Thursday, March 31, 2022

Fear Is Contraction

Fear unites the disparate parts of our false selves very quickly. The ego moves forward by contraction, self-protection, and refusal, by saying no. Contraction gives us focus, purpose, direction, superiority, and a strange kind of security. It takes our aimless anxiety, covers it up, and tries to turn it into purposefulness and urgency, which results in a kind of drivenness. But this drive is not peaceful or happy. It is filled with fear and locates all its problems as “out there,” never “in here.”

The soul or the True Self does not proceed by contraction but by expansion. It moves forward, not by exclusion, but by inclusion. It sees things deeply and broadly not by saying no but by saying yes, at least on some level, to whatever comes its way. Can you distinguish between those two very different movements within yourself?

Fear and contraction allow us to eliminate other people, write them off, exclude them, and somehow expel them, at least in our minds. This immediately gives us a sense of being in control and having a secure set of boundaries—even holy boundaries. But people who are controlling are usually afraid of losing something. If we go deeper into ourselves, we will see that there is both a rebel and a dictator in all of us, two different ends of the same spectrum. It is almost always fear that justifies our knee-jerk rebellion or our need to dominate—a fear that is hardly ever recognized as such because we are acting out and trying to control the situation.

-- Richard Rohr

Wednesday, March 30, 2022

Change

Another lingering reflection, on a recent Randoms...?:

Does humanity really change?


When we're talking about the prospect of change in people, it seems to me that we are really working with two things. One is hope; we’re asking whether there is opportunity for people to become better. And, if opportunity, what about likelihood? Is it likely that people will change (are changing)?  On the other hand, we are working with the notion that people fundamentally do not change — perhaps because they cannot change and, therefore, we are dealing with something on the order of...the opposite of hope. 

If we believe there is reason to hope that people have the opportunity or likelihood of becoming better, individually and collectively, then there would seem to be something that would be enabled regarding working toward the things that could make that happen. If, fundamentally, we do not believe that people can change for the good (or perhaps simply that people don’t change for the good — whether they can or not), then that would seem to lead toward certain other assumptions about what the implications are if people fundamentally cannot become better. What would that mean — that our prospects are limited to only getting worse (many people seem to believe this)?

At one level, it might be important to observe what seems to happen collectively from a historical perspective.  Here, we could look at the nature of what we think is happening right now with Vladimir Putin and Russia and the forces that are involved in the dynamic that he is currently perpetuating — one that appears to be consistent with similar things that have happened all throughout history (which, therefore, begs the question about whether things really ever do change). 

At another level, it feels important to get down to something a bit more granular, like what about my life or your life? For example, do I believe that I have changed and, if so, in what ways and to what degree? Because it seems likely that answers to questions at both of these levels are not disconnected. If, for example, you or I don’t (or can’t) change, then why would there be a reason to believe that we, as humanity, could change? 

It is hard to avoid observing that when we’re talking about change, at an existential level, we are really tempted or pulled into a something quite binary; like either yes we do change or no we do not. When, in reality, change probably is a little more closely relatable to the ideas of evolution — or, how things change. In other words, the change that occurs is often incremental, involves a lot of time, is quite influenced by circumstantial events.  And that, that change is often leveraged by opportunists for the good or the bad either to incite activity towards maximizing the good or to energize our more deeply seated fears about our survivability in the face of the threats we perceive in the world.

It also doesn’t seem difficult to observe that the answer to the question really becomes the basis on which most individual and collective activism rotates. If, for example, we are hopeful and optimistic, then we will try to energize the assumption that there is good involved and that we can hopefully anticipate the natural energy of that kind of resource. 

Yet if, for whatever reason, we are primarily not hopeful, then it would feel quite difficult not to operate primarily from the energy of fear and preservation and protection that would be needed to prevent the ultimate doom that would appear to be the only logical outcome in the absence of some kind of more hopeful disposition to whatever existence is about.

