The poet Kahlil Gibran said, “In one drop of water are found all the
secrets of all the oceans.
And Walt Whitman said “I see the world in a blade of grass, the universe
in a single grain of sand”
and the writer William Blake echoed, “ To see the world in a
grain of sand, and a heaven in a wildflower, is to hold infinity
in the palm of your hand and eternity in an hour.”
It’s this embrace, this holy copulation of opposites, that brings
forth our reality as we know it. Without light, there could not be
dark. In every part of our world,from the tiniest grain of sand
up to the edge of time and space, this same dance
of opposites, this interplay of male and female, of yin and yang,
this intercourse, is happening, and making it happen. Making this
happen. And if you can grasp this in any example, you will be able
to see it demonstrated again and again in all examples, from minute
systems to the once unfathomable. That’s why they said
I see the world in a blade of grass, the universe in a single grain
of sand It’s all so simple, as it quietly stares us in the face and
waits for us to recognize it.
As the poet Kahlil Gibran said, “The obvious is that which is never seen
until someone expresses it simply.” I hope this video brings you closer to
understanding his simple Truth,
the means by which creation relates and creates.
It’s a beautiful movement, a beautiful
symphony of opposites joined in an eternal dance
– creating and relating
and forming
the world we know.
So, it’s not two – it’s one. Einstein's theory of relativity
and quantum physics don’t seem to follow the same rules
because they have brought two different functions to the table,
the male and the female. They are the yin and yang of our
universe. Two parts of the whole. They are not truly
separate, we have just misunderstood them. They are forever
joined as One, in holy copulation, bringing forth the universe
you know.
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