Selma, Jimmie Lee Jackson and The Sorrow of The Divine

He doth give His joy to all:
He becomes an infant small,
He becomes a man of woe,
He doth feel the sorrow too.

Think not thou canst sigh a sigh,
And thy Maker is not by:
Think not thou canst weep a tear,
And thy Maker is not near.

O He gives to us His joy,
That our grief He may destroy:
Till our grief is fled and gone
He doth sit by us and moan.

– William Blake, On Another’s Sorrow

In the moving film, Selma, a grandfather grieves the unconscionable murder of his young grandson, Jimmie Lee Jackson, 26, in 1965.  Mr. Jackson was killed by a highway patrolman during a peaceful march that became a bloody and brutal assault during the Civil Rights effort to assure our Nation’s African-American citizens the right to vote.

As the grandfather weeps after identifying the body in the Coroner’s Office, he is approached by Martin Luther King who simply acknowledges there are no words for a time such as this but he assures the aging, despondent man that it was God who was the first to shed a tear when Jimmie Lee was shot.

People have different thoughts on how the Divine works.  Some would say even in the worst of circumstances, such as this, that it is just God’s will.  Or we are being tested.

For me, I believe The Divine gives us the freedom to choose whether we uplift our fellow human beings with acts of kindness and mercy or whether we make poor choices of oppression, unkindness and even unlawful acts against others.  The Divine has given us the decision-making rights and either way will sit by us in joy or in sadness.

Yet good often comes out of deep sadness, violence or wrongdoing. Jimmie Lee Jackson did not die in vain.  In fact, his life provided a solid inspiration and determination for the Civil Rights work to move forward.

Although he and many others suffered during this great movement, there was victory when the great march from Selma to Birmingham ended on the Alabama Capitol steps and Martin Luther King and thousands of others, black and white, of all religions, celebrated and President Johnson did the right thing to initiate the legislation allowing the unencumbered right to vote for all citizens of our country.

We have come a long way and we have a long way to go.  The Divine is counting on us.  I believe a Spark of The Divine resides in us all.  And we have the responsibility to do the best we can to make our Spark one that unites us all in love, in peace and in countless, random and over the top acts of kindness and goodness every day.

Selma, Jimmie Lee Jackson and The Sorrow of The Divine

He doth give His joy to all:
He becomes an infant small,
He becomes a man of woe,
He doth feel the sorrow too.

Think not thou canst sigh a sigh,
And thy Maker is not by:
Think not thou canst weep a tear,
And thy Maker is not near.

O He gives to us His joy,
That our grief He may destroy:
Till our grief is fled and gone
He doth sit by us and moan.

– William Blake, On Another’s Sorrow

In the moving film, Selma, a grandfather grieves the unconscionable murder of his young grandson, Jimmie Lee Jackson, 26, in 1965.  Mr. Jackson was killed by a highway patrolman during a peaceful march that became a bloody and brutal assault during the Civil Rights effort to assure our Nation’s African-American citizens the right to vote.

As the grandfather weeps after identifying the body in the Coroner’s Office, he is approached by Martin Luther King who simply acknowledges there are no words for a time such as this but he assures the aging, despondent man who it was God who was the first to shed a tear when Jimmie Lee was shot.

People have different thoughts on how the Divine works.  Some would say even in the worst of circumstances, such as this, that it is just God’s will.  Or we are being tested.

For me, I believe The Divine gives us the freedom to choose whether we uplift our fellow human beings with acts of kindness and mercy or whether we make poor choices of oppression, unkindness and even unlawful acts against others.  The Divine has given us the decision-making rights and either way will sit by us in joy or in sadness.

Yet good often comes out of deep sadness, violence or wrongdoing. Jimmie Lee Jackson did not die in vain.  In fact, his life provided a solid inspiration and determination for the Civil Rights work to move forward.

Although he and many others suffered during this great movement, there was victory when the great march from Selma to Birmingham ended on the Alabama Capitol steps and Martin Luther King and thousands of others, black and white, of all religions, celebrated and President Johnson did the right thing to initiate the legislation allowing the unencumbered right to vote for all citizens of our country.

