Sunday, May 3, 2015

I Had a Spiritual Experience Today

Perhaps I should call it a transcendent experience.  

Most of my readers know a few things about me personally--such as I consider myself an agnostic-atheist since leaving Mormonism.  And that I engage in an artistic pursuit using full-spectrum photography.  I post examples on almost every blog I write here.  About 15 years ago I began taking apart digital cameras and modifying them to sense light that is not visible to our eyes.  The camera receives colors in the ultraviolet and the near infrared that exist in abundance all around us unseen.  Then the camera electronically translates the unseen light into a new message of visual interpretation that I have called my Surreal Color World.  

(click on the images to see any of them larger)
(All photos are copyrighted 2015 by David Twede.  Permission must be granted for any use)

In the past few weeks, after a relationship breakup, I have been focusing my attention on a new subject of Cypress Knees surrounding where I live in Florida, with a new optical filter I recently developed to make more vivid the surreal colorism of my world view that I created well over a decade ago.  Following are a few examples of the scenery, seen in a new light, I encountered in my meanderings along the Shingle Creek banks in Central Florida. 




While I was out today (Sunday, May 3, 2015) and listening to piano music on my headphones, the songs moved from serene piano baroque pieces to contemporary pieces.  Songs like Canon in D, well known to me, played in the back as I snapped shot after shot of lovely scenics.



A popish version of the instrumental song “Hallelujah” played by Brian Crain ("Piano and Light" album)--it's one my ex GF loved--and my thoughts reminisced that about a decade ago the song would have meant more to me.  As the song transitioned to another, I came across a cypress knee that took the form of a hand.  



The song became the theme piece from the movie American Beauty, which when I saw not long after I had left religion and become agnostic-atheist, had a profound impact upon me.  There I listened and took in the surreal beauty around me.  The symbolism of the very present subject took on a direct connection to emotions that were bubbling up inside me.  An unseen hand of a sort touched a chord deep inside me.    




I felt overpowered by the beauty of nature that we can’t even perceive with our natural eyes.  There is so much hidden under our limited experiential abilities, our narrow ego tunnel of squat human sensory bandwidth.  Seeing the colors, shadows, illuminations, dimensions in the viewfinder of my altered camera opened me to the idea that the world is so beautiful and we barely realize it. I started to analyze it, but felt the emotive sensation evaporating as I did, so I stopped and let it flow.  It filled me up, passing through me, and I bodily-felt vision and visually-saw beyond where my eyes could see.  No, I didn’t see anything actually real, but I felt it out there.  I felt that I was with it on all sides of myself.  I wished I could absorb it all, and grow with it.  I yearned to slow down all the feelings that rushed by me.  I heard words in my mind call out, “There has to be more. This can't be all there is to it.”  




Meaning took hold without being defined.  I knew there was a meaning to all of this and while I couldn’t verbalize any of that meaning, it felt logical and real for a transient breath of thought. Maybe, I questioned for the first time in almost a decade, just maybe there is purpose and something beyond, or perhaps higher, than us.  Instinct from many years ago almost took me over—to fall to my knees and call upon something—as I was overcome by this lost or perhaps tossed-away feeling, now returned as an older friend with new wisdoms and insights learned during our separation.



Years ago I would have interpreted this strictly in the religious context in which I was raised.  When I had developed surreal color  photography over a decade ago, I had felt these connections and near mystical insights—seeing the dreamlike world I captured in my camera—back then in Michigan and Colorado.  I knew now, however that it was something else.  Perhaps not mystical or even metaphysical--after all I was feeling it inside my physical body and brain.  These experiences aren't exclusive to the followers of one religion or another.  Unbelievers have them often too, but don't usually declare it from the doorstep or rooftop.  

At that moment I felt this grandeur and expansive connection to the world, gathering even a hope of something larger out there, I also felt saddened by so many losses:  My former life in a black and white delusion that gave comfort without actual fact and truth; the loss of relationship with my children’s mother; the time lost with them as they grew.  I felt the loss of other relationships since then, and the burden of knowing that my youthful dreams hadn’t quite fulfilled the way I wanted. Then I realized what an amazing journey it was.  I couldn’t have planned any of it, but it has brought me to so many places in life that I wouldn’t trade away. 



I recalled something I had written almost a year ago in a blog.  
“You know that moment when you learn something profound for the first time?  Reading a well written blog or novel that fires off all kinds of new thoughts? ... The Newness of the Everlasting Curiosity is exciting...  Tired of your boring friends at church?  Find new ones.  Seeing the limitation of your inherited, family philosophy?  Search for a new one.
“Leaving the LDS [church] is like becoming a child who is merging into adulthood again.  All the fascination of a whole world opens to your exploration, of choosing new directions, of seeking new friends, learning new insights—it’s the candy store that continues to give when you remove the abundant limits placed on you by [religion].”
 



The words at the end of the movie American Beauty also resonated into my mind.  
“I had always heard your entire life flashes in front of your eyes the second before you die. First of all, that one second isn't a second at all, it stretches on forever, like an ocean of time... I guess I could be pretty pissed off about what happened to me... but it's hard to stay mad, when there's so much beauty in the world. Sometimes I feel like I'm seeing it all at once, and it's too much, my heart fills up like a balloon that's about to burst... And then I remember to relax, and stop trying to hold on to it, and then it flows through me like rain and I can't feel anything but gratitude for every single moment of my stupid little life... You have no idea what I'm talking about, I'm sure. But don't worry... you will someday.”

