Sunday, September 5, 2010

Living In The Now

The other day I came across a quote that really made me stop and think. It was attributed to “Anonymous”, which may be better than having a famous name attached to it. Here’s how it went: ” Hell is the knowledge of opportunity lost; the place where the man I am comes face to face with the man I might have been.”

Undoubtedly it’s odd to mix the idea of hell with Zen concepts, but the more I thought about this idea the more it spoke to me of the need to truly be present to my thoughts, actions, and choices in this moment.

Thursday, September 2, 2010

No More Taking Sides

In recent days we've heard the news of a cab driver in New York stabbed because he is a Muslim http://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/31/nyregion/31cabby.html and another incident in Seattle where an employee wearing a turban in a 7-Eleven store was beaten and told: "“You’re not even American, you’re Al-Qaeda. Go back to your country.” http://peterdaou.com/2010/09/man-beats-man-in-turban-youre-not-even-american-youre-al-qaeda-go-back-to-your-country/

And today the Israeli Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, and President Mahmoud Abbas of the Palestinian Authority will sit down at the State Department with Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to begin a process of trying once again to find a road to peace and to end a conflict that has afflicted that region for more than 60 years.

Will the new peace process work? We can't know yet, of course, but it seems to me that all people of good will have to hope and pray that it does. And what about our country, are these recent incidents of anti-Muslim feelings, even Islamophobia perhaps, isolated events, or are they signs of what is to come, of where our nation is going? Those questions must remain unanswered right now too, left to be answered by future historians in light of what tomorrow’s news reports may bring.

All this was on my mind this morning as I dutifully spent my hour on an elliptical trainer at the gym. I used to listen to music on my iPod while exercising, but over the past couple of months I've been enjoying some very intellectually stimulating and educational podcasts from "Speaking of Faith", a program produced by National Public Media and wonderfully hosted by Krista Tippett. I could go on and on about how much I've come to love this program, the people to whom the recorded shows have introduced me, and the website that expands upon and broadens the potential scope of the learning the show offers in ways that are truly amazing. But I'll resist that temptation, at least for this post, and speak only about the show I listened to today. "No More Taking Sides". http://speakingoffaith.publicradio.org/programs/2010/no-more/

If you follow the link to the page for that particular show, you'll see that the introductory blurb describes it this way: "Robi Damelin lost her son David to a Palestinian sniper. Ali Abu Awwad lost his older brother Yousef to an Israeli soldier. But, instead of clinging to traditional ideologies and turning their pain into more violence, they've decided to understand the other side — Israeli and Palestinian — by sharing their pain and their humanity. They tell of a gathering network of survivors who share their grief, their stories of loved ones, and their ideas for lasting peace. They don't want to be right; they want to be honest." The story they have to tell is, at the same time, heart-breaking, inspiring and a source of hope. They talk about moving beyond being pro-Israeli or pro-Palestinian to looking for a way to use the pain they each feel over the loss of a loved one in a way to try to help heal and, ultimately, resolve what seems to be the unresolvable conflict between their two peoples. At one point, Mr. Awwad makes the comment that he sees his pain over the loss of his brother as "holy", and he felt that to strike back in anger over that loss would allow that holy pain to be used in furtherance of continuing a struggle that would inevitably lead to other losses and other futile acts of retribution.

I urge you to listen to this program, to think about the way in which these folks are trying to find a better way, and - if you're so inclined - to say a little prayer for them, for the peace process being started today, and for our country. May we all be guided by wisdom, from whatever source you may believe in.

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Mirror Lake


During our recent vacation in Utah, Suz and I hiked around this alpine lake, which was about an hour from Park City where we were staying. All along the way out and back we were marveling to each other as each turn in the road or crest of a hill brought one gorgeous panorama after another into our vision. It was a magnificent day!

Good To Know.......???

Sunday, August 1, 2010

Ordinary Days

A large part of the past year has been very much dominated by my business life. I have been consumed by the demands of establishing objectives and goals, gathering and analyzing data, responding to questions, and reviewing legal documents. Vacations had been canceled, or deferred, and too frequently I ended up spending the night near the office, unable to face the long commute home in the evening, only to retrace my steps early the following morning. Even on weekends, documents had to be prepared, or reviewed, and often there were conference calls with other members of our management team and outside counsel or other advisers. And with all that, just over a month ago we saw all that we had done and all that we had hoped to achieve had ended in disappointment, even despair, leaving us no closer to achieving our goals than we had been a year ago. But today, I am happy. What is different is my attitude and my focus, both of which recently have been centered on home and family.

