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
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
When nothing
Is being
Said
Listen carefully
What you hear
Is nothing
Worth repeating
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.
But he shot her
Dead
That’s ok
Shouldn’t there be
An investigation?
Don’t worry about it
But he shot her
Dead
That’s ok
I suspect
A time is coming
Moral insanity
Will kill immoralists
There’s no need for further
Fret, something (fate?
God? Inner incongruity?)
Will destroy ugly immorality
We won’t believe our eyes
Bad administrators (et al)
Will melt like nazis in Raiders of the Lost Ark
Proving art and life reconstitute what is good
I saw Jesus yesterday
Limping in Hannaford
I prayed for this
Limping Jesus
“You're praying
For me?” Jesus said.
“Yeah, I am.” I said
Looking for soup
Dawn
Fingering beads
He prays:
Deus meus
Et omnia
Fiat mihi
Voluntas tua
Secundum ΛΟΓΟΣ
(λόγος)
Verbum tuum
Prosit!
He prays
Fingering beads
Dawning
Divine Expression
I want to be awake when I die
want to see the darkness
step up to my face
to hear senses say bye bye
brain switch off light
feet disappear beneath knees
I won’t have anything to say
no prayer, no bargaining --
what a shame to leave
undrunk
coffee milk
in refrigerator
Maybe Hobbes was right
and Locke wrong.
I hope not. And I don’t.
Hope is the stretching of luck.
Perhaps I’d rather not know.
Have some tuna fish and ginger ale
Contemplate Jeremiah Johnson
Chewing on rabbit from spit
As fellow mountain man rides off
Schopenhauer cheers me.
Sometimes to work out what something is, it is useful to contemplate its opposite. Arthur Schopenhauer is probably the best known miserabilist in the history of philosophy. Although he was once prosecuted for pushing his landlady down a flight of stairs, he was not on the whole an evil man. He thought ethics should be based upon compassion, and the compassion he felt both for animals and for his fellow humans can often be glimpsed in his writings. He was not bad, but he could be very grumpy and was a thorough pessimist. Even if he conceded occasionally that things could be worse, he probably would have added: “And they soon will be!” He even wrote a book called Studies in Pessimism.
https://philosophynow.org/issues/171/Happy_Thoughts
Although, I do hope his landlady recovered without much suffering.
Apart from her, I can think of several political landlords for whom a non-lethal tumble down to the well of a staircase would not be an undesirable occasion.
“Happiness is a mystery like religion, and should never be rationalized.” G.K. Chesterton, Heretics
Please, ignore my thinking, I am a religious man.
The mean and ugly ones
Are already dead
May they go away
Leave us in peace
Finding whatever distorted
Afterlife they’ve fashioned
No argument
No factual evidence
Will convince
Liars and corrupts
They are wrong
Only time, heart attacks
Cancer or a stroke
Will get their
Attention — how’re
You guys feeling?
Faint blue gray
Morning eaves
Drip
We are all
Alone
No bird sings
Cracked shell
Scattered on
Snow
When I lost
My sanity
I looked
Around
To try to
Find it again
No luck
It was gone
So I closed door
To this enclave
And stayed crazy
As day goes
Night comes
Alone, and all alone
To pray
Eyes open
Facing God
We wonder
Who sees
What how
Do we
See through
God
Or does
God see
Through us
It is said
No one sees
God and lives
But is to see
Through God
Our vocation
To be
Seen through
What prayer is
Why so many
Do not pray, unwanting
To be seen through
Transparency is
The longing of God
Our being
Prayed through
Praying through
Clearing wisdom
"America isn't the way it is because he's president, he's president because America is the way it is."
-(--commentator on Canadian Broadcasting Corporation 2026)
. . .
Then further north (so to speak):
“Pretending what is true is not true, or that what is is not, is actual insanity. Take it from me, I am sanity, be more like me. “
(—God)
This sad time
Night, White
House murders poet
Words are fingers
Gun is mind
Bullets in her face
In response to the New York Times interview "We Pressed Trump on His Conclusion About the ICE Shooting. Here’s What He Said." with Donald Trump held 7jan26, my comment:
What is equally nauseating to Ms. Good's horrible encounter with awful men imposing their deadly will on her -- is the callous and hypocritical narrative of the event by Homeland Secretary and President.
Such intentional gaslighting, being told what we actually see is not what we are seeing, is the stuff of terrifying control and abuse.
We are being trafficked into false narrative and dystopian future.
