It looks very interesting, Sir. Some first reaction thoughts:
"It is a failure of human wholeness"
I can't help but wonder though, is it entirely a failure of human wholeness, or simply another part of the process?
I keep silent on an issue I should address or actively break faith with one of my own convictions.
I wish the author would give us some specific examples, because on the one hand I entirely understand what is being said here. On the other hand, I sometimes think in breaking faith with a conviction we discover that the conviction may have been an erroneous one - at least in part. Again, a part of the process?
Wholeness does not mean perfection: it means embracing brokenness as an integral part of life. Knowing this gives me hope that human wholeness-mine, yours, ours-need not be a utopian dream, if we can use devastation as a seedbed for new life.
And here I agree 100%, except I am not sure I would call us broken. I often think what appears broken to others, may in fact, be entirely perfect just the way it is. Like that worn out pair of tennis shoes that others think we should toss in the garbage, yet we know fit our feet better than any new pair ever could.
Thank you for sharing this chapter. I found it very interesting.
In order for integrity to be maintained, it must be truthful and whole. But we are very complex beings. My truth now is very different than it was 20 years ago, and I am sure it will be different 20 years in the future. And my truth is very different than everyone elses. Is there any accountability? Or maybe everyone's truth is equally needed?
I enjoyed a lot of it and had some of the same reactions as Abigail did.
I too have an aversion to the word "brokenness." Perhaps "incompleteness" works better for me, even though it sounds more contradictory.
I like "Wholeness is not prefect." I think of wholeness as not feeling the extreme needs and wants. Of course there is always food and shelter etc. but I understand what he is talking about with the feeling you can get when in the wilderness. It is one of my most favorite places....the middle of nowhere. In places like that you can forget all your cares and focus on the infinitely smaller intricacies and the expanse of everything at the same time. My wife has even more experience with hiking and backpacking and describes the feeling as a connectedness or loosing yourself. What you are going to eat and where you are going to sleep become your only concerns.
I'm surprised of Allan's response to that part of it. I believe you are in New Zealand.....one of the most amazing and beautiful places on earth. Perhaps he was posting in his sleep.
I seem to have an talent for seeing things this way whether I am in the middle of the woods or the middle of Manhattan. I guess it is the artist side of me that is always looking at the little things instead of blowing by them. It is not unusual for me to stare off in a conversation making a little composition in my head of the cityscape or the sidewalk.
Getting a little sidetracked....
I also struggle at times with my profession vs. my values, as a designer. I try and find a balance. On one hand I don't want good design to only go to the very rich, while on the other I do want to make money in a business. I can spend a ton of time designing a place for someone and shopping for all the comfort items they will need in it, meanwhile I don't want to forget about those that struggle for food and the basic necessities. I want to go as "green" as possible while sticking to the clients' needs and wants. I don't want to support extravagance, but I do want to give people a place that can be that refuge away from the world...a place they feel comfortable, stress free, and happy, if not more whole.
I think in my life, in the short time I have been outside of twi, I have gotten quite a bit of wholeness in my life. Alothough, while in it I was definitely living a divided life, as the author describes it. Now, what you see is what you get with me. No games, no masks as Nietzsche would say, but up front and unarmed. Although, I do still tip toe at times around my family that is still in twi. I think it is something that has helped me"weed out" relationships and/or friendships without really trying at all. Somepeople like it, some would rather gossip, backstab, and play games.
I tend to agree with the general topic. Although, my twi years still leave a distaste for anything that seems to have a formula for life, but I guess the guy does have to have chapters. I also still don't like catch phrases like "rejoining soul and role", plus it just seems a little cheesey, but I understand the need for those sorts of things.
Anyways, thanks and I hope it is ok to post part of the book here.
i also believe that many people (such as myself) had truly positive life changing experiences with tongues and such while in the way
in fact, i would even go as far to say that if the tongues of twi was really being practiced,
that it could actually help people genuinely come to recognize the silent nature that has been described as the voice of God throughout many traditions and schools of thought
but as we know, how more often than not, the way life was lived as a community in twi often worked against our own intentions and collective gifts....though not always, of course
I agree that there is a time for being still, whether you do that by sitting zazen, or praying, or speaking in tongues. But I wonder if there isn't also a time for activity. If you can still hear the voice of God while journeying, like Saul of Tarsus did.
Lindy, I hear you, especially when it comes to the divide that can occur between career and personal life. Working in the legal field that can be especially tricky - do you use every loophole you can find to win, because professionally you are to use the existing laws to represent your client to the best of your ability? Or do you ignore certain technicalities in the interest of overall justice and fairness? Thankfully, I work for two very ethical attorneys who truly do seem to be intereseted in justice and fairness as opposed to winning at all costs, justs for the sake of being able to say they won.
