Saturday, January 24, 2026

froid et troublant, source de colère et de tristesse

 I am troubled

They shoot 

our neighbors

It is cold

Very cold

And troubling

boop boop di do

Woman and dog walk at 2 degrees Saturday morning.




sound of all

 Can you hear me now?

The body does not know how to discourse or to listen to a discourse. 

This which is unmistakably perceivable right where you are, absolutely identifiable yet without form, this is what listens to the discourse.

Rinzai (d.867)

(Silly!)

It's only “now” that can hear anything. 

Because it is only now that sounds itself across the dooryard.

If I am not here/now I can’t hear nothing.

And, let’s face it, nothing is the simplest, sweetest sound of all.

fawning, until every follower’s dignity is shorn away

Some words that caught my attention:

Tacitus was especially good at describing the effect the tyrant has on the people around him. When the tyrant first takes power, there is a “rush into servitude” as great swarms of sycophants suck up to the great man. The flattery must forever escalate and grow more fawning, until every follower’s dignity is shorn away. Then comes what you might call the disappearance of the good, as morally healthy people lie low in order to survive. Meanwhile, the whole society tends to be anesthetized. The relentless flow of appalling events eventually overloads the nervous system; the rising tide of brutality, which once seemed shocking, comes to seem unremarkable.

As the disease of tyranny progresses, citizens may eventually lose the habits of democracy — the art of persuasion and compromise, interpersonal trust, an intolerance for corruption, the spirit of freedom, the ethic of moderation. “It is easier to crush men’s spirits and their enthusiasm than to revive them,” Tacitus wrote. “Indeed, there comes over us an attachment to the very enforced inactivity, and the idleness hated at first is finally loved.”

(--
῏῏OPINION,
DAVID BROOKS, The Coming Trump CrackupJan. 23, 2026, Nytimes)



last bill and tasty mint

 Reading about hunter s thompson, I feel obliged to clarify my state of mind:

I will not commit suicide.

If I am found dead it will have been a murder by God, some librarian, or being mistaken by ICE for an immigrant at corner bodega buying cigarettes.

All three suspects should be investigated. Especially God and ICE both of whom know no limit or constraint.

Please bury my body on the grounds of mar-a-lago. I want to be near the embalmed bronzed body of  the savior of the known universe who has sacrificed everything to sever [sic] us.

he came from the wrong county of ny

 Criminals are criminals

To lesser of larger degree


I visit as volunteer

In prison with criminals


I’d visit with trump

When he’s imprisoned


Hell, a kid from Brooklyn

Can put up with a kid from Queens 

history

 Time will come

We’ll look back

And say:

What fools they were

To have that man

As president!

Shake their heads

Begin to forget him

As the embarrassment 

He was

Friday, January 23, 2026

quickly, now, adumbrate

 When I

Die


Nothing 

Continues


Apace

only that and light was all it needed

 In prison this morning, Ernest Hemingway’s story “A Clean Well Lighted Place” took us into why we even bother being patient with another.

And, nothing.

Once thought of as possibly disrespectful of two known prayers, now experienced as new prayers identifying the core of existential longing, to be here, to be now, creating what is coming to be.

    "You do not understand. This is a clean and pleasant café. It is well lighted.  

The light is very good and also, now, there are shadows of the leaves."

    "Good night," said the younger waiter.

    "Good night," the other said. Turning off the electric light he continued the conversation with himself. It was the light of course but it is necessary that the place be clean and pleasant. You do not want music. Certainly you do not want music. Nor can you stand before a bar with dignity although that is all that is provided for these hours. What did he fear? It was not a fear or dread. It was a nothing that he knew too well. It was all a nothing and a man was a nothing too. It was only that and light was all it needed and a certain cleanness and order. Some lived in it and never felt it but he knew it all was nada y pues nada y nada y pues nada. Our nada who art in nada, nada be thy name thy kingdom nada thy will be nada in nada as it is in nada. Give us this nada our daily nada and nada us our nada as we nada our nadas and nada us not into nada but deliver us from nada; pues nada. Hail nothing full of nothing, nothing is with thee. He smiled and stood before a bar with a shining steam pressure coffee machine.

