The Gift Of Threshold Moments
by Sam Keen
[Listen to Audio!]
The thrush’s song belongs to a family of experiences that usher us into a threshold where sound trails off into silence, time disappears into timelessness, and the known world is engulfed by the great mystery.
The family includes the reverberating echo of a temple bell that dwindles off into the void; the polyphonic chanting of Tibetan monks that merges into an endless communal chorus; the electric interval between the crash of thunder and the flash of lightening; the awful emptiness when the exhalation of a dying person is not followed by an inspiration; the deep sigh and profound calm that comes in meditation when the mind finally stops chattering; the timeless moment, before sleep or after awakening, when we enter a dream world in which it seems perfectly reasonable that we should fly, change gender, or simultaneously be ourselves and our parents.
In these threshold moments, the spirit slips between the synapses of the mind. The normal illusion that there is nothing beyond the tyrannical march of profane time (chronos) is dispelled, and we have a brief intimation of eternity, an awareness of sacred time( kairos). In these pregnant voids we come to understand the limit of our comprehension. We gain a tacit knowledge that our modes of experiencing time and the world are nothing more than the mechanisms, categories, and paradigms created by our limited minds.
Like monarch butterflies confined on their migrations to low altitudes, our wings will not carry us into the vast regions of outer space.
The proper name for the experience of unknowing is not mysticism but wisdom. When Socrates was told that the Oracle of Delphi said he was the wisest man in Greece, he replied that it could only mean he knew what he did not know. Wisdom comes from the certain knowledge of our ignorance, and it teaches us that we dwell within a small circle of light surrounded by an immense mystery. According to tradition, the owl— the symbol of Athena, the goddess of wisdom— spreads its wings only with the arrival of dusk. Wisdom is the paradoxical art of seeing.
There are no Wood Thrushes in the sparsely wooded area of California where I live now. But there are Great Horned Owls aplenty, and when they begin their low, uncanny hooting just after dusk, I am transported back to an earlier time when I stood quietly at the threshold, listening to the thrush’s invitation to evensong, and heard a faint echo of the silent music of the spheres. Over the years, the thrush’s shaman song has gradually transformed me into an agnostic. Unknowing. Amazed.
About the Author: From ‘Sightings’ by Sam Keen.
Latest Community Insights  |
The Gift Of Threshold Moments
What does a threshold moment mean to you? Can you share a personal experience of a threshold moment? What helps you open up to the immense mystery that surrounds the small circle of light in which you dwell? |
| ppst ppst wrote: It was nike mercurial soccer cleats at Nike Shoes Online the Paris retro jordans for cheap Opera House that I ugg factory outlet last saw Beltrami, Cheap Air Max Trainers three Cheap Retro Jord… |
| Jagdish P Dave wrote: ” The thrus’s song belongs to a family of experiences that usher us into a threshold where sound trails off into silence, time disappears into timelessness, and the known world is engulfed by t… |
| david doane wrote: I appreciate Sam Keen’s essay. A threshold moment is a crossover moment, a moment of transformation. It’s the point when the water reaches 212 degrees and transforms to steam, or wh… |
| Share/Read Your Reflections |
|
Awakin Circles:
Many years ago, a couple friends got together to sit in silence for an hour, and share personal aha-moments. That birthed this newsletter, and rippled out as Awakin Circles in 80+ living rooms around the globe. To join in Santa Clara this week, RSVP online.

Some Good News
Video of the Week
Kindness Stories
Global call with David Bullon Patton!
Join us for a conference call this Saturday, with a global group of ServiceSpace friends and our insightful guest speaker. Join the Forest Call >>
About
Back in 1997, one person started sending this simple “meditation reminder” to a few friends. Soon after, “Wednesdays” started, ServiceSpace blossomed, and the humble experiments of service took a life of its own. If you’d like to start an Awakin gathering in your area, we’d be happy to help you get started.

|
Leave a comment