There is a prayer I like that says: "Oh ordinary day, let me be grateful for the treasure that you are". It's the antithesis of the attitude that responds to the common question of: "What's new?" with the threadbare canned reply: "Nothing, just the same old, same old." Maybe it's getting older, at least in part, that heightens my appreciation for the daily ordinary. With each passing year we see another of our contemporaries suddenly facing a precipitous decline in their health, leaving them forever changed, impaired, diminished. It's easy to imagine how they would cherish the ability to set back the clock of their lives to an ordinary day, one just like all the others when they were healthy, and whole, and happy. So much of this is trite, old news. Forty years ago, Joni Mitchell lamented with us: "Don't it always seem to go that you don't know what you got 'til it's gone?" And yet, for me at least, it is precisely because an idea is trite, an old saw, even obvious and banal, that I usually need to be reminded of the simple truth that it contains, the essential life lesson that deserves a larger part of my daily attention. That's the path to wisdom, and serenity.

The singer-songwriter Carrie Newcomer to me seems to possess a gift for elevating out of the myriad ordinary elements and experiences of our often too busy days those persons and moments that hint at transcendence, or even that give evidence of the sacred in our lives, and to bring them into attention in ways that sometimes elicit a chuckle, and other times a gasp. With an outlook that refuses to consider anyone unimportant, any experience unworthy of reflection, in simple, everyday language she provokes me to consider the many ways in which each day is suffused with spirituality, yes even with the Spirit of God. Her music inspires and unsettles; it is a cause for joy, and a reminder to do better, to pay closer attention. Listening to the message of her songs is a comforting reassurance, as well as a lesson in how much of the content and message of each day I miss by failing to pay attention and to savor the treasure of that ordinary day.

Later this year, Carrie is going to be at a retreat center in the Pocono Mountains where she'll be leading a seminar on the topic: "Writing Mindfully: Exploring the Sacred Ordinary." It's billed to be pitched to "songwriters, poetry and prose writers of all experience levels…", and I certainly hope that is true, particularly the "all experience levels" part. I'm going to attend that weekend, and we'll see if the prose of an aging lawyer is malleable enough to learn to grapple with the sacred ordinary. I hope so. In a way that's what I hoped to find a way to do each time I've started a journal or a blog entry - to use the medium of writing to organize my thinking, to examine my experience, and, perhaps, in so doing, better to understand both the experience and the writer. We shall see. I'm guessing that if anyone can help make that happen, Carrie Newcomer is the gal to do it. Stay tuned, see what happens, even comment if you like. It's a process, a journey, an evolution, and every insight is worth considering. See, I'm learning already.

There is an instinct in us for newness for renewal,
for a liberation of creative power.
We seek to awaken in ourselves
a force that really changes our life from within.
And yet this same instinct tell us
That this change is a recovery of that which is deepest,
most original, most personal in ourselves.


–Thomas Merton

Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Priorities

Recently, I've been getting some pretty rabid emails from folks who seem to be certain that the effect on our country of the Health Care legislation recently passed by the Obama administration should be counted on a par with what that pesky meteor did to the dinosaurs. Well, maybe it should. But I came across something on the web today that suggests that I'm not the only one who wonders what standards folks are applying in reaching their conclusions, and why some are suddenly awake to goings on in Washington, when it would have seemed to be to them a fairly uninteresting topic for much of the past decade. So, in case you missed this, I thought I'd share.....

"You didn't get mad when the Supreme Court stopped a legal recount and appointed a President.

You didn't get mad when Cheney allowed energy company officials to dictate energy policy.

You didn't get mad when the president ignored the clear and timely warning that terrorists were going to hijack planes and fly them into the WTC towers.

You didn't get mad when we illegally invaded a country that posed no threat to us.

You didn't get mad when the weapons inspectors, who said there were no WMDs, were ignored.

You didn't get mad when we spent over 600 billion(and counting) on said illegal war.

You didn't get mad when over 10 billion dollars just disappeared in Iraq.

You didn't get mad when you found out we were torturing people.

You didn't get mad when hundreds of thousands of people died in Iraq.

You didn't get mad when a covert CIA operative got outed.

You didn't get mad when the Patriot Act got passed.

You didn't get mad when the government was illegally wiretapping Americans.

You didn't get mad when we didn't catch Bin Laden.

You didn't get mad when you saw the horrible conditions at Walter Reed.

You didn't get mad when we let a major US city, New Orleans, drown.

You didn't get mad when we gave a 900 billion tax break to the rich.

You didn't get mad when the deficit hit the trillion dollar mark.

You finally got mad when the government decided that people in America deserved the right to see a doctor if they are sick.  Yes, illegal wars, lies, corruption, torture, stealing your tax dollars to make the rich richer, are all okay with you, but helping other Americans...oh hell no."

Monday, March 1, 2010

Being silly...a calling

My granddaughter, Caris, a while back (when she was 2-3-ish) began to say that Popi is silly, and then giggle with the fun of it. Later, it became a point of pride with me that, when questioned by her dad about who's the silliest person she knows, the answer is always: "Popi". Sometimes my exalted status is also expressed by her as: "Popi is soooo silly." And now her younger sister has taken up that refrain - and seemingly spontaneously.

So here I am.....a 65 year old lawyer, accountant, business executive, mover and shaker.... and one of my greatest joys in life comes when Caris or Caleigh giggle ferociously, point, and once again confirm that there's something at which I am the very best......