(I wrote this on Sunday and neglected to hit 'post'. Two days late....)
There are almost no other days that make me as humble and proud and blessed as Father's Day.
There are very few parents I feel comfortable talking about kids with because ours turned out so remarkable...and not everyone's did.
Mimi (38) is the Director of Operations and Special Projects at the Institute of Classical Architecture and Art, a nationwide non-profit organization housed in New York City. Josh (41) is a lawyer at Rosenberg, Martin and Greenberg in Baltimore and three times voted 'rising star' by the Baltimore Legal Association.
He's married to a prosecutor, Cathy Chen, for the Baltimore City Prosecutor's office. They have given us three wondrous grand-daughters.
Mimi is married to Tim McCarthy, who works for Linked-In (his office is in the Empire State Building!) and they gave us baby Eleanor.
I wish I deserved them, I really do.
But, instead, they have blessed me so.
Happy Father's Day to me....
Tuesday, June 20, 2017
Saturday, June 17, 2017
So I play on-line games
Lordy, Lordy, I have to admit it--I play Hearts and Solitaire on line.
Here's the thing, I win about 90% of the time in hearts and only 15% of the time in Solitaire.
One reason is the hearts game is badly formed. Throw the Ace of Hearts and you'll get the King and Queen. Real people, as opposed to a computer, would hold on to the King and Queen in case they needed them to stop a run.
But in Solitaire I'm playing against the cards, not three computer driven opponents.
Thing is, which gives me something to ponder, I love both games equally.
I love trying to get above 90% in Hearts (I never have!) or 15% in Solitaire (I never have!) though that's a 75% difference in winning or losing.
Maybe those games, like life, aren't about the winning or losing percentage but about simply 'getting better' at what your doing.
I invite you to sit with that possibility for a bit.
What if--just, what if--the whole game we're playing that we call life, isn't about winning or losing but about simply 'getting better'. What if that's the Truth?
How would that alter the occurring of 'how life shows up' for you?
It's not about 'winning' at all, but simply 'getting better'.
I'm going to have to dwell on that for a good spell.
I hope you will too.
Maybe there's just some wisdom and possibility and creation in there somewhere if we ponder it long enough.
Greatly to be wished for and wondrously to be received.....
Here's the thing, I win about 90% of the time in hearts and only 15% of the time in Solitaire.
One reason is the hearts game is badly formed. Throw the Ace of Hearts and you'll get the King and Queen. Real people, as opposed to a computer, would hold on to the King and Queen in case they needed them to stop a run.
But in Solitaire I'm playing against the cards, not three computer driven opponents.
Thing is, which gives me something to ponder, I love both games equally.
I love trying to get above 90% in Hearts (I never have!) or 15% in Solitaire (I never have!) though that's a 75% difference in winning or losing.
Maybe those games, like life, aren't about the winning or losing percentage but about simply 'getting better' at what your doing.
I invite you to sit with that possibility for a bit.
What if--just, what if--the whole game we're playing that we call life, isn't about winning or losing but about simply 'getting better'. What if that's the Truth?
How would that alter the occurring of 'how life shows up' for you?
It's not about 'winning' at all, but simply 'getting better'.
I'm going to have to dwell on that for a good spell.
I hope you will too.
Maybe there's just some wisdom and possibility and creation in there somewhere if we ponder it long enough.
Greatly to be wished for and wondrously to be received.....
Brooklyn and back
8:20 a.m. train down and 3:02 train home. In between, 6 stops on the 4/5 train to within 2 blocks of Mimi and Tim's apartment.
An hour or so adoring Eleanor and then a walk through a worsening rain to have lunch. Ellie fell asleep on Mimi's shoulder about half-way through and then we sat in a little area at the front of the restaurant for an hour or so with some friendly people until the rain slacked. Ellie woke up halfway through that and totally charmed the strangers around her.
A just right visit--a hit of Mimi, Tim and Ellie. And riding Metro North instead of driving made all the difference in the world! I read half a very good book and dozed a little. The train takes 90 minutes. No way to do that in a car because from our house to theirs is exactly 90 miles and driving 60 once you hit the city is something you could (maybe) do at 3 a.m.
On the subway there was a family from Brazil speaking Portuguese on one side of us and a family from Germany speaking German on the other side of us. Ah, New York! And in Brooklyn I saw a lot fewer couples who were both straight and both white than otherwise. Ah, Brooklyn!
