Bit By Little

Dearest Readers,

This month I am working on GITA and it’s proving to be a difficult challenge. Writing a play is never easy but I’ve had pretty good luck with the process in the past. Most (but not all) of the first drafts I’ve written have poured out of me without too much resistance. This one, however, is not so fluid.

As I described my writing activities to a friend last night I found myself back in that old familiar territory of “I’m not enough.” Here is a summary of our exchange:

Friend: So what are you up to for the rest of the summer?

Me: I’m supposed to be writing a play. But it’s not really happening. I’m not giving it a lot of time or focus. I’m managing between 10 minutes and 30 minutes a day but it’s not really enough.

Friend: That’s not bad. It’s better than nothing.

Me: That’s true. It is.

Friend: Starting something new isn’t easy.

Me: That’s true, too.

Ah! Don’t you love it when friends say the things to you that you would say to them? For some nutty reason we just can’t say these things to ourselves.

Starting a new project is not easy. Doing a little bit each day is progress, however slow. It is the action that counts. The effort, not the result.

So I better get off this post and make a little bit more effort!

Inspiring Message of the Day: Do I have a project that I would like to begin? What if I started with ten minutes a day? What if this could be enough? I will pick a project, do a little bit and accept progress rather than perfection as my success.

We Shall Overcome

Dearest Readers,

Yesterday I wrote a kind of meditation on life andĀ death. Well, you want to talk about life and death? Go and seeĀ Soundtrack for a Revolution. I watched a presentation of it last night brought to our fair city by Ā the Yukon Film Society. It’s a filmĀ about the Civil Rights Movement and how Gospel Music played a part in its victory. It’s also about overcoming our greatest fear.

Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., who was the Movement’s central figure, said something in one of his speeches that rocked me to my core. He said, “In order to have freedom we must overcome this fear of death.”

Okay, their lives were on the line. He said this because the protesters were being killed. He knew he might well be killed. He was killed. But those words of his, they are, in my opinion, The Greatest Truth of All. They are relevant in all of our lives, everyday, no matter who we are.

For even when there is no danger, even when we have all of our rights and all of our dignities and desires, we can still be imprisoned by fear.

At the end of the movie I heard a young woman say that she thought it was a powerful film “except for the religious stuff.” Hello? She missed the whole point. It was Dr. King’s faith, his utter devotion to the Gospel of Peace and Justice, thatĀ drove him and, in fact, carried the entire Movement, leadingĀ ultimately to its victory.

Our present circumstances may not seem as dire. Today, the majority of North American people do not feel oppressed by injustice. And yet I would venture to say that the majority of us are oppressed by our fear.

The call to “Let Freedom Reign” can be just as significant in our lives today, just as meaningful, if we are shackled by childhood fears, held back by Old BS (belief systems), strangled by trauma and shame.

The Civil Rights Movement was such an unbelievably monumental happening. It was a Seismic Shift in both Inner and Outer Consciousness. It changed government and it changed hearts and minds. What cannot be dismissed is the undeniable Truth of its Message. At its very core was a profound belief in our inherent ability to overcome fear through faith.

This is the Real Freedom available to us all.

Inspiring Message of the Day: Let me not confuse Faith with religion, which may cause me to reject its Power. Let me explore the idea of using Faith to overcome my deepest fears.

Is This The Real Life

Dearest Readers,

If you have been reading this blog for a while you will remember my friend Leanne. She was killed by cancer just a few short months ago. I think of her often, acknowledge her in little ways, say prayers in her name and even speak directly to her. It allĀ  helps.

LastĀ  night she appeared in my dreams. Have you ever had a dream about someone who is dead? It takes a moment to register first that the person is alive before your very eyes and second that he/she really did die in waking life. The sensation is almost impossible to describe.

When Leanne and I met in the dream we were in a classroom surrounded by our high school chums. Not surprising. This is where she and I spent most of our time together. All of a sudden, there she was.

“You’re alive!” I said.

“Yeah,” she said, “I know. It’s pretty amazing.”

She looked amazing. Like she did when we were teenagers: healthy, vibrant, glamorous. In fact, Leanne still had all of these qualities when she was living with cancer. She was as gorgeous as ever.

But in the dream there was something different about her. Despite her radiant beauty there was a stiffness and a puffiness in her face. I have seen bodies that have been embalmed. Her jaw looked somewhat like this.

I’m sorry if that’s morbid. But the unnaturalness in her face kept reminding my conscious self that I was dreaming. Something was not right.

And yet the reunion was celebratory. Leanne was alive! Alive. Incredible. And so real. When I awoke I couldn’t believe it. I got to see her, to speak with her, to be near her again.

Did it really happen? Did she visit me? Can the spirit of a person come to another person through a dream?

Once a friend of mine gave me a card that said, “I do not know whether I was then a man dreaming I was a butterfly, or whether I am a butterfly dreaming I am a man.” The quote is by Chuang Tzu, an ancient Chinese Philosopher who may or may not have existed.

The quote, according to Burton Watson, an “accomplished translator of Chinese and Japanese literature and poetry”, references “the Transformation of Things.”

I found this quote when I Googled “the transformation of things”:

“[The butterfly dream] shows that, although in ordinary appearance there are differences between things, in delusions or in dreams one thing can also be another. The transformation of things proves that the differences among things are not absolute.”

In my dreams Leanne is alive. In waking life she is not. The difference between these two truths is not absolute. “Absolute” means “final”.

Leanne’s death was final. And yet not. Wait a minute, am I a butterfly?

