Sunday, November 7, 2010

"The Times, They are a-Changin"

Wow, what a truth.
I'm thinking not so much about times, but more of people. But it's safe to say, that if people change, times change along with them. And my times are really a-changin. So it leads me back to people.

I used to think people didn't change. So I felt wise, not to try to change them. I felt locked in a world where I was stuck in some difficult relationships and painful patterns of coping, a sad way of being in general. Perhaps because I embraced the idea that people never change, I lacked hope. I was on track, its probably realistic to say that some don't change. But it doesn't mean they won't or they can't..someday. Now I am sure beyond a doubt that we do change.

Yes, people really do change, even husbands, wives, fathers brothers and best friends. Even politicians, celebrities, prisoners and the guy next door. I believe it now, as I've seen it with my own eyes, in myself the most. In others who I care about. It's happening everywhere. This new truth is one of the best gifts I have been given and provides immeasurable new amount of hope. It changes the way I hold on to people and let them go, makes it all so much easier to do both, more enjoyable,and less painful. It allows me to avoid taking on the problems of the world, but instead, enjoy the situations I find myself a part of, as my only responsibility is to love. And to pray. It is not to fix or change or empty all my resources trying to 'be there' for someone.  It allows me to honor my old truth; don't try to change them, but with hope. Especially in myself.

Some of my older and unhealthy ways are hard to shake. I've tried to change, but people don't change, right? It doesn't mean they can't or they won't. And even in myself, it doesn't always mean I have to try hard or do anything. Just pray. We are all nature. We are all attached to the vine of Creation and Creator, growing as its only natural to do. Did I ever consider before now, its so natural and so easy to change? Of course not. The TV, the newspaper, my neighbour, whoever, all tell me how hard it is, how expensive it is, how fleeting and hopeless it is.

Well changing me, others, the world, it's not in my job description anymore.  The Guy responsible for that is all knowing, all powerful and all loving. In His timing, all things work together for good,as I have read from a particular Magic Book called the New Testament.

He is saying, "My pretty little butterfly, go out and play. Enjoy the beauty I made for you today, watch the grass grow or the bees collect honey, because this beauty is a pure reflection of my love and all possibilities lie in my creative power. There is metamorphosis happening all around you.  It's natural, it happens without your efforts, so just play."

Tomorrow is always a new day where the sun has come out to play, a little different then yesterday. The moon sleeps a new night with new dreams, the day is fresh, the world, like a grape, is attached to it's vine, ready to be changed while it plays.






"Come gather round people wherever you roam
And admit that the waters around you have grown
And accept it that soon you'll be drenched to the bone
If your time to you is worth saving
Then you'd better start swimming or you'll sink like a stone
For the times, they are a changing"


Bob Dylan

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Arirang, Endings and Beginnings, Farming Advice

"The sun has set. Could it be that the sun wanted to set?" 
.....a lyric from one of many versions of Arirang (Very old traditional Korean folk song). I've included a link, listen to it, it's breathtaking.

Click and Listen to Arirang -Traditional Korean Folk Song
**********************************************************************************

Beginnings are naturally headed toward endings.
And endings point the way to new beginnings.

A child cries out her new life
as a mother exhales the last breath of her former self, willingly.

Winter kills Fall, as snow thumps down and covers wet leaf.
Then spring finally liquefies winter and she flows away gracefully.

Young puppy tries to catch its tail. Over and over. Happily.
Geese fly south when it's cold and return again when it's warm.

Old man returns to being hairless, teethless, and helpless.
As he remembers his childhood fondly, he is ready for the end.


Nature lets go. Nature is endings and beginnings. We are nature. 
Why can't I let go? 



***********************************************************


"Anyone who puts his hand to the plow and looks back is not fit for the kingdom of God"
.........Jesus (Luke 9, 62). 


Sounds pretty harsh eh? And are we all meant to be booted out of heaven cause we can't seem to let go of the past? Or we try and we mess up? I am sure the answer is no.


I really wondered what his means for a while. Whenever Jesus sounds like a hard-ass I know something is not right in my understanding of what he was saying. I waited. I prayed. I think I figured it out. (This is how it usually goes).

 If you think of being a farmer, and riding on a plow, and turning back and focusing your attention there, you would naturally  lose your ability to drive your plow straight. You would end up driving in all kinds of directions and messing up your field, or crashing, tipping your tractor, or worse. Basically having a few plowing issues and not riding along with ease, listening to his tunes, enjoying the sunshine, like a farmer should. We are all meant to live at ease and in harmony, like a happy farmer, you might say.

In order to know where you are going, you have to keep your eyes on what's ahead of you, and not spend your time looking back at where you have come from. Straight paths come from forward focus, and knowing the direction you are headed, and once you are going straight you can relax and enjoy (and that is part of the essence of the Kingdom of God, for now at least).

I guess it's pretty hard to live like a happy farmer with beautifully plowed fields when you are busy looking back at what you did when you were an angry lost unhappy farmer, who seemed to make an entire mess of his land.

Jesus, I love the way you look at things.
Thank God for fresh fields to plow.

Click to see trailer for an amazing movie. "Spring Summer Winter Fall....and Spring"

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Cyber-Places, Love and September 1st. A Happy Birthday.