One more thing -- Maybe its just me, but there's something darkly comical about the scenario where a reporter walks up to a man holding a bloody knife with a dead body at their feet, and asking the question of the perpetrator "How do you feel about your encounter?"
I take swaths from Chris Hedges today on substack. Sometimes intellectual heft is the only solace. Where else do words like "ekpyrosis" and "onagrcracy" pop up and display themselves?
Ekpyrosis, the inevitable conflagration that destroys the world according to the ancient Stoics, is part of the cyclical nature of time. There is no escape. Fortuna. There is a time for individual death. There is a time for collective death. In the end, with weary citizens yearning for extinction, empires light their own funeral pyre.
...
Our high priests of war, Donald Trump, Marco Rubio, Pete Hegseth, Stephen Miller and the Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Gen. Dan “Razin” Caine, are no different from the fools and charlatans who snuffed out empires of the past — the haughty leaders of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, the militarists in imperial Germany and the hapless court of Tsarist Russia in World War I. They were followed by the fascists in Italy under Benito Mussolini, Germany under Adolf Hitler and the military rulers of imperial Japan in World War II.
...
These stunted human beings are unable to read others. They threaten. They terrorize. They kill. The art of power politics between nations or individuals is far beyond their tiny imaginations. They lack the intelligence — emotional and intellectual — to cope with the complex, ever-shifting sands of old and new alliances. They cannot see themselves as the world sees them.
Diplomacy is often a dark and deceptive art. It is by its nature manipulative. But it requires an understanding of other cultures and traditions. It requires getting inside the heads of adversaries and allies. For Trump and his minions, this is an impossibility.
...
The Italian philosopher Benedetto Croce quipped that fascism had created a fourth form of government, “onagrocracy,” a government by braying asses, to add to Aristotle’s traditional triumvirate of tyranny, oligarchy and democracy.
Our ruling class, Democrats and Republicans, piece by piece, dismantled democracy. In Germany and Italy, the constitutional state, as well, collapsed long before the arrival of fascism. Trump, who is the symptom, not the disease, inherited the corpse. He is making good use of it.
(THE CHRIS HEDGES REPORT, Grand Illusion, We are cursed by what the historian Barbara Tuchman calls the “bellicose frivolity of senile empires.”, CHRIS HEDGES, JAN 08, 2026, SUBSTACK)
I'm happy to read those who still have their wits about them.
I seem to have severely misplaced mine these days.
Tires hissing road
This cloudy morning
Eaves dripping
Ice agent
Blows out brains
Of poet mom
Breaks my spirit
The lies told
The ugly lying mouths
I withdraw
Deeper within
Darkness
Giving hard
Cold truth chance
To thaw
Good is murdered
nausiating noem
refuses truth
Good dies
trump lies
heartbroken cries
Good is gaslit
blatant dissembling
ugly, ugly, ugly
Back 2000 years ago there was a stated confidence that if you ask God, you will receive.
Over those 2000 years not a whole lot has come from such confidence. Yet the words are repeated like a mantra wishing to be true.
As though belief were all you needed.
Whatever we ask God,we shall receive,because we keep his commandmentsand live the kind of life that he wants.His commandments are these:that we believe in the name of his Son Jesus Christand that we love one anotheras he told us to.Whoever keeps his commandmentslives in God and God lives in him.We know that he lives in usby the Spirit that he has given us.
(--from 1 John 3:22-4:6)
We've been disappointed before. How many times over 2000 years? More than a few I suspect.
Maybe to get a favorable prayer response you'd have to pay to play. The way it works with President Trump. Pay him, and your requests are granted. Pay him a lot and big requests, big pardons, are granted.
I admit to liking the idea that one "lives in God and God in him." It's a good script. Fits in print. The idea.
These days prayer feels like someone quoting the Constitution and the Separation of Powers -- both regaled. Good copy. Fits in print.
I admit to packing my valise and boarding a train to agnostic unbelief. It's not a far destination. A cup of coffee and a tuna fish sandwich help sustain the trip. Countryside passes with little beckoning. Fact is I could just get off anywhere and feel right at home in an aborted attempt to reach the last station.
The carefully crafted rails of scripted testament would go on with no rider. There would be broad fields rising to a bare hill from which to look back over the landscape. There's no one there.
It's fine that so many ask and ask and ask. The sick ask. The dying ask. Those who want more for themselves or their families ask. Warmongers ask for a blessing. The well-fed ask for continued good luck in the stock market. The baseball player rounding third in home-run trot makes sign of cross in a public show of gratitude. The trudging farm laborer prays to make it to his casa and dinner.
