Sat, 31 Dec 2005 Filed in:
Journal
error: (error “Cannot find any
publishing styles to use”) One of the fundamental principles of
material life is limitation — in particular the limits of our
faculties and the resources they act upon. For example, we can live
for only so long without food, and there is only so much food to be
had in the world. Nothing is without limit; not even the whole
universe could satisify an unlimited number of people who all
wanted the same thing. In society, positions and luxuries are even
more limited than the basic necessities of food and water. Many
people want to become doctors, for instance, but universities and
medical schools have only so many openings available. Many may
dream of a sports car, or a mansion by the sea, or just a warm
house with a healthy family; but the fact is, not everyone who
dreams of a thing can have it. It’s only those who work hard, or
have some natural, cultural or social advantage, that can gain
access to the limited number of rewards available. As a result of
this fact of life, children are brought up with a sense of the
critical importance of education to their future happiness. There
are advertisements on television telling them that high school
dropouts make less money than those who go to college; only the
best grades can get a student into Ivy-league schools; a diploma is
the only sure way to reserve a spot in the coveted echelons of
white-collar society. Success is very much tied to our ability to
secure for ourselves a place in the ever-dwindling real estate of
luxury. The rest is the lot of the common man, who must toil until
the end of his days “just to make ends meet”. Since this is a
reality of social life, we are faced with it almost from day one.
We can hardly rest for the sense that others might snatch up the
opportunities if we let them pass by. First, we must do well in
primary school, then on to high school and deciding a major, then
fighting our way into a good college and a prestigious program,
then to find a young, pretty wife or husband before “all the good
ones are taken”, then a job in competitive markets that never seem
to have enough positions, then a house in a good neighborhood
before housing prices go through the roof, etc., etc. We are racing
to beat out others who might find the better deals before us. Not
being content with second or third place is a frequent subject of
books and movies. In such an atmosphere, it’s no wonder that we
continue this image of life into the next world. Nowhere is it
written that heaven has limited real-estate, yet I remember at
least one Christian movie that described a “well of souls” — where
the souls of babies come from — that will run dry with the coming
of the Last Days. Driven by our sense of competition, Heaven is
imagined as a place that only the holiest, most devout may reach.
It’s almost an exact comparison between attending school to find a
good job, and “working on our virtues” to secure a place in
paradise. But is this an aspect of spirituality *at all*? If I were
to discuss heaven with a farmer from the slopes of Costa Rica, what
would he imagine? Maybe a place where crops never fail, and grow
without toil; but would it be as colored by the sense that not
everyone may experience it? Or take prayer as another example. When
I talk to my friends about their concerns and ask if they’ve prayed
about it, some say they do. Then they express the hope that God
will hear their prayer — as if maybe He doesn’t have enough ears
for everyone. *But why wouldn’t He hear us?* Does He have a limited
attention span? Does He allocate assistance only to a certain
number before it runs out? If a person thinks he or she is “not
good enough” for God to hear their prayer, my response is, “Good
enough for what?” To make the grade? To beat out others who are
praying on the same day? To say it loudly enough for God’s ears to
pick up the cry? As far as I’ve read, God and heaven are utterly
without limitation or end; these are primary factors distinguishing
Them from our present reality. If this is the case, wouldn’t it
imply a fundamentally different economy from what we experience
here? Yet our upbringing has presented such a concrete sense of
what life’s about that I think we project this understanding
forward, as if what’s coming next is just an colorful extension of
what we’ve already known. Assuming for a moment that God and heaven
have no constraints, what does that imply? Well, it means that God
can do anything whatsoever, for one thing. I remember one day
talking with a friend, and I proposed the idea that God might
wilfully govern the movement of sub-atomic particles, thereby
continually expressing His will through the medium of creation and
assuring that at each moment all things work out for the ultimate
best. My friend was shocked at the implication that God would waste
His time on such mundanity. He preferred a model where God had
designed the world so perfectly that He simply “turned the key” at
the beginning, and since then we’ve been operating on natural laws
and principles, freeing the Creator from having constantly to watch
over it. This is actually a fairly common idea of creation, but it
begs the question: What could it possibly mean for God to waste His
time? Does He really have only a fixed quantity of it, such that by
misusing it He would waste it? Is His attention span so limited
that watching every atom would have an impact on the infinite span
of His mind? Consider an example: You have a thousand dollars. A
friend comes up to you and says he needs eight hundred dollars to
satisfy a debt. But giving him eighty percent of what you have
leaves you with very little to work with. It means you can’t really
do much with the money you had hoped to spend on other things.
Maybe you say yes, maybe you don’t, but certainly you will feel the
loss. Now imagine you have about two hundred billion dollars. This
is enough money that if you blew five million dollars a day, every
day for a century, you still wouldn’t finish spending it all. Now
your friend asks you for eight hundred dollars again. Would you
even notice it among the five million others you spend each day? If
you can, project this to trillions, quadrillions, to absolutely
ridiculous sums of money. At a certain point, you could give a
billion dollars to every baby who would ever be born, until the
expiration of the Sun, and still it wouldn’t dent your pocket-book.
These are absurd, practically useless riches, they’ve become so
large. Now consider that this isn’t even an atom within a drop
within one of the countless oceans of Infinity. If God commands
resources of this kind, the concept of “resources” flies out the
window; it becomes laughable to imagine that God doesn’t have the
time to personally and fully attend to the concerns of every
individual who has ever been. He could watch over the movements of
every atom of billions of universes, and it would be less for Him
than it is for us to laugh at a small joke. The idea of competition
belongs to this world. I don’t believe there are a limited number
of spots in heaven, or to God’s attention. I doubt even there
really exist highs and lows where infinity is concerned. If the
Writings of God talk about gradations of heaven, perhaps it refers
to gradations in our capacity to accept and perceive them, than to
any real separations in such a place. In fact, I think Heaven is
going to be the biggest culture shock of all! I mean, what if gold
were unlimited in this world? It would suddenly lose all its value.
We prize what is rare, and have developed a society around the
acquisition and accomplishment of things that not everyone can do.
Within Infinity, value must be based on something far different
than rarity. All of this is one result of a cultural upbringing
that focuses us so much onto a path of progress and ascent. It’s
what we’re about, and what moves the engine of Western
civilization. So we imagine an after-life that is essentially an
extension of the same thing in its underpinnings. But it is divine.
What this truly means is something I think none of us can
accurately perceive yet.
Wed, 21 Dec 2005 Filed in:
Journal
error: (error “Cannot find any
publishing styles to use”) Lately I have been thinking a lot about
culture and how our cultural upbringing dominates our
interpretations of very basic things. Where this interests me most
is in how it affects our understanding of spirituality and our
relationship to the world of the unseen and to God. One historical
figure who keenly appreciated this was Socrates. As the story goes,
one day a person went to visit the oracle at Delphi. He asked the
oracle if there was any man in the world wiser than Socrates (who
was probably well known for his witty discussion and his humor by
that time). The oracle responded, “No”. So the man went to Socrates
and told him what the oracle had said, at which Socrates was
shocked. How could it be me? he thought. To test the truth of the
oracle’s pronouncement he went around asking people difficult
questions about profound topics, to see if their answers were
better than his, or if he really was the wisest man alive. This
caused Socrates, for example, to go up to a lawyer and ask him,
“What is justice?”, or ask teachers what knowledge was, or the
philosophers of the time (the sophists) what wisdom was. Each time
they gave their answers, Socrates would consider it and probe its
implications. Over the course of their discussion they would
invariably be forced to refine their answers as Socrates found more
and more cases where not only did they not apply, but they had
contradicted themselves. Finally each person gave up in
frustration, claiming that Socrates was merely playing with words,
or tricking them into saying things they didn’t mean. “It’s obvious
what Justice is and everyone knows it, there’s no reason to ask
such questions!”, was a typical reply. What Socrates discovered is
that no one really knew what they were saying, they just repeated
what everyone else had said about it. In the end, he decided that
what the oracle really meant when she claimed him to be the wisest
man is that no one was truly wise, and only in recognizing this
could wisdom begin. Everything the people held as obvious and true
about life was based on a set of cultural assumptions that most
people left unquestioned. Rarely did Socrates present his own
definition of things (though he does try to define justice in his
best known work, “The Republic”); instead, he wanted people to own
up to the fact that no one knew what life was about, and that by
assuming they did they prevented themselves from ever approaching
wisdom. Such an approach came to define the Socratic method, and
today people still use his form of argumentation to peel away
layers of assumption and gain insight into the foundations of what
we claim to know. His success as an individual failed socially,
however, because the elders of Athens did not like the way he
encouraged the youth to question tradition and the canons of social
opinion on subjects such as truth, virtue and knowledge. People
favored the public definition of these things because they fostered
social stability, whereas he began a movement which very much
destabilized what others had long regarded as sacrosanct. For this
they condemned him to death; and believing in justice as greatly as
he did, he complied with the judgment and administered their poison
himself. What was then true of society remains so today. We are
brought up with basic notions of life, existence and truth which
many claim to be self-evident but few can define. I have witnessed
people bring God Himself to task based on such empty ideas — when
in fact their disagreement really boils down to, “Things aren’t
going the way I want them to”. Take for example the laws of God,
which are clear enough, but are constantly redefined to be
“inapplicable” if they disagree with a person’s desires. Because
these basic concepts remain unexamined, they can sometimes take on
the role of mystical symbols which shy from definition. I have seen
people on television claim unbelievable things in the name of
“God’s will”, or “justice”, or “destiny”, as if the power of these
words themselves requires no further understanding. In fact,
conversation about their real meanings is avoided, and why? Would
it lessen the magic hold of “God’s will” has over people, if they
thought it meant illumining the world with the spirit of His love
by way of action and example? A far less versatile buzzword that
would be! How much does our package of cultural assumptions affect
the way we see the world and experience of God and spirituality? Is
our understanding of these terms really an understanding, or more
an inchoate “sense” passed down to us by family and friends? Might
the real truth be so foreign to us that — as people throughout time
have always done — we would reject the very Prophets of God
Themselves should They arrive on our doorstep and proclaim loudly
the answer to our hopes? What is this “sense” of truth we hold to
so dearly that it provokes such virulent debates, yet likely blinds
us from the beauty and simplicity of Truth itself? I have known too
many people whose joy was ruined by the demands of religion,
whereas in His Own Book I find such declarations as these: Were men
to discover the motivating purpose of God’s Revelation, they would
assuredly cast away their fears, and, with hearts filled with
gratitude, rejoice with exceeding gladness. My counsels and
admonitions have compassed the world. Yet, instead of imparting joy
and gladness they have caused grief… It behoveth them that are
endued with insight and understanding to observe that which will
cause joy and radiance. In further entries I would like to examine
this effect of our culture further, because it appears to condition
our attitude toward some of the things that matter most. My entry
next week will look at “competition” in society, and how much it
determines our views on the next life.
