All our spaces,
and the barriers
that contain them,
define us
and confine us,
shaping our
feeling, thinking
and relating
to each other.
Spaces become
part of our habits
and ways of
conceiving our worlds,
and we think
these spaces
are normal
as the architecture
of our lives.
But the radical
change of spaces,
and new ways of
understanding space
and the places we form,
can confront these
habits and ways
of conceiving
inner and outer,
connection and
the levels of disconnection,
and also our routines
and strategies of working
out living in the world.
Consciousness can
change spaces
as much as spaces
can change consciousness.
30/11/2016