Saturday, April 30, 2022

Randoms...?

When you truly love someone, you are more open to change.


We are all suffering in some way, so it is not particularly helpful to compare suffering — comparing tends to lead to  by-passing, rather than awareness...of ourselves and others.


We have to be more willing to admit that the full experience of humanity includes our collective and personal ugliness and is not unrelated to our beauty — we can’t live in denial of either one.


Despite how social-media appears to be working, what do we do with the reality that so much of what we individually produce is not even noticed?


Prior Randoms...?

Structural Stupidity


In the past 10 years (especially 2011-15), something "went terribly wrong, very suddenly. We are disoriented, unable to speak the same language or recognize the same truth."

What happened:

The early internet looked like "a boon to democracy": "Myspace, Friendster, and Facebook made it easy to connect with friends and strangers to talk about common interests, for free, and at a scale never before imaginable."

Instead, the "Like" button, retweet and comments "encouraged dishonesty and mob dynamics."

Of three major forces that collectively bind together successful democracies, social media "has weakened all three ... social capital (extensive social networks with high levels of trust), strong institutions, and shared stories."  Continue here....

-- Jonathan Haidt

Friday, April 29, 2022

We Dream The Dreams Dreaming Us

'Poem for the week' -- "We Dream The Dreams Dreaming Us":

You say we should wait— 

It must have snowed all night or season,  


we don’t seem to know  

and there isn’t a clock; 


I say then  


we should  


wait, I  

trust you. 


The white page is blank outside;  

we haven’t heard in days. 

There is not enough time for a whole new plot. 


Inside, the wax dilates  

wide around the candle.


We sit in the dark

and wait


and are separate,


but looking at each other—

-- Brian Tierney


From the author:

“The title is borrowed from Shangyang Fang’s excellent first book, Burying The Mountain, and I loved the possibilities it opened with the complicated concentricism of its claim. Like many poets, liminality interests me. Dream or reality, present or future, snowstorm or apocalypse, prophecy or experience. This is the end or the beginning. This is the new phase or the final phase. Though, really, binaries break down in the face of the potential for love, which can correct and redeem all that we have done to the Earth, and to all earthly life, and, most especially, to each other. Not simple, sentimental love, but the good, hard love that requires believing each other to be worthy; the love of sitting quietly together in a quiet room in a turbulent time—interpersonal togetherness as a starting point.”

Thursday, April 28, 2022

What We Are Starving For


What we are starving for is what we are not giving. 

-- Anne Lamont

Wednesday, April 27, 2022

Life Just Keeps Going

If there’s one thing that seems true about life, it is that it just...keeps going. 

There’s really not much of anything that, in the end, you can hold onto in terms of trying to constrain it. It just keeps going. 

This can be disconcerting at times — sometimes, we just want it to stop. 

But, buried underneath all the dynamics that change requires of us, something is persistent. Something that just must keep going — keep growing, keep creating, keep perpetuating, keep evolving — seems to be at the core of the very nature of life, even as circumstances seem to prevail upon our understanding of what all is happening. 

Something a little surprising to many is that it really isn't even stopped by death.  In fact, death is part-and-parcel of the very dynamic of it.  Life uses death, too, as part of it's keep-going-ness.

Because of this, we can’t really hold onto life (at least in the form of a grip), especially if our grip is an attempt to stop it, keep it the same, etc. In any given moment, we are not experiencing everything exactly as it has been experienced before.  We can’t hold onto the past, we can’t hold onto the present, we can’t hold onto our ideas about what the future will bring. Life just keeps going. 

And the sooner we are willing to accept the reality that change is inevitable, the sooner we are more free to engage (rather than resist) life in all its times and spaces; to cherish the past, to enjoy the present, and to anticipate the future with hope

Life is not something after all to try to hold onto (or go back to...sorry MAGA fans) — it's something to accept, to cooperate with, to grow with, to help shape.

Tuesday, April 26, 2022

Convenience and Boredom

The last fifty years have seen a worldwide effort to maximize one and eliminate the other.

