Here is a story that someone shared on-line that I found fascinating. See what you think:
“There's an old
Irish myth about how when the center falls apart, when there is no big unifying
story that can be told in public so that everyone remembers, yes, we all are in
this together, when that happens, when the center cannot hold, the old story
says then it's time for each person to go to the margins and the edges of life.
Because the center when it's missing does not completely disappear. Rather, the
elements of the center are then found at the margins and edges of life. And so
it becomes a time for each person to go to the edge that attracts them and at
the same time causes them to be fearful.
And the old story says that if each person goes in the direction that is both
attractive and fearful to them, they will find that at the edge of their life a
thread, and if each person would then pick up that thread and begin to pull it
back towards the center, then the unifying center can be remade from the
weaving together of many individual threads of life. In the greater myth that
serves life, not death, no one has to be heroic and do it all or claim that
they are the only one who can do it. Each person is just responsible to find
their thread and find a way to weave it back into life. And the key to this
narrative of the great way is that no one can be excluded for any reason, not
because of their age, or their origin, or their race, or their economic
disposition. Because each person has a life thread that has vitality and
meaning and creativity in it.
And the point isn't to indulge in some kind of magical thinking that would say
that no one is going to die on this troubled path that we all share at this
point. And certainly, the point cannot be that we're all going to go back to
life and business as usual. The understanding of the bigger myth right now is
the world as we knew it is already gone. The point now is to be inhabiting a
bigger, unifying living myth in which the words that we are all in this
together have genuine, heartfelt meaning. We are in a time of radical change
throughout the world, where life and death are struggling on a daily basis. And
that requires each of us to change and come out of the crisis as greater souls
not smaller people.”
- Michael Meade
You can also watch Michael Meade tell this story here after about ten minutes and then he tells another story and weaves them all together. Meade challenges us to go to the edge that attracts us and scares us and there we will meet the world that is waiting to be born and we can bring that thread back to the centre. Check it out:
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