In this episode of Dots of Thoughts, Emeka Okereke reads and reflects from a freshly written essay titled A Meditation on Light.
The episode begins from a simple physical fact: light has no mass. Light has no weight. From this point, the reflection opens into a meditation on light as that which illuminates without force, imposes no hierarchy, absents nothing, and yet remains indomitable. Its indomitability is not one of force, conquest, or imposition, but of revelation.
Light is described as exquisitely sensitive to form. It delineates contours, reveals thresholds, and bears witness to the nature of things without contesting or judging them. To speak of standing in the light, then, is to consider what it means for the human being — as a form with mass, weight, gravity, and accumulated attachments — to stand in relation to that which is weightless and massless.
From here, the meditation turns toward shadow. Shadow is not treated as the opposite of light, but as the natural consequence of anything with mass and gravity standing in relation to the weightlessness of light. Shadow becomes the evidence of relation, obstruction, form, and accumulation. The attempt to deny, eliminate, or absent shadow is where fear and distortion arise.
The episode proposes that light has no opposite. Truth too has no opposite. What is often called opposition may simply be the evidence of weight, gravity, polarity, movement, measurement, and form within creation. The work, then, is not to conquer shadow, but to understand it, witness it, and allow that which carries weight to become weightless.