  I remember the days before the internet was such a part of our lives. When we began to embrace it, some people knew exactly how it worked, how information was connected and how it landed at our fingertips with only the push of a button. Like I knew how to search the library archives,  some knew just exactly how information got from one place to another faster than I could open a book. But I surely didn't understand how it worked. I knew that it took me out of archives and into computer labs. It was like magic, a supernatural force moving information through some medium I couldn't visualize, the angels of info, gracing me with all too much at one time.

I did know that if I looked for something online, I would be presented with a generous selection of information, sources, unrevised, uncensored, unfiltered information. It was enough for me to know the utility of it. Or lack of, back in the days before Google was such a key in discerning what we see and what we don't. I also knew that if I typed up an email and hit send, it would fly out into the Never-Never land of somewhere I couldn't conceive, and somehow land in the inbox of a friend, or community forum. Professors and family members were not yet accepting notes this way. But that was ok. Professors and those family members I wished to see were always there when I searched them out in real life. I could see their faces,  ask them my questions, tell them what I wanted to say. I didn't know how lucky I was back then.

The next few years were a blur, not due to the grueling pressures of research as a university student. Due to a different kind of student activity. I am still not sure how I graduated, but somehow, thesis behind me, I set out for the world. Despite the shenanigans, I had mastered most of Microsoft Office, understood cyber chat, was moving around files of dorm parties and trip photos, digitally mastered music, online jokes. The important things. I remember replacing a mixed tape with a burned CD for my mother. On a brand new CD player. She loved it, even though she really didn't know how I got all that music onto a CD from my very own computer.

As time went on, I got used to the idea of communicating this way for more than school or pleasure. I sent and received emails, chatted on MSN with not only friends, but even family. I eventually became the junkie I am today, checking my email several times a day. Since then, as we all know, there are countless social sites, methods and devices named after luscious fruits, all designed to keep us technically in the loop. I've started to adapt to this, even embrace it a little. I now know that a server doesn't bring you a drink,  having wireless does't mean there was a power outage, and a browser is not a tireless shopper.  But I can't say I've gotten rid of that idea of the vast unknown Cyber-land. As it becomes more a presence in my life, it still remains a mystery. I think I like to keep it this way.

On days like today, I prefer to be back in the time when I sent an email out into the unknown and wondered if the person on the other end received it. I liked the element of mystery to it. I was raised believing in a mysteriously amazing place we all go once we have finished this time on earth. To me, all places unseen are the same place. That unknown space out there where I have in countless bad times bargained it to reveal itself to me. It has a sweet loveliness to it, but it still calls me toward it, full of curiosity and sometimes desperation.  Cyber-land morphed into heaven when I was in my twenties, then hell when I was in my thirties.

When my mother died I called her every day for weeks. I would realize after dialing the number that she wasn't going to answer, and so I'd hang up the phone and crumble into a heap on the kitchen floor, feeling like a crazy person. Maybe somewhere in my subconscious, I thought if I couldn't see her anymore, maybe I could phone her. Or maybe I thought that the use of an evolved technological tool such as a telephone would  allow that extra stretch and make it possible to contact her one last time. It's amazing what you wish for when the pain is that intense. It wasn't long after that when I started envisioning that Cyber-land would bridge me to her.

I would email her long letters. I told her all about my life, how much I missed her, how life had changed and would never be the same. I told her about being robbed on Leacock St., losing a lot of so-called friends because of her tragedy, and graduating finally with no ambition and a lot of debt, getting my heart broken by my first love, coming to know promiscuity and feeling worthless. I could always tell her anything. She was good that way. Dead or alive, a mother's love is unconditional, I hoped.

I also asked her questions. I wanted to know where she was, what it looked like there, if she was ok, what I should do about this or that. I told her how alone I was, how painful it was to be so alone, like suddenly being a helpless orphan in a cold angry city.  I would finish up each letter telling her that no matter how much she hurt me when she left, I didn't blame her, and I will always love her. Then I'd hit the send button and shoot it out to that unknown Cyber-heaven that I so desperately wanted  to exist. Of course, I never got a response. But somehow I felt she got the letters. For a while, it was very comforting, and let's face it, you do what you have to do to keep on getting out of bed each day, even if it's crazy.

Over time the emails to my mother became less frequent, the wandering orphan found new paths and started to recognize peacefulness in her loss. But Cyber-heaven never went away. There always seemed to be a need for it.

More losses followed my mom's death. It's like a giant arm swept across my family landscape and removed a whole slew of the figurines in one motion, over the span of just a few years. For a while, I got lost running. I used distraction, ambition, substances to cope, unable to keep up with the grieving, and the emailing I should have done. Those who weren't caught in the giant sweep were left in ruin. We all fought, grew apart, and the living family might as well have been in Cyber-land too. There are more than a few bitter emails I wrote, which landed in the inboxes of loved ones still alive, that I wish I could delete from their memories. MSN accounts were blocked and unblocked, Facebook accounts deleted and re-added, poison prose exchanged regularly by computer or phone. Everyone seemed to be struggling alone in their own pain. Technology had just complicated our troubles and added another layer of confusion. We became a family seeing each other's kids grow up only by seeing the odd picture online.

