The perception of a problem can be as bad as the problem itself.
-- Nathaniel Persily
The perception of a problem can be as bad as the problem itself.
-- Nathaniel Persily
I've noticed…that it’s nearly impossible (for me) to maintain rhythms in life perpetually, almost as if most rhythms need to be broken now and then — but initiating rhythms in life also seem very important.
God’s power is not domination, threat, or coercion. All divine power is shared power and the letting go of autonomous power ft.
-- Richard Rohr
In most things, success depends on knowing how long it takes to succeed.
Ever noticed…that everything in the Lord’s prayer is plural?
It seems like most of recent-era evangelical Christianity has never noticed that…at least in the political context.
Yesterday's post speaks amazingly well to this neglected notion of our sense of community.
Often times it is the fear of being found out or the actual experience of being found out that alerts us to what lies beneath. It actually places us on the path of self-discovery.
-- Ruth Haley Barton
It is in the process of embracing our imperfections that we find our truest gifts: courage, compassion, and connection.
Prior 4 Observations (from Others).
Every problem, every dilemma, every dead end we find ourselves facing in life, only appears unsolvable inside a particular frame or point of view. Enlarge the box, or create another frame around the data, and problems vanish, while new opportunities appear.
-- Rosamund and Benjamin Zander
I’m wondering…what I’m wondering about and why.
Every 3rd Monday (unless something comes up on a Monday), I post something about what I’m wondering about. Usually, it’s about a ‘why’ or an ‘about’.
Why does this (or that) happen?
What is this (or that) about?
Today, I’m wondering about why the things that make my list…make my list in the first place. Isn’t something influencing that most of the time?
Or, what about this — why does it seem like I don’t wonder about certain things (at all)?
Surely, there have to be some implications here (if not ramifications)….
When is the last time you looked up for even a few minutes at a cloudless night sky?
When is the last time you looked endlessly at that portal in your hands?
Which do you feel better serves your needs?
I’m doing an experiment. Like everyone else (I’m assuming), I don’t think I am addicted to one form of social media or another. But, I am noticing the ease with which I rotate back to Instagram, for example, just to see the latest…skuttlebutt or anything else that might be entertaining.
I’ve decided to test myself a little bit on this by deleting the Instagram app on my phone. What will I feel when I have that extra minute? Or, what will I feel in the evening when I’m too tired to do anything else, but am not ready for bed? If I don’t have that to turn to (because it is so easy), what will I turn to? What if I have simply deluded myself into thinking that I’m not into something more than I think I am?
I know there is something psychologically appealing about keeping track of controversy. It feeds something in us. Perhaps, we think we’re more in control of something, if we’re aware of it. But, it’s hard not to notice how easy it is to go looking for it as well.
Besides how it feels, what does it really feed? Is that something constructive or good or is that something else?
I know myself well enough that sometimes I have to build in things to check myself.
At the very least, I know that what I feel, based on what I’m looking at, can be quite different things (night sky versus social media, etc.). I think I need to find out if what I’m looking at is creating something in me that I’m not aware of.
Maybe you’ve already performed an experiment like this — what did you discover?
Accepting oneself does not preclude an attempt to become better.
Ever noticed…how little musculature we have as a society for grief?
And, we can’t figure out why we’re so anxious….It was only later, through friendships with Christian men and women who truly embody the spirit of understanding and compassion of Jesus, that I have been able to touch the depths of Christianity.
-- Thich Nhat Hanh
Prayer, for me, is increasingly like on-going dialogue.
Good power seems to be far less something that you have than it is something you access.
Ultimately, we have to accept that healing is something we can't rush.
In a number of ways, isn’t a warrior mentality primarily juvenile in nature (if not in substance)?
My longer posts each week seem to rotate between something happening in the world around us (more often political stuff lately) and something more sublime (why do we have to force ourselves away from our media-diet of controversy (which we say we hate, but do we really? — after all, we all know by now that we actively perpetuate it…). Given that cadence, I guess it's time for...the former (ugh).
Honestly, I've not been immune from what the sucking-us-down has been doing to all of us. It does, ironically, seem conspiratorial (conspiring against us). How do we engage, and not stick our head in the sand (pretending what is happening isn't), without becoming incapacitated by it all?
