The Art Exorcist 🗽

FUN✰POV
7 min readJul 22, 2020

Yo, what up? Here we go five minutes. No more. Five minutes just quick. meditative soft, super cool and kind. chillin five in nature. Renew yourself. Hello, Goodbye. See you later, alligator. Here we are. And today we're I guess we're talking to ourselves about what we just, we just accomplished I mean, there's big picture, there's small picture, there's usually those two lenses, you know, left and right up and down. Front and back. Big Brain, small brain. And today we got the music stuff. Even though it was it's like bare bare minimum. We finished what is like a 15 Track mixtape collection which is kind of a family fantasy.

And we push those words together and we and so that's what we were. We were working on, you know the hard truth and the healing journey that can come of it. And so you know, that's just stuff that when you exercise when you exercise or x exercise, it's an exorcism. These are like exorcisms. These are like exorcisms. Either that or they're surgeries. Shout out to juice world. Black and White video. Go check it out right now. We'll put it we'll hyperlink it right here. So yeah, music is kind of like that, that dose that that powerful, psychedelic dose. It's just like to it's like one to three minutes long. And you get like a story. You get a mood, a tone and attitude. You get a handful of words. And then you get poetry. Yeah, you get these lyrics. You get melody, harmony. Now the other stuff that we are going to learn over the course of our life in terms of learning about music, and the 12 notes, and shout out to our Grandma, grandma Sonia, for giving those piano lessons early on. We're going to keep this quick which we promised ourselves. We were, what are we on? Three minutes, it looks like so, yeah, I think this is a, you know, everything we do is family art. Okay and family legacy, it's what's going to exist on after you're gone. And a lot of companies that are just based on, you know, serving individual people. There's no legacy there because those relationships will die out over time. But if you're creating art, you're capturing those relationships, conversations, communications, cartoons, you know, scripts, prescriptions for medicine. Sure. That's part of the timeline. That's something that's being written. Then, you know, it's more abstract. But yeah, that is a piece of physical art, a piece of physical writing. But we digress. The point here is to leave behind art of all kind, created to creative expressions of all kind. And so family is like the ultimate creative expression. And it's like the ultimate unknown. Two people get together and they make magic happen. And, you know, for whatever reason, science could maybe tell us, more or less what's going on but the actual how, where, what, when, why, you know, with there's a whole expanse of universe beyond the realm of reality, which but Creating a child making a child out of nothing, you know is or out of everything and nothing out of to making a new that is quite magical. So we call it magic we call it making magic. And it's the same as making a film or making a building a house. Or do making an album. Depends how much time is spent usually has to do with time. You know how much effort is put in. It takes a lot of effort to create a kid so anyways, shout out to our grandma Sonia. You know, she said this thing when she was 98 she lived to be 101 she said when she was 98 I asked her what what else in life she wanted You know, at this point being 98 years old, and she just very gently told me that quote, just for everyone to get along. And unquote, and that was something that really stuck with me because the family fracture, the family dysfunction, it goes deep and I recognize it as a kid I was witness to the the dysfunction and it just grew and grew over time. You know, with with as the fracture continued to fracture. And the people who maybe could have used some unconditional support, never got it and so Ba ba ba ba ba. You know, our grandma was a piano player her whole life. She loves to sing, chant all the songs. And, you know, it's it's pretty abstract to just want just to wish that you know, in this example just to wish that your kids would quote unquote get along. And you know that it I say it's abstract because it's like, Okay, what do you actually mean? How are you doing it? What's the strategies here? What is the practice? What is the exercise? Or, you know, the emotional exorcism? And I think it's like, like how they say a lot of people just can't see what's right in front of them. You know, they don't, they don't they don't look deeper underneath the surface. And maybe, maybe there was a solution sitting right there in front of her words. She wanted everyone to get along. She was a musician. And she was always singing. So maybe, maybe the goal would be a sing along, right? That's the substitute here. That's the substitute solution. Maybe it's and that becomes an actual call to action. That becomes a, a group activity, where it's very impersonal unless someone writes the songs themselves. But it's just you're getting together you're expressing, you're expressing your voice. And, and you're doing it together. So you're becoming one voice. And maybe there would have been a solution there. There could have been, unfortunately, you know, it's like, people live their whole lives, and they just wish these things they pray for these things like, Oh, I wish they would just get along. Why can't they just get along? You know, they asked that question. And maybe the answers is is inside of the words. Okay, what do you mean by get along? Like what are some practical applications of getting along? And you could you could definitely test out as a musician as a piano player singing along, singing along and I think that's where this project comes from. So and there, I know we, we went over our allotted time for the day. Our talk meditation, our logging for the 21st of July, we posted publicly a lot of freestyle music, voice memo music, which I'm not sure how much we're going to do these days because both our phones, which we were recording the music out in nature where we are now with the birds shout out, shout out to the, to the best background singers there ever were. The studio Nature outdoor studios fun POV outdoor studios and and yeah so we don't know how much is going to come now since since our phones went swimming in the storm the other day quite a downpour but we're gonna but but we put the stuff up and so maybe we'll get into a prop maybe we'll properly go to band lab and and put the instrumentals with the maybe we'll you know because these are freestyles. So we might need to. We do. We'll touch it up. But at the end of the day, I think these are family singalongs. You know, fam fam poetry instead of slam poetry family musical instead of High School Musical. Fantasia. I don't know if transcription is going to get that instead of Fantasia. What's your fantasy What's your fantasy? You know, these are all the are these puns are these, etc, you know, they're remixes of titles. And that's where, you know, go back a couple posts, the theory of relative creativity, you know, cultural relevance and creative relevance and those two scores, you know, based on how much is how far you're deviating from the cultural relevance, relevance, and then the creative relevance, which is what has already been done. Sing alongs sing singing along with your family. Everyone has a voice. And all it takes is practice exercise, exorcisms, surgeries, you know, but it's got to start out in a in a really in a place by yourself, you have to be completely by yourself and experimenting with your voice. That's that's pretty much the most important thing you You go out in nature, or you you have your room, but if you're in your room, no one else can be home or hear you. Because they're these perceptions that can trap you. And you don't want to be stuck. You want to be free and open to say, whatever comes to your mind when you're inside of some music. Okay? So this is to ourselves, but to our family, you know, shout out shout out to the entire world. We're crying for everyone these days. Because it's, it's, it's this is this is for real. This is for real time that we're living through right now. So never dismiss that, you know, just give you it's cool to give yourself kind of like a break a life break a break a break life. Shout out to break life. You'll see the hyperlinks we'll put some hyperlinks in here. I'll talk to you all later. You want the poem? The final poem? There is no me only we and we are the world however. If there's an eye then there's and then there's a you and I love you forever. Okay, are you want the JFK real quick? Okay, JFK quote, real quick. I see little of more importance to the future of this country and our civilization than the full recognition of the place of the artist. If art is to nourish the roots of our culture, society must set the artist free to follow their vision wherever it takes them. Peace, peace in the Middle East east of your mind, ciao for Now on the flip, slip

FUN☆POV

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