Tue, 13 Dec 2005 Filed in:
Journal
error: (error “Cannot find any
publishing styles to use”) I woke up this morning from a very
powerful dream; the feeling of it is still with me. In its details
it was rather simple, but in its feeling and meaning it was very
profound for me. I had somehow come to a complete understanding
that human souls are granted by God the freedom to experience
whatever reality they most believe in. This took particular forms
in the dream, but in the clearest, I was seated in an empty, white
room, eating a phone book. A co-worker stepped in to wonder what I
was doing, but I had no way to explain that for me, the room had
everything in it I could ever want, and that the phonebook was
actually a very tasty lasagna. Later when I thought about this it
occurred to me that a phone book, of sorts, represents an
particular ideal of knowledge: a single book that’s a compendium of
irrefutable factual knowledge, well organized. Meanwhile I was
eating this book as if it were a tasty meal. This brought the
following quote to mind: Although to outward view, the wayfarers in
this Valley may dwell upon the dust, yet inwardly they are throned
in the heights of mystic meaning; they eat of the endless bounties
of inner significances, and drink of the delicate wines of the
spirit. In another scene, I was driving on the freeway, which was
filled with traffic, yet I was somehow feeling the most intense
peace and joy to be alive and experiencing such a place. I
wondered, “What if hell is our real home and this life is just a
respite? That would completely alter how we experience existence
here.” That is, we seem to want something so much better; what if
this life is actually fantastic, and we miss out on that reality
because we believe in something else? At the end of the dream I was
trying to tell a group of people this, even lifting myself into the
air to shock them into accepting the possibility that things might
be other than they seem. I remember saying to the group: “Our
culture has so completely determined the life we experience, we
can’t even separate what we’ve been told from what we know
ourselves. Imagine if the basis of all our understanding begins
with the number two. No matter how much we add to that foundation,
we will never comprehend unity. We need to subtract from what we
started with to achieve that understanding. We’ve been set up in
such a way that Truth is simply not perceptible.” Then the dream
ended and I felt as if anything were possible provided I truly
believed in it. It might appear one way to those who see me, but
*how I experience it* is something completely up to me.
Wed, 30 Nov 2005 Filed in:
Poems
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publishing styles to use”)
Wed, 30 Nov 2005 Filed in:
Poems
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publishing styles to use”)
Wed, 30 Nov 2005 Filed in:
Poems
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publishing styles to use”)
Wed, 16 Nov 2005 Filed in:
Journal
error: (error “Cannot find any
publishing styles to use”) A while ago, when talking about the
[[j2005#thedarkside][light and dark sides]] I think we all have, I
was saying that while the light has direction, the dark has energy.
So it’s not too strange that if left alone, the dark will do what
it decides to do — while if left alone the light will not! In fact,
it takes energy to stop the dark and motivate the light; they react
oppositely to the influence of determined force. Which raises the
question of where the light gets its energy to oppose the dark?
This would seem to come from four very plentiful sources, means by
which the dark willingly grants its energy to the purposes of the
light: internally, from self-admiration and self-loathing;
externally, from love and hate. For example, the light’s is a world
of discipline and control. The more a person feels in control of
themselves, they more capable they feel of acting out the plans of
the light; the less control, the more they feel susceptible to
stirrings of the dark. But where does the energy come from to
maintain all that discipline? I find from watching people that it
is either from deep self-loathing: they hate who they are and wish
to govern it — or admiration: they love who they are and want to
further the good parts. Since these forces originate in the dark,
they of course both have the taint of “self” (from the light’s
point of view) and secretly make the light feel ashamed to use
them. Isn’t there a source of energy, it wonders, that might be
utterly disconnected from the dark? Pursuing that end, it might
seek energy from other people, or purely external motivations like
social dictum. But in the end these too must be enforced within the
individual, and so the dark has to play its role. There is no
escaping the dark side, even though at times it seems like all the
light wishes to do. I’ve even found that you can hear in a person’s
voice, and see in their eyes, which part of themselves their
sentiments are coming from. The “pure light” sounds strangely tinny
and high-pitched, like something with little depth. When a person
speaks in that voice alone, I’m almost certain that whatever
they’re saying will not come to pass. The “pure dark”, on the other
hand, is deep and dusky. If they speak in that voice, I’m almost
sure it *will* come to pass, even if it’s something the speaker
fears to happen. When the two reach common cause, however, their
voice has a real timbre. If the dark is a lump of black iron, and
the light a concept of steel, the two together can become a
keenly-tempered blade. It’s like we have these two ingredients and
the real challenge is to learn the correct admixture. It’s a
difficult balance to achieve, but the results make it worthwhile.
So when people recite to me a new litany of discipline they’ve
introduced into their lives, I think, “There’s the light side
again, seeking to regain its dominance.” I can hear how the effort
will tire them out, how they will spend furtive evenings indulging
themselves as a way to release the inner pressure. I also listen
for whether their motive is from loathing or admiration, since
these two have very different dynamics. On the other hand, if they
talk about new plans for gratifying some wish, I think, “There is
the dark side, racing to escape its prison.” I hear how freeing and
exulting the release will be, but also the nights of worry, and
self-recrimination for straying from the path. It seems that none
of us can live on one or the other side for too long, without
mental or emotional repercussions. And thus what I really listen
for is the person who seeks to marry the two sides: to serve a
higher purpose in a way that brings them continual joy. I am always
listing to hear such tones from my own voice.
Sat, 12 Nov 2005 Filed in:
Poems
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Wed, 02 Nov 2005 Filed in:
Journal
error: (error “Cannot find any
publishing styles to use”) This theory has been part of my thinking
since it first occurred to me several years ago. As I remember, it
happened while I was still working a regular job. Back then I was
very interested in planning and how to arrange my life to be most
effective (which is still an interest — just not in the detailed
fashion of before). As I sat and made my daily plans, I saw very
clearly what I intended to happen each day. The days were part of a
progressive plan that moved from month to month, ostensibly toward
some specific goal. What I noticed, however, is that my life — as
seen from month to month — betrayed a very different character from
what my planning led me to think. I *knew* who I was, and the
choices I was making day to day, but somehow another creature was
appearing between the lines: a personality who lived only from
month to month. This concrete, well-defined, daily me became my
Short Man — the person I see over short time-scales; the other is
my Long Man, who strides across the years. Sometimes they are very
different, having opposite goals and means; other times they are
harmonized and we work together. Have you ever noticed how
sometimes you do things without explanation? An impulsive word or
deed, a sudden change of plans, an inspiration following from a
dream or a sudden moment. This is how the Long Man acts; he slips
between the moments of our otherwise ordered lives. Nor is he
easily put off. You can deny his existence altogether, but he still
finds ways of accomplishing his ends. At times the Long Man has
scared me to death. Do I want what he wants? Why is he moving me
down a certain road? *Who does his thinking*? Other times he’s
given me a sense of security, because although I have no idea how I
will achieve certain things, if the Long Man wants it also, I can
be pretty sure it will eventually happen. Nor is the Long Man
necessarily a moralist like my Shorter self. He seems to play out a
deeper life of the heart, which may go against what I believe to be
right. Other times he will stop me — in the end — from denying what
I truly believe in. He is neither good nor evil, just inexorably
true to my heart. Lately I have even begun to think there are many
Long Men: one who walks the months and years, another who passes
slowly through the stages of my life, and another who encompasses
the whole and whom I might call Destiny. And beyond these, there
might be another who spans a greater whole — my part in the
zeitgeist of mankind — and yet another who expresses the most basic
desires of my species. I even wonder if it does not continue, until
I would find that my Longest Man, the Infinite Man, is none other
than the role I play in God’s Being. To see the Long Man in action
requires either keeping a long diary, or having a good memory and
enjoying self-reflection. I first noticed the Long Man when I
started seeing certain things coming to fruition in my life, mostly
regarding career and relationships. I realized that these changes
were complex, and required too much “planning” to have simply
happened of themselves. There are times when one can even sense the
Long Man in another person, which prompts us to feel like we know
what the flavor of their future will be, despite what they imagine
for themselves. Both Long and Short Men seem to express facets of
one personality with many strata. They are only incompatible if
there is doubt and conflict in the individual. A harmonized mind
(in my experience) tends to move in a more synchronized fashion, as
if we possess the capacity for multi-level, simultaneous thinking
spanning multiple time frames. It’s amazing to me that the Long Men
“think”, but they do seem to express a coherent intent. This is a
side of myself I have wanted to cultivate and enlist the help of,
because some of my desired personal changes are daunting to the
Short Man Alone. To harness the power of all our dimensions would
allow us to grasp for futures which deny immediate comprehension.
Then one day I was reading a book by Greg Egan titled *Quarantine*,
in which he played with the idea of human’s control over the
function of quantum coherence in the observed universe. He
suggested that life naturally exists in a state of superposition
(cf., the movie “What the Bleep do we Know?”), but that humanity
possesses a unique capacity to collapse these states based on our
intention. For this reason, the rest of the beings in the universe
quarantine us, so that our particular biases and prejudices are not
allowed to decide what the rest of the universe will look like. The
main character in the book is surgically altered to be able to
exists in a natural state of superposition, only causing a collapse
when he consciously chooses. In this way, for example, he is able
to open combination locks by trying every possible combination
simultaneously, and “collapsing” the desired result. But, he
wonders, who chooses what is “desired”? He is separately conscious
— through superposition — in every one of these possible states. In
all but one state he experiences frustration and failure, while in
that chosen state he knows success. What troubles him is that there
must be another entity, a state of unity higher than all the
separate states, who chooses the outcome most profitable to the
whole. This “super identity” exists beyond nature, beyond
superposition, expressing its desires through the choice of which
superimposed state to collapse. This sounded an awful lot like the
Long Man I was experiencing! The Short Man always looks at
immediate details, while the Long Man seems to choose which *set*
of details his counterpart will face. Are we at each moment
presented with a multitude of possible futures, our Short Men
confronting them all, while a deeper aspect to our being — beyond
place and time - decides which of these is incorporated into our
realized future? Perhaps there are even Shorter Men than the
immediate will: the decisions of my organs, cells, part of cells —
even molecules. Looked at this way, I see myself more as a
pan-dimensional being, my feet in the raw stuff of my body and
surroundings, with my head and heart reaching up through levels I
can barely visualize. At this point, thinking of “I” is like taking
a slice through a being who crosses multiple potential realities.