Sir,
"english seems an increasingly difficult language to define, let alone use these days
and finding the meat of the intent behind them takes a little more time than we are often inclined to give"
It is a battle I have struggled with my entire life. I used to dread taking tests because I would read a question and could interpret it in so many different ways. I would get so caught up in trying to understand exactly what was being asked that I would miss the overall picture of what the subject matter was supposed to be about. I see my older son struggle with this issue as well. We have many conversations about sarcasm v facetiousness v figures of speech, etc.
"it seems to me
that if i am a whole being of many parts
but i think i am only a piece of what i really am
in a sense...i am broken
simply for not knowing how whole i am
and those pieces i do not think are mine
simply haunt me as if it was an "invading or oppressive other""
Amen. It takes a great deal of time, wisdom, self-confidence, self-love, and self-acceptence to see and accept our many parts. It requires overcoming all the negatives that have been tossed at us regarding some of those parts - overcoming the shame that was intentionally or unintentionally instilled in us by our parents, friends, society, etc.
I think that is a large part of the root (from a psychological perspective) of the need for a savior. Yet, at the same time, I think religion also often (though not always) plays a large role in preventing us from seeing and accepting all of our pieces.
I agree that there is a time for being still, whether you do that by sitting zazen, or praying, or speaking in tongues. But I wonder if there isn't also a time for activity. If you can still hear the voice of God while journeying, like Saul of Tarsus did.
yeah, there seems a time
there are ways to practice being present in work, play, eating, sex, etc...
good athletes are present while active, or they are not good athletes
good musicians
good dentists
like 'being still while moving'
not applying brakes to stop
not applying gas to go
but rather...taking off the clutch
and paying attention to what comes next
there are prayers and meditation while walking, eating, celebration, etc...
that have all already been developed into arts and sciences
even ways of being a warrior in battle that lives in presence as the field of silence that the very war rages in
but a common thread, it seems
as that the silent sitting is really the ground of all the other stuff
because practicing sitting with silence cultivates our awareness of the basic truths of it
in preparation for a life of ways of embodiment of those same inward truths
in other words...sitting with silence is the baby food of all traditional spiritual practice
whether one is a jew, gentile, or something else
and though being still and silent should be the easiest place to start
(due to actually requiring less than any other kind of activity)
it is often the hardest place to be in this hyper age
and when we skip that "easy" part
we really are putting the proverbial cart before the horse
often acting on behalf of our thoughts and feelings about God
when we have never really gotten used to observing our own thoughts the way God does in the first place
i hear ya about the lifelong struggle in terms of healthy communication of actual shared meaning
tiz the common heart of all relationship, it seems
requires certain radical levels of clarity
and i am finding that there are very potent and sophisticated arts and schools
of practicing notions such as 'open inquiry'
like learning new tongues, as scripture says, but using the languages we already know
because it not about the actual words, per se
but how the words are being used
and how we are actually being with each other when we use them
interfaith dialogue
conflict resolution
the great peacemakers of history
etc...
all benefit from increasing our capacity to find a genuine shared interior space
via higher levels of dialogue and discourse
and when 'we mutually understand how we understand each other'
we will find ourselves in an amazing 'place'
though it is not a very common place to find ourselves in
which is why i think we cherish real friendships so much
i have seen varieties of these arts of 'open inquiry' in everything from catholics to quakers to hopi to jews to sufis to buddhists to psychologists to druids to role-playing gamers and kids
such higher orders of human speech are quite ordinary, really
and have been around since the beginning
which is what makes them "divine"
imo
but when the majority has somehow come to believe
that no such higher dialogue is possible
let alone beneficial to them
well...it dont take a rocket scientist to figure out what happens next
a few thoughts on contemplative history of various christianities...
some strange resemblances between what i have learned of and from those schools of 'practicing silence,' (such as the quakers) and the infamous pentecostal account, is how they actually basically practiced the most curious and strange thing...which typically went like this...
shut up
sit down
and dont go to sleep
pray only silently to yourself
(which, it sems, could be anything from speaking random sounds that you feel
or repeating the same syllable or song or wise saying over and over again)
and do this for many hours a day
together (or alone...if you have to)
or if you are a hardcore practitioner
follow a wise teacher of such things
and do this for periods like nine full days
(such as that one account)
...man oh man...i dont know about you...but this sounds like pretty extreme stuff, to me....