Marketers and technologists work overtime to create convenience. We’ve gone from hunting and growing our food to pressing three buttons on a phone to get it…

And the cost of that convenience is high. We give up privacy, control and satisfaction to get it, in every corner of our lives.

At the same time, the market has figured out that we simply don’t like to be bored. And so there’s more stimulation, more options and more noise than ever before.

The problem is that boredom is a partner with satisfaction and joy. It’s hard to overstimulate ourselves into those feelings.

-- Seth Godin, Convenience and boredom

Monday, April 25, 2022

What I Have Been Exposed To

I've noticed...that I believe things that I have been exposed to.

That has a number of implications, doesn't it?

Besides the fact that I don't believe in things I've not been exposed to, wouldn't that have to mean my beliefs are relatively limited...that is, to my experience?

Which would also mean that something could be true, that I don't believe in, simply because I haven't experienced it.

At the very least, humility about the realities of truth is in order.  Judgments about people with different experience really are not only often misguided, but also fraught with opportunity for harm...to those people, not to mention myself.

Sunday, April 24, 2022

God Does Not Forget

Dear Child of God, it is often difficult for us to recognize the presence of God in our lives and in our world. In the clamor of the tragedy that fills the headlines we forget about the majesty that is present all around us. We feel vulnerable and often helpless.... But we are not helpless and with God’s love we are ultimately invincible. Our God does not forget those who are suffering and oppressed.

-- Archbishop Desmond Tutu

Saturday, April 23, 2022

Randoms...?

When the system becomes primarily something to game, something is really wrong.


It's hard not to observe that politics has become increasingly exploitative — the irony being that each side thinks it is the other side that is guilty of it.


How easily does lying becomes systemic — more and more lies and liars, increasingly less and less sensitive to what is true because when you've lied so much, you can't even 'remember' what is true (not to mention the lies you've told).


How are we complicit when we believe our ends justify our means?


Prior Randoms...?



On the Lighter Side: Biden's Fault

On the Lighter Side:

Friday, April 22, 2022

Earth Day 2022 - "We Are the Earth"

The ultimate luxury in life remains nature

-- Robert Rabensteiner



At this very moment, the Earth is above you, below you, all around you, and even inside you. The Earth is everywhere. You may be used to thinking of the Earth as only the ground beneath your feet. But the water, the sea, the sky, and everything around us comes from the Earth. Everything outside us and everything inside us comes from the Earth. We often forget that the planet we are living on has given us all the elements that make up our bodies. The water in our flesh, our bones, and all the microscopic cells inside our bodies all come from the Earth and are part of the Earth. The Earth is not just the environment we live in. We are the Earth and we are always carrying her within us.

Realizing this, we can see that the Earth is truly alive. We are a living, breathing manifestation of this beautiful and generous planet. Knowing this, we can begin to transform our relationship to the Earth. We can begin to walk differently and to care for her differently. We will fall completely in love with the Earth. When we are in love with someone or something, there is no separation between ourselves and the person or thing we love. We do whatever we can for them and this brings us great joy and nourishment. That is the relationship each of us can have with the Earth. That is the relationship each of us must have with the Earth if the Earth is to survive, and if we are to survive as well.

If we think about the Earth as just the environment around us, we experience ourselves and the Earth as separate entities. We may see the planet only in terms of what it can do for us. We need to recognize that the planet and the people on it are ultimately one and the same. . . .

A lot of our fear, hatred, anger, and feelings of separation and alienation come from the idea that we are separate from the planet. We see ourselves as the center of the universe and are concerned primarily with our own personal survival. If we care about the health and well-being of the planet, we do so for our own sake. We want the air to be clean enough for us to breathe. We want the water to be clear enough so that we have something to drink. But we need to do more than use recycled products or donate money to environmental groups. We have to change our whole relationship with the Earth.

-- Thich Nhat Hanh




Thursday, April 21, 2022

What If: Like A Flower

What If...we could be more like a flower?

Do you think a flower ever wishes that it could be more like another flower? 

I know, in some ways, the answer is preposterously obvious — no!

