Thursday, October 8, 2015

"Lonesome Place"

"Lonesome Place" by Langston Hughes
I got to leave this town.
It’s a lonesome place.
Got to leave this town cause
It’s a lonesome place.
A po’, po’ boy can’t
Find a friendly face.
Goin’ down to de river
Flowin’ deep an’ slow.
Goin’ down to de river
Deep an’ slow-
Cause there ain’t no worries
Where de waters go.
I’m weary, weary,
Weary, as I can be.
Weary, weary,
Weary as can be.
This life’s so weary,
‘S’ bout to overcome me.
Langston Hughes's photo.

Thursday, September 3, 2015

GIF Love

25 Life Changing Lessons From Rumi



25 Life Changing Lessons To Learn From Rumi

“Study me as much as you like, you will not know me, for I differ in a hundred ways from what you see me to be. Put yourself behind my eyes and see me as I see myself, for I have chosen to dwell in a place you cannot see.” ~ Rumi

1. Stop acting so small. You are the universe in ecstatic motion.
2. Your job is to live your life in a way that makes sense to you, not to “them”.
3. Never give up on yourself.
4. Ignorance is God’s prison.
5. The treasures that can be found outside of you can’t even compare with the treasures that can be found inside of you.
6. When you let go of who you are, you become who you might be.
7. There is something you can do better than anyone else.
8. You don’t have to see the whole staircase, just take the first step.
9. When you commit to something, do it with all your heart.
10. Good things come to an end so that better things can fall together.
11. The wound is the place where the Light enters you.
12. Do what you love and do it with love.
13. Think less. Feel more.
14. Love is worth it all.
15. Appreciate both the good and the bad in your life.
16. You change your world by changing yourself.
17. We are made of Love and made to Love.
18. Your Soul is not of this world, your body is.
19. At the Soul level, we are all ONE.
20. Your Soul is more precious than anything.
21. Choose your life partner wisely.
22. Real love transcends the material plane and no matter if your bodies are apart, your souls will forever be connected.
23. Raise your words, not your voice.
24. Silence is the language of God.
25. Just to be alive is not enough.

