Diversity and Connection

On Saturday I enjoyed a neighborhood luncheon of eight women celebrating life.  I was surprised to hear how many had grandfathers who came to this country when they were 12 or 14 speaking no English and, yet they contributed and thrived.  Their grandchildren are proof of that.  

My niece is currently driving across the country to visit us.  Because she and her beloved dog are traveling together, I decided to re-read John Steinbeck’s Travels with Charley.  It was 1960 and he wanted to understand what was happening in the country so he outfitted a camper truck and left the East coast with his dog Charley and drove up to Maine, across the northern route to Washington state, down to CA and across Texas and the South.  I recommend the book to understand the changes in our country that could lead to Trump and Vance, and Congress killing funding for public broadcasting to silence dissent.

At Book passage, I bought a book, My Head for a Tree: The  Extraordinary Story of the Bishnoi, Guardians of Nature.  The author Martin Goodman travels to Rajasthan, in northern India, home to the Bishnoi, a desert people whose religion is built around nature and wildlife conservation. In 1604 two Bishnoi women were beheaded in defense of trees. In 1643, when trees were being felled for use in celebrations of the goddess Holi, a local Bishnoi named Buchoji killed himself in protest. On September 11, 1730, over 363  Bishnoi were beheaded to save trees.  These people are fierce and still willing to die to save trees.  They understand the peril of not recognizing our connection with all that’s here, the roots that connect us all around the world.

My niece and her canine companion camping by Lake Erie to enjoy the sunset.

Relationship

Fyodor Dostoyevsky in The Brothers Karamazov:

Love every leaf…. Love the animals, love the plants, love everything.  If you love everything, you will perceive the divine mystery in things. Once you perceive it, you will begin to comprehend it better every day. And you will come at last to love the whole world with an abiding universal love.  

Space for All
The Sleeping Maiden – Mt. Tam
At the Muir Beach Overlook
Open Within

Shadow

At the park, I saw a little boy, perhaps two or three, laughing and waving, but I couldn’t see anyone there.  Then I realized he was playing with his shadow, waving, laughing and dancing with his own image.  If only we could greet all aspects of ourselves with such joy and glee, no hiding, only reception and awareness of all that’s right here for us to see, receive, and be.  



Light and Dark
Dancing our heart like a kite at the end of our arms
Receiving and being with sun and shade

Compassion

When my grandson was four, he watched butterflies and a caterpillar, and then went into the house and returned with a long strand of yellow yarn which he weaved through the wires of a fence so the insects would see the fence and not be hurt.

I’m with that today as I read news I find horrifying though I continue to work with non-judgment and trust in ebb and flow, and the recurring phases of the moon.

I’m reminded of Nelson Mandela who spent 27 years in prison, but refused to carry a grudge against his captors. He later said of his release from prison, “As I walked out the door toward the gate that would lead to my freedom, I knew if I didn’t leave my bitterness and hatred behind, I’d still be in prison.”

Thich Nhat Hanh:  This, my dear, is the greatest challenge to being alive. To witness injustice in the world and not allow it to consume our light.  

Trust
Offering at Green Gulch
Serenity

Connection

In reading The Mushroom at the End of the World by Anna Lowenhaupt Tsing, I learned that “When Hiroshima was destroyed by an atomic bomb in 1945, it is said, the first living thing to emerge from the blasted landscape was a matsutake mushroom.”  

I’ve been at Green Gulch Zen Center and farm for four days.  I parked at Muir Beach and after crossing a wooden bridge, I walked into a land of gardens, bunnies, quail, deer, and flights and songs of birds.  I can’t imagine one country dropping a bomb on another but I can imagine the mycelium web of mushrooms surviving the damage.  I offer photos of invitation.

From the Muir Beach Overlook on a foggy, July day.
On Approach
The Temple Gong
Beach Art
Honoring the Coast Miwok who lived and nourished on the land for more than 10,000 years.
Nature heals with restoration
Lavender and Bees

Peace

Thursday through Sunday I’ll be in a Sensory Awareness workshop at Green Gulch Zen Center with Lee Klinger Lesser titled How does my love for life want to express itself?  She suggests we bring an object or symbol that represents how our love for life wants to express itself in the midst of these times that we are living.

