Saturday, September 30, 2023

3 Observations & A Question….

Without justice, it’s not really peace…it’s control.


There IS more than one perspective…we really have to ask why we have a hard time accepting that.

 

You will be fine, unless you mess it up and, then in the end, you will still be fine.

 

Do we hold on to things that bring us joy assuming that the only likelihood is the prospect of losing them AND that there won't be any new sources of joy?

 

Prior 3 Observations & A Question….

Electric Power: China


Friday, September 29, 2023

Don’t you dare rake your leaves this fall

For decades, I stalked the invertebrate enemy.

I bought a propane-powered contraption that promised to lure and kill mosquitoes by mimicking human breathing. I caught about three.

I fogged my deck before guests visited, removed all traces of standing water and dropped mosquito dunks into a bucket of water to serve as a trap. And still, the bloodsuckers attacked.

I lined my walkway with citronella tiki torches — until one of the lamps lit my shrubs on fire.

I hired a company to spray a garlic-based repellent in the bushes, and I scattered garlic granules in the lawn. It didn’t bother the mosquitoes a bit, and my yard smelled like a pizzeria. (It did keep the vampires away.)

In desperation, I resorted once or twice to having the spraying company use chemical insecticides that actually do kill mosquitoes — and probably humans, too. But even that was a short-lived fix.

So when my wife and I bought a place in the Virginia piedmont last year, I was prepared for the worst. If I had that much trouble with mosquitoes on my postage-stamp lot in the city, surely I would be donating a quart of blood every evening to their country cousins.

But they didn’t bite! Here, in the mountains, I walk the fields and putter about in the woods without wearing my usual Eau de DEET, and yet the mosquitoes do not feast. I sit on the porch at dusk, baring my arms to all comers — and not so much as a nibble.

It isn’t my imagination. Entomologists tell me this is part of a worldwide phenomenon.  Continue here....

-- Dana Milbank

Thursday, September 28, 2023

Only Persists


What you resist not only persists, but will grow in size.

-- Carl Jung

Wednesday, September 27, 2023

Truth & Context

As with most things, when I read something like last week's post about being gifted, I am primarily relating to it from my context.  Any observation like that may immediately resonate or it may not at all.  So, when it does, I'm nearly always connecting to what it is postulating because of something familiar about it to me.

But, I've noticed that sometimes when identifying who made the observation, something else is gets involved.  For example, if it is somebody I am familiar with, I may read the observation with an additional lens.  If I know the person (and I like the person or what they tend to say), I tend to take the observation with more merits of truth.  If I don't know the person or think the person is coming from a disposition I don't trust, I take the observation differently.  Sometimes, I can read an observation without knowing who made it and then it takes on a whole new shape when I discover who made it.

The truth is the truth, but our relationship with it is influenced by the context in which it is received.  And, it is often impacted by how that truth is announced or who announced it.

In this case, I didn't know who Marie Curie was.  I noticed the observation.  It struck me in some way.  But, I also did a little back-and-forth about its merits.  This, in retrospect, was primarily because of how what was being observed struck me (at face value, in my context).

But, then I looked up Marie Curie (quite a life story, by the way) and her observation took on a whole new shape, flavor, richness, and depth.

The truth was there and I was relating to it, but only from my own context.  When the context for it was expanded, my imagination for it did, too.

Sometimes I will read something and then edit my assessment of it because of who wrote it (or made the observation).  This is, perhaps, unavoidable.  And, the two go together because truth and context almost always do.  But, it made me realize that I can let the context (or the person making the observation) overshadow the observation itself.  This may not be the worst offense in the history of mankind, but it is important to recognize because we do this kind of thing all the time.

Especially in these times, where political context is often overshadowing nearly all semblance of truth:

“I say up front, openly, and proudly, that when I WIN the Presidency of the United States, they and others of the LameStream Media will be thoroughly scrutinized for their knowingly dishonest and corrupt coverage of people, things, and events. Why should NBC, or any other of the corrupt & dishonest media companies, be entitled to use the very valuable Airwaves of the USA, FREE? They are a true threat to Democracy and are, in fact, THE ENEMY OF THE PEOPLE! The Fake News Media should pay a big price for what they have done to our once great Country!”

-- Donald Trump, last weekend

We've heard this so many times now — the content hardly even registers...because of the person saying it.  On it's merits alone, it is not only disheartening, but quite scary because the only reason such mania persists is that there is still a ready audience for it...paying for it to continue.