We have come a long way and we have a long way to go.  The Divine is counting on us.  I believe a Spark of The Divine resides in us all.  And we have the responsibility to do the best we can to make our Spark one that unites us all in love, in peace and in countless, random and over the top acts of kindness and goodness every day.

No Judgment. Just Love Forever.

Twenty years ago when my niece was born, I tried to think of the best life-long gift that I could possibly give her and one day the answer appeared, simply and perfectly. No judgment. Just love forever. (NJJLF).

Over the years, I have found that affirmation to be true, loving and kind.

What does it mean to me, “No judgment. Just love forever?”

First, no judgment. Quite challenging if you think about. Every day with all the social media and electronic media and pundits and talk shows, we find ourselves able to place and post judgment on everything from political candidates, party views, the State of the Union (Really? Did we have to look so divided in front of the entire world? Personally, I think we could at least feel good about gas prices and mortgage rates.), the latest news, whom we feel is the best at dancing on the latest talent show, the boss’s latest decisions and the Academy Awards. Every moment of every day, we can and often do place judgment on everything from the weather, how our hair looks, to the kind of day we had at work.

Judgment is placed on all manner of things – and sometimes rightfully so when there is justice and mercy to be determined and lives to save.

In our daily lives, however, as long as we are not breaking laws and being unkind to others, we humans have a lot of freedom to choose the direction of our lives. We can choose the schools we attend, our friends, our food, whether to study or go to a movie, whether to choose a life long partner and where we want to live and work.

So no judgment means just that. Sweet Niece, make the important, smart choices that I know you will make. And when you realize the choice you made wasn’t the best, be grateful for that opportunity to learn for the future.

And then, just love forever means exactly that. My goal is to support you, watch you fly, not encumber you. Celebrate the excitement that is your life. No matter where you go, you can know I am there for you.

But I am not writing this just for you, my niece. I want to expand it so much more. To celebrate all the many ways to find The Divine in our lives. And to share the love that emanates therefrom.

I have lived too long where I have worried about the judgments of others. It has caused me to miss some times good times with family and friends that I should not have missed.

So tonight, I am giving myself a break, too. No judgment, Crissy. Do what your heart tells you to do. Go where it calls you. The Divine loves me, too. And as far as judgment goes, I believe The Divine meets each of us where we are – because if The Divine is anything, The Divine is love.

Peace Like a River of Whirled Peas

Remember years ago when a play on the words, Visualize World Peace, turned into Whirled Peas?  Even a band was formed by the name.  After my recent hospital stay (last blog), I  thought of “peace like a river,” a song I once sung in a little church in Eastern North Carolina and how my mind become a lot like a bunch of whirled peas in the midst of headaches, tests and amnesia.

The amnesia was the most disconcerting.

I remember waking up with a headache, not being able to talk well and falling out of the bed.  After that, the other 48 hours seem like flashbacks – an occasional remembrance of a nurse here or a visitor there.  But mostly, I have asked many questions of my husband and others about what happened during that time of my complex headache diagnosis.

How did I get to the hospital that morning, I asked.  Where was Finlay, our dog? Did he get fed? My husband said I did not want to go the emergency room even though I could not put together a coherent sentence, could not speak well and could not stand up without falling.  My nurse said I was planning to go to work on the second day of my hospital stay. I had missed a day and needed to get back. My sister came to help and I still cannot tell you how she knew I was sick.  Did I call her?

At work last week, a nurse/colleague/friend said she was glad to see me feeling so much better.  And in our conversation, I realized she had been to visit me when I was in the hospital and I had zero recollection.

So I say all this to say the most important thing I learned.  There was peace in that whole, wacky episode. A foggy, whirly and total reliance on other people to move me, test me, medicate me, study my brain scans, tolerate my delusions and occasional hallucinations (cornbread on the floor) and gently say no work for you today.  It was a whole lot like whirled peas to me bubbling down a river.