As I reflect on this, two poems of Naomi Shihab Nye come to mind.  One is called “Kindness”.  The other is “So Much Happiness”.  

You can find both poems at poets.org.

Here is the last stanza of “So Much Happiness”.

Since there is no place large enough 

to contain so much happiness

you shrug, you raise your hands, and it flows out of you

into everything you touch. You are not responsible.

You take no credit, as the night sky takes no credit

for the moon, but continues to hold it, and share it, 

and in that way, be known.

Touch!
Scent

Abundance

Education

Thomas Jefferson said “An educated citizenry is a vital requisite for our survival as a free people.”

Appointed by Trump, Linda E. McMahon was sworn in as the 13th United States Secretary of Education on March 3, 2025.  Secretary of Education!

McMahon says it’s important for children to learn about A1.  What does she think the A stands for?   Asinine, Atrocious, Absolute, Absent, Allegory, Aging, Agile?  

It’s AI, Artificial Intelligence, an addition to animal intelligence, natural intelligence, emotional intelligence, and so on.  When asked about Trump’s statements, AI points out the lies.  Perhaps that’s why she thinks of it as Aging, Absent One. 

And now, perhaps we can start referring to each day as Interdependence Day, since without education we are not free, but with or without it, we are Interdependent.  

Floating, tied with the tide.
The hills are summer gold!

Adaptation

We’ve been with our five year old grandson for three days so I haven’t read the news until this morning.  As I read, I try to embody the words of Thich Nhat Hanh:

What is most important is not to allow anxiety about what happens in the world to fill your heart. If your heart is filled with anxiety, you will get sick, and you will not be able to help.

Our family gathered to celebrate the Fourth of July, and we played croquet, feasted, talked, and watched fireworks from a hill walking distance from our son’s home.  Grandson’s parents were backpacking in Big Sur to celebrate their 17th anniversary.

On Sunday, we went to our local library to get books on snakes.  I didn’t expect it to be crowded but it happily was, especially in the children’s section where there was a table for coloring and drawing, one with puzzles, a tent with stuffed animals, and yes, a section on snakes.  I don’t know why grandson’s current fascination is snakes though yes, they are beautiful and adaptable, so we returned home with the two books he chose, though we could have taken out 100 books.  It’s hard to integrate a world where systems that help the people are being dismantled and eliminated, and yet, so far, we still have libraries, places to gather, share and learn lifetimes of knowledge and creativity, and feel wrapped in blankets of love, generosity, and care.  

Waiting for Fireworks
Chatting with another five year old through the fence
A fairy door invites entry when strolling along the street

Freedom

As we await a vote that benefits the super-wealthy, destroys our country with debt, and leads to children starving, each of us must look at what matters.

John Lewis in Across That Bridge wrote:

Freedom is not a state; it is an act. It is not some enchanted garden perched high on a distant plateau where we can finally sit down and rest. Freedom is the continuous action we all must take, and each generation must do its part to create an even more fair, more just society. 

Last night I watched a recording of an event put on by the Tergar Institute.  Uvinie Lubecki, Ocean Vuong, and Ronan Harrington spoke.  I’m inspired by their intelligence and commitment to the world and themselves.

Some notes: 

Uvinie: I saw no other way.  Purpose is a way of being.  It’s how we drink a cup of tea.  Awareness, Love and Compassion, lead to connection and wisdom.

Ocean: Develop the voice you already have.  Re-read a book like Moby Dick.  Understand why it’s a classic.  Live the Buddha’s final words: Go forth with earnestness. Try with all your heart. Our youth are afraid of being “cringy”, of shame. Give ourselves permission to fail so there is no shame.

Yongey Mingyur Rinpoche: Failure is the mother of success.

Ronan: Speak truth to power.  Resilience requires balance.  Know when to open and close so you don’t ruin your health as he did trying to save the world, and now he recovers from pain and addiction.  Resilience requires boundaries.

Awaiting the Vote
May our flag represent freedom, not oligarchy
May we live in connection and honor, respect, and celebrate diversity.