Influenced as it is by our collective one, we all see things primarily through the lens of our own experience.  Because of this, we have to recognize how much of what believe is true is based on our experience of it.  That experience is both real and isolated (including those referenced above — they, too, have a story that influences their relationship with truth).  It is only when we can imagine the possibility that our experience of truth is not, in fact, the whole experience of it that we have opportunity to comprehend its more expansive nature, not to mention other people's relationship with it.

Without such perspective, we are numbingly vulnerable to the ideals (violence) reflected by Donald Trump above — the elimination of anything (and anyone?) that doesn't line up (if not, agree) with their experience.

I am grateful for what my context has afforded me, including the knowledge that while our humanity is shared in common, the details of my own experience are not universal.  My experience is real, but it is not the only one.  I have (the good) opportunity to wonder (even imagine) what part of the greater body of truth is understood by people from other contexts and experiences.

The universal brotherhood of man is our most precious possession, what there is of it.

-- Mark Twain

Tuesday, September 26, 2023

LT: All The Ideas

The role of a creative leader is not to have all the ideas; it's to create a culture where everyone can have ideas and feel that they're valued.

-- Sir Ken Robinson

Monday, September 25, 2023

Initial Impression

I’ve noticed…that sometimes I read something and get an initial impression that once I’ve taken the time to re-read it was quite different than what was actually there.

Sunday, September 24, 2023

Awe, Introspection, Awe

Contemplative life flows in a circular pattern: awe provokes introspection, which invokes awe

Maybe you’re making dinner and you step outside to snip chives from the kitchen garden just as the harvest moon is rising over the eastern slopes. She is full and golden, like one of those pregnant women who radiates from within. Suddenly you cannot bear the beauty. Scissors suspended in your hand, tears pooling at the corners of your eyes, you nearly quit breathing. Your gaze softens, and the edges of your individual identity fade. You are absorbed into the heart of the moon. It feels natural, and there is no other place you’d rather be. But the onions are burning, and so you turn away and cut your herbs and go back inside. You resume stirring the sauce and setting the table.  

This is not the first time you have disappeared into something beautiful. You have experienced the unfettering of the subject-object distinction while holding your daughter’s hand as she labored to give birth to your grandson; when curled up in bed with your dying friend …; while yielding to your lover’s lips. You have lost yourself in heartbreak, then lost the desire to ever regain yourself, then lost your fear of death. You long ago relinquished your need for cosmic order and personal control. You welcome unknowingness.  

Which is why seemingly ordinary moments like moonrises and lovemaking undo you. The veil has been pulled back. Everything feels inexhaustibly holy. This is not what they taught you in the church of your childhood. Your soul has been formed in the forge of life’s losses, galvanized in the crucible of community, fertilized by the rain of relationship, blessed by your intimacy with Mother Earth. You have glimpsed the face of the Divine where you least expected it.  

And this is why you cultivate contemplative practice. The more you intentionally turn inward, the more available the sacred becomes. When you sit in silence and turn your gaze toward the Holy Mystery you once called God, the Mystery follows you back out into the world. When you walk with a purposeful focus on breath and birdsong, your breathing and the twitter of the chickadee reveal themselves as a miracle…. 

So you sit down to meditate not only because it helps you to find rest in the arms of the formless Beloved but also because it increases your chances of being stunned by beauty when you get back up. Encounters with the sacred that radiate from the core of the ordinary embolden you to cultivate stillness and simple awareness. In the midst of a world that is begging you to distract yourself, this is no easy practice. Yet you keep showing up. You are indomitable. You are thirsty for wonder.

-- Mirabai Starr

Saturday, September 23, 2023

3 Observations & A Question….

You've got to know yourself well enough to know what you don't want.


What unbinds the heart as much as anything is understanding of the things that bind it in the first place.


A lot of the time, what we’re really dealing with is a by-product of something else.


When does "what will make me feel better?" transition to "what will make me feel good?" — when the consequences of the difference are most apparent?


Prior 3 Observations & A Question….

Where Is Everyone Going? + Congregant & Clergy Views

Friday, September 22, 2023

Orbed Grace

'Poem for the week' -- "Orbed Grace (with image)":


I cannot rightly say much about grace,

except that it is as real to me as the orbed white dahlia blossoms that punctuate my verdant backyard like stars

Its reality is similarly bright, surprising, and full of delight.


When the blossoms fade,

and your promises elude my grasp,

walk me out under the sky lights

that I might recall the rightness of that elusion

and gratefully witness the sheer wonder of it.

For it is in response to the burning orbed-brightness of grace

that my own blossoming occurs.


Thank you for petaled teachers

and revelation in all its gracious forms.


