliché!

But truly, we set projects aside and feel guilty. The inner dialogue is thrown into a loop, reasoning that procrastination, incompetency, distraction, or laziness are the obvious downfall of an otherwise creative mind. All clichés as well, by the way.

No. The truth is simpler than that. We stop what we are doing when we are no longer moved to continue. Being, it turns out, requires a sort of natural, spiritual momentum. The momentum that comes from doing is of another kind altogether. And the momentum that carries a project from the imagination to manifestation, and completion, is not bound by time. Nor can it be forced by it.

To be continued…