maturity is tied to forgiveness
This question of maturity, so intimately tied to forgiveness, is the
subject of another of David Whyte’s short essays. He writes:
MATURITY is the ability to live fully and equally in
multiple contexts; most especially, the ability, despite our grief and
losses, to courageously inhabit the past the present and the future all
at once. The wisdom that comes from maturity is recognized through a
disciplined refusal to choose between or isolate three powerful dynamics
that form human identity: what has happened, what is happening now and
what is about to occur.
Immaturity is shown by making false choices: living only in the past,
or only in the present, or only in the future, or even, living only two
out of the three.
Maturity is not a static arrived platform, where life is viewed from a
calm, untouched oasis of wisdom, but a living elemental frontier
between what has happened, what is happening now and the consequences of
that past and present; first imagined and then lived into the waiting
future.
Maturity calls us to risk ourselves as much as immaturity, but for a
bigger picture, a larger horizon; for a powerfully generous outward
incarnation of our inward qualities and not for gains that make us
smaller, even in the winning.
Maturity beckons also, asking us to be larger, more
fluid, more elemental, less cornered, less unilateral, a living
conversational intuition between the inherited story, the one we are
privileged to inhabit and the one, if we are large enough and broad
enough, moveable enough and even, here enough, just, astonishingly, about to occur.
excerpted from Consolations, a book by David Whyte
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