    "What's yours?" asked the barman.

    "Nada."

    "Otro loco mas," said the barman and turned away.

https://yale.learningu.org/download/51358dbc-0c73-4e33-8cfb-967c55a621f5/H2976_Hemingway_A%20Clean%20Well%20Lighted%20Place.pdf 

We wondered about what it meant to call into existence. Whether a phone call. Or the indecipherable Big Bang. 

We wondered about the Inca in Utah, Spaniards in Peru, memorization in the sciences, logic and calculation, and what ‘nothing' has to do with God.

The older waiter smiled.

The barman called him loco.

So much comes to nothing, so much comes from nothing.

Still, he smiled.

Thursday, January 22, 2026

ergo

 Jack Smith tells the truth.

Donald Trump tells lies.

Any questions?

soporifique

 Watching Smith hearing. 

It’s surprising that theatrical posing allows anything of substance to occur.

No wonder so many are jaded.

I concede.

This brand of politics is numbing.

les soins palliatifs, c'est apprendre à accepter

 I’d sat with the dying

For decades

A hospice volunteer


Been humbled

At lives going elsewhere

Remaining with bodies


One day I stopped,

Practicing odd prerogative

To attend within silent distance


As a buddhist/christian meditator

And contemplative I am always with

Each brother and sister, within each being


But I’d return, to outer, if asked

To sit with dying president

On his way elsewhere


Trusting

It would be good

For both of us

dasein

 Snow plow goes up hill

Yes

Deer trips light outside barn

Yes


Realms away in dream brought back

Yes

I understand nothing about being-here

No


Snow plow comes back down hill

Yes

As a buddhist christian silence is holy

Yes

Wednesday, January 21, 2026

un fléau pour un patron

embarrassment 

doesnt even come close

more — horrified sadness

at such a man

then what’s left

 I like that Schweitzer concludes that the Jesus of history is unknowable.

While he was studying medicine, Schweitzer’s book The Quest for the Historical Jesus (1906) was published. In it he rejected the contemporary views on Jesus – both the conservative approach, and the liberal approach that tended to remould Jesus in its own image. In the book he concluded that the Jesus of history is unknowable, and it’s only by accepting the spirit of Jesus that we can begin to see him. This is not knowable through doctrine but only through ethical action based on a reverence for life. It’s not a love of belief nor a love of self, but a love based on respect for life. For Schweitzer this was the true message of the gospel.

Schweitzer concludes his Quest with this eloquent statement:

“He comes to us as one unknown, without a name, as of old, by the lakeside, he came to those men who knew him not. He speaks to us the same words: ‘Follow thou me’, and sets us to the task he has to fulfil for our time. He commands – and to those who obey him, whether they be wise or simple, he will reveal himself in the toils, the conflicts, the sufferings, which they shall pass through in his fellowship, and as an ineffable mystery, they shall learn, in their own experience, who he is.” (pp.127)

 https://philosophynow.org/issues/171/Albert_Schweitzer_1875-1965         

Many say they feel him. Hard to argue another’s experience.

I don’t think I have anything to say about this.

Except --

A New Hampshire Episcopal bishop's stark warning to his clergy is resonating across the nation, drawing fervent praise from some and rebukes from others.

Bishop Rob Hirschfeld was one of several community and faith leaders gathered in Concord, N.H., for a vigil for Renee Macklin Good just days after she was fatally shot by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent in Minneapolis. 

Hirschfeld called out the "cruelty, the injustice and the horror … unleashed in Minneapolis," and warned his clergy to prepare for "a new era of martyrdom." 

"I've asked them to get their affairs in order to make sure they have their wills written," he said, "because it may be that now is no longer the time for statements, but for us with our bodies to stand between the powers of this world and the most vulnerable."

Hirschfeld's comments quickly went viral.

https://www.npr.org/2026/01/18/nx-s1-5678579/ice-clashes-new-hampshire-bishop-urges-clergy-prepare-wills 

Is the experience of Jesus one that puts our lives in jeopardy? Are the things of God things that put us in harm's way? Helping the poor? Protecting the immigrant? Attending the sick, the imprisoned, the victims of greed and cruelty?

