Wednesday, November 30, 2016

Half-time...


You had to do

the wanting

and the trying

and the achieving

and the self-promoting

and the accomplishing.



The first half of life is all about some kind of

performance principle.

And it seems that it must be this way.

You have to do it wrong before you know what right might be.



These deeper voices will sound like

risk,

trust,

surrender,

uncommon sense,

destiny,

love.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

We must go through the pain of disorder
to grow up and switch our loyalties from self to God.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

As we grow in wisdom, we realize
that everything belongs and everything can be received.

We see that life and death are not opposites.
They do not cancel one another out;
neither do goodness and badness.

There is now room for everything to belong.
A radical, almost nonsensical “okayness” characterizes
the mature believer,
which is why we are often called “holy fools.”

We don’t have to deny, dismiss, defy, or ignore reality anymore.
What is, is gradually okay.
What is, is the greatest of teachers.

At the bottom of all reality is always a deep goodness,
or what Merton called “a hidden wholeness.”


~R. Rohr

Interesting perspective...

Image result for the man in the mirror

Michael Gerson: Trump's hypocrisy is good for America

WASHINGTON — As Donald Trump's campaign promises have been dunked in reality's strong solvent, many have been transformed in one way or another — modified, moderated, qualified, abandoned or pushed off into the distant future. Not a wall across the whole southern border. Not every part of Obamacare repealed. Not all illegal immigrants deported, at least in the foreseeable future. Not literally tearing up the Iran agreement. Not an actual prison cell for Hillary Clinton.
All this has opened up Trump to the charge of being a hypocrite. For the nation's sake, let's hope so.

Hypocrisy has always been a complicated vice. It is the easiest, most common charge made in politics ("My opponent claims to love apple pie but uses them regularly in unspeakable acts.") Most of us feel a visceral reaction when a crusading prosecutor makes use of prostitutes, or a law-and-order judge takes bribes, or a moralizing pastor tends to his or her flock a little too closely.

But we should take care in defining hypocrisy. "A hypocrite is a person who — but who isn't?" said Don Marquis. More helpfully, British political scientist David Runciman said hypocrisy involves "claims to a consistency that one cannot sustain, claims to a loyalty that one does not possess, claims to an identity that one does not hold."

Hypocrisy comes in a long continuum of seriousness. You can wear a false face in displaying good manners toward someone you secretly despise. There is often hypocritical deception involved in political or diplomatic negotiations, which generally start with principled, nonnegotiable demands that are negotiated away in the process of finding a compromise. Hypocrisy can come in accommodating human realities that don't quite fit our ideals, as in the widespread use of artificial birth control by American Catholics. Or it may be that you have simply changed your mind in light of new circumstances — as President George H.W. Bush did in violating the pledge "Read my lips: No new taxes."

In one sense, hypocrisy is unavoidable and necessary. If people were required, at all times, to live up to ideals of honesty, loyalty and compassion in order for those ideals to exist, there would be no ideals. Being a moral person is a struggle in which everyone repeatedly fails, becoming a hypocrite at each of those moments. A just and peaceful society depends on hypocrites who ultimately refuse to abandon the ideals they betray.

Before we become overly self-forgiving, it is worth recalling that the founder of Christianity took hypocrisy quite seriously: "Be careful not to practice your righteousness in front of others to be seen by them." Purity of heart and motivation, in the Christian tradition, does matter. But the hunt for hypocrisy should begin in the mirror.

The issue at hand, however, is a certain kind of political hypocrisy — the conscious use of a mask to fool the public and gain political benefit. Most would concede that this type of hypocrisy is generally harmful for a democracy, in which self-government requires informed choices. Trump's brand of personality-driven politics — emphasizing the virtues of a single leader — exaggerates the challenge. Trump arrives in Washington claiming to be the only honest man in a world of mendacity. It is a long way down from such a pedestal.

Some of Trump's strongest supporters seem to assume his cynicism. The part about forcing Mexicans to pay for the wall, according to Newt Gingrich, was "a great campaign device." Of the largest construction project since the Qin dynasty, Rush Limbaugh now says he never expected Trump to do it.