To know you, even in the smallest ways, is to love you … and I do love you.


Amen. 


-- Emily CashDriftwood Prayers

Thursday, September 21, 2023

Gifted For Something


We must believe that we are gifted for something.

-- Marie Curie

Wednesday, September 20, 2023

Who We Are

How much can we know about who we really are without first having had deep encounter with knowing who we’re not?

We are not truly able to like (appreciate) ourselves without the benefit of a thorough embracing of what we don’t like about ourselves. 

And, that often comes through a gauntlet of recognizing how much of the expectations that we have of ourselves are conditioned by the expectations others have of us. This kind of tyranny can only be resolved with a deeper acceptance of our own expectations of ourselves (independent of the expectations of others).  I must become beholden to the true beauty of who I truly am, particularly in contrast to whatever I am as defined by others.

As long as I am driven by achieving a kind of personal exceptionalism that is predicated on the approval of others, I can never really dispose of the artifice that dims the shining of what is beautiful about me. One’s real beauty doesn’t need (and can’t actually have) the kind of light that is merely a reflection of the expectations of others. It can only shine from a kind of interiority that is not beholden to the temporary brightness that is attributed from others. In other words, it might be bright, but it doesn’t really shine.

This kind of beauty is independent in both source and energy from the kind that comes from seeking the result instead of the cause, the byproduct instead of the purpose, the manifestation instead of the essence.

In the end, what I am is a function of who I want to be (desire). But, if who I want to be is simply a resemblance of something that is defined by others, I can never really live from my true essence. Who I want to be as defined by who I am must have a kind of congruence that may or may not include approval or acceptance of others.  External approval is not the same thing as internal acceptance. It is fleeting — just as quickly discarding you as it using you for its own advantages. And, such dynamics are not centering or freeing; they are endlessly distracting and binding.

Who we are is most certainly influenced by the context that we've both come from and are currently in.  But, the journey is the identification and liberty of our unique contribution to that context.  Otherwise, we become a casualty of the system that feeds on the false energy of our trying to be something we're not.

Tuesday, September 19, 2023

Grows With Use

A talent grows by being used, and withers if it is not used.

-- May Sarton

Monday, September 18, 2023

Opportunists

Ever noticed...how you can spot opportunists a mile away?

...particularly political ones.

Sunday, September 17, 2023

Letter of Recommendation...from the Poor


Every church should be able to get a letter of recommendation from the poor in their community.

-- Archbishop Desmond Tutu

Saturday, September 16, 2023

A Quiet Little Unstimulating Evening


A Quiet Little Unstimulating Evening tonight in Ann Arbor....

3 Observations & A Question….

A case could be made that the very thing that you’re asking for, you are already getting.


There is what you think you know about other people, and then there is being in relationship with them.


Relationships, generally, are messy at one point in another — and, yet, they are vital to the quality of our existence.


There is so much around us all the time to be inspired by...what are you spending your time looking at?


Prior 3 Observations & A Question….

Thursday, September 14, 2023

Partially Know Ourselves

"I had a sense of something, but I really had no idea!  This really help me understand myself."

How many times have you heard someone say something like this?

The reality is, all of us only know parts of ourselves, both before and after moments of enlightenment.

In its purest form, this is just simple observation. There really isn’t even a need for any particular moralization about it either — as it is just simply true. 

Most healthy human beings seem inclined to learning more about themselves. This also seems simply observable. Awareness overall, especially self-awareness, is generally both a good and helpful thing.

It is when we become preoccupied with the prospect of self-knowledge that things seem to get off track rather quickly. Full self-knowledge is not only unattainable, it is also unnecessary, not to mention unhelpful because it is usually driven by other, unhealthy forces. It can end up in a kind of narcissism, which is destructive both to oneself and to others because it doesn’t stop.  It can't stop — as its appetite is relentless and insatiable.  And, it invariably projects itself on to others.  A preoccupation with self-knowledge is too often just disguised desire for perfection:


We can (and should) still honor and follow our natural instincts to better understand who we are; being aware, however, that obsession with doing so is no longer about understanding and growth...as much it is about a false sense of control and superiority.

Perhaps it is helpful to acknowledge that there can be freedom in simple self-acceptance, especially when it comes with a healthy understanding of our limitations.  Recognizing that we only partially know ourselves can actually provide a kind of humility and freedom that we all need.

The poor in spirit are blessed and are not crushed by criticism because they are not trying to protect an idealized version of themselves. 

-- Rich Villodas

Wednesday, September 13, 2023

When You Come Out


When you come out of the storm you won't be the same person who walked in.

