Life bursts through any structure or plan with brutal force.
Every form has its place, time, meaning. Take a spider: he weaves a web, and it serves him well—catching careless flies and butterflies. The form sustains his life.
But the world shifts. Winter hits, or drought. Wind tears the useless web to bits. The one who used it, who could fix it, is long gone. Shreds of the form slowly turn to waste, food for bacteria and fungi.
Without the web, the spider would die. Without the spider, the web is dead.
It’s a dance of potential and form: what could be and what already is. They need each other, like two wrestlers in a match, like inhale and exhale in a breath.
Modern folks often forget this. They prize only what they can hold, analyze, or deposit in a bank. They dodge the question, “Where does it all come from?”
No wonder they suffer when their precious forms decay. Life, which they ignored, forces its way back in. Change always catches them unprepared.
Want to skip pointless pain? Consider this: the most valuable things are implicit, invisible, hidden.
The paradox? Life’s greatest energy hides in what seems to not exist.
Sincerely yours,
-Alexander
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