The Center
JUNE 18, 2007
I love synchronicity...
After weeks of no activity on our backyard labyrinth, today there was movement... our dear friend David came over and we made a plan to start relaying the bricks on Wednesday morning... so my walkable mandala is once again sparking to life... it will be so good to have it to walk, to listen, to just be in the circle that takes me around and around to the center of myself...
I love that it started back up this week during these musings on mandalas...
Milt and I worked some today on our sand mandala... After the rim was complete, he wanted to move to the center... which is where the next move in a mandala usually starts... although working from the rim inward is also acceptable... there are no rules, just following were your creativity wants to take you...
Carl Jung described the following circle and dot at the center as a symbol for wholeness...
After weeks of no activity on our backyard labyrinth, today there was movement... our dear friend David came over and we made a plan to start relaying the bricks on Wednesday morning... so my walkable mandala is once again sparking to life... it will be so good to have it to walk, to listen, to just be in the circle that takes me around and around to the center of myself...
I love that it started back up this week during these musings on mandalas...
Milt and I worked some today on our sand mandala... After the rim was complete, he wanted to move to the center... which is where the next move in a mandala usually starts... although working from the rim inward is also acceptable... there are no rules, just following were your creativity wants to take you...
Carl Jung described the following circle and dot at the center as a symbol for wholeness...
In sacred geometry it is the point where the great One looked out around Itself and saw all creation...
It is a wonderful place to begin...
It is a wonderful place to begin...
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Labyrinths provide us with a path to practice change. Some labyrinths have withstood the passage of time for thousands of years. Others are here for just an afternoon, drawn in the sand at the edge of the ocean. Many modern labyrinths were meant to last for years, but because of unforeseen circumstances their time is shorter than intended. And they once again help us to practice letting go and giving thanks for the time they are with us. The Labyrinth of Life at the Sebastopol, California Teen Center reached such place of letting go and is at the end of one chapter and the beginning of another chapter that is yet unknown.

Sometimes... a labyrinth can take years to become a physical reality. In 2018 I met with my friend Deb, to discuss her desire to have a labyrinth on the beautiful land she lives on. Despite our plans and several meetings, listening to the land and finding the right spot, the labyrinth did not come to fruition. Fast-forward five years and in the blink of an eye... it happened!