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Spiritual Understanding (standard:other, 816 words) | |||
Author: GXD | Added: Aug 27 2007 | Views/Reads: 5893/2334 | Story vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
Giving up guilt and grieving can be a rewarding process, well worth the effort. | |||
Click here to read the first 75 lines of the story writing. Or music, drawing, painting, sculpture, what have you. So creativity relates to grief and guilt in this way: grief and guilt can't always be talked out, but must be "acted out" in socially acceptable ways. Art is the socially acceptable way for people to express the discomfort -- or even pain -- of their underlying emotions and thoughts. Artistically expressed thoughts and emotions make up what we call "beauty". We all know that creativity is child-like behavior, because the child who is free to express himself is a child who smiles. The child whose behavior gives rise to repression by adults begins to accumulate a burden of grief or guilt. If this grief or guilt is drained off promptly, by encouraging the child's creative expression, it would be like putting a band-aid on a cut. The child's capacity for bearing grief or guilt will be increased, and the child will be less likely to "act out" those feelings and thoughts in antisocial ways. What I have just illustrated is the Aristotelian derivation of Creativity as a desirable thing. If we drain off guilt and grieving, we bring beauty into our lives. These thoughts are not precisely original, but go back to what the Russian novelists of the nineteenth century were trying to tell the world. --Xenocrates Seattle, June 29, 1991 Gerald X. Diamond Tweet
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