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Posts Tagged ‘love’

How many beautiful love stories does one live in a lifetime? The years pass, and I see now that they are far more precious and rare than I ever expected. Kisses, crushes, love interests, “partners”, relationships even, they come and go…but how many love letters can you hold open and read on a cold day?

How many folded pieces of parchment do you have, in an envelope addressed to you, inscribed with words like,

“Tu est une ange! Je t’adore toujours. Je t’embrasse ma cherie.”

and signed,

“Bisoux~”

Me, I don’t have any at all.

It is one of the great sadnesses of my life that I lost the most beautiful letters I’ve ever received. Each precious one I pored over for hours, and many days and months after that.  I would trace the curves of the ink with my finger, knowing that my love’s hand had done just the same. I knew that he wrote those words with the same handsome fountain pen used to write my address the last time I’d seen him.

I counted the days in anticipation of each new note. About ten days after I’d sent my reply, it would come. At the foot of our elaborately carved Victorian stairs, under a bouquet of flowers, I would see that cream envelope and every time my heart leapt. Without a word to my mother I would rush upstairs to open it. I was sixteen and in love, then seventeen and still the letters arrived from my beautiful man. Though he was nineteen, he seemed so old to me. Handsome, blond and worldly, this young man from the south of France sent me sunshine in the form of affection I could understand, handwritten love letters we grew into for years.

I pressed the memory of his golden, shining smile into my heart so it could never leave. When I was eighteen the letters slowed, and heartbroken, I thought his devotion had drifted. In all this time we had spent only a few hours together, and our plans to meet again never took shape. I left for college, my parents moved, and I was left with only old letters and the two photos he’d sent over the course of the previous years. My life was starting and he became a memory of a dream I’d had of being fantastically loved.

That is, until he found me. Twenty years later, long after the advent of email and facebook, he found me. Imagine my surprise when I saw his friend request…

“Why did you stop writing?” I half-teased. “I kept hoping I’d hear from you…”

“You disappeared!” He said. “Where did you go? I went to find you, I went right to your house on Cape Cod but you had moved! I tried to call. I found your friend, but your phone number had changed as well, and she had no idea where you were. You were gone! Why didn’t you tell me? I was so sad!”

I had broken his heart, and I’d had no idea.

We’ve chatted briefly now, and after twenty years I can see his face in facebook photographs.  I see both a boy and a man, with a recognizable smile, older now, distinguished. I see a lover and a stranger, fantasy, reality, my present and my youth…and a beautiful story. What I wouldn’t give to read those letters again.

Merci, cheri~~

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Historical Note: The same month he came looking for me, I heard of email for the first time, and opened my first student account.

Neither the letters nor the missed connection would have happened a few months later. How did your life change that year?

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http://www.nytimes.com/slideshow/2011/10/09/movies/mondo-posters

I met someone recently who had the most unnerving effect on me. Around this man, all my normal good sense failed me and I found myself in a few bizarre situations I could not logically account for. What I realized is that sometimes we encounter people who, for whatever reason, wield a strange control over us. This was the case with him. As soon as I saw what was happening, I cut him out of my life, despite being inexplicably fond of him.  I just had this sense that around this man I could get carried into anything and barely even want to stop it. It got me thinking about legendary Depression-era couple Bonnie and Clyde.

Here is their story as told through the eyes of another famous couple, Serge Gainsbourg and Brigitte Bardot, in one of my all time favorite songs:

Serge Gainsbourg Bonnie and Clyde English subtitles – YouTube.

For a much better picture quality (which does the original beautiful film justice), but without the subtitles, click here:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QKfBJMIANsM

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What kind of love affair makes you want to live like that?

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“In 1969, aptly named American archeologist Iris Cornelia Love unearthed Aphrodite’s temple but failed to find the original statue.”   — Anna Rohleder

Aside from being a potentially perfect opening quote for a novel, this excerpt points to one of the great tragedies in the history of art. The original sculptor, Praxiteles, is considered the most masterful sculptor of the ancient world. Yet we only know of his work through the copies made by his admirers, an example of which is seen below:

Torso of Aphrodite, 1st century B.C. Greek. Founders Society Purchase, General Membership Fund. Photo copyright 1987, courtesy Detroit Institute of Arts.

Read the original article here.

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Botticelli's masterpiece remains persuasive 525 years later

Sandro Botticelli – The Birth of Venus – iPhone 4S, 4 | GelaSkins.

Venus came to visit recently, and she came to kick me in the ass. If you believe in synchronicity and all things in life having a purpose, even if only because you insist on finding one, then you will understand this.

I just left a job editing contractor reports at a foreclosure mill. Day in, day out I was looking at photographs of destruction and decay, of trampled lives and shitty toilets. Colleagues of mine routinely saw animals left to die in crates, even blood spattered murder scenes complete with chalk outlines.  In the midst of all this (for the brief six weeks I was there) I asked myself, “WHY? Why am I seeing all this?”

I’m an artist. I like beautiful things.  I’m also a transpersonal counselor. My field is often accused of being overly focused on the “higher” elements of human experience at the expense of the nitty gritty raw unpleasantness of the deep psyche.  I am very sensitive and shudder when I see my brother wince in pain.  And yet, there I was, watching people get locked out of their homes, houses ripped apart, their stuff stolen or destroyed.  “Why?” I asked.

And then Venus came to me.

“You have underestimated me,” she said. “You think I am frivolous, my gifts a luxury. You think to do my work in this world is a lark, a fancy, reserved for bored baby boomer housewives and artists on the fringe. You have this idea that to be serious and dutiful you are supposed to suffer and toil in unpleasantness and sacrifice…but this is FALSE.”

(Did I mention this was ten days into the Wall Street protests? I suspected Venus was getting used to speaking her mind again.)

“This is why you are here, seeing all this tragedy,” she continued. “This disaster and pain you see, this is what the world is like without me. Without grace. Without beauty. Without balance and money and love and pleasure. Do not discount me. You have disrespected me for years thinking I am frivolous, and as a result you have hesitated to commit to working with me. I am your path. Enough is enough. This I guarantee you won’t forget. Now get your ass to work.”

Humbled and somewhat terrified, I have complied.  And my Mysterious Artemis blog was born.

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“Your time is limited, so don’t waste it living someone else’s life. Don’t be trapped by dogma – which is living with the results of other people’s thinking. Don’t let the noise of other’s opinions drown out your own inner voice. And most important, have the courage to follow your heart and intuition. They somehow already know what you truly want to become. Everything else is secondary.”

– Steve Jobs’ Stanford Commencement Address

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