There is, of course, the question of God, and the agency of God related to the question of change. God would represent some kind of ultimate design which would inform whether or not there is a final summation that ends with goodness prevailing (or not). And, then, the question of the agency of God and just to what degree God is able (or willing) to prevent the doom that mankind, at least historically, seems inevitably capable of creating. Is there something about the nature of God that transcends this human proclivity, left to its own devices? And, if so, just exactly how does that agency work? Is it through an ultimate kind of last-minute intervention or is it more like a kind of ongoing (slow as it may be), but perpetual transformation that, like a conspiracy, continues to exist and develop and grow even in the face of all the evidence against its effectiveness.

What about the element of time? When one estimates such things as the question of change, what time parameters are involved? Do we measure this over the span of a person‘s relationships or one's lifetime? Over the longer ark of recorded history? Or, do we measure this on the premise of some other more ontological basis about the nature of existence itself?

Do I need to land this thing (...are you kidding me, are you really going to end this question with just more questions)?

Despite a lot of legitimate, and unfortunately repetitive and dissuading evidence, I personally lean toward the 'arc' thing (not the ark thing) for the most satisfying answer.  It seems to me, the more one knows and understands, the more things point to some version of design, energy, and ultimate progress that perpetuates a dynamic that is sourced in the most basic creative elements of life itself.  We often hear things like, "things have really changed" or "things aren't like they use to be".  In other words, things are always evolving — realities create new realities, sometimes different realities.  Even things that are destroyed seem to eventually grow back (even if in an altered state). And, this dynamic never seems to stop — almost as if it can't stop.  

And, so, to me this translates to a vision of creation and existence that has an ever-present tambour of perpetual growth.  It is the nature of energy itself.  It is full of and fused by what I would call creativity (God).  And, it is fundamentally (unfashionable as that term may be) good.  It is, at least, in it’s most natural state, predisposed to interdependence, harmony, and continual growth (which is, by the way, what is so insidious about anything that inhibits these realities).

If these things, or these elements, are in fact somehow embedded in the basic constructs of existence in life, then it seems to me that change is inevitable (even if there are long periods where it looks like nothing is happening or like things are getting worse or ...) and because the quality of energy from this inevitability is embedded in goodness, then it stands to reason that change is a constant. 

And, if that is true, then I think that informs the nature of the possibility of change in an individual and, therefore, in our collective humanity.

So, while we've now entertained the possibility that humanity changes, how that happens...is for another day.

Tuesday, March 29, 2022

Culture =


Culture =  Values + Behavior

-- Lt. Gen. George Flynn

Monday, March 28, 2022

IN: Means To An End

I've noticed…why it bothers me sometimes when I feel like I am much more often a means to an end, than an end itself? 

I understand it, we all are.  So, no big deal.  

So, what is it within me that this sometimes bothers?

It feels like being the end, at least now and then, would be nice — being the object of something, rather than always the enabler of someone or something else, seems....desirable?

Stating it this way sounds selfish....  

But, choosing denial feels like it cuts something off, something that needs to be gotten to.  

So, I’m wondering, when this does bother me sometimes, why?  What’s going on?

What Is Going On

Ever noticed…that it often seems easier to pay attention to what is going on in others than what is going on in yourself?

Because this is true, we are less prepared to actually help someone else with what is going on in them.

Sunday, March 27, 2022

Mercy Now

Mercy — sadly, something we often don't even realize how much we need it.

Saturday, March 26, 2022

Randoms...?

Sometimes, it's more obvious how relentless life can feel — sometimes in bad ways, sometimes in good ways...it just keeps going.


Sometimes I wonder if part of bravery is simply responding to the moment by just continuing what is needed — like going to cancer treatments when you're not sure you can, or to work when it feels overwhelming, or helping your neighbors when they're being bombed.


There are so many people who contribute such good things to the good of the order, to the co-existence of our collective humanity.


What is, after all, the purpose of living?


Prior Randoms...?

U.S. Image Sours Across NATO

Friday, March 25, 2022

Visual: Sweeping

Visual - "Sweeping"

Lake Michigan

Thursday, March 24, 2022

Our Doubts Are Traitors

Our doubts are traitors, and make us lose the good we oft might win, by fearing to attempt.

