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jiveny | August 27, 2010Today I planned to make some pesto for my lunch using fresh herbs, oil, lemon, salt, pepper, garlic, sunflower seeds, and steevia extract to sweeten. Turns out I put in far too much steevia in and ruined the pesto. Yet, I tried my best to salvage it – adding more oil, more herbs, more this and more that.
Mid way through this excercise I realised something I’d like to share with you. Something true of pesto and I think also true of life in general.
I realised that rather than adding more to the pesto what it needed was less, though wanting not to waste what had already been gathered I ignored this instinct, adding more.
And I feel that as humans, we are often adding more to our lives, acquiring more and collecting more in the vain hope that all this extra stuff will make our lives richer and more delicious. Only, I’ve found the reality to be that we tend to get lost in the more we consume and distracted from the true essence of our being.
In the last 24 hours this message has been illustrated in more ways then one.
Last night I watched the pixar movie UP and seeing the old man, so attached to his house and all that was within it, that he actually dragged it behind him almost wherever he went. Doing so, it seems he missed a lot of the beautiful things that life was offering him throughout his journey.
I’ve since come to the conclusion that one of the true gifts of being human is our memory, in which we can carry mementos of our all our dear experiences allowing us to travel lightly in physicality.
Unfortunately though, we feel as westerners that the memory of something is rarely enough. We don’t trust our memories and so we gather ‘tangible proof’ and are sold souvineers to remind us.
I do not mean to sound negative about this; I too croon over many dear possessions, but I do feel if we could just be comfortable, carrying with us the cherished memories of our lifetime, we would find ourselves much freer, with much less to carry, less to watch over and less to physically risk.
In line with this thinking, heres a link to an interesting website: six items or less, which challenges you to select six items only (not including socks, undies, workout clothes, swimsuits, and the like) to wear for an entire month. Another variation is to choose only 100 items to live with, including your house, car, bed etc. Feedback from everyone involved so far has found it to be a very liberating experience as they let go of a great deal of material clutter that we tend to mindlessly hoard in our rooms.










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