and so simple things like your own breathing
your own heartbeat
your own thoughts
your own feelings
and your own dreams
become of paramount importance
and worth paying close attention to
(though you really cant help it, because that is all that you have to work with in such a state, anyway...which is kind of the point)
and of course, there are a thousand other elements that can be and have been added to this kind of thing
just as there are and have been a million recipes for bread
or wine
in other words...we are free to find ways to celebrate and decorate such an act
partially because, i'm sure, one can imagine how quickly one might become terrifyingly bored
but the idea for folks like that
was to do this kind of thing as often as possible
to the degree that one is are finally able to maintain that curious new perspective
even while we are out-and-about in the world
and perhaps it is not hard for one to imagine
how this becomes a most critically valuable skill
if one is trying to fix, or help or heal or teach anyone else, including ourself
(which are among the most common of human tendencies, it seems...a bunch of helpers from the get-go, by nature)
which is perhaps why this school of first century healers
were so deeply devoted to such a path
as to consider it quite the blistering ordeal
or why certain groups of pioneering american christian thinkers
saw the value of practicing being silent together for longer than a mere minute
prior to even opening their mouths when in a circle of wise elders
and so something strange and troubling (and often truly sad-making)
is how us average modern can only be still for 15 minutes or less
yet continue along in this chronic sort of search-and-rescue-and-repair-and-control mode
makes ya wanna say "do me a favor and stop doing me favors," ya know?
and im sure its not hard to imagine how horrific that might beging to look
if it got out of control for too many generations in a row
....
ok so...maybe this kind of thing sounds too familiar...
you know..."you guys all go and be in silent prayer for many days before you speak of this stuff
and dont forget to pay attention to your breathe and your hearts
yada yada yada
and i guarantee that you will meet me via the air some day very soon"
...and other such things
...
oh yeah...and one of our typically favorite parts of all....
..."there really ARE NOT HARD RULES about this kind of thing
There are many parts of Quakerism that I find highly spiritually motivating
One of My favorite books if "The Christian's Secret of A Happy Life" by Hannah Whitall Smith
She was a Quaker that wrote the original in the 1800's it has been reprinted with some of the more unfamiliar references updated, Such as railway car travel, calling cards etc that she uses in her illustrations--but the heart of it remains untouched. I have had a copy near to hand for over 10 years--I highly recommend it --
It does not promote Quakerism or any other Christian sect just down to earth practical day to day living advice
The Way taught a little about being whole in a way a being of body, soul, and spirit would be whole but a being of body and soul only would not be whole
But I must asked when is the body whole?
I say at its purest state maybe
But I must asked when is the soul whole?
I say when what breath in is in the purest state maybe
But I must asked when is the spirit whole?
I say when in its new body maybe
Because all I have is more questions I can not give a great answers to any of my questions
but I enjoy getting more in touch with my body knowing its every need
I enjoy getting more in touch with my soul knowing its every need the very image of Flesh
I enjoy getting more in touch with my spirit knowing its every need the very image of God
very cool...thanks Clay, TL and Roy and everyone for all that
...It does not promote Quakerism or any other Christian sect just down to earth practical day to day living advice
yeah
here are some quotes from that article on the quakers i find very refreshing and appealing
Unlike other groups that emerged within Christianity, the Religious Society of Friends has tended toward little hierarchical structure, and no creeds.
The various branches have widely divergent beliefs and practices, but the central concept to many Friends may be the "Inner Light" or "that of God within" each of us. Accordingly, individual Quakers may develop individual religious beliefs arising from individual conscience and revelation coming from "God within"; further, Quakers are obliged to live by such individual religious beliefs and inner revelations.
Quaker mysticism includes a strong emphasis on its outwardly-directed witness. Rather than seeking withdrawal from the world, the Quaker mystic translates his or her mysticism into action. Action, in turn, leads to greater spiritual understanding — both by individuals and by the Meeting as a whole.
Decision making among Friends
Business decisions on a local level are conducted at a monthly "Meeting for Worship with a concern for business", or simply "business meeting". A business meeting is a form of worship, and all decisions are reached so that they are consistent with the guidance of the Spirit.
Instead of voting, the meeting for business attempts to gain a sense of God's will for the community. Each member of the meeting is expected to listen to that of God within themselves and, if led, to contribute it to the group for reflection and consideration. Each member listens to others' contributions carefully, in an attitude of seeking Truth rather than of attempting to prevail or to debate.
A decision is reached when the meeting as a whole feels that the "way forward" has been discerned (also called "coming to unity"). Occasionally, some members of the Meeting will "stand aside" on an issue, meaning that these members do not share in the general sense of the meeting but are willing to allow the group to move forward.
Many Quakers describe the search for unity as the gathering of believers who "wait upon the Lord" to discover God's will. When seeking unity, Friends are not attempting to seek a position with which everyone is willing to live (as is often the case in consensual models) but in determining God's will. It is assumed that if everyone is listening to God's Spirit, everyone will hear similar messages and the way forward will become clear, for God's will is that the meeting should be united.
The business conducted "in the manner of Friends" can seem time-consuming and impractical. The process surely can be frustrating and slow yet at its best it works remarkably well, allowing the group to come to decisions even around the most difficult mattters. By the time a decision is recognized, the important issues have been worked out and the group supports the decision. There is no "losing" side, no one will benefit if problems emerge in implementing the decision. Participants who have come to trust the process, confident that there will be enough time and interest to hear each important concern are unlikely to bring up the topic time and time again. It is much less likely that participants will suffer hurt as a result of the decision making. It is far less likely that additional meetings will be needed later to "fix" the original decision.