Is the function of my soul a cohering aspect of Infinity to bring
out Its colors and flavors? Is my “self” just the experience of
witnessing that effect?
Thu, 27 Oct 2005 Filed in:
Journal
error: (error “Cannot find any
publishing styles to use”) Peter had asked, “I understand the power
and value that Faith itself *can* bring to a man, but what does it
really mean beyond self-induced freedom from uncertainty?” Dear
Peter, It is the posing of this question, inwardly, that creates
the dilemma, and the “split” you feel between two paths: one of a
resigned (yet putatively false) certainty, and one of an active
uncertainty. The former feels less than truly human, as if one had
“stopped” and given up everything to an illusory Super Power; while
the latter is more true to our condition, but comes with all the
attendant anxieties and concerns of that condition. The former is
ideal, pretty, maybe even heavenly; the latter is real — and in
that reality lies the more potent allure. I have no interest in a
God of the unreal, or in my mind coming to a halt. So how do I
resolve faith/acceptance/delighting in the Khidrs of life, with
introspection, questioning, searching, and that wonderful thirst
which propels men to greatness? The answer is: I do not resolve it,
because I do not face this question; and that is because *I do not
seek freedom from uncertainty*. What is happiness? To me it is
loving the current day as it is, and not looking forward to its
end, or another, better day to follow it. I know I am happy when
the current hour is absolutely enough, when I count myself lucky
for having lived, and when the people in my life fill me with awe
and wonder that I know such wonderful souls. This is not always
because life is perfect and rosy — often it is bumpy, like today
when I missed my flight, and then missed my metro stop and had to
walk a mile in the cold dark of a San Francisco night — but because
I choose to appreciate the wonder of life itself. I think happiness
is found in living — consciously living. It is not an external
state later applied to life, but the very condition of living
itself. It is only when a person does not see this, precisely
because they are seeking something better, that they face a
constant disappointment. Now, actively appreciating life, looking
with wonder at the sky and wondering how molecules bond to form
solid surfaces; thinking and thinking and thinking about the beauty
of things and how they work: this is an active mind, an alive mind.
It is not a mind resigned to the world, or one that says, “As long
as God knows how butterflies stay in the air, that is enough for
me.” I want to *know*, to understand airfoils and laminar flow,
pressure gradiants and thermals, and everything else. I want to
keep learning and questioning because this very process is my
mind’s life. To resign myself to a world that I don’t understand
and then move through it like a blissful zombie is not life; that
is just a sweet death. And to wonder over an over again where
happiness lies and quest to find it: this is not life either; it is
missing the point. Neither path is what I seek; neither bondage in
certainty, nor freedom from uncertainty. What I want is what life
is, uncertain, unsure, full of questions. My faith is that this
uncertain and unsure life is pretty cool. It’s interesting. I like
being alive. I don’t own much, I’m not famous, I’m not wealthy, but
I feel like a child most of the time and I get excited very easily.
I don’t have questions about what Truth is, because I’m not looking
for Truth anymore — for Truth is all around me. Life is truth,
*living is truth*. *The fact of using your mind to look for truth
is truth*. It’s not seeing this which makes the whole thing so
damnably complex. We are looking for what’s right under our nose,
and then we wonder why it’s so hard to find. I question always, not
because I’m hoping to find a final Answer at the end of all that
questioning, to put to rest all my doubts and fears, but because
the questioning itself is fun. Finding new answers is exciting;
learning new things satisfies my mind. I do it for the experience,
not the end or what I might “reap” from the effort. In our culture
we look so much to the end, the product, the conclusion. We think
Truth is something we can find, and that once we find it our search
will be over and we can put it up on our mantle for all to see.
Now, we think, our suffering will end, our uncertainty will
disappear, we can finally go to sleep. At the end of a hard day,
one deserves a rest, no? Well, in a way our suffering does end:
when pain ceases to hurt so much — when Moses pierces the lesson of
Khidr — in a way uncertainty does disappear: when not knowing
becomes part of the adventure. But in reality there is no end; the
experience of living never ends. It only transforms from one form
to another: from child to adult, material to immaterial, from
experiences of the body to those of mind and soul. We are always
changing, moving, becoming. This itself is the truth of living; not
what we imagine ourselves to be heading toward. So to me, God is
like a best friend who’s given me consciousness so that I might
enjoy the beauty of His being. However, His being is not beautiful
in any textbook way, like a single Mona Lisa hanging on a gallery
wall. That’s idealized, refined beauty. Rather, God’s beauty is so
infinite and broad that it requires training the eye to see it all.
And the more we train and educate our souls, the more of it we will
perceive. However, I do not train my inward eye toward some final
end, some cessation of the training; I do it for the sake of the
beauties I see. And in always wanting more, I continue on, never
seeking rest and never begruding this movement ever-upward. I don’t
play the game for the final longsword +5 at the end — but because
the graphics are cool and the story is fun. *The playing is the
truth of the game*; the seeing is the truth of beauty; the living
is the truth of life. Forget the Truth of schools and scholars;
Truth is in your reading of this e-mail right now. Do you feel it?
God’s nearness around your shoulders and in your chest — like your
body itself is a creation of His love? Question if you have a
desire to question, *but because you want to question*, not because
people have told you to seek answers to endless questions. To
desire certainty is like wishing not to be part of this existence;
to loathe uncertainty is to loathe the basic condition of life
itself. Why should Faith be something to take us away from what
life is? God created life. In my mind, what He desires most is for
us to dig in with all we’ve got that we might appreciate and
experience the many moments of wonder He’s placed there for the
seeing — like an endless procession of beautiful longwords in an
infinitely varied game. If life doesn’t appear that way, then I
say: look again. Are you seeing what’s there, or seeing what’s it
not, like looking at an existential negative? Look long and deep,
and when you find yourself lost in the vision, you will know at
that moment what truth and happiness are.
Wed, 26 Oct 2005 Filed in:
Journal
error: (error “Cannot find any
publishing styles to use”) Peter Lee sent in a comment and question
regarding the last few blog entries, which I found so well
expressed I asked for his permission to post it here. I will follow
with my response to his closing questions tomorrow. Here is what he
wrote me: “I’ve also just begun my adventures on NWN [Neverwinter
Nights] a couple of days ago, it is a remarkable game. :) “However,
I must admit that I am quite baffled in how you drew the parallel
of such fantastic journey with our own. “I find these games to be
of such delight precisely because it is so *different* than how
life really is. Such games always imply a positive experience, i.e.
your progress is an absolute function of the additive. I currently
don’t find life to adhere to the same formulae… although it is
quite likely that you may disagree. “For one, I have no idea what
I’m living for. Well, that is not entirely correct. I do have ideas
about what I’m living for, I just do not truly understand those
very ideas. Not only that, I am not certain if I will ever fully
understand those ideas, so my life’s quest always converges to a
*single* idea: a quest for Truth. “Living for Happiness, Love, Joy,
Acceptance, Understanding, Freedom, Success, Wealth, Comfort, etc.
ultimately falls back on what you consider those ideas to mean. But
what *is* Happiness? What *is* Love? How do you know if you are on
the right track to attaining these ideals? How do you even know if
your understanding of these ideals is satisfactory enough to lead
you to better understanding, ultimately taking you on the right
path for finding them? Even if you are not certain what it is that
you seek, is it possible for you to have found it? “Here you may
entertain a concept of God. In His grace, you are exactly where you
should be. In His wisdom, you substitute your ignorance with His
guiding hand. In Him, you graft perfection into life. In Him, you
find raazi. “But doesn’t that mean there is no more quest for
Truth? We have found it. Truth is divine, given by grace and
guidance, in His mystery it is endowed, and in His humor it is made
known. In prayers you express your intent, and in His intervention,
you are given what you seek… even if you may or may not understand
what you thought you were seeking has been made known to you
because who truly understands the mind of God? “This is the fork in
the road that I have been staring at for some time now. In one, I
seek God and re-engineer life to operate in the fantasy adventure
world formulae, the absolute additive, always progressing forward,
looking for my next sword, since in Faith I can rest in comfort
that I will find it. I will seek Khidr, ultimately to wield my
blade in absolute authority of the divine. In another, I seek what
is Undefined, following a path with infinite sign-posts, accepting
the unfortunate possibility that I will never find what I am
looking for, and that I may never find my next sword. I will seek
Moses, except bear my questions with unflinching conviction in the
properness of its utterance. “I must admit, this is not the first
time I’ve been at this fork. I have once embraced Faith without
question. But it is a hazardous and difficult path to follow. I
have tasted of peace, but never free from the question of its
origin. That I may have Faith in any of my own choosing to serve
any of my own ideals has shattered my fantasy time and time again,
throwing me back to my quest for Truth. “I sometimes miss the
innocence of my Faith, the comfort of completeness that it offers.
Deep down, I feel a stirring whenever I entertain thoughts of His
voice, bringing endowment of divine purpose and knowledge, to have
Truth be made known and to call me forth from the multitude with a
command marking me His… such fanciful dreams of empowerment and
freedom! What wonder if my Faith *was* Truth! Yet I am continually
repulsed by its premise, the self-evident nature of its dogma, that
it grows with power in acceptance, not in questioning. “John, how
do you resolve your inner conflict of the meaning and the Truth of
Faith? I’m simply referring to your act of Faith, not what that
Faith is actually composed of. I understand the power and value
that Faith itself *can* bring to a man, but what does it really
mean beyond self-induced freedom from uncertainty? “A world without
God is a frightening and an unsettling place. Some may even call it
“meaningless”. But as far as I can tell, it still is the same
world. Only the lens of reflection has changed; of what I may see
and find that Faith may have blinded is the current quest of my
choosing. “I wonder what will be my next sword?”
