Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Giddyup

"When the horse you rode in on becomes sick and dies, it is prudent to dismount."

PRUDENT
1. wise or judicious in practical affairs; sagacious; discreet or circumspect; sober.
2. careful in providing for the future; provident: a prudent decision.

SAGACIOUS
1. having or showing acute mental discernment and keen practical sense; shrewd: a sagacious lawyer.

I don't have much else to say other than that. This phrase has been stuck in my head all day like a bad song. I guess the moral of the story is that I have grown sick and tired of being sick and tired. It is time dismount the dead horse and get on with my life.

Saturday, September 26, 2009

Ahh . . . ahh . . . HAH-CHOO!!

Logic is neat stuff. I use it. I like it. I'm not always rational, but I am always making an attempt to put things together logically.

The problem is that all the logic in the world can't account for those things that are unforeseen. I can be both logical and rational but I will never know what the next 30 seconds of my life will hold.

Like when you have no idea that you're going to sneeze and the next thing you know - HAH-CHOO!! (Only on a much larger scale). The logical sequence that was interrupted by the sneeze might have gone like this:
Open the cabinet.
Grab my toothbrush.
Turn on the water.
Get the toothbrush wet.
Put toothpaste on th-  HAH-CHOO!!!
. . . 

Thus the logical and orderly routine of brushing my teeth is interrupted. Now I have to put down the toothpaste. Put down the toothbrush. Grab a kleenex. Blow my nose. Pick up the toothpaste, etc.

I didn't plan on the sneeze. There was nothing illogical or irrational about the order or method that I was using to brush my teeth . . . and hah-choo - my life got interrupted.

This is not to suggest that my life would be better were I to throw my hands up in a fit of 'fuck-its' and never brush my teeth again. I guess I used this example to illustrate (mainly for myself) that logic isn't neccessarily the answer to living life the way I want to live it.

I have been relying heavily on reason, and to little avail because (as I've said before) the future is made up of entirely unforeseen events. (Not to mention all that stuff I wrote about flawed logic recently). That's it. I'm done thinking about my thinking for now.  

Monday, September 21, 2009

Were i but a...

I was going to write a new blog entry but it took me so long to figure out how to disable the Hindi transliteration that I don't have time.

basically, the world continues to spin on it's tilted axis, regardless of my deepest wish that it stop for what would become an indeterminate (if not inconsequential) period of "time".

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

baby steps

God didn't exist until God was an idea.

I had to write that down before I forgot it.
In my last post I wrote that I am (or was ) (or still am) on the verge of some big ideas. New neuropathways are slowly being etched into the carbon-based mass inside my carbon-based skull. The pathways are being reinforced, each crevice dug a little deeper, with every repetition of the old words as they collide with one another in a new way.
I was watching the History Channel tonight and there was this segment about how the Earth's moon was created. There is some evidence to support the idea that roughly 4 billion years ago there was a "Great Impact". An "asteroid" for lack of a better term was dislodged from it's orbit around the then-molten Earth by the gravitational pull of the planet Jupiter. It flew toward Earth at 25 thousand miles per hour. The asteroid "nicked" one side of the planet and upon impact was shattered into a million pieces, spinning out into space in a long, arm-like shape. Because the asteroid was made up of metals and because gravity already existed in the universe, the scattered pieces began to amass creating Earth's moon in about a year.

A wise man once told me that science and religion lived in different houses and that I was not to imagine that they lived together. He said I could not be a "Dieistic Creationist". (I think he meant I could not choose to believe that God created atoms and thus the atoms have intelligence and thus the universe was created out of divine intelligence). He said that the Greeks referred to the Heavens as the Cosmos which means Order in Greek. The Greeks understood that the world (the WHOLE world - people, animals, plants, tides) all acted in accordance with natural laws. They knew this thousands of years ago.

But it was considered impious to suggest that lighting was "thrown" by anything other than the mighty hand of Zeus. All the knowledge in the world in ancient Greece was rendered useless.

To believe in God is to believe in the irrational. And for "belief in God" to actually be a belief there has to be behavior to accompany it. (Otherwise it's just an idea). (Hence religion??).

I think I am getting closer to the reason why I cannot accept that science and religion live in the same house. I think - I thiiiiiiiiink it may be because if I attribute the natural order of a universe, a solar system, a planet, a moon, and six million known species to the intentional agenda of a divine being, then I am getting the irrational confused with the rational.

That's the danger. Don't call something that is not rational rational and don't call something that is rational not rational. They are separate. Science and religion do not live in the same house. They are both here ('here' meaning part of my experience) but they are not the same.

God it feels good to get that out. I think some of the pathways are secure.

Thursday, August 13, 2009

A word on the Dalai Lama

A friend of mine shared with me recently that she had some fears about living a spiritual life. (It has been suggested to me that I "continue to enlarge my spiritual life" as a solution to my particular brand of self-centeredness). My friend told me that she feared she was not being spiritual enough. She said she was also afraid of getting comfortable - what if she thought she was being "spiritual enough" but it turns out she wasn't and she screws up again?!
I told her that I had those same fears - how will I know if there is enough spirituality in my daily life? Will I know right away if my prayers worked? If I just say them and I don't hum with Divine energy while I'm praying are me prayers good enough? If I could do it better, would I know by now? Will God think that I could pray better and punish me if I don't hum with Divine energy?
One thing my current spiritual adviser has impressed upon me in this last year is that I can invite God into every stream or avenue or area of my life. God can be the thing that connects them all. I don't have to choose what "parts" of my day are for God and what "parts" are for me. (Like that Kahlil Gibran poem I put in one of my posts).
I told my friend these words of wisdom that my friend had shared with me and encouraged her to just let God be a part of everything that she did. I told her that if she did so (brought God into everything) then every act could be prayerful or at the very least spiritually connected. She could be spiritual all day every day. (Not perfect, just aware and humble).
Then I came up with an example.
The Dalai Lama. His Holiness travels all over the world speaking to millions people. I got to see him in Minnesota about ten years ago and I found his presence truly magical. He was this tiny old man in bright red and orange robes with big, coke bottle glasses and I think he was missing some teeth. He was answering questions from audience members and I remeber thinking, "Gaahhd! He seems so . . . normal!"
He spoke English, he said something about McDonald's, I remember he laughed at himself. He was sharing a story about how he had made a mistake and he laughed at himself.
So it dawned on me the other day - if the Dalai Lama travels all over the world and eats McDonald's, and makes mistakes - he doesn't cease to be a holy man just because he does those things.
The Dalai Lama is still the Dalai Lama even when he's in line at Cinnabun in the Newark International Airport.
They are not separate.
If I chose to invite God (or God-awareness) into as many minutes of my day as I can, then it doesn't matter if what I'm "doing" is standing in line at the DMV, or waiting tables, or putting my boyfriend's niece down for a nap.
Thank you to the Dalai Lama for His Holy Human-ness!!
I can do everything today with gratitude and humility - it is my choice.