I'll leave it there. In the field. It is dusk. Birds have sung and gone. So has the sun.
The lonely expanse doesn't evoke anything but the dying of light and cooling of temperature.
The rails curve in silence.
Here is the only destination without travel plans.
Whether or not there's a cat snoozing on your lap, the moment, its bare offering, passes .
Long time ago, Augustine (354--430AD):
That quote, "Men go forth to wonder at the heights of mountains, the huge waves of the sea, the long courses of rivers, the vast compass of the ocean, at the circular motion of the stars; and they pass by themselves without wondering," is from St. Augustine of Hippo, found in his Confessions, highlighting how people marvel at external wonders but overlook the greater wonder of the self, made in God's image, and the divine within. (—from ai re Augustine’s quote)
And there it is.
The ‘divine within’ — is the natural without.
We look, from within, as the without.
Behold what is within without; behold what is without within.
Augustine saw it.
We are within what is without.
Epiphany
That which is
Of itself
Shows through
What is
Itself
Now
Each being
Realizing
Wholly
Itself
Aseity
Maybe hopelessness
is more desirable
than trying to be hopeful.
These days hope is
irrational swag.
Supreme Court
took away hope
Said president could do
Justice-free
Anything he wanted
Republican congress
Took away hope when they
Took paralysis drug and
Sit stone-faced
staring at nothing
Democrats are looking for
A roadside diner
For quick breakfast
Before beginning
Hibernation escape
Church opens
Collection envelopes
Finds quarters
Immediately depositing
Into pedophile account
No, hope has sold out
Of stores and hearts
Leaving empty aisles
Empty ventricles
Empty eyes
Quote on screen: “There is nothing outside.” (Linji)
Oh, stop it!
Ok, there is something outside.
No, thats not it. There is nothing inside.
Look, now you're just talking smack.
I don’t know how to tell you this — you’re dead, and there’s nothing either inside or outside.
. . .
[screen goes black, there are no credits, a voiceover is heard saying “Are we done here?”]
Our teacher,
(Beloved and bedeviled)
Donald Trump, tells
us it is ok to punch
in the face anybody
we want to punch.
All the prior
Education we had
Is now overthrown
By someone trustworthy
Who lives an
Exemplary life.
The guy from Nazareth’s
Time is over
We now have a new
Savior and redeemer
Who tells us good is
Bad and evil is good
We’ve waited
A long time to hear such
Debilitating fallaciousness
From the new
Il capo dei capi,
non scherzo.
Yo, Dogen!
Yes?
Waddya mean “Life is one continuous mistake!”
Just that.
Really?
Really!
Fusatsu
The Ten Grave Precepts
I’ll be working on — “See the perfection; Do not speak of other’s errors or faults.”
(A slog, for sure.)
God showed up
Where I was
Just sitting
“How are things
In your country?”
God asked —
“Damned
If I know,”
I said —
“You are,
And you do,”
God revealed
Funny how
Words still
Mean something
Dawn doesn't care
About human stupidity
It shows up
Bringing light
To darkest
Night
Saying — here
Try again
How kind
The cosmos
Suggesting life
Without ideology
No barriers
No boundaries
Still
No disturbing
One’s
Edgeless edge
Zen students
All, we reside
In cornerless
Whole
Not stepping
Over, nor
Remaining behind
This very place
This very
Moment
An entirety
As it is
Each particular
Nescient glance
“Nothing is more important than family.”
(That’s the copy for an advertisement for the ACLU.)
It doesn’t surprise me they’ve become Buddhists --
“Nothing” needs to be explored
I notice that my primary strategy is to give up
I leave things, jobs, houses, organizations --
positive take, letting go; negative take, bailing out;
as plane plummets (state, soul) jump and tumble
as I fall I ponder what will happen when I hit ground,
(here it comes! here it comes!)
I think I'll pray -- what will I say?
ok, I’ve got it, "Dear God, my name is . . . uh oh” (sp*#@!lat)
Rethinking my life
I now know uselessness
We have a president
Who is troublesome
Not I, not anybody
Can do anything
About him — so we
Watch and wonder
Exactly how he will
Kill us, democracy
America itself
In the inch
Of Maine
Where I live
No bombs
In the mind
Of America
It can do
Nothing wrong
In the realm
Of right and wrong
We pass, preferring
Fear and doubt
There are no tanks
On road, no missiles
Destroying homes —
We are safe and sound
Q: Have you learned nothing?
A: [thinks a while]
Yes, yes I have.
Q: [unsure of the ambiguity]
That’ll teach you.