Many who are unaware of the focus of Friends on "unity, not unanimity" express doubts as to whether this process of decision making can work in a large group. Many yearly meetings, however, have successfully employed this practice for years. Some Quaker-related organizations, such as Haverford College in Philadelphia, utilize traditional Quaker form practices of governance.
Coming to decisions by the sense of the meeting has been a centerpiece of the Religious Society of Friends for over 350 years, at times seeing them through extremely difficult decisions. Quaker-style decision making has been adapted for use in secular settings in recent years (see Consensus decision-making).
I get an e-magazine, called "Peaceable Table" which is written for "Quakers and Other People of Faith. " Last months issue contained an article that I feel might add to the topic. The complete article can be found here: http://www.vegetarianfriends.net/issue24.html
The Inner Home
The most important refuge we can find, the indispensible source of life and of the universal compassion we are called to incarnate, must be within. A psalm attributed to Moses, who was born in exile and never set foot in the promised land, begins with the line "Lord, you have been our home throughout all generations" (Ps. 90:1). Still another psalm, perhaps by an exile who had once thought God dwelt only in one locality, celebrates a God who is found wherever she or he may set foot: ""If I ascend to heaven, thou art there; / If I make my bed in Sheol, lo, thou art there!" (Ps. 139:8). We can only live with grace in exile, and faithfully fulfil our prophetic calling, by turning daily, even hourly, to this inner Home, this Beloved. It is after all this Source of Love who has called and inspired us to speak and enact Her/His love and liberation for all: for these, the least of all our brothers and sisters, and for the recalcitrant who still insist on killing and eating them.
—Gracia Fay Ellwood
I've never been on a retreat, so forgive me. Do I say, have fun? Learn lots? Whatever, I do wish you well.
Hidden wholeness...I was thinking about something that might be the opposite...hidden brokenness. When I was in TWI, there were always things that jarred me--the separation from earthy family was one. I could never whole heartedly embrace it. There were several others...but I renewed my mind and told myself that I believed it...
Deep inside though there was a jarring or discord, something uncomfortable. Being a good wafer I ignored it--but later after i left, those things were the first doctrines of TWI to go!
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sirguessalot
:)
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Abigail
It looks very interesting, Sir. Some first reaction thoughts:
"It is a failure of human wholeness"
I can't help but wonder though, is it entirely a failure of human wholeness, or simply another part of the process?
I keep silent on an issue I should address or actively break faith with one of my own convictions.
I wish the author would give us some specific examples, because on the one hand I entirely understand what is being said here. On the other hand, I sometimes think in breaking faith with a conviction we discover that the conviction may have been an erroneous one - at least in part. Again, a part of the process?
Wholeness does not mean perfection: it means embracing brokenness as an integral part of life. Knowing this gives me hope that human wholeness-mine, yours, ours-need not be a utopian dream, if we can use devastation as a seedbed for new life.
And here I agree 100%, except I am not sure I would call us broken. I often think what appears broken to others, may in fact, be entirely perfect just the way it is. Like that worn out pair of tennis shoes that others think we should toss in the garbage, yet we know fit our feet better than any new pair ever could.
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VeganXTC
Thank you for sharing this chapter. I found it very interesting.
In order for integrity to be maintained, it must be truthful and whole. But we are very complex beings. My truth now is very different than it was 20 years ago, and I am sure it will be different 20 years in the future. And my truth is very different than everyone elses. Is there any accountability? Or maybe everyone's truth is equally needed?
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lindyhopper
I enjoyed a lot of it and had some of the same reactions as Abigail did.
I too have an aversion to the word "brokenness." Perhaps "incompleteness" works better for me, even though it sounds more contradictory.
I like "Wholeness is not prefect." I think of wholeness as not feeling the extreme needs and wants. Of course there is always food and shelter etc. but I understand what he is talking about with the feeling you can get when in the wilderness. It is one of my most favorite places....the middle of nowhere. In places like that you can forget all your cares and focus on the infinitely smaller intricacies and the expanse of everything at the same time. My wife has even more experience with hiking and backpacking and describes the feeling as a connectedness or loosing yourself. What you are going to eat and where you are going to sleep become your only concerns.
I'm surprised of Allan's response to that part of it. I believe you are in New Zealand.....one of the most amazing and beautiful places on earth. Perhaps he was posting in his sleep.
I seem to have an talent for seeing things this way whether I am in the middle of the woods or the middle of Manhattan. I guess it is the artist side of me that is always looking at the little things instead of blowing by them. It is not unusual for me to stare off in a conversation making a little composition in my head of the cityscape or the sidewalk.
