
Mirjam
Yazïra
Kroker

Before delving into the worlds of problems and solutions—those creations of the mind that shape and occupy so much of existence—lets pause in gratitude for the simple fact of having taken form. To be alive, to breathe and move in this world as a being of matter, is a rare gift.
Yet here it is, shaped by time and circumstance, with the ability to imagine, to create, to wrestle with the complexities of what we call problems and the efforts we name solutions. In this moment of awareness, acknowledging the mystery that is to have a form—the bridge that allows you to participate in the endless unfolding of creation, even when it seems difficult.
For all that is unresolved, and for all that is challenging, there is this—an appreciation for the profound offering to be part of this multiverse, to bear witness and to act. And perhaps, that is the first solution: a soft surrender to the fabulousness of simply being.
AM I A VECTOR OF DETERRITORIALISATION?
The desire to be a living matter in transition is what makes me a semi-nomad. To be a semi-nomad does not mean to be homeless, it is rather like Braidotti says, a figuration for the kind of subject who has relinquished all ideas, desires or nostalgia for fixity.
My work thus currently consists of:
* coordinating change
* finding a place for transitioning
*giving birth to ideas
* rhythmical displacement
* fostering nomadic consciousness as a form of resistance against hegemonic and exclusionary views of identity
* nourishing imperfection
*elliptical frequentation of ideas, gestures, places, and living matters
*lateral spreading
*collaborating with living matters
* seeing without looking in a certain direction
And others say: It's great to have roots, as long as you can to take them with you. G.S.
