Finding our way to The Way one situation at a time. I don't know how great it will be, but I expect it will be interesting, and I look forward to it going on past all reason because wonder is just that way. Are you coming or not?
Katahdin Range 02 — Sandy Stream Pond, Baxter State Park, Millinocket, Maine
The individual is the hope of the world.
As an individual, the most important thing I can do is convince you of your own significance.
And encourage you to develop your relationship with yourself, particularly learning to recognize your original nature and your inherent virtuousities (The things you do best and enjoy/love doing most), while honoring and following the guidance of your intuition, your body's felt sense, and your nighttime dreams.
While de-emphasizing personal gain, success, recognition and advancement as goals worthy of you.
I lost you with that, didn't I.
You have what it takes to save the world and you want to be wealthy.
What does, "Thy will not mine be done," with the "thy" being your own intuition, your body's felt sense, and your nighttime dreams, mean to you?
God is the first and the last God is she who is honored and she who is mocked God is the whore and the holy woman God is the wife and the virgin God is the the mother and the daughter God is a sterile woman who has many children God is she whose wedding is extravagant and who didn’t have a husband…. God is the silence never found God is the idea infinitely recalled God is a barbarian among barbarians…. God is a foreigner in, and a citizen of, every land ...
These words are adapted from The Thunder: Perfect Mind, a poem found among the Gnostic gospels at Nag Hammadi in Egypt in 1945.
It only takes sitting with the poem to realize that it is of God, from God, to God, and so are we all.
Athabaska River Valley — Jasper National Park, Alberta, Canadian Rockies
We owe ourselves intrinsic loyalty, filial devotion, love and duty.
How do we think of our foundation, of our core, of our source and the ground of our being?
Our life is the testimony of our allegiance to our original nature and the innate virtuosities (The things we do best and love/enjoy doing most).
To betray them is to leave the path, to depart from the way, to wander from the course into the wasteland of our discontent.
The way back is the way of emptiness, stillness and silence, and waiting there for the mud to settle and the water to clear allowing a guide to appear in the darkness to bring us back to life.
How these metaphors appear in our own case, what shape they take and what form our life takes under their tutelage will be different for us all.
Our place is to intuit guidance when it beckons and to follow where we are led-- seeing with hindsight what progress we have made.
Boulder Beach — Otter Point, Acadia National Park, Maine
If we aren't yet Jesus and the Buddha, we are the closest thing to both that a lot of people will ever get, and it would behoove us to realize this, and do our best Jesus/Buddha imitation when we are going about our business in the world.
Our business is very much Jesus' business, is very much the Buddha's business, and how we carry ourselves while doing it tells the tale we are here to tell.
Being ourselves as Jesus would be us. Doing our thing as the Buddha would do it. And consciously being us being Jesus and the Buddha being us, puts us on a different plane than if we were unconscious of our association with either while being us doing our thing.
Katahdin Range in October 05 — Baxter State Park, Sandy Stream Pond, Millinocket, Maine
A couple of Bible verses, "Time and chance happen to us all," "It rains on the just and the unjust alike," put the hiatus on the idea that everything that happens is God's will that it happens.
We need a rest from that nonsense, a lengthy break.
That and the idea that if God didn't will it, "God let it happen."
God did this as punishment for that, and did that as reward for that over there.
We need a hiatus from all of this. Forever would not be long enough.
"Circumstances beget circumstances!" That observation may go back to before 500 BCE.
We prefer the idea of a God that punishes and rewards. Like Santa Claus with ashes and switches or presents for those who have been naughty or good (So be good for goodness sake! But, it is really for the sake of presents and the promise of more).
The stuff we believe/know to be so that isn't so makes life much worse than it needs to be.
I wish we would stop it. It gives me the wanderlust. Like wandering over yonder to see if they are free of the nonsense that is so abundant hereabouts.
Lower Falls, Yellowstone River, Yellowstone Canyon — Yellowstone National Park, Canyon Village, Wyoming
How do you maintain your balance and harmony?
We need a regimen, a process, a program, a routine that we engage in regularly to clear our vision, regain our perspective, recharge our resolution, reorient our direction, reclaim our determination, revitalize our incentive put ourselves back on track and get underway again.
Finding things that need to be done that we can do wholeheartedly is a great way to get underway and stay there.
Maintaining our balance and harmony sustains us for the journey one day at a time.
Theology and spirituality are mutually exclusive, theology being the product of the Left Hemisphere, and spirituality being the steady state of the Right Hemisphere.
Theology is thinking/logically/reasonably knowing, and spirituality being seeing/hearing/realizing/grasping/comprehending/understanding/etc. knowing.
Theology’s knowing is content with knowing, spirituality’s knowing must express/exhibit/reveal/etc. itself in doing—the right thing in the right way at the right time in the right place.
And it doesn’t have to think what is right, it knows what is right, spontaneously, intuitively, telepathically/etc.
And with spiritually, what is right here/now, may not be right then/there, and so Jesus could say, “The spirit is like the wind that blows where it will,” meaning the spirit doesn’t know what it is going to do next, and may not know what it is doing now, in a “Don’t let the left hand know what the right hand is doing” kind of way (And the only way we can do that is to not know what we are doing (from the Left Brain’s standpoint).
We are the balancing agent between our brain's hemispheres, which represent different ways of perceiving/responding to apparent reality, and our place is to bring awareness/mindfulness to play in choosing how to see/respond to what we perceive in each moment of every situation as it arises.
We have to see our seeing and think about our thinking all of the time.
