A Pause

Today, I’m again overwhelmed with a president who, on an ever-changing whim, goes against the constitution to levy tariffs that affect each one of us and everyone in the world, and that is just one thing he does daily. Therefore, I opened Stay Inspired, Shelter in Place, 2020.  It’s an expensive book but 100% of the profits are donated to NO KID HUNGRY.

This book is the inspiration of Lisa Dolby Chadwick, who is the founder of the Dolby Chadwick Gallery.  You can order the book through the gallery.  It’s a collection of poetry and art.  Open to any page and find beauty and comfort, perhaps even laughter.

In Dean Young’s poem “Whale Watch”, I smile and recognize these words:

… I have seen books with pink slips

marking vital passages

but this i do not recommend

as it makes the book appear foolish 

like a dog in a sweater.

Here’s the last line of Rilke’s poem “Sunset” translated by Robert Bly.

one moment your life is a stone in you, and the next, a star.

Again, I recommend Naomi Shihab Nye’s poem, “So Much Happiness” which can be found at poets.org.

Ken Wilber:

Great art suspends the reverted eye, the lamented past, the anticipated future: we enter with it into the timeless present; we are with God today, perfect in our manner and mode, open the riches and glories of a realm that time forgot, but that great art reminds us of: not by its content, but what what it does in us: suspends the desire to be elsewhere. And thus it undoes the agitated grasping in the heart of the suffering self, and releases us – maybe for a second, maybe for a minute, maybe for all eternity – releases us from the coil of ourselves.

This book is great art and releases us from the coil of ourselves.

Look through the trunks of trees
Open Fairy Doors
Greet the morning with a swim in Angel Lake

Reading

From Ron Charles today in the Washington Post:

At the opening ceremony of the Frankfurt Book Fair, Turkish-British writer Elif Shafak said, “In a world that remains deeply polarized and bitterly politicized, and torn apart by inequality and wars, and the cruelty we are capable of inflicting on each other and on Earth, our only home, in such a troubled world, what can writers and poets even hope to achieve? What place is there for stories and imagination when tribalism, destruction and othering speak more loudly and boldly?” (I’m quoting from notes that Shafak sent to me.)

Shafak, whose most recent novel is “There Are Rivers in the Sky,” spoke with longing for the 21st century that never arrived — or at least hasn’t yet. She recalled the flutter of international optimism when the Berlin Wall fell, the Soviet empire broke apart, and the internet promised to create a well-informed electorate. In those heady days, for a moment at least, it felt possible to see a bright future for peace and democracy. 

“Fast forward, today,” she said, “we are living in a world in which there is way too much information, but little knowledge and even less wisdom.… As we scroll up and down, more out of habit than out of anything else, we have no time to process what we see. No time to absorb or reflect or feel. Hyper-information gives us the illusion of knowledge.” 

“For true knowledge to be attained we need to slow down. We need cultural spaces, literary festivals, an open and honest intellectual exchange.”

I continue to read that in reading novels we gain empathy.  Focusing, we enter another’s mind and world.  We’re exposed to lifestyles, characters, choices and worlds wider and broader than we may personally know.

It’s a challenge to continue to see lies reported as truth. It’s discouraging to know the money that is poured into a race to destroy our democracy, and yet there are books to read and places like the Bay Area Children’s Museum to go and return to joy, creativity, thoughtfulness, and trust.

A fish flies at the museum
Music vibrates the air
Looking through a portal
Reflecting
Touching and Seeing