GIF Love








Tuesday, June 23, 2015

Understanding .... Neale Donald Walsch

What is the truly spiritual response to the terrible event in South Carolina? Is it forgiveness, as so bravely extended to the young killer by the family members of those he murdered?
Yes, that is a wonderfully spiritually elevated first step, and the whole of humanity is inspired by those grieving family members in Charleston. Yet there is another step, a step beyond forgiveness, that I believe God offers to everyone of us—and invites each of us to embrace in our own lives as we move toward spiritual mastery.
That second step is understanding. And ultimately, it replaces the first. Ultimately it renders forgiveness unnecessary.
I have observed, in my own life and in the lives of many others, that this is one of the most challenging and difficult messages of the so-called New Spirituality as articulated in books such as Conversations with God. It is challenging because, on its surface, it seems to violate everything we have been taught about the most sublime, exalted way to behave—and about the way that God behaves.
What if it turned out that God does not forgives us for anything, and never will? Might this be the missing link? Might this be the data about God and Life that we have never allowed ourselves to consider?
I have been asking for years: Is it possible that there is something we don't fully understand about God and about Life, the understanding of which would change everything?
I believe the answer is yes, and that the following is what we do not fully understand: God does not and will not offer forgiveness to anyone for anything, because forgiveness is unnecessary. It is replaced in the process of Divine Balance with a more searingly powerful energy: Understanding.
First, Divinity understands Who and What It Is, and so It is aware that God cannot possibly be hurt or damaged, injured or diminished in any way. This means that Divinity would not be disappointed or frustrated or annoyed or angry or vengeful for any reason. It simply has no reason. “Vengeance is mine, sayeth the Lord” is, I believe, the biggest spiritual untruth of all time.
Second, God understands that humans do not understand who and what they are. Thus, they imagine that they can be hurt and damaged, injured and diminished (and from a purely human perspective, this experience is very real). It is out of this misunderstanding of who they really are that all thoughts, words, and actions seemingly requiring forgiveness flow.
Humans do things they would never do if they understood their True Identity and embraced it fully. Understanding this, God has no need to forgive humans for what they do (even if God could somehow be “hurt”), any more than we have a need to “forgive” a two-year-old child for saying or doing something that some might call “bad.” Forgiveness is not part of the equation in our response. We simply understand how an 18-month or 24-month old child could do such a thing.
The idea that you need to forgive an adult is clearly based on the fact that you feel they should know better than to have done what they have done to offend, damage, or hurt you. Yet the Soul knows that nobody does anything inappropriate, given their model of the world. The Soul knows that everyone is doing the best they can at any given moment.
Just as we understand the child whose simple immaturity and confusion led to his actions, so, too, do we see, when we come from the place of the Deep Understanding of the Soul, that the exact same thing is true of the adults who act in ways that persons of greater awareness of their True Identity would never act.
The more we find out about the young man who perpetrated the mass church killing, the more we see how this applies. Ah, we say. Now we understand. We begin, as well, to understand the mass consciousness and the limited awareness of many aspects of the internet culture in which he found himself submerged, and the sources from which he gathered his data about life. As we learn more about this particular case, the mind catches up with what the Soul already knows.
Understanding thus replaces forgiveness in the mind of those who have expanded their consciousness to include this level of awareness. The invitation before humanity, then—if we truly wish to change and finally transform the human experience—is to change our model of the world. And how can we do this? By telling a new story, the true story, of who we really are, of why we are here on the Earth, of who and what this thing we call Divinity really is, and of what God wants.
Perhaps the most profound spiritual outcome of the mass killing at the Emanuel AME Church in Charleston will be that it will lead the whole of humanity to this heightened awareness.
The families of those who died there have shown us our magnificence with breathtaking clarity. Let us allow their first step to take us to the next step: a compassionate understanding of how any human being (much less masses of human beings) could do the kinds of things we see being done every day in our world, and a deeper awareness of the truth of who we are in relationship to each other and to God, such that we begin living that truth at last, in every moment of our individual lives, erasing finally these horrific events from our collective experience.
There could be no more fitting tribute to the blessed souls who gave up their present physical life to bring each of us the opportunity to open to this awareness.
In the meantime we see, with gentle comprehension, that understanding replaces forgiveness in the mind of the master. We see, as well, that only understanding of our past and our present can change our future. Condemnation has never done it, and it never will.
This is not something that is lost on God.
Divinity, therefore, patiently and lovingly awaits our growth, even as we do with our children.
(From NDW Support: Commentaries such as this from a Conversations with God point of view about life on Earth can be found every day atwww.CWGConnect.com, where CWG readers gather every day to interact directly with Neale.)
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A Sticky Point Indeed

All duality is a mind creation, all duality is created by the clinging and attached mind. When there is no attachment there is no duaity.

Osho



On the rugged, splattered path we now walk since the shooting in Charleston ...

My point in what I believed was delivered in simplicity ... a response to a comment on those hating white people in south and mid-western USA ... "we have all been taught to see differences but some of us think for ourselves - we must stop pointing fingers over there - it is race now other times its transgender, homosexuals, little people -- everyone matters -- how often does black community reach out to other groups in the world -- any group?"


Was hijacked by a debate hungry individual who pointed out all the various groups, including the NAACP, fraternities, pod-casters, YouTube presenters, and so on, who reach out to the LGBT community on behalf of the Black community ... which went on and on and for the life of me I could not understand the ferment when I was simply suggesting when we have the same sensitivities to others - no matter who they may be - that we have for ourselves (hopefully) and for those we like and love, the world will change.

I ended with this point ...

One does not have to be an activist or mount an individual soap box -- I am referring to the dialogue inside ourselves -- changing that alone will impact the world -- have to be sensitive to others and their empathy will be returned -- all human issues are complex racism is not the only complex discrimination at work in the world -- my original point has literally been hijacked by something else all together --- change will come when we quietly change our inner dialogue we don't need a tv, radio or you tube channel or a podcast or a stage just quiet individual assessment -- that is the simple point I made ... care about others and they will care about you.


It is a giant task, I promise you, to wade into this world and suggest to the Black community that caring about others will reap the empathy and respect they angrily shout to the world they do not receive from the global community. There is a lot of anger. Anger with history.  The debater highlighted ...

