#9

 

Design suggests wholeness 
by symbolically corresponding with itself 
in relative form. 
Design references a position that does not change, 
yet is always changing. 
In design there must be a symbols 
to which another symbol can be referred 
and create the correspondence between opposites.
This is the natural order of things. 
Design gives form and identity 
to this great transformation. 
Meaning and purpose 
when appearing as form 
identify the many variations 
of the original Chi. 

 * * * 

Design, a language vast and deep, 
Where symbols wake and symbols sleep. 
A dance of forms, both bold and true, 
In endless circles, ever new. 

It holds a truth, a constant ground, 
A steady pulse, yet spinning 'round. 
A place where opposites align, 
Where change and stillness intertwine. 

A symbol here, a symbol there, 
A whispered code upon the air. 
Through shifting shapes and endless flow, 
The Chi, the source, begins to grow. 

Wholeness found in fractured parts, 
A mirror in the human heart. 
Design, the thread that ties it all, 
In ever-changing, endless fall. 

Purpose carved in fleeting form, 
The great transformation born. 
In unity, diversity, 
All reflections of the cosmic sea. 

Through design, we come to see— 
The many parts, the unity. 
Each form a message, clear, precise, 
A step in life's great sacrifice. 

In symbol, we discover more, 
The Chi, the center, at the core. 
So let design in wholeness be, 
The key to all that is to be. 

* * * 

In the heart of a peaceful village, nestled between rolling hills and crystal-clear rivers, there was an ancient temple that held the secret to the nature of life itself. The temple, though humble, was a masterpiece of design—each stone, each curve, each intricate carving symbolizing a deep connection between the seen and unseen, the known and unknown. 

One morning, a young artist named Lina arrived at the temple, seeking to understand the great mystery of design. She had been taught the basics of painting and sculpture, but something inside her knew there was more to creation than just following rules. She wanted to know what gave art its true meaning, what made it come alive. 

As she wandered the temple, an elder priest, Master Qian, appeared before her. His eyes were wise, his steps slow and deliberate. He spoke gently, as though each word carried the weight of centuries. 





"Design," Master Qian began, "is not just a matter of shape and color. It reflects the universe itself. It is a symbol of wholeness, the way one form mirrors another, and how each change flows into the next." 

Lina listened carefully, though she did not fully understand. 

"Look at the stones beneath your feet," he said, pointing to the ancient steps. "Each one is different, yet they are all part of the same path. They correspond to one another, forming a whole, just as the elements of the world correspond to each other. Water, earth, fire, air—all shift, all change, but their essence remains constant." 

Master Qian continued, "Design reflects this truth. A shape may seem fixed, but it is always in motion, always shifting. Each form we create is a place for opposites to meet and balance. The solid and the fluid. The large and the small. The dark and the light." 

Lina felt a stirring in her heart. She had always admired the beauty of the world around her—how each flower bloomed in its own way, yet all shared the same rhythm of growth. How the sky changed from dawn to dusk, and yet each moment felt connected to the next. 

"What is this design?" she asked quietly.

 "It is life itself," Master Qian replied, "the dance of opposites that create balance and transformation. It is the chi—the life force that flows through all things. When you create, you are giving form to that energy, giving it purpose and meaning. Just as the river changes its course, but always finds its way to the sea, so too does design evolve, but it always remains true to its original source." 

Lina thought for a moment, then asked, "And what about the symbols? You mentioned them—how do they work together?" 

Master Qian smiled. "Every symbol is a doorway to another. One shape leads to another, just as one moment in time flows into the next. The symbol you create today will lead to the symbol of tomorrow. Each is a reference to the other, each a reminder of the unchanging order behind the chaos. They are the language of the universe." 

As the sun dipped low, casting long shadows over the temple’s stone walls, Lina began to see the world in a new light. She understood that her art was not simply a personal expression—it was part of a grand, eternal design. Every brushstroke, every chisel mark was an echo of something much greater than herself. She was not just an artist; she was a conduit for the great transformation of life. 

