Mindfulness
A poem about mindfulness inspired by Ancient Greek
Wisdom
The illusions of my true phantasy
Reflect in the mirror of my vanity
Igniting the
desires of my awareness
To arrive at the
door of my mindfulness
For mindfulness balances my inner measures
Completing my total perishable wholeness
Driving my
cells and atoms, daily, to total death
Giving my
whole human existence a new re-birth
Mindfulness makes me cry every day
Sensing the instance of my dire necessity
For my emotions run me to the ground
Waiting for the seeds of happiness to abound
Oh! Dear mindfulness, come forward
Bring the elements of my life toward
Elevate my mind to highest consciousness
Let my soul enter the serene valley of awareness
Always
remembering the following wise sayings of the ancient Greeks:
Anaximander: ‘What is infinite is something other
than the elements, and from it the elements arise’;
Aristotle: ‘Knowing yourself is the beginning of all
wisdom’;
Democritus: ‘In truth there are only atoms and the
void’;
Epicurus: ‘The art of living well and the art of
dying well are one’;
Protagoras: ‘Man is the measure of all things’;
Pyrrho:
‘By suspending judgement, one can
attain a quiet and peaceful mind’; and
Socrates:
‘All I know is that I know nothing’.