Tuesday, July 16, 2024

without an image of ourselves






Procrustes was a host who adjusted his guests to their bed.
Procrustes, whose name means "he who stretches."

He kept a house by the side of the road where he offered hospitality to passing strangers, who were invited in for a pleasant meal and a night's rest in his very special bed. Procrustes described it as having the unique property that its length exactly matched whomsoever lay down upon it. What Procrustes didn't volunteer was the method by which this "one-size-fits-all" was achieved, namely as soon as the guest lay down Procrustes went to work upon him, stretching him on the rack if he was too short for the bed and chopping off his legs if he was too long. Theseus turned the tables on Procrustes, fatally adjusting him to fit his own bed.



We are no sooner out of the womb than we must begin this precarious unfolding
 and shaping of who we are. If we have bad or destructive times in childhood, 
we begin to fix on a survival identity to cover over and to compensate 
for what happens to us. If we are never encouraged to be ourselves 
we begin to construct an identity that will gain us
 either attention or approval. 

 When we set out to construct our lives according to a fixed image, 
we damage ourselves. The image becomes the desperate focus 
of all our longing. 

 There are no frames for the soul. In truth, we are called,
in so far as we can, to live without an image of ourselves,
 or at least to keep images we have free and open.

 When you sense the immensity of the unknown within you, 
any image you have built of yourself gradually loses its promise. 

 Your name, your face, your address only suggest the threshold of your identity.
 Somehow you are always secretly aware of this.
 Sometimes. you find yourself listening to someone 
telling you what you should do 
or describing what is going on inside you,
 and you whisper to yourself that they 
have not the foggiest idea who you actually are.




~ John O'Donohue
from Eternal Echoes



Saturday, July 13, 2024

our compulsive manufacturing of contrived existence stops

 








There are times like these in our lives—such as facing death or even giving birth —
when we are no longer able to manage our outer image, no longer able to suspend ourselves
 in pursuit of the ideal self. It’s just how it is—we’re only human beings, and in these times
 of crisis we just don’t have the energy to hold it all together. When things fall apart,
 we can only be as we are. Pretense and striving fall away, and life becomes starkly simple.
 
 The value of such moments is this: we are shown that the game can be given up 
and that when it is, the emptiness that we feared, emptiness of the void, is not what is there.
 What is there is the bare fact of being. Simple presence remains—breathing in and out, 
waking up and going to sleep. The inevitability of the circumstances at hand is 
compelling enough that for the moment, our complexity ceases. Our compulsive manufacturing
 of contrived existence stops. Perhaps in that ungrounded space, we are not even comforting ourselves,
 not even telling ourselves everything is okay; we may be too tired to do even that. 
It’s just total capitulation—we’re forced into non-grasping of inherent reality. 
The contrived self has been emptied out along with contrived existence and the tiring treadmill
 of image maintenance that goes along with it. What remains is a new moment 
spontaneously meeting us again and again.

There is an incredible reality that opens up to us in those gaps 
if we just do not reject rupture. In fact, if we have some reliable idea of what is happening
 in that intermediate, groundless space, rupture can become rapture.
 

 
 
 
~  Pema Khandro Rinpoche
excerpts from Breaking Open in the Bardo


defending the image








 humility is the greatest freedom. 
 
As long as you have to defend the imaginary self
 that you think is important, you lose your peace of heart.
 
As soon as you compare that shadow with the shadows of other people,
 you lose all joy, because you have begun to trade in unrealities and
 there is no joy in things that do not exist.





~Thomas Merton
 


it floats you

 





The vast flood
Rolls onward
But yield yourself,
And it floats you upon it.




~ Ikkyu
from Zen and Zen Classics 
by R. H. Blyth
with thanks to Poetry-Chaikhana.com



Tuesday, July 9, 2024

contemplative dimensions of healing trauma

 






~ James Finley

Monday, July 8, 2024

breathing underwater

 





I built my house by the sea.
Not on the sands, mind you;
not on the shifting sand.
And I built it of rock.
A strong house
by a strong sea.

And we got well acquainted, the sea and I.
Good neighbours.
Not that we spoke much.
We met in silences.
Respectful, keeping our distance,
but looking our thoughts across the fence of sand.
Always the fence of sand our barrier,
always, the sand between.

And then one day,
- and still I don't know how it happened -
the sea came.
Without warning.

Without welcome, even.
Not sudden and swift, but a shifting across the sand like wine,
less like the flow of water than the flow of blood.
Slow, but coming.
Slow, but flowing like an open wound.

And I thought of flight and I thought of drowning and I thought of death.
A while I thought the sea crept higher, till it reached my door.
And I knew then, there was nether flight, nor death, nor drowning.
That when the sea comes calling you stop being neighbours
and you give your house for a coral castle,
and you learn to breathe underwater.






~ Carol Bieleck
"I am not a traditional nun. 
In addition to being a Sister of the Society of the Sacred Heart,
 I became an ordained Sufi priest,
 participated in the Dances of Universal Peace,
 and attended the 1995 United Nations Women’s Conference in Bejiing."


photo by Alex Mustard

Sunday, July 7, 2024

a great coauthorship

 






Each of us has had many authors, 
and each of us is engaged, 
for better or worse, in that same authorship. 

We could say that the human race is a great coauthorship 
in which we are collaborating with God and nature
 in the making of ourselves and one another. 

From this there is no escape. We may collaborate either well or poorly,
 or we may refuse to collaborate, but even to refuse to collaborate
 is to exert an influence and to affect the quality of the product.

The business of humanity is undoubtedly survival in this complex sense —
 a necessary, difficult, and entirely fascinating job of work. We have in us
 deeply planted instructions — personal, cultural, and natural — to survive, 
and we do not need much experience to inform us that we cannot survive alone. 