-- Haruki Murakami

Tuesday, September 12, 2023

LT: Who They Naturally Are

We don't want people to try to be somebody they aren't when they come to work. That's just exhausting. We want them to be able to learn how to aim who they are naturally in order to succeed at work.

-- Bob Jordan, CEO Southwest

10 photos and videos of the stunning double rainbow that appeared last night over NYC


See more images here.... 

Monday, September 11, 2023

Our Senses

I'm wondering...about how much of what we fill up our senses with influences the quality of the whole rest of our life?

Sunday, September 10, 2023

Our Obsession With Meaning

If we could let go of our own obsession with what we think is the meaning of it all, we might be able to hear [God’s] call and follow Him in His mysterious cosmic dance…. 

For the world and time are the dance of the Lord in emptiness. The silence of the spheres is the music of a wedding feast. The more we persist in misunderstanding the phenomena of life, the more we analyze them out into strange finalities and complex purposes of our own, the more we involve ourselves in sadness, absurdity and despair. But it does not matter much, because no despair of ours can alter the reality of things, or stain the joy of the cosmic dance which is always there. Indeed, we are in the midst of it, and it is in the midst of us, for it beats in our very blood, whether we want it to or not. 

Yet the fact remains that we are invited to forget ourselves on purpose, cast our awful solemnity to the winds and join in the general dance.

-- Thomas Merton

Nice News: M51


This is a photo of the galaxy M51, which lies about 27 million light-years away from Earth. Per NASA, the gravity of its neighboring galaxy is thought to be part of what causes those mesmerizing swirls and ripples, but we’re frankly too busy staring at them to focus on the science. And if you think this image is something, wait until you see the full photo captured by the James Webb Space Telescope.


Previous Nice News....

Saturday, September 09, 2023

3 Observations & A Question….

Knowing about something or even how something works is not the same thing as actually experiencing it.

 

It is more than a bit conspicuous how those in the political sphere who appeal to law-and-order are the very ones being indicted (and convicted) for abusing it — it looks a lot more like law-and-order applies to other people (not them)...to the ones they want to maintain power over.


Nothing in the Earth is ours — so, that would seem to call into question whether anything that we put on the Earth is either….


Aren't most quality and long-term friendships, in the end, sustained by deep levels of acceptance?


Prior 3 Observations & A Question….

Satisfaction with Education in U.S.

...well, look at that, would ya?  Really makes you wonder who is fanning the flames here (but, I think we already know...).

Friday, September 08, 2023

Hungry Mosquitoes, Irritable Bears and the Glories of Wilderness


One of the paradoxes of urban America is that millions of people speak reverently about wilderness but are much less eager to venture into it and risk real bites from actual mosquitoes.

I’ve been musing about this while backpacking with family on the Pacific Northwest Trail, sometimes known as “America’s wildest trail,” on the Canada-U.S. border in Washington State. It’s stunning, mountainous country, right at timberline in the Pasayten Wilderness — yet we have it pretty much to ourselves (along with the bears, lynxes and mountain goats).

Perhaps I’m running away from home, for this is a dispiriting time in America: A former president has not only been indicted four times but may actually also be re-elected, our life expectancy is among the worst in the rich world, and large majorities of adults polled say our country is on the wrong track.

Yet there’s something still spectacularly right about the United States: our wild spaces.  

For me, wilderness backpacking is a profoundly healing experience. It restores my soul.  

Continue here....

-- Nicholas Kristof

Thursday, September 07, 2023

Where You Belong


When you know and respect your own Inner Nature, you know where you belong.

-- Benjamin Hoff

Wednesday, September 06, 2023

How Thoughts Embed Themselves

In any given day, we have SO many thoughts.  

So why do certain thoughts grab a spot and settle in...so deeply?  Some even cause rumination — cycling over and over them in our minds.

How do thoughts embed themselves in the library of our brains anyway? 

And, when this happens, what is it that does the embedding part?  

Two things seem noticeable about which ones stick.  For one, personal experience is often glue-like for something to attach to our consciousness. It is what we associate with certain kinds of thoughts that contributes to its stickiness.  

The experience-set we are working with is set in motion early in childhood.  It is how we learn and understand things.  Those things can be positive or negative, but either way they form the base from which our subsequent thought-patterns emanate.  When I was a child, I developed all kinds of perspectives on what I thought things looked like (including what they were supposed to look like).  Among other things, I formed impressions about family, marriage, friendship, church, society, money, success, the world, our existence, and God.  I developed thoughts (even expectations) about them, without even realizing it, that carried over into my adult life.

