Perhaps you too have experienced doubt, worry, and too-caring (if such a word exists) today, in your own way. Yet, nothing is foreign to the architecture of flesh and bone called Human.
In the genetic bath of humanity, codon 63 is now activated by the Sun, while its structural and dynamic partner, 64, "speaks" gently to the Earth this week of March.
Doubt (the shadow of 63) arises when you lose touch with imagination, and confusion (the shadow of 64) arises when you rely too much on logic.
If we look at them embraced, as they actually are in the DNA molecule, doubt is the stimulative principle of research, of logic, while confusion is the activating ferment of imagination.
The beauty of logic, as Richard Rudd says in "The Gene Keys," lies in the fact that it itself represents an important paradox.
It seeks to put an end to doubt, but it can never be satisfied by any answer.
The only satisfying answer is one that defies logic!
Research, in balanced logic, therefore presupposes remaining open under the pressure of doubt, without finding a definitive answer. I would appreciate it as a sort of answer without answer.
Thinking now with a logical mind how such a solution would sound, I remembered what Robert Bateman said in "Thinking like a Mountain."
"If you worry, go outside, take three deep breaths, approach a tree, and say Thank You.
If you can't find a tree, you'll still find a dandelion... Nature is magical."
I haven't met the dandelion in the first day of March, but only the cute one in the picture.
According to the ancient principle of "formal affinity," taken up in the Middle Ages, then in the Renaissance and Enlightenment, but lost in its original form in the modern scientific world: "plants useful to health are 'marked'."
Similar to the doctrine of signatures, as within, so without, Hepatica Nobilis (liverleaf, Roundlobe Hepatica, Round-lobed Hepatica, Liverwort, noble Liverwort) reminds us through the epithet "nobilis" of the presumed pharmacological properties of the plant related to the shape and color of its leaves.
Although in reality, it contains several toxic substances, some causing skin irritations, in folk medicine it is still used today as an antispasmodic, antineuralgic, diuretic, and sedative.
I approached it and said only this: THANK YOU!
And this is the first heartful thank you of this March!
Comments