Sat, 22 Oct 2005 Filed in:
Journal
error: (error “Cannot find any
publishing styles to use”) I love to play fantasy adventure games
on my laptop, especially right now *Neverwinter Nights*. In those
sort of games, it’s typical to start out as a fighter character who
wields a plain, simple sword. It’s a good sword, capable of doing a
fair bit of damage, but there’s not much sexy about it. Just a long
piece of metal for bashing in the heads of a few kobolds. Next
kobold. As you journey on, sure enough the character undoes enough
kobolds to begin raising in levels, until the amazing day when he
finds his first longsword +1. At the beginning this is a wonderful
event, because, you see, it’s a magical sword. It almost glows with
possibilities. It’s likely has very little weight, and shines with
its own light when you wield it. It probably has its own name. It
reminds of the day when I traded in a Toshiba laptop for my first
Apple PowerBook. It was like going from a longsword to a longsword
+1. (There are many changes in my life which bear a striking
similarity to the feelings evoked by adventure games). A few days
ago I decided to upgrade to one of the newest PowerBooks, which
were announced this past week. I made a little table to determine
how much “better” they were, and found they had improved in no less
than fourteen categories. Yes, I had found my longsword +2 — with
added fire damage!! So as I was saying my prayers at the end of the
night and getting excited about the new laptop — friends who know
me well understand the spiritual connection I have to computers,
which are, for me, a mystical window into the worlds of the mind —
it occurred to me that in every game I’ve ever played there has
always been a longsword +4, and a +5, and so on until you find a
weapon named “Demonslayer” or some such, with abilities so amazing
it makes it hard to sleep at night. It was at this moment I
realized: we are always heading toward something better. I don’t
mean “better” in the sense that what we have is no good; a
longsword +1 in the hands of a level 3 fighter is a fine thing, and
it’s worthy of much appreciation the first day you find. But as a
character progresses in ability, he will need better equipment —
and lo and behold that equipment is always there to be found. There
may be challenges and difficulties along the path, but after every
mountain is another valley full of new goods and magic items. This
realization tempered my excitement somewhat — now knowing each new
thing is stepping stone, there to be treasured until giving way for
something better suited to our future — and it also showed me there
is never a cause to worry: what is needed can always be found. I
suppose this is a matter of faith, since my belief in these things
is tied to my belief that God is willing to provide them. It both
detaches me from seeing each new longsword as the “end all, be
all”, and fills me with a sense of excitement at wondering what
each new sword will look like — whether I find it in this world or
the next. It gave me a distinct feeling that things will never
cease becoming more wonderful.
Wed, 19 Oct 2005 Filed in:
Journal
error: (error “Cannot find any
publishing styles to use”) What if progress along the mystical path
toward God is measured by our capacity to love our own creation?
According to what I called “the reflexive principle” a few weeks
ago, this love gauges the amount of love I have to offer the world
around me; and which sets the bar for my faith in how much God
loves me. This faith has to do with my certainty that my prayers to
find Him will be answered; or that He wishes to assist me; or that
after asking for something my attitude is not, “Why would He do
that for me?”, but rather, “Why wouldn’t He?” I don’t mean
self-love by saying this, which is usually love for an imagined
identity rather than the real stuff of who we are; I mean love for
all the beauty and ugliness, the imperfections and the things we do
well; I mean sitting down to prayer at the end of the day and
thanking God for having made *this* the seat of my awareness. In a
way, it’s about being *raazi* concerning those aspects of my being
which are largely beyond my control. This opens an eye (the eye of
a lover, who sees beyond all “flaws”) to who and what we truly are.
The opposite of this is self-hatred, where is most of the focus is
on who we might become. In fact, we hate even our efforts toward
it, such that we hardly believe we can accomplish the perfections
we’ve set for ourselves. We are rotten at the core, and only by
shunning our creation, and bending it to some nobler end, can we
hope to salvage something from this ruined existence. Thinking on
it, I found that some religious and philosophical institutions have
enshrined this mentality, becoming a sort of institutionalized
anti-humanism. They see us starting from a point of sin, or lack,
or ignorance, and most of the “point of life” is in escaping that
original condition. By validating a sense of self-loathing, and
indicating that this journey is the only hope of redeeming a being
who otherwise shouldn’t have been, they lock people into a fervent
wish to escape their own skins. But by loving our own creation, I
mean to say that we began whole and perfect, as a seed begins
perfect. Everything the tree is meant to be lies within the seed,
it only needs tending and nurturing to bring out all of its fruits.
What it needs is warmth and encouragement, not the prodding sense
that as a sapling, it’s hardly grown enough. What child would
respond well if constantly compared to the adult who it was yet to
be? I wonder even if we don’t halt ourselves along the path of our
true growth by that loathing, like a plant hidden in darkness. Can
we open our arms fully to the sunlight when we don’t believe we’re
worth it? Or is real happiness found in being pleased with what
is.
Fri, 14 Oct 2005 Filed in:
Journal
error: (error “Cannot find any
publishing styles to use”) I was asked recently what I thought
about the nature of beauty and truth. Since these are typical
questions for Philosophy, I wanted to know my presents thoughts on
the matter. After a moment’s reflection, I replied that I think the
experience of the present moment is all we can ever know of truth
and beauty. Anything beyond these — such as the principles and
ideas we abstract from experience — exist in the realm of human
concepts and limitations, creating an impression of the real world
which my uncle calls “the phenomenal world”. But thinking further,
my opinion has changed. It is not the present moment which holds
beauty, but a capacity of the present to reveal it. It’s like
looking into a mirror: you see whatever is reflected at that
instant. Take the mirror aside, apart from what’s showing, and
there is nothing but your own face staring back at you. Is beauty
“in” the mirror? No. But it possesses a capacity to reveal it. Then
what is it that we look at? I remember seeing an old castle in
Germany, which had been standing for many centuries. It was in good
shape, with huge stone blocks and impressive, iron-banded doors. It
presented a convincing image of strength and stability. That
perception of strength and stability is what my uncle calls the
phenomenal: existing only in the momentary experience of those who
perceive it (however they perceive it) — a trick of time and shape
(cf. Qur’an 27:88, comparing mountains to clouds). Peel aside the
glossy exterior of most buildings and likely there are veins of
rot, rat warrens, insect burrows, and other things we’d rather not
know about. As the veil of time is lifted — moving into a distant
future — that castle is already crumbling into dust, its memory
fading away until the space is only an empty field again. That we
are beings of phenomenal experience makes this perfectly okay,
since we’re not asking the castle to endure forever. Or are we? The
image of the castle certainly feels almost like a promise — and we
want the physical object to make good on that promise. We put a
certain degree of trust in it, invest some of our heart in it. We
begin to have faith in it. And this is where I think we go wrong.
It’s not that the phenomenal world is a sham — any more than a
mirror is a sham, though its images might still amaze — but that we
buy into it, expecting it to become something more. Even if we’re
told it’s just smoke and mirrors; that the whole, pretty world we
know is only dust and energy in manifold forms; we still want it to
end up real in the end. Because if it doesn’t, where else can we
turn? The man who stores up wealth in his bank account wants that
phenomenal wealth to somehow turn into real wealth, since the
phenomenal wealth of gold and dollars seems to hold a certain
promise. Yet it doesn’t. Christ warned us of the easy
susceptibility of mortal wealth to decay and theft. But it just
feels so real and solid; can’t we believe it is? This hoping — a
faith that the mirage will become the real river — leads to a
constant sense of dissatisfaction with life. It’s just never turns
out “as it should”. Every generation for century after century has
expected better times around the corner: religion, philosophy,
science, poets, have written and dreamed that one day, the
phenomenal world is going to turn around and finally become what it
promised to be. In that day, decay and theft will either be gone or
mitigated. If it doesn’t happen in “this life”, it’s believed to
happen in some other life. But the consistent idea is that present
reality just isn’t quite right, and that we’re all waiting for
existence to finally get its act together. A natural consequence of
the failings of phenomenal reality to satisfy is the belief that it
has failed because somehow we failed: either by being essentially
unsuitable for a better reality, or having failed in the
prerequisites to achieve it. The falsehood of the phenomenal
becomes a criticism of our own hope in it; and this, I fear, can
only lead to an condemning cycle of self-hatred. When the world
itself is a constant reproof, to where can a person turn? But I
think this is a problem we’ve created for ourselves. In wishing the
phenomenal to be more “real”: more enduring, permanent, grand,
perfect — those eternal qualities we glimpse in the ephemeral —
we’ve created a dissatisfaction which demands an answer: Why
shouldn’t it be? The mind tries to resolve this flaw in the world
and comes up with the idea that we screwed it up: that we didn’t
get it right and must labor to right those wrongs. Religiously it
becomes a perception of moral flaw; scientifically, a flaw of
understanding; artistically, a flaw of technique or inspiration.
The imperfections of the world around us *become our imperfections
in our own eyes*, and this, because we believed it should have been
better. What is the real world? Plato’s “real real”? When we see
past time and space, past distinction and multiplicity, what
presents itself to the mind’s eye? What is it we keep wanting the
phenomenal to become? The alchemists wanted to reach it, to
discover the secrets of capturing the real, in order to restore the
arts of perfection and ever-lasting health. They wanted to bring
its quintessential nature into the human sphere so as to correct
the flaws they perceived in the world around them. Who hasn’t been
striving to “bridge the gap”, to reconnect the soul with the
reflections of God it perceives in the mirage of life? In some way,
I think everyone is trying to bridge the phenomenal into the real,
or imbue the phenomenal with its qualities. They want the facade of
granite and steel to become a real building that can never fade;
they want their wealth to become an unassailable quality whose
value does not decay; they want their ideal to reflect truths that
are as unyielding to argument as truth itself. In so many ways, we
take the phenomenal to be real, and then try to patch up the weak
spots so it somehow becomes the real. In all of this there is a
critical misjudgment, which I think begins with *believing in the
images of the phenomenal*, and mistaking the forms for their
essence. It’s not that any one form contains the essence, but that
*the essence lives by the infinity of its forms*, a kind of
Aristotelian home for Plato’s perfections to dwell in. It is all
one masterpiece, not a broken promise. We make the errors in it
that we see, by demanding something of the eye it can’t deliver: a
perception of flawlessness in a world where flaw is the salt of
beauty.
Tue, 04 Oct 2005 Filed in:
Journal
error: (error “Cannot find any
publishing styles to use”) In Arabic there is a word which means:
accepting, contented, pleased with, satisfied, acquiescent,
agreeable. In mystical texts it is found in connection with a
believer’s status toward the will of God, as in “raazi be-qazaa
baashi” (“be thou content with the Will of God”), or “raazi
be-rizaaye-khodaa” (“being content with whatever pleases God”).
Becoming raazi, however, is a profound journey. It involves not
only the mind — to perceive the will of God — but the heart, in
accepting and being pleased by it. It is the difference between
knowing that “God works in mysterious ways”, and being comfortable
with the strangest and most mundane of those mysteries. For
example, God knows that our future can take innumerable paths, and
He is always affecting our circumstances to lead us down the best
path. I know that some don’t believe in such an “interactive God”,
but I think the efficacy of prayer implies a divine responsiveness
to our present condition. At any rate, who knows what each of our
possible futures might hold? In one, I get home after a long drive;
in another, I might experience a fatal accident and the end of my
life and chances. The difference between the two might be only a
few seconds — mere moments! And so, not wishing that my life end
today, God slows me down by those couple seconds I need to survive.