The issues the black community currently face in America are so complex, as you know historically they have faced a lot and unfortunately Racism is still alive and well in America. unless you have lived there it's difficult to understand how deep rooted it is. I was lucky to live in a state that has many liberal-minded people and also live a life of privilege so my exposure to racism was minimal in comparison to others, but there was some and it gave me a new perspective on it all. So I can understand in some ways why some members of the black community are focused solely on the advancement of black issues as there are still so many to work on. But obviously advocating for other groups while advocating for your own community is more Beneficial to society as a whole but not everyone is able or willing to do that.

Not only is it beneficial to "society as a whole" but it will save all our souls ... quiet reflection does get in the way of noisy ego driven thoughts -- the longest journey is indeed from the head to the heart --- in some ways it is easier to scream at the world and blame it for victimizing ME!!! but there is no salvation in that -- were it so, many would have arrived at the promised land of a sated soul long ago and yet the agony remains.

Change ourselves and the world changes.  

Monday, June 15, 2015

The Angry, Self Righteous and Willfully Ignorant




It is my general view that too many people in the world today are angry. The explosion of social media as platforms for personal expression has also exploded a cruel and tiresome assault of often anonymous anger. Anger so hateful in its expression it near knocks the breath from my body.

In a world now tossed into the new frontier - the information age - I am always bewildered by how little persons actually know.  Individuals will comment online when a quick check in a neighboring tab would have informed them of the very issue they are angrily struggling to discuss.

This junction of anger and willful ignorance has ballooned - I dare now to say - in justified, uninformed anger as a response to every issue in the dramatically sensationalized world we now occupy.

Willful Ignorance - The practice or act of intentional and blatant avoidance, disregard or disagreement with facts, empirical evidence and well-founded arguments because they oppose or contradict your own existing personal beliefs. 

All issues are responded to in molten anger. Anger is the new ... intellect? If one is angry they are more passionate? clued in? informed? not apathetic? smart? 

In anger, there is little room for understanding, growth, compromise, empathy.There is so much subtlety in life. History has taught us - if only we would learn the lessons of history - that life is not of black and white positions to which we are of one or the other point of view and are called to angrily defend. In all of history there are grey areas in which we all traverse.

Caitlyn Jenner
NAACP's Rachel Dolezal
Islam and terrorism
Palestine and Orthodox & Zionist Jews
Barack and Michelle Obama
Race
The Duggars
Homosexuality
Atheism
Kim Kardashian, Kanye West and family

I could go on forever and a day listing complex issues of our time - except the issues that these characters provide have always existed - if only we would learn the lessons they offer.

First line of defense - if angry vitriol is your only position, you are not at all and please do not fool yourself otherwise, part of the solution of this perceived problematic issue. 

So much refusal to allow information that trumps your vitriol - well that's just plain immaturity.

A recent tussle on Facebook ... no shade on Zuckerberg but FB, like twitter, has become the place where the haters from hell come to rest their weary but volcanic innate beast and therefore are places to avoid as much as possible.  But, soft! what light through yonder window breaks ... angry trolls are found at the foot of almost every article that floats online as well.

In response to the firing of a teacher who suggested segregation in response to a pool party at which a frazzled policeman lost control of himself and the situation was all captured on film.

One Facebooker wrote - Segregation is ugly and anti-Constitutional.
I wrote - during segregation there were communal and economic advantages that African American communities lost after the civil rights movement and amendment to the Constitution... not an endorsement of segregation ... but those advantages were never generated among black communities after.
To which first Facebooker said - You're out of your mind.
And another wrote - Please do some research. Especially regarding your last statement.

Now, I am a historian and by that virtue, we read, we read a lot.

And here is the simple truth ... a mere stroke of a Google key away -  https://books.google.com.jm/books?id=hDGnAwAAQBAJ&pg=PA76...

Collective Courage
In Collective Courage, Jessica Gordon Nembhard chronicles African American...
BOOKS.GOOGLE.COM.JM


This recurring issue of angry, self righteous and uninformed explosion of willful ignorance among people are individuals upon whom the truthful and subtle experiences of human history are utterly lost.