Does every family have a Cyber-heaven, a Cyber wasteland, emails sitting unopened in the inbox, or worse yet, opened and put in the junk file, relationships whittled down to Cyber-communication only? Not every family goes through as much loss in such a short time. But many do. How do they recover? How do those left living mend relationships and forgive, let go of pain, learn to be themselves in new ways without the ones who raised them and showed them how to live? The answer is love. Love must be lived out. Love can't be kept inside and held up in hard times. Love can show itself most brilliantly when it is tested.

Can love be blasted out into Cyber-land to the living and restore a broken family? I say yes. It's one of the reasons I write. It involves embracing a new reality, a new way of doing things, the evolution of technology, communication, how we live, how we love each other. Slowly, we are finding ways to come back together. Healing takes a long time, but our new technology provides us with a way to take baby steps, new options to love each other then we had in the past.

I began to heal most when I started to see the internet as a tool that offers me a way to love myself and others, instead of just a necessary part of life these days. It's social, and it allows us to reach out more then ever before.  It doesn't replace real face time, but it compliments it. Everyone can embrace it in a his own unique way. I tune into humor, music and inspiration in videos, and watch speakers who explain philosophy and faith. I send links of beautiful songs, post poems, send and receive prayers and little notes to say hello, or real time photos of my daughter. I started to add an x and o on the end of text messages to my younger brother, hoping to begin repairing all the damage that's been done. Baby steps. Do these things make a difference? The fruits of these labours, are restored relationships over time. Or at the very least, living with loving intention more of the time. After all, often you have to start out by extending the act of love intentionally before you can begin to feel it.

 A few years have gone by. Things are getting easier. Some days I still find myself wanting to send one of those emails out into Cyber-heaven. Today I'm thinking of my Grampa, one of the beloved family members I've pictured residing there. It's September 1st, his birthday, and one the most important days of the year. So much of what I know, and who I want to be is about who he was. Today is more than just a birthday.

When Grampa was dying I wrote a poem for him, telling him what an amazing person he was, how important he was to me, how much he taught me and others. How I saw all the little things. I poured my heart out in the poem, tried to include everything that I knew would matter to him.

 He was a man who wasn't about money or status, hobnobbing, fine dining or entertainment. He was about love. He loved everyone around him and put us all first, all of the time. And he never said a word about what he did for us, no matter how big or small his deeds were. My Grampa was no ordinary person. He was full of God. He was full of love.

An older family member decided that my poem was not a good idea and wouldn't allow it to be shared with  Grampa before he died. She said it would hurt him because it was too emotional for a person who is old and dying. I didn't agree at all, but just as Grampa would have done, I respected her needs before my own and avoided causing any pain for her.  I think it was too emotional for her. The poem was quietly tucked away before it was read.  I kept my mouth shut. But, it made me angry and disappointed at the time. Who gave her the right to decide what an old man gets to experience as a reflection of the relationships he had, the love he expressed day in and out. What made her feel she had a place to intervene? To me, it was between me and my Grampa.

 He didn't read it, but I like to think that Grampa already knew all the things I said in that poem.  I think I will email him today and tell him we are all doing ok. And then, it's probably time to forgive her and add her to Facebook.

Sunday, August 22, 2010

Hallelujah - Kate Voegele (Studio Version) + LYRICS & DOWNLOAD



( From Paul )

My prayer for you is that you may have still more love—a love that is full of knowledge and wise insight. I want you to be able always to recognize the highest and the best, and to live sincere and blameless lives until the day of Christ. I want to see your lives full of true goodness, produced by the power that Jesus Christ gives you to the praise and glory of God (Philippians 1:9-11).

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

I am thinking of you today.

"May your roots go down deep into the soil of God's marvelous love; and may you be able to feel and understand, as all God's children should, how long, how wide, how deep, and how high His love really is; and to experience this love for yourselves, though it is so great that you will never see the end of it or fully know or understand it" (Ephesians 3:17-19 TLB).

Saturday, July 24, 2010

Branches, Petals and Leaves

Morning Glory is beginning to climb...and there is a hanging plant which I bought dying for $2 at the end of the garden center season. Seems to be doing ok. 

These flowers are as big as my head!

Echinacea

Rose of Sharron has finally bloomed.

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

My Pretty Drummer Friend


Before they left, the clouds dropped
jewels in the lake.
Hidden among the fish and ashes,
the dead,
floating wood, deservedly deserted,
was her heart.

And then one day she announced her perfection to me,
over instant coffee.

Each of her waves became 
curves in my own journey.
As they crashed early on her shores,
I counted the them.
As they greeted me, one by one,
each wave's story had it's own ending.



*****************************************


Now I watch her daily in the same way I breathe.
I've come to know her, as she has known me, 
since my feet were no bigger than her smallest pebbles


On some days she feels my tears drop onto her edges,
filling her more and more, with salty sorrow.
She inhales lifelong desires thrown into campfires,
sees the unfinished dreams discarded into the wind over her.
She breathes me to sleep under stars on first warm nights,
I lay on her sands.


She saw my first kiss.
She saw my saddest goodbye.
She held my first child and rocked it to sleep. 
She saw my life turned upside down more than once,
 and somehow, she helped me put it back upright again. 


She wishes me peace.
She shares with me simplicity.


