We all hold on so very tight (won't dream of letting go) to all the things we think we are, and all we think we know. And even though we hate our life, we cling, and you know why, for there to be a butterfly, the caterpillar first must die, and never know the one who'll finally fly.
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River Flows
You don’t have to believe in reality
Archive for the ‘relationship’ Category
Metamorphosis
Posted in belief, compassion, death, love, musings, mysticism, poems, poetry, Reality, relationship, relationships, sacred, seeking, self-help, spiritual instruction, spirituality, values, tagged belief, compassion, death, fear, love, meditation, musings, mysticism, poems, poetry, Reality, sacred, seeking, self-help, spirituality, values on November 18, 2011| 1 Comment »
Yearning
Posted in belief, compassion, love, meditation, musings, mysticism, poems, poetry, Reality, relationship, relationships, religion, sacred, seeking, self-help, spirituality, values, tagged belief, compassion, death, fear, hell, love, meditation, musings, mysticism, poems, poetry, Reality, relationship, religion, sacred, seeking, self-help, spirituality, values on December 7, 2010| 2 Comments »
See, I live in here, and know
I'm not perfect, and
know I'll never be
perfect,
but there's one, the Magician, they
tell me he's perfect, and
he'll take care of me
if I just believe, wish for it
really hard,
he'll steal in
in the night, hold my hand,
say it's all right,
walk with me
into the light,
and I'll love.
Catch my heart with a lasso,
pull me right in,
have my back, be my friend,
make this empty hell end,
no more scared,
no more lonely,
'cause he loves me.
I just wish I could see
his face,
hang out with him,
talk about chicks and how
they can
take you to heaven and hell
a dozen times a day
without even trying.
I wish I didn't have to believe, that
he could just be here,
with me,
I wish I wasn't afraid that
I'm clinging to
some imaginary
friend.
I wish I didn't think that maybe
all my friends are
imaginary,
that they're maybe here
only because I think they are,
because I believe
they are.
I see
the bodies, I
hear
the voices,
feel
the touch,
understand
the words,
but
do they know
who I am,
really?
If they don't know who I am,
how can they possibly
love me,
someone
they don't really
know.
I am not a rock, I am not a frickin' island.
I need someone to rock
out with,
to play and cry and fight
and love and work
it out
with.
Why go to the dance if you're just gonna be
a frickin' wallflower,
why bother?
Why go to the pool if you ain't gonna
swim?
It's cool to walk in the forests of the
Sacred
and be blown away
by the wonder of it
all,
very very cool,
mind-blowing.
But not 24/7, not for me, not
here,
now.
(It's also sometimes cool to have
your kitty
stretch out on your
journal when
you're trying to write, and
purrrrrrrrr
when you
hug him.)
It's magical to look across the room
into
the eyes of someone you
love,
see
their slow
smile,
feel
that connection,
feel
all melty inside
'cause you know they love
you,
feel the smile that begins to
transform your own
face,
see them keep lighting up, 'cause
now they know how it feels,
now they know that
you're loving them
too.
Totally mushy, not all that cool,
totally feeding your souls.
It's so sweet to have someone you love
be happy
that you love them,
that oh-so-quick connection
that lights you
up
and keeps you glowing
long after it's over.
It sucks to be too damaged to do this, be
too scared,
suspicious,
cynical
to allow yourself to love,
too full of shame and pain and
self-loathing
to have a space for love
to be,
too twisted up to trust,
to just see loving, the
need for love
as dangerous
weakness, and
still
to long, to yearn for
someone to love the
person you are
behind the mask,
yearn,
while working so hard to
make sure that they
don't get a
glimpse of who you really
are,
how much you want them
to feed your
soul,
drop the
walls
and stand together with
you, just
you,
naked
in the fields of the real and
find
the love that
couldn't
possibly be there,
you're sure,
hungry,
hungry,
living in a starving world,
praying for
the angel who will
descend and give back
love
to me, who will show me the
impossible,
show me that
the person who lives
in here, the
one
I call
me,
can actually be
loved for a
season for
no other reason
than that I
am,
not some mask, but
just me.