Teton Reflection at Ox Bow Bend — Grand Teton National Park, Jackson, Wyoming
I remind us of this a couple of times a year. Here it comes again:
It's all useless, pointless, hopeless, meaningless,stupid and absurd-- and coming to a very bad end: We all are going to die!
And, we can't let that stop us, or even slow us down!
Because in the meantime we have work to be done!
We have to show them what it means to live with our heart on the line invested in what we are doing in each situation as it arises ANYWAY! NEVERTHELESS! EVEN SO!
So what if it doesn't matter? Who cares if no one cares? What difference does it make if it doesn't make a difference? Why not give it the best we have to offer? Even now? Even here? Even yet? Even still?
We have to pick ourselves up, dust ourselves off, and get back into action as though everything is riding on the effort we put forth in doing what needs to be done when/where/how it needs to be done because it needs to be done when all we get out of it is the joy of doing it and the satisfaction of having done it no matter what all our life long.
Why not?
Can you think of anything better to do?
If so, do it!
Now, this meshes nicely with my Wailing Wall metaphor.
The Wailing Wall is our hope and our salvation, just waiting for us to grasp that and smile, turn around with our backs to the wall and say to all that is useless, pointless hopeless, meaningless, stupid and absurd, "Show me what you got! Because I got something for you!"
And, as it rushes us, there with our backs to the Wailing Wall, we grab it with both hands and heave it over the wall.
On the other side of the Wailing Wall is nothing but the Void. And we send all that Boo-hoo, woe is me stuff straight into the gaping abyss of oblivion where it belongs.
And step into the day, to see what we can do with it and what it needs from us like it makes all the difference, because it does.
ACE Basin 01/30/2015 — Ernest F. Hollings ACE Basin, National Wildlife Refuge, Hollywood, South Carolina
You know how the way things are? Putin destroying Ukraine while we watch. Much like Hitler destroyed Europe, and Alexander the Great destroyed the known world. And how what's going on has been going on from the beginning. And is going to be going on long after we have stopped going at all.
Well, there is nothing we can do about that except take it to the Wailing Wall with all of the grief and remorse it brings up within us.
As a way of finding the strength and resilience required to get up and do the next thing that needs to be done when, where and how it needs to be done anyway, nevertheless, even so.
It is ours to bring as much humanity to life in the world as we are capable of bringing to life in the world, and let that be that.
It is the Native American way in light of and response to the atrocity the U.S. Government and citizens have committed against them throughout history.
And the descendants of slaves in this country and around the world.
And the Tibetan response to the Chinese massacre in our lifetime.
We do it like they have done it. We respond to the horror of our time like they have responded to it in their time.
Glade Creek Mill 06 — Babcock State Park, Fayette County, West Virginia
We can't help how we see things, but. We are responsible for how we see things. Which means, of course, that we can help how we see things.
It starts with seeing how we see things. Seeing our seeing is the most important thing to see.
The second most important thing to see is seeing that how we see things IS NOT HOW THINGS ARE!!!
It is only how we see things.
The third most important thing is to stop taking seriously the way we see things.
It is only the way we see things.
The fourth most important thing is to see how we see things impacts/controls/determines how we act/what we do.
The fifth most important thing is to see how the way we live expresses/exhibits/reveals the values at the heart of our life.
I think Liberty, Justice, Equality, Truth are the core values at the heart of the Constitution of the U.S. and that we cannot stand for the flag without standing for the values the flag stands for, therefore these four values must be part of the core values of every U.S. citizen.
In addition to these, my other core values in no necessary order are:
Emptiness, Stillness, Silence, Balance, Harmony, Integrity, Sincerity, Vitality, Spontaneity, Compassion, which are held in place by our service to our intuition, our body's felt sense, our nighttime dreams our habitual practice of focusing/awareness/mindfulness, in service to original nature and the innate virtues (virtuosities) which comprise what we do best and what we love/enjoy doing most.
I see this list of values/concepts comprising essential things to be right about and incorporate into our life as the adamantine foundation of human beinghood.
Boone Creek Fall 10/16/2015 — Julian Price Memorial Park Picnic Area, Blue Ridge Parkway, Blowing Rock, North Carolina
Our response strongly influences what happens next. We shape the future by the way we respond to the present.
There is typically more at stake in any moment than getting our way in the moment.
Imagining likely scenarios and practicing our response to each one provides us with the experience of having worked our way through practice rounds before we go live.
I practice fending off dog attacks every time I go with a camera into the woods.
My first strategy is sweet-talking my assailant, calling out, "Come on, Mikey! Come on! Where's the ball! (Bouncing an imaginary ball, then pretending to throw it).
If that has no effect, I back up slowly, still sweet-talking.
It it is an all-out attack, I'll have one or two stainless steel forearm crutches at the ready.
My targets are: Throat, Chest, Nose, Eyes in that order.
The Buddhist concept of "Bodhisattvas" beautifully flips the Nirvana/Pure Land, Heaven/Hell narrative by positing a shift in perspective that sees the world as it is, not as a place of suffering and meaningless wandering, with death as a hoped-for escape from "the everlasting round of grief, loss and sorrow," but as a place of unending opportunity to practice the art of healing/helpful presence, by returning-- not to another round of anguish and agony, but to another chance to develop our capacity for compassion, kindness, grace and mercy.
Getting better at being loving through the practice of being Buddha/Christs by living and dying to live and die again and again.
And, it offers much more interesting ways of spending our time than being lost in beatific visions in heaven/Nirvana forever.
I'm all for being a Bodhisattva when I die-- and I don't have to wait until then to start living the role!