The past

A couple of years ago, when I started studying Zen philosophy, Raf was hired to illustrate a book. The book is a memoir called Leaving Parma. As he was brainstorming ideas for these illustrations he came up with this one: “Words create past experience.” He came up with this within the context of the memoir as “Creative Nonfiction.” The idea came to him when he read the prologue to the book. In that section Angie Sarich explains that when she had her family read the book they remembered things very differently and it made her question the past and what it was. So using this idea he decided to illustrate the book with words from the book. He used words to recreate images described in the story. The above illustration is an example of one of these final images.

I thought this was a brilliant idea and if  you ever get a chance to get your hands on this book take a peek at Raf’s illustrations. They are really unique.

When he was bouncing this idea off of me I was studying Zen and was kind of, in a roundabout way, thinking about the idea of past and what it is. And then it hit me. hard.  The past does not exist. We may think it does but it doesn’t. We are constantly rewriting it, whether it be in our minds, or on paper, or on a blog. We remember things about specific events that didn’t quite happen the way another person might remember it. So if I recall something one way and another person who experienced the same event recalls it another way, which way is the true way? See what I mean? The past is merely an imagining of what we think happened.  And our  recall of fact is tenuous at best.

That’s really all I have to say about that. I thought about it recently because the idea came up in my zazen group this past week. It was one of those rare,  mind-blowing “aha” experiences that don’t happen very often.

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5 responses to “The past”

  1. Jrphotography Avatar
    Jrphotography

    Very cool. I have been thinking along those same lines too (I wrote a bit about in my my blood post, “tumble”). I agree. Our experiences and how we see our past, influences what we think about the present and future. And we can’t escape it. Our brain can’t quite tell us the truth; it’s just too much information…we just grasp what we can while we leave other pieces behind. It’s very much like the story of the blind wise-men who tried to describe an elephant by touch only. They were all right. And they were all wrong.

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    1. CraftyMoni Avatar

      Oooh! I Love your blind wise-men story. We are like the wise men. We are just as blind, I think.

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  2. Kcmartin Avatar
    Kcmartin

    Oh Moni I so agree. Think of the night with our Brother. What you said in your post hits it. We all live in different event “Zone” now. We all see stuff in such a different way. Honestly as siblings I really wish we could get on the same page. All my love! Kelly

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    1. CraftyMoni Avatar

      oh that is an excellent example of this! We do all see things in a different way. And we like to create stories. It’s what our brain does and, as Jr mentioned below, there is no escaping it. It’s just what it likes to do.

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  3. The Past « Sandy Sangha Avatar

    […] was working on and about how those illustrations made me realize that the past doesn’t exist. I blogged about it on Blatherskite, if you would like to read more. Mostly I wanted to share a couple of the illustrations with you. […]

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