 If so, then Jesus is an annoying experience.

One that we can do without.

(There you are, I’ve got you covered. You don’t need Jesus.) Right?

Right?

Right?

on the other hand

 Two months 

Until Spring —

Can you imagine

using obviate in a long sentence

 I stay in my room

I do not go out


Am I afraid?

Will I be taken?


Back then

Immigrants from Ireland 


Into the streets of Brooklyn

The schools on corners


Perhaps my great grandfather

Filed wrong form, fudged a fact


Immigration control has found out

Are looking for me, drive passed


Want bonus for each capture, drag

Out of car, pull from living room


Tell me only the pure belong

Only genetic purity is wanted


Decommission human compassion

The Jews will not replace them


I am Somalian, I am Venezuelan, 

I am Cuban, Salvadoran, Colombian


I am Arab, I am Danish, Greenlandian, 

I speak Spanish, speak Norwegian, French


I am now an enemy of the state

A traitor to their race, a piece of garbage


So I stay hidden, tucked away, unclean

While the new masters spew their rhetoric


Load their guns, kneel on necks

Drag us on the streets, punch faces


No one asks where is God, no prayers 

are heard, no churches, no gospel


No children playing in schoolyard or park

Only this, only this — some white men


Believe they own everything, count

Their money, are paid tribute, steal fortunes


And no one, no one can stop their absolute 

hubris, megalomania, superiority, excellence


So…we hide

Waiting fate


Wondering how 

One country’s suicide


Would obviate

Everything


Until

It becomes


Nothing

Tuesday, January 20, 2026

la peur est un fou dangereux

 It becomes frightening.

The chaotic threats


The frightened people

Frightened legislators


Frightened Supreme Court

Frightened criminals


Frightened pastors and priests

It is frightening


Now then —

Aside from fear


Can we talk about

(I’m sorry)


Can we talk about 

How decency has died


(I’m sorry)

How we now have to live


In his indecent world,

Again, there’s no antidote


No cute political banter

No facile name calling


A turning point

Dancing cacophony 

to my representatives and senators

 Forced myself to watch 45 minutes of trump at White House podium.

It is, in my estimation, a criminal dereliction of cabinet and congressional responsibility to allow this man to continue in office.

Unless, of course, the goal is the destruction of the US government as exemplified these 250 years.

And if such is the goal, I say — well done, and well played, you are overlooking and overseeing the end of the American experiment of democracy.

Now, then, tell me what’s next.

Shall I write my last will and testament? Leave the country?

Or should I buy a gun and cans of provisions for a long siege?

Thanks for your counsel.

sgìth

I used to think I was a pacifist. 

“True pacifism,” or “nonviolent resistance,” is “a courageous confrontation of evil by the power of love.” (--Martin Luther King)

 I'll have to ponder this.

These days it seems that the courage required exceeds my ability to see through the fog of evil to the light of love.

This realization leaves me bereft. 

oración haiku

 Creating 

Wholeness


Gracious

One


We long to

Become


Your

Face


True

Here

αυτό που είναι, που έρχεται να γίνει

 Creating

One


Heaven

Itself


Your name

Is beyond us


May your 

Reality


Be our

Reality


(As it is)

As it must be


Today, move through

Us, be each beginning


(Even though we forget 

Causing others to forget)


Merciful compassion

Assisting us


To walk 

In peace, svāhā!

έτσι είναι, έτσι θα είναι

 Mothering 

Grace


That which is

Within wholeness


So that wholeness 

Comes through you


As true

Blessings do


You are the prayer

Of grace-filled


Wholeness for those

Of us not yet so


Let it be so — now

And at the hour


We give up our

Illusion of separateness 


Undergoing yes, your yes,

Our completing yes — svāhā!

anything else

 No reason

To love


Only reason

Is love


Anything else —

No, 


nothing 

else

Monday, January 19, 2026

ana-agoraphobia

(again — no easy 

way to escape) 


Ah, nightfall

Hiddenness


If you love me

Keep your


Commandments

I will follow


Your love

No compulsion


No competition 

Just what is true


From which 

There is


No easy way

To escape

worlds percieved -- that which is passing through, that which is passing by

Where have all the religious people gone?