The form of the slowing uses whatever is at hand: possibly a car to
cut me off, causing me to brake suddenly. If one is “far from the
mystery”, the event seems like an aggravating, momentary thwart to
my plans; yet maybe that car just came between my future life and
impending death. *You never see the car you didn’t hit you.* So I
wonder if that car cutting me off is not “the hand of God”, holding
me back for a few seconds in order to craft for me a better future
— using the least amount of interference possible. Becoming raazi
seems to mark a dividing line between knowledge and understanding,
between `ilm (knowledge in the head) and `irfaan (knowledge in the
heart). A classic example of this distinction is found in the
Qur’an, in a story where Moses meets the deathless prophet, Khidr.
I’ll retell that story here in my own words, based on what appears
after verse 65 of chapter 18: One day Moses and one of His servants
were walking between the “two seas”, when they came upon one of the
servants whom God had endowed with knowledge (whom commentators
believe was Khidr). Moses asked Khidr if He could join him in his
travels, because he hoped to learn something of the higher truths
God had taught him. To this Khidr replied, “You will not be able to
hold patience with me, for how can you be patient with something
when your understanding is incomplete?” Moses replied that He would
be very patient with Khidr, and would not disobey him in anything.
So Khidr allowed Him to follow him, but asked that He say nothing
about whatever He might see — unless Khidr himself should start the
discussion. They went along together until at one point they were
in a boat, and Khidr suddenly opened a hole in the bottom of the
boat to sink it. Moses exclaimed that he was trying to drown them,
and how very strange that was! But Khidr only said, “Didn’t I say
that you wouldn’t have patience with me?” Moses regretted this
outburst, and asked Khidr to forgive him for forgetting his vow. So
they continued, until they met a young man, whom Khidr instantly
slew. Moses shouted, “How could you slay an innocent who has done
nothing? What an evil thing you’ve done!” Again Khidr replied,
“Didn’t I say you wouldn’t be able to have patience with me?” Moses
again regretted his criticism, and said, “If I say another word,
remove me from your company, for you would be fully justified in
doing so.” Then they continued on, until they came to a town whose
inhabitants refused either food or hospitality. But when they found
a wall on the point of falling down, Khidr set to work and repaired
the wall. Moses said, “Surely you could ask for recompense after
all that work!” But Khidr only said, “This is the parting between
you and me; though first I will tell you the meaning of those
things which tested your patience. “As for the boat, it belonged to
certain men in dire want, who used it to ply the water. I rendered
it unserviceable for a time, because there was a certain king after
them who seized on every boat by force. “As for the youth, his
parents were people of Faith, and we feared he would grieve them by
his future rebellion and ingratitude, so we desired the Lord to
give them another son who would be pure of conduct. “As for the
wall, it belonged to two orphans in the town. There was a buried
treasure beneath it to which they were entitled. Since their father
had been a righteous man, the Lord desired they should attain full
maturity and recover their treasure — which would not have happened
had the treasure been found too soon. “This is the meaning of those
things about which you could not be patient.” Sufi writers have
referred to this story as an illustration of the difference between
two kinds of men who devote themselves to God: those who are
conversant with the Law and obey, like Moses; and those who see
beyond the Law and rejoice at the wisdom of God’s ways. Moses was
inclined to judge the actions of Khidr by His own standards —
according to the word of the Law — while Khidr acted out the
greater plan of God (which sometimes contravenes the lesser). I
don’t think the purpose of the story is to say that mystic
understanding confers an authority to act like Khidr, which some
have believed, but that if we were to meet with Khidr along our
Path, perhaps we might appreciate him as a servant of the better
good, rather than judge him harshly. What form does our Khidr take?
Perhaps he is that car which just cut me off on the road —
seemingly acting one way, but to another purpose. If we meet our
Khidr — in the shape of our enemies, disappointments, and apparent
cruelties of God — should we react as Moses had done? Would we be
able to keep patience with his company? To be raazi means that we
could, that we have gone from `ilm to `irfan, and that our
reactions are no longer governed by the limitations of mortal
vision. As Bahá’u’lláh wrote of a lover who had been ruthlessly
chased by a watchman (his Khidr) into the court of his long-lost
beloved: Now if the lover could have looked ahead, he would have
blessed the watchman at the start, and prayed on his behalf, and he
would have seen that tyranny as justice; but since the end was
veiled to him, he moaned and made his plaint in the beginning. Yet
those who journey in the garden land of knowledge, because they see
the end in the beginning, see peace in war and friendliness in
anger.
Sat, 01 Oct 2005 Filed in:
Poems
error: (error “Cannot find any
publishing styles to use”)
Thu, 29 Sep 2005 Filed in:
Journal
error: (error “Cannot find any
publishing styles to use”) An idea I’ve been working with in my
spiritual pursuits lately is something I think of as “the reflexive
principle”. It’s basically a formula which states that how I treat
myself is generally how I will treat others (over time), and how I
fundamentally believe God treats me. For example, if I am strict
with myself, I will tend to be judgmental of others and believe
that God is strict with me. This is because I would be espousing
strictness as a form of truth, which lifts it to a universal
experience of the character of life. If I work on the principle of
generosity and bounty, meanwhile, it only becomes a natural
expression of my inward state when I am generous with myself. This
tends to open up my generosity to others, and my faith that God is
willing to be generous with me. The reflexive principle reflects a
triune relationship in my connection to God: that how I see God,
how I see myself, and how I see others are all elements of one
thing. I think we have only one central bias — at the deepest
levels — which expresses itself in these three channels
concurrently. I use this principle in several ways, such as finding
out what my heart really thinks about God, myself and the world. If
I’m harsh with myself, I discover the belief that God should be
harsh with me; if I’m truly happy with others, I see that I’m happy
with myself; if I view God as authoritarian, I find society to be
filled with laws and requirements. Every combination seems to
express this reflective principle, to the extent that I wonder if
the three are actually separate. What if I *am* my self, my God,
and my society? I mean, my perception of the three can only dwell
within myself. As purely external entities, they don’t exist for me
as objects of perception. In other words, what I see is a
reflection of myself upon those things, and thus what the reflexive
principle tells me is that I can find out more about my essential
beliefs by looking inward. That the God I relate to is not found in
my professed beliefs at first surprised me. The reflexive principle
says that I can only believe in God as a friend insofar as I’m
capable of being such to myself — even though my Faith says that He
will always be more so. It is not about what is, but what I have
faith in as being. Thus I improve my relationship to myself,
people, and God always in lock-step. One leg of the triangle cannot
outstrip the others, without some degree of falseness creeping into
my relations (i.e., a belief about God I don’t have faith in, a
belief about myself that doesn’t reflect how I treat myself, etc).
In one sense, I see this set of relationships as a fractal design:
where God is the fractal itself, Infinite in scale; the world is
the diversity of its patterns; and my self is but one point within
its immensity: individual and yet nonetheless infinite as well,
possessing the same inherent design as that reflected in the whole.
That one small part wants to understand itself can be done by
looking to what’s around, and finding that within myself is a
mysterious, complete identity with the Whole: “He hath known
himself who hath known God.”
Sun, 25 Sep 2005 Filed in:
Journal
error: (error “Cannot find any
publishing styles to use”) Yesterday I drove up to Aspen, Colorado
on what might have been one of the prettiest days of the year. The
weather was cool but warm, the trees were changing color in
indescribable patterns of brilliant gold and yellow and red… I was
able to capture just [[gallery/Colorado/Aspen/index.html][a few
pictures]], although it does nothing to equal the beauty of the
trip itself. One a day like that one, I realized that when men grow
tired of the world, it’s the world of men they’ve had too much of.
Beauty like this seemed like God’s face, cloaked in the form of
leaves and branches. It was among the most beautiful drives I’ve
ever taken.
Tue, 13 Sep 2005 Filed in:
Journal
error: (error “Cannot find any
publishing styles to use”) Been having lots of fun with the new
camera lately. It seems that shooting from a tripod greatly
improves the quality of the images (which is really no surprise).
So here are
[[gallery/Colorado/Garden%20of%20the%20Gods/index.html][some new
images]] from the “Garden of the Gods” in Colorado Springs. Also, a
few more pictures have been added to the
[[gallery/Illinois/Chicago/index.html][Chicago gallery]].
Tue, 06 Sep 2005 Filed in:
Journal
error: (error “Cannot find any
publishing styles to use”) On the subject of spiritual things, I
think that true religion always brings with it joy and happiness.
Whenever these two are missing, something has either been lost or
not yet found. Spirit is like a vibrant, beating heart; a shining
light glowing from the center of human life; a palpable energy that
reaches out and touches hearts. Religion educates us how to
experience this reality, how to draw on its energies and share them
with other people. This “plugging in” would produce the abundance
of spirit and joy I keep reading about in the lives of the martyrs.
But how to transform? Without this spirit, people are like unlit
lamps, or mirrors in a dark room. Human reality is one of the most
beautiful things in existence, but it must be “turned on” to reach
its potential. Spiritual transformation kindles the lamp, and turns
the mirror to the sun. It’s like unveiling a masterpiece so that
everyone can see how truly wondrous it is. And I believe people
have this beauty within them at all times; it only waits to be
awakened. Turn a mirror toward the sun and even if it is dusty it
will glow brightly. Transformation, then, is not changing, but a
shift of focus. When the heart is concerned with material things,
it is dark and forlorn; when it turns toward the Divine, it becomes
bright. Whatever the heart is occupied with, it reflects. Thus,
when a person is fully concentrated on God, they will begin to
manifest godly things. The real trick is what is meant by “God”. If
one’s concept of God is too abstract and separated from the world,
focusing on it will tend to turn people away from the world too
much. They will not appreciate the beauty of life and will tend to
forget about others. They begin to see material things as “bad” and
their heart slowly turns sour. Because the joy and happiness are
missing, I would say that such an idea of God is wrong. We know God
is near when we feel the melodies of heaven reverberating within
us. God is heat and light: can shadow ever be its substitute? I
think real attention to God would result in a deep appreciation of
the world — such that even the smallest things are cherished and
seem valuable. And it will turn the heart towards people. What kind
of “God” would produce this transformation? If spirituality is
falling in love with God, and virtue simply the natural behavior of
a lover, then love of what God would produce a Bahá’í both in
spirit and deed? It would be an idea which gives value to the
world, which reveals people as glorious and wondrous in nature, and
which unveils secrets within the smallest of things: by which atoms
become lights and suns, and drops reveal the mystery of oceans: in
terms of which nothing is ever meaningless, and every moment of
life reveals a deep and everlasting love. What form of belief
yields this? I’m not sure it can even be named. What my heart turns
toward, can I ever tell it? Any attempt at words would repeat the
very mistake I mean to avoid. God — as He relates to human life —
is something profoundly alive, brilliant, warm, full of hope,
bountiful, and glorious. When I say “Allah’u’Abha”, I’m not just
saying that God is most glorious: I’m actually defining for myself
what God is. Wherever there is glory, I see His face; whenever I
feel wonder, I am touched by His presence; at whatever time I’m
lost in awe, then I know He is near. And so I believe that
spiritual transformation does not happen by effort alone. Our
efforts do not make us into something we’re not; they open our eyes
and purify our heart so that we can see what is already around us —
and has always been with us, “standing within thee, mighty,
powerful and self-subsisting”. Blind thine eyes, that thou mayest
behold My beauty; stop thine ears, that thou mayest hearken unto
the sweet melody of My voice; empty thyself of all learning, that
thou mayest partake of My knowledge; and sanctify thyself from
riches, that thou mayest obtain a lasting share from the ocean of
My eternal wealth. When we reach this state, we become a pure,
receiving organ, capable of detecting the fragrance of God from
great distances: So great shall be the discernment of this seeker
that he will discriminate between truth and falsehood even as he
doth distinguish the sun from shadow. If in the uttermost corners
of the East the sweet savours of God be wafted, he will assuredly
recognize and inhale their fragrance, even though he be dwelling in
the uttermost ends of the West. At that point, the seeker goes into
the world and searches for his Beloved. Where will she be found?
