I love the Rilke passage below, and have been saving it for a matching photograph that illustrated the idea. This morning I noticed my camera had made its way back into my bedroom, and took a look to see what pictures might be waiting inside. My daughter spent some time yesterday photographing, and this image she captured makes me think of the mysteries we all hold and seek answers to, and like the small opening to the sun in this photograph, we must wait for the clouds to shift to see the answer.
I love the idea of loving the questions themselves, rather than fretting the not knowing.
Have patience with everything
unresolved in your heart and try to
love the questions themselves, as if they
were locked rooms, or books
written in a very foreign language.
Don't search for the answers,
which could not be given to you
now, because you would not be
able to live them. And the point
is to live everything. Live the
questions now. Perhaps then, someday
far in the future, you will gradually,
without even noticing it, live
your way into the answer.
~Rainer Maria Rilke
Perfect!
ReplyDeleteHi Billie! Boy, I've missed visiting your site during my period of distractions. And what a welcome back: beautiful photo and the passage is fabulous. It really speaks to my heart. Thanks for posting!
ReplyDeleteMatthew, I think there's a new camera in the future. :)
ReplyDeleteMichelle, it's great to see you.
ReplyDeleteI got your info about the great new site:
petsblogroll (dot) com
which everyone should go check out right now!
I didn't sign on because I often diverge from blogging about the animals we live with and didn't want to mis-represent camera-obscura to the readers, but I love the idea and it looks like a great place to find much good reading.
The picture certainly compliments the verse, which I love. There doesn't seem to be anything to add, Rilke has succinctly put it perfectly.
ReplyDeleteYou're right, Arlene - it's such a beautiful and succinct verse.
ReplyDeleteExactly what I needed to hear. And so beautifully said. I love the photo, and of course the Rilke. Thanks for a wonderful post!
ReplyDeleteThat's a nice coincidence. I was reading Rilke yesterday morning - the first verse:
ReplyDeleteEverything beckons to us to perceive it,
murmurs at every turn, "Remember me!"
A day we passed, too busy to receive it,
will yet unlock us all its treasury.
I love Rilke and I love how poetry slows me down, make the moment seem longer.
Máire
I, too, am an appreciator of Rilke and familiar with this favorite passage :) What a wonderful pairing with the picture your daughter took. Joseph Campbell is one of my all time favorite teachers - he wrote: "Life is not a problem to be solved, but a mystery to be lived...It's not the agony of the quest, but the rapture of the revelation...You ARE that mystery which you are seeking to know."
ReplyDeleteThanks, as always, billie, for sharing :)
I want to add that imo, your daughter has a great "photographer's eye" !!
ReplyDeleteJane, it's interesting to me how these passages seem to float onto my radar just about the exact time I need to read them again.
ReplyDeleteI'm glad it worked that way for you as well!
Maire, thanks for that passage - I love it too! And I agree that Rilke seems to slow the moment and make it more precious for reading his words.
ReplyDeleteBeth, I'm a Joseph Campbell fan too - thank you for sharing that passage. It's wonderful!
ReplyDeleteAnd thank you for passing on the compliment to my daughter. She reads the blog so will see it and hopefully feel good about her work!
Sort of a variation on the Serenity Prayer, isn't it?
ReplyDelete