I could never live in Manhattan--still too much a country boy. I might survive in Fort Green, the part of Brooklyn Mimi and Tim live in--though Brooklyn has nearly 3 million souls in 71 square miles. But I'd have to have a garage and a deck and a yard--which probably would put me in the $3million range, which I'm not in!
A wild trip, but manageable. Much better than driving.
And Eleanor IS the best baby....
Mimi and Tim are two of my top people as well.
An hour or so adoring Eleanor and then a walk through a worsening rain to have lunch. Ellie fell asleep on Mimi's shoulder about half-way through and then we sat in a little area at the front of the restaurant for an hour or so with some friendly people until the rain slacked. Ellie woke up halfway through that and totally charmed the strangers around her.
A just right visit--a hit of Mimi, Tim and Ellie. And riding Metro North instead of driving made all the difference in the world! I read half a very good book and dozed a little. The train takes 90 minutes. No way to do that in a car because from our house to theirs is exactly 90 miles and driving 60 once you hit the city is something you could (maybe) do at 3 a.m.
On the subway there was a family from Brazil speaking Portuguese on one side of us and a family from Germany speaking German on the other side of us. Ah, New York! And in Brooklyn I saw a lot fewer couples who were both straight and both white than otherwise. Ah, Brooklyn!
I could never live in Manhattan--still too much a country boy. I might survive in Fort Green, the part of Brooklyn Mimi and Tim live in--though Brooklyn has nearly 3 million souls in 71 square miles. But I'd have to have a garage and a deck and a yard--which probably would put me in the $3million range, which I'm not in!
A wild trip, but manageable. Much better than driving.
And Eleanor IS the best baby....
Mimi and Tim are two of my top people as well.
Friday, June 16, 2017
going to Brooklyn
We're taking the train tomorrow to Brooklyn to see Mimi and Tim and, of course, baby Ellie.
Ellie is pulling up and crawling like crazy. Mimi said they thought they'd get her a cage--she said 'pen' but I thought 'cage' after seeing them chase her around their apartment on Bern's phone.
I swore I wasn't driving to NYC again after our last trip. It took us 4 hours and 15 minutes from Brooklyn to Cheshire. We've actually driven to Baltimore in that time!
So, a quick trip. Down to visit and have lunch and then come home. Got to get back to the old dog at a decent hour.
But even a few minutes with those 3 is worth the hassle of riding the train and subway and driving to New Haven. Lovely.
Ellie is pulling up and crawling like crazy. Mimi said they thought they'd get her a cage--she said 'pen' but I thought 'cage' after seeing them chase her around their apartment on Bern's phone.
I swore I wasn't driving to NYC again after our last trip. It took us 4 hours and 15 minutes from Brooklyn to Cheshire. We've actually driven to Baltimore in that time!
So, a quick trip. Down to visit and have lunch and then come home. Got to get back to the old dog at a decent hour.
But even a few minutes with those 3 is worth the hassle of riding the train and subway and driving to New Haven. Lovely.
Wednesday, June 14, 2017
ok, F--- Facebook!
I used to be on Facebook when I was Rector of St. John's in Waterbury. I looked at about a dozen times in a dozen years and got bored. Then, when I retired, I got off Facebook after about a half-an-hour of clicks.
Then, a couple of months ago, I went on to see if I could see a video of a sermon of mine that was supposedly there. It wasn't.
Everyday I get 7 or 8 emails about people who have said something on my...what's it called? My 'frame'? My, uh, 'pallet'? My, is it, "wall"? Well that makes less than no sense. I don't have a wall except in my house and there's nothing there.
I always look if my son put something on whatever it is I have on Facebook. But tonight I decided to explore a bit and it was horrible. People put up nonsense and there are ads and people I never heard of are there saying things I think are deplorable (Yes, Hillary, I think that word applies from time to time!!!)
So, 'begone, Facebook'! I'm not going to try to get 'off' since I know what a pain that is. I'm just not looking anymore. I'll let Josh know in case I'm supposed to reply to anything he puts there--though I don't think I'd know how!!!
Since I'll be wrapping up this blog after 116 more posts, maybe I'll just sign off social media altogether. No email. No texts. Call me or send me a letter, that kind of thing.
I'll have to ponder it, but it seems like something to lean into.....
Then, a couple of months ago, I went on to see if I could see a video of a sermon of mine that was supposedly there. It wasn't.
