The Whisper and the Walk
The Whisper and the Walk
The monk walks,
his robes brushing against silence.
The world narrows into a single frame—
yellow vastness,
a face,
an ear that listens to everything and nothing.
He steps closer,
not to speak,
but to dissolve.
Is it the Buddha’s ear he approaches,
or his own?
The air is thick with questions
no one will ask aloud.
What does a wanderer say
to a silence that has already answered.
Do they talk at all,
or simply share the same stillness?
The monk leans in,
and the yellow hums softly.
A conversation unfolds,
without words,
without sound—
just the weight of a shared knowing.
Maybe he whispers:
“I’ve walked far,
but the farther I go,
the more the path circles back.”
Or maybe the Buddha answers:
“You were always here,
standing in the quiet of your own mind.”
And maybe there is no whisper at all.
Just a step closer,
then closer still,
until the monk becomes part of the ear,
part of the listening.
The yellow glows brighter.
The face remains still.
And somewhere in the in-between,
the journey ends
as the question dissolves.

This captures the essence of the lovely painting in all profundity. The title is apt. The flow gentle and introspective. Outstanding!!
ReplyDeleteThis a great stuff . I loved the line "Is it the Buddha’s ear he approaches,
ReplyDeleteor his own?" ๐๐