Value for Friday of Week 41 in the season of Assessing

Healing

Returning home, taking comfort, making peace with and embracing the past all make healing possible.

  • Your pain is the breaking of the shell that encloses your understanding. [Kahlil Gibran, The Prophet.]
  • Healing yourself is connected with healing others. Quite often, it’s not that easy to heal yourself, it’s much easier to reach out and heal others, and by doing that, you heal yourself. [Yoko Ono]
  • What I want for my fans and for the world, for anyone who feels pain, is to lean into that pain and embrace it as much as they can and begin the healing process. [attributed to Lady Gaga]

Emotional healing is the process of recovering from emotional pain and trauma. It involves working through feelings of hurt, grief, anger, or fear that arise from past experiences, and gradually restoring emotional well-being. This journey enables us to come to terms with our experiences, release pent-up emotions, and ultimately find a way to move forward with a healthier mental state. The emotional healing process typically includes acknowledging and expressing your feelings, seeking support, practicing self-care, and sometimes, professional therapy.”  “. . . emotional well-being predicts long-term prognosis of physical illness. This suggests that enhancement of emotional well-being may improve the prognosis of physical illness . . .” “Emotional healing becomes more plausible when the patient’s inner strength attains the level of strength of the disturbance, represented by ‘level of potency’, which allows the patient to cope with his/her disturbance more successfully.

Real

True Narratives

Technical and Analytical Readings

Photographs

Documentary and Educational Films

Imaginary

Fictional Narratives

Novels:

From the dark side:

Poetry

Books of poems:

Music: Composers, artists, and major works

Robert Schumann, Symphony No. 2 in C Major, Op. 61 (1846) (approx. 35-40’) (list of recorded performances), “began to take shape at the end of 1845, shortly after his recovery from a nervous breakdown. His comment then to Felix Mendelssohn, ‘drums and trumpets have been sound- ing in my mind for some time now,’ might strike us as a wry reflection on his dis- turbed mental condition, replete with aural fantasies, of the year preceding.” “The narrative of the C major Symphony is that of the journey from despair to healing and redemption”. In this work, “Schumann reinvented his own compositional language and created an alternative way of thinking about the symphony – despite the onset of the syphilis that was eventually to kill him”. Top recorded performances are conducted by Toscanini in 1941, Bernstein in 1960, Szell in 1969, Karajan in 1971, Sawallisch in 1972, Kubelik in 1978, Gardiner in 1998, Gielen in 2010, Holliger in 2012, Abbado in 2013, and Thielemann in 2018.

Perhaps Tibetan chant offers the music most overtly focused on healing:

Many pastoral-toned short works by British music suggest a return home to England’s soothing and verdant landscape.

Charles Koechlin, chamber works:

Other compositions:

Albums:

Music: songs and other short pieces

Visual Arts

Film and Stage

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The Work on the Meditations