Journey into seeing

Last week I was in London meeting a friend and this white bicycle caught my eye chained to the railings with the words life is not measured by the number of breaths we take but by the moments that take our breath away. I’m a visual person so I just had to get my camera out which I tend to carry with me at all times and take a photograph. I met the friend and after coffee we walked back to the tube past the bike. As we walked past I was waiting for her to notice it but she didn’t so I pointed it out as I thought it was so brilliant - I’ve since found out it’s a ghost bike. She liked it and was surprised when I said I’d already seen and photographed it. Her passing comment was that if I hadn’t said something she would not have seen it… which got me thinking how many things in front of our eyes don’t we see?
The most fun and perhaps shocking illustration of this is the genius cycling awareness advert the moonwalking bear. Watch the advert before reading on… How can we fail to see what is in front of our eyes? Perhaps seeing or looking is a discipline that we can learn or get better at. The mystics talk about awareness and learning to cultivate it through our senses being present in the blade of the moment. It’s actually one of the reasons I love photography. It helps me see, actually look at things, see differently - trying to explore a fresh angle or finding a way to make the ordinary look beautiful.
On the Sunday worship programme we heard the story of Blind Bartimaeus receiving the gift of his sight back when he met Jesus Christ. I jotted down a sentence I really liked that was used to introduce it - when we learn to see differently we learn to see God’s world in a new light. A youthworker in Cheltenham doing detached work on an estate told me a story of one of the lads he was working with. His sense of value and worth was fairly low and he would walk with his eyes down. Richard (the youthworker) felt there was a real breakthrough when this lad pointed out the hills surrounding Cheltenham that he had never noticed before even though they had been there his whole life! He had begun to see differently, he was lifting his horizon. That story prompted me to write a song that captures this idea of encounter with God helping us to see differently, to see the world charged with the presence of God, to lift our horizons. It’s an old tune now from the album Grace (see proost) but you can have a listen here or download the track for free. The lyrics are below (the second verse includes a quote from Mike Riddell’s wonderful book Godzone).
I lived in the shadows preventing me see
Though you were there you weren’t visible to me
But you came into my world and pointed out the trees
Helped me to encounter your mystery
I had seen the hills a thousand times before but it took someone to point them out to me
I had see the hills a thousand times before but it took someone to point them out to see
Now you’re waving in the trees
Laughing in the thunder
Dancing in the rain
Shining in old eyes
Crying in the breeze
Speaking in the silence
Your presence everywhere
The world is full of you
posted by jonny baker