THE GREAT LET GO
A myth where some king has nothing left to do.
His kindom falls apart, he loses everything,
and in the desolate nothing,
he sits down to rest on a pile of hay,
and begins to sing to keep himself company.
In time, a princess arrives,
and life begins to re-assemble,
to self-assemble.
His kindom falls apart, he loses everything,
and in the desolate nothing,
he sits down to rest on a pile of hay,
and begins to sing to keep himself company.
In time, a princess arrives,
and life begins to re-assemble,
to self-assemble.
Allegra Preuss • THE GREAT LET GO
Because a leaf practices more patience than an ego,
and the ego doesn’t have veins. A leaf does.
If it doesn’t have a pulse, don’t trust it.
and the ego doesn’t have veins. A leaf does.
If it doesn’t have a pulse, don’t trust it.
Allegra Preuss • THE GREAT LET GO
“Beware the barrenness of a busy life.”
—Socrates
—Socrates
THE GREAT LET GO
A young guy at the medicine circle said something about the importance of preventing the “domestication of humans’.
Here are some ways I’ve found to do that without running away to the woods:
-stick your tongue out
-take your shoes off
-communicate with sound and body as often as you do with words, 50/50
-dance until you feel done and then cross the thr... See more
Here are some ways I’ve found to do that without running away to the woods:
-stick your tongue out
-take your shoes off
-communicate with sound and body as often as you do with words, 50/50
-dance until you feel done and then cross the thr... See more
Allegra Preuss • THE GREAT LET GO
Express, don’t explain.