From that day on, Lina’s work reflected this truth. Her paintings no longer merely depicted the world; they embodied the forces that moved through it. Each piece told a story of opposites coming together, of change and continuity, of form and formlessness. 

And in this way, Lina learned to create not just art, but meaning. Through design, she gave form to the endless dance of life, and in doing so, she became one with the great transformation of the Chi. 

* * * 

In the heart of the world, nestled between realms both seen and unseen, there was a place known only to those who could see the unseen. It was a land not bound by time, nor shaped by the hands of men, but by something older, far older—something that was not made, but unfolded with every breath of the universe. 

This was the land of Design. 

The air hummed with energy, a kind of rhythm that could only be understood by those who had been there long enough to listen. Patterns floated like soft winds, spinning around and connecting. The land was filled with symbols—some bold and shimmering, others faint and translucent, but each one a piece of the great puzzle that held all things together. 

In the center of it all stood a figure. Not a person, but a presence—an essence, you might say—that seemed to flow and shift with every passing moment. It was neither still nor moving, but rather in an eternal dance with itself. Its form was made of shapes that defied the logic of the physical world: circles that bent into spirals, lines that turned into waves, and triangles that folded into squares. And in the spaces between, there was a pulse—a constant, steady rhythm, the heartbeat of the land. This was Chi—the source, the center, the wellspring of all creation. 

One day, a traveler from a distant world stumbled into this place. His name was Niro, a seeker of truths, a wanderer who had heard whispers of this realm in his dreams. He had traveled far, through forests of fire and across oceans of stars, seeking a deeper meaning, something beyond the limitations of his own understanding. But when he arrived in the land of Design, he found not what he expected—no answers, no sages, no sacred tomes—but a vast, living, breathing symphony of forms. 

At first, Niro was disoriented. The air felt thick with the power of the symbols, and each symbol seemed to call to him in a language he could not understand. But there was something oddly familiar about it—a sense that he had encountered this language before, in his heart, in his dreams, in the very rhythms of his life. 




He reached out to touch one of the symbols. As his fingers brushed its surface, the symbol flared into life, expanding and contracting, its edges shifting and changing like a river carving its path through time. Niro could feel it—this was not just a shape, it was a story. It was a fragment of something larger, something whole, something cosmic. 

Suddenly, the presence in the center of the land spoke—not with words, but with the movement of its ever-changing form. "You seek, yet what you seek is not separate from you," it seemed to say. "The design is within you, in every choice you make, in every step you take. You, too, are a symbol in this dance." 

Niro stood in silence, feeling the weight of those words settle deep within him. He looked around and saw the symbols again, but this time, they were no longer foreign. They were familiar. They were his own. 

He began to move, guided by the flow of the designs. He felt his body become one with the land, as if he were part of an intricate web stretching out into eternity. Each step he took caused new shapes to form around him, and each shape revealed a new truth—about him, about the world, about everything. 

The symbols around him whispered their secrets—change and stillness are not opposites, but part of the same flow. Wholeness is not the absence of parts, but the embrace of them. Through the ever-changing, we find the eternal. And in that moment, Niro understood. 

Design was not just a language; it was the way of life itself. It was the thread that tied all things together, from the smallest grain of sand to the vastness of the stars. It was the Chi—the pulse at the center of everything—and it was within him, as it was within all things. 

As Niro danced among the shifting forms, he felt a deep peace settle into his heart. He had come seeking answers, but instead, he had found unity. The many parts of the world—his own fragmented experiences, the fractured pieces of his past—were all part of the same grand design, moving toward something greater than he could ever comprehend. 

And so, in the land of Design, Niro became one with the symbols. He knew now that he was not separate from them, but part of the ever-unfolding dance. The flow of change and stillness, of chaos and order, all wove together in a single, infinite pattern. He was both the traveler and the journey, the question and the answer, the symbol and the meaning. 

And in that moment, he understood the greatest truth of all: through Design, all things come to be.