And, yet, it seems a little conspicuous (to us humans) that something of beauty would NOT be able to think about its beauty in a frame of how its beauty compares to the beauty of something else. I wish I had more red in my flower. I wish I was bigger. I wish I was used more often in floral arrangements. I wish more people were around, to see me, etc. 

You know, things that we, as human beings, think about all the time.  

We could actually marvel at the possibility that we could be perfectly content in our own color and shape and size and season and use and all the other things that come with existing for the purpose of just being — not for the purpose of gain, popularity, or any other advantage that would somehow put us in a better position to get something we think we need. 

What does a flower need?  It beautifies the world either way, with or without audience, just by existing.

How do I beautify the world simply because I exist?  Why do I evaluate my existence by using audience to validate it?

The irony is that beauty often does create audience — it is, after all, something to behold.

But, truly beautiful things don't need an audience to be beautiful.  Because they are anyway.  

...which may be part of what draws us to it (you know, like a flower).

Wednesday, April 20, 2022

Calmness


Ever noticed...the power of calmness, in your life?

Tuesday, April 19, 2022

Seems To Hang On

Ever noticed...how each season seems to hang on as long as it can, before it finally just relents?

This can often be similar to how we live our lives — what are we holding onto?

Monday, April 18, 2022

Something Altered

Ever noticed...how do things feel the day after Easter? 

Something has been altered; but, we are so quickly back to our routines, to so much sameness.  How do we hold both of these realities...at the simultaneously?

If nothing else, Easter expands our imagination

Perhaps God awakens us with surprise.



Let him Easter in us, be a dayspring to the dimness of us.

-- Gerard Manley Hopkins

Sunday, April 17, 2022

Easter: We Are Led...By the Presence of Jesus

If we, who would be his disciples, recall the night before he died, we are led to a table, from a table to a garden, from a garden to a courtyard, from a courtyard to a hill, from a hill to a grave, from a grave to life. The table holds the self-gift of his very flesh and blood; the garden is watered by his tears and blood; and the cross holds him, even as the One whom he knows and loves lifts him up from the grave to release him into the surprise of hope and life. 

-- M. Shawn Copeland


The Eucharist “is not a prize for the perfect”, but rather “a gift of the presence of Jesus in the church.”

-- Pope Francis

Cherry Blossoms at a Tea Plantation


Beauty, color, and order — just a few of the wonders of Resurrection Day!

Saturday, April 16, 2022

Solidarity vs Equality

Jesus’ state was divine, yet he did not cling to equality with God, but he emptied himself. 

-- Philippians 2:6–7


Most consider that this was originally a hymn sung in the early Christian community. 

The hymn from Philippians artistically, honestly, yet boldly describes ... the great self-emptying or kenosis that we call the Incarnation and ends with the Crucifixion. It brilliantly connects the two mysteries as one movement, down, down, down into the enfleshment of creation, into humanity’s depths and sadness, and into a final identification with those at the very bottom (“took the form of a slave,” Philippians 2:7). Jesus represents God’s total solidarity with, and even love of, the human situation, as if to say, “nothing human is abhorrent to me.” God, if Jesus is right, has chosen to descend—in almost total counterpoint with our humanity that is always trying to climb, achieve, perform, and prove itself.  

This hymn says that Jesus leaves the ascent to God, in God’s way, and in God’s time. Most of us understandably start the journey assuming that God is “up there,” and our job is to transcend this world to find “him.” We spend so much time trying to get “up there,” we miss that God’s big leap in Jesus was to come “down here.” What freedom! And it happens better than any could have expected. “Because of this, God lifted him up” (Philippians 2:9). We call the “lifting up” resurrection or ascension. Jesus is set as the human blueprint, the standard in the sky, the oh-so-hopeful pattern of divine transformation.  

Trust the down, and God will take care of the up. This leaves humanity in solidarity with the life cycle, but also with one another, with no need to create success stories for ourselves or to create failure stories for others. Humanity in Jesus is free to be human and soulful instead of any false climbing into “Spirit.” This was supposed to change everything, and I trust it still will.