But it is whirled peas that allowed me to float peacefully along making no decisions, remembering no tests, and not even worrying about what was happening to my health.  It was the amnesia of letting go.

I may never remember much about that whole incident.  It may always be a jumble of green peas, bobbing in a peaceful brook on the way to whatever comes next.

But isn’t it really that way every day in life? The peace in the river arrives when we surrender and just let the peas roll.  However, they roll.  Whirled or not.  The amnesia has given me faith and assurance that when my peas are whirled, I am blessed with good people to keep my river peaceful.

 

 

 

Thank You is the Only Prayer We Need

Meister Eckhart once said if the only prayer you ever say in your entire life is thank you, it will be enough.

Today I am celebrating some of those things for which I am grateful. Right now. That’s all. No big philosophical insights to share. Just a whole lot of appreciation for The Divine and the life I have and the people I love and a few unusual days. So here is the list for now.

An early day that turned into a trip to the emergency department and a two day hospital stay. Where I experienced the best of caregivers. How could I be so fortunate to be affiliated with one of the best health systems in the country? Heck, the world? Safe and sound and surrounded by people whose mission is to make me well and comfortable.

Two really super bosses (you know who you are, Jim and Bill,) who each helped facilitate my recovery.

A surprise visit from my dear sister who came to help at a stressful time with her quick laugh, great hugs, delicious food and warm feet when it was us, curled up in the bed together talking and laughing – just like the old days.

A walk around the block with my dear husband and funny dog – both of the humans recovering from being under the weather, the dog doing its job leaving pee-mail on every post possible, having missed four days of regular walking and communication.

A dear friend who just happens to be one of the smartest people I know in the profession needed most at this very minute.

Flowers and delicious bakery treats from caring friends.

Diet Cokes and Nabs (if you have to ask, they are the orange crackers with peanut butter and the best ones are made by Lance – sorry Nabisco but you all make other good things) delivered by co-workers who just wanted to help.

Knowing that, truly, all I have to do is reach out and there is someone there to return my touch, to be there when I need it.

So much more I could say. But tonight I am just saying thanks. Because that is the best prayer I can offer to the Great Divine who never fails to show up precisely and exactly when needed.

Haley’s Halo and The Love of Other Dogs I Have Known

“One day, we will see our animals again in the eternity of Christ. Paradise is open to all of God’s creatures.” Pope Francis

Haley went to Heaven last night.

She was the beloved dog of two of our dearest friends. Her life was not an easy life in the beginning. Years and years of being bred again and again in a horrible puppy mill, Haley was sick and abused, patches of beautiful West Highland Terrier sweet hair missing and afraid of other dogs (especially male) and most people (especially female).

Found by our friends by caring folks who rescued Westies, Haley spent the last three years of her life being loved like nobody’s business.

Her hair grew back. As much as possible, her health returned. She started trusting people again. She went on long walks, had the best of love and care and lived in a beautiful and comfortable home.

She had great treats, good food and a safe and warm place to snuggle down each night. She went on many long walks and one day, she even wore a pink ballerina skirt and went dancing with aspiring stars.

Haley was a star as a matter of fact. As have been all of the dogs I have known and loved, Dolly, Kelly, Holly and right now, our sweet little Finlay.

I am not a Catholic, but I love the new Pope and I loved what he said recently about Paradise being open to all God’s creatures.

I think he is right about that. And I think, actually, if you have or have had a dog in your life, you have pretty much experienced Paradise on Earth.

Who could love you more? Trust you with their lives? (Don’t abuse this please). Who is  more completely unconditional about their love for you than a dog?

Haley got her halo last night and a well-deserved one at that. I am going to miss you, Haley, but as someone once said, death is a comma, not a period and I am so very happy that you found peace and joy in the later years of your life and that you are continuing that happiness today.

The Woes of Christmas

“We can’t keep learning the same lessons over again. We just keep learning the same lessons over again.” Ha Ha Tonka

Many of my followers may not agree with my thoughts on Christmas.  But another has passed us by. And I learn more and more each time.

