Sunday, January 31, 2021

GRADUATION ADDRESS

Excerpt and poem for the Class of 2003 of The Waldorf School in Lexington, MA

God and Satan were walking down a road. God bent down to pick something up. He gazed at it glowing radiantly in his hand. Then Satan became very curious and asked, 

“What’s that you have there?”  

“This,” God said, “is Truth.”

Satan said, “Here, let me have it; I’ll organize it for you.”


Dear Class,

If I have any words of wisdom at all—they would be: Don’t allow anyone to organize truth for you. That is too easy and too dangerous for your morality and for your freedom. That would mean that you abdicate responsibility for yourself and acting on your own ideals. And one must act on ideals that are truly part of one's being, which is sometimes harder than following the lead of others. Einstein said: "To punish me for my contempt for authority, fate made me authority myself.”


I believe we must all strive to be authority for ourselves. We do not have to act out of instinct, genetics, desires, fear or handed-down traditions or perspectives, however worthy. Rather, each one of us must reflect on our relationship to the world, to each other, to our true selves and live out of that orientation. This is what we have often discussed in our classes.


You have explored in your studies some of the greatest works of literature, and received broad and deep education and, thus, the opportunity to think and reflect. Discussing and understanding those great works as guides in conjunction with your other studies and experiences, hopefully, have inspired you to continute to formulate questions, and transform ideas into ideals. Living and acting out of those ideals that you have made your own will create the possibility of your becoming your own moral guide and authority. 


Remember your main lesson The Divine Comedy with Mrs. Wells? After Dante comes through the Inferno and Purgatorio, he stands at the top of Mt. Purgatory ready to enter the last of the three realms: Paradiso. His guide has been Virgil, who must now leave him, but not before he bestows upon him a crown and a mitre, symbolizing that Dante is now king and priest of his own life, his own authority because he has earned it as witness to the consequences of abdicating that right, as the souls in torment have done.


I wish for you and have the confidence that you aleady see and will continue to pursue the universal truth in beauty and goodness, in our human capacity to "seek, to find and not to yield." At every moment, here and now, you are the only one who can take ideas your ideals into the world, love and live them.


I would like to close with a poem as a gift to the class of 2003 (a parchment scroll with poem handed to each student) 


Here and Now

Now when there is no truth

here where everything and nothing is real

and all paths lead

to everywhere and nowhere

refuse to stand at either pole

or be forever lost in between


Know one thing:

Look to the the fixed star

navigate with your soul consciousness

whoever, wherever you are

above, below, around—and into all things


All things exist in relation to you

orbit in your sphere

are held in balance by you

live by your center of warmth and light


Become the Sun--

Here and Now!

Thursday, November 26, 2020

Birthday Wishes- for Sula

You will be ten--ten years
ten times a celebration
at Advent, darkest time of the year
and you, a star shining
before the brightening horizon


Your delightful birthday wish list?

fancy velvet dress
a new phone
a big fake diamond
a laptop
squishy animals
a watch
fancy LED lights
YouTube on my phone
ice skates
Doug the Pug calendar

My birthday wish for you
standing on the threshold of womanhood?

Awakening to the ancient memory
wisdom of blood and breath
You, Divine Feminine.

Tuesday, November 17, 2020

HEART BREAK ~ HEART ACHE

The Dilemma: The moral incompatibility of America's divergent perceptions of decency, truth, even reality, but most of all the unwillingness of so many vs. the hope of others to grant to our fellow human beings their unalienable rights with justice,  kindness and civility.   


    That one mean-spirited, egomaniacal sociopath of a person, by any human-centered standard and logic, incompetent to serve in any capacity for all Americans, incapable of moral leadership, has besmirched America, taken it down to the lowest, corrupt and bizarre level ever--and with it--America's purpose and possibility as a "more perfect union." For his entire chaotic and nightmarish "reign" beginning with the birther lie, he has fed followers fear and misinformation/lies and lies to appranately gullible, who have chosen to ignore his crude, careless and vengance-filled rantings, lies, and crimes esentially gaslighting to fundraise. Others who support him percieve that they have much to gain in  power and wealth by denying and/or tolerating all of the above.

    Some of each group know what he is, and always has been, what he has and has not done, but do not care. Some have seen fit to ursurp the American flag to stand for something other than equality and justice for all, and Christianity to distort its essential truths and teachings, even in some cases believe he is a savior and somehow fulfills prophesy or some other outlandish consipracy that the Bible prepares its literal interpreters to swallow regarding other conspiracy delusions.