* * *


Bridging the gap between divine omniscience
and mortal awareness.

Find your truth. Know your mind. Follow your heart. Love eternal will not be denied. Discernment is an integral part of self-mastery. You may share this post on a non-commercial basis, the author and URL to be included. Please note … posts are continually being edited. All rights reserved. Copyright © 2025 C.G. Garant.




 

#7


In all of creation there is desire 
and from this desire 
 arises every beginning. 
When purpose and meaning unite, 
all forms move in accordance with creation. 
There cannot be an error 
when desire is rooted in meaning 
and is purposefully designated. 
In design meaning and purpose, 
the tangible and the intangible, 
come together enacting the One of everything. 
They then separate 
enacting the parts of everything. 
Separate meaning and purpose 
 and design will not be understood. 
Design is something more. 

 * * * 

In the heart of creation, desire stirs, 
A spark that ignites what the soul defers. 
From this yearning, all things take flight, 
A dance of meaning, a blaze of light. 

When purpose and meaning in union stand, 
The forms align as they’ve been planned. 
No fault, no flaw, when roots are deep, 
In the soil of truth, where all things sleep. 

The tangible, the unseen, they blend, 
In design, they rise, and then descend. 
The One in all, the all in One, 
A cycle begun, and yet undone. 

When separated, the parts take shape, 
Each one a note in a grand escape. 
But lost is the song without the whole, 
Design, more than parts, speaks to the soul. 

For purpose and meaning, when torn apart, 
Leave us grasping for the beating heart. 
Design is not merely what we see 
It’s the pulse that binds, the harmony. 

In every longing, in every trace, 
There lives the echo of a sacred space— 
Where desire, purpose, and meaning meet, 
And all of creation becomes complete. 

* * * 

In the beginning, before time had woven its threads and the world had been painted in its myriad hues, there was only a singular force - desire. It was not the kind of desire known to human hearts, fleeting and selfish, but the deepest longing of the cosmos itself, a longing that pulsed at the very core of existence. In that primordial moment, desire was not born of want, but of the innate yearning for meaning and purpose. It was the heartbeat of creation. 



From this desire, everything emerged. The stars, the planets, the mountains and rivers, the breath of the wind, and the touch of the rain—all these were but whispers of that great longing. The sun and moon danced together in the sky, not out of habit, but because they shared in the eternal yearning that had first given them life. The animals roamed, not aimlessly, but in accordance with the rhythm of creation’s desire. Even the smallest grain of sand, the most insignificant of drops in the ocean, was part of this grand design. 



Purpose and meaning, like two great lovers, joined hands in the heart of this cosmic dance. When they met, all things moved in perfect harmony, a perfect unity of thought and action. There was no confusion, no chaos, only the flawless unfolding of existence. In every leaf that fluttered in the breeze, in every heartbeat that echoed through the silent expanse of the universe, there was purpose. In every pattern that formed in the night sky, in every whisper of a distant galaxy, there was meaning. The One, the All, was alive and aware, and it was through desire that all began and all was understood. 


And yet, in the brilliance of creation, there was still room for more. For the desire to know, to understand, was endless. As the great unity unfolded, the One gave birth to the many. From the single spark of desire, countless forms emerged, each separate but never truly apart. Stars split into constellations, and galaxies wove themselves into spirals of light. Each form had its own purpose, its own meaning, and yet each was connected to the others in an intricate web of existence. 



But there was a secret at the heart of it all—an understanding that could not be grasped by mere separation of parts. For design, the very blueprint of creation, was something more than the sum of its parts. It was not enough to see only the individual stars, the singular mountain, or the solitary river. To understand the design, one had to see them all, united in purpose, moving together in the great dance of existence. 





And so, the world moved, not in isolated fragments but in an intricate, infinite pattern, one that no mortal mind could fully comprehend. Desire, meaning, and purpose intertwined in ways that defied logic, but that did not mean they were any less real. It was not an error when desire was rooted in meaning, nor when purpose was bound to the greater design—it was the very essence of what made creation whole. 