  •  “I just want to do God’s will.” (--Martin Luther King, 3april1968)
  • 4april1968, Shot dead.
  • 19jan2026, Wondering about the correlation of God’s will and the racist cruelty of pernicious personnel calling themselves 'leaders.'
Once christians were christians. 

Now the only christians whose voices and authoritarian pronouncements seem to be heard are white christian nationalists, and those whose designs collate with those voices.

And yet --

God is unknowable

The Trinity is incomprehensible.

Jesus is marvelously, badly, represented by his followers.

The Holy Spirit is beyond articulation or representation.

What we call ”The Christ” is the deepest longing of creation and the human heart for justice, compassion, service, peace and beneficent love. 

“Christ” is yet to appear for the vast majority of us.

Christianity, in its essential nature, thus, is mostly mute and moribund. What we hear are archive recordings of once vital proclamation. A nostalgia of oratory.


There is no creating a new religion. We've given things over to exegetes and historians to re-dredge our absurd arguments over who owns Jesus, who controls God, who is worthy to be saved, or, at least, have their name on the congregant registry.

We are sociologists scanning humankind's conceptualization in language of its religious sectarian and denomination variety, the parsing of subtile belief preferences, the registering and codifying of domicile congregations and fundraising letters.

We are left with fundraising appeals from our new political religions -- the republicans, the democrats, and the heretic independents.

What else is there?

Perhaps the return to the originating energy sourcing.


What is the originating energy of that which astounded us before we came to word trying to describe it?

Listen carefully

Fall into silence.

Look carefully.

See through everything.

Stop trying to nail your suspicions to the wall. 

That which you are seeing through, that passing breath, that sound gone by, that uncomprehended image faded away -- that is your very being, surrounding and surrounded by being-itself.

Umwelt. 
            Umwelt | ˈǒǒmvelt | 

noun (plural Umwelten) 
(in ethology) the world as it is experienced by a particular organism: the worlds they perceive, their Umwelten, are all different. 

origin 

German, literally ‘environment’.

The surround.

Seen through . . . seeing through.

This is what we are.

This is what is God.

What an experience to have faith in!

That is, if anyone remains willing to have faith in what-is-most-intimate. 

for martin and renee, prière du lundi matin

 Call me

Old-fashioned 


But I still hate

That a good man


And woman

Were assassinated


By stupidity and

Arrogance (the


Hidden rulers

Calling shots)


Rather,

(If you now dwell


Elsewhere),

Forgive our hatred


With

Your love

a pornography of perverse portraiture

Pernicious

Precedent 


President

Chooses


Himself

Over country


Persistently

We are poorer


A too-patient

Populace


Broken

By this perversion


Looking only

Up at his face


Lusting 

Paid-off


Pinning down

Decency

Sunday, January 18, 2026

lullaby

 Snowplow

Passes

Again


Maine

January

Night


Empty

Once again

Quiet

huis clos

And then one day

He closed his door

Going silent


It was hard to know

What broke, but there

Were pieces on the floor

creator, creating, creation

 If you pray,

maybe this --


That which is

coming to be


our life our love

our hope


we are here

for you to be here


amid all who

are absent


refresh us with

presence, 


we are

here, we are


here

γνώρισε τον εαυτό σου, οι θεοί το κάνουν

 Socrates did not believe in the Athenian gods.

for that he was hounded and scorned by the Athenian gods’ believers.


Twenty five centuries later, those who believe in the American gods

Hound and scorn those who don’t believe in the American gods.


Socrates was condemned to death, he chose to drink hemlock,

My guess is he didn’t have a handgun to shoot himself in the head

 

The American gods are a jealous bunch of gods, but, oddly, generous —

They have guns and will happily shoot you, saving you the trouble


The chief god smiles, says you were stupid not to believe, gathers prizes

We're lucky to have such a god, not having to think anymore, we’re free

Saturday, January 17, 2026

a special skill

 It looks easy

On television movies

Pulling the trigger

Killing someone


I don’t know what

I’d do in such life or

Death situation

Pulling the trigger


It is a big ask

Stopping someone from

Killing you by

Killing them


We ask people to do it

For us — soldiers, police

Ice goons —I might not be

Able to shoot a woman 


in the face

Because she told me

She wasn’t scared

Or didn’t blame me

a ban against it

 Light snow still falling Saturday afternoon.

