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May 2008

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19 posts categorized "The Labyrinth Project"

(Post)Lentenblog 2008 :: Labyrinth 18

It is [almost] finished!

This morning, Gordon and Jeanene finished up the last arc of the labyrinth (save a gap five stones in length, which they left undone for me to finish up on Wednesday night... a nicely symbolic number considering the giant undertaking).

Labryses

All that's left is (see drawing above) creating curvilinear endcaps on the labryses (switchbacks) and putting in the luminations (petals), and then I'm moving on to create some guided prayer sheets (hopefully a set for adults and another set for early readers) to have on hand in some kind of wooden mailbox or something there at the start of the labyrinth.

So I'm also thinkin' about that.

(Post)Lentenblog 2008 :: Labyrinth 17

Lab_panorama043008

Img_0209 Img_0211 Img_0212

scorpion and two views of the flint scraping tool i found

(Post)Lentenblog 2008 :: Labyrinth 16 [slide show]

It's not quite complete, the labyrinth.
But that didn't keep Kate's Sunday school class from checking it out.
This made my day.

Img_0353_4
Picture_1_4

I posted a Flickr slide show here.

Labyrinth tonight. Come help me move rocks.

Labyrinthsituated

(Post)Lentenblog 2008 :: Labyrinth 15

So I've been out to the labyrinth site twice since I wrote about it last. Once on April 20, for about an hour, and once again on Friday, April 25, for two-and-a-half hours

Bucketrock_2 This last home stretch is the loneliest part. I even put in a plea for volunteer labor Sunday at church; this was supposed to be a group project, a community undertaking, and I feel guilty for not being better at mobilizing and inspiring people to come out and co-labor.

Only a quarter of the 11-ring, 360-degree concentric-circle course, maybe 80 degrees, still needs filling in. Now that Jean Gomez's rock pile is depleted, I've strayed further and further up the property line looking for fertile outcroppings.

And the fault line that had always been quietly growing in the center of the bottom of the fishy-smelling plastic bucket has now become a hole, so I'm going to need to bring a new bucket up there next time.

It's interesting the amount of self-negotiating going on when I'm looking for rocks. For a similar amount of effort, I can either walk further on foot and get great rocks, knowing I'll have to lug them back in the bucket, or I can stay closer and work harder, kneeling down to glean the nearby area for usable rocks. I usually choose the former, but after about an hour of these trips, the whole thing seems futile, since I've maybe made a 10 to 12 degree arc's worth of progress and my eyes are stinging with the same sweat that has soaked my shirt through. Then there's the scorpions and unavoidable prickly pear needles that occasionally get lodged under the skin.

Entranceleftright Once a 20- or 30-pound load has been hauled and dumped, there's the extra interior dialog about whether I should break my pace and kneel down (where it's easier for sweat to blur my vision) to position the new rocks or stay moving (where I might catch a breeze) and head back along the fenceline, having to avoid the cactii.

I don't want this to sound miserable. It's also a very spiritual time. Prayer happens. Remembering happens. Perspective happens. Breathing definitely happens.

But I always get impatient at about this point in any project I'm working on. I should have expected it.

(Post)Lentenblog 2008 :: Labyrinth 14

Labsite_asof6pm041608www
labyrinth site as of 5:55pm 041608, shot from the west

the hour growing late,
pregnant
with this project, with possibilities,
i lifted the front edge of my
tee-shirt to form a chalky cloth sling

i piled in hands full of
fist-sized limestone
three, nine, thirty-eight,
and i labored to stand,
grabbing my back,
looking and feeling
like a last-trimester mama -
and i laughed out loud.
this father of four births,
four umbilical incisions,
four afterbirths,
and one miscarriage,
waddling over to this
birthing site,
pacing in artistic anticipation,
wondering and worrying
about this strange,
forthcoming delivery

so many strong women
in my life,
many of them mothers,
and some of them
wing-waiting

i figured they'd all
laugh out loud
(perhaps my twin-bearing
mom the loudest)
to see me wrestle and
wrangle and huff

i came around
to where i'd left off

i couldn't gracefully
set my quarry upon the earth
so i squatted
and, valsalva,
let the stones

fall

a little lower than the angels

had the earth tonight been water
the concentric rippled labyrinth
might have serv'd witness enough

to the father son and holy ghost.

prs 041608


Labsite_asof822pm041608www
labyrinth site as of 8:20pm 041608, shot from the east

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labyrinth, texas style

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i couldn't help myself: i started forming the switchbacks.

(Post)Lentenblog 2008 :: Labyrinth 13

April0708 I wanted to cross-post some photos Gordon and I took using his camera on Tuesday.