A; [realizes he has nothing to say]
[and can’t say it]
Do you write poetry?
No, I don’t.
What do you write?
Words
Oh!
“As birds’ wings beat the solid air without which none could fly so words freed by the imagination affirm reality by their flight” (Williams et al. The Collected Poems of William Carlos Williams. Vol.1, 1909-1939 235). https://www.theintima.org/re-embodying-medicine-william-carlos-williams-and-the-ethics-of-attention#:~:text=Yes%2C%20profound%20concepts%20arise%20in,about%20the%20process%20of%20observation.
No one would accuse me of writing poetry.
Czesław Milosz ended his poem Ars Poetica? with these lines:
The purpose of poetry is to remind ushow difficult it is to remain just one person,for our house is open, there are no keys in the doors,and invisible guests come in and out at will.What I'm saying here is not, I agree, poetry,as poems should be written rarely and reluctantly,under unbearable duress and only with the hopethat good spirits, not evil ones, choose us for their instrument.
https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/49455/ars-poetica-56d22b8f31558
Goethe wrote:
"Words are but noise and smoke" (or "Names are but sound and smoke, / Obscuring heavenly light” (--Johann Wolfgang von Goethe in Faust, Part One)
It occurs to me that what we call “God” is our worded approximation of inner experience finding Itself in the appearing landscape.
For some folks this is ‘seeing' God. For some this is ‘hearing' God or ‘speaking with’ God. These are perfectly adequate approximations.
approximation | əˌpräksəˈmāSHən |
noun
a value or quantity that is nearly but not exactly correct: these figures are only approximations.
• a thing that is similar to something else, but is not exactly the same: the band smashed up their equipment in an approximation of rock star behavior.
. . .
approximation
noun
1 a general approximation is that a ten degree rise in temperature doubles the rate of reaction. estimate, estimation, guess, conjecture, rough calculation, rough idea, surmise; guesswork; informal guesstimate; North American English informal ballpark figure.
2 we can only look for an approximation to the truth about these matters. semblance, outward appearance, likeness, resemblance, similarity, correspondence, comparison. (Dictionary)
It has been said that no one has ever seen God, except:
Perhaps poetry is the energy of the transcendent breathed into language.
And for our Christian brothers and sisters, what they call ‘Christ’ is the embodied expression
of God languaged into human form.
In Kantian philosophy, the thing-in-itself (German: Ding an sich) is the status of objects as they are, independent of representation and observation. The concept of the thing-in-itself was introduced by the German philosopher Immanuel Kant, and over the following centuries was met with controversy among later philosophers.[1] It is closely related to Kant's concept of noumena or the objects of inquiry, as opposed to phenomena, its manifestations.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thing-in-itself
Poetry is the process allowing things to be themselves with, perhaps, appreciation and contemplative respect.
Our tendency as humans is to make things other than they are. We wish to fashion things according to our preferences. We want to own things. We want to own persons.
To be well-within-oneself, to let something be-itself, is a hard-sell for our acquisitive nature.
I’m not saying that the best poetry is unwritten.
But close to it.
Intimately close to it.
The last
Funeral you
Attend is
Your own
I will
Not commit
Suicide in
Winter
Too cold
Hard ground
Mittened hands
Slippery ice
Nor spring
Too muddy
Black flies
Mosquitoes
Screw it
Death has
To be
No bother
The way
Orange juice
Or farina
Just happens
The other
Side of
Fresh coffee
Buttered toast
Thursday
Is
One more
Reason
To
Stop
Naming
Anything
Ready?
What is
Today?
Eh?
I manage
To stay up
Til midnight
And it’s
The wrong day
Happy 2 January!
Everything
Is vacated, just
Another Friday
A snoring dog
Shikantaza
Near full moon
Finish Suor Maria Celeste’s story along with that of her father Galileo Galilei. The book was Galileo’s Daughter by Dava Sobel. (1999).
The delight of it. The trouble they’d seen.
The hubris of power and choosing belief over learning.
How we deprive others and make them suffer.
Remind me
How anything matters
But eyes recognizing
Simple love
As it occurs
No fanfare
No grand bows
Brown paper bag
Three people hug
Absence of fourth
Middle of B&Gs
Rockport Maine
Last day of year
Amid the noise, a calm wisdom, with a perfect name, Jane Goodall:
https://bsky.app/profile/cajunblue.bsky.social/post/3mbck5q65qs2s
cheers!
Walking harbor
After hugging man
whose wife just died
Brings me to Quaker sitting
Hands gassho and clap
Enfolding obscurity
A play in four lines:
Let’s pretend god exists.