-- Richard Rohr

Friday, April 15, 2022

Sacrifice vs Leverage


Isn’t this one of the great tensions (and lesson) of Holy Friday — sacrifice vs leverage?

As referenced in Matt 26:38, I've never noticed that Jesus said he was...overwhelmed.  He was clearly suffering (and, this was before the events we now refer to as Good Friday).  

You and I are suffering, too (note the suppression we almost instantly feel because we view ours and Jesus' through a lens of comparison).  There are days when I feel overwhelmed; with a kind of sorrow in places within me that are hard to identify (my...soul?).

We are so accustomed to solving for the suffering in our lives, and to using power to do it — so much so that we are even willing to bargain for it.  

And, yet, accepting suffering (our powerlessness) is really the only healthy way to orient ourselves to it.  This is the way of sacrifice — something that we are often, at best, only intellectually used to.  Practicing it is even more unusual.  

And, Jesus calls us, just to that.  To follow his example, of sacrifice.  

When I was a kid, I couldn't understand why Jesus just let his own death happen, especially when he had to power to stop it.  He had more power than those who were against him, but he wouldn't use it...the way they were using it against him.  But, Jesus knew something I didn't (and still don't, much of the time).

We tend to view things through the lens of investment — what's in it for me?  Will it work?  

Jesus is saying it is not ROI that is good for us; sacrifice is what is good for us — it is what heals us, what makes us truly capable of making any difference in the world...by extending that same healing to others.

When we feel overwhelmed, leverage is often the only good option we can see.  But, Jesus says to look at him, at his approach; to look at sacrifice — entrusting ourselves, rather than leveraging ourselves.  

Thursday, April 14, 2022

Winter to Spring

'Poem for the week' -- "Winter to Spring":

Did not I remember that my hair is grey

    With only a fringe of it left,

I’d follow your footsteps from wee break of day

    Till night was of moon-light bereft.

Your eyes wondrous fountains of joy and of youth

    Remind me of days long since flown,

My sweetheart, I led to the altar of truth,

    But then the gay spring was my own.


Now winter has come with its snow and its wind

    And made me as bare as its trees,

Oh, yes, I still love, but it’s only in mind,

    For I’m fast growing weak at the knees.


Your voice is as sweet as the song of a bird, 

    Your manners are those of the fawn,

I dream of you, darling,—oh, pardon, that word,

    From twilight to breaking of dawn.


Your name in this missive you’ll search for in vain,

    Nor mine at the finis, I’ll fling,

For winter must suffer the bliss and the pain 

In secret for loving the spring.

-- Irvin W. Underhill

Wednesday, April 13, 2022

Consciously Choose Captivity

Anything we practice, we become better at. If we practice anger, we’ll have more anger. If we practice fear, we’ll have more fear. In many cases, we actually work very hard to ensure that we go nowhere. Change is about noticing what’s no longer working and stepping out of the familiar, imprisoning patterns.

I’ve never met a person who would consciously choose to live in captivity. Yet I’ve witnessed again and again how willingly we hand over our spiritual and mental freedom, choosing to give another person or entity the responsibility of guiding our lives, of choosing for us.

-- Edith Eger

Tuesday, April 12, 2022

Curiosity Is The Wick


Curiosity is the wick in the candle of learning.

-- William Arthur Ward

Monday, April 11, 2022

That I'm Not Seeing

I'm wondering...about what is staring me right in the face, that I'm not seeing....

Sunday, April 10, 2022

End of What We Know

When we reach the end of what we know, that’s where we find God.

-- The Cloud of Unknowing



Unrelated (but, perhaps not — the horrifying weight of the whole thing in Ukraine, described here in The New Yorker, is more than can be borne, which underscores the observation above and our need for solidarity with God and each other):

Saturday, April 09, 2022

Randoms...?

It just can't be over-stated how much we see what we want to see.


How impoverished we become, as a people, when our imagination of power is limited to our idealization of leaders’ use of threat.


Knowing without corresponding action ends up unfulfilling.

Can I trust that there is something about goodness that is extended whenever it can be — that, if it isn’t, there is usually something mitigating it?


Prior Randoms...?