     Still, Congress did not convict on the first impeachment, even with credible witnesses, later retaliated against for telling truth. We were warned then that leaving Trump in power would embolden him to go even further. And he did, and again a second impeachment where he was not held accountable for planning, organizing and encouraging the "wild" and dangerous actions of his most extreme followers, inciting them to subvert a consitutional process. Thus, the deadly insurrection tradegy of the January 6, 2021 riot/ attack on the Capitol and the Constituion.

    Then true to his dark side, and his cultish supporters the lie that the 2020 election was a fraud, even with confirmation otherwise by his own Attorney General, Bill Barr continues to be hammered home daily.  And we are aasked to actually believe that those whom he called to DC for a "wild time" to "save the country" from its own Consitution took a peaceful tour of th Capital that day,  despite the evidence of our own ears and eyes, (which Trump once advised we should not believe). 

    People on tours usually do not crash through windows, injure police and  security guards, carry weapons and destroy property to get into the place they have come to tour. And there were deadly assaults on Capitol police officers, deaths and injuries, and even suicides associated with the trauma of that day. There are ongoing increased threats of and almost daily violence of threat in support of his to effort make America great again. Never a kind of encouraging word regarding our country and its people--only talk of disaster, retribution and victumhood. The sadest part if that members of Congress so nor step in the affirm the truth, rather have gon along with the stated goal by Steve Bannon after the 2016 to dismantle the administrative state (AKA our democracy and institutions without any plans to reform or replace them.  What will we have? Chaos

    Will you wake, for pity's sake?

    The dilemma includes that we have called some who support, tolerate or igore the above, our friends, our neighbors and our loved ones. It is heart breaking with an incomparable ache. 

GOD HELP U S

Friday, November 13, 2020

KARMA

One lifetime is all we are given?
one lifetime to get it right
to learn, to err, to repent, to be saved?
Unitl death frees us
from this one life we did not choose


Are we born by chance into
privilege and peace
or into oppression and conflict?

Some roam the earth with no home.
Some cram into boats 
to seek a better life
only to sink beneath the waves.

Some cross borders seeking refuge
to be turned away or placed in cages.
Some struggle a lifetime in survival mode,
falling into the well of grief and despair.

Have we not chosen to come to earth—
this “tavern where drunkards get sober”  
to cry in the wildernessm ask questions
sound a call, gather and share wisdom,
bear witness to evil and good

Free will, fortune, fate
weave through our earthly comings and goings
until everyone will have been everyone else—
other lives, other loves, other loss

Over many lifetimes
coming into being and dissolving
again and again in
constellations of anonymous stars
moving across the heavens


Sunday, July 5, 2020

WInter Wind

whipped blown groan gusts
wheezing shudders shivers
shingles tremble quiver
through cracks creak
draft waft blasts rushes
window rattles rumble
door lurches wobble

dark room reels cover up 
wrapped warm draft defying
sleep fails--hear, here there
thundering tremor rolling 
engine roaring waves wake

SNOW

Quiet--
Then from still, grey skies
snow—I watched all day
flying, drifting, floating
settling on bare winter branches, cedar and spruce
green grass patches and spent brown fields.

My father caught frozen flakes
set them under a microscope.
Look! each a masterful design

All day--snow fall--
By evening, over the earth
one even plane—pure white cover

A blanket of tiny crystal stars


Monday, May 4, 2020

ADVENT

I watch you, redbreast, perched at sunrise

on thinnest branch—atop the birch

wavering in the brightening breeze.


Again and again you take flight

a short distance

a fool’s errand

an awful sound—the thumping

against my window.


Back to lime-leafed safety you wing.

Then once more 

lift off into your reflection. 

Is it mate or nesting place you seek?


It’s spring—all must be readied,

shreds of dried grass, tinsel bits and twigs

woven into high-hung homes

sheltering pale blue eggs.


Soon, you will find mate, build cradle,

settle into your creation

waiting through tender nights.


A quiet advent


I know not where it will be—or when

tiny fissure first, then downy chicks

reaching up, beaks open in soft chirps

all hidden from our eyes.


But it will be—this spring

one of many hallowed births 

through meadow and wood.


And all must be readied.