That was how I felt at the moment I watched myself connect with the world through light that is unseen.  It was as if I could see everything literally and metaphorically in a new light through the vision glowing on the LCD of my full-spectrum converted camera.  In a short moment, ages passed and I felt as if I had gain the experience of years, all in a few dozen heart beats. 



As the feeling ebbed, I figured I had primed my emotions with the music and scenery; this concoction of emotions, beauty, peaceful surroundings and seeing in a new light opened me up to experience myself in a way that doesn't happen often enough.  We crave this because it feels so alive.  We feel big and tightly loved.  We feel small and ineffably important.  Contradictory elation and sadness all in the same bottle-opening moment, which overcome and fill us with so much wonder.  The New and Everlasting Curiosity is a kind of spiritual experience even if there is no such thing as a spirit, in the dualism sense.  It is transcendent. 

(All photos are copyrighted 2015 by David Twede.  Permission must be granted for any use)


Cypress knees grow around the tree, from the roots.  While their function is not fully understood, some scientists have thought they may help in oxygenation in the low dissolved oxygen mud swamp through the knee's bald head. I have also read the knees assist in anchoring the tree in the soft, muddy soil.  Each knee is very unique, and they take on iconic forms which I am investigating through my art style.  Like them, we find our anchors in the mud of the world through our own unique experiences. We rise above the mire and breathe new life into ourselves through very personal transcendent events.  

While I do not know what the future will bring--death dark as empty space, or an afterlife of surreal unseen light--I am glad to be alive and having the experiences I have.  May you have new and everlasting curiosity.

17 comments:

  1. David T. Come back to the church. You are a gem and we need you. Don't abandoned what you have felt is true. You have so much talent and the Lord can use you to benefit humankind.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. No, Twede, don't return to the Mormon church. You are a blight and a jerk. we don't want you, regardless of your supposed soul searching. Get lost already.

      Delete
    2. Wow. I can just feel the Mormon love in that reply...

      Delete
    3. Why return to an organization which seeks to control, explain and dispense this type of experience when he could get it freely in nature?

      If he returned to the LDS church he'd literally be expected to pay 10% of his income to get the benefit of such experiences. Even the temple is a cold comparison to our natural transcendent tendencies in the wild outdoors. A sterile, opulent lobby is the pinnacle of worship for Mormonism, but the natural world offers so much more and requires no oaths, rituals, secrecy or elevation of men over you.

      Delete
    4. I didn't see how asking Mr. Twede to return to his former church was in bad taste. It looked like a compliment. Why are you atheists so hung up on this?

      Delete
    5. @Bradley -- Considering all he has written, it would be a kind of gross dishonesty to return to a religion he knows is false. And it's fundamentally opposed to the tenor of this wonderful post. It's asking him to take this profound, transcendental, and mind-expanding experience and stuff it into a constricted little box of fraud, minute rules, and thought control.

      Mormonism is false not just for historical reasons, but because its vision of existence is far too tiny. Asking someone who has seen that to voluntarily step back into it after an experience like this isn't exactly rude, but it sure doesn't grasp what it's all about.

      Delete
    6. Stay where you are David as far as organized religion goes. God exists but he doesn't matter in this life ... and he wants it that way. We are to find ourselves and that simply cannot happen with a parental church that wants us to never grow up.

      Delete
  2. This is beautiful and thought provoking! I too have my moments of spirituality which remind me there is a possibility of more. They are moments of intense beauty, deep connection and unforgettable and I can only hope if there is something more it will be greatly intensified once I get there. Thank you for sharing you beautiful photographs and deep thoughts!

    ReplyDelete
  3. Your insights and photos are incredibly inspiring. Thank you, sir, for imparting this experience to the world.

    ReplyDelete
  4. David is a liar and just pulling our collective leg. Don't fall for this bologna. Or should I say blog-nah?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Please shove your Mormon religion up your judgemental ass.

      Delete
    2. Both of you "Anonymous" are just rude. Regardless of your persuasion, can't you just appreciate the experience Mr. Twede had? I do believe it is affirming of Mormonism, even if he doesn't, but I don't judge him. I accept the experience he's had.

      Delete
  5. I'll be your new GF, David!

    --Morning Glory

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Okay, joking aside. I am also a visual artist. As a member of an artist activist group, I use my art to increase awareness of environmental issues. I find Davids thoughts on his own work enlightening and intriguing. I have spent many hours out walking in nature. David coupled art and nature with music. I am also a musician. Studies have been done on the brain showing how music lights up the "god" part of the brain.

      Sadly, the spiritual experience David is describing is one Mormons think they have the market corner on. Its worst use is to validate religion. Its best use, as shown here by David, is to validate and enrich life.

      --Morning Glory

      Delete
    2. I appreciate your joke, and your insights, MG. True, our brains are wired in this way. They question I have is, what evolutionary purpose is there to this wonder and pondering? Does it add to survival of the species? Perhaps. But it sure feels important.

      Delete
  6. So beautiful, eloquent and thought provoking. And to all those mean people out there that call themselves Christian, grow up. This isn't your journey. Clearly you don't have one and feel the need to leach on to Davids. Go find your own journey to criticize and critique. You'll be the better for it.

    ReplyDelete
  7. I look forward to your new posts David. This one was definitely worth the wait! Thanks so much for sharing these beautiful thoughts.

    ReplyDelete