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creativity

“The purest definition of “religious” is: relating to or manifesting faithful devotion to an acknowledged ultimate reality.”

— Darrell Calkins, Share via Whatsapp

“There are so many stereotypes, prepackaged concepts and platitudes out there in our thinking on the divine, and the associated emotions those produce; it’s very difficult to transcend. But that’s ultimately what experiencing the divine is all about: transcending stereotypes, concepts and platitudes. As soon as one falls back on an acceptable definition or understanding, it disappears. It’s like water; the moment you try to grasp it, you lose it.”

— Darrell Calkins, Share via Whatsapp

“Accurately perceiving and following one’s intuition is, I think, the essential human spiritual process. The distractions, confusion, misinterpretations and temptations that oppose that process are enormous. At the same time, there are always clues for how to go about it. The divine is a mystery, so the impulse to really discover, like a child, has to be the core response to anything; that’s the only way beyond the habits, presumptions and prejudices that feed ignorance and fear. To question well, instead of hiding behind a belief or answer, requires the application of the most valued of all human qualities, such as compassion, courage, imagination, respect, humility, devotion, and ultimately love of life itself. This kind of passionate questing is evident in the most admired and, if you will, divine individuals in every culture, religion, and skill throughout history.”

— Darrell Calkins, Share via Whatsapp

“More focus has been placed on these subjects through human history than on anything else—mystery and mysticism, God, imagination, intuition, the nature of relationships, human purpose, happiness and salvation…”

— Darrell Calkins, Share via Whatsapp

“In terms of achieving what I call “being in the right place at the right time,” one has to know balance. Not from the outside as an observer, but from the inside out. For every individual, that requires creating a successful balanced interface between what one is compelled by and the essential principles of nature, which we comprehend through our intuitive conscience. Those are our clues to the mystery. When one gets it right, there it is.”

— Darrell Calkins, Share via Whatsapp

“In the construction of one’s life, we define ourselves largely by the problems we engage and the debts we incur. The greater and more sophisticated the problems, the greater and more sophisticated the person. True resolution, or transcendence of endless dichotomy, is rare indeed. To truly make a debt vanish requires, in a way, a certain kind of magic. In all traditions, this is looked upon as one of the great mystical tricks. It is not forgotten, fixed, or hidden perfectly; it disappears. To have this occur, one must do more than simply forgive (another or oneself), although in action that’s an important step. One intuits the value of the problem as the birth of possibility.”

— Darrell Calkins, Re:, Share via Whatsapp

“The simple, external acts in which you resolve shame and guilt, and set right a debt, by passing by them all and giving something grander even so and instead of. You end the circle by leaving it behind. Conscience brings awareness of the need to change something, but the source of your actions must become inspiration and devotion. You’re not doing it to get out of debt; you are doing it because you know it to be the thing to do.”

— Darrell Calkins, Re:, Share via Whatsapp

“Through the realization of the potentials and possibilities within and outside of you, one connects imagination with reality. What could be becomes so.”

— Darrell Calkins, Re:, Share via Whatsapp

“Through the realization of the potentials and possibilities within and outside of you, one connects imagination with reality. What could be becomes so. You transform what exists, causing not only its evolution, but determining to a large part the course of its evolution. It’s a kind of alchemy in that what you create has not existed before, you give birth to other potentials and possibilities, which continues and expands the program. Perhaps more importantly, the very core of existence is touched and celebrated, that being creation itself.”

— Darrell Calkins, Re:, Share via Whatsapp

“An unpublished writer should doubt themselves. They should constantly wonder whether what they’re creating has merit. And then, having doubted, they should take up their pen and see if they can’t make it better.”

— Johnny Rich, Share via Whatsapp

“He was surrounded by love, and he used that power to create.”

— Suzanne Young, Poet Anderson ...of Nightmares, Share via Whatsapp

“Fashion is simply a guideline for style-less people to appear stylish.”

— Criss Jami, Healology, Share via Whatsapp

“Why do you paint, Nona? ... I paint first to honor God who paints the sunsets and oceans and human hearts. And second, I paint so I don t get cranky like so many of the old people in this world.”

— Kimberly Stuart, Operation Bonnet, Share via Whatsapp

“How many geniuses die undiscovered, not only by others but, more sadly, by themselves?”

— Joyce Wycoff, Share via Whatsapp

“Creativity is an amazing human characteristic, which is more connected with curiosity than with knowledge.”

— Eraldo Banovac, Share via Whatsapp

“These five values are the organic origins of what could be called intuitive conscience. They are also what we experience personally as our core, essential yearnings, however distorted or confused we may interpret them: to care and be cared for; to share equally in freedom and responsibility; to belong, and to trust that what we belong to will continue; that there exists an objective hierarchy of virtue and wisdom; that there exists that which is unquestionably sacred or divine.”

— Darrell Calkins, Share via Whatsapp

“Creativity is an inherently human trait that allowed us to dominate our environment and make our way to the top of the food chain.”

— Harry Hoover, Born Creative: Free Your Mind, Free Yourself, Share via Whatsapp