Getting a little sidetracked....
I also struggle at times with my profession vs. my values, as a designer. I try and find a balance. On one hand I don't want good design to only go to the very rich, while on the other I do want to make money in a business. I can spend a ton of time designing a place for someone and shopping for all the comfort items they will need in it, meanwhile I don't want to forget about those that struggle for food and the basic necessities. I want to go as "green" as possible while sticking to the clients' needs and wants. I don't want to support extravagance, but I do want to give people a place that can be that refuge away from the world...a place they feel comfortable, stress free, and happy, if not more whole.
I think in my life, in the short time I have been outside of twi, I have gotten quite a bit of wholeness in my life. Alothough, while in it I was definitely living a divided life, as the author describes it. Now, what you see is what you get with me. No games, no masks as Nietzsche would say, but up front and unarmed. Although, I do still tip toe at times around my family that is still in twi. I think it is something that has helped me"weed out" relationships and/or friendships without really trying at all. Somepeople like it, some would rather gossip, backstab, and play games.
I tend to agree with the general topic. Although, my twi years still leave a distaste for anything that seems to have a formula for life, but I guess the guy does have to have chapters. I also still don't like catch phrases like "rejoining soul and role", plus it just seems a little cheesey, but I understand the need for those sorts of things.
Anyways, thanks and I hope it is ok to post part of the book here.
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sirguessalot
very cool...thanks for those immediate replies
a few thoughts on the fly...
i think it might help to remember, too
that this is only the first chapter
in a pretty densely nutritious book
and so it really is the "big fat claim" portion of the book
and provides virtually no detail
i guess what im saying is that i wouldnt expect too much out of it
and yeah...i dont even know what is right or wrong any more about posting such a thing
i suppose i'll pay whatever price should someone find a cause
i only plan on posting the first chapter, anyway
...
anyway...
i tell ya
guys like Parker Palmer have been successfully teaching teachers and writing about it for a long long time,
and all one really has to do is spend a little time digging in and around the works of modern practicing quakers
to see that there is already a huge growing body of stories and research and thought around it all
but again...there really are 9 more chapters of densely nutritious practical stuff
with plenty of case studies and stories to illustrate
not that i am selling the book here
...there are millions of good books
well, i think you nailed it with that question
which really does speak to the common heart of most conclusions
and too, i think our preference for words is always worth looking into
as well as making sure we know how any given speaker is using it
english seems an increasingly difficult language to define, let alone use these days
and finding the meat of the intent behind them takes a little more time than we are often inclined to give
especially considering how severely twi taught us to warp and re-warp common words
into some perfect unchanging meaning
...not that there are absolutely true or absolutely untrue meanings
just the opposite
we simply have to develop the skill to know what each other is meaning
whether we are reader and author, or you and me in a cafe
...
that said..
(this is just my impression...not all of which would disagree or agree with Parker's book)
it seems to me
that if i am a whole being of many parts
but i think i am only a piece of what i really am
in a sense...i am broken
simply for not knowing how whole i am
and those pieces i do not think are mine
simply haunt me as if it was an "invading or oppressive other"
and this condition is considered, by many schools of thought,
to be the most natural state of every given person
most all of the time
since the dawn of man
and it is a very real place that we all naturally experience
though we may want to claim we have no such darkness left in us
we are under the illusion that our un-whole-ness is a whole-ness
we act according to that illusion
or if we are under the illusion that our un-whole-ness is true but an evil curse
we act according to that illusion
a perspective of whole-ness requires that we includes our shadows and scars
as well as our deepest gifts and yearnings
or we are simply not seeing the whole self picture "as God would"
...we are being partial in our approach
and so our life's work is realize the nature of our actual wholeness the face of brokenness
not just in theory...but to unfold and experience the actual texture and contour of the soul in life
were we can find actual value and distinction in the shape of the lines that define all our many pieces
to pick up on the theme of many traditions and schools of thought
i would even go as far as to call the shape of our very soul "our most beautiful and holy wound"
and seeing all the parts of "the whole wound" that we are
requires that we find a perspective that is even able to witness it all
to tease out all the lines of our entering into this universe
is to trace the lines of an amazing scar
but most are either too terrified to make such a choice
or too distracted to realize such a choice can even be made
both of which are quite natural, too
and it really couldn't be any other way
which is why the quakers incorporated a lot of silence and space in their elder communities
in order to actually experience that place of silence in a profound way
simply by enduring it
in order to see what happens next
and what happened next is much like what happened throughout all the scripture stories
in terms of visions, dreams, predictions, compassion, community, meaning, etc...
compared to many traditions
i would say that twi had us fill such an "evil" silence with all kinds of noise and activity
and effectually blocked out the root essence of the voice of God
...traditionally
(i love "speaking in tongues," btw..and still do, and practice it daily in my own ways)
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sirguessalot
and i just want to add real quick
to rid certain confusions
i also believe that many people (such as myself) had truly positive life changing experiences with tongues and such while in the way
in fact, i would even go as far to say that if the tongues of twi was really being practiced,
that it could actually help people genuinely come to recognize the silent nature that has been described as the voice of God throughout many traditions and schools of thought
but as we know, how more often than not, the way life was lived as a community in twi often worked against our own intentions and collective gifts....though not always, of course
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VeganXTC
I agree that there is a time for being still, whether you do that by sitting zazen, or praying, or speaking in tongues. But I wonder if there isn't also a time for activity. If you can still hear the voice of God while journeying, like Saul of Tarsus did.