And here it is, another day,
a time to fear, a time to play,
and pray to love that has no end,
for all your blessings given me,
for life, and hope, and eyes that see,
I thank you now,
with all
my
heart,
Amen.
Sunday Morning …
Posted in belief, compassion, death, love, meditation, musings, mysticism, poems, poetry, Reality, relationship, relationships, religion, sacred, seeking, self-help, spiritual instruction, spiritual teaching, spirituality, values, tagged belief, compassion, fundamentalism, God, love, meditation, mysticism, poetry, Reality, religion, sacred, seeking, spiritual instruction, spiritual teaching, spirituality, values on February 28, 2010| 1 Comment »
Traveler, when this journey is over, will you mourn? When the pieces are returned to the box and the game is over, will you long for the play to have been eternal, will you sit, savoring or regretting, remembering the moves, taking satisfaction from your score? Will you have known joy, and sorrow, love and loss and pain? Will it seem, somehow, all worthwhile, something more important than winning in some game that only you, perhaps, knew that you played, (or wanted to)? Where were you before you were here? Tell me no stories, tell me what you remember. And if you forget it all, wipe the slate clean, and open your eyes to the colors of the dawn, is it not yet beautiful, does it not yet take your breath away? Why try to gather memories to you, all protected, some dusty hoard that only you know why you treasure, or that perhaps becomes a burden you toss away, old, no longer needed so you can travel light and free and not be weighed down by who you are, or think you are (or thought you ought to be)? Let it flow, you know not where it goes, and why, and why do you care? It brought you here, this trail of wonder. Flowed 'round the bend and there you were, new light in the mist. And now you want to be here always, never move on? Stop here, stay here, when you daily hunger for escape, some other space in which to be? Ashes to ashes, dust to dust, still it flows, and so you must ... can't hide, can't deny, can't chuck it for sweet bye and bye. Do you seek to lose yourself in thickets of your mind, your grandiose and often-cruel imagination? So say you surrender, just love, and open to it all. What will you lose, to what do you cling? Why do you think it will matter, to whatever the river will bring when the lights dim, the show closes down, when your final curtain falls?
An American Mantra – A Poem
Posted in belief, compassion, love, meditation, musings, poems, poetry, Reality, relationship, relationships, religion, sacred, seeking, spirituality, values, tagged belief, compassion, love, meditation, musings, poems, poetry, Reality, relationship, relationships, religion, sacred, seeking, self-help, spirituality, values on September 11, 2008| 1 Comment »
Love is for Doves.
Look.
Power makes others cower.
Greed is what you need.
More Money for your Honey,
more toys for your boyz,
a big dinner for the winner,
shota rummy for your tummy,
line up at the trough and feed.
Don't let nothing bring you down,
shoot 'em, boot 'em, burn their town,
till the day you're in the ground.
Sweet land of Liberty, to Thee I sing.
Love it or leave it.
Look.
Love is for Doves.
~riverflows
Goin’ For a Swim – a Poem
Posted in belief, death, God, love, meditation, musings, mysticism, poems, poetry, Reality, relationship, relationships, sacred, seeking, self-help, spiritual instruction, spiritual teaching, spirituality, values, tagged belief, death, God, love, meditation, musings, mysticism, poems, poetry, Reality, relationship, relationships, sacred, seeking, self-help, spiritual instruction, spiritual teaching, spirituality, values on July 18, 2008| Leave a Comment »
Left brain, right brain, God brain, no brain in the light or dark, or maybe rain. Singin', Oh, Glory, gotta tell the story, runnin' from the place with all the pain. Saint or sinner, dancin' for your dinner tryin' to pretend it's all a game, while worryin' 'bout the score and sayin' you don't mind, but watchin' your behind all the same. Or maybe you pretend you know how the story ends, or not, it don't make no never-mind. Hidin' out, hope to shout, look, you're gonna fall, big river calls, get off the bank, suhkah! Better dive in, sink or drown or swim or you gonna, really gonna miss it all (and you already paid for your ticket, and the clock is tickin'). Wow, is it NOW already? GONNA DIVE, BAY-BEE!!! KerSPLOOSH!!! Shhhhh ... Listen. Don't you hear the river call?
