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Aaron Mullin Oct 2014
A humbling power
An artist finding her voice at 20 years of age

She got down to work
Rolled up her sleeves
And let it flow
2 or 3 poems a day

Many artists are able to do this:
Commune with Source
Bring back the beauty for the masses

You can do it
And if you can, then so can I

Her story is a description of
How you get up on top of the life force energy
And produce an amazing depth and breadth
Of resonant energy

Be careful
If you lose that trail
Spend it all
You risk everything

When Sylvia lost the trail
She tried to die
But 20 was too young

So she got down to work
Rolled up her sleeves
Couldn't let it flow
There were fits and starts
And 10 years later

She took her own life

What if We were more mindful of the rare flowers that live among us?
What if?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Bell_Jar
Aaron Mullin Sep 2014
Adapted from pg. 571 of Alcoholics Anonymous, 4th Edition

The Black Swan Sanctuary will become a unique and highly successful approach to that age-old public health and social problem, following the crowd... In emphasizing Black Swanism as an integral component of the human genome, the social stigma associated with this condition will be blotted out... "Historians may one day recognize (BSS) to have been a great venture in social pioneering which forged a new instrument for social action; a new therapy based on the kinship  of common suffering; on having a vast potential for the myriad of ills of (hu)mankind."
Adapted 1 July 2011 while in ceremony

Excerpted from Black Swan theory Wikipedia page:

The phrase "black swan" derives from a Latin expression; its oldest known occurrence is the poet Juvenal's characterization of something being "rara avis in terris nigroque simillima cygno" ("a rare bird in the lands, very much like a black swan"; 6.165).[4] In English, when the phrase was coined, the black swan was presumed not to exist. The importance of the simile lies in its analogy to the fragility of any system of thought. A set of conclusions is potentially undone once any of its fundamental postulates is disproved. In this case, the observation of a single black swan would be the undoing of the phrase's underlying logic, as well as any reasoning that followed from that underlying logic.

Juvenal's phrase was a common expression in 16th century London as a statement of impossibility. The London expression derives from the Old World presumption that all swans must be white because all historical records of swans reported that they had white feathers.[5] In that context, a black swan was impossible or at least nonexistent. After Dutch explorer Willem de Vlamingh discovered black swans in Western Australia in 1697,[6] the term metamorphosed to connote that a perceived impossibility might later be disproven. Taleb notes that in the 19th century John Stuart Millused the black swan logical fallacy as a new term to identify falsification.[7]

http://www.reddit.com/r/blackswansanctuary

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