She gathers us all in her arms, floats our mid-drifts,
belly laughs on summer days.
People come from all around 
and act like they know her,and know her moods. 
They mistake her for shallow, perhaps even vane. 
Confidently in their march on sand, they let their children play, 
Yet helpless to her own gravity she is forced to swallow
precious life and floating wood all the same. 


She takes the blame
when we don't know how to respect her.


In winter, resting on cold, she becomes it,
while holding her jewels in places perfect in time.
She holds the land together
as if it might crack as we rumble about.
In long dark days we stomp around as she lies down.


In the cold, she is thick and still
and I am thin and restless.


She receives the melted sun and rebuilds it for tomorrow.
She raises it back up to grow our tomatoes,
our little bobbing butter ball babies.
She brings down my fury, 
slows my race, so I can see her sparkle
 like champagne spilled on glass, 
as far as the eye can see
especially around dinnertime.


As storms invade our space, 
I inhale the smell of the fear of the storm as she stands as my shelter.
And I believe in her. 


They are dumping poison into her,
rings around their ankles,
wading cowardly from land.
What's done to her upsets a feminine rhythm,
Huron's mighty drum.
So delicate and vulnerable, quiet and calm,
yet she roars, waves crash,
topple cabins of guilt
built on cliffs
never meant to be negotiated.


Her power eliminates the tiny empathetic kites
I used to fly at water's edge.


She bangs consistently,
despite what they've done. 
Jets her jewels at me to collect,
take them home
and relive the days of summer.
I wear her around my neck, on my skin and in my hair.
In her perfection
she is bountiful and seemingly endless.
As am I, she says. 

She is whispering of a lifelong friendship
between the two of us.

Thursday, July 8, 2010

This is not an apology letter.



Hi Dear Friend,

This letter is in response to realizing how greedy I have been recently. I am sure, if you read the last poem, you know how much of it I have kept for my own understanding, and probably mine alone.

I want to tell you that I am sorry for leaving you out at times in the poems I have written. I am sure you have said to yourself, "What the heck is she talking about?"
Editors and critics say, writing like this makes the reader feel inadequate and left out, and the piece takes on a more pretentious feel. It apparently becomes unenjoyable.

They may be completely right. But I just want to clear things up.

A person can't write every line for everyone to understand. It would be like trying to please all the people in her life all of the time. It is impossible, and all she ends up doing is getting tired, frustrated, rejected and feeling judged. Then she goes ahead and judges herself for not being good enough. Who would chose this route in life? Haha, we all know who we are, (or were).

Aren't we valuable, lovable, and extremely interesting exactly how we are, following our passions, focusing on what matters, uniquely to us? Isn't this what we were created to do? Shouldn't we stop the doing,  the addiction to external feedback, filling the hungry vein of validation? Shouldn't we just be, and be enough?

Eat my poem, it's yours. All the words are yours. The meanings they conjure up in your mind and spirit are yours. You are not meant to take mine away with you in a doggy bag. You are meant to help yourself to the sweet and sour of what it means for you.

Anyways, friend, I want to say I am sorry if you have felt left out now and then,over the years, but I did it on purpose, and I hope you still find me of value in your reading selections.

Kim Gun Mo - Beautiful Goodbye 김건모 - 아름다운 이별

Monday, July 5, 2010

maybe words grow

I try to fit these thoughts
into the     narrow rooms      of words
but doors swing open   out they burst
float down long and lonely   bee paths to afternoon paths with no ends
lost off anyone's cliffs
edges of perception   slippery and  full of holes
can't hold anything in
instead of skipping    the show
not clothing the ego
they find a way to just be   lost
not in words   not in a face's embrace   not still they burst


the rhythm of breathing
attitude's the respirator    we suck in the honey
pumps life       like pulling the wings off insects
cut apart   here or long gone   like grandmother's lilacs
flies high     unseen
keeping me alive


those words   drip back down throats
a way of sitting   of hearing once
voiceless birds     who are fine to sing in silence
as the trees know
have grown days    gathered sprout into luscious season
each ring in a trunk   each notch on a stick   each nameless chic
is a tune from beak
this is not nature      human dysfunction


too unsimple to unravel in words
instead leap dripping   with crazy chirping    hollowed echoes   empty
from unexplained leak    drips all the natural solutions
and human falsities        to lies    stalagmites in secret caves
neon vibrations light up caverns     lost is an easy place to find
rooms too narrow      to get intimate    lest by chance, desire's dance


looking down in the water     today its even clear
through ripples only   see what they see    really
pick heads off thoughts
like dandelions    make mother's butter    on a little chin
spread on yoke of her egg     breadth of own shoulders
plough through conversation
hardly even planting a seed     maybe


copyright July 2010, Theresa Ullyot

Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Black Pearl and Collarbone

"What is the good news?" said Collarbone to Small Black Pearl one day.
"Well," said the Pearl. He pondered.
"The good news is that tied firmly around your neck, I am resting on you. And where ever you go, I get to go with you too. I get to see all kinds of things as I go along with you."
"True," said the Collarbone as he chuckled. This wasn't new news, but he wouldn't tell Pearl that.
 "And you aren't heavy at all, Pearl. In fact, you are very light, and very beautiful. You make me look good to everyone who sees me."
" Really?" Pearl was happy. He hadn't realized he had his own beauty. He was black, made darker and more murky by years of torment in the ocean. He rested back into his place on Collarbone and said one last thing.
" Where ever I go, I'm taking you with me too, so I am never without my place to rest."

