Category Archives: Social Issues

Inside the Skin

“The essence of love and compassion is understanding, the ability to recognize the physical, material, and psychological suffering of others, to put ourselves “inside the skin” of the other. We “go inside” their body, feelings, and mental formations, and witness for ourselves their suffering. Shallow observation as an outsider is not enough to see their suffering. We must become one with the subject of our observation. When we are in contact with another’s suffering, a feeling of compassion is born in us. Compassion means, literally, “to suffer with.”~ Thich Nhat Hanh

I have always considered myself to be kind. Generally good. Easily forgiving and accepting of others. I am quick to join those who fight injustice with my time and treasure. I am hopeful and trusting, perhaps naively so, in the goodness of others. And I am honest. Honest to a fault some say. Which brings me to this.

Why do I feel so disconnected from the world right now?

This world of 24-hour news feeds, polarized ideals, political unrest, tragedy, conflict and greed. Well the answer might seem obvious. I have little in common with the world I just described. All that despair and suffering of others somewhere over there has little to do with me…except..except, the truth is, it does. I am them. At least this is how it is if I truly am who I say that I am. Nothing happens to others without also happening to me. And that is my dilemma, because it all feels too horrible and big for one person. And I am not sure what to do. I could pray as some suggest, but I’m not completely sure anyone is listening. Humanity has suffered the scourge of adversity since the beginning of time.

Slowly, methodically I have been shutting down, shutting the ugly world out so I don’t have to know about it…or care. I have tried turning off the cable news, filling my corner of the world with routine and beauty. I have avoided reading newspapers and online commentaries, turning to books instead. I work every day, and celebrate life in the little day to day ways that we all do…dinner with family, birthdays, weddings, births and even death, remembering the blessing of a life fully lived. What more could possibly be expected of me?

And as I ponder that question I realize that the answer lies in the truth that I am trying desperately not to care what happens somewhere, over there, to others. But the thing is, I do. Because I am them and they are me and we’re in this mess together.

How do I reconnect? It’s not up to me to change the world! I couldn’t even if I tried. Who am I after all to think I could move the needle or make a difference? Who am I indeed!

Well, I am kind. Kindness helps when the need for help presents itself. Kindness smiles. It lets the mom with grumpy kids cut in line, it reads a story, it carries someone’s groceries, it shares a sweater, it holds a door.

And I am forgiving and accepting. Forgiveness chooses not to judge when wronged. Forgiveness allows me to give others the grace to learn the lessons of their own journey without trying to hurry them along, my way. Forgiveness helps me to let go. I can accept that we may not be in the same place or believe the same thing, and that is okay. Oh and one more thing. Forgiveness means forgiving myself too. For whatever. Being good is not dependent on perfection.

To reconnect, I can do what I can where I am. Small things can have a huge impact. I don’t need to be everywhere to care, to promote justice, to work for peace. But I can inhabit those things. I can be caring in every encounter I have with those around me. I can be justice through honesty and truthfulness and I can be peace. And those things that are happening somewhere else? Well, they are part of the journey of learning to connect for those who live there.  We all have a role to play.

It might not seem like a lot, but it’s a big deal. The poor, the sick, the outcasts, the refugees, war, conflict, greed…these things will always be with us. It takes courage and humility to care. To feel what others are feeling in suffering as well as joy, to put myself “inside the skin” of othersBy virtue of my humanity I already have everything I need. I just need to remember who I am.

Namaste’ Fellow Humans 😊


If not when our hearts are bleeding, when?

…meanwhile…in Roanoke, Virginia…  

As the initial shock of the senseless murders of two journalists fades, I had hoped this weekend would be like any other. I have a cake to bake and gifts to wrap in celebration of my grandson’s 5th year on this planet. But I can’t get past the senselessness of this most recent act by a mentally deranged madman because it happened to my community. And I admit I feel guilty for not feeling equally as shocked and upset when it happened to others.  Especially when there are things that can and should be done. Other civilized nations have figured it out. Why are we struggling to figure it out? Maybe I’m not meant to get over it. Perhaps my calling now is to join the voices from other communities in the hope that we will eventually reach a critical tipping point as we all demand “enough!”