-- William Shakespeare


Is it not the case that we all want to attempt something, especially something we're not sure we can do?

Wednesday, March 23, 2022

How Do We Use Our Energy?

What happens to us when we become preoccupied (and obsessed) in our abilities to anticipate what all can go wrong?

Since so much of who we are (and become) is related to the use of our energy, what is different when our internal energy is consumed by protection rather than construction (or creativity)?

Collectively and individually, we are certainly feeling the prevailing weight of all the threats that surround us.  Those threats need attention and substantive energy...from each of us.  Very few things don't matter.

It starts with me...and you.

The question then becomes how do we use our energy — how do we convert it to work towards constructive change, rather than towards denial, withdrawal, avoidance, scarcity-mindset, and enemy-making?

My energy is not enough, but yours and mine together are.  We have it.  How are we going to use it?

Tuesday, March 22, 2022

Science & Wisdom

Science is organized knowledge. Wisdom is organized life.

-- Will Durant

Monday, March 21, 2022

Change & Time

I’m wondering…how time factors into the equation of change (whether we perceive that we do or do not change).

Do we really change individually?  How much of that is influenced by our sense of whether or how humanity itself changes?  If you take time out of the equation (or include it in the assessment), how does that alter our understanding of how change occurs?  In other words, is our understanding of change time-bound?

Do you feel like you've changed?  If so, how?  When — suddenly or over the long haul?

Time can mess with our conclusions about things like change, individually or collectively — because how far back do you want to go?

Sunday, March 20, 2022

Wherever The Human Heart Is Healed

Wherever the human heart is healed, justice gains a foothold, peace holds sway, an ecological habitat is protected, there the human and earth community already reflect in fragments, the visage of the trinitarian God.

-- Elizabeth Johnson


A new treaty targets plastic pollution:

World leaders met on Wednesday to draft an agreement to reduce plastic pollution. Though in early stages, the treaty has already been hailed as “the most significant environmental multilateral deal since the Paris accord” by UN Environment Programme Executive Director Inger Andersen

  • What’s so significant about it? The broad strokes include goals to:
  • Make packaging more sustainable (no more clamshells, we hope)
  • Ramp up recycling (Only 9% of plastic has ever been recycled, per the UN Environment Programme.)
  • Do something about microplastics, the insidious little plastic pieces that sneak into water
  • Limit the overall production of plastic

The treaty won’t be fully hashed out until 2024—which is actually a fast timeline for global agreements—but whatever makes it to the final draft will be legally binding to keep loopholes to a minimum.  Continue here....

-- Jamie Wilde

Saturday, March 19, 2022

Randoms...?

Many (most?) people believe what they believe because others believe it.


Love, in the end, is not a proportional thing — there is nothing proportional about it.


Our sense of self is highly impacted by giving and receiving.


Does humanity really change?


Prior Randoms...?

U.S. Political Party Identifications


Democracy is not a state. It is an act, and each generation must do its part to help build what we called the Beloved Community, a nation and world society at peace with itself.

-- John Lewis


Is that what is being reflected above?

U.S. Gas Prices - Support vs Oppose

Friday, March 18, 2022

It’s Time We Reclaim Our Focus

It’s like you thought the solution to air pollution was for you personally to wear a gas mask.

-- James Williams


The typical American worker focuses on a given task for just three minutes. Each day, we touch or check our phones more than 2,000 times, and spend more than three hours staring at them, on average. So says Johann Hari, an author who has previously written about depression and addiction, in his new book “Stolen Focus.” It is an investigation into how we got ourselves into this distracted state — what Mr. Hari describes as an “attention crisis.”

Some factors that Mr. Hari identifies seem straightforward, like the current business model of Big Tech, which makes money in direct proportion to the attention people give it. Other factors he unearths are less commonly discussed, from what we eat (highly processed food, filled with refined carbohydrates) and how we sleep (by some accounts, less than we used to) to the nature of American childhood, with its widespread loss of autonomy. Mr. Hari calls for an “attention rebellion,” a drastic collective action to force major changes, such as instituting a four-day workweek and letting children have much more unsupervised free play.

