Tuesday, 1 February 2022

On Raging

The pandemic is raging. Somewhere beneath the sea, the volcano is raging; sea rages; winds rage; the waters washing out about the islands and sending the frail crust into the infinite transformational properties of the earth. The nations raging – furiously – and then we ask why? Why do they do it? I would really like to know.

The rich rage at failing to increase their already plutocratic wealth. Religious rage with zeal for their godly houses.  Politicians, despite the cults they profess, the corruptions they practice, the ideologies they idolise, rage against the intractabilities of governing.

Some are raging with joy. Transposed into another dimension by drugs, dance, or drumming. Dionysus on the dance floor. Raging with beauty, like avian flocks lighting up from the lakes at sunrise. Raging with grief, flooding tears of hopelessness and loss. The earth rages, shaking.

Wrath, a raging deadly sin, so common. We rage because so much fails us, so little contains us, we feel responsible for it all.

We can’t control the earth, the wind or sea. In the face of all this raging, we might try controlling ourselves: our temper, our envy and greed. The raging within. With God’s help. 

Friday, 31 December 2021

On Speaking Low

 

Entering a New Year, with Janus looking forward and back, to landscapes familiar and changed. Confronting stresses internal and external: climate change, contagion, conflict, confusion. Worn mentality, emotions of grief and loss. Escape attempts: entire populations in denial. Swinging out.

Talking to yourself is said to be a sign of insanity. Yet we talk to ourselves all the time, if only silently. Much of this conversation is critical; much of our memory is regret. This negative voice is actually subtraction. Designed to keep us safe. Subtracting dangers. Recalling risks, provoking examples where things went wrong. The superstition of avoiding praise that might attract misfortune. Yet misfortune is.

Other tones are available, attainable. Think of the unfettered approval given a child who is learning to walk. Falling comes with the world. The voice is encouraging, sure we can do it. We can’t save ourselves (Christ has already done that) but we won’t do nothing. We can sympathise with our plight. Take responsibility for our timing. Fight our corner. Give ourselves every chance. Speak low and easy into our succession of moments, as a warm travelling companion. That’s my New Year’s Resolution: speak low, speak love, start at home.

Tuesday, 30 November 2021

On Christmas Present

 

Advent: a season of repentance. For beginners, we could look at greed. Greed of Empire. Personal greed. Even greed of space.

It’s famously more blessed to give than to receive, and charity’s a word of bad repute. Why? What’s the relationship between justice and moderation? How to avoid ostentation? Generosity depends on having. What’s the cost to the receiver? What’s taken away? What obligation purveyed? What conditional love displayed? Is this gift really necessary?

Many motivations and intentions. You can give time, strength and attention. Everybody wants your attention, can’t get enough. Much of it in grievous situations. Grief on the move. And harmony, the resolution of discord, that must be led back over and over, in progressions.

The obligation is not to the receiver, but the giver. It will test your values. There’s no top to the pile of causes stacking up on my desk, appealing for money and support. What’s the relationship between courage and wisdom?  How best to relieve suffering? Or nourish, or inspire? Which most appropriate decisions can you make, knowing the others have a right to your help? (As you to theirs.) Christmas present is love for me and thee and they.

Sunday, 31 October 2021

On the Temple

 

I’ve seen a warehouse when the consignment has shipped: swept bare, not a nail or speck of dust remains. If the body is a temple, as the Apostle says, so also the body’s mind.  You don’t allow heaps of rubbish lying around a temple, so less the body and even less the mind.

Piles of procrastination. Hoards of hurts. Caches of comparisons. Operas of offence. Bales of brawls and dramatic cavorting. Menageries of judgement. Cellars of self-congratulation.

Illness and mourning shock the body whether you’re consciously aware or not: energy leaks away like water. Change the stowage. Find chapels of healing; encompassed griefs; cloistered regrets swathed in prayers of humility.

What to bring to this space once you’ve removed the lumber? Trousseaux of thankfulness, gardens of good will, coffers of kindness. Pure intentions. Troves of tender regard. Gatherings of flowers, scripture, literature, art. Music, language of angels. Vast stores of memories. Many things are quicker to dismantle than build up. That accounts for gallons of slowness and tonnes of patience. Treasuries of mercy and lovingkindness.

‘We cannot know what God is, but rather what God is not’. Remotion, not names. No nail nor speck of dust remains.

Friday, 1 October 2021

On Mistakes

 

You only get one chance with most things, so you might as well enter into the field of your mistakes. Mistakes are your loyal friend; they will never leave you.

Some mistakes are long-lasting. It actually takes a long time to commit them. A thesis written on the wrong topic; a dream job becomes a nightmare; a cult fails to deliver your salvation. Some mistakes can’t be avoided: you can’t take everything. (A mistake is not a take). You may miss a take due to standing where you are, or to what has standing here and there. And the unmistaken life doesn’t last. Always new realms of mistakes to be explored. Mistake upon mistake compounds understanding.

Then you might remember the mistakes of others. Bearing grudges for half a lifetime over a hasty word, yourself a different person then. Twin mistakes, born at the same time. Forgiving as an act of the will; forgetting harder still. (A mistake is not a crime).

Then the mistake of taking yourself seriously; you’re often more comedy than drama. When others mistake you, “ya gotta love ‘em”. You think you’re better than them? Not so. When you make mistakes, you gotta love you, too.

Thursday, 2 September 2021

On Secret Worlds

 

Can a secret be something concealed, intended to be unseen; esoteric, known only to the magic few; or at the same time widely known, promulgated, a widely cast net? The secrets of the body, for example. A deadly virus, a pestilence, mutating silently, hidden within, passing opaque from one to another, enigmatic yet evident in its effects.

There are many secret worlds: natural, social, contrived or deployed in support of a wider project of control. Conspiracy theories provide alternative explanations for what we observe to be going on: their charm lies in having the good oil, making someone a benefactor sharing the real story. Bonding with a listener looking for simplicity, agreeing with existing fears. We like simple. Complex makes us feel bad. Reality might be making us feel bad already.

There’s the secret world of intelligence, where code and espionage find threats and secure safety yet whose failures bring down nations. Of disinformation, where the wide net catches whole cohorts of lemmings going over the cliff of anti-vaccination, for example. Of religious fanaticism, where Jesus is sold: a commodity to save you from being yourself and from all worldly disasters. Not realising that you’re already saved. By the mystery.

Sunday, 1 August 2021

On Breathing

 

I see, here in the second winter of the world’s war over breath, (a scarce resource; needful to life), fighting a determined pestilence the century presents us with the theme and crisis of breathing. Who breathes? And who does not? George Floyd can’t breathe because the police are pressing on his neck. (Breathing as racial privilege). His words become a manifesto for the signs of the times. Care homes become breathless as disease is carried from place to place, aged to aged. Miner’s lungs blacken. (Breathing as victim of government neglect). The earth chokes on carbon while its green lungs, the forests, burn. (Breathing as spoil of consumption and greed.)

Bata, who had barely survived cancer, spoke of approaching death: “Every breath is precious.” Our breaths are limited in number. What flows through the channels of the breath? Air; anything else is poison. What floats upon the breath? Alcohol, infection, conspiracy theories, lies?  Blessing, compassion, acceptance, love? Good news, or frightful influences?

When the spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters, was this the first breath of wind giving life to everything, even rocks and trees? The world’s health. Save your breath.