What form will she take? He seeks and seeks, casting away every
idea and conception, waiting until his heart thrums with nearness
to his Love. I think this is why it cannot be told: because every
seeker must find this Reality for him or herself, must go through
the process of purification and discovery before he can fully
appreciate the Truth. Yet after a person finds the Beloved, He
becomes the point and origin of all transformation and virtue:
“Whensoever the light of Manifestation of the King of Oneness
settleth upon the throne of the heart and soul, His shining
becometh visible in every limb and member.” This is gaining access
to the world of spirit, and discovering how to “soar in the air
even as thou walkest upon the earth”. `Abdu’l-Bahá says: Those
souls that, in this day, enter the divine kingdom and attain
everlasting life, although materially dwelling on earth, yet in
reality soar in the realm of heaven. Their bodies may linger on
earth but their spirits travel in the immensity of space. For as
thoughts widen and become illumined, they acquire the power of
flight and transport man to the kingdom of God. These are a people
whose happiness does not come from effort or “trying”, but as a
result of the world they experience. Their vision has been
transformed, not their substance. Once a person sees the glories
which have been deposited in human reality, and witnesses the
miracles attending every second our lives, how can he not be
overwhelmed with gratitude, and at every moment repeat the
tradition, “O Lord, increase my astonishment at Thee!” Getting to
this point does require some effort. Bahá’u’lláh says, “Labor is
needed, if we are to seek Him; ardor is needed, if we are to drink
of the honey of reunion with Him…” Yet once the fire has been lit,
it does not need to be lit twice. It will burn as fiercely as the
fuel you feed it. If every created thing, if every *atom* became a
door leading to the Ancient of Days and a cause for wonder and
amazement, how brightly such a fire would blaze! So in serving
people, I do not want to “try” to serve them anymore. I want it to
become impossible not to serve them. If a person you loved entered
the room, would you be able to sit still and not look after their
interests? Love generates virtue as a fire produces heat. This, to
me, is the secret of transformation: find God — I mean, not an idea
but the true, spiritual reality — devote your heart utterly to Him,
and the rest of life will fall joyfully into place.
Fri, 02 Sep 2005 Filed in:
Poems
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Tue, 30 Aug 2005 Filed in:
Journal
error: (error “Cannot find any
publishing styles to use”) The other day I had a chance to go
hiking with my father at the Seven Falls park in Colorado Springs.
There are several photographs from the hike we took
[[gallery/Colorado/Seven%20Falls/index.html][here]]. And no, there
are no people in the pictures! As a few have noticed, my artistic
side resonates more with the idea of an empty landscape.
Mon, 29 Aug 2005 Filed in:
Journal
error: (error “Cannot find any
publishing styles to use”) The past few months I have been working
on a theory of personality to help me understand some of my
behaviors. It follows roughly from a few earlier thoughts — when I
wrote about [[j2004#ahousedivided][a house divided]] — where I
hoped to find a method of self-improvement that did not require a
constant, inward struggle. I think the pressures of modern living
have placed demands on us to act a certain way before we understand
the reasons for those actions. This is especially so how because
people’s lives interrelate so much that there isn’t great deal
tolerance for odd behavior. Faced with one set of impulses and
desires, and another set of prescriptions for living filled with
expectations, we learn to fragment ourselves very early in life,
presenting our best side to the public and hiding our darker side
until even we can’t see it. This darker side is dark, not in the
sense of evil, but because it is hidden from view. Sometimes its
contents are indeed horrible, but probably not always as horrible
as they seem. As a result, this side is left unexamined, making it
very hard to form accurate judgments about is character. One thing
for certain though: the dark side is filled with energy and
potency. It exists because our actions are at variance with our
deepest urges. Conversely, the “light” side of our nature can lack
genuine spirit if it is only a prescription with no connection to
our urges. All of the dark side is to some extent desired, but only
a portion of the light side overlaps with our basic interests.
These areas of overlap between our desires and the accepted forms
of behavior provide us with an outlet for creative energies —
otherwise the individual finds himself frequently indulging the
dark side to find sufficient release. The light side — often
socially and morally determined — is famous for priding itself on
being “selfless”, and thus not only failing to consider the
individual’s desires but actively ignoring them. It may even reach
the extreme of choosing the exact opposite of what the heart wants,
believing there to be more merit in rejecting what the self
desires. Since there are two origins of behavior: impulse and
determination, I think health lies in harmonizing the two —
blending short-term desires with long-term goals; enough release to
know daily joy, but enough control for overall happiness and
direction; and neither to excess. Further, the dark parts that must
stay dark — the desire to harm, for example — are not condemned,
but found an accepted channel, perhaps only in fantasy. I don’t
believe guilt is an effective way to “keep on track”, except to the
extent that it makes us aware of our decisions and their
consequences. There is no reason to loathe any of our impulses,
simply to decide how to express them. Also with our moral choices,
not to make them in defiance of the self, but in reference to what
will complete us and integrate us best with the world around us.
Based on this division, I find in myself the greatest power and
energy come from my dark, less evident side; but my best wisdom
comes from my light, determined side. This is why my passions
sometimes override what I know is best for me, because the two
sides experience momentary conflict between short-term and
long-term interests. Whichever side “wins” is sometimes a coin
toss, because I don’t want either side to have absolute dominion.
Who knows, sometimes making a mistake is the best way to learn.
What seems to matter most is fairness and making the best decisions
when times matter most — not striving for an illusory perfection
that I always feel guilty for not achieving. As the two sides reach
a greater respect for one another, I start to see them as two
aspects of a unity rather than as opposing sides. At times they
fight, but more often they find ways to cooperate: for the dark
side to offer its energies in service of the light, and the light
to choose options that consider the dark. It is not necessarily a
position of compromise, but of mutual interest. A compromise would
satisfy neither one for long — such as a morally ambiguous but pale
indulgence — but rather to find among the fields of possibility
options to satisfy more parts of me at once. This happens when I
serve society in a way that excites me, for example. The
crusader-type moralist would look down on this as a concession to
self-hood, and the rebel-type might see it as dancing to the tune
of the Man, but I see it as a fulfillment of self within a greater
field than self alone: something that benefits all parties, and not
just “self” or “not self”. In [[j2004#ahousedivided][my earlier
essay]] I had wondered how to achieve inward unity while aligning
myself with an outer purpose. I think the answer lies in marrying
the two — engaging self in the service of society. This creates a
perpetuating cycle, so that the energy source for activity is
constantly available and replenished and one’s motivation is at its
highest: both external and internal. It’s a framework that must
also remain flexible: sometimes a selfish indulgence, sometimes a
selfless correction, but which on the whole leads consistently to a
better end. Anything else seems to me so far to be either too
inhuman (a quest for perfection) or too dehumanizing (giving up on
perfecting anything).
Sun, 28 Aug 2005 Filed in:
Poems
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Sun, 28 Aug 2005 Filed in:
Journal
error: (error “Cannot find any
publishing styles to use”) Something that’s been puzzling me a lot
lately is my reaction to possible romantic relationships. When I
was younger I remember wanting to meet someone very much, and
getting into relationships almost as quickly as they became
available. But I realized in the end that either my personality is
not very amenable to living with another person (something I still
think may be true), or I’ve been finding women who don’t really
want the kind of person I am. These days I’m averse to any sort of
relationship other than friendship. When things start to get
closer, I pull back, sometimes harshly so. The mere thought of it
depresses me, and I find myself getting unhappier the more things
might develop with someone. It has led me to believe that I might
have been made for the hermit’s life, spending most of my time with
thoughts and other interests. But last night a realization struck
me with all the force of the truth, and I think I understand now
why I’ve been avoiding it — other than the usual reasons of fear
and uncertainty. What I was thinking about was love. Most of the
poems I’ve written about love start with the thought of a
particular person (or persons), with real inspiration coming from
the translation into the spiritual dimension. I’m thrilled by the
reality of love, and find my happiness wherever it occurs: love for
beauty, computers, ideas, people, food, etc. It doesn’t really
matter what prompts my experience of love, since they all seem to
share common traits that I connect back to their origin in God. In
this way I experience God through my love of the world. It’s been
my life’s ambition to learn how to love all things. This is no easy
task — many things still bother me and I wish for them to change,
as if to wipe them from my experience of life — but month by month
I learn more, and move further down that road. Life as I experience
it today is incomparably richer than what I knew as a young person.