Here, condensed and edited for clarity, is a recent conversation with Mr. Hari about what it will take to reclaim our minds.  Continue here....

-- Casey Schwartz

Thursday, March 17, 2022

On the Lighter Side: Limerick

On the Lighter Side (for this St. Patrick's Day):

There was a drained worker on staff

At most he could muster a weak laugh

When we queried why

His passion ran dry

Turns out he was just drinking decaf

Beginning of Wisdom

The beginning of wisdom is to do away with fear.

-- Yohannes Gebregeorgis

Wednesday, March 16, 2022

The Source of Information

These days, it seems that what is to be believed is highly predicated on the source of the information involved in the belief. We may believe or may not believe something is true primarily because of the source of the information about it. I’m not sure if that has fundamentally changed as a working dynamic, over the course of time, but it seems to be in play now more than ever.

We used to be able to trust that the intention behind information was trustworthy. But now, we almost automatically question that — because the source of information really informs our understanding of the intention behind it. We don't take things at face value anymore, because we have learned to distrust the bias, the motivation, and the integrity behind the way information is organized and presented.

Politicized information is used to seek advantage and distortion seems to be a widely accepted tactic for seeking or maintaining that advantage.

And, more often than not, politicized advantage is intentionally manipulating your fears through your belief systems.


An example:

Tuesday, March 15, 2022

Encouragement and Reassurance

Reassurance always runs out. Reassurance implies that the only reason to go forward is because it’s certain to work. Reassurance is futile.

Encouragement means that someone sees us, understands us and believes in us. Even (especially) when things don’t turn out as we hoped.

Encouragement lasts. Encouragement is self-fueling and self-fulfilling.

-- Seth GodinEncouragement and reassurance

Monday, March 14, 2022

My Anger

I've noticed...my anger is most quickly evident around things that I work at — things that still don’t work, despite my efforts.

When I try to make a habit that either doesn’t happen or that actually appears to turn against me, my typical response is (and almost instantaneously) anger.  

In other words, for me, anger is often connected in some way to effort.

I have a love-hate relationship with anger.  I almost always seem to view it as something bad; at the very least, to be avoided (I am an Enneagram 9, w1).

So, my willingness to notice things about my anger is not insignificant....

Sunday, March 13, 2022

The Deeper I Descend

The deeper I descend into myself, the more I find God at the heart of my being.

-- Pierre Teilhard de Chardin


Our purpose for opening the door inward is to help us know and claim who we are so we can more completely join with God in expressing this love in every part of our external world.

-- Jalaluddin Rumi

Saturday, March 12, 2022

Randoms...?

Like ocean waves on the shore, time washes away most of the detail of our lives, but like the corresponding sea-salt air, an aroma of us will linger...perhaps even for a generation or two.


There is the thing you do, and there is the source of what you do and, then, there is the thing that energizes the source of what you do.


We often hear about reasons not to trust ourselves — what is often missing, though, is the assumption that it is in our True Self that the Divine exists.


What is it, then, that makes us real?


Prior Randoms...?

Not a single statue honored a Black person’s legacy until 1974. That has had very real repercussions...

With most of the legal challenges resolved after the violent Unite the Right rally, of August 2017, and the statue of Robert E. Lee removed from its lofty pedestal in downtown Charlottesville, Virginia, local lawmakers in December 2021 voted to do the unimaginable—donate the statue to the local Jefferson School African American Heritage Center.

In turn, the nonprofit cultural group quickly announced its plan to melt down the bronze statue and use it as raw material for a new public artwork. What the group plans to build is still an open question, but it clearly will not be another statue honoring the Lost Cause of the Confederacy, the idea that slavery was a benevolent institution and the Confederate cause was just.

As part of America’s reckoning with its oppressive past, Charlottesville and the rest of the nation face the question of not just which statues and other images should be taken down, but what—if anything—should be put up in their place.

