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BEAUTY IS THE HARVEST OF PRESENCE
By David Whyte
BEAUTY is the harvest of presence, the evanescent moment of seeing or hearing on the outside what already lives far inside us; the eyes, the ears or the imagination suddenly become a bridge between the here and the there, between then and now, between the inside and the outside; beauty is the conversation between what we think is happening in the world and what is just about to occur far inside us.
Beauty is an achieved state of both deep attention and self-forgetting; the self forgetting of seeing, hearing, smelling or touching that erases our separation, our distance, our fear of the other. Beauty invites us, through entrancement, to that fearful frontier of intimacy between what we think makes us; and what we think makes the world. Beauty is almost always found in symmetries: the symmetries seen out in creation, the wings of the moth, the airy sky and the solid earth, the restful, focused eyes of a loving face in which we see our own self reflected: the symmetry also, therefore, of bringing together inner and outer recognitions, the far horizon of otherness seen in that face joined to the deep inner horizon of our own being. Beauty is an inner and an outer complexion living in one face.
Beauty especially occurs in the meeting of time with the timeless; the passing moment framed by what has happened and what is about to occur, the scattering of the first spring apple blossom, the turning, spiraling flight of a curled leaf in the falling light; the smoothing of white sun-filled sheets by careful hands setting them to air on a line, the broad expanse of cotton filled by the breeze only for a moment, the sheets sailing on into dryness, billowing toward a future that is always beckoning, always just beyond us. Beauty is the harvest of presence.
‘BEAUTY’ | From CONSOLATIONS: The Solace, Nourishment and Underlying Meaning of Everyday Words. © David Whyte and Many Rivers Press 2017. PHOTO © David Whyte 2014: Dancing with Sheets in Sunlight: San Miguel de Allende, Mexico.


There is a faith in loving fiercely
the one who is rightfully yours,
especially if you have
waited years and especially
if part of you never believed
you could deserve this
loved and beckoning hand
held out to you this way.
I am thinking of faith now
and the testaments of loneliness
and what we feel we are
worthy of in this world.
Years ago in the Hebrides,
I remember an old man
who walked every morning
on the grey stones
to the shore of baying seals,
who would press his hat
to his chest in the blustering
salt wind and say his prayer
to the turbulent Jesus
hidden in the water,
and I think of the story
of the storm and everyone
waking and seeing
the distant
yet familiar figure
far across the water
calling to them
and how we are all
preparing for that
abrupt waking,
and that calling,
and that moment
we have to say yes,
except it will
not come so grandly
so Biblically
but more subtly
and intimately in the face
of the one you know
you have to love
so that when
we finally step out of the boat
toward them, we find
everything holds
us, and everything confirms
our courage, and if you wanted
to drown you could,
but you don’t
because finally
after all this struggle
and all these years
you simply don’t want to
any more
you’ve simply had enough
of drowning
and you want to live and you
want to love and you will
walk across any territory
and any darkness
however fluid and however
dangerous to take the
one hand you know
belongs in yours.




FROM THE WAKING UP APP BY JAMES LOW:
Working With Life And Death
Clarity And Equanimity
Everything As It Is



NO MORE WAR CREDITS:
The NO MORE WAR hashtag graphic is from VENT, a Giles Duley x OPX Studio co-llab. The MORE LOVE colour graphic is from MODERAT, Berlin electronic supergroup Apparat+Modeselektor. YOU ARE SAFE is the album cover of Keinemusik’s Muyè by Rampa, Adam Port, &ME.
IN PLACE OF WAR is from the showreel of InPlaceOfWar.
The WAR IS OVER poster (cropped) is from Happy Xmas (War Is Over) by John Lennon & Yoko Ono.
Nina Simone’s NO FEAR is by Abigail Gray Swartz. MAKE ART NOT WAR is by Shepard Fairey. Marchers with PEACE FLAGS is from the documentary Walkatjurra: Our Actions Will Never Stop by Francisca Silva Bravo & Carole Risler.
DRAGONS BREATHING FLAME, ON MY COUNTERPANE, THAT DOESN’T FRIGHTEN ME AT ALL is from Life Doesn’t Frighten Me by Maya Angelou, Illustrated by Jean-Michel Basquiat.
BEAUTY IS THE HARVEST OF PRESENCE is from CONSOLATIONS: The Solace, Nourishment and Underlying Meaning of Everyday Words by David Whyte. © David Whyte and Many Rivers Press 2017. PHOTO © David Whyte 2014: Dancing with Sheets in Sunlight: San Miguel de Allende, Mexico.
THE TRUELOVE spoken by David Whyte is from the podcast ABC Conversations, ABC Australia, 21 February 2025.