Sunday, June 27, 2010

Listening update

I was done my forty days of listening on June 17th. When I started, I wondered, how can I become and conscious listener in just forty days, and better yet, how can I listen for forty days straight? This seemed impossible, knowing then that I couldn't get through forty seconds let alone forty days.

I love when I am humbled by just how little I know. I also love how God's sense of humor tickles me until I bust at the seams, overflowing in the most pure form of ecstasy. He is surely saying, you thought you had it eh, but as it turns out, you were not quite right..instead, let's see what you think of this..as he rolls out an even more satisfying experience. Yes, I was so wrong, once again, but, my dear Maker, I am so right about knowing how wrong I was. (at least). I know he smiles at this.

I used to say all the time, everything exists within it's opposite..I found over and over that I was right, even though when I started saying that, I didn't have a clue why I said that as often as I did. It is true. I finished forty days of listening, and I heard so much. It was as if my ears had never heard before. Maybe it was my heart that had never heard, or my spirit that had never listened.

If you are reading this, I bet I know more about you than I did a few months ago. And they might even be things you didn't tell me explicitly. Watch out, I got your back, and I know you more personally now..or at least, I am on my way to it.

What did I learn. Lots, but I will touch on just a little of it.

Listening takes time. It is a two part activity. First there is the presence. You have to be there, not thinking about what time you have to start making dinner, or how badly your car needs an oil change, or wondering how your breath is smelling.

 You have to stop waiting for the other person to stop talking so you can take your turn showing them how you know what they mean (when you don't). You have to step out of the circle. It's not about you. It's not even about the other person. It's more divine than that. It's more magical. It's more holy.

So there's that part. Then, there's the after-listening. The thinking, the review, the looking deeper, the circumstances, the context, the perceptive you failed to see at the time, the angle you couldn't see because of your own short-comings or limited scope. That part allows for the hearing of possibilities. Of deeper understanding. You can choose that, or just quiet contemplation, allowing the introspect to come to you like a super power. Both work.

I bet you are wondering what I heard. Well, I can share some of it. Some is mine all mine. You will have to listen too if you want to know what's to hear.

It was pretty. It was ugly. Even scary. But real as ever.

I heard the wind and realized what it's real job is. I heard birds, the water, the moon yawn. I heard what chaos sounds like, in the world, in a life, in a child's life. I heard desperation, fear, lost ways. I heard what a life sounds like when it wisks by you so fast you hardly saw it. I also heard a common voice. That we've all been through it, or some form of it. I heard that not everyone is a judge, nor is everyone standing on trial every day.I heard excuses, and holding back and the quiet of stinginess. I know the voice of stubbornness. I heard vulnerability, and self righteousness, and also truth, lots and lots of truth. And  I also heard some things about me. Some things I loved to hear, other things that I didn't love so much. I heard Avaih growing right next to me as I grew. I heard great news about our future. Mine, yes, and yours and mine too.

Each one of the sounds above have specific references, with details, with faces, voices, bodies which also give messages. Louder than life, you could say. And sometimes, someone is screaming at you, with their words, or just actions, or maybe non actions. They are just screaming their message, but you don't hear it. They have to resort to all kinds of ways to get you to hear them. Being on the listening end, I see how sometimes it is hard to get people to hear you. Ever had that? Actions are your truest friends, much more loyal than words, but even actions can lie to you. The heart is really the most reliable listener (did I just say that? I know, how cheesy). Romanticized overused cliches..but then...everything exists within it's opposite. Know what I mean?

I also heard my own voice saying no, for the first times ever. I heard the resistance to it from others. I heard the struggle inside me to change back to yes. But the No's became easier, and the resistance became minimal. And my life became more peaceful. I could hear more clearly.

Yes, I heard my monster, and no, I didn't feed it. I could hardly hear it, it's just a pip squeak now... squeak squeak..It just gets told to hush. I can't listen when my monster gets all restless and noisy. (perhaps I will write about my monster someday)

Anyways, now, I can't seem to let go of it. The listening I found so hard to do at first is now something I can't live without.What I can live without is the constant spin of life, too fast to grab on, and not easy to stay on. It makes you dizzy, doesn't it? Life. Fast life, fast hands, fast thoughts, fast words, fast ears, fast love, fast loss. This has to go, if I really want to continue listening, continue being present, continue growing.

So what now?

 Listening isn't an activity I have to do proactively. It is a way to live.

 Instead of a life of distraction, I can hear a voice, even in a bird's song or a in wind at my window. People don't have to shout at me anymore, or do crazy dances to get me to understand. Now that my ears are perked up and my heart is full of clear and true feeback, I will be looking for a certain voice which resides inside of all people. More to come on my next adventure. Come along with me?

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

The Helio Sequence - Lately

Truth in Opposites

I recently heard someone (important) say that most of our troubles in our lives and in the world are caused by lies. Lies told on purpose, or lies we tell ourselves, or lies that are mutations of the truth we are too eager to believe for our own purposes. We accept them like our monthly bills, we open them up, read them exactly as they are, and pay them accordingly. Taking the extra time to figure out if there have been any mistakes on the bill, and then arguing with sender is just too taxing and takes too much time. Just open it, read it, pay it. Mistakes in understanding don't exactly expose intent.