The range and depth of issues is confounding; impossible to both enumerate or itemize. Why should we even have to? But, what happens if we don't (maybe the exact opposite of what we tend to think; but, who knows?)?
It’s like watching a ship take on water. But, you feel it a little differently if you’re on that ship. You feel stupid, angry, and most of all…helpless. “Do something!” we scream (at ourselves in the mirror). We know panic doesn’t help, but we’re increasingly desperate for an effective alternative. And, if we’re honest, we all have this sinking feeling that we’re aiding-and-abetting things somehow.
How does one, then, resist what truly needs to be resisted? We don’t know how, in part, because we still haven’t collectively re-agreed on the what. So, what should be resisted? We need a better answer than the easy one of simply saying, “the other side”.
We have to find out though. We must find a way to identify it. The ship is going down and we’re going with it. Our very survival is being pressed now into differentiating between a basic understanding of what is good and bad and what is being co-opted as being so (yet another horrifying example here…yes, go ahead, add 1 more thing to the controversy column). In other words, we are having to rediscover what really is at the core of our individual and collective conscience. Perhaps the silver-lining is that this is long overdue...and is now happening (or starting to). What do we really want collectively? What do we really need collectively?
The smartest person in the room, I’ve learned, is usually the person who knows how to tap into the intelligence of every person in the room.
-- Scott Kelly
I’m wondering…about AI — mostly about where meaning and morality fits in (or doesn’t).
Just because LLM’s can make new connections to an unfathomable degree and at an unprecedented rate doesn’t mean that they're real (or substantive). None of this happens without a rate of an investment that we’ve never seen before. Investment is predicated on the possibility of return. Perhaps we need to evaluate more carefully what that return actually is — we are, after all, funding this through our societal choices.
Too often, we throw up our hands on such things and say, in effect, “but what can we do about it?” Well, other societies aren’t caving in as easily. They are doing something about it, by getting at the values they have as a group. So, why aren’t we?
Just because you can make money at something, doesn't mean you should. Sometimes I wonder how much our love of money has stunted our growth and development as a society (no to mention as individuals).
Many of our leaders have just caved in to our appetite for consumption, regardless of the implications. Given the amount of money involved now, is AI just one more example?
I looked up early this morning at the still nighting sky.
The stars were stunning.
I was reminded that they always are and that the only thing that really changes is my perception of them. They're sitting there all the time; shining or doing their thing (whatever that is).
Invariably now, when I put myself in a position to see them and then contemplate their significance, my thoughts drift towards…love. Is that cultural conditioning? Or, is that something innately existential? Many have debated the question over time. So, if nothing else, I'm not the first to wonder about it (not to mention what really changes whatever I end up concluding?).
Something (Someone?) put such things in place, even as the nature of their 'place' is always evolving. The span of time involved so far exceeds both my experience and understanding of it, my conclusions are somewhat irrelevant (at least on that scale). It makes a lot of sense (even beyond rationality) to me that such a thing means something. The traditions of understanding that nature is the primal representation of spirituality is not hard for me to accept (even if I tend to forget it at times).
Further, the connection between nature and that Being described as love does not feel inappropriate or even a stretch. It would seem that Being would have a motive when creating something beautiful — true at both human and divine levels, isn't it? A motive to do that would be what we might characterize as...loving. The meaning involved would seem to necessitate communication; portrayal, offering, invitation, acceptance.
Doesn't nature seem to do this? Obviously, there are deviations from a constant state of this (how else can you fit things like earthquakes or other 'natural' disasters into this equation of understanding?). But, the overall pattern seems to be beauty, harmony, inter-relatedness, dependence, care, respect, work, enjoyment...and on and on. This all could be described in a variety of ways (and has been), but it holds water for me to also describe it as love.
I'm going to a funeral today. Why (am I going)?
I suspect it is related to all this because the life lived, in the context above, was caught up in the meaning of this beauty. He tried to capture it. He wanted to embody it. Many benefitted because of it; we were drawn into each of the three dimensions I'm describing here. Nature, love, God. I want to honor that and the person who was involved and who lives on, despite his physical passing.
