Swings in art
Swings are not just for playgrounds. At the Museum of Heraklion in Crete, there’s a delicious little statue from Hagia Triada of a woman on a swing. It dates c. 1450 BC.
In the Italian province of South Tyrol exists a 7th century affresco of St. Proculus sitting on a swing.
And in an album of genre paintings by the Korean painter Shin Yunbok (born in 1753), there’s a tender little painting of a woman climbing onto a swing as a group of women wash themselves in a stream.
Probably the most famous swing painting is L’Escarpolette by Jean-Honoré Fragonard. It portrays a woman in a swing who, as she’s pushed by an old man, lefts up her legs high for her lover to see. And, like Cinderella, she loses a shoe.
The Greeks also had an interest in swings as many of their vases can testify.
So it looks like swingers have been around for awhile!
Transitions
The old me has been going in one direction but the new me wants to go in another.
Because of mental habits, transitions are not always easy. Luckily, a major change in environment facilitates making major changes in behaviour.
The voyage begins tomorrow so Kalo Taxidi!