Well,  thinking about lies and misconceptions we easily accept got me to think about forms of expressions. I am probably not the only one that expresses myself in ways other than straight and obvious truth. In fact, sometimes expressions are far less direct than we can clearly see, and its hard to make any sense at all of what message you are trying to understand.

Expressing myself is hard work. Getting anyone to buy what I am saying most of the time is even harder. People even expect lies, extrapolations, omissions. We live among ghosts of reality, sneaking around in between conversations, but not often clearly revealing themselves, unless we hunt them. I find myself joking, singing, tiptoeing around, writing poetry, songs, and stories, all for the purpose of exposing what I feel is important. I wonder how many feel this way. I am sure I am not alone. 

Understanding others' messages can be even more difficult, especially when its hard to even know when they are not being direct. This song is an example.(I have included it in the Blog - The Helio Sequence, Lately) If you listen to it a first time, like you're just opening the good old mail..you hear a guy denouncing any feelings left for a person he has left behind. What a jerk. Who wants to hear they aren't missed.

 A second listen (since it is a good song) divulges to me, that he wouldn't be singing this song if he didn't feel the exact opposite. Why would he spend the time to think and sing about not needing  his lost one. Its obvious he is struggling in his own loneliness and sorrow. He is pitiful, and I wish I could comfort him. 

And all it took was one extra listen to the song. He must have loved her a lot. His intention here was to express the pain of losing his lover. 

It made me wonder, how many times in my life have I heard someone's words and not gotten the message at all? Worse yet, gotten the exact opposite message. Maybe it's worth it to give things a second visit, a second chance to be heard, interpreted, understood. Perhaps clarity in the message comes from focusing on the intent.

I recently figured out that there is guy in my life who does a lot of shinnanigans while giving his messages. I used to  listen to what he had to say, and do my best to follow his suggestions. But sometimes, I just felt he was confusing, if not downright absurd. His comments or suggestions were not consistent with who I knew him to be. In a confused state of mind, I would tend to get miffed and start to ignore him. I can do what I think is best, his opinion is nice, his stories are interesting, but sometimes I just don't get him at all. What can I do? It's easier just to dismiss him, since I don't get him anyways. 

But the guy just won't seem to go away. He keeps coming back, telling me more, asking me to go here and there, and if you know me, you know I am pretty much up for any kind of trip. 

I've been watching him a little more carefully. (after all, it's all about listening). It dawned on me, that since people (and I) tended not to always listen to what he was saying straight up, he found that  humour, re framing, even blatant irony, sarcasm and absurdity were better ways to get me and others to listen to him. I realized he had good reasons for what I thought was nonsense at times. And now, I look at it, I take a second look, I call the company and refuse to pay the bill until I know what the charges are for. 

Take a look at Luke 10 25-37. It's a good window into what I mean. 

 A higher-up member in religious society encounters Jesus and takes the opportunity to get the big answer. He asks, "What do I have to do to get eternal life?". 

Jesus responds, "Why do you ask me? You are the expert on the Laws of Moses, you know this answer." (after all, Jesus was just a free spirited young guy spreading new-age crap, so how would he know?). 

The religious guy starts spouting the commandments..which we all know. He got to the one regarding love towards our neighbour.
 "You must love your neighbour as yourself" he said proudly. (within your own church, of course)

Jesus remarked, "See, you knew it all along". Aha..Sarcasm, " Do this, follow the Law of Moses, and you will live forever!" he laughs. I can just see him sitting, picking a piece of grass or playing with some pebbles, and just going, man, you have got it SO wrong.

Then we see Jesus develop a well laid out plan of satire, adopting the mindset of the 'holier than though' he stood with. In order to expose such a foolish way of thinking, he develops it along with this guy, using the guys already existing legalistic frame of understanding. 

"So if I respond to all the needs of the people around me, I will live forever?!" asked the guy.

"Let me ask you a question, after this little story, " says Jesus. He tells him of the Good Samaritan. 

"Which of these guys is your neighbour, the priest that passed by, Levite that passed by, or the Samaritan that stopped to help this guy, despite all the issues between their peoples?"

The guy thinks, already embarrassed at his stupidity and says, "The Samaritan, of course, for he had mercy upon the fallen man."

"Right, " says Jesus, with another laugh. 
"You got it, now go and do likewise" he says, knowing it's not at all  likely. 

The puzzled 'holy man' sits for a while, as Jesus walks on. He wonders, how can I possibly have mercy on all my enemies, all those within my community and also those outside of it. I am only one person, and I have limited resource, and I really don't see how I can do this. He is overwhelmed and confused.

"Jesus!" he yells.

Jesus turns back. 

" It's impossible to have mercy on all those who require it, and love everyone endlessly, for I am one man, and I can only do what one man can do! It involves too much sacrifice, too much risk, all my resources! It's impossible!" 

Jesus smiles, this time a larger smile. "Right", he says. 

In his brilliant way, he used a playful way to get this headstrong and blocked 'holy' (self righteous) man to see that his interpretation of the laws were foolish and the way is much more simple than that. He exposed foolishness just by going along with the man, allowing him to figure it out on his own through the process of receiving the message, answering it himself, even if he was wrong along the way. 