Yesterday in prison we spoke of perspective, of seeing through, of seeing through space, of seeing through inner space and outer space. We are that which is seeing through.

We name this seeing through many things -- perception, awareness, consciousness.

"Consciousness," argues psychologist George A. Miller, "is a word worn smooth by a million tongues . . . Maybe we should ban the word for a decade or two until we can develop more precise terms for the several uses which 'consciousness' now obscures.1


He is of course right, but the solution he suggests is impractical. When one thinks about it there are few key words in our vocabulary that do not share the same polysemy. Should we also dispose of "life," "existence,” "time," "love," "humor," or "holiness"? They all invite idiosyncratic interpretations, even by professional users of these terms. Consequently they all are surrounded by a haze of ambivalence.

But ambivalence is not necessarily a drawback in human communication, because speech is only part of our total language system. And the inbuilt flexibility of words like "life," "love," and "existence" can even be advantageous. What is more, unless our emotional nature is stultified by an inflated rational pose, we can always empathize and reach out into the psyche of others and resonate with their feeling state or intended communication. Thus we may quibble about the definition of the word "love," but unless we are particularly callous or intransigent we know very well what it is to love. We also have a sense of what is means to be alive or to exist, notwithstanding the sophisticated word-splitting of philosophers.


I propose that the concept of "consciousness" falls in to the same category. We all intuit what it stands for, though our descriptions may not always match in every detail. Miller agrees: he writes: "Despite all its faults, however, the term would be sorely missed; it refers to something immediately obvious and familiar to anyone capable of understanding a ban against it."[2]

(--beginning of paper, On the Nature of Consciousness and Reality, An Overview of Jean Gebser's Thoughts on Consciousness, by Georg FeuersteinJournal of Conscious EvolutionVolume 1 Issue 01/2005 , 

Perhaps we might do away with the word ‘perspective.' Settle on ’seeing through.’ 

We are that which is seeing through. No longer ask ‘who’ is seeing through. No association with a discrete person exercising perspective with perception.

We might find ourselves asking: What is that which is seeing through?

And here begins, again and incohately, the investigation of insight.

Perhaps we have become too enthralled with terms like consciousness, life, love, existence. We argue and dissect them, fancify and elaborate, complicate and obscure.

But when you ask me: What is that which is seeing through? -- you have my attention, and my ignorance.

Is that what Zen is asking?

Why we get all confused and pseudo clever in our responses?

Why we’re told to get back on our cushion, to look and breathe?

I don’t know.

The answer might be immediately obvious -- but I’ve always been blind, and now I am going blind.

Which might just be a blessing.

(With gratitude to the conversationalists on Friday morning in prison.)

window

 Light snow

Cat watches

Buddha sits

Empty cross


Dog snorts

Truck passes

All’s well

Within itself

the banality of great-full bullying

read the two volumes of her “Life of the Mind” in my winter rental off the sands of old orchard beach in 1981.  

Here is Arendt on totalitarianism.             https://www.hannaharendt.net/index.php/han/article/download/101/168

This morning I am reminded of Arendt’s take on politics vis a vis America’s slide into fascism:

Many readers were shocked by The Origins of Totalitarianism – not so much by its relentless account of insane cruelties, as by its occasional flashes of outlandish good cheer. At a time of deepening disillusionment about the public world, when many of Arendt’s contemporaries were turning towards the pleasures of cookery, religion, scholarship, children, art or psychoanalysis, Arendt insisted that however badly things were going, politics could always save us. She drew inspiration from the Nuremberg trials and the new-minted concept of ‘crimes against humanity’, and from the foundation of the United Nations, and looked forward with extraordinary confidence to some sort of global political renaissance.  