~riverflows
Not Love – a Poem
Posted in belief, compassion, love, meditation, musings, poems, poetry, Reality, relationship, relationships, seeking, self-help, spirituality, values, tagged belief, compassion, love, meditation, musings, poems, poetry, Reality, relationship, relationships, seeking, self-help, spirituality, values on July 16, 2008| 1 Comment »
It’s not love when I’m afraid, when I know from many times that you’ll say those things with that expression. I want you and already my gut knots, knowing whatever happens will hurt. You don’t do tenderness, not in sex. Understanding’s not where you come from. You wear black robes even when you’re naked. I have trouble keeping it up in enemy territory, waiting for your knives to cut me down. It’s not love when you won’t hear me, won’t hear me, won’t tell me, eyes locked somewhere years away. It’s not love when I do for you or away you go, snarling, I must try to make it better or good-bye. It’s not love when your eyes turn so evenly blank to TV, no time for me, us, seeing nothing you don’t want to see. It’s not even friendship, it’s a moth trying to love a spider. It’s not love when it’s we two, hungry, “Feed me, feed me. Daddy, mommy, care for me, damn you.” Suck each other dry, toss and grab another. “They’re all alike, can’t trust any, unreliable.” A year, you never saw me once when it really mattered. (Well, perhaps once, or even more. I think sometimes you worked at being kind. It’s just I couldn’t count on you, worn down by waking every day not knowing if you’d be with me tomorrow.) It’s not love. With you it was love as I knew it, school in session. You taught me more than you know, I think. For that I thank you. I know you tried, hard enough to say you’d tried, not hard enough to love, to face that what you think and do might connect with why it never works. So truly brave sometimes, but still in love an angry coward. Never saw through any eyes but your own. It wasn’t love, but yet for us it was, and now I strand by strand untangle wings. Perhaps I’ll learn to fly.
~riverflows
Pushing Kids, Screwing with Heads
Posted in belief, Christianity, compassion, fundamentalism, fundamentalist Christianity, fundamentalist religion, God, love, meditation, musings, parenting, Reality, relationship, religion, seeking, self-help, spiritual instruction, spiritual teaching, spirituality, values, tagged belief, compassion, fundamentalism, fundamentalist Christianity, fundamentalist religion, God, love, meditation, musings, parenting, Reality, relationship, religion, seeking, self-help, spiritual instruction, spiritual teaching, spirituality, values on June 23, 2008| Leave a Comment »
My standard disclaimer applies.
~ Kelley Armstrong, in “Bitten“
Sometimes I’ll be reading a book and something will just jump out at me, like it’s written in glowing text. The quote above was one of those. It’s like this person was writing about stuff from inside my head, putting into words what had always been there, but only as this messy clump of sad-angry unspoken feeling.
It’s not that my parents were intentionally cruel to me … well, my father was now & then, and my two older brothers were when I crossed them or they were in a bad mood … mostly general anger, fecal matter flowing downhill, I think.
But I don’t think my father or my brothers gave a rap about what I became when I grew up. My father didn’t particularly seem to care about my happiness, but he didn’t lay any expectations on me about who or what I should be when I grew up. As long as I did what I was told, he pretty much left me alone.
My mother was the one who had plans for me. She was a very strict religious fundamentalist (Southern Baptist), and, according to her, I was supposed to grow up to be a preacher. As far back as I can remember, I was going to church with her 2 or 3 times a week, except for revivals in the summer, when it was every night except Saturday.