Saturday, April 18, 2020

DARK MOON



Through our time on the planet, we develop perspectives on life from our experiences, and from our thought and feeling lives. Some of having more fully informed perspectives; others more dimly sensed; some able to articulate their perspective, others not. Whether on the surface or buried within, it seems of crisis or turmoil, we review, re-imagine, reshape and transform our outlook—and may make changes, based on that review. Our perspectives, lighter or darker in mood and meaning bring comfort or pain, bind us together, inspire us, or may isolate  or haunt us.

In adolescence we begin to form our perspective on life, to create our “map of the world.” As we continue to observe and learn about the world and ourselves, the topography shifts, expanding or circumscribing boundaries. We begin to look fondly on a happy childhood,  recalling those carefree, innocent years. We may remember a garden where roses grew the summer long, and begin to realize how unaware we were then of threats of thorn, blight, or how quickly they fade. We may have not such wonderful recollections of our youthful years. Nevertheless, when we begin to consider our "map", it’s the things we don’t see that may be the most important. If there has been trauma in our early years, we may be in denial about it and our memories bring only confusion, pain and/or shame, often eclipsing the normally-anticipated joys of coming of age and our adjustment to adulthood.
Whether joyful or mournful, memories come unbidden, their moods and meanings woven into life's tapestry, beautifully formed or misshapen, brilliant glimmers or dark shadows. At times of crisis or great change, we may reflect on our perspective whether imagined as a map or tapestry. In doing so, we then may decide to just live in the present and imagine the future. 
     The year 2020 brought a time of uncertainty, of precautions and restrictions to quell the spread of the Covid pandemic. There was confusion and changing information almost daily. There was fear and then doubt with a president and others who minimized the dangers and/or denied in some cases that there really was a pandemic at all,  ignoring the science and smearing the experts with lifelong experience and expertise in epidemiology.  Thousands filled hospitals and thousands were dying each day, challenging to the max doctors and healthcare workers. Often ill loved ones were not able to have family around in the hospital or at their burials. While many people were able to work from home, other essential service workers risked, and sometimes lost their lives to remain at their jobs, and school children began learning remotely, at disadvantage socially and academically. 
    We were at a standstill in our ability to meet and gather with others for social, cultural events and activites, or other “normal” situations. Life as we knew it had stopped short, and we found ourselves isolated in place with neither any sense of when, how, nor if it would end and what lay beyond. Some of us experienced situational depression and anxiety (or existing conditions were exacerbated). All we could do was hope and pray that family and friends would remain well. There was gratitude for selfless service of health care, and other essential workers, and inspiration from many acts of kindness and compassion. We were saddened to hear tributes about family member lost, and of the grief of their suviving family, as the death rate climbed into the hundreds of thousands at home and millions worldwide. Those unaffected phyically were gratful to escape Covid itself, and the for the variety of ways were able to remain in touch during our isolation. Virtual human warmth on Zoom, FaceTime or texts, our methods of communicating to expressing common concerns and experiences with friends and family.
     Almost as soon as we became aware of the national emergency came that doubt and  denials, resistance to precautions to prevent further Covid cases. It was one thing to have the uncertainty and confusion at the beginning, but quite another to have the U.S. President deny that it was a problem at all or worese yet an invented hoax to further divide an already divided nation, saying it would go away, "just like that." Well, we are still dealing with Covid in less intense and isolating ways, but it has not gone away.  There was an obvious and harmful failure of national leadership to address the pandemic in any coherent, consistent wayu to affirm and follow the guidance based on data, research from those most knowledgable about disease and global pandemics. 
    Instead, we were asked to trust and believe a president who mentioned many times that he makes decisions on his gut feelings. Later we found from a video taped interview that he knew the danger and purposely played it down (saying it doesn't exist or over before it had taken its toll. But that is another story.
  Many of us may have formed the perspective that life is too often a “rock and hard place.” We are not in control as we sometimes believe or wish ourselves to be. Although we continue to responsibly prioritize and plan anyway, all the while we must be prepared that ultimately our plans may be thwarted by any number of reasons and realities. Now we are living that truth as never before, more or less affected based on various factors: our age, experience, frame of reference, predisposition, attitude and personality, anxiety and fear, or complete denial.  We see at least unified in the common experience of uncertainty and falling away of norms of all kinds.  Surprisingly, some of us “sheltering at home” to avoid the spread of the virus, to “flatten the curve,"  have become aware that, at least, this slowed, more manageable pace of life is not at all bad in and of itself.
We have time and opportunity to reflect, sort out our perspective, take out our worn out map and review where we were, where we are and where we would like to/need to be when we when/if we finally emerge. Whether or not we like it, we cannot help sensing our inner thoughts, feelings and memories more than ever, which can also induce anxiety, if we have been skimming the surface of life, distracted by overbooked, whirlwind days; pushing down thoughts and feelings, reacting to circumstances--rather than initiating them (which is probably most of us).
Now is the time to reflect: “If a man does not master his circumstances, then he is bound to be mastered by them” (Towles , A Gentlemen in Moscow).
I find myself more active in both thinking and feeling these days, more nostalgic, more thoughtful, more emotional—floods of memories, sadness, gratitude all a blurry mix. The memories are not of times long past, rather within a year's when I was making plans to travel, have friends over, go to dinner with my husband, participate in our granddaughter’s second birthday and enjoy a visit from our son and family on Easter and so much more! 
     I am not alone—ordinary, everyday lives everywhere were crammed brimful with the bustle of living.  Although not long ago, it all seems very far away, in between worry that we may lose family or friends to this deadly virus.  
     Even if I, or no one I know personally is brought down by the virus, there is still the sad knowledge that everyone is vulnerable, as millions have been ill worldwide and probably millions will or have died of the Covid19 pandemic. There is a feeling of connection to others throughout the world, so that even in isolation there is no separation.