Statues of Black Americans—and, more importantly, the lack of—are an often overlooked barometer of racial progress, hidden in plain sight. Despite their silence, statues are active portraits that can reinforce the value and visibility of Black Americans. The lack of Black statues sends a clear message of exclusion.  Continue here....

-- Frederick Gooding, Jr.

Thursday, March 10, 2022

Attribute of the Strong

Forgiveness is the attribute of the strong.

-- Gandhi


...in contrast to much of what is portrayed as strength (especially these days) — power over others.

Wednesday, March 09, 2022

Partially Loved...

Another lingering reflection, on a recent Randoms...:

Sometimes, we just don’t quite know what to do with the reality that we are only partially loved by everyone.


This one could be a little startling; so, it bears reading with some care....

Even though we think we want it, and as disappointing as it may feel, I suspect it is probably a great relief to any one person in particular — to not have the burden of loving someone fully

And, such an observation, should invariably lead to another one: 

While I may not be loved fully by any one person, I am still fully loved. 

...that needs to sink in a bit.

In other words, the reality of the former doesn't eliminate the truth of the latter.

And, that is something that I can take a great kind of consolation in, because to be fully loved creates a great freedom — one even bigger than if that were able to be granted by any one person. 

Some of the conflict we may feel about this may have come as much from how we have been enculturated — by things like finding a 'soul-mate' (from the culture at large — movies, books, etc. — not to mention the church).  How often do we hear refrains like "you are my everything..." or "all I need is you..."?  And, so, it's no wonder we are sometimes a bit confused by our desires to be loved, especially on certain terms.

The reality is we are loved in many many ways, by many many people.  Our parents love us (yes, incompletely).  Our siblings love us (incompletely).  We are loved by our children.  At times, we are loved in different ways by our neighbors, by our friends, by our community, by our church, by our society (all imperfectly, incompletely).  Life loves us.  So, while all of these love us only partially, altogether, it is still true that we are fully loved.  Not to mention that God, by definition, IS love.

So, to put a finer point on it, we are, in fact, fully loved; just not by any one particular person (that would put them in the position of God — which is not a healthy thing for any human to have to be).  

And, that should take the pressure off — ourselves, not to mention those we expect (or simply desire) to love us.  The goal should not be to love perfectly or even completely.  The goal is to love others wherever we can, however we can, whenever we can — and to let others do the same for us.

Tuesday, March 08, 2022

Success Can Be Dangerous

Success can be dangerous. 

It has a tendency to shut our eyes to opportunity and cover our ears to the ideas of others.

-- Simon Sinek

Monday, March 07, 2022

How Disorienting

Ever noticed...how disorienting it is, when someone is operating aggressively out of their ego?

Sunday, March 06, 2022

"I Believe In God"

To say “I believe in God” means that there is Someone who surrounds me, embraces me everywhere, and loves me, Someone who knows me better than I do myself, deep down in my heart, where not even my beloved can reach, Someone who knows the secret of all mysteries and where all roads lead. I am not alone in this open universe with all my questions for which no one offers me a satisfactory answer. That Someone is with me, and exists for me, and I exist for that Someone and in that Someone’s presence. Believing in God means saying: there exists an ultimate tenderness, an ultimate bosom, an infinite womb, in which I can take refuge and finally have peace in the serenity of love. If that is so, believing in God is worthwhile; it makes us more ourselves and empowers our humanity.

-- Leonardo Boff

Saturday, March 05, 2022

Randoms...? (from Others)

The only thing that can actually ruin this country is believing the people peddling despair to you for their own power or profit.

-- Jonah Goldberg


Perhaps the greatest test of love is the way we act in times of need.

-- Suleika Jaouad


Who I will be is deeply related to who you are. In other words, we are each impacted by the circumstances that impact those around us. What hurts you hurts me. What heals you heals me.

-- Jacqui Lewis


The smallest deed is better than the grandest intention.