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Abigail
Lindy, I hear you, especially when it comes to the divide that can occur between career and personal life. Working in the legal field that can be especially tricky - do you use every loophole you can find to win, because professionally you are to use the existing laws to represent your client to the best of your ability? Or do you ignore certain technicalities in the interest of overall justice and fairness? Thankfully, I work for two very ethical attorneys who truly do seem to be intereseted in justice and fairness as opposed to winning at all costs, justs for the sake of being able to say they won.
Sir,
"english seems an increasingly difficult language to define, let alone use these days
and finding the meat of the intent behind them takes a little more time than we are often inclined to give"
It is a battle I have struggled with my entire life. I used to dread taking tests because I would read a question and could interpret it in so many different ways. I would get so caught up in trying to understand exactly what was being asked that I would miss the overall picture of what the subject matter was supposed to be about. I see my older son struggle with this issue as well. We have many conversations about sarcasm v facetiousness v figures of speech, etc.
"it seems to me
that if i am a whole being of many parts
but i think i am only a piece of what i really am
in a sense...i am broken
simply for not knowing how whole i am
and those pieces i do not think are mine
simply haunt me as if it was an "invading or oppressive other""
Amen. It takes a great deal of time, wisdom, self-confidence, self-love, and self-acceptence to see and accept our many parts. It requires overcoming all the negatives that have been tossed at us regarding some of those parts - overcoming the shame that was intentionally or unintentionally instilled in us by our parents, friends, society, etc.
I think that is a large part of the root (from a psychological perspective) of the need for a savior. Yet, at the same time, I think religion also often (though not always) plays a large role in preventing us from seeing and accepting all of our pieces.
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sirguessalot
yeah, there seems a time
there are ways to practice being present in work, play, eating, sex, etc...
good athletes are present while active, or they are not good athletes
good musicians
good dentists
like 'being still while moving'
not applying brakes to stop
not applying gas to go
but rather...taking off the clutch
and paying attention to what comes next
there are prayers and meditation while walking, eating, celebration, etc...
that have all already been developed into arts and sciences
even ways of being a warrior in battle that lives in presence as the field of silence that the very war rages in
but a common thread, it seems
as that the silent sitting is really the ground of all the other stuff
because practicing sitting with silence cultivates our awareness of the basic truths of it
in preparation for a life of ways of embodiment of those same inward truths
in other words...sitting with silence is the baby food of all traditional spiritual practice
whether one is a jew, gentile, or something else
and though being still and silent should be the easiest place to start
(due to actually requiring less than any other kind of activity)
it is often the hardest place to be in this hyper age
and when we skip that "easy" part
we really are putting the proverbial cart before the horse
often acting on behalf of our thoughts and feelings about God
when we have never really gotten used to observing our own thoughts the way God does in the first place
and then there are always other things...
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sirguessalot
yeah, Abi
i hear ya about the lifelong struggle in terms of healthy communication of actual shared meaning
tiz the common heart of all relationship, it seems
requires certain radical levels of clarity
and i am finding that there are very potent and sophisticated arts and schools
of practicing notions such as 'open inquiry'
like learning new tongues, as scripture says, but using the languages we already know
because it not about the actual words, per se
but how the words are being used
and how we are actually being with each other when we use them
interfaith dialogue
conflict resolution
the great peacemakers of history
etc...
