HOME GLOBAL DISTRICTS CLUBS MISSING HISTORIES PAUL HARRIS PEACE
PRESIDENTS CONVENTIONS POST YOUR HISTORY WOMEN FOUNDATION COMMENTS PHILOSOPHY
SEARCH SUBSCRIPTIONS FACEBOOK JOIN RGHF EXPLORE RGHF RGHF QUIZ RGHF MISSION

Part One: The Beginning of the Journey, Thin Slicing What We See

 

 

I open the scroll and again tell you, “I could afford this eventually in 1973 because it has no writing at the beginning. The Chinese love the beauty of writing: how it is done and what it says in its imaginative descriptions. There is nothing there so we will have to supply our own stories; we have to put ourselves in this work to understand its meaning. And even then, there may be no meaning, so the journey could be the pleasure of the journey, not a destination and, of course, the company.”

 

Rule One: Sipping, telling stories and admiring. At any time in this process, you are expected to supply a story about a journey you took with friends, what you saw, and how it changed your direction in life. The journey may be the destination.

 

Thin Slicing: What do we see at first glance:

 

A View from Above: A Physical Distance from the Scene.    

A landscape of mountains or hills, water and nature.               

Mankind and his habitats, almost hidden in nature.

Soft and green.

Islands of rest and experience (the experience of what came before).

Kinds of things: dots, types of trees, masts, placements, etc.

ABA, classical (in the Greek and Chinese sense) composition and proportion (therefore HUMAN).

Numbers: especially 2s and 3s.

 

Thin Slicing the Thin Slicing: No, to be honest, that was not what I first saw here. What I first saw in the simplest thin slice was: 1) ABA (something on one side and a similar thing on the other with something in the middle, 2) spots of green, and 3) a gentle, wavy line of hills and distant mountains.

 

“What did these three things do?”

 

ABA is balance: from the pyramids of Egypt, to the classical compositions by Mozart, to the structure of our bodies, and much more in all cultures.

 

 

The composition of ABA reminded us that we are human: something on one side balanced by something on the other side and something in the middle. This was a journey that humans can take. As we looked deeper, we see the golden section of “the shorter distance is to the longer distance as the longer is to the whole.” This realization forces us to examine our own proportions on our arms, legs, body, hands and feet. We become all mankind in that instance. Every culture teaches us this. Most of us know Goldie Locks and the Three Bears. It is essential democracy in our eyesight: not far right, not far left but just off middle (it is never too hot, too cold, but just right). As an adult, we might call it “Golden Section with the Three Choices.” Those of us who love mathematics know the golden section in the hypotenuse of the 3-4-5 triangle, where when you take a 45-degree line it cuts the hypotenuse into 2 and 3, or a “golden section.” Those who love cartoons knows that it is not the arm of Olive Oyl, or the massive arm of Bluto, but the “just right” arm of Popeye. On the Parthenon in Athens, it is the front distance to the side distance as the side is to both added together. In this scroll, we see this golden section in the way that the center of the middle island is just off center on its imaginary vertical line.

 

 

Once you see it one place, you see it all through the scroll.

 

There are two friends near a small hut with three kinds of trees behind them. There are two friends in boats with three masts and three friends with two masts. And to keep us honest and guessing, there are boats with no masts.

 

A journey is taken with friends or at least one friend. They both stand before the small temple on the first land mass, again in a hut on the middle island, and on the balcony of a dwelling overlooking the lake (at the end of this first unwrapping). We know that this is not a real journey on the lake because if we take our magnifying glass, we see that in the distance there are four boats tied to a dock but we see five masts.

 

Some Greens Stand for Eternal: Some Do Not! As I said, this is a journey to take with friends. The green is the evergreens and trees with leaves, symbols in Chinese art of steadfastness of friendship. Beside the green evergreens are colored blossoms on trees and we know: “If friends go away, they will bloom again in the future just as bright and vital as they were before.” Away from these three, at the edge of the lake, is the “weeping willow” tree, a symbol of sadness in many cultures (the concept of departure and loss).

 

 

We Must have a Frame. And above it all, holding our attention to the thin slicing of the lake journey is the curved line of the hills and mountains, holding the sky outside the scroll and holding us, our fellow travelers and the lake inside.

 

 

 If we look even closer at this first view of the scroll, we see a “dragon spine” of the mountain in the lower right hand corner and on this we find dots, “ti-en fa.” It will take us too long to find a pattern of numbers in these dots on this first voyage but it is there. If we sip our wine long enough, look and count the dots long enough, record our findings long enough, admire the details long enough, we might find an internal pattern to the chaos or WE MIGHT NOT. Still, even if a pattern is not found, the wine, the stories of other journeys and the fellowship of hunting will be enough to keep us looking. We can always unwind the hand scroll again.     

 

 

Time to Rest and Reflect! Like our travelers we pause here and ask that our friends on the journey (YOU) tell us a story or two…about your experiences with these elements: friendship, travel, fellowship, places to stop and reflect on what went before, our humanity in many forms, symbols and their importance, water/earth/human/sky, and patterns/compositions/proportions, and any other events/ideas that the peace of the journey suggests. Send us your contributions, stories and comments.

 

Review where we have been:

 

.
 

PART TWO...

www.rghfpeacejourney.orgPeace Journey Introduction - Background before the journey - Ming Dynasty Journey - 2009 Writing Award

RGHF Home | Disclaimer | Privacy | Usage Agreement | RGHF on Facebook | Subscribe | Join RGHF-Rotary's Memory