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Intersection of Interbeing

Could it be that two city streets meet at a portal of awakening that leads to enlightenment? May your next frontier be "Inter-Be" discovery. Nearly forty years ago on July twenty-fifth, working in the center city of Philadelphia I was walking to make a noon business meeting and noticed a hippie sitting cross-legged on the corner sidewalk of Fourth and Walnut Street. He sat there with the noontime crowd ignoring him. Disheveled, scraggly haired, he looks up at me. Stopping. No coin can. I ask if he is okay. Calmly he says, "I am one with the universe". His brilliant, piercing, blue eyes exuding joy and bliss. Struck unaware, I haplessly then moved on. Over twenty years before, monk Thomas Merton had an epiphany at another Fourth and Walnut. This corner, in downtown Louisville Kentucky. It liberated and changed his thinking forever. He wrote and spoke on interconnection world wide challenging norms opposed to interbeing. A memorial was built there to his moment. In many towns, there are corners yet to discover. Years later, understanding Merton's experience, still in my awareness fog...yet remembering. I decide to go back to my Fourth and Walnut. Arriving at the corner, there were two of us. Myself and a frail-looking, white-haired woman in a vestment smock with a gentle, knowing smile cautiously saying, "I have been waiting for you". I didn't know her. I was stunned and speechless. She went on, "I want to go through" and started walking by me slowly up Walnut Street sidewalk. Flabbergasted, walking the other way, I turn back to see her, she had already disappeared. I remember the July twenty-fifth event because that is my father's and son's birthday. Sometimes, the fates do speak to us, if we listen. Now, I'm thinking of returning once again. The mystery of the portal is enticing. Wandering through the Bardo, one will find their realm. The oneness of everything is interbeing. This is a partially fictionalized, mystical drama/narrative mixed with a factual event in Louisville KY and with actual Eastern spiritual concepts such as Inter-Be, Interbeing, Oneness and the Bardo. Attribution and credit to Thich Nhat Hanh, Buddhist practitioner, author, lecturer, teacher and poet of international reputation and Trappist monk (Catholic), author, activist and poet Thomas Merton. Concepts discussed of Christian and Buddhist practice are opinionated. Facts regarding Thomas Merton's epiphany are accurate. 8/16/2020

Copyright © | Year Posted 2020




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Date: 10/2/2020 5:11:00 AM
Sam, your comments are supportive and in writing this I had committed Christians in mind. I wanted to show a critical point of connection between East and West philosophy. Thomas Merton is certainly a good example. Many at PS dismiss my poems because they push against some of their more fundamentalist thinking. Oneness, however, is a good starting point. Thanks for your kindness, another commonality to pursue.
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Date: 10/1/2020 12:28:00 PM
Greg, I loved this write when I first read it and I am so happy that it is on the winners list at 4th and Walnut - such a happy intersection of enlightenment and inspiration! Congrats and kudos! Here's to meetings at 4th and Walnut!
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Date: 8/21/2020 4:43:00 PM
There is so much of the mystical experience living in between your lines. This is a "fav" for me. I want to read it many times to "wallow" it in its rich layers. Much has happened on Walnut St. in Philadelphia. Many have lived on this historic street including Benjamin Rush. I have stood on this corner and felt a spiritual pull! Enjoyed this very much!
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Greg Gaul
Date: 8/21/2020 6:12:00 PM
Mystical forces are at work at all the 4th and Walnut Streets. You feel them, so glad you told me. Thomas Merton and Sam are connected, maybe in perpetuity. Could it be that we all are? Thanks so much for your keen insight and kind interest Sam.

Book: Shattered Sighs