Everyday I get 7 or 8 emails about people who have said something on my...what's it called? My 'frame'? My, uh, 'pallet'? My, is it, "wall"? Well that makes less than no sense. I don't have a wall except in my house and there's nothing there.
I always look if my son put something on whatever it is I have on Facebook. But tonight I decided to explore a bit and it was horrible. People put up nonsense and there are ads and people I never heard of are there saying things I think are deplorable (Yes, Hillary, I think that word applies from time to time!!!)
So, 'begone, Facebook'! I'm not going to try to get 'off' since I know what a pain that is. I'm just not looking anymore. I'll let Josh know in case I'm supposed to reply to anything he puts there--though I don't think I'd know how!!!
Since I'll be wrapping up this blog after 116 more posts, maybe I'll just sign off social media altogether. No email. No texts. Call me or send me a letter, that kind of thing.
I'll have to ponder it, but it seems like something to lean into.....
Tuesday, June 13, 2017
Faith as a possibility....
We had a long discussion about faith/believing/knowing at the little group I go to on Tuesday mornings today. For some reason I just couldn't get into it too deeply and didn't know why. On the way home, I remembered why...I wasn't 'letting the workshop be the workshop!'
I help lead this "Making a Difference Workshop" where we spend 4/5 of the time either doing centering prayer or dealing in two domains--the domain of experience and the domain of concept.
So, we spend most of the workshop exposing how wed and trapped we are in the domains of concept and experience, where our concepts, which come from our experiences, begin to color and determine future experiences. We 'work backwards' until we can reach the point where we can un-conceal (different from 'reveal' which is why my spell check doesn't like it) a third domain. Experience and concepts are all about 'getting somewhere'. The third domain--the Domain of Possibility--is a place 'to come from...."
Our conversation today was bogged down (as we almost always are) in the two domains of experience and concept, which actually collapse on each other into a vicious circle. What I needed to say, if I'd only remembered to let the workshop work, was to create the possibility of 'faith' or 'believing' AS A POSSIBILITY.
Everything exists in all three domains. God, for example, exists as an 'experience' of God/Spirit/the Holy and a 'concept' of God. But both the experience and concept are dwarfed and transformed by God 'as a possibility', as a creation, as a limitless declaration. God then become a place to 'come from' and BE, not a place of presence or representation. (That's 'doing and having', or 'experience and concept'.)
Am I going too fast? We use three days to do this workshop and I'm trying to re-create it in a blog post!!!
Faith as a possibility helps us to create a future that wouldn't happen anyway.
That's one of the mantras of the workshop--'there are two futures: the one that will come if you just wait and the one you can create that wouldn't happen anyway.'
Faith as a possibility means we bring the limitless possibility of 'faith' into the moment. We 'be' faith, rather than experiencing faith or having a concept of faith. That's why the second rail of the workshop is centering prayer. Centering prayer is a prayer of 'being' rather than 'doing' or 'having'.
I'm not sure any of this is making sense--but I know our conversation today needed a high octane injection of 'being'. We were talking about 'experiencing God' and having 'concepts/traditions/theologies about God. What we needed was God as a limitless possibility to 'come from' into the next moment.
(Coming from 'being' devolves into experience and concept--we call that, my favorite bit of workshop language: 'the ontological cascade' (cool, huh?)--but we can also return to 'being' again and again and 'come from' being by, guess what?, merely 'SAYING SO....'
Should be familiar as a way of creating: "God SAID 'let there be light....."
You know the rest of that.
Maybe next Tuesday I can come from 'Being' into the conversation....Devoutly to be hoped.
I help lead this "Making a Difference Workshop" where we spend 4/5 of the time either doing centering prayer or dealing in two domains--the domain of experience and the domain of concept.
So, we spend most of the workshop exposing how wed and trapped we are in the domains of concept and experience, where our concepts, which come from our experiences, begin to color and determine future experiences. We 'work backwards' until we can reach the point where we can un-conceal (different from 'reveal' which is why my spell check doesn't like it) a third domain. Experience and concepts are all about 'getting somewhere'. The third domain--the Domain of Possibility--is a place 'to come from...."
Our conversation today was bogged down (as we almost always are) in the two domains of experience and concept, which actually collapse on each other into a vicious circle. What I needed to say, if I'd only remembered to let the workshop work, was to create the possibility of 'faith' or 'believing' AS A POSSIBILITY.
