Yellow painted Pass-Through Labyrinth recognizable on the right . . .
Smiling along the Labyrinth Walk in Trinity-Bellwoods Park, Downtown Toronto.
Yellow painted Pass-Through Labyrinth recognizable on the right . . .
Smiling along the Labyrinth Walk in Trinity-Bellwoods Park, Downtown Toronto.
This photograph show French Bulldog MOMO inspecting the Labyrinth beside the Skating Rink in Trinity-Bellwoods Park.
If MOMO looks close enough,
He may see the chalk markings I used when designing and painting the Labyrinth.
This photograph was likely taken on the day I was painting it,
or during the days after.
Dogs digging the Snow Pile dumped from Zamboni ice rink shavings,
With my Yellow Pass-Through Labyrinth in the background . . .
Skateboarding my pass-through Labyrinth in the Trinity-Bellwoods Park Labyrinth Boardwalk . . . ?
The yellow colour of the concentric circles are already beginning to fade.
Do I repaint the fading Labyrinth arcs now or wait until Spring 2021 ?
Mindfulness Dog Walking in Downtown Toronto’s Trinity-Bellwoods Park Labyrinth Walk . . .
Dogs are people too.
They need to go for Labyrinth Walks now and then,
Like Kona did on my Trinity-Bellwoods Park Labyrinth Walk . . .
“Just like a scene from a movie,
A group of Toronto teenagers were having a hip hop dance party in the weekend night.
They took turn to show off their talent for dance,
No TV show jury,
No commercial tickets,
Everyone was a star on the center stage,
And everyone gave their admiration and encouragement to each other.”
Looking south,
This is my 7 Lane Pass-Through Labyrinth I recently painted on the pathway beside the ice hockey rink in the north-east corner of Trinity-Bellwoods Park, Downtown Toronto.
“Toronto is full of Labyrinths (these ones are in the west end) 🌀🌳 and they’ve been a healing tool for me and so many others throughout the world over centuries.
A Labyrinth is a metaphor for spiralling into Self,
It’s a ritual we use in Qoya to help us remember that everything is within.”
“I have been walking the Labyrinths in Trinity-Bellwoods park regularly for years – since they were first put there.
But I have had to watch the neglect and degradation of them to the point where they are no longer walkable.
does anyone know how to get them refreshed?”
There are on my To Re-Paint Labyrinth List.
There are five multi-coloured Classic Labyrinths I first painted on Easter Sunday 2009 along the pathway beside the ice hockey rink in the north-east corner of Trinity-Bellwoods Park, Toronto.
The five Labyrinths are 3, 7, 3, 11 and 3 Lanes respectively.
Together,
They comprise what I call The “Trinity-Bellwoods Park Labyrinth Walk”.
This is the 7 Lane Classic Labyrinth at the south end of The Walk . . .