Tuesday, December 14, 2021

A Beautiful Time of the Year

 

photo credit: Arthur Bruno

Many people have told me they don't like Christmas. What they mean, of course, is they don't like the way Christmas is promoted by the media and corporations, placing emphasis on buying unnecessary things and going into debt to do so. We all know people who are over-stressed for various reasons during this beautiful time of the year. And so the words of Mary Baker Eddy which are quoted below are what I will concentrate on today. Spending the day quietly listening, in peace and joy, today and every day, is all I want. This is the gift which is ours for the claiming of it, anytime, anywhere. Happy Christmas to All...

"Certain occasions, considered either collectively or individually and observed properly, tend to give the activity of man infinite scope; but mere merry-making or needless gift-giving is not that in which human capacities find the most appropriate and proper exercise. Christmas respects the Christ too much to submerge itself in merely temporary means and ends." Mary Baker Eddy - Miscellaneous Writings 259:23-39

Monday, December 13, 2021

Come, Sit With Me

photo credit: Aaron Springston

 

LIFE - by Jim Young


"come, sit with me
let yourself simply be
plunge, if you will, to the depths of your grief
loosen the slipknot on your weary body and ravaged soul
freeing your burdens
your anger, your pain
whatever it is that discomforts you
whatever it is you feel

come, sit with me
open to the joy that is you
letting laughter’s release unfold your Truth
allow yourself to bask in my love for you
healing your mind, your body, your soul
bathe in the Light of transformation
knowing all you have to be is you
that I’m always here for you

come, sit with me
travel with me through the universe
be open in your silence
mindless in your solitude
resting your thoughts and feelings here beside me
fully present in this art of relationship
and you will come to know
yet again
that we are One

come, sit with me
no matter what the condition or circumstance
no matter what our past
it is safe now
in Eternal Friendship
this presence is all that matters
all we must do is be what we both are
and these precious moments become our Truth
authentic love, our bond."

​from Jim Young​


Sunday, December 12, 2021

Forgiving Myself and Others

 


Regular readers of this blog know I have a next door neighbor who does not like me. Yesterday, he yelled ugly things at me while I was unloading groceries. It didn’t upset me at the time​,​ but different words he said have been playing over in my mind. This morning, I had a choice: I could continue to hear his words, repeating them to friends, feeling superior for not retaliating ​(​while having a certainty that I was right​)​ — or, I could humbly seek to release this encounter. It seemed a perfect time to practice Hoʻoponopono. By a persistent mental repetition of these words — I’m sorry, Please forgive me, I love you, Thank you — I allow myself to not apportion blame and forgive myself for any attack thoughts I have had toward him. As a bonus, I’m reminded how valuable this practice is. I look forward to noticing instances where these words can fill my thoughts, rather than something I would rather not think.

“If a friend informs us of a fault, do we listen patiently to the rebuke and credit what is said? Do we not rather give thanks that we are ‘not as other men’? During many years the author has been most grateful for merited rebuke. The wrong lies in unmerited censure, — in the falsehood which does no one any good.” Mary Baker Eddy - Science & Health Page 8:30

Saturday, December 11, 2021

Drop Your Troubles in My Palm


After an eventful and rather emotionally-draining day today, I had many topics floating through my mind. But when a friend posted this Elizabeth Gilbert story to social media -- well, it says it all. Namaste...

“Some years ago, I was stuck on a crosstown bus in New York City during rush hour. Traffic was barely moving. The bus was filled with cold, tired people who were deeply irritated with one another, with the world itself. Two men barked at each other about a shove that might or might not have been intentional. A pregnant woman got on, and nobody offered her a seat. Rage was in the air; no mercy would be found here.

But as the bus approached Seventh Avenue, the driver got on the intercom."Folks," he said, "I know you have had a rough day and you are frustrated. I can’t do anything about the weather or traffic, but here is what I can do. As each one of you gets off the bus, I will reach out my hand to you. As you walk by, drop your troubles into the palm of my hand, okay? Don’t take your problems home to your families tonight, just leave them with me. My route goes right by the Hudson River, and when I drive by there later, I will open the window and throw your troubles in the water."

It was as if a spell had lifted. Everyone burst out laughing. Faces gleamed with surprised delight. People who had been pretending for the past hour not to notice each other’s existence were suddenly grinning at each other like, is this guy serious?
Oh, he was serious.

