
I have thousands of pages and hours of recordings that I will never read, hear or see again, and many that I will never read, hear or see, period, but each of them is a connection to who I am.
I book I have never read, or a record or CD or DVD I have never played, still represents a moment when I reached out thinking, “This looks interesting. I wonder if I’ll find something in it worth sharing.”
That’s what creative expressions are — an attempt to share something the creator thought was worth sharing.
And the existence of each item in my collection is a clue to who I am — the fact that I sought it out provides a hint about me, for better or for worse. The same can be said about each of your possessions.
Perusing a friend’s bookshelf or other collections can tell you a lot about what’s important to them. It’s why we ask things like “What’s your favorite movie? What kind of music do you like? What’s your favorite color” — always seeking clues to who we are. It’s also a search for common ground; we delight in hearing, “Oh, I love that song, too! Oh, the part in the story where that happened, were you as deeply touched as I was??”
Huh. Common ground. We are always seeking common ground.
Here I go into the evil of contemporary politics again: We are assailed daily by people who want to separate us — the opposite of the search for common ground. “You there! Retire to your little box and don’t come around here no more!”
But in our creative works, we find things worth sharing, the things that unite us even in our distinct individuality and uniqueness. When a film or a song or a dance or a play connects with us, we see our common humanity and we share something worth sharing.
I saw a wonderful movie the other day and looked for more information about it, which led me to one review where the writer said, “It’s too bad that actress is a communist — that ruined it for me.”
He didn’t see that a person with abhorrent opinions still made a human connection, because that’s what creators and their creations do — they show us reason after reason to love our neighbors and even to love our perceived enemies. There are concepts that rise above our creations and lead us inevitably to our Creator.


