Sunday 15 January 2017




The Color of Carrying the World

"She carried an old globe as she walked,
a garage sale find;
carried it as though bearing the earth
but lightly in her hands."
(B. Harder, Random Musings)

I was enjoying coffee with Anna in the Sundre, Alberta cafe one day last summer when I noticed a woman crossing the street. She had a bag in one hand, and in the other she hefted a basketball-sized globe of the earth - the kind we used to have in our elementary classrooms. It was an intriguing image, this woman who walked with purpose, her feet drawn to their destination, and along for the ride... was the whole world.

I've been thinking about this woman and her globe for the last week, pondering the implications of holding the earth lightly in our hands. The image evokes both blessing and indictment. On the one hand we humans have been particularly gifted with innate abilities and tools to bring the earth to marvelous fruition. At our best we tend the earth and its creatures in such a way that all life flourishes. This is blessing.

On the other hand we have chosen lifestyles that take from the earth without giving back. Our level of over, and very much unnecessary, consumption seriously jeopardize the well-being of generations that have not yet been conceived. This is indictment.

“Western civilization is a loaded gun
pointed at the head of this planet.” 
(Terence McKenna)



As a culture we have not only made it acceptable to over-consume, we have made it necessary. Much of our self-image and self-worth are grounded in what we own. In addition, we have created economic systems that depend upon high levels of consumption. To make a living, retail business owners must sell goods - mountains of goods. We the buyers must purchase these goods - and then dispose of them to make room for further consumption.


“The earth will not continue to offer its harvest,
except with faithful stewardship.
We cannot say we love the land
and then take steps to destroy it for use
by future generations.” 
(Pope John Paul II)

Blessing and Indictment. We carry the earth, each of us in our own way. None of us are innocent, none absolutely guilty. We carry the earth - each time we plant a seed and nourish its growth; when we reclaim land disrupted by resource extraction; when we love and care for creatures; when we reduce, reuse, and recycle. We carry the earth in our gratitude, our compassion, and our stewardship.

I see no easy answer to over-consumption in the near future; I too will continue to drive my vehicle, replace broken things in my home, buy clothes, art, tools... but I am aware, when I look at my grandsons, that their children's well-being balances precariously upon my choices.

I leave the last word to scientist, Stephen Jay Gould:

“We have become,
by the power of a glorious evolutionary accident called intelligence,
the stewards of life's continuity on earth.
We did not ask for this role, but we cannot abjure it.
We may not be suited to it,
but here we are.” 
(Stephen Jay Gould, The Flamingo's Smile: Reflections in Natural History)

The color of carrying the world...
obligation and opportunity.


A stranger
handed me a
kitten

I do not know
about
kittens

So I listened
to the
cat

and learned


Pause
Breathe
Listen




To Ponder Further:
- From the Bible: "The Lord God took the man and put him in the garden of Eden to work it and keep it." (Genesis 2.15)

- From Islam: "Someone said, "O Messenger of God, will we then have a reward for the good done to our animals?" "There will be a reward," he replied, "for anyone who gives water to a being that has a tender heart." (Hadith of Bukhari)

- From Buddhism: "As a mother with her own life guards the life of her own child, let all-embracing thoughts for all that lives be thine." (Khuddaka Patha, Metta Sutta)

Tuesday 10 January 2017



The Color of Changing the World, Part II

“Love people who hate you.
Pray for people who have wronged you.
It won’t just change their life…
it’ll change yours.” 
(Mandy Hale, The Single Woman: Life, Love, and a Dash of Sass)

A local funeral director phoned the other day to ask if I would attend to the grief needs of one of their client families. This was above and beyond, care that comes from the heart, not the bottom line. He made a difference in that family's life; he made us all a little better by his kindness.



A year ago Vanessa Smith of St. Catharines, Ontario donated 63% of her liver to a fellow hockey parent in need of a transplant. Vanessa has six children, and she is not afraid to be who she is, and in so doing, to change the course of humanity. 


Last winter Mark Przybylowski and Paula Malolepszy toured the west end of Montreal helping people shovel their cars out of a massive dump of snow. They didn't have to do this... but they did. It was just random acts of kindness that reveal the brilliance of humanity at its best. 

“You are here
in order to enable the world
to live more amply,
with greater vision,
with a finer spirit of hope and achievement.
You are here to enrich the world.” 
(Woodrow Wilson)

While I understand the inclination to engage BMW's (bitching, moaning and whining; not to mention outright complaining), I know that this is not the kind of world changing that expresses humanity's genius. Quite simply, we are better that that. We are creatures filled to the brim with powers that can address our greatest needs, push back the darkness, and give life from other galaxies a reason to meet us. 

“There's always a story. It's all stories, really.
The sun coming up every day is a story.
Everything's got a story in it.
Change the story, change the world.” 
(Terry Pratchett, A Hat Full of Sky)

Our words and actions, even our thoughts, and perhaps our feelings - all are choices we get to make. We can choose to complain; or we can choose to live a different story. Well I'm choosing this day to change the story of grumbling to a story of gratitude, kindness, and compassion. Together, we do amazing things. We feed the hungry, provide shelter, care for our world, and initiate countless random of acts of kindness every moment. We will overwhelm the world with such brilliance; overwhelm and heal it. 

“Human potential is amazing.
We have the capacity to create a world that is peaceful;
one that spreads kindness and love rather than hatred.
If we believe it to be so, it will be our truth,
and we will create it.” 
(Kristi Bowman, Journey to One: A Woman's Story of Emotional Healing and Spiritual Awakening)

In the face of political, economic, and ideological uncertainty, perhaps even chaos, the time has never been more ripe for all of us to expose our greatest strengths - gratitude, kindness, and compassion (and perhaps a good helping of playfulness for good measure). Resist the temptation to social media slandering, coffee shop complaining, and the accompanying sense of powerlessness. Instead, be the bright Light and Love that you are created to be. Change the world...

I leave the last word to Sri Chinmoy:

“Do you want to change the world?
Then change yourself first.
Do you want to change yourself?
Then remain completely silent inside the silence-sea.” 
(Sri Chinmoy, Meditation: Man-perfection in God-satisfaction)

The color of changing the world... 
being the real you.

A mirror
can only reveal
that
which stands
before

So too
do
words
unveil
the heart

Breathe
Pray
Love



To Ponder Further:
- From the Bible: "I can do all things through Him who gives me strength." (Philippians 4.13)

- From Islam: "Those who act kindly in this world will have kindness." (Qur'an 39.10)

- From Buddhism: "...goodwill alone, which is the heart's release, shines and burns and flashes forth in surpassing them." (Itivuttaka 19)