Pretend?
Yeah, pretend.
Who do you think you're talking to?
[long pause]
[nothing else is heard]
Critics will love this work. They’ll compare it to Sartre and Ionesco. It will probably have only a brief run off-broadway, then on to the college theatre circuit. The costs these days are staggering.
It’s the final stage direction that will fill columns in daily newspapers. They’ll ask — how is it possible to hear nothing else?
You, you in your 3rd floor walk-up in Chicago— you tell them!
Doris, our elder, sent this Merwin poem yesterday:
To the New Year
With what stillness at last
you appear in the valley
your first sunlight reaching down
to touch the tips of a few
high leaves that do not stir
as though they had not noticed
and did not know you at all
then the voice of a dove calls
from far away in itself
to the hush of the morning
so this is the sound of you
here and now whether or not
anyone hears it this is
where we have come with our age
our knowledge such as it is
and our hopes such as they are
invisible before us
untouched and still possible
—W.S. Merwin
He might be writing about the new year, his true self, or, perhaps, God. Poems are like that. Once they leave home, they are both homeless and belong to everyone.
I ask God:
Who do people say you are?
You talking to me?
Yeah, you.
People think the damnedist things.
Like?
Like I'm breath.
Are you, breath?
Yeah, I am.
What else?
Some say I'm everything.
Are you?
Yeah, I am.
What else?
Nothing.
Are you?
Yeah.
Talking to God is awkward. I know God doesn't talk out loud, that I make it up, phrase whatever comes to mind. I know that I'm probably just having an inner dialogue with myself.
Merwin wrote
from far away in itself
to the hush of the morning
so this is the sound of you
I like that.
God and my self and the new year -- each sounds that way.
Saying nothing other than distant hush, stillness, sunlight reaching down.
In 1957, as I entered high school, I read Allen Ginsberg in a poem saying "Poet is Priest." It was a line in his "Death to Van Goth's Ear".
It caught my attention. I'd just turned twelve. It's when I began my love of poetry. It had a sacramental implimentation. The implication for me was an exclaustrated creativity that cycled through my years, then decades, into a lifetime of being just outside the monastic cell of religious horarium, just outside the monastic enclosure whose signage seemed to say -- "stay away, but stay close."
Consecration is an inner act of reverence to all that belongs.
When the priest at mass echoing Jesus used to say "Hoc est corpus meum" (This is my body) -- I heard also "per omnia secular secularum" (through all ages of ages, now is forever, all is what is here). My bastardized translation and odd understanding threw me into the scripture of prophecy, poetry, and projective verse.
In developing his poetics, [Charles] Olson drew from a wide array of influences, including mythology, the history and geography of Gloucester, and the process philosophy of Alfred North Whitehead. Olson believed that the act of poetic creation should be connected to a primordial dimension of human existence. He wrote in his landmark essay “Projective Verse” (1950) that poetry was a form of “energy transferred from where the poet got it” to the reader. In distinction from the “closed form” of conventional poetic meter, Olson proposed an “open field” that “projects” organically from the poem’s content—i.e., the perception of the poet who interacts with and yet is an integral part of the poet’s immediate environment. Olson used the duration of a human breath, a basic human function that conveyed a poet’s vital energy, as the measure of a poetic line.
https://www.britannica.com/biography/Charles-Olson#ref1106576
I would read Olson, Creeley, Williams, Merwin, Ginsberg, Rich, Snyder, Antoninus, Kinnell, Eliot, Pound, Duncan, Empson, Edson, Harjo, Hirshfield, Paston, Basho, Issa, Buson, Takahashi, Sakaki --among many others.
Poet was priest for me.
Poems, scripture.
The poetic, my monastery.
Today, in this cell, this poetic -- i.e. "an imaginative sensitive emotional thoughtful expression" (dictionary) of what is revealing itself -- is the muted vocation that cloisters me in daily practice.
This by Takahashi:
Destruction
English version by Lucien Stryk and Takashi Ikemoto
Original Language Japanese
The universe is forever falling apart --
No need to push the button,
It collapses at a finger's touch:
Why, it barely hangs on the tail of a sparrow's eye.
The universe is so much eye secretion,
Hordes leap from the tips
Of your nostril hairs. Lift your right hand:
It's in your palm. There's room enough
On the sparrow's eyelash for the whole.
A paltry thing, the universe:
Here is all the strength, here the greatest strength.
You and the sparrow are one
And, should he wish, he can crush you.
The universe trembles before him.