The wind’s in the willows
My heart is in two.
I sit being billowed
Thinking of you.
The wind’s in the willows
It’s starting to rain.
I sit getting drenched
Both with droplets and pain.
Poet unknown, but I found a copy of this very same poem in Chapter 55 of a Timeless Place.
For a dear friend who shared this poem recently. I love its imagery and was inspired to animate parts of it with Archetypal Animations.
Have a beautiful and soulful day.
Following are sources for the images and music used to create each Archetypal Animation. All images for this blog come from Pixabay and all music is from Spotify. To hear the music, just click the little sound box in the upper right-hand corner of each animation.
You can follow my Pixabay account to see collections of spectacular photos I have encountered in my searches for images for Archetypal Animations. And follow my Spotify account for meditative and powerful playlists of musicians I have discovered in my search for musical soundtracks for Archetypal Animations.
Feature Archetypal Animation:
UnderWater Fashion Woman Art Water Tank Fine Art | Engin_Akyurt | Engin Akyurt • Age 41 • Türkçe • Member since Nov. 1, 2016 • #25
Willow Tree Winter Light Color Sky | elvina1332 | Эльвина Якубова • Age 29 • Каспийск/Россия • Member since Jan. 22, 2018 • #869
Match Smoke Match Head Sticks Matches Burn | roegger | Deutsch • Member since Nov. 25, 2014
Girl Nighttime Lantern Oil Lamp | Greyerbaby | lisa runnels • Age 59 • magee/united states • Member since Jan. 13, 2012
Love Heart Valentine’s Day Red Affection Hearts | marcosaasilva | Marcos Silva • Age 58 • Macaé/Brasil • Member since Nov. 19, 2016
Music: Day 28: Mantra for Moving Forward (So Dar Keha) | Meditative Mind
First Archetypal Animation:
Weeping Willow Willow Tree | MabelAmber 👀 who will one day • make you hide…/your face in your hands 👀 • Member since Sept. 6, 2015
Heart Broken Nature Love Leaf | Modman | Kevin McIver • Age 59 • English • Member since April 22, 2015
Hourglass Shattered Broken | Heather_Ann | Heather Plew • Age 32 • Grapeview/USA • Member since Jan. 25, 2018
Heart Crack Broken Pain | chadkrue17 | Chad Krusenstjerna • Age 25 • Lynnwood/United States • Member since Aug. 24, 2015
Music: 50 Shades of Purple | Songs For the Brokenhearted by Maria Paloma
Second Archetypal Animation:
Abstract Background Grey Billow | yadiyadi | English • Member since Jan. 28, 2013
Background Abstract Etherial Billows | yadiyadi | English • Member since Jan. 28, 2013
Paraglider Leisure Sports Free Flight | JACLOU-DL | JackieLou DL • La Baie du Mont saint Michel/France • Member since June 10, 2017 • #72
Woman Face Light Painting | Inactive account – ID 19833603
Music: Molly (feat. Brendon Urie of Panic at the Disco) | Lil Dicky
Third Archetypal Animation:
Weeping Willow Willow Tree | MabelAmber 👀 who will one day • make you hide…/your face in your hands 👀 • Member since Sept. 6, 2015
Window Glass Water | Pexels | English • Member since March 26, 2016
Rain Umbrella Pavement Red Black | nikondian | Souvick Ghosh • Age 32 • Kolkata/India • Member since July 22, 2017
Cloud Heart Love Wind | Kranich17 | Michaela • Germany • Member since Jan. 6, 2019 • #332
Music: [1] Thunder & Rain Sounds, Pt. 01 1:05 | Thunderstorm & Rain (Sleep & Mindfulness) | Sleepy John
Fourth Archetypal Animation:
Hand Hyperhidrosis Sweating | BarbaraBonanno | Barbara Bonanno • Massa (MS)/Italia • Member since Feb. 20, 2015
Scream That Weather Breath | Engin_Akyurt | Age 41 • Türkçe • Member since Nov. 1, 2016 • #25
Under Water Fashion Woman | Engin_Akyurt | Age 41 • Türkçe • Member since Nov. 1, 2016 • #25
Under Water Fashion Woman Art | er Water Fashion Woman | Engin_Akyurt | Age 41 • Türkçe • Member since Nov. 1, 2016 • #25
Under Water Fashion Woman Art | er Water Fashion Woman | Engin_Akyurt | Age 41 • Türkçe • Member since Nov. 1, 2016 • #25
Music: Pain PinkPantheress | [1] Pain 1:39
My small insight in animating parts of this poem is:
Keep moving forward no matter the weather inside or outside.
Every emotion, feeling, and mood is rocket fuel powering us ever forward through new beginnings and endings on our endless and indestructible journey through the feeling of being.
It is only through the dark that we know the light.
It is only by descending to our deepest depths that we can reach our highest heights.
One more insight, actually it is a synchronicity between working on this poem and a movie that my husband and I watched last night. We saw a BBC version of Great Expectations. Neither of us had ever read Charles Dickens book nor seen any of the movies made about it.
Both of us were spelled bound by the convoluted beautiful tale Dickens weaves through all his stories. We were particularly captivated and appalled by Miss Havisham.
"Humiliated and heartbroken, Miss Havisham suffered a mental breakdown and remained alone in her decaying mansion Satis House – never removing her wedding dress,..." -- Wiki
Here is a sense of the depth of despair she has descended to and refuses (or cannot) let go of in this complicated story.
Her endless pain bends and distorts her until she appears more dead than alive, more witch than beautiful maiden, which she was. Still she clings to her unendurable pain, the consequences of which ripple through and define the rest of her life and beyond.
I listen to a lot of Alan Watts, and he talks a lot about letting go because there is no way to hold on to it. It can be pleasure, pain, money, status, whatever it is a person is tempted to hold on to. He also talks about peaks and troughs. You can’t have one without the other.
I immediately sought to find an example of what would happen to a human being who only held onto pleasure. A person who refuses to see, feel, or know their own pain. I could not think of a literary example, but my mother-in-law sprang to mind.
I realized a person who holds on to pleasure also is beaten and battered into more of a monster than a human being by this force–for pleasure is an energy just as pain is energy. We feel these energies as emotions inside of us.
A person who clings to pleasure becomes dim, shallow, and cruel. They become a person who takes pleasure in other people pain, misfortune, and sorrow. They have forgotten their soul needs food to grow and that consuming someone else’s pain is a pretty poor substitute for their own.
To grow, a soul needs to sink into the depths of being a mortal being. Denying their own pain and suffering, cuts them off from other people and slices themselves in half. A person who clings to pleasure becomes the same type of pitiful monster that Miss Havisham becomes due to clinging to her pain.
You can follow my journey in exploring what happens to a person who clings to pleasure through my Big Sky Series.
Have a beautiful day!