Today I was fortunate to be able to see an exhibition in Charleroi from the Belgian artist Laurence Dervaux. The works in the exhibition were centered around the theme of the ‘liquids’ within the human body (such as blood, water, etc.) and the ‘fragility’ of the human body as a system that depends on these liquids.
When I
entered the first room I immediately had to think of the book ‘Dune’ in which
the scarcity of water, and how to frantically keep and recycle it, is such a
central theme. But that was not so much the intention of the artist, as the
entire installation functioned more as a metaphor for the entire human body
through which liquids travel and are contained.
One of the smaller
pieces, which looked like a network of blood vessels in the shape of baby-lungs,
came with text, saying that the combined length of all the blood vessels in a
human body, measures more than twice the circumference of the earth... Now that made me ponder… because this means
that the human body is indeed a vast system, a small universe of its own. The
same reasoning can be applied to any body, to any animal or creature.
That alone
should make us have so much respect for ourselves and each other who inhabit
this world, as physical bodies. The realisation that we are each a vast
universe of it’s own, yet extremely vulnerable, because we actually need each
other to be able to live and co-exist. Real divinity would be to live in a
manner that honours this realisation: where our actions are rooted within respect
and consideration for ourselves and each other.
Yet, in
this world not even the most vulnerable among us, seem worthy of our
consideration. We declare wars, knowing full well that children will be the
victims of these atrocities, and we declare them anyway. Does humanity deserve
a seat amongst the Gods in the heavens? Or did we invent hell because we know we
did nothing to stop the hell on this earth?
It is important to realise that there exists a way to 'stop'. Atrocities happen because at some point, we 'give in' to our emotions, we give in to our anger and our fears. This is an internal 'movement', an inner 'tipping point'. This inner movement does not happen without our 'consent'. We consent to it because we are participating in it. It takes many years to train oneself into developing the diligence and self-discipline required to be able to stop such automated forms of participation in emotions. I recommend to learn about self-forgiveness and how it works - because that is how you are going to learn to develop inner silence and the ability to Breathe through your own emotions when they visit you.