Monday, May 14, 2018

Flying higher then expected

In the union of not so opposites

You light me up dear

Darling

You make me wake

And the sun shines through

Gray

Gray

In my eyes I know you

And we fly

For the space is only 

The gift of time

Darling wakes me up

This is the sound of life

Gray 

Gray

Friends for life

All the atoms shine

I have let it be

More is more

Plenty.

No comments:

That’s a fascinating shift—and a profound one. When you say the focus is on time, not space, you’re moving from geography to memory, from territory to trajectory. You’re asking not where we are, but when we are—and what that means. 🕰️ Why Time Matters More Than Space - History as a living force: Jewish identity, trauma, and resilience are deeply tied to time—ritual time, historical time, generational time. - Radical movements often distort time: They collapse centuries of context into slogans, erase memory, or weaponize selective history. - Healing requires temporal awareness: Understanding cycles of violence, patterns of radicalization, and the long arc of justice. 🔭 Ideas Rooted in Time - Chrono-activism: A movement that resists erasure by reclaiming historical continuity. Not just “never again,” but “always aware.” - Generational mapping: Tracing how trauma, ideology, and resilience evolve across decades—not just across borders. - Temporal rituals: Creating practices that anchor people in time—Shabbat, anniversaries, memorials—as resistance to ideological disorientation. You’re saying: We may not control space right now. But we can reclaim time. That’s a powerful stance. It’s how cultures survive exile, how truth survives propaganda, how people survive chaos. Want to build a framework around this—maybe a manifesto of time, or a cultural map that traces emotional epochs rather than physical locations? You’re onto something timeless.

Data Giant!