When I was 10 or 11 years old she had me read the entire Bible, a chapter or two at a time, over the course of a year. It wasn’t really how I wanted to spend my childhood, though I did get a lot of attention from her in the process.
When I finally broke free, left home, and quit pretending to be this little religious robot that my mom seemed to want, I detested almost everything about the fundamentalist Christian religion I had felt imprisoned by while growing up. I then spent a lot of years being guided by the principle that, when in doubt, I should do exactly the opposite of what my mother and the church would want me to do.
Drinking, drugs, sexual acting out, and other dubious and illegal behaviors were supposed to be my declaration of independence. Way too many years later, I finally figured out (duh!) that when I knee-jerk did the opposite of what I thought my mom & the church would want, I was no more free than when I did what they wanted … either way, it was my mom & the church that were guiding my behavior.
To feel compelled to rebel against and oppose some belief system, some set of values, is still a form of slavery to whatever’s being opposed.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~
So here I was, reading this lively werewolf-focused paranormal romance, and this sentence I quoted above jumped out and grabbed me and I started thinking. I would say my mom was pretty much the opposite, that she cared so much about what I accomplished in life and so little about my happiness.
I think she would probably have said she cared about my happiness because she wanted me to go to heaven & stay out of hell, but that’s not what I’m talking about. And I think that excuse is just easy, automatic, religious-based rationalization for wanting me to be something that would make her look good, be who she wanted me, allow her to shape my life.
That whole “I’m only doing this for your own good” shtick is way too often a cover for something like “I want you to be what I want you to be, not what you want to be. I want you to make me look good, I want to be able to see you be this or that and feel good about myself as a parent, be able to tell myself that I made you what you are, and take pride in that.”
How do we show we care about the happiness of our kids? I don’t think it’s by indulging their every whim, and I don’t think it’s by forcing them to do exactly as we say and become exactly what we tell them to. Neither of these approaches seem loving, kind, or compassionate to me.
How about we show our kids, by our example, what it’s like to live a life that includes play, joy, excitement, working things out with love … maybe loud, excited, passionate expression of feelings and differences, but how to live a life that includes happiness. I would have loved to have seen a little of that in my home while growing up.
How about, if we’re unhappy, we deal with our own crap, work it out for ourselves, instead of trying to makes ourselves happier and reach some of our goals vicariously, at the expense of our kids (and, speaking to my own kids, I’m so sorry about being so caught up in my own stuff, thinking only about my own needs and ignoring yours so much while you were growing up).
How about we just set reasonable limits and requirements on our kids and then listen to them, support them as they play with life, trying this or that on for size, finding out what works for them and what doesn’t. How about if, instead of telling them what we want them to be, we ask them about their hopes and dreams, what they like and don’t like, and then listen and don’t try to pull rank or discourage them from making their own choices. As parents, we know when we care about our kids’ happiness.
There’s no recipe … the only way to care is to care. Part of caring is accepting them for who they are and staying away from caring too much about who or what you want them to be. And I know teenagers can be hard to communicate with … but I can still care. Love goes a long way, love of the developing person temporarily in my charge, not love of showing off this or that thing that my child can do.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~
My oldest daughter grew up without me (a story for another day, one in which I’m the guy in the black hat), and she ended up marrying a strict right-wing conservative religious fundamentalist and adapting herself to his lifestyle. Her husband is a humorless, arrogant, rigid man who has told me he likes his “good Pentecostal wife” exactly as she is and doesn’t want me communicating with her for any reason, because he doesn’t want me trying to “open her up.”
She goes along with him on this, partly because of a rift we had over the fact that I had read some paranormal romances by an author that she disapproves of (with heroine Anita Blake) and refused to apologize or agree with her that my reading such books was wrong … this is despite (or maybe partly because of) the fact that said daughter grew up as a voracious reader of romance novels.