The Labyrinth Project is progressing. On Tuesday evening, we went out to the site and roasted hot dogs (using the tripod legs of a music stand!) and worked on the labyrinth concentric circles (all measurements are now multiplied by 1.5).

For those of you keeping track, and wanting a new set of measurements, here's how it all shakes out:

covenant labyrinth 2.0
by the numbers

11-course labyrinth
54 feet diameter
22.125 inch-wide paths
Center circle is 13.5 feet across

Adding the lunations, the total diameter comes out to approximately 57.75 feet. In the case of a 54-foot labyrinth, the measurement from the center to the first circle would be 6.75 feet. Then each additional path is spaced at 22.125 inches intervals.

Later on I will transform the concentric circles into a labyrinth by incorporating the switchback turns, also called labryses. Then, finally, we'll make petals or lunations.

I'm still thinking of placing a hinged wooden box thing at the entrance that would contain a guest book, a pen, and maybe some prayer suggestions?

Lentenblog 2008 :: Labyrinth 12

this kind of captures last sunday.
the music makes the first part seem less stultifying.

like i said earlier, the first draft was too small.
not unlike the stonehenge in this is spinal tap :)

hats off to the kids at church
and to abigail (10) our camera person

RLP at the site

songs by little ol' me.

Lentenblog 2008 :: Labyrinth 11

labyrinth update
fun stuff; we had our first work day on Sunday.

i have more to post about the topic sometime soon.
i have some video footage abigail took that i need to edit down.

but bottom line: the labyrinth course was too small when executed.
36' will work in flat terazzo or level pavers, but not in rock-lined footpaths.
lesson learned.

thanks to everyone who came and helped on the first draft. we got a section of the circle finished — based on completing about 80 degrees out of 360 in one hour.

second, larger draft coming soon.

i almost don't have it in me to ask the kids to volunteer again.

Lentenblog 2008 :: Labyrinth 10: Setting aside a space

       Picture_2

click the video thumbnail above to watch a vlog version


Weedeater

Finally.

Rain, illness, travel and other hurdles had kept me from coming back to the labyrinth site until today. I borrowed my dad's gasoline-powered weed-eater and went to the back of the property this afternoon.

It was very peaceful. I was the only one there. It was really nice to be alone.

Weedeatingbefore

So for about the first hour this afternoon I used the weed-eater to chop off a bunch of dead shin- and knee-high grass. By about 4:00 it looked like this. The clump in the foreground is about an inch tall.

Rakingbefore

Next, I used this $4 rake to clear the dead grass away. This took about twice as long as I had planned; I got twice the number of blisters I had planned… But then, just as the sun had dropped below sight, I had finished — well, at least enough to rest. Just in time for a metaphoric shabbat.

Clearedsite

If you squint, you can kind of see the circle of the labyrinth starting to take shape.
the Prayer Walk, off in the background of this photo will lead straight into the Labyrinth.

The center of the labyrinth will be where the surveryor's flag and dog tie-out are located, there in the middle of the composition.

It's only after periods of exhausting physical labor that the God-phrase "It is finished" comes to mind. I think of Christ's work on the cross, and I think about the YHWH's work in the creation accounts. I think about resting after work, and I think about saying, "It is good" and letting it apply both to the end result and to the process of having worked hard.

Lentenblog 2008 :: Labyrinth 09 - projecting into the near future

Projecting_into_futurewww

Lentenblog 2008 :: Labyrinth 08

interesting:
this spring, christopher's church is building a labyrinth as well, in the same Texas limestone.

gordon and christopher play catch together from time to time, i understand.

Lentenblog 2008 :: Labyrinth 07

Rulerinthegroundwww2
Dogtietry1Dogtietry
Johnandgordon

John McJilton and I walked out to the labyrinth site tonight. Gordon and Lexie and John's kids came out a little later. We got the dog-tie in the ground around sunset. Took three of us taking turns turning the metal corkscrew into the limestone-infested ground. We measured the circumference with the line, which was rewarding for me.

Weedeating

Lentenblog 2008 :: Labyrinth 06

Johnietractor1Path

here is the end of the prayer path; the edge of the property.

ClearingFirepit_2

this is the site for the labyrinth. near the altar and fire ring.

Lentenblog 2008 :: Labyrinth 05

 

Gordon shows the prayer walk, circa 2006.

This is the path that leads to the labyrinth site.

Lentenblog 2008 :: Labyrinth 04

Labyrinthpilgrimage_no1

Labyrinth_supplies_no1

Stake_2

Lentenblog 2008 :: Labyrinth 03

Beforeplan0108b

Lentenblog 2008 :: Labyrinth 02

Beforeplan0108a

Lentenblog 2008 :: Labyrinth 01

Cactus_labyrinth_2

Beforemontage0108web



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