Sunday, March 29, 2009

Dawn Running

"The breaking dawn signaled time to wind down the writing and put on my running shoes. My morning jogs over dirt paths and along a field bordering woods under the brightening, expansive sky were themselves a primary and continual source of language and concepts for this book. I would see sunrise after sunrise reveal each season’s easy efforts of leaf and blossom or notice how the landscape became sparse and toughened under winter’s pale light, then return to my apartment with ideas I’d practically plucked off branches! I felt myself losing then finding myself by participating in this whole world that I was coming to love, tying into its wider gyre and spinning."

Runner

He runs
In autumn, with the leaf-crisp earth crunching
To the rhythmic roll from heel to toe.
In blank-faced winter, only crows and old snow
To keep him company; yet in their ancient
Glad bravado, he hears an unexpected triumph of ancestral
Dinosaurs; and not unlike one in his plodding gait, knows
The pain of those who still proceed by foot and bear their weight.
If severe enough, a twisted ankle or a nagging knee,
He won’t be here tomorrow, or a few days, or weeks,
Having learned something of what to fight
And what to walk around. But he’ll be back sometime beneath
A spring sky at first light, amber streaked,
The good black dirt beneath his feet
Wet and fragrant, dark harbinger of flowing sap and flowers.
Then summer, with the sweat of self an artist’s oils
Blending him into the canvas of his surroundings,
A single painting celebrating the gift of how mere matter
Came to have a mind to become flesh
And move itself through air.
Round and round, year by year,
Upon the same small plot of ground – pointless, some would say.
Meanwhile, the necessary retracing of steps
And orbits, a working knowledge of collaboration
And a spiral to his groove.

Prose is excerpted from Original Faith: What Your Life Is Trying to Tell You available on Amazon and other online retailers including Amazon UK and Flipkart (India) and by special order at bookstores (ISBN: 978-1-934611-00-5).

"Runner" is from the eBook Original Faith: The Crossing - Mystical Poems, Essays and Sayings available on this site.

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

To Love Resoundingly

To love someone is to delight in the other’s being in, of and for itself. And to know this joy in another’s being is to experience the power of one’s own declaration of the loved one’s inherent and limitless worth.

This is joy that takes us out of and beyond ourselves. It is as if we voice the living echo of the joy God shouted upon creating the world to see that it was very good. Take this literally or take it metaphorically; it points to the same and only love. And to know our love is to begin to know ourselves, a self that is both finite and boundless.


Start of the Season
for Laura

I love the way this gangly grade-school girl
Sun-lit, freckle-spangled,

Surprises me with real speed sprinting for first base
Growing into her long legs.

I love the way she makes the God in me
Spread slowly into a long grin.

Broad as the greening lawn, my love rounds third for home
Growing into its own world.


Excerpted from Original Faith: What Your Life Is Trying to Tell You available on Amazon and other online retailers including Amazon UK and Flipkart (India) and by special order at bookstores (ISBN: 978-1-934611-00-5).

Saturday, March 21, 2009

Love’s Affirmation of the Loved One’s Worth

From last time:

“Delight that we experience in the being of others in, of, and for themselves constitutes an absolute affirmation of their absolute worth. Joyous affirmation is therefore the first movement of our love’s great Word.”

More on love’s affirmation:

“Love affirms the pricelessness of persons, their worth as ends in themselves. Love looks at another and finds a sheer worth-in-being that exists aside from any instrumental value, however great, that the loved one may have for purposes outside herself.”

A few reminders from recent posts to help focus discussion:

1. Some book content is too much for blog format – so, for example, I don’t think I’m going to try to elaborate on my use of the word “absolute.”

2. Here we’re primarily considering love in relation to other people.

3. In these posts, I’m outlining a concept of love that's developed over the course of a book chapter and that’s developed further in the book as a whole. I'm unable to sketch it out in just a few posts. For example, we’ve yet to consider the relationship between love and action. So if the concept seems incomplete so far, it is . . .

4. If you've read Original Faith and have any questions about chapter one, please feel free to bring them up.

Excerpts are from Chapter One of Original Faith: What Your Life Is Trying to Tell You. The book is available on Amazon and other online retailers including Amazon UK and Flipkart (India) and by special order at bookstores (ISBN: 978-1-934611-00-5).

Saturday, March 14, 2009

Love’s First Movement as Joyous Affirmation

Looking more closely at our love as it first stirs into joyous affirmation, it seems to begin when we notice personal qualities in the loved one that inspire joy. These comprise the ways in which the person’s own love shines through his or her particular gifts, characteristics, talents, and forms of intelligence. At some point this “noticing” vanishes in a moment of pure exultation that is our love’s joyous affirmation of the other.

Excerpted from Original Faith: What Your Life Is Trying to Tell You, Chapter One: What Love Is. The book is available on Amazon and other online retailers including Amazon UK and Flipkart (India) and by special order at bookstores (ISBN: 978-1-934611-00-5).