Perhaps my body lifted my head this morning (usually I'm looking down, trying to avoid falling in the dark). Perhaps it said something like, see what persists (and surrounds) in all the living and dying we do on this earth. Notice it. Appreciate it. Perpetuate it.
Nature does it, in my opinion, because it represents Something (God) who does it, so that we can do it, too.
The good life is a process, not a state of being. It is a direction, not a destination.
-- Carl Rogers
Fortunately, awe is not only reserved for life’s grand events. It can be found in the mundane, like in the kindness of a stranger or the laughter of a loved one.
As Dacher Keltner suggests in his book, Awe: The New Science of Everyday Wonder and How It Can Transform Your Life, this emotion offers far more than a pleasant, fleeting experience—it holds the potential to profoundly shape our mental and physical well-being.
What you might not realize is that awe also brings significant cognitive benefits that can positively impact your brain function and how you interact with the world. From enhancing creativity to improving decision-making, awe has the unique ability to sharpen our minds and transform the way we think. Continue here….
-- Mark Travers
I have the right to do anything I want to do. I'm the president of the United States.
-- Donald Trump, this week
In honor of the many freedoms I enjoy, I would like to fly the American flag, like I used to.
However (assuming anyone even noticed), I’m afraid that would be completely misunderstood.. As much as I would like it to be about patriotism, the community I live in would tend to read it, especially right now, as nationalism.
There is a distinction between patriotism and nationalism.
Question yourself, yes, but don't doubt yourself. There's a difference.
Sometimes the stories are as important as the truth they represent.
You have to take ownership of your own health — it’s not somebody else’s job.
Whatever happened to the question, "Can you tell me more about that?"?
'Poem for the week' -- "Sufficient":
Citron, pomegranate,
Apricot, and peach,
Flutter of apple-blows
Whiter than the snow,
Filling the silence
With their leafy speech,
Budding and blooming
Down row after row.
Breaths of blown spices,
Which the meadows yield,
Blossoms broad-petaled,
Starry buds and small;
Gold of the hill-sides,
Purple of the field,
Waft to my nostrils
Their fragrance, one and all.
Birds in the tree-tops,
Birds that fill the air,
Trilling, piping, singing,
In their merry moods, —
Gold wing and brown wing,
Flitting here and here,
To the coo and chirrup
Of their downy broods.
What grace has summer
Better that can suit?
What gift can autumn
Bring us more to please?
Red of blown roses,
Mellow tints of fruit,
Never can be fairer,
Sweeter than are these
-- Ina Donna Coolbrith
How chaotic does the world seem to you right now?
How about in your own life — how chaotic does it feel?
Where does this lead you? Do you feel like you just want to isolate yourself from it all?
I know people who try to literally move away from what they feel is chaotic — to insulate themselves from the outside world. . It feels like an almost natural response (after all, why would you want to stay in chaos?). But, moving away from it doesn’t really deal with it, it is mostly just an attempt to avoid it, often with only short-term effect.
When I am disrupted by something, I feel like moving away from it. Others respond in the opposite way, they confront it. Disruption is not always a bad thing. But, chaos usually is, especially when it is persistent.
Chaos makes you feel like something is out of control. It makes you feel like you have to do something about it — that you can't handle it, if you don't.
Chaos disables connection.
Chaos enables isolation.
Isolation enables the impacts of chaos. It is an attempt to control it, when in fact it actually contributes to perpetuating it.
Even in its most legitimate form, isolation is simply a method to reposition how one enters the chaos. And, sometimes that is needed. But, isolation is mostly ineffective and, in the long run, an illusion.
Working on something collectively (together) is often the greatest antidote to chaos.
Going it alone, whether at a personal or national level, betrays a fundamental flaw in one’s understanding of what it means to be in a healthy relationship with the dialectic of order and chaos. Isolation only tips the scale further away from a more constructive and healthy engagement with chaos in life.
We should be both aware of and vigilant against, then, those who use chaos to divide and isolate us. Ironically, chaos when use this way is even more about power at times than order is (which can also at times feel just as heavy handed).
Disruption is one thing. Monetized chaos is another.
Given what and how these things work, we need to come together.