This incommunicado situation is not exactly comfortable for me, but what really torques me is that my daughter is my mother all over again, only more so. Her home-schooled children (two older daughters, two younger sons) have no access to television, the Internet, or long-distance telephone service, all avenues by which they might become corrupted by the world. They follow a strict dietary and exercise routine, supervised by their mom.
She constantly brags to other family members about her kids’ high scores in this or that subject, or on national scholastic achievement exams (home-schooled, so this is also the teacher bragging about her students’ performance). The kids are praised for being thin and censured & ridiculed any time they deviate from mom’s standard of how her children should look. Mom & dad decide which schools their kids should go to (like MIT and Duke) … you get the picture.
I feel sorry for the kids. Projection, I think; if I were in their shoes, I’d be miserable. They may turn out fine … I hope so, but I have this image of a few more screwed-up souls coming unprepared into the real world having no idea who they are underneath the masks they wear for mom & dad, no idea what their own values and beliefs are. Good luck, guys. You’ll need it.
If you’re reading this and have memories of growing up in a world where someone cared so much about your happiness and so little about what you accomplished in life, I hope you realize how lucky you are. Anyway, that’s the view from my window.
And thanks, Kelley Armstrong, for saying it.
Peace.
~riverflows
Letters From The Earth – Mark Twain on Fundamentalism
Posted in belief, Christianity, compassion, fundamentalism, fundamentalist Christianity, fundamentalist religion, love, musings, Reality, relationship, religion, seeking, self-help, spirituality, tagged belief, Christianity, compassion, death, fear, fundamentalism, fundamentalist Christianity, fundamentalist religion, hell, Letters from the Earth, love, musings, Reality, relationship, religion, seeking, self-help, spirituality on June 7, 2008| Leave a Comment »
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Mark Twain is one of the greatest authors America has ever produced. I still read and enjoy his stories, and he is still one of America’s all-time best-loved storytellers.
I first read his book “Letters from the Earth” sometime in the Sixties, and I loved it. I was just getting started in my process of recovering from being raised as a fundamentalist Christian, and I had (still do, actually) a lot of issues with the cruelty and savage treatment of others that the Bible and fundamentalist Christians attribute to the wishes and guidance of God.
“Letters from the Earth” was written in 1909, but wasn’t published until 1962, more than 50 years after Mark Twain’s death. His daughter, who controlled his estate after his death in 1910, was apparently worried about her father’s reputation being damaged by people’s reactions to these essays.
I felt enormously relieved and validated to see a lot of these issues spelled out and poked full of holes by Mark Twain himself, an author I’d read in school, in the title essay in his book, an essay also called “Letters from the Earth.” This is a good essay to check out if you’re interesting in exploring a few nooks and crannies that fundamentalist Christians don’t exactly publicize, or if you’re just curious to see more of Mark Twain’s writing.
Here’s a sample of one of the Biblical (King James version) passages he references:
(Deuteronomy 20)
20:10 When thou comest nigh unto a city to fight against it, then proclaim peace unto it.
20:11 And it shall be, if it make thee answer of peace, and open unto thee, then it shall be, that all the people that is found therein shall be tributaries unto thee, and they shall serve thee.
20:12 And if it will make no peace with thee, but will make war against thee, then thou shalt besiege it:
20:13 And when the LORD thy God hath delivered it into thine hands, thou shalt smite every male thereof with the edge of the sword:
20:14 But the women, and the little ones, and the cattle, and all that is in the city, even all the spoil thereof, shalt thou take unto thyself; and thou shalt eat the spoil of thine enemies, which the LORD thy God hath given thee.
Sooo … if I were an Israelite and a soldier in the time of Moses and my unit decided to fight a city, and that city resisted us, we’d lay siege to the city and when we’d starved them into submission, we’d round up the entire population and then butcher (hack to death with swords) each and every male in the city, husbands, sons, toddlers, infants; any living captive human male, we would kill.