all benefit from increasing our capacity to find a genuine shared interior space
via higher levels of dialogue and discourse
and when 'we mutually understand how we understand each other'
we will find ourselves in an amazing 'place'
though it is not a very common place to find ourselves in
which is why i think we cherish real friendships so much
i have seen varieties of these arts of 'open inquiry' in everything from catholics to quakers to hopi to jews to sufis to buddhists to psychologists to druids to role-playing gamers and kids
such higher orders of human speech are quite ordinary, really
and have been around since the beginning
which is what makes them "divine"
imo
but when the majority has somehow come to believe
that no such higher dialogue is possible
let alone beneficial to them
well...it dont take a rocket scientist to figure out what happens next
just read the news these days, i guess
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dancing
if we could latch on to one speck of openness
and communication that agrees in our minds
then this is the beginning of a birth of toungues that is much needed
and much wanted as we live with millions yet are quite alone
if that could happen and not let the 'devil' take it out of our minds
then truly we are sowing in good ground
and right wrong will come to pass
it's the honest heart, the loving heart
that wants to give and see and yes take with out taking
give without really giving anything receive that which is already ours
-ours-
it takes more then one in this life and i do believe the next to have this oneness
these scattered hearts, thoughts, emotions, feelings
all held in our hands as well as others
why can't we just all get along-
so they say
dream on. there is more to it then getting along
a much greater balance of love, communication, giving, taking
to view many views is a gift
to see from anothers perspective without getting upset is witnessing in a way-a great way
one that has been practiced from the first Word
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sirguessalot
hm
i could be wrong
but ya know...something pleasantly strange in do see in all that, Clay
is how there seems to be almost NO figures of speech, flowery language, metaphors or poetry
in what you just wrote
i see nothing unscriptural
blasphemous
or ungodly
really
nothing Jesus would condemn
should he be posting here
in fact
its almost got a fundamentalist nature in its straight-talkingly-truthfulishly-literalismicality-ness
yet naively childish and mythic in its hopeful expectations of how the universe can really work
which is both hot
and cool
imho
:blink:
sometimes i wonder
if perhaps the old saying is even more true, that "in my father's house are many mansions"
though also having to do with how we can and do actually inhabit each other
as well as a lot of other things
in many many ways
and as beings, there is a sense of us that is so expressive
as to extend far beyond our bodily self
one that overlaps and encompasses each other
and then on until the ends of the universe
...
of course...all this is mostly an expression of possibility
because consensus reality most often seems to be quite a different place altogether
....sometimes
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sirguessalot
a few thoughts on contemplative history of various christianities...
some strange resemblances between what i have learned of and from those schools of 'practicing silence,' (such as the quakers) and the infamous pentecostal account, is how they actually basically practiced the most curious and strange thing...which typically went like this...
shut up
sit down
and dont go to sleep
pray only silently to yourself
(which, it sems, could be anything from speaking random sounds that you feel
or repeating the same syllable or song or wise saying over and over again)
and do this for many hours a day
together (or alone...if you have to)
or if you are a hardcore practitioner
follow a wise teacher of such things
and do this for periods like nine full days
(such as that one account)
...man oh man...i dont know about you...but this sounds like pretty extreme stuff, to me....
and so simple things like your own breathing
your own heartbeat
your own thoughts
your own feelings
and your own dreams
become of paramount importance
and worth paying close attention to
(though you really cant help it, because that is all that you have to work with in such a state, anyway...which is kind of the point)
and of course, there are a thousand other elements that can be and have been added to this kind of thing
just as there are and have been a million recipes for bread
or wine
in other words...we are free to find ways to celebrate and decorate such an act
partially because, i'm sure, one can imagine how quickly one might become terrifyingly bored
but the idea for folks like that
was to do this kind of thing as often as possible
to the degree that one is are finally able to maintain that curious new perspective
even while we are out-and-about in the world
and perhaps it is not hard for one to imagine
how this becomes a most critically valuable skill
if one is trying to fix, or help or heal or teach anyone else, including ourself
(which are among the most common of human tendencies, it seems...a bunch of helpers from the get-go, by nature)
which is perhaps why this school of first century healers
were so deeply devoted to such a path
as to consider it quite the blistering ordeal
or why certain groups of pioneering american christian thinkers
saw the value of practicing being silent together for longer than a mere minute
prior to even opening their mouths when in a circle of wise elders
and so something strange and troubling (and often truly sad-making)
is how us average modern can only be still for 15 minutes or less
yet continue along in this chronic sort of search-and-rescue-and-repair-and-control mode
makes ya wanna say "do me a favor and stop doing me favors," ya know?
and im sure its not hard to imagine how horrific that might beging to look
if it got out of control for too many generations in a row
....
ok so...maybe this kind of thing sounds too familiar...
you know..."you guys all go and be in silent prayer for many days before you speak of this stuff
and dont forget to pay attention to your breathe and your hearts
yada yada yada
and i guarantee that you will meet me via the air some day very soon"
...and other such things
...
oh yeah...and one of our typically favorite parts of all....