Arendt had a distinctly high-minded conception of politics, seeing it not as the bureaucratic administration of collective concerns, or a burdensome public duty, still less as a self-interested continuation of warfare by other means. Politics for her was a precious cultural achievement rather than a regrettable social necessity, and it involved the careful maintenance of institutions that enable people to converse freely and respectfully about the world as they see it and as they would like it to be. It was essentially concerned with problems of a kind that will never have perfect solutions, and which therefore require improvisation, invention, and endless critical discussion. Politics required us to set aside all sentiments of pride, indignation, shame or resentment, as well as any pretensions to superior expertise, in order to become responsive, intelligent citizens, willing to negotiate all our differences on a basis of complete equality.8 Politics, in short, was the opposite of totalitarianism, and it depended on an open-hearted love for ‘human plurality’9 – for people not in the mass or in the abstract, but in the distinctness and idiosyncrasy of their lives and the infinite variety of their perceptions. It was more like a serene philosophical seminar than a self-interested struggle for power, and it was not so much a means to human happiness as the pith and substance of it. 
https://www.hannaharendt.net/index.php/han/article/download/101/168
Perhaps our cheerful slide into fascism will be a distinctively American variety of indomitable obliviousness.

reminder

 To the people of the United States

Do not allow

Racist and corrupt people to

Rob you of your beauty


Call them their true names

Ugly, and cruel, unkind, and hateful

They are not America

They are the perversion of our identity


Be nice

Dissolve ice

Remove maga

Return to your true saga

its only words, but words are all we have

 The lad in the novel

Where a woman went lost 

Hiking the AT ended up at

Dorethea Dix in Bangor


I’d visited there


There’s a mental illness

Thinking that the government

Is spying on you, is going to

Hurt you, hyper juiced and wary


I’ve looked at the brochure


The warden’s service, hiking clubs

Comb Maine woods

The thick growth hides and shelters

All visitors to the mind’s hospital —


Thank you for visiting

we read charles olson in prison friday morning


 LOVE

 


(down 

to my soul:

 

                         assume your nature as yourself 

                         for the love of God

 

                                                             not even good enough

    

 Stories 

                 only

                            the possibility

                                                             of discrete  

                                                                                   men 

 

There is no intelligence 

the equal of
the situation

 

There are only

                                  two ways:

                                  create the situation

 

                                                                     (and this is love)

 

                                  or avoid it.

                                                         This also can be

Love.


                                                                                                                    (Poem by Charles Olson)

Friday, January 16, 2026

in prison today, sometimes, the doubt

 Good people

Everywhere 


See what is

Not good


Furrow their

Brows


Ponder such

Ugliness


Cannot call out

God


Wonder why

They ever thought


They 

Could

en tom sardinboks er bare en tom sardinboks

 I have a tin

Norwegian sardines


Something fishy 

Is going on

Thursday, January 15, 2026

today

 O yeah

Happy birthday

Martin; thanks

gourmet

 I wasn’t hungry

A few bites of tuna salad

Some ginger ale 

you're fin(e)

Where does silliness like this come from?

You cannot describe it or draw it,
You cannot praise it enough or perceive it.
No place can be found in which
To put the Original Face;
It will not disappear even
When the universe is destroyed.


Mumon (13th c.)

You’d think that sensible people would sniff at such words and turn quickly to their horoscope or stock market numbers.

Still, I wonder about the Original Face.

What are we talking about here?

The Creator?

My mug?

The photo of Wenby at foul line?

There’s fog covering roadside trees out on Barnestown.

Five vehicles in neighbors yard tell of some reconfiguration going on in the three year unoccupied house.

My unoccupied life is this room these days. With nothing to say I listen to books, tires, interviews, and voices from my past wondering what’s becoming of this version of personal pretense.

The recluse is in. 

LBJ died at 64 in 1973. MLK died at 39 in 1968. JFK died at 46 in 1963. RFK died at 42 in 1968.

I’ve outlived each of them. And have nothing to show for it, except some undiagnosed dementia and various actual diagnoses that shoot craps as to who will take me away. (Don’t blow on those dice, daddy has enough shoes and shirts for another forty years!)

Original Face! Really?

Give me a break.