But we’d keep the women, little girls, and female infants for ourselves, along with the cattle and whatever else of value we could find in the city, and we’d divide them up between ourselves. Now what’s a soldier going to do with a woman or girl that’s given to him as part of the spoils of conquering and sacking a city? Whatever it is, I don’t think Oprah or Dr. Phil would approve.
To me, this sounds like something out of a story about particularly nasty pirates, what with the sacking and looting and taking the women & girls and killing all the men & boys. If I were reading such a story, I’d be waiting to see how these bastards finally got what they so richly deserved. But, according to the Bible, these butchering, murdering, and almost certainly raping looters are the good guys, under God’s personal guidance.
In Letter XI, while writing about a similar passage describing the slaughter of the Midianites by Israelites (Numbers 31), Mark Twain said:
The heaviest punishment of all was meted out to persons who could not by any possibility have deserved so horrible a fate — the 32,000 virgins. Their naked privacies were probed, to make sure that they still possessed the hymen unruptured; after this humiliation they were sent away from the land that had been their home, to be sold into slavery; the worst of slaveries and the shamefulest, the slavery of prostitution; bed-slavery, to excite lust, and satisfy it with their bodies; slavery to any buyer, be he gentleman or be he a coarse and filthy ruffian.
It was the Father that inflicted this ferocious and undeserved punishment upon those bereaved and friendless virgins, whose parents and kindred he had slaughtered before their eyes. And were they praying to him for pity and rescue, meantime? Without a doubt of it.
With a God like that, who needs a Devil? Personally, I think God should sue the writers & publishers of the Old Testament for libel, but that’s a subject for another post.
Time for bed. ‘Nite, all.
~riverflows
Remembering …
Posted in belief, love, meditation, musings, poems, poetry, Reality, relationship, religion, spirituality, tagged belief, love, poems, poetry, relationship, spirituality on May 19, 2008| 2 Comments »
Where do we go
when the light dims
and the last sigh has faded?
Where you were
is silence,
and a void that still holds
your empty shape.
And the flicker of the ever-shifting memories
now more real than the hollow flesh, the
meaningless bones that
you made precious in your
living there inside,
that you made shine.
All that is real is here, now,
all else is memory, or fantasy.
Yet here, now, strangely, you are not.
How is it that you somehow seem more real now,
here,
than you did trapped in your
withering, useless body
not that many hours
or days ago?
I am not sure where it is you live, now
that you have shed that old, worn-out
garment, but
whatever space it is, it still
touches me.
Perhaps the raindrop grows weary of its flight,
longs to join again with the river
from which we sprang so few
springtimes ago, the
place where you swim free, and
sing and laugh there just beyond the edge
of hearing.
No sadness here, but smiles
and sweet warm comfort.
Good night, Dear One, sweet
dreams and peaceful sleep.
Rushing to Belief
Posted in belief, musings, mysticism, Reality, relationship, religion, seeking, self-help, spirituality, tagged belief, musings, mysticism, Reality, relationship, religion, seeking, self-help, spirituality on May 17, 2008| 2 Comments »
My standard disclaimer applies.
The universe is not only stranger than we imagine, it is stranger than we can imagine.
~ Politically correct paraphrase of a quote by J. B. S. Haldane …
A couple of days ago, while I was reading one of grizelda3‘s postings & a comment on it, it came to pass that I said to myself, “Self, why do I and most everyone else so often seem to rush from one belief to another, to act as though we must choose this position or that, subscribe to this or that or another theory about almost everything?”
The posting in question had griz discussing the significance of signs & portents & their significance, or lack thereof, and the person commenting was talking about feeling silly for seeing “signs and wonders” everywhere, for being into synchronicity.
And I thought, “It seems to me that a lot of people act as though life is a series of forced choices between conceptual/belief systems in different areas. You either believe in God or you believe in the absence of God or you believe that you don’t know.”