At the next stop, just as promised, the driver reached out his hand, palm up, and waited. One by one, all the exiting commuters placed their hand just above his and mimed the gesture of dropping something into his palm. Some people laughed as they did this, some teared up but everyone did it. The driver repeated the same lovely ritual at the next stop, too. And the next. All the way to the river.

We live in a hard world, my friends. Sometimes it is extra difficult to be a human being. Sometimes you have a bad day. Sometimes you have a bad day that lasts for several years. You struggle and fail. You lose jobs, money, friends, faith, and love. You witness horrible events unfolding in the news, and you become fearful and withdrawn. There are times when everything seems cloaked in darkness. You long for the light but don’t know where to find it.
But what if you are the light? What if you are the very agent of illumination that a dark situation begs for?. That’s what this bus driver taught me, that anyone can be the light, at any moment. This guy wasn’t some big power player. He wasn’t a spiritual leader. He wasn’t some media-savvy influencer. He was a bus driver, one of society’s most invisible workers. But he possessed real power, and he used it beautifully for our benefit.

When life feels especially grim, or when I feel particularly powerless in the face of the world’s troubles, I think of this man and ask myself, What can I do, right now, to be the light? Of course, I can’t personally end all wars, or solve global warming, or transform vexing people into entirely different creatures. I definitely can’t control traffic. But I do have some influence on everyone I brush up against, even if we never speak or learn each other’s name. 

"No matter who you are, or where you are, or how mundane or tough your situation may seem, I believe you can illuminate your world. In fact, I believe this is the only way the world will ever be illuminated, one bright act of grace at a time, all the way to the river." 

 Elizabeth Gilbert


Friday, December 10, 2021

Superstition

Arrival - acrylic by William Haskell

 “Superstition was rising everywhere. People like to see human life as an upwardly sloping line towards knowledge and tolerance. But I have to say that has never been my experience. It isn’t in this century, and it wasn’t in that one. The lesson of history is that ignorance and superstition can rise up in almost anyone at any moment, and what starts as doubt in a mind can swiftly become an act in the world." Matt Haig - from How to Stop Time

“Superstition and understanding can never combine. When the final physical and moral effects of Christian Science are fully apprehended, the conflict between truth and error, understanding and belief, Science and material sense, foreshadowed by the prophets and inaugurated by Jesus, will cease, and spiritual harmony reign." Mary Baker Eddy - Science & Health Page 288:9

Thursday, December 9, 2021

Music is Divine

 


"The human sigh for peace and love is answered and compensated by divine Love. Music is more than sound in unison. The deaf Beethoven besieges you with tones intricate, profound, commanding. Mozart rests you. To me his composition is the triumph of art, for he measures himself against deeper grief. I want not only quality, quantity, and variation in tone, but the unction of Love. Music is divine. Mind, not matter, makes music; and if the divine tone be lacking, the human tone has no melody for me." Mary Baker Eddy - Message to the Mother Church, 1900, P11:8


Wednesday, December 8, 2021

Live Justly; Love Mercy

 


Many people are “daunted by the enormity of the world’s grief”. I have a friend who hides in mindless television. She refuses to watch the news as she feels it’s too horrid, but she immerses herself in yucky CSI shows and such. Even though I don’t understand her way of thinking, it’s better than hiding in a bar and living with the consequences, as do some I know. Another friend stays away from society and watches cooking shows 10 or 12 hours a day, topping it off with nightly movies. Both of these women are compassionate, loving people, yet they feel helpless when it comes to facing the injustice which is running rampant. There are far more people in the world who love than hate, but it’s easy to become bruised when you love, and easier to become more angry when you hate. That is why I loved the above statement when I saw it on Facebook: “Live justly, love mercy, and walk humbly now. You are not expected to complete the work, but neither are you free to abandon it.” 


“You who feel threatened by this changing world, its twists of fortune and its bitter jests, its brief relationships and all the ‘gifts’ it merely lends to take away again; attend this lesson well. The world provides no safety. It is rooted in attack, and all its ‘gifts’ of seeming safety are illusory deceptions. It attacks, and then attacks again. No peace of mind is possible where danger threatens thus.

“Be still a moment, and in silence think how holy is your purpose, how secure you rest, untouchable within its light.” A Course in Miracles Workbook Lesson #153

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