Time stands still (Slice of Life)

slice-of-life_individual

Sometimes it so happens that we come across an idea; and then we run into the same idea again and again. Each time the idea is expressed differently. Recently I read Eavesdropping: A memoir of Blindness and Listening by Stephen Kuusisto. I really liked what he has written about listening. He says that each sound has a story to tell and that there are so many surprises when we actively listen to our surroundings. He writes about his childhood and his life as an adult. He loves to visit cities around the world in order to discover the art of sightseeing by ear. In one essay he writes about his visit to Iceland. There he attends a concert by Ruben Gonzalez, a Cuban musician. The author writes, โ€œAnd then Ruben Gonzalez was playing the piano and time stopped. Then he let time back out.โ€

Yes, there are many moments in life when time stands still. I believe that one can appreciate such moments if one is open to them. A fellow-bloggerย  describes them as the โ€œwow momentโ€.

(https://amommasview.wordpress.com/2017/07/19/this-wow-moment/)

These moments can be those of intense beauty or of extra-ordinary ordinariness. I still remember such an experience in Lothal. A few years ago we had been to Ahmedabad and went to Lothal, a site of the Indus valley Civilization. We grew up reading about that ancient civilization. Gazing at the still well-preserved remains I felt as if time had stopped. I had gone back 5000 years into the past. Another such moment which I shall always remember is when I held our grandson in my arms a short while after his birth. It was a special moment. Time stood still.

I came across the same idea in The Tibetan Book of living and dying. The author, Sogyal Rinpoche says, โ€œOur mind is the universal basis of experience- the creator of happiness and the creator of suffering.โ€ He says that people find it very difficult to understand the glory of the nature of mind. But sometimes we get fleeting glimpses of it. He explains, โ€œThese moments could be inspired by a certain exalting piece of music, by the serene happiness we sometimes feel in nature or by the most ordinary everyday situationโ€ฆ Such moments of illumination, peace, and bliss happen to us all and stay strangely with us.โ€ I was reading about the great French photographer, Henri Cartier-Bresson, and The Decisive Moment. It is the same as โ€œthe wow momentโ€, or โ€œwhen time stands stillโ€, or that moment when we understand โ€œthe true nature of our mindโ€. Bresson was the first to propose this idea. He believed that the decisive moment occurs when the visual and psychological elements of people in a real-life scene spontaneously and briefly come together in perfect resonance to express the essence of that human situation.

While reading about such moments the proverb, โ€˜time and tide wait for noneโ€™ comes to mind. But time does stand still. It allows us to absorb that special moment. It moves on, but that moment remains with us.

Manipal lake 3rd may (2)

Lothal

Time stands still (Slice of Life)

 


Comments

9 responses to “Time stands still (Slice of Life)”

  1. I love this post and believe that time brought me here intentionally today. The idea of sightseeing with our ears really appeals to me. Most aren’t very good listeners, and allowing a moment to stand still can empower listening, too.

    Like

    1. Thank you Glenda ๐Ÿ™‚ I too think that we should learn to listen more. After reading that book I have been making real effort to listen to different sounds. Regards ๐Ÿ™‚

      Like

      1. When I listen the chance to connect improves. I might relate to something said or ask a question. Sometimes sulence arises and listening becomes loud, so noticeable is the silence that the one talking (if we are using the phone) will say, “Are you there?”

        Liked by 1 person

  2. This is a beautiful post. You have given me the gift of a day starting in peace. I am going to share this with my family and friends. With Gratitude, s

    Like

    1. Thank you ๐Ÿ™‚ My son told me to read the book by Stephen Kuusisto and I am glad I did so. I listen to people but now I also make it a point to listen to nature. Now it is 9.50 in the night, it was raining some time ago and I can hear so many night sounds outside. Regards, Lakshmi Bhat

      Liked by 1 person

  3. Time is indeed elastic. Some moments seem endless, frozen as you describe. Sometimes they are rapid. I can be meditating and 30 minutes can go by as if in a moment.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Very true Elizabeth ๐Ÿ™‚ Thanks

      Liked by 1 person

  4. A lovely, philosophical, post

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thank you Derrick ๐Ÿ™‚

      Liked by 1 person

Leave a reply to mukhamani Cancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.