Inspiring Message of the Day: Life has so many puzzles and riddles. I cannot solve them all. But I can embrace them. I can embrace the Mystery and be held by its Great Power.

Mid-Week Tools

Dearest Readers,

My brain is full of ideas right now. I have a number of projects cooking and dividing my time so that each of them has my focus is proving rather challenging. I’m not complaining. This is a Cadillac problem, folks. And yet I do need to simplify in order to stay on track.

What have I got in the tool kit to keep it simple? Here are a few good ones:

One Day at a Time: I can only do what I can do today. I can only ever accomplish the task at hand. I can’t work in the future. I can’t get things done next week. If I stay in today, if I do the next right thing, I will achieve all that I am supposed to in this day in which I am now living.

Don’t Push: I don’t have to make anything happen. I am not the Maker. If I am forcing myself or forcing outcomes I have somehow ended up in the Driver’s Seat. Pushing feels like stress. Physically, pushing feels like tightness and tension. Pushing often creates the opposite response: lethargy. Rather than push, I can practice letting go.

Letting Go: I’m going to re-word a quote from one of my mentors, Sister Helen Prejean (who wrote Dead Man Walking), who said “Forgiveness is a path. It’s not an act.” Letting go is a path, it’s not an act. I need to walk this path everyday. We don’t learn how to let go once and then become masters. We cultivate the ability to let go. We practice. We surrender our desire to be in control whenever we remember.

Enjoy Life: What a concept.

Inspiring Message of the Day: What is the task at hand? I will do it. What is the outcome? None of my business. Am I enjoying my Life? Only when I truly Surrender and Let Go Absolutely.

Meaning What

Dearest Readers,

When I landed home over the weekend after two months away I found a big pile of The New Yorker magazine waiting for me. My father gave me a subscription a couple of Christmases ago and after my initial anxiety over the frequency of their arrival (“How am I ever going to read them all?”) I soon became hooked.

In the May 31st issue there is an article on the great writer Somerset Maugham who is most well-known for his novels Of Human Bondage and The Razor’s Edge, neither of which I have read. I recall reading one of his short stories in university but I don’t remember its title. His name, however, has stayed with me.

The writer of the NY article writes that the protagonist in Of Human Bondage discovers “that life has no meaning other than what one makes of it.” I found this very interesting. It’s kind of like the old riddle “when a tree falls in the forest and no one is there to hear it, does it make a sound?”

If we were not here to experience Life, would It have any meaning? Without us, without the human experience, is there any meaning to anything at all?

In my own search for meaning I’ve often thought that we exist in order for Existence to know Itself. Hmmm, I might be getting a little too deep for a Tuesday morning. Let’s go back to the quote.

“Life has no meaning other that what one makes of it.”

If I believe Life is meaningless, it will be. I’ve tried the Way of No Meaning. It doesn’t feel very good. Conversely, if I believe Life has meaning then I will come to experience Its Meaning in All Manner of Things. This, too, I have tried. It not only works, it makes Life worth living.

It’s a rather simple formula, isn’t it? Much more suited to a Tuesday morn.

Inspiring Message of the Day: “All shall be well, and all shall be well, and all manner of things shall be well.” ~ Julian of Norwich


Silent Recognition

Dearest Readers,

After two months on the road I am home (sweet home) and it feels great to be here. Yesterday afternoon after completing the cardio spurt I committed to last year I looked out at the mountains, deep green with summer life, and said to myself, “Man, I love this place.”

When I flew home the other day I had a long layover so decided to take the Canada Line into Vancouver to run some errands. After a fruitful shopping session I headed back to the airport to spend the rest of my time chilling in the departure lounge.

On my way back inside the airport I witnessed an interesting exchange between a guy heading in my direction and a guy heading in the opposite direction, for the trains. This is the conversation that took place:

Guy Heading for the Airport: Are you going downtown?

Guy Heading for the Trains: Uh, yes.

GHFTA: I have a Day-Pass and I don’t need it. Would you like it?

GHFTT: How much do you want for it?

GHFTA: No, nothing. You can have it. It’s good for the whole day.

GHFTT: Oh, okay. Thanks. Thank you.

GHFTA: You’re welcome. It’s good for the whole day!

As the GHFTA and I walked inside I was tempted to say something to him. I wanted to acknowledge his generosity in some way, you know, validate it for him. It was on the tip of my tongue to speak, to say the words, “That was really generous of you.” He stood right in front of me, the escalator carrying us down together.

I kept silent.

Why? Was it fear? No. I’ve been afraid to speak out in such situations before but this time it was something else that held my tongue.

Humility. Both his and mine.

First of all, his: The GHFTA didn’t do what he did for recognition. He made the decision alone, he took the action alone and he alone would receive the benefits of such kindness.

And we all know what those are, don’t we? A sense of satisfaction at having done something decent. A feeling of righteousness without the “self” in front. Integrity, increased self-esteem. All good stuff.

Okay, secondly, mine: The GHFTA didn’t need me to make his action count. Who was I to interfere? “That was really generous of you.” No duh. That’s why he did it.

Don’t get me wrong. As an Inspiring Coach I’m all about validating our successes, however small. But by keeping my mouth shut I was acknowledging my own insignificance in the situation. I was the Silent Witness, nothing more.

This action not taken on my part was inspired by the GHFTA’s own humble gesture.Ā He didn’t need me to make his day.Ā He’d already done that for himself.

Inspiring Message of the Day: Am I the kind of person who needs to make everything about me? Today I will be the Silent Witness, allowing other people to have their moment in the spotlight without my interference.