The propensity of proffered peace, channeled message from Claude Monet

So many Characters. So many roles that people play. It is a dynamic dynamic.

 

What many fail to realize is that it is done, created by design.

 

Contrast. Shades of blue, yellow, pink, red, all around the color wheel.

 

Many roles fit the same bill. What sometimes gets lost in the shuffle is the characters own unique hue. There is always something different from one to the next.

 

Call it personality, essence, spirit.

 

Every one of us is different from the next. Try to imagine a world of only grays and beiges, drab and dreary. It feels sad doesn’t it, void of color, void of emotion.

 

Every one of us contribute to this light spectrum. The full depth and scope permeate the world around us.

 

Allow another to be as they are, let them paint from their own pallet. In turn, give yourself the tools you need to create your own masterpiece.

 

Not every hard line is to remain on your canvas. A delicate brush stroke here, a delicate brush stroke there. Choose a new color outside of your comfortable chosen few. Blend those colors. Create from different perspectives, vantage points. Proffer.

 

 

 

 

Channeled message from one of the world’s most famous painters, Oscar-Claude Monet, 1840-1926. Oscar was a French painter who became famous for his natural paintings. “Impressionism”, nature as Monet perceived it. Oscar had a method of painting the same scene many times to capture changing light and changing seasons. Monet longed for solitude while working and felt his work was always better for the time alone. His art evolved over time to include the abstract. Monet died of lung cancer at 86. A black cloth that draped his coffin was removed by a dear friend and replaced with a flower-patterned cloth, “No black for Monet!”

1 thought on “The propensity of proffered peace, channeled message from Claude Monet”

  1. Thank you for sharing. One of my favorite artists. Monet’s Gardens in Paris were spectacular! I understand his longing for solitude. I agree the lack of color does create dullness and stoic feelings.

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