| "Chian MiMi", Acrylics on Stretched Canvas |
There are a lot of stories from my childhood that I start with the words "When I was 13 years old." It was an important year for me in many ways. I learned a lot, and I started to become somebody unique and diverse. One of the primary things that happened was my discovery of Religion. I had been going to a Methodist Church with my family where we lived, in Muncie, Indiana. Our attendance was not what you would call regular, necessarily. But enough, that my family felt they belong. Except for me. I was already accustomed to not fitting in at school and elsewhere. So it was no surprise that I would feel out of place at church, too. My biggest problem with the sermons that I kept hearing no matter what church I visited were the negative messages. "If you do this... you're going to hell!". "If you do that... you're going to hell." To me it seemed all of these people were obsessed with whether they were going to heaven or hell when they died instead of being obsessed with life in the here and now. So, one Sunday, I told my mother, "I'm not going to church anymore."
You have to understand that for all the conservatism my parents practiced- and still do- my mother has always had a streak of Social Liberalism. Which I appreciate. I'd like to think I get it from her. My mother said to me, "what are you going to do, then?" I didn't know. I knew there was something else out there that had to fit me. But, I didn't know how to find it. And back in 1980, we didn't have the Internet. So, my mother suggested I do some reading; find out what else was out there that seemed interesting to me. Rather than just write off Christianity all together, do some comparative studies. Now, this may seem a little odd to some. But, you have to know that by 13 I was already knee deep in advanced academic studies, anyway. I was on a path to one day be a "Scholar." So, I think my mother saw this as much as an exercise as anything.
For a year I studied everything I could get my hands on from the school library as well as the Bracken Library at Ball State University: Judaism, Islam, Catholicism, even Zoastrainism. It was- and is- my belief that people tend to conform themselves to a religion that is picked for them, rather than find a religion that conforms to them. I made a list of what I "believed" in at the time. Then went searching for something that fit that list. I found my answers in Buddhism: connectedness; compassion; peace. And when I discovered it, I became it. I have been a Buddhist now for 32 years. And I have tried to live my life through the philosophy of Buddhism in everything I do.
"Chian MiMi" refers to the Chinese words that mean "A Thousand Secrets". Atop that list is the secret to life, the universe, and everything. Some might say "42", but my answer is "Compassion". In this painting, which was my third after having started painting again, I try to show the Buddha lingering on the middle path between chaos and order. I utilize three of the most recognized iconic symbols in Asia: the luck dragon; the Buddha; and the symbol of Happiness. This was the painting that made me realize that my Impressionistic style could be valid and acceptable. It was of this painting that my ex-girlfriend- the artist who became a Dental Hygienist- said "You did this? This is good." And gave me the final bit of assurance and validation I needed to continue this path. The sale of this painting a year later was the confirmation.
Details: "Chian MiMi", 26" x 32", Acrylics on Stretched Canvas, was created in late 2009, now hanging in the private collection of John D. Gaultney (Purchased).