It’s a labor I dream of, and I feel as if untold worlds await me
behind each new moment. I describe this as a pursuit of universal
love, or true love; but the world’s [[romantic.ideal][romantic
ideal]] seems to credit only exclusive loves. Everyone I talk to
wants love, but often they want only one or a few forms: love of a
person, career, family, etc. When I talk about universal love, some
suggest that it’s impossible for mortal beings, or flatly state
they don’t want such a thing! Of those who want it, many retain the
thought that it lies always beyond reach. But I intend to find this
universal love, this complete vision, or die having made of my life
an earnest attempt. Yet this also where I run into problems with
those who want the typical ideal. The modern romantic ideal
envisions one person as the primary focus of our capacity to love
(with a possible allowance for children, though some relationships
even suffer when children appear, because it distracts from that
singular mutual focus). In essence, one person becomes the “sink”
of the other’s best energies, and they the “source” for
replenishing them. By feeding each other in this way, the
relationship perpetuates with enough excess that some degree of
social involvement is possible. Too much external involvement,
however, deprives one side of the pair of what they need to
replenish that lost fuel. One cannot be the focus of another who is
too much outwardly occupied. This is the situation of an “unloved
spouse”, who must turn to others to get what he or she needs. This
dynamic is what I grew up believing in, and I used to see no
problem with it. I was even eager to participate. But I found in
the end *that my dream of universal love is incompatible with the
romantic ideal*, and I am unwilling to give up that dream. Why is
it so essential to me? Because I believe that if I can discover
true love for all things, then I can believe — with all my mind, my
heart and soul — that God loves all things in me. This is a form of
my quest for God, and it seems unreasonable and unjust for a person
to ask me to give up that quest. There are things we should never
ask of one another. The thing is, I have many loves — programming,
reading, thinking, photography, chess, and more — and almost all of
them require significant amounts of uninterrupted time to achieve
fruition. This fact has been called “selfish”, because I demand
time to myself to complete what I love. (To those who’ve said it,
my being “selfish” is usually paying attention to things other than
themselves — though they rarely see how selfish this claim of
selfishness is. If a man can never expect time to himself, how are
people to get anything done?) Under pressure to be less “selfish”,
I have bent to the ideal before: the belief that all my love and
attention should go to one person. But when my love turned again to
other things, the word “selfish” returned, and with it various
forms of jealousy: anger, resentment, vindictiveness. I’ve heard my
laptop called “the other woman” more than once, because I chose to
focus on it rather than the person I was with. When they’re around
they want it all! absolute focus and attention; an exclusive love
that ignores every other thing. Exclusive love, however, is the
anti-thesis of universal love. Rather than making progress in
learning to love all things, I experienced a constant pressure to
love one thing above all. However much I’ve heard the desire
expressed to watch my spirit to fly, I’ve felt an unconscious wish
to ground me. At times, it even seemed others wished to become my
God: a focus of worship, origin of laws, setter of standards. If I
happened to choose one of God’s laws above their interests, it
provoked anger. Faced with this demand to relinquish my universal
dream, I have at times relented. I’ve bent as far as I could, until
the bitterness of despair was too great. My dream and my romantic
love became at odds: pursuing my passion began to hurt the one I
loved. How can I withhold my heart in this way and still have
something left to give? What in the world was being requested of
me?? But I can no more sacrifice my soul’s life than I could
violate my integrity in the name of a just cause. They want a
passion from me that asks for the muting of all other passions.
Unsurprisingly, I became more and more dead inside as this
progressed. I stop writing, creating, seeing people. My life became
an endless hope for escape. I could neither move nor stop. My
existence began to decay. And when things ended this way, I faced a
terrible realization (this is what I became conscious of last
night): *Where did all my love go*? I spent years trying to devote
the majority of my heart and soul to one person after another —
curtailing my writing, hobbies, and creative output — but where is
that love now? As far as I can see, it was wasted. Whenever I
pursue the universal love, the results affect large numbers of
people: those who use the software I write, who read my thoughts,
experience my friendship or find beauty in my art. In this way I
feel worthwhile, because people around the world receive the fruits
of my love. If one doesn’t care for something, another will. I
don’t have to tailor my work to one bias — there are as many
perspectives as there are people. As long as I honestly love what I
do, someone out there will appreciate it. The demands of exclusive
love are the opposite of this. Rather than benefiting whomever is
receptive, I must aim my love at one mind, one point of view, one
set of prejudices. If they don’t appreciate it, it falls flat; if
they do, they might keep it to their own heart. The fruits of this
love rarely reach beyond that one person, unless it’s an
outward-directed activity we both share in. As a result I can spend
years devoting my heart to one person, expending time and thought
and energy — and then one day they leave, and all of it is lost.
There is nothing to show but what I learned from the experience.
Even that does not go beyond the relationship, does not touch
other’s lives, except insofar as I now treat them better. It’s like
a mutual navel-gazing society to which no one else is invited. In
this type of scenario I feel my capacity as a human being is
wasted. This is why I fear relationships that seek the romantic
ideal. When I start dating someone, they don’t want to hear about
my love of all things, about how sometimes I don’t want to go out
with them but would rather stay home and write. They want to hear
how I love them more than anything else, how they are more
beautiful than everyone else, that I would give up everything for
their sake. Hence my realization: that I avoid romantic
relationships because I have a dream and don’t want to be pulled
away from that dream, sucked dry by a heart who in reality is
thirsting for God. I am not a surrogate God by any means, and do
not wish to devote my life to anyone’s quest for satisfaction. Is
it really “selfish” that I would rather benefit more people than
just one? Each time I’ve been married, I stopped writing. But I
would rather write and offer myself to whomever passes by, than
lose my writing for one person’s sake; while the person who could
join me in this endeavor is the one who would cause me to write
even more.
Sat, 27 Aug 2005 Filed in:
Journal
error: (error “Cannot find any
publishing styles to use”) In a dream I was climbing a long tower.
I asked, “Where are we going?” and people said: “To see the
Christ.” It was a broad tower with a spiral staircase in the wall —
something like a lighthouse. As I neared the top, a feeling began
to come over me. It was a kind of joy that reached fingers through
my body. At the end of the stairs I saw what looked like a picture
frame, or a small mirror. This, I understood, was Christ’s reality.
People were approaching the mirror and disappearing as they touched
it. They were being transported to another world. As I walked
toward the mirror, my feeling of joy became overwhelming. It was
more intense than anything I had ever felt before. Meanwhile, in
the distance, I heard someone sobbing. I drew closer and became
intoxicated; closer and I began to fade and glow. At the same time,
the sobbing grew louder and more insistent. Touching the mirror, I
knew, would transport me into another life. I longed to reach it,
but someone near me was in pain. What was happening? At that moment
I awoke and found that it was I, myself, who was crying… I wonder
if my body could not endure the revelation. It was begging me not
to touch the mirror. Ever since, this image comes to mind when I
think about the “next life” — which in a sense is found when we
die, and in another by our recognition of Him.
Wed, 24 Aug 2005 Filed in:
Poems
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Mon, 22 Aug 2005 Filed in:
Journal
error: (error “Cannot find any
publishing styles to use”) While reading further in one of my
favorite books today, *Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire* (which
takes a bit of getting used to, but is worthwhile after that), I
came across a discussion of some early ideas about the divinity of
Jesus Christ. What was so interesting about them is how the
doctrine of the trinity was almost forced based on prevailing
assumptions about the nature of the world. For example, it was a
strongly held notion around that time that divine substance (the
quintessence) was something indivisible, perfect and beyond
corruption. Anything divine was of the quintessence, such as soul,
heaven, etc. Alchemy was a science devoted to discovering the
relationship of quintessence to ordinary items, thus enabling the
scientist to convert them to any other form, heal the material
substance of the body, and live eternally young. Now, based on the
idea that divine things are of quintessence, it was impossible for
thinkers to conceive that Christ could be both divine and yet of
human form. They believed Christ had come from heaven (and returned
to it), but they sought a model to allow for a visitation within
the physical world of One who must have been a living form of the
quintessence — otherwise His divine nature would be in question. It
is surprising how many theories evolved from the single necessity
of requiring that Christ not be of common flesh in order rationally
to accept His divine nature. A first group asserted that He never
had physical form at all, but was an optical/auditory illusion who
simply bore the appearance of a human being. In this way the Divine
visited humanity without becoming “corrupted” by intermingling Its
substance with the four elements. Another group believed that
Christ was in fact human, with the Holy Spirit being the real
divine agency. It visited Jesus of Nazareth at the time of His
baptism — which allows for His being an ordinary human being during
birth and childhood, a very messy consideration (e.g., how could
the Son of God have come through a woman’s vagina to enter this
world?) — and left Him during His trials on the cross, immediately
before His seeming exclamation of despair. This model invoked a
dual nature to Christ which again permitted the Divine to visit
humanity without the taint of mortal corruption. Later this dual
model evolved into a triune one, afterwards confounded as a unity
to avoid the obvious problem that quintessence must be indivisible.
But I still have more to read on that development… What interested
me is how strong the basic assumptions were — of the nature of
things, and how mortal substance could not become the carrier of
divinity because of its corruptible essence — and how these
assumptions forced religious thinking down certain avenues in order
to reach a compromise between what was believed about the world and
what people had come to believe about Christ from His teachings.
Then what about the assumptions we have of the world today? In what
ways is the same thing is happening now as then: the invisible
bending of religious interpretations toward a believable model
based on the context of our world-view. How we see things seems to
put a range to the truths we can accept — those which fit the model
somehow. Are there assumptions we hold of mortality and selfhood
that run so deep, our view of God is not so much a form of truth as
an inverted picture of how we see ourselves?
Wed, 17 Aug 2005 Filed in:
Journal
error: (error “Cannot find any
publishing styles to use”) Starting from south of Phoenix, this
month I went to Albuquerque, then the Navajo reservation, then
Flagstaff, back to Albuquerque, then to Sante Fe, and at last up
here to Colorado Springs. Although I took more than 500 pictures,
only a few of them turned out to my taste. Those pictures can be
seen [[gallery/New%20Mexico/index.html][here]]. The girl who
appears in two of them is my friend Marjan, who took me up to the
top of Sandia Peak outside Albuquerque.
Tue, 16 Aug 2005 Filed in:
Journal
error: (error “Cannot find any
publishing styles to use”) Today I was driving up north from
Albuquerque to Colorado Springs, to visit my dad for a few months.
While I was driving I saw two amazing things. First is that I was
headed toward a huge storm, which I could see from about a
half-hour’s drive away. There was lightning and huge pockets of
rain pouring down in several places. When I got to the storm,
however, I ended up driving between all those pockets, so that it
was very dark and humid but there was no rain on me at all. There
was lots of lightning, though. Thinking I might see and hear more
of what was going on, I rolled down my window and looked out at the
grass field passing on my left. During those few moments a bolt of
lightning struck the ground about eighty feet from my car. To get a
picture of where I was, to my left was a strip of grass between the
northbound freeway and the southbound freeway. The lightning hit
about twenty feet to the left of the southbound freeway. I had
never seen lightning hit so close, and I noticed two interesting
things: one is that at the point of impact — which I saw clearly,
because I happened to be looking right at that spot when it
happened — the lightning bolt created a very bright red flare. But
after the bolt passed, I couldn’t see any sign of where it struck.