The Cold War Never Ended

 

Friday, April 08, 2022

Visual: Narrow & Long

 Visual - "Narrow & Long":

South Haven, MI

Thursday, April 07, 2022

Not What Ships Are For

 A ship is safe in harbor, but that's not what ships are for.

-- John A. Shedd

Wednesday, April 06, 2022

Q&A: Desires

Q&A:

Q: Who are you becoming?

A: What desires am I choosing?


Desires dictate our priorities, priorities shape our choices, and choices determine our actions. The desires we act on determine our changing, our achieving and our becoming.

-- Dallin H. Oaks

Tuesday, April 05, 2022

Contribute vs Control

We cannot control relationships.  We can only contribute to them.

-- Simon Sinek

Monday, April 04, 2022

At The End

I've noticed…that I am drawn to things that have a kind of reveal at the end. 

Answers to questions related to the meaning of things when they show up, often at the last minute, usually grab me.

Movies and books are like this sometimes.  As are poems, like this one from last week.

Sunday, April 03, 2022

We live in a culture where ‘everything is permitted and nothing is forgiven’

Lent, a season in preparation for Easter when Christians often focus on sin and repentance. One of the things that’s most difficult to swallow about Christianity is the idea that normal, nice people are sinners, that we are born sinful and can’t elude being a sinner by being moral or religious enough.

It can seem gentler and kinder to think of human beings as basically good, our intuitions basically correct and our motives basically pure. But then we run into the hard facts of greed, genocide, abuse, oppression, lies, tyranny, hatred, jealousy, violence, murder, enslavement and even mundane selfishness, impatience, arrogance or resentment in our own heart.

It wasn’t until college that I ever really thought about the Christian doctrine of sin. I had grown up in a Baptist church hearing about how Jesus “died for our sins,” but it seemed that sin was the breaking of certain rules — drinking too much, sleeping around, lying, murder and stealing. I was a docile kid mostly into student theater and church. Not much of a rebel. So for me, being a sinner was more of an abstract religious idea than any kind of felt reality.

In college, through a string of failed relationships and theological questioning, I came to understand sin as something more fundamental than rule breaking, more subtle and “under the hood” of my consciousness. It was the ways I would casually manipulate people to get my way. It was a hidden but obnoxious need for approval. It was that part of me that could not rejoice in a friend’s big award or accomplishment, even as some other part told her, “Congratulations!”

My favorite definition of sin comes from the English author Francis Spufford. He says that most of us in the West think of sin as a word that “basically means ‘indulgence’ or ‘enjoyable naughtiness.’” Instead, he calls sin “the human propensity to mess things up” — only he doesn’t use the word “mess,” and his word is probably closer to the truth of things.

This propensity is not only passive like an accident, but is also “our active inclination to break stuff,” Spufford says, including “moods, promises, relationships we care about and our own well-being and other people’s.”

This is the slow dawning that I had about myself in college, and with it came liberation. Far from being a crushing blow of self-hatred, the realization of my actual, non-theoretical sinfulness came with something like a recognition of grace. I saw that I was worse than I’d thought I was, and that truth knocked me off the eternal treadmill of trying to be better and do better and get it all right. It allowed me to slowly (and continually) learn to receive love, atonement, forgiveness and mercy.

Every week now in church, I kneel with my congregation and admit, in the words of the Anglican liturgy, that I have sinned against God, “in thought, word and deed” by what I have done and by what I have left undone, that I have not loved God with my whole heart and have not loved my neighbor as myself. With my whole community around me, week in and week out, I admit, as Spufford says, that I have broken stuff, including other people and myself with my human propensity to, ahem, mess things up.

The Eastern Orthodox practice of praying the Jesus Prayer has become important to me over the past few years. This prayer simply says, “Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, have mercy on me, a sinner.” It is usually prayed repetitively and meditatively, again and again.

In praying it over and over, I noticed how strange and transformative it is to repeatedly identify myself as a sinner. I am not identified primarily as a mother, a writer, a woman or a priest. I am not primarily a Democrat or a Republican or a Christian. I am also not primarily an upstanding citizen or right or reasonable or talented or “on the right side of history.” Instead, again and again, in these received words, I call myself a sinner.