Often, as adults, our earlier experience-set is either affirmed or put into conflict by additional experiences.  Our thoughts, once again, evolve and continue to take shape from our surroundings and circumstances (especially our painful ones).  Whether by continuance or adjustment (sometimes significantly), our experience forms the fabric against which our thought-patterns lay.  It deeply sinks the thought-poles of ideas that makes sense to us.

There is another dynamic, too, that has an adhesive quality to it — the mood or energy that is often connected to a pattern of thoughts. It doesn’t take very much of this “mood" about certain thoughts or ideas for that energy to actually become even more significant than the thoughts themselves.  Fear, for example, is like this and is often used to tap into an idea; it rides below the surface and energizes the thoughts we have on the surface. Thoughts, in this context, can often become like lightning-rods for our fears. 

We have to know that this kind of thing is going on because it is often the energy behind certain thoughts that is what is most important about them.  More often than we realize, there are significantly influencing forces prevailing on the thoughts that circulate around us.  And, these forces are part of what embed them deep within us.  Social-media has done nothing if not confirm this dynamic.  In fact, it appeals to it...because it works.  It is often selling the energy even more than it is the ideas.  If this or that idea falls out of popular favor, we'll just change to the new thing.  This is easily done because it runs on the same energy.

Though not completely new in concept, this kind of energy often harnesses our thoughts towards what is wrong with things (using fear again) — we often become near experts at finding flaws with things.  And, so, our challenge (and opportunity) is to consider, not only how our thoughts form and are sustained, but also how we can change the dynamic of the thoughts we so actively maintain.  It is much harder, for example, to work at discovering what we can do rather than simply pointing out what we can't (or shouldn't) do.  Doing this requires that we understand and then reposition how what embeds itself, in our thinking, needs to change.  

This could not only affect how we think, but what we think...which might position us to actually do something constructive for the world.

Tuesday, September 05, 2023

LT: Bigger Than Themselves

The best leaders are also the best followers. They follow a purpose, cause, or belief bigger than themselves.

-- Simon Sinek

Monday, September 04, 2023

Eat Something

I've noticed...when I sense someone’s disappointment in something that I am involved with, I often want to eat something.

Sunday, September 03, 2023

Sunday morning, back in the fourth pew


One good reason to travel around America is to meet American people, all the more so if you’re one of them yourself. I went out West for ten days and rediscovered what I always knew, that our people don’t mind talking about themselves. You call a cab at 5 a.m. in Flagstaff and a cheerful guy pulls up at your hotel and you ask him how his day is going — “Fine,” he says, “I’m on the midnight shift and I love to see the sun come up.”

“You from here?” No, he’s from Boston, he came out here to help his son who owns the cab company, and he loves Arizona, the climate relieves his arthritis. “So what did you do back in Boston?”

In Europe, this question might raise hackles, like asking, “What’s your annual income?” but he doesn’t mind. He’s a retired Baptist minister. And now the door opens wide...continue here.

-- Garrison Keillor

Saturday, September 02, 2023

4 Observations (from Others)

Live in each season as it passes; breathe the air, drink the drink, taste the fruit, and resign yourself to the influence of each.

-- Henry David Thoreau


Give your sorrow all the space and shelter in yourself that is its due.

-- Etty Hillesum


Our real blessings often appear to us in the shape of pains, losses, and disappointments.

-- Joseph Addison


Love does not allow people to flee or shield themselves from the pain or the troubles of this life. Genuine lovers move deeply into the life-and-death dramas of this world, like a plant that sinks roots deep into fertile soil, and there give themselves wholly to the flourishing of life. To withhold oneself from love is to withhold oneself from participating in a complete life.… 

-- Norman Wirzba


Health Spending & Hate Crimes


Friday, September 01, 2023

Advice for a Gray Afternoon

'Poem for the week' -- "Advice for a Gray Afternoon":

Do not assume the worst, a trap 

Loneliness sets for old age, 

Or make impossible demands 

On your equally lonesome peers. 

Set your children free, 

Not always at your beck and call. 


Because your needs keep growing 

And are endless, don’t imagine 

There are answers to everything 

Your heart cries Yes to. 


Give yourself permission to question 

Certainties you once bet your life on. 

Establish and maintain a good forgettery, 

Welcome that angel with others. 

Make trust the keeper of your house. 


Sit in the sun that banishes doldrums, 

Useless apologies, guilt. 

Open your eyes, uncurl your fingers, 

Take in what you need. 


Give sleep the upper hand, 

Fall often into the arms of that god.


-- Jeanne Lohmann