AA has a saying that goes something like “Trying to fix things by switching from one drug to another is like changing seats on the Titanic.” Maybe this applies to beliefs too? Maybe a huge number of our difficulties and conflicts are related to choosing some rigid position based on some set of agreed-upon rules and then distancing ourselves from and often fighting with others who choose some other position, choose some different set of rules to define themselves and their lives?
People who believe in God often argue for their particular position, trying passionately to convince others that what they believe is correct. Most people who believe in God belong to this or that religious club, each club with their own Most Holy set of rules that define God and how the people with that particular conception of God should behave and what they should believe.
Members of opposing religious clubs regularly fight & kill each other for the right to say which club’s rules apply. I have no idea what God (if She/He/It/They exist(s)) thinks or feels about all this posturing and prostrating and hating and killing and looking down on and fear and sometimes-savage insistence on being right, mixed in with a little sympathy and compassion, now and then.
People who believe there is no God, no Sacred, no overarching intelligence, no underlying Truth, argue for their position, trying passionately to convince others that what they believe is correct.
People who say they don’t know sometimes argue (often a lot less passionately) for their position, trying to convince others that there’s no way to know.
What’s so friggin’ scary about not choosing some belief or the other, about God, about synchronicity, about the purpose of life, about any of these large questions that we seem so driven to spin explanations for? I’m not saying it isn’t or can’t be scary, I’m asking in the sense of “Go inside and ask and see what bubbles up.”
Is it that we won’t know what team we’re playing on? That we would no longer be able to choose up sides and fight? Is it that we’d be embarrassed to say “nothing I can put words to” if someone asked us “what do you believe in?”
Is it that we’re afraid the reality might be really, really scary, so we come up with comforting stories to shield us from the dark? Is it because we’re afraid we’d lose one of our favorite subjects for deep philosophical conversations with friends?
Synchronicity … meaningful relationship of events, underlying linkage, something besides random chance at work … I could believe that, or I could believe that everything is totally random. Either way, if I did believe one or the other, I’d probably pay more attention to evidence that seems to support my position; I’d probably interpret actions & events in my life in ways consistent with my position.
Thinking about it makes me tired.
So how about if I just shift to being aware of what’s going on with me, both around me and inside my head? How about if I live in the moment, let the parts of my mind that seem to automatically jump to interpretation do their thing, but be aware of what they’re doing instead of being herded along by what they’re doing.
Krishnamurti uses the term “choiceless awareness.” I like “you do what you do and you get what you get.”
I can think it’s really cool that I’m just getting ready to call someone I haven’t talked with for a while and, as I’m starting to dial their number, the phone rings and it’s them. I can go “Wow, that’s so cool” without digging for hidden meanings, without trying to fit it into some theory involving predestination or telepathic connection or “it was meant to be” or whatever.
If it happens 17 times in a row, I can think “I don’t know how to explain this; it feels non-random, though” without having to develop and defend some theory to explain it all. I don’t have to be credulous, I don’t have to be naïve, but I also don’t have to have a theory that explains everything in my life.
If there is something Sacred, something underlying it, Love, Truth, some reality behind that which we label using the word “God,” then That Which Is must exist in the real. If I attend to what is real, see with clear eyes and an open heart, then and only then can I become aware of the real Sacred, the real Holy, if such exists. I can never find the Sacred by looking away from the real, by looking inside my own head, by listening to others and doing what they believe I should do. Burying myself in a set of beliefs does not connect me with the Real, it imprisons me in the imaginary creations of human minds.
Is that what “getting a life” means, getting our of my little jail of beliefs & going out into the vast, mostly unknown river called life & just swimming along, seeing what I see, hearing what I hear, feeling what I feel, enjoying the show?
How should I know?
How should I?
How should?
How?
Peace … river flows …
:o)
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