Looking east over David Crombie Park in Old Town Toronto towards Downtown.
Look beyond Basketball wall and you may recognize the square outline of the green and blue Labyrinth I painted there last year . . .
Looking east over David Crombie Park in Old Town Toronto towards Downtown.
Look beyond Basketball wall and you may recognize the square outline of the green and blue Labyrinth I painted there last year . . .
It’s February and you can still make out the painted lines of the Labyrinth I painted on Augusta Avenue during 2019’s Pedestrian Sundays in Kensington Market, Downtown Toronto . . .
“Everything But the Rain☔”, a four-piece band, is seen here jumping above the Labyrinth I recently painted in David Crombie Park . . .
My Labyrinth in the wading pool in Christie Pits Park needs some TLC, Tender Labyrinth Care, by way of new tints of blue paint.
InshAllah, I’ll repaint once it’s warm enough, and dry enough, outside.
“Some days you don’t know the answers so you ask for guidance.
Two years ago I participated in a beautiful Labyrinth ceremony. It felt deeply spiritual. I felt connected.
I’m so searching for some of that calm and reassurance right now.
I’m hoping this maze will help me unwind the questions that sit on my soul.”
Another view of the Labyrinth I recently painted in Randy Padmore Park in Downtown Toronto . . .
Road repair has brought new asphalt to the surface of Kensington Avenue in Downtown Toronto.
Resulting in disappearance of one half of the Street Labyrinth I painted there during a previous Pedestrian Sunday in Kensington Market.
Yet, because of the particular design of this pass-through Labyrinth, half is all you need.
One can still enter, walk, exit, having completed their Labyrinth Experience . . .
The opening frames of this drone video reveal a visual taste of my most recent, and most complex, 22 Lane Octagon Labyrinth in Budapest Park, Sunnyside Boardwalk, Toronto . . .
My latest Labyrinth,
Perspective from west side of my eight sided 22 Lane Octagon Labyrinth design . . .
My most recent Labyrinth . . .
“Today I found the Labyrinth to my heart and soul during an urban hike with my hiking group.
So much so, I ditched them and did my own thing half way through.
☀️
It was sunny. The lake was glistening.
The light breeze was perfect.
The wildlife were everywhere.
🧘♂️
This Labyrinth has plenty of twists and turns.
There was a couple of times when I wanted to throw the towel in and take the short cut – to get right to it.
🏃♀️
But I stuck with it.
👉
Because deep down I know if I skip the necessary steps in life, I’ll miss certain intended life lessons.
Then instead of growing and evolving, I’m just bypassing the real stuff.
The stuff that makes life interesting and challenging!
🙌”
Bottom’s Up! …hahaha
The Great @HiMYSYeD!
— Sean K (@seankillackey) 4 November 2019
In the west end, by the dinosaurs, by the lake, by the pool
— Shari Kasman (@smkasman) 4 November 2019
Oh cool Budapest Park.
— Sean K (@seankillackey) 4 November 2019
Here is Shamez Amlani with his Bicycle atop the Heart Labyrinth I painted during Pedestrian Sunday in the Baldwin & Augusta Avenue intersection in Kensington Market.
Shamez is one of the four original Co-Founders of Streets Are For People, who championed Pedestrian Sundays in Kensington Market (and in two other Toronto Neighbourhoods as well).
He’s also my friend and has always supported the Toronto City of Labyrinths Project!
That’s me (re)painting the Heart Labyrinth in the middle of the Baldwin & Augusta “T” Intersection during Pedestrian Sunday Kensington Market . . .
“They say life is a race, but actually it’s a maze.
There’s one entrance and one exit and arbitrary milestones in between.
Some take longer, winding roads and some have straight clear paths.
It’s important to understand that life is incredibly complex like the maze and each one has their own unique journey to take.
We should learn to live with empathy and not compare.”