Poetry helps me express my deepest feelings. I’ll let this verse be my final lament…

this page of our
collective story stings
from drops of salty
tears, rivulets of ink
collide, muddling
the truth…
but soon enough
another page will
manifest in dreadful
déjà vu, the
folly of our dense
forgetfulness
exposed.
some memories
refuse to die,
each tear stained
page a conscience
cue, to summon
us to write our
denouement,
it’s up to us to
right this grisly
narrative, to seize
control from witless
forgers once for all
to simply pen
“enough”.

kat 29 aug 2015


Friday Haiku Word of the Day Challenge…”Opprobrious”

  

Today’s word was quite the challenge for Haiku because it is, on its own a high syllable word…but in light of tragedies this week in Roanoke, Va, where I live…a relevant word to consider…offering a bit a irony…

Haiku Opprobrious 

Truth is revealed
through opprobrious actions
Tables set for tea

kat 28aug2015

(The challenge: Use Dictionary.com’s Word of the Day in a Haiku – a three line poem with 5 syllables on line 1 & 3 and 7 syllables on line 2)


Credo…In Times Like These…

newsie
If you’re paying attention, the current political climate has become impossibly ludicrous. Politicians bought and sold to the highest bidder, average folks be damned. When I spend too much time watching the news or reading commentary I find myself losing ground in my goal to live mindfully, in gratitude, inhabiting each precious moment. Worry, fear, and downright disbelief at what some charlatans are seemingly getting away with at the expense of our nation…and ultimately our world, causes me to forget to breathe. And of course, it’s miserably downhill from there. Breathing, as we all know is kind of important.

To calm myself, I have come up with a Credo (Latin for “I Believe”) list to remind me that there are certain truths I can depend on. Goals not too lofty or impossible to realize. Simple basics that I know are possible, that I trust are possible if enough of us believe. This little list is something I intend to refer to, (even if just line by line as a situation arises) and repeat like a mantra, to bring me back to the moment, to sanity, to remind me to breathe, and to guide me to gratefulness for the goodness that exists, even if it’s hard to perceive it in the cacophony of the absurdity around me.

In times like these…
I believe in the inherent goodness of humanity.
I believe the paths that guide our moral compasses are many, equally inspiring when they draw us to the light.
I believe that truth will ultimately win over spin and dishonesty.
I believe it is possible to exist with our neighbors in peace, bypassing war through diplomacy.
I believe we can care for our sick, our poor, and our outcasts without taking from another.
I believe that hard working people deserve to be paid a living wage.
I believe justice will prevail when we leave aside our egos and come to the table.
I believe that civil liberty and freedom are our birthrights, not to be dictated by arbitrary belief systems.
I believe we owe it to our Mother, Earth, to care for her waterways, her greenways and her skyways.
I believe in educating our young to carry our legacy of innovation into the future, without burdening their futures in the process.
I believe in honoring those who’ve served us in war, calamity and peace by providing basic care and sustenance for as long as they have need.
I believe we owe gentle end of life care to our aging elders, basic security of shelter, health and food.
I believe in supporting life in all of its stages, not just its embryonic beginnings.
I believe in families, large and small, organic and blended, in various flavors, colors and varieties, where love is key and the only thing that matters.
I believe one day we will look beyond our differences, acknowledging the common thread that binds us together as one race, one family.
And because I believe, no amount of lunacy or madness can dissuade me…
And because I believe, I have hope.


Memo Random

image

i didn’t get
the memo…
the one that said
there is an us
and them…
the one that said
different
is bad
or scary
or inferior.
i’m afraid i am
terribly out of step,
but i didn’t know
that it’s not about
how we play the game,
because winning
is all
that
matters.
and winners
are all that
matter.
i didn’t get
that memo…
and it has made
all
the
difference.

~ kat ~ august 2015