There are no laws, no quick answers, and it won't require much sacrifice. The religious guy is able to laugh at himself and his foolish thought process. This was the intent Jesus must have had.

I am beginning to know this guy on a whole new level now. He is full of poem, play, symbolism, satire, and more. He delivers messages in ways that are much more interesting to me, but also require more investment in him, and more trust in his true nature, in his intent. He allows me to have foolish answers, wrong interpretation, but if I keep following, I eventually get to the clear and true answers. I am less inclined to dismiss his messages as inconsistent overwhelming useless twitters. I am even looking for truth in opposites.


copyright Theresa Ullyot 2010
with inspiration and assistance from Michael Frost, "Jesus, the Fool" (Hendrickson Publishers, 2010)

Saturday, May 15, 2010

The Key to Getting it is Not Getting it at All.

There was a lady named Violet, who lived in a big beautiful house which she inherited from her late second husband. She had been left a nice house and a good car, fully paid for, enough money to pay all the bills, beautiful gardens and even a gardener who came once a week. 
What good luck, the neighbours said. Maybe, she said. 

One day there was a storm and one of her big trees fell on her car. Smashed it right into the pavement of her driveway. It was a write-off. The neighbours came to share their condolences. 
What a shame, they said. Maybe, she said. 

A week later two brand new cars were delivered to her driveway. The insurance had come through and  paid out a fair bit more than the first car was worth. Now she had a regular car and a convertible. The  neighbours congratulated her. 
What great news, they said. Maybe, she said. 

A few months passed by and Violet took her convertible for a drive. It began to rain and she tried to put up the roof of her new car. All the fiddling about caused her to veer off the road and hit a pole. She was taken to the hospital to treat minor injuries and they thought it best to keep her overnight for observation due to her age. The neighbours heard. 
What bad luck, they said. Maybe, she said. 

The night she stayed in hospital for observation, the neighbours heard a loud bang and rushed to their windows to find Violet's house fully ablaze. Investigation revealed that there had been a gas leak from the tree falling incident, which had ignited by a spark from one of her appliances. The house was destroyed. The neighbours rushed to the hospital to tell Violet the news. Your house is gone, they said, but you were here safe, in the hospital, with no injuries, how wonderful, they said. 

Maybe, she said. 

(inspired by an old Chinese Taoist story via Michael Frost)

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Alan Hirsh and Michael Frost - changing the meaning of the word MISSION

This is a great blog.

Shapevine Missional Training And Learning Resources

Alan Hirsh has some incredible insight on how the word and idea of mission work is changing. I am also incredibly inspired by a very bright yet down to earth guy named Michael Frost who hails from Australia. I saw him present at a recent conference hosted by Vision Ministries, right here in Waterloo last weekend. I am looking forward to digging into more or their work. They redefine what it means to 'know God' by taking a literal look at who Jesus was. It is nothing less than mind-set shattering. They also suggest that perhaps the traditional ways the large churches have approached mission work is not how Jesus would have done it. True effective mission work means to become part of the folks you are serving, (not self righteously to tell them what to do, but to learn from them what they are doing already and move from there).

I am inspired by a newer entrepreneur in mission named Nigel Barham, who is the founder of MOVEIN, which has followers of Christ actual move in to some of Toronto's high needs neighborhoods and live as Jesus would have serve the community they become part of. (www.movein.to). pretty inspiring. You'll hear more about these people for sure.

Today I read a great summary of the main causes of the world's poorest countries continuing to be poor.It is part of the summary of the book, The Bottom Billion: Why the Poorest Countries Are Failing and What Can Be Done About It by Paul Collier brought to us by David Mays. It gives a good overview and was well worth the time it took to read. 


There's lots going on. 

Monday, May 10, 2010

There's listening, and then there's listening.

A group of churches in our community are taking the month of May to give back to the community. They are coming together despite the differences in their beliefs and practices to exercise a common belief. If you want to show true love, serve others. Pretty simple. I love to see simplicity. I have to admit, I'm not always good at keeping things simple, when it's most required especially. I love this campaign, and am sorry I didn't see it sooner. However, I am thankful I saw it at all.

For an odd unknown reason, I needed to purchase a paper copy of The Record yesterday, and one day late at that. I said to the teller, I don't usually buy newspapers, because life is so busy, I am used to just going after exactly what I want to find on the internet. But yesterday, I felt I needed information to come to me instead, opening up the possibility that the universe would provide me with some new piece of information I may need for the days to come. Back to coincidence, or fate, or synergy, or God, depending on who you are and what you want to call it.

So, I opened the paper and I listened. For these church groups, May has been designated as a month for giving back. For me, in my own immediate life, I am starting a few steps behind. First, I have to know what is truly going on, then I might have a chance at knowing what is required of me. It seems I spend so much time planning, executing, assessing the aftermath. This is all great, but it can also make reality harder to find. What's really going on can get lost in the chaos of life. If you want to see you have to look. If you want to hear, you have to be quiet..and listen.

So, in the month of May, I am listening. At the beginning and ending of each day, I will take pause to record what I have heard, but also, how I have listened. I am ecstatic in anticipation of what I might hear. When you listen to life, I believe, it talks to you, lays down straight where things are at. Much like I feel when I think about doing push ups (which I haven't done in far too long), I know it's going to be a challenge at first.