In this case, perhaps surprisingly, I am all for the wisdom of Gingrich and Limbaugh. Trump presents a special case, in which the normal criticisms of political hypocrisy should be suspended. Every time the Trump agenda is reshaped or refined to better fit reality, even Trump's most dedicated critics have reason to applaud.

This is a rare ethical circumstance in which realism and good sense take the form of hypocrisy. On a variety of issues, the sincerity of Trump's current intentions — or the cynicism of his past intentions — should not matter. If the candidate who gave a wink and nod toward white nationalism now repudiates the alt-right and promises to "bring this country together," so much the better. If the candidate who promised a trade war with China reconsiders, it is all to the good.

It is admittedly an odd thing to cheer for cynicism. But in this strange, new political era, hypocrisy is our best hope.

Accidental Art...Let's Dance!


Allowing LOVE

When God looks at us, God can only see “Christ” in us. Yet it’s hard—for us!—to be naked and vulnerable and allow ourselves to be seen so deeply. It is hard to simply receive God’s loving and all-accepting gaze. We feel unworthy and ashamed. The very essence of all faith is to trust the gaze and then complete the circuit of mutual friendship. “The eye with which I see God is the same one with which God sees me. My eye and God’s eye is one eye, and one sight, and one knowledge, and one love,” as Meister Eckhart says.


When you go to your place of prayer,
don’t try to think too much or manufacture feelings or sensations.

Don’t worry about
what words you should say or what posture you should take.
It’s not about you or what you do.

Simply allow Love to look at you—and trust what God sees!

God just keeps looking at you and loving you center to center.
Hinduism called this darshan, the practice of going to the temple—
not to see the deity, but to allow yourself to be fully and lovingly seen. 

Try reversing the engines.
This reversal is the triumph and victory of grace.


Gateway to Silence:
Everything—yes, everything—belongs.
~R. Rohr
(Sometimes the words we most need to hear
are hanging on the wall right behind us!)

Tuesday, November 29, 2016

Post-Thanksgiving

 Pre-Italy Reading
 Oh, good...I apparently have a goal!
 Again?  Okay.




Come Healing

kintsukori
O gather up the brokenness
And bring it to me now
The fragrance of those promises
You never dared to vow

The splinters that you carry
The cross you left behind
Come healing of the body
Come healing of the mind

And let the heavens hear it
The penitential hymn
Come healing of the spirit
Come healing of the limb

Behold the gates of mercy
In arbitrary space
And none of us deserving
The cruelty or the grace

O solitude of longing
Where love has been confined
Come healing of the body
Come healing of the mind

O see the darkness yielding
That tore the light apart
Come healing of the reason
Come healing of the heart

O troubled dust concealing
An undivided love
The heart beneath is teaching
To the broken heart above

Let the heavens falter
Let the earth proclaim
Come healing of the altar
Come healing of the Name

O longing of the branches
To lift the little bud
O longing of the arteries
To purify the blood

And let the heavens hear it
The penitential hymn
Come healing of the spirit
Come healing of the limb

O let the heavens hear it
The penitential hymn
Come healing of the spirit
Come healing of the limb
– Come Healing, penned by Leonard Cohen, recorded on Old Ideas (2012).

Saturday, November 26, 2016

Thank you, Mary...

"Life is a series of natural and spontaneous changes.
Don’t resist them; that only creates sorrow.
Let reality be reality.― Lao Tzu
Sent at 7:37 AM on 11/25/16
Little did she know.

Thursday, November 24, 2016

Happy Thanksgiving

Thou hast given so much to me,
Give one thing more,—a grateful heart
Not thankful when it pleaseth me,—
As if Thy blessings had spare days,—         
But such a heart, whose pulse may be
Thy praise.    
~George Herbert








Listen...

Image result for prophetic voices
In America, we will re-learn what it means to live “in exile”
as the body of Christ,
as we are always supposed to do.
One advantage of being in exile for the children of Israel was that
some of the strongest prophetic voices emerged —
like Isaiah, Jeremiah, and others;
I believe that will happen for us, too.
~ Jim Wallis

So thankful!

Texas women exonerated after nearly 15 years in prison for sexual assault

The four women known as the San Antonio 4 were declared innocent by Texas’ highest court on Wednesday, Nov. 23, 2016.
                              