For those who disagree with what I say,  I love you still and wish for long evenings by firesides drinking hot chocolate and pursuing witty, curious and intelligent debates about this topic and you might give me something to think about.  But for now without that lovely and insightful debate, I commence to share my deepest thoughts on the one day of each year that has caused so much heartache in my life and in so many others.

For so long, anxiety and worry about this holiday has stormed furiously in my life – taunting and teasing me with the refrain – you should, you ought, you must and especially gloating on its usual admonition – you must do what everyone else tells you to do on this day.

This drama has increased dramatically of late and the fretting begins in early Spring and lasts until which time, it gears up ready to destroy  the next holiday season. For this, I blame no one but myself. I realize that no one but me is in control of my life and guilt is something I allow and I can overcome it. However, because I have read so much and heard so much similar despair from so many others, I thought I would invite you to go with me as I work through the outrageous drama that is called Christmas in my hurting head.

Since this is my place to record feelings, some difficult, others exceeding
painful, I will speak my truth in love – taking full responsibility for my part in the saga. For me Christmas has long been been a breeding ground for relationship destruction in my world. It seems to be to be a child’s gift and we, as adults, perpetuate an effort to ensure that small, innocent children remember a dream of a Rockwell painting that is filled with gifts, sparkling lights and tons of presents laying in wait for tiny hands to become paper shredders in haste to discover hidden treasures.

This is how it begins and why now as adults try to recreate that same perfect day for our children.

As we get older, however,we are faced with the facts that as adults, we try to conceal that day – unbearable grief, financial issues and relationship issues that are sometimes sharply quiet moments of sarcasm Some even chastising with anger or envy that someone did not show up because they had other plans.  How dare they do this?

Having said that, I am perfectly willing to participate in the celebrations of those extraordinary lives such as  the Christ, Mother Teresa, Martin Luther King, Gandhi and Nelson Mandela. To this every day. most humans try to utilize the messages from the greats – the Golden Rule and the lessons of selflessness, giving, truth, respect, understanding, gratitude and kindness.

We endeavor to love ourselves and others. We understand that manipulation is prone to failure and resentment and the eventual demolition of relationships. That love and acceptance are the essential elements of grace. That violence, both physical and emotional, only exacerbates the likelihood of an imploding an broken heart so deep, it will take long stretches of time to wipe the slate clean no matter how hard we pray, how much we try and how hard we fight to force the anger away so that it will not escalate into an ugly old wort of grudge that hurts no one but ourselves. Or worse, we declare we have forgiven but will never forget, which I completely cannot understand to any degree whatsoever. But then again I have failed enough to know that we all make personal mistakes.

So to the advice.

1. Start your own traditions with your significant others.

2. State your intention and offer other days and ways to celebrate if you cannot make Christmas Day itself.  (This year I have actually had five Christmas celebrations with different people on different days.  And I have one more to go.) The day is not important. The time together is.

3. Look after yourself. (Trust me. No one else is going to do it). Take some time alone.

4. Remember that guilt is the gift that keeps on giving so let that little package remain unopened and drag it to the street with the used up Christmas tree.

5. And remember the season and its reason. For those whom you love that are far away, reach out with a call. And if you get one, please take the time to answer it.

6. Also remember if you have not spent several years with different family members, next year may just be the time to fix that. In fact, it is what I plan to do.

7. Set boundaries. And stick with them.

8. And just love with peace.

.

Finding Our True Selves

When I was seven, a friend called me “bubbly.” I was frankly a little defensive being immediately reminded of the pink, plastic jar filled with bubble suds and a tiny wand that provided my sister, Wendy and me, with hours of fun in the backyard on a slow, summer day.

Folks thought this was a fine thing indeed and my sister had no comment, an equal amount of interest and no concern about why this word was not used to describe her. In fact, she seemed to have quickly removed herself from any sort of moniker that might follow her to therapy after childhood.

Which is exactly where if followed me (along with a great amount of other life luggage) in my early 40’s at the doorstep of my therapist, the esteemed Dr. Matthews, for about 30 months. That word spoken that day stuck to me like a lichen and shadowed me like the cloud of dust that wafted around the precious, little blanket that belonged to the dusty and minute Linus, the philosopher friend of the comic star Charlie Brown.