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Love as Joyous Affirmation

A few preliminary thoughts about conceptualizing love:

Reminder: for the time being, we’re primarily considering love in relation to other people. This keeps things simpler - and surely loving others is a big part of love’s job in the world.

Becoming aware of what love is helps us act on love more consistently and emphatically.

We have many feelings in addition to love in relation to those we love that are not to be confused with love. For example, intimate relationships include sex and the mutual enjoyment of a wide array of day to day activities.

Our first experiences of love usually occur in relation to our parents, other caretakers, and siblings. People with histories of very mixed or conflicted feelings toward family members may have particular difficulty sorting out what love of is. If this is the case for you, then you may want to reflect on your love for some other sentient being that you have cared for such as a dog or cat. This may more clearly and readily point you toward understanding what you feel when you feel love.

Love as Joyous Affirmation

In the previous two posts I’ve stated that the first motion of love’s spirit or the first aspect of our experience of it – love at its inception – is joy of a particular kind: a delight that focuses on others in, of, and for themselves.

Delight that we experience in the being of others in, of, and for themselves constitutes an absolute affirmation of their absolute worth. Joyous affirmation is therefore the first movement of our love’s great Word.

Excerpted from Original Faith: What Your Life Is Trying to Tell You, Chapter One: What Love Is. The book is available on Amazon and other online retailers including Amazon UK and Flipkart (India) and by special order at bookstores (ISBN: 978-1-934611-00-5).

Saturday, March 07, 2009

More on Love and Joy

Last post I stated that love is joy of a particular kind: a delight that focuses on others in, of, and for themselves. To continue...

Love’s joy is not a delight in any pleasure or delight with which the loved one provides us – not even the joy of loving them. Our gladness that they are alive points as squarely to them as our gladness that we are alive points to ourselves.

Love’s delight is in the sheer presence-in-reality of the one we love. It is joy that such a one should be at all, and it contains a bottomless sense of thanksgiving or gratitude. Love is the delight by which we hold another’s presence sacred. Love is that central aspect of our pleasure in someone’s existence, utterly free of ulterior motive and not preoccupied with viewing the other as means to any end.

How does that sound to you as making a start toward understanding what love is?

Excerpted from Original Faith: What Your Life Is Trying to Tell You, Chapter One: What Love Is. The book is available on Amazon and other online retailers including Amazon UK and Flipkart (India) and by special order at bookstores (ISBN: 978-1-934611-00-5).

Thursday, March 05, 2009

What Love Is: Joy

Love is a pleasure, a delight. There are many forms of pleasure and delight, but more than any of them, love takes us out of ourselves. Love is joy - a delight that focuses on others in, of, and for themselves.

Excerpted from Original Faith: What Your Life Is Trying to Tell You, Chapter One: What Love Is.

What do you think – and feel? Have you ever felt that someone felt this way about you? Have you ever felt this way about someone else?

Tuesday, March 03, 2009

Introducing Love

Love occupies a special place in the realm of human feelings. We identify it closely with human beings at their best, and this is so whether we view ourselves as secular or religious. Love never really goes out of fashion. It is a perennial source of trouble to cynics. Whatever we may believe or not believe, our love, as the song says, is here to stay.

Excerpted from Original Faith: What Your Life Is Trying to Tell You, Chapter One: What Love Is, p. 4

I start my book with the topic of love for three reasons:

• People are often unclear about what the word means or use it in different ways.

• Once we understand what love is, we see that it’s a universal experience. It brings us together. We hold it in common regardless of background or tradition.

• It’s important for us to increase our awareness of love because this helps us to act on it with greater emphasis and consistency.

What do you think love is?

About the Book:

Original Faith’s experiential, non-doctrinal approach helps to enrich the believer's consciousness of faith and spiritual life while bringing this dimension of experience to the attention of nonbelievers. The book includes practical guidance to help foster transition from an identity based on ego to one based on love and beyond – without oversimplifications or false promises, and with the understanding that genuine self development means becoming increasingly passionate about the good of the wider world.

I’m in my fifteenth year of a progressive disease that by now has me mostly bedridden; I've lived by what I’ve written. With a faith known first hand, we find that we are here not to seek meaning, but to help create it.

Availability:

USA: Amazon.com, BarnesAndNoble.com, Target.com. Also available by special order at your local bookstore (ISBN: 978-1-934611-00-5).

India: Flipkart and Infibeam.

UK: Amazon.co.uk.

Sunday, March 01, 2009

Going on Sabbathical

Recently I received an email asking if I know of any internet discussion groups where people have taken a break from public worship to examine their beliefs and commitment to religion. I’m not, so if anybody is, please do mention it in the comments thread.

This email brought to mind the fact that I haven’t discussed worship much on this blog, so here are a few questions:

If you go to church, temple or mosque, what role does this play in your spiritual life?

Do you also engage in other spiritual practices? How would you characterize their role and perhaps relative importance in your life in distinction from public worship?

What do you make of the connotations of the word worship in contrast, say, to love or reverence?


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