DALLAS -- Texas’ highest criminal court on Wednesday exonerated four San Antonio women who spent almost 15 years in prison after being wrongfully convicted of sexually assaulting two girls, opening the door for the women to seek potentially millions of dollars in state compensation. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals ruled that the so-called “San Antonio 4” -- Elizabeth Ramirez, Kristie Mayhugh, Cassandra Rivera and Anna Vasquez -- were innocent.

The decision will allow the criminal records of all four women to be expunged.The women were convicted in 1998, after two of Ramirez’s nieces, ages 7 and 9, accused them of holding them by the wrists and ankles, sexually assaulting and threatening to kill them in 1994. One of the nieces later recanted, saying another family member threatened her into making the statements.
CBS affiliate KENS reports that Ramirez was babysitting her two nieces, who were 7 and 9 years old at the time, while the other three women were visiting at her apartment.
About four months after that night, in November 1994, the 20-year-old and pregnant Ramirez remembers a knock at her door.

“I was at home in my apartment, and a detective came knocking at the door and asked to speak to me,” Ramirez previously told KENS. “He asked if I knew Javier, Stephanie and Vanessa, and I was like, ‘Yeah, that’s my brother-in-law and my nieces.’ And he said, ‘Do you know they accused you of sexually assaulting them?’ And I was like, ‘No.’ And he said, ‘Do you know why they would do that?’ And I said, ‘No, I have no idea because it never happened.’”

Mike Ware, an attorney with the Innocence Project who represented the women, said the women were “ecstatic” after learning about the ruling. The nonprofit, which investigates possible wrongful convictions, took on the case more than a decade after the women were convicted.

“It’s going to be a very good Thanksgiving for all four of them,” he said. “The court has issued a very well-reasoned and excellent opinion. Really a courageous opinion.”

The ruling declares the women’s “actual innocence” and makes them eligible to seek millions of dollars from the state under a law allowing compensation for the wrongfully imprisoned. Ware said he will ask the court to quickly issue a formal mandate, after which the women would be able to file a claim with the state that, if granted, would pay each of them $80,000 for each year spent in prison.
Ramirez was given a 37-year prison sentence, while Mayhugh, Vasquez and Rivera each got 15-year sentences after being convicted. Vasquez was paroled in 2012, and the other three women were released in 2013 after challenges were raised about expert testimony.

But the court’s opinion on Wednesday relied heavily on the niece who recanted her testimony. The opinion said the two girls’ testimony was so intertwined that a jury could not rely on one without the other. The court also said the “newly available evidence of innocence undermines the legally sufficient, but hard-to-believe versions of events that led to the convictions of these four women.”
A concurring opinion by two other Texas Court of Criminal Appeals judges would also grant exoneration based on the challenges to the expert testimony and recantation. The opinion said “no reasonable juror would have convicted them” considering those factors and other “weak and contradictory” testimony presented at their trials.

Wednesday, November 23, 2016

Life happening...

 Thanks, Cheryl...
 Sky Art

 Sawyer spotted and photographed it...
 My Hero:  Price Stedham
 Post-ER
 Crazy Socks & Shoes
 Creative little guy...
 Thanks, Theta!
Full Moon
 Brunch at Café J
 Bare Bear Butts!
 And the Austinites are appalled!
Theatre with Ed & Virginia
Another lovely time with precious friends...

Tuesday, November 22, 2016

Listen...


Truth

 
“If you are telling the truth, then you can speak gently, 
                              and your words will have power.”                             
 ~Chogyam Trungpa
 

The heart of God...

Cynthia Bourgeault says,
“We begin to discover that our Buddhist and Jewish
and Islamic and Hindu friends are not competitors.
Religion is not a survival of the fittest.
There is a deep understanding
that we all swim together or we sink together.
Each religious tradition reveals a color
of the heart of God that is precious.”

Friday, November 18, 2016

Still US

“I don’t believe we are a fundamentally different country today than we were two weeks ago,” he said. “The same country with all its grace and flaws, and volatility and insecurity, and strength and resilience exists today as existed two weeks ago. The same country that elected Donald Trump elected Barack Obama. I feel badly for the people for whom this election will mean more uncertainly and insecurity. But I also feel like this fight has never been easy.”  ~Jon Stewart