The second thing was the sound, which was not like ordinary thunder
at all. It was sharp and high-pitched, more like hitting a piece of
sheet metal with a hammer. And *loud*. From that point on, I began
wondering why lightning doesn’t hit cars more often. (Perhaps
something about the engine running causes a car to be somewhat
positively charged, since I’ve read that negative seeks a path from
the positive cloud to a more negative pole). The second interesting
thing occurred later on in the same storm. I arrived at a pocket of
sunshine near the middle, where the storm was still all around me
but the clouds had opened on the left side to let in sunlight. The
sky was bright blue on that side. The rays from the sun hitting the
vapor-filled air to my right created a huge rainbow; and at the
exact point where the rainbow was touching the ground, a patch of
sunlit grass. Now, the grass was somewhat yellowish, and everywhere
else the darkness of the storm made it seem grey and green, but in
this one place it glowed bright greenish yellow. If I didn’t know
it was the ground, I could have seen it as the opening to a huge
pot of gold, since it shone with just about the right color. That’s
when I wondered if such an effect isn’t what started the original
fable. Anyway, for the first time I felt like I was seeing the
famous “pot of gold” which I had always wanted to find as a kid.
The end of the rainbow was clearly rooted to it, though both the
rainbow and the patch of gold moved along as my car moved. By
sunset I made it to Colorado Springs, and saw the dimness of
Cheyenne Mountain with the sun setting behind it. I hope to have
some pictures from this area soon.
Mon, 25 Jul 2005 Filed in:
Journal
error: (error “Cannot find any
publishing styles to use”) This love letter is a composite of
several letters written over a long period of time. There is really
no reason to post it here other than to share the beauty of the
sentiment. If you’ve had enough cheese today, you can pass it by.
But I think it expresses an essential quality of relationship which
I’ve begun to conceive of as universal and accessible by other
means than just a single person. It’s about the soul longing for
God, Who is seen wherever the eyes are capable. A thousand hellos.
If I could fold myself enough, and survive the journey, I would
send you my hand to hold instead of this letter. But since paper
and ink are like trusted friends, I gave them these words of
affection and asked them to seek you out. I think of you often here
— where the wind and the sea are cold, and the chill probes me with
its ghostly fingers. But the memory of you keeps me warm. It chases
away the minutes and the hours until I forget where I am. >
Recall me to myself, for I soon forget > once thoughts of you
have cast their net. I teeter on the brink of falling headlong. A
wave of insanity has risen to immerse me. Sometimes my pen and I
sit here, in this cafe or around town, commiserating. He leaves a
stream of black tears — which are here, dried on this paper. Our
rapport is so strong, his weeping traces my thoughts; so I send you
this record of our misery, showing as it does my feelings. So many
words clamor to express themselves. Patience, I tell them; not
everything must be done at once. But can you sense the state of my
being? Everything is in uproar. The signposts are uprooted — there
is no more sense of left and right, up or down. The days are
nights, and sleep finds me only as the sun rises. What is to come
of my heart’s kingdom? You have conquered it without sword or
arrow. > Where banners once flew in proud disdain > a king
now weeps for his kingdom’s bane. The space between us is a great
plain over which the steed of time only saunters. His insouciance
drives me mad. I speak to him about you, and who we go to meet, but
his ears only twitch as if to say, “My pace is set, my friend; even
mortal love cannot change it.” But he is so wrong! Whether we go
fast or slow, desire lengthens the distance with every step. If
only I had wings, I would leap from this costive mare to find you.
Perhaps the folds of my letter have stuck together from the
sweetness of the ink; or maybe this paper, bent to take its burden,
has whispered something of its ardent master. At times I wonder if
they will steal my words, and offer them to the sugar merchants for
an easy exchange. But if my humble thoughts do not reach you for
whatever reason, my prayers and love are certain to. What else can
be said? Words, even if well-crafted, can only hold so much. “For
the stream’s bed cannot hold the sea.” When I think of you lately,
a wash of light suffuses my being. I feel joy in places unrelated
to my physical self. This is a new experience for me. What organ
feels the bounty of love? It is a mystery of gladness that ruins my
days and nights. You make me sigh. You make my eyelids flutter. In
the mornings, I recall the music of your voice and can no longer
stay in bed. This energy won’t let me alone. A deep pleasure runs
through my muscles like a current. And my heart… sometimes, I
think, were it susceptible to feinting, I would lose my mind. I am
so much in love with you. If you touched me now it would send me to
heaven. Do you realize your power? Yet you are so kind. I want to
curl up around the phone and let your sweet voice send me to
oblivion… Now I feel constantly as if I have to write you, or write
poems — or do something to relieve this pressure of light longing
to shine out. You’ve made my days and nights a constant sunrise,
each promising to begin the best day of my life. To the poet in me
you have been the most lovely muse. It isn’t hard at all to write
when I think of you. My fingers seem to know the way and summon the
words to follow. The pen feels light in my hand. The ink hungers
for the paper. Your magic has awoken a magic within me — until I
feel fey and mystical, ready to split the night of remoteness with
a single stroke. Whatever you’ve done, it shakes me to the core and
back again, filling my mind with sweet memories. I believe now that
knowing you is one of God’s gifts to me. What can I do, but write
to stave off this insanity? Call me again some time, my sweetheart.
Call me and let me hear your voice so I can survive another day.
Whatever semblance of peace I once had is fled. Your memory chases
away all other thoughts. Call me and resuscitate this poor
creature, for whatever I might be doing when you read this, the
rest of me longs to hear from you. But how can I last in your
presence? How can I keep from fading to a sigh and rejoining the
vapors of pre-existence? If I could write, “I love you”, strong
enough to mirror my heart, it would fly from this page and wrestle
you to the ground, and show such devotion as to melt you away.
Though words can only go so far. These have hardly conveyed my
turmoil. I have to stop — or even my fingers will go insane! I love
you. All the rest, only God and angels may know. Perhaps they will
whisper it to your soul in the deep of night, or grant you the
sweet dreams of loving reunion. After all this things only grow
more intense. Your smile is a luminous liquid, seeping inside to
warm me everywhere. That water turns to fire, and then watching you
is like a presence of flame: it cooks my heart over embers that
won’t leave me alone! I write this after seeing you briefly and the
burning will not cease. I’ve talked about it to one friend, but
talking only makes the pain worse. Yet I can’t leave off thinking
of you for the pain. Thinking or talking about it only makes the
wounds bleed fresh. My spirit is trapped between sight and
blindness: both are a torment. Remoteness is like sliding through
time on the edge of a blade. These have been profound days. I am
reading right now the story of Majnun and Layli, by Nizami. How
fine to see those expressions of madness and know a glimmer of
their purity. I suppose every experience in life educates us —
though the school of love mistreats its students. They prepare us
for a greater understanding in time. I think of you as a sign of
God, revealing rays of the Immortal Beauty in your pretty eyes,
your laugh, your amazing smile. It affects me deeply enough to
realize: only God can touch my soul that way. Then I remember how
He created the world to reveal His attributes — and there they are:
the beauty of life, the joy of loving, manifested in the simple
fact of your being. Love answers to no one and makes no excuses;
some things must be said whether wisdom confirms it or not. I write
this in pain — but for the beauty of that pain. I love you. I shall
always cherish your memory as one who gave me the gift of dwelling
in the fires of rapture. From that experience I have been nurtured
in the mystic’s way. It helped acquaint me with the nature of my
Goal. You are such a heart-slayer! You kill me. And now that I am
gone, what remains must say goodbye.
Sat, 16 Jul 2005 Filed in:
Journal
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publishing styles to use”) A few times I’ve talked about God’s
being invisible, and that we know Him is through His outward
manifestations and attributes — in the way a poet is known by his
words, or a lover by his actions, or a craftsman by his handiwork.
However, I do not mean invisible or hidden in the sense of
something beyond reach. A thing can be inaccessible to view, and
yet be very present and always around us. That is, God is not the
Hidden because He is obscure, but because He is too obvious to see.
“Yea, the intensity of His revelation hath covered Him, and the
fullness of His shining forth hath hidden Him.” For example, a
sphere is the simplest shape for an object in space, because it
distributes its mass evenly. To we standing on the Earth’s surface,
however, it appears flat because of the immensity of scale. What
historically should have been the most straightforward deduction
was beyond the scope of agreement for so long, exactly because our
eyes could not take in the magnitude of the problem. Another
example is pure light. If a white light shines on a painting, we
see color and shape in the artwork. That color, though, is not
coming from the painting. The colors we’re seeing were actually
“hidden” in the white light, until the pigments on the canvas
caused a few of them to be absorbed, and others to be reflected to
the eye. (A red object appears red because it absorbs every color
but red, leaving only the red light to reach the viewer). The
painting is not emitting its own light, but “sculpting” the
complete, white light into a smattering of various frequencies:
called red, green, blue, yellow, etc. It’s like a filter, revealing
different parts of the light in different places, until the eye
sees what was always potential in the light all along. The same
thing happens with sculpting stone: every possible sculpture is
“hidden” in that stone, until the artist decides what to take away
to reveal an image. It’s not that the substance making up the image
was not there, but that the completeness of the original stone kept
it from being seen. If our eyes were unlimited perhaps we could see
in an untouched block all sculpture, but our awareness can handle
only one image at a time. Thus the artist puts his hand to stone,
and with each block develops a different piece. Each one was always
possible, but only when they became actual could we know them.
Likewise all poems, letters, essays, etc., are potential and
“hidden” in a dictionary — since it contains every word I’m using
to write these entries. But who can stare at a dictionary and
realize all knowledge? The purpose of a writer is to consider these
words before each sentence, and remove everything but what reveals
his meaning. So art, speech, the visible world, all consist of a
process of placing limitations on a much vaster substrate of
possibility. The painter carves light by applying pigments which
absorb — and thus inhibit — the flow of pure light that would
otherwise reach our eyes. Because of this limiting effect we become
aware of things like color, shape, texture, etc., which are the
substance of visual experience. And yet, the elements of all we see
were at every moment potential within the same white light, since
it has always been the same sun shining down. The activities of
life greatly modulate and alter that light, producing innumerable
variations, but that’s all we do — vary a pre-existing potential.
“There is nothing new under the sun”. Nothing is visible which
doesn’t come from the same light as always. It may appear new, but
the potential for its appearance was there from the beginning. Life
is like this too. Experience is a tenuous process of imposing
limits on an infinite background. Or in the sense of a sculptor, we
are a kind of nothingness who causes the waiting statue to be
revealed. Michaelangelo’s David sat in his block of marble for many
millions of years before we knew him. He may have known he was
there all along, but until we brought him the gift of empty space,
he remained “hidden” and unsung. With respect to God, perhaps our
very souls are a brand of nothingness like the space surrounding
David’s features. God knows Who He is, and always has, but He wrote
through His Messengers, “I wished to become known.” As a pure
light, He shone with perfect brilliance, but the colors and
possibilities of that light remained fast bound within it, hidden
by its own perfection. So He created darkness to sculpt that light
and reveal the beau