Those who sought to understand the world through the separation of parts, to dissect and categorize each thing, would never fully grasp the truth. For meaning and purpose did not dwell in the isolation of the individual. They lived in the dance, in the joining of all things, in the ebb and flow of the One and the many. To truly know design, one had to see with the eyes of the heart, to feel the pulse of desire that throbbed through every stone, every tree, every star. 

For in that desire was the key to all things. It was the force that held together the fabric of existence, not as something rigid and fixed, but as a living, breathing, ever-changing thing. And only those who understood that desire could see the world as it truly was—not as parts, but a masterpiece of meaning and purpose. 

In design, there was not only structure and form, but a dance of infinite possibility. A single breath could change everything. A single thought could create worlds. Desire was the origin, and from it, purpose and meaning would emerge, again and again, in endless creation. And in that endless creation, the One would always remain, infinite and eternal. 

* * * 

In a time before time, when the universe had yet to form, there existed only the whisper of desire. It was not a longing like the ones we know now, but a silent stir deep within the fabric of creation. The desire was pure—a spark waiting for its moment to set everything into motion. 

In that void, there was nothing but the pulse of something more. Yet, from that pulse, a question began to bloom: What if there was something else? What if there was meaning to the silence? And so, with a whisper that reverberated across the endless dark, the first spark of creation flared into life. 





The spark caught on something deeper, a thread of purpose that unraveled across the void. It was a force, a light that bent and twisted, weaving through the darkness, drawing shapes and forms from nothingness. As if every element had been waiting for this moment to begin its dance. Matter was born from this spark, energy flowed into shapes and rhythms, and everything became interconnected by the thread of desire—an invisible force pulling everything into a harmonious design. 

It was in this moment that the first beings emerged, each one a piece of the whole, distinct yet incomplete. They were beautiful in their imperfection, for they had not yet realized their purpose. The trees, the mountains, the oceans, the stars—each was born from the same spark, but they did not yet understand that they were all part of a greater whole. 

The first beings wandered through the world they had been given, feeling the hunger of purpose deep within them. Some were content to grow, some longed to understand, while others simply were. But all felt the tension, the echo of something greater just beyond their reach. They were each a note in a grand song, yet the music was not whole without the melody that bound them together. 

As ages passed, some beings began to realize the deeper truth—they were not alone, not separate. The mountains spoke to the trees, the stars whispered to the oceans, and even the winds carried the voices of all the earth’s creatures. In this subtle exchange, they came to understand that design was more than the visible forms they wore. It was the pulse that held them together, the rhythm of desire that flowed through everything. 

One day, a great gathering of beings took place, as if the universe had called them all together for the first time. In the stillness that followed, a voice—ancient and timeless—spoke. 

“Look,” it said. “You have wandered long in search of your own meaning, but meaning is not in the fragments of your being. It is in the unity you have yet to realize. Desire brought you forth, but it is purpose that will complete you.” 

And so, in that sacred space, where the tangible and the unseen converged, the beings understood. The pulse, the desire, the purpose—they were all part of the same whole. They were not separate, but one. The world was not a collection of isolated pieces but a single, living design—a song sung by the universe itself. 

From that moment on, the dance continued, each being knowing now that it was not just its own purpose it served, but the purpose of the whole. Together, they moved in rhythm with the pulse of creation, each note adding to the melody of life. And in the silence between the notes, they found the meaning they had been seeking all along. 

For when desire, purpose, and meaning meet, all of creation becomes complete. 


* * *


Bridging the gap between divine omniscience
and mortal awareness.


Find your truth. Know your mind. Follow your heart. Love eternal will not be denied. Discernment is an integral part of self-mastery. You may share this post on a non-commercial basis, the author and URL to be included. Please note … posts are continually being edited. All rights reserved. Copyright © 2025 C.G. Garant. 

#9

  Design suggests wholeness  by symbolically corresponding with itself  in relative form.  Design references a position that does not change...