These zen folks come here from China, Japan, Vietnam, and Korea thinking we Americans are interested in silly riddles meant to liberate mind and body.

The only face I’m interested in is that of our dear leader, DJT. His “ …will not disappear even / When the universe is destroyed.”

It seems like he’s bringing us close. But, ah! Who cares?

Evil, cruelty, thoughtlessness, and absurd outcomes all live across the street from Zen.

Go ahead, wave. 

There's really nothing to worry about.

Don’t look back. Don’t look ahead. Face yourself.

You're fin(e)!

See it now?

Wednesday, January 14, 2026

yes, certainly

 It’s not difficult 

To be grateful —

Go ahead, 


Say yes

Thank you

You are gift


That’s it

Appreciate, and

The world glows

with no destination in mind

 Did not expect

To not want to belong


But, no, I do not

Preferring to walk by


Steps to door of

(You name it) church


Zendo, family living room,

Neighbor’s porch, your eyes.


It’s a rare disease, eremitic

Solitude, only statue of Buddha


Sample coffin cross at window

Winter trees in dooryard —


I listen to novel about woman

Lost in maine hiking on AT


And feel the community

The concern, the description 


Recognizing how being lost

Is little different than found


Daylight diminishing, headlights passing

towards Hope between ragged and bald

hello, dsm-5, i'd like a consult

 I no longer

think


I follow

trump


whose thinking

is 


pig-slop and

rotten cabbage


but it's

ok


those who

love him


tell us

he's sane and


we're not

so, there's that

but don’t open your mouth

 When nothing

Is being

Said


Listen carefully


What you hear

Is nothing

Worth repeating

Tuesday, January 13, 2026

in the beginning

 

At Tuesday Evening Conversation:


In the Beginning

An Intimate Origin Story 

Monday, 12jan2026

 

Brian McLaren reflects on the miraculous creation of the cosmos and everything in it:  

The first and greatest surprise—a miracle, really—is this: that anything exists at all…. The first pages of the Bible and the best thinking of today’s scientists are in full agreement: it all began in the beginning, when space and time, energy and matter, gravity and light, burst or bloomed or banged into being. In light of the Genesis story, we would say that the possibility of this universe overflowed into actuality as God, the Creative Spirit, uttered the original joyful invitation: Let it be! And in response, what happened? Light. Time. Space. Matter. Motion. Sea. Stone. Fish. Sparrow. You. Me. Enjoying the unspeakable gift and privilege of being here, being alive…. 

Genesis means “beginnings.” It speaks through deep, multilayered poetry and wild, ancient stories. The poetry and stories of Genesis reveal deep truths that can help us be more fully alive today. They dare to proclaim that the universe is God’s self-expression, God’s speech act. That means that everything everywhere is always essentially holy, spiritual, valuable, meaningful. All matter matters. 

Through the book of Genesis we encounter a story of goodness and interconnectedness.

Genesis tells us that the universe is good—a truth so important it gets repeated like the theme of a song…. Every river or hill or valley or forest is good. Skin? Good. Bone? Good. Mating and eating and breathing and giving birth and growing old? Good, good, good. All are good. Life is good. 

The best thing in Genesis is not simply human beings, but the whole creation considered and enjoyed together, as a beautiful, integrated whole, and us a part. The poetry of Genesis describes the “very goodness” that comes at the end of a long process of creation … when all the parts, including us, are working together as one whole. That harmonious whole is so good that the Creator takes a day off, as it were, just to enjoy it. That day of restful enjoyment tells us that the purpose of existence isn’t money or power or fame or security or anything less than this: to participate in the goodness and beauty and aliveness of creation….   

According to the first creation story, you are part of creation. You are made from common soil … dust, Genesis says; stardust, astronomers tell us … soil that becomes watermelons and grain and apples and peanuts, and then, they become food, and then that food becomes you…. Together with all living things, you share the breath of life, participating in the same cycles of birth and death, reproduction and recycling and renewal. You, with them, are part of the story of creation—different branches on the tree of life. In that story, you are connected and related to everything everywhere. In fact, that is a good partial definition of God: God is the one through whom we are related and connected to everything.