Everything exists in all three domains. God, for example, exists as an 'experience' of God/Spirit/the Holy and a 'concept' of God. But both the experience and concept are dwarfed and transformed by God 'as a possibility', as a creation, as a limitless declaration. God then become a place to 'come from' and BE, not a place of presence or representation. (That's 'doing and having', or 'experience and concept'.)
Am I going too fast? We use three days to do this workshop and I'm trying to re-create it in a blog post!!!
Faith as a possibility helps us to create a future that wouldn't happen anyway.
That's one of the mantras of the workshop--'there are two futures: the one that will come if you just wait and the one you can create that wouldn't happen anyway.'
Faith as a possibility means we bring the limitless possibility of 'faith' into the moment. We 'be' faith, rather than experiencing faith or having a concept of faith. That's why the second rail of the workshop is centering prayer. Centering prayer is a prayer of 'being' rather than 'doing' or 'having'.
I'm not sure any of this is making sense--but I know our conversation today needed a high octane injection of 'being'. We were talking about 'experiencing God' and having 'concepts/traditions/theologies about God. What we needed was God as a limitless possibility to 'come from' into the next moment.
(Coming from 'being' devolves into experience and concept--we call that, my favorite bit of workshop language: 'the ontological cascade' (cool, huh?)--but we can also return to 'being' again and again and 'come from' being by, guess what?, merely 'SAYING SO....'
Should be familiar as a way of creating: "God SAID 'let there be light....."
You know the rest of that.
Maybe next Tuesday I can come from 'Being' into the conversation....Devoutly to be hoped.
Sunday, June 11, 2017
me too...
Bern and I were talking earlier about getting older. She told me that turning 30, for her, was an opportunity to leave behind some things she no longer had to think about. "I knew I'd never be a model for 17 magazine," she said. "Took pressure off. One less thing to worry about. That's the way we should be now."
How right she is.
I wrote about Bela, our 12 year old Puli getting older. Well, so are we.
Our daughter, Mimi, told Bern a while back, knowing we have always had a dog--"when Bela dies, you and Dad should get an older dog...."
We probably will--though I dread the day Bela dies. I've thought, more than once, that it might be better for Bern if I died before Bela. Our house is paid off. She'll get part of my pension and SS. She'll be fine. And Bela could comfort her more about 'the man' (which is what I am to Bela) than I'll be able to when he dies.
I've backed off that. I want to outlive Bela and get a 7 year old rescue dog after an appropriate mourning.
But I am getting older.
That whole conversation about turning 30 was spurred by my telling Bern I can't jump anymore. With my repaired knee and the other knee that pops audibly whenever I stand up, I just don't think I can--or should--jump.
She told me then about her turning 30 and also told me 'jumping is over-rated'.
Granted, it is. But I used to be a pretty good basketball player and loved to shoot jump shots.
Playing basketball, she told me, is also over-rated.
I'm going to ponder 'the opportunity to leave things behind' as opposed to regretting I can't do things I used to do.
That may be the thing to do as I move toward 80 in a decade.
Yea, I think that's a plan....
How right she is.
I wrote about Bela, our 12 year old Puli getting older. Well, so are we.
Our daughter, Mimi, told Bern a while back, knowing we have always had a dog--"when Bela dies, you and Dad should get an older dog...."
We probably will--though I dread the day Bela dies. I've thought, more than once, that it might be better for Bern if I died before Bela. Our house is paid off. She'll get part of my pension and SS. She'll be fine. And Bela could comfort her more about 'the man' (which is what I am to Bela) than I'll be able to when he dies.
I've backed off that. I want to outlive Bela and get a 7 year old rescue dog after an appropriate mourning.
But I am getting older.
That whole conversation about turning 30 was spurred by my telling Bern I can't jump anymore. With my repaired knee and the other knee that pops audibly whenever I stand up, I just don't think I can--or should--jump.
She told me then about her turning 30 and also told me 'jumping is over-rated'.
Granted, it is. But I used to be a pretty good basketball player and loved to shoot jump shots.
Playing basketball, she told me, is also over-rated.
I'm going to ponder 'the opportunity to leave things behind' as opposed to regretting I can't do things I used to do.
That may be the thing to do as I move toward 80 in a decade.
Yea, I think that's a plan....
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About Me
- Under The Castor Oil Tree
- some ponderings by an aging white man who is an Episcopal priest in Connecticut. Now retired but still working and still wondering what it all means...all of it.