Rooms and Boundaries: Difference between revisions
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imported>Jacob Robertson No edit summary |
imported>Jacob Robertson No edit summary |
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* Appreciate how a window divides the space between the room you are in, and the space beyond, while at the same time inviting you to sense that the "outside" and the inside of the window are being brought together by the window because it is transparent. Be aware of the space of the room you are in, and the space of the "outside" and the space of the two places added together. | * Appreciate how a window divides the space between the room you are in, and the space beyond, while at the same time inviting you to sense that the "outside" and the inside of the window are being brought together by the window because it is transparent. Be aware of the space of the room you are in, and the space of the "outside" and the space of the two places added together. | ||
* Many of the [[#Mirrors|Mirror]] exercises can be repurposed for Windows as well. | * Many of the [[#Mirrors|Mirror]] exercises can be repurposed for Windows as well. | ||
= Fences and Walls = | |||
Even without actual walls and windows, we can still appreciate the quality of areas that are being divided. Some examples of how these exercises can apply everyday in many situations... | |||
* In the neighborhood, there's a quality to be found when inside a backyard fence, or looking at another neighbor's yard in their fence, or passing by houses that have fences and knowing you are outside of those areas | |||
* Inside a stadium there's a powerful feeling of thousands of people all being enclosed together within the boundaries of the stadium, whether it's indoors or outdoors | |||
* Any kind of delineation such as a soccer field, even without fences, has a boundary | |||
= Mirrors = | = Mirrors = |