• Tag Archives Holidays
  • A Sabbath

    87  bar rises 29.71 0mph NW dew-point 63  Summer, hot and sticky.  Clouds forming.

    Waxing Crescent of the Thunder Moon

    Unless I miss my guess, the Thunder Moon will have a namesake event to celebrate its waxing phase.  The day was hot, the dew point high and clouds have begun to build.  In fact, I’ve come downstairs to see if I need to unplug the computer.

    After the picture printing in the AM, I have focused the afternoon on reading Sierra Club political committee material.  It’s a well thought out approach, developed at the national level.  It’s primary aim is to influence electoral politics on behalf of an environmentally sensitive agenda.  As such, it works at the retail political level and at the election atmosphere level, too.  Don’t know yet what my role will be since there has been only one meeting and I couldn’t make it, but I’m looking forward to rolling my sleeves up and getting back in the fray.

    Otherwise a laid back day, a non-