..."there really ARE NOT HARD RULES about this kind of thing
except the laws of love, of course"
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dancing
And could such a chance meeting of thought
(though i don't believe in chance as un foreseen)
Be an actualoccurence that can, has and will happen and continue to happen
either by thinking the same thoughts
either spiritual or otherwise-if their is anotherwise
could this be would could sprout into a fellowship with God and Hios son
via ourselves, made in the image of God
a mirror of the Living Universe inside
for no 'man' can see God and live
So what must see God
Something must die-transform, change into that which is pure
for the blessed are the pure in heart for they shall SEE God
Did Jesus lie
Can we be pure in heart
Sure,
many are mislead,
but there is no mistaking the Word of Life
LIVING IN YOUR FLESH
not a book or preacher or trickery with words
but something that really happens as it did with Jesus
as it did with Peter and the eleven and the about three thousand
as it it did with Paul
Did it stop there
Did the Word of Life turn into a book
or living epistles of the HEART
Hidden Wholeness
the Hidden man of the Heart
the Son of Man
more diverse then ever imagined or can be
the Glory that shall be revealed in us
God how i love that verse
does it stop after we put off this flesh or does it continue to be revealed
un stoppable, un hindered by that which we see with our eyes and hear with our ears
but new ears and new eyes
Could this possibly be done Now?
To see with new eyes and hear with new ears
that which has been is now and will be forever
Jesus thought so....
Yes a mighty big claim
but it starts with a word and grows into 2 3 and more
The most underestamated part of man
Christ
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dancing
I hope with you and even when we may be in different thoughts,
Or anyone else, somehow it all comes together eventually....
and separates again yet truly there is One Lord
I believe it...seen it....live by it....
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sirguessalot
i have a sense that this was asked in a wide open way
almost as if you were asking the space inside of a circle
but it is such a timely question for me
because i am actually going on a silent retreat for 3 days-and-nights very soon
one that is adapted from some Christian stuff even older than the quakers
that also draws from the work of Rumi
so...i just want to say yes, to that
and out here in the open, if i may
before i have to pull myself away from this reflective ride we are on
and get back to work
this week has been so crazy
that i am way behind
(tho i may go play in chat a bit...if i can try not to put too many folks to sleep)
:ph34r:
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dancing
thanks for that
easy to get narrow minded
when there are so many minds
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dancing
i miss you already todd
i wish i'd been up to seeing you
love always and forever
clay
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templelady
There are many parts of Quakerism that I find highly spiritually motivating
One of My favorite books if "The Christian's Secret of A Happy Life" by Hannah Whitall Smith
She was a Quaker that wrote the original in the 1800's it has been reprinted with some of the more unfamiliar references updated, Such as railway car travel, calling cards etc that she uses in her illustrations--but the heart of it remains untouched. I have had a copy near to hand for over 10 years--I highly recommend it --
It does not promote Quakerism or any other Christian sect just down to earth practical day to day living advice
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year2027
God first
Beloved Todd
God loves us all my dear friend
That sounds like a great book my dear friend
The Way taught a little about being whole in a way a being of body, soul, and spirit would be whole but a being of body and soul only would not be whole
But I must asked when is the body whole?
I say at its purest state maybe
But I must asked when is the soul whole?
I say when what breath in is in the purest state maybe
But I must asked when is the spirit whole?
I say when in its new body maybe
Because all I have is more questions I can not give a great answers to any of my questions
but I enjoy getting more in touch with my body knowing its every need
I enjoy getting more in touch with my soul knowing its every need the very image of Flesh
I enjoy getting more in touch with my spirit knowing its every need the very image of God
thank you
with love and a holy kiss blowing your way Roy
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sirguessalot
very cool...thanks Clay, TL and Roy and everyone for all that
yeah
here are some quotes from that article on the quakers i find very refreshing and appealing
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VeganXTC
I get an e-magazine, called "Peaceable Table" which is written for "Quakers and Other People of Faith. " Last months issue contained an article that I feel might add to the topic. The complete article can be found here: http://www.vegetarianfriends.net/issue24.html
The Inner Home
The most important refuge we can find, the indispensible source of life and of the universal compassion we are called to incarnate, must be within. A psalm attributed to Moses, who was born in exile and never set foot in the promised land, begins with the line "Lord, you have been our home throughout all generations" (Ps. 90:1). Still another psalm, perhaps by an exile who had once thought God dwelt only in one locality, celebrates a God who is found wherever she or he may set foot: ""If I ascend to heaven, thou art there; / If I make my bed in Sheol, lo, thou art there!" (Ps. 139:8). We can only live with grace in exile, and faithfully fulfil our prophetic calling, by turning daily, even hourly, to this inner Home, this Beloved. It is after all this Source of Love who has called and inspired us to speak and enact Her/His love and liberation for all: for these, the least of all our brothers and sisters, and for the recalcitrant who still insist on killing and eating them.
—Gracia Fay Ellwood
I've never been on a retreat, so forgive me. Do I say, have fun? Learn lots? Whatever, I do wish you well.
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Bramble
Hidden wholeness...I was thinking about something that might be the opposite...hidden brokenness. When I was in TWI, there were always things that jarred me--the separation from earthy family was one. I could never whole heartedly embrace it. There were several others...but I renewed my mind and told myself that I believed it...
Deep inside though there was a jarring or discord, something uncomfortable. Being a good wafer I ignored it--but later after i left, those things were the first doctrines of TWI to go!
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