Opportunities to listen. I am sure there are tons I have ignored most of my life.  There is listening to someone, and then there is listening to hear what they are really saying. How much will I hear if I listen to the people around me, messages from different sources out there, the silence.

I'll start today, with mindful listening. The first thing I hear is that a certain three point five year old needs some fresh air. Maybe we can join one of the churches in their park clean up.

Friday, May 7, 2010

Mother's Day is coming

She liked Lily of the Valley.
She loved animals.
She would have made a good veterinarian.
She was very chatty with the people she met met along the way.
I wonder if people rushed her when she chatted with these people..the UPS guy, or woman selling milk at Beckers, a man at the post office.
I wish I could tell her, I totally get it now.

Thursday, May 6, 2010

The things you never plan for..

It's 5: 30, almost dark, unfortunately, in the winter. We are in the car, headed to watch my little God son's hockey game.
"Mama," she says from the back seat.
Her car seat is getting too small for her. Come to think of it, I've known for two weeks now, she is 42 pounds, big enough for a booster seat. Saw them on sale in a flyer. Need to get on that.
'Yes, hun, " as I have said a thousand times, with a thousand mini but hugificent questions she asks.
We have just driven by a cemetery.
"Is that where Grama is, Mama?"
How do I go about answering that. She interrupts anyways.
"Why did grama die? Am I gonna die mama? Am I gonna go to Heaven? Are you gonna die too?"
Shit. I thought these were glorified moments of TV drama, not real!
"Is Grampa gonna die?"
Ok, think..
"Yes, honey, some day..but he is still young, and healthy, he will be around for a long time too, so don't worry"
"Grama was old then Mama, wasn't she? She had to go to Heaven where old people go. Old people die Mama, right, old people are in Heaven"
don't lie to your children, don't lie to your children...
But she is still too young to make sense of this. Do they really have an innate sense, this young, to start asking questions this meaningful?
"Well honey, Grama was very sick, so she wasn't old, she was still pretty young, but she had to finish her time here, it was hard for her, and she had to go be in Heaven with God where it's better for her"
"She was my Grama, right Mama? She was your Mama...and she was my Grama?"
Is there a day I don't wish she was here to meet you Avaih?
"Yes, Avaih, she is your Grama"
"But she died, Mama, but she wasn't old"
I have no idea what to say.
"But Mama, what about Grampa, he is gonna die soon, right?"
Hmmm, shit, yeah, i guess..sort of, relatively, well, how knows, sort it out T, you are a grown up..
"Honey, we never know when we are gonna be done here and go to Heaven to be with God. But when we go, we are ok, and Heaven is a nice place, with God who loves you, and with princesses and castles and fairies and all kinds of candy"
I can't see her face, it's darker and there's a lot of traffic at this time of night.
Thank goodness she can't see mine.
"So Mama, I'm gonna tell Grampa he's gonna get candy and see princesses soon Mama,"
Oh no, wow, didn't expect this so soon. I can't have her saying that to Dad. Who wants to ever hear something like that.
"No no, honey, it's best you don't do that, see Grampa might be sad about saying goodbye, and so we shouldn't really talk about it much, you know, just talk to mommy about.."
She interrupts.
"Ok Mama, we won't tell Grampa he is gonna go to Heaven soon cause he is old and have candy and princesses. But can I go too Mama, I'll come back, I promise, I won't stay too long,and I will bring Grama back too Mama, to see you. I will go with Grampa"
The reds and yellows of the cars' lights, green of the go light, though they are more blurry tonight, take one of my hands and guide me towards home. The reality of it sinks from the surface towards the inside.
I think.
Thank God for every day I hear the little thunk of your feet hitting the floor out of bed, and the twist of the bedroom door, and then, "Mama, get up, get up, let's go downstairs, I'm hungry."
Every day is a gift. Such a cliche, but I don't even care.

Happy Birthday, to my Mama, this week you would be 57. I can't believe it.
I try to imagine, what you would look like. Can you believe it's been ten years Mom, ten years..so long, but also so short. The blink of an eye. But also 100 years, stretched as thin as possible, especially when I really need you.
I remember the good times, and I remember the good things you taught me, and I am trying to do a good job of keeping those things in my everyday, and teaching those good things to your granddaughter.

We will never forget you in our day to day. Your virtues are alive and well in us every day, and are carried on through our generations. Happy Birthday Mom. (January 28, 2010.January 28, 1953.)

Fighting with the last little while..

Ever find the climb is so steep you can't see what's ahead of you? Or how close you are to the top? So, weary and inspiration run dry, you go back down before ever reaching your final destination. It's only when you get to the very bottom again that you can see how close you came to reaching the top. The only thing to do is now is to remember how close you came, so next time you can keep on going.

The last few laps are always the longest, the hottest, the driest, when muscles are fatigued, hearts have sunken low.

I think, often our preparations get even more unbearable just before we are about to realize achievement of our goal. The trick is to remember this during the struggle, and use it to power through.

"Many of life's failures are people who don't realize how close they were to success when they gave up. " Thomas Edison

I'll try not to give up on what I believe in, and do what I think I am here to do.