I researched the word “bubbly” online at Thesaurus.com and found all sorts of synonyms – sparkling, vivacious, full of life, perky, vibrant – even gassy and fizzy. Effervescent was listed, too, and I felt somehow hopeful about that adjective and quickly clicked to its synonyms where I found animated, buoyant, irrepressible, vital, and, oh, yes, zingy. I decided for own self-confidence it was best not to read the definition of that word.

But what I found even more disturbing were the antonyms of the word bubbly. All of them gave me pause and made me wonder if the antonyms don’t beg the question – Are we endowed with one attribute and not the other?  For example, must one be bubbly in order to avoid being flat, stale, unenthusiastic, dull and listless? Or maybe could one just be serious and sober and somehow even out the territory between perky and dull?

I have thought about how quickly that words was bestowed by someone I did not know well and how after that, I somehow embraced that trait as a good thing and spent years cultivating that quality in myself – being extroverted and outgoing.

But I became bubbly – I sunk into it just like a hot, bubbly bath at the end of a long day. I became enveloped by it and lived it fully every single day – for years. Bubbly was I at work, at school, in the community. It manifested itself in numerous dinner parties at my home, many leadership positions, in the acquisition of friends galore and in my nearly insatiable social network ladder climbing – especially when it complimented my work as a fundraiser at our local hospital.

Actually, the Buddhists talk about this whole idea of self-identification a lot. I love the works of author Jack Kornfield. In his work, The Wise Heart: A Guide to the Universal Teachings of Buddhist Psychology, he makes it easy to understand with his concept of RAIN (Recognition, Acceptance, Investigation and Non-Identification). He writes about using these four principles for mindful transformation.   First, you recognize something in your life. (Hey, she called me bubbly. This is a different experience.) Secondly, you accept the situation. (“Acceptance,” Kornfield writes, “is a willing movement of the heart to include what is before it.” Okay. Hmmm…This is someone’s judgment call – their adjective for me. Bubbly.) Third, you investigate. (Using our body, feelings, mind, etc., we “investigate whether we are clinging to it, resisting it or letting it be…and we notice how much we identify with it.)” And finally, non-identification, where “we stop taking the experience as ‘me’ or ‘mine.’ We see how our identification creates dependence, anxiety or inauthenticity. In practicing non-identification, we inquire of every state, experience and story, ‘Is this who I really am?’…Then we are free to let go and rest in awareness itself.”

If, as a child of seven, I had Jack Kornfield to call upon, my whole life may have been quite different. I skipped two of the most important steps. I did, of course, recognize and accept the adjective, but I failed to really investigate and instead of not identifying with it, I dove right in and accepted it like a new best friend.

One day Bubbly came crashing to an end fairly permanently end around the time of marriage loss, leaving a job, everything changing.

Now truly bubbly is a distant memory that shows up at a party every once in a long time. I feel much happier and stronger now and I doubt in this new town where I reside that not a single one would use that word to describe me. I am usually the first to leave a party, gravitate to those I know and I am happiest when I don’t have to leave the house, when I can stay home and work in my home and garden, read, write and just piddle around my home.

So did I actually change?

The world will often rush to tell us who we are. We are free to grab the first thing as if nothing else will come along.

But that happens at the expense of us taking our time. Instead, we must remain the inventor of our very short life. We must plan our days. Quietly turn aside from the people who tell us how to spend our minutes, our hours, our holidays, our free time – no matter how well meaning they might be. Today I know that I can at times I can be bubbly.

But bubbly is not me. I am serious by nature. I am a continuous seeker for the Divine. And will never be still until I find just who it is that I am supposed to be.

Let me be clear. I love bubbly. I love bubbly people. Thank you to all of you who lift our days. I try to preserve that part of myself – from long ago – that looks the cashier in the eye and smiles with love and happiness and says thank you.

But my quest remains. It may take years before I can sum myself up in that exact right word. But this is part of life – to find out who we really are.