The smallest possible “survival unit,” indeed, appears to be the universe… 
Inside it, everything happens in concert; not a breath is drawn but by the grace
 of an inconceivable series of vital connections joining an inconceivable multiplicity
 of created things in an inconceivable unity. 

it may be that our marriages, kinships, friendships, neighborhoods,
 and all our forms and acts of homemaking are the rites 
by which we solemnize and enact our union with the universe… 
They give the word “love” its only chance to mean, 
for only they can give it a history,
 a community, and a place. 

 in such ways can love become flesh
 and do its worldly work.


It is  in these bonds that our individuality has a use and a worth;
 it is to the people who know us, love us, and depend on us
 that we are indispensable as the persons we uniquely are… 
Separate from the relationships,
 there is nobody to be known.





~ Wendell Berry
taken from  The Art of the Commonplace
art: Share in the wonder of the Shared Sky exhibition | by Stuart Buchanan
with thanks to The Marginalian by Maria Popova


let the last thing be song

 






i.

Memory is safest in someone with amnesia.
Behind locked doors
glow the unmarred pieces—
musical notes humming
in a jumble, only
waiting to be
arranged.

ii.

What is left in one
who does not remember?
Love and music.

Not a name but the fullness.
Not the sequence of events
but order of rhythm and pitch,

a piece of time in which to exist.

iii.

A tone traveling through space has no referent,
and yet we infer, and yet it
finds its way between our cells
and shakes us.

Aren’t we all still quivering
like tuning forks
with the shock of being,
the shock of being seen?

iv.

When I die, I want to be sung across the threshold.
Don’t you? Doesn’t the universe,
with its loosening warp
and weft, still
unspool its symphony?

Sing to me — please —
and I will sing for you as all unravels,
as time continues past the final beat
of the stutter inside your chest.

Harmonize, at the edge of that horizon,
with the black hole’s
fathomless B-flat.




~ Hannah Fries
with thanks to the marginalian



Saturday, July 6, 2024

there is some kiss





There is some kiss we want with our whole lives, the touch of
spirit on the body. Ocean water begs the pearl to break its shell.

And the lily, how passionately it needs some wild darling! At
night, I open the window and ask the moon to come and press its

face against mine, Breathe into me, Close the language-door and 
open the love-window. The moon won't use the door, only the window.



~ Rumi 


half spirit and half animal







Humans are amphibians - half spirit and half animal. 

As spirits they belong to the eternal world, but as animals they inhabit time. 
This means that while their spirit can be directed to an eternal object,
 their bodies, passions, and imaginations are in continual change, 
for to be in time, means to change. 




~  C. S. Lewis
from The Screwtape Letters



Friday, July 5, 2024

happy birthday!!

 

Happy 89th Birthday
to
Tenzin Gyatso, His Holiness the 14th Dalai Lama








Tuesday, July 2, 2024

dealing with pain associated with causes and conditions in the past

 





~ Gabor Mate



a community of the spirit

 








There is a community of the spirit.
Join it, and feel the delight

of walking in the noisy street
and being the noise.

Drink all your passion,
and be a disgrace.

Close both eyes
to see with the other eye.

Open your hands,
if you want to be held.

Sit down in the circle.

Quit acting like a wolf, and feel
the shepherd’s love filling you.

At night, your beloved wanders.
Don’t accept consolations.

Close your mouth against food.
Taste the lover’s mouth in yours.

You moan, “She left me.” “He left me.”
Twenty more will come.

Be empty of worrying.
Think of who created thought!

Why do you stay in prison
when the door is so wide open?

Move outside the tangle of fear-thinking.
Live in silence.

Flow down and down in always
widening rings of being.





~ Rumi
 from Selected Poems 
Translated by Coleman Barks with John Moyne




the river of silence

 







You would know the secret of death.
 But how shall you find it unless you seek it in the heart of life?

 The owl whose night-bound eyes are blind unto the day 
cannot unveil the mystery of light. 

If you would indeed behold the spirit of death,
open your heart wide unto the body of life.

 For life and death are one, 
even as the river and the sea are one.

In the depth of your hopes and desires lies your silent knowledge of the beyond; 
And like seeds dreaming beneath the snow your heart dreams of spring.

 Trust the dreams, for in them is hidden the gate to eternity. 
Your fear of death is but the trembling of the shepherd 
when he stands before the king whose hand is to be laid upon him in honour.

 Is the shepherd not joyful beneath his trembling, 
that he shall wear the mark of the king?
Yet is he not more mindful of his trembling?

For what is it to die but to stand naked in the wind and to melt into the sun? 
And what is it to cease breathing, but to free the breath
 from its restless tides, that it may rise and expand
 and seek God unencumbered?

Only when you drink from the river of silence shall you indeed sing. 
And when you have reached the mountain top, then you shall begin to climb. 
And when the earth shall claim your limbs,
 then shall you truly dance.





~ Kahlil Gibran
from The Prophet



Friday, June 28, 2024

in the midst of constant change - we are not "selves"

 






But just why is everything impermanent and in constant change? 

The answer has to do with what might be called 
the flip-side of anicca: pratityasamutpada, 
or, technically, “interdependent origination.”


More simply: everything changes because everything is interrelated.
 Everything comes into being 
and continues in being 
through and with something else.

Nothing, Buddha came to see, has its own existence.


In fact, when he wanted to describe the human self, 
or the self/identity of anything,
 the term he used was anatta,
 which means literally no-self. 

We are not “selves” in the sense of individual, 
separate, independent “things.”
 Rather, we are constantly changing
 because we are constantly interrelating.





~ Paul F. Knitter
Professor of Theology, World Religions and Culture
 at Union Theological Seminary in New York
with thanks to love is a place