It must have been over 30 years ago that I bought the Kuan Yin statue I had fallen in love with in a store window. It was then, as it is today, black and many-armed and cost more than I really could afford in disposable income -- eighty bucks.

Time passed and the statue never changed much. Some of the black patina wore off and revealed what might or might not be brass or bronze below. And with the paint, some of my gee-whiz-Mr.-Wizard uncertainties wore off too. I went to the Zen center and sat, and got the drift of things a little and the awe tinged with fear (what if somehow, something stripped me truly naked?!) wore down as well.
But today, I was pleased to see my old friend in much the same way I would be pleased to run into an old friend on the street. It was warm and mostly clean. The statues were on the altar together with an incense burner and candle and water bowl. Just as when I had first finished it only now ... well nothing had changed and everything had changed. Changed softly and somehow naturally, like a maple leaf that tiptoes into spring, gathers its forces, turns a ruddy, solid green and greets the rain drops with a plop, plop, plop. The incense rose from the bowl as it always had, the candle flickered, and everything was snug as a bug in a rug. Like old friends, sitting on a park bench, silent, but with shoulders touching easily ... nothing had changed and yet everything was changed.
How nice to have old friends, to breathe the same air, smile at the same jokes, and wonder why it was that what once had been wondrous was now just wonderful.
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"What sort of presumptuous son-of-a-bitch builds a church in his backyard? "-the kind who has three kids and needs a little quiet space. I'm thinking of building one myself.
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