-- Anonymous


...any thread? (Prior Randoms...from Others).

growing toll of Russia's invasion of Ukraine

Earlier this week as I settled into bed, I felt aware of being conflicted.  The comfort I was experiencing was not shared by many in Ukraine right now.  I couldn't fully rest...just knowing:

Russian military forces have invaded Ukraine.

The wide-scale invasion of Ukraine has dramatically changed the mood in Kyiv, the capital, as a nation woke up Thursday, Feb.24, with the new reality that it is at war. Ukraine's military says Russia is taking casualties in fierce fighting, but Russia's military is telling a different story.

The Ukrainian military says thousands have already joined up; Ukrainian Defense Minister Oleksii Reznikov said the service is now accepting enlistees over age 60, as long as they're physically able.  Continue here....

-- Marco Storel

Friday, March 04, 2022

Tomorrow is a Place

'Poem for the week' -- "Tomorrow is a Place":

for Maya

We meet at a coffee shop. So much time has passed and who is time? Who is waiting by the windowsill? We make plans to go to a museum but we go to a bookshop instead. We’re leaning in, learning how to talk to each other again. I say, I’m obsessed with my grief and she says, I’m always in mourning. She laughs and it’s an extension of her body. She laughs and it moves the whole room. I say, My home is an extension of my body and she says, Most days are better with a long walk. The world moves without us—so we tend to a garden, a graveyard, a pot on the windowsill. Death is a comfort because it says, Transform but don’t hurry. There is a tenderness to growing older and we are listening for it. Steadier ways to move through the world and we are learning them. A way to touch your own body. A touch that says, Dig deeper. There, in the ground, there is our memory. I am near enough my roots. Time is my friend. Tomorrow is a place we are together.

-- Sanna Wani

Thursday, March 03, 2022

Boldly Enough

The only thing people regret is that they didn’t live boldly enough, that they didn’t invest enough heart, didn’t love enough.

-- Ted Hughes

Wednesday, March 02, 2022

Ash Wednesday: Covid made us face death. But there is reason to hope.

Several days a week, on the way from my home to the nearest coffee shop, I pass a cemetery. Among hundreds of others lie the graves of my father, grandmother and grandfather. It’s an almost daily reminder of their lives but also that I will join them someday, perhaps even in that same graveyard. It’s an unbidden memento mori in an ordinary day.

We as a culture tend to strenuously avoid the fact of human mortality. Of course, we all know that we will die. But those of us who live in places that feel safe and who are relatively healthy, with friends and family who are relatively healthy, can arrange our lives to avoid thinking about death. With the blessings of modern medicine, people are living longer and when death comes it often happens in medical spaces, far from where most of us live and spend our time.

Gone are the days when graveyards frequently circled churches, a bygone reminder of the intrinsic connection between our mortality and our practices of faith. Cemeteries are often no longer near cities at all. In a Times profile of Colma, a small California town where many of San Francisco’s dead have been buried or reinterred, John Branch wrote, “Colma exists mostly because the deceased, like so many present-day workers in San Francisco, could no longer afford to live in the city.” As prices rise for urban spaces, burial grounds are moved farther out of town, and urban dwellers are left with few palpable reminders of death. Death itself, like cemeteries, becomes a distant and forgotten reality.

This Wednesday is Ash Wednesday, which begins the Christian penitential season of Lent. On Ash Wednesday, churchgoers usually kneel and our foreheads are marked with ashes in the shape of a cross. An Ash Wednesday service was one of the first liturgical services I ever attended. And it hit me hard. We, the living, gathered to name the fact of death. The priest marked the foreheads of children, even newborn babies. It felt so true and countercultural, and also incredibly sad.

I have since presided over several Ash Wednesday services as a priest, and it still hits me hard. In the service, I tell the members of my congregation, one by one, “Remember that you are dust, and to dust you shall return.” This black mark of death rests on every forehead — the young and old, rich and poor, strong and weak, sick and well. We carry on our body a recollection and proclamation that we, and everyone we love, will die.

