Buttonhole Paradise
The Conversation
Elements From The Conversation
This is what a space, much larger than a buttonhole, looks like. Morrison describes the exact opposite of Tagore's fool—someone who receives your pieces and returns them to you whole. The tragedy of Tagore's flower is that it gave itself to someone who could never perform this gathering.
Music
This is the tragedy Tagore's line warns against: the flower stays in the fool's buttonhole even after realizing the fool cannot keep it safe.
With deep affection we send you away with the simple request to answer these two questions honestly for yourself:
The thing I call paradise right now is ____________________
The first small root I could send toward real soil is ___________________
George & Matilda





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