I am intrigued by what seems to me to be a connection between what Nate sings:
“I have found the dilemma. We don’t know who we are. We’re all the same, we’re just unique,”
and what Lauren Berlant writes in the review at the end of the post:
“The claim is in the body taking up time, and space. What is important is that many versions of nobodiness are revealed in their singular and yet generic, impersonal, non- autobiographical somebodiness.”
We must realize we are all One (“Love one another.”), yet remember Who We Are: Each of us a Unique expression of that Love.
Thanks Steve for making the BIG connections (and Rev. Mike is your playground!). It’s great to see all this expansion, as we feed off of random bits of reality and words that matter.
I am intrigued by what seems to me to be a connection between what Nate sings:
“I have found the dilemma. We don’t know who we are. We’re all the same, we’re just unique,”
and what Lauren Berlant writes in the review at the end of the post:
“The claim is in the body taking up time, and space. What is important is that many versions of nobodiness are revealed in their singular and yet generic, impersonal, non- autobiographical somebodiness.”
We must realize we are all One (“Love one another.”), yet remember Who We Are: Each of us a Unique expression of that Love.
I love that Divine conundrum.
Thanks Steve for making the BIG connections (and Rev. Mike is your playground!). It’s great to see all this expansion, as we feed off of random bits of reality and words that matter.