This recognizes that I will get much wrong. That as a writer, I’ll say things, however unintentionally, that are untrue and unhelpful. As a mother, I will harm my children — the people I love and want to do right by most in the world. And it tells me that I will harm them in real ways, not just dismissible “well, shucks, we all make mistakes” kind of ways. As a priest, I will lead people astray. I will not live up to what I proclaim. I will fail. I will hurt people, not just in theory or abstraction. I will cause true harm.

This humbles me.

I need this humility. Our broader culture does too. The Lutheran theologian Martin Marty wrote that we live in a culture where “everything is permitted and nothing is forgiven.” He meant that we tend to reject the idea of sin and judgment in favor of a “you do you” moral individualism. We try to convince ourselves that there is only personal appetites and preferences, but we cannot quite shake a sense of good and evil because most of us retain a sense of justice, a sense that what we do matters. But when someone violates our often unspoken sense of justice or righteousness, there is no way of atonement. There is no absolution or restoration.

An understanding of universal sinfulness, in contrast, is the verdant soil from which grace can spring. The British author Tom Holland called the Christian doctrine of sin a “very democratic doctrine,” because it has a leveling quality. To paraphrase Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, it draws the line separating good and evil not between political parties, cliques, classes, religious groups or ideological tribes, but instead through every human heart.

But we’re not left to stew in guilt or shame. We aren’t just sinners; we are sinners who can ask for mercy and believe that we can receive it. Living in this posture is what makes forgiveness possible, which is the only thing that makes lasting peace possible. Without a clear sense of right and wrong, we will end up endorsing injustice, cruelty and evil. But without an equally profound vision of grace, we will end up only with condemnation and an endless self-righteous war of “us versus them.”

After I kneel with my church each week, confessing that I have blown it, I am invited to stand and receive absolution and forgiveness. I’m then invited to “pass the peace” to those around me and extend to them the same mercy and forgiveness that I’ve received.

“Forgiveness flounders,” the theologian Miroslav Volf wrote, “because I exclude the enemy from the community of humans even as I exclude myself from the community of sinners.” But if I am a sinner, then my enemy and I have something in common: We are both wayward and in deep need of grace.

-- Tish Harrison Warren, NY Times Newsletters

Saturday, April 02, 2022

Randoms...? (from Others)

In the blink of an eye, the same people who monetized and celebrated hysteria now pretend to be in favor of sober restraint.

-- Jonah Goldberg


Many of our intellectuals are simply in the business of “organizing political hatreds".

-- Julien Benda

Politics is the art of looking for trouble, finding it whether it exists or not, diagnosing it incorrectly, and applying the wrong remedy.

-- Ernest Benn

So politicians and I observe an unspoken pact: I keep my expectations low, and they regularly meet them.

-- Matt Labash


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

In Photos: Citizens of Kyiv


In the weeks after President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia ordered the invasion of Ukraine, Kyiv, the capital, became a city transformed. Much of its population evacuated. New defense units gathered and took up arms. Impromptu social support — field kitchens, aid stations, bomb shelters, evacuation convoys — sprouted into functional shapes. The city endured intermittent bombardment throughout. This altered streetscape became the uneasy milieu of Alexander Chekmenev, a Ukrainian documentary and portrait photographer who since the 1990s has visually chronicled his country’s post-Soviet life.  Continue here....

-- C.J. Chivers

Friday, April 01, 2022

Afternoon in Andalusia

'Poem for the week' -- "Afternoon in Andalusia":

But why wouldn’t geometry equal divinity

1000 + 1 + 1 + 1         What is faith

but trust in one & infinity         Once


in Granada I studied a wall of polygons

or was it stars or bees         or for a second         a flash

of gladiolas in a field until I could see


a galaxy         planets spinning         spokes on a wheel

clocks or buttons         vines blooming         a tornado

from a future century              garden of ellipses


my lover’s cornea         alight each morning 

God         so far away         & right in front of me

-- Sahar Romani