     Everything has changed!

Thinking about the past, present, and imagining the “after” of this crisis, seems to me to have extraordinary, almost super-sensible aspects, and I wonder what it means—not only for me and my family, but also for America and the world. Is the global spread of this illness and death another Noah’s arc? A purge—not as punishment, but an outer manifestation of humanity’s inner “soul state”? Is it a moment of grace for some in the midst of a tragedy for many? Is it a wake up call to care for an ailing earth as well as for one another? Do we need to deeply consider and fully realize things will never be the same—more importantly, that things have to be different? We have already seen that the absence of traffic, travel and business has essentially cleansed the environment of noise and air pollution and thereby reduced symptoms of respiratory illness, and stress levels on Mother Earth and on humans (probably on all living things). How is it that there can be a redistribution of resources for health and welfare in this crisis, but those who have suffered in desperate situations prior to this can be ignored, turned away, caged and forgotten? What are we learning and will we apply it?  How do we redraw our individual, as well as a national/world map to portray life as it could be beyond the crisis? Can we, should we, will we ever “go back” to how things were? Will we master our circumstances or will we allow them to master us?
It seems a principle, both individually and historically that once we leave one condition behind, or it is interrupted for whatever reason, there is no “going back.” Even if that were possible, it seems to me a seismic shift like a pandemic demands reflection and creative choices from all and in all directions of life? “Two roads diverged in a wood, and I— / I took the one less traveled by, / And that has made all the difference (Frost “The Road Not Taken”).
     Since we must go forward, wouldn’t it be wise and wonderful to go toward something new, something better, or at least different, based on what has been experienced, learned and long-wished for and/or much needed? We are left to imagine what we will do and how, and to consider that when we individuals make changes, even in small ways, everything around us also changes. When the old falls away—from war, natural disaster, social turmoil, or in our personal lives from the weight and ware of our illusions (in this case, a pandemic) something new can come into being.
We have only to look to the rhythms of nature: the seasons and the heavens: Each month the moon wanes to a sliver of silver light fading to dark new moon…then waxes to a brilliant full rising. So it is in all of life! Will we as individuals, and more widely, as towns, states, and nations (since there is no separation): rethink, reimagine and transform our maps into something more healthful for mind, body and soul, more human, more beautiful and able to sustain our common needs, our rights, and our planet?

Life is defined not by what we let go, but what we let in….
(Call the Midwife Season 9, Episode 2)

Wednesday, February 26, 2020

EQUINOX

Finally—

the sun warm and golden

new leaves tender on greening branches


the cold winter in my bones ached

the coming of darkness every evening closed my heart

then endless rain, more cold

                       Why?

And I said I wouldn’t complain.


I wonder less often what purpose my life serves

as I move more slowly—even in the warmth.

becoming the dullness of winter

the fullness of summer.


How vain and small such musings seem to me now!


Two things keep me from sadness:

the small pink, perfect cherry blossoms

each year they appear

fragrant and pure

            and

the sun’s arc moving toward a mid-summer sky.

Monday, February 24, 2020

COVES




















The coves quiet in the cold
A few gulls sweep the blue air

The wild sea flows from the horizon

It does not matter now-- 

the chaos we have wrought--
losses suffered, 
changes to come
cannot touch, taint the heart of things:
the quiet, the blue, the flow, the deep