The church has long said that facing death, without denial or distraction, is a necessary part of living truthfully. And this truth, like all truth, teaches us how to live. In the Rule of St. Benedict, Benedict urged his monks: “Day by day remind yourself that you are going to die. Hour by hour keep careful watch over all you do, aware that God’s gaze is upon you, wherever you may be.” Benedict understood that recalling death changes us.

Speaking the truth of mortality out loud on Ash Wednesday feels somehow transgressive. In the midst of the bustle of cities, the busyness of our lives, the triviality that subsumes much of our time and the unreality of social media, a priest stands with ashes in hand and calls people back to reality.

Amid the mountains of sociological data about life in a pandemic over the past two years, one weird statistic caught my eye. Christianity Today reported on an annual funeral industry study that showed that after a decade of steady decline, the percentage of people age 40 and over who say that religion is “very important” in the funeral of a loved one spiked by 10 percentage points in 2020 and rose another 2 percentage points in 2021.

Covid’s specter of mass death challenged any flimsy hope that we can control our lives and be rescued from mortality, loss and pain. For many of us, facing the immovable fact of death quite naturally raises questions about God. With nearly a million lives lost to Covid in the United States alone, more people find themselves longing for religious rituals that acknowledge mystery, meaning, horror and hope in death.

Oftentimes, by avoiding the truth of death, we end up stifling questions about the meaning of life, about God, about eternity and about who we are, what we are for, where we are headed and why anything matters at all.

I experience this all the time. Karl Marx famously called religion the opiate of the masses. He meant that faith can have a numbing affect, quelling hard questions and hampering the work of justice in the here and now. He has a point. Religion has at times been used as an excuse by some to not work for change and to embrace a pie-in-the-sky quietism. Still, in my own life, any numbing effects of religion don’t hold a candle to binge-watching Netflix with a pint of Ben & Jerry’s and a bourbon on the rocks. Like morphine, the pleasures of consumerism and creature comforts dull my notice of life, death, longing and the pressing struggles of this world.

A fascinating 2014 study by The Times’s The Upshot looked at the most difficult places in America to live, based on factors such as life expectancy and income level, and then compared common internet search terms there with those from the easiest — and wealthiest — places to live. What they found was that those in the hardest places spend time thinking about health woes and religion. People in America’s easiest places think about jogging and cameras.

On a global scale, this divided reality is even clearer. A 2008 Pew study showed that “Generally, there is a clear relationship between wealth and religiosity: In rich nations fewer people view religion as important than in poor nations.” People who live in the world’s poorest nations almost unanimously said religion was important to them, while people in Western Europe and in other wealthy nations said it is less significant.

Even the book of Proverbs in the Bible acknowledges this tendency. The book’s writer asks for daily bread, acknowledging that if he became desperately poor, he’d be tempted to steal. But he also asks God to deliver him from riches, “Otherwise, I may have too much and disown you and say, ‘Who is the Lord?’”

There are myriad reasons that wealth might dampen faith. But one is that those of us who are privileged and comparatively comfortable can insulate ourselves from death, suffering and our own mortality in ways others cannot. Whether one is a churchgoer or not, when our bodies are strong, our stomachs are full, and we have high-speed internet and craft beer, questions of eternity seem less pressing.

These Covid years, though, asked us to face the inescapable fragility of all of our lives. Each year, Ash Wednesday asks the same.

But Ash Wednesday doesn’t end with an invitation to distraction or consumer comfort. Nor does it end with the imposition of ashes. After the ashes, in the Anglican Book of Common Prayer, the priest asks that “at the last we may come” to God’s eternal joy. Then we take Communion together, a tangible decree that ashes give way to beauty, that death gives way to resurrected life.

The Catholic priest and writer Henri Nouwen called the hope of Christianity — the hope of Ash Wednesday — a “transcendent realism.” Transcendent realism confronts the truth of the grave. And it is in this truth that the most important questions of our lives get a hearing. We need more than diversion, work and pleasure. We need deep, resonant, defiant hope.

-- Tish Harrison WarrenNY Times Newsletters

Tuesday, March 01, 2022

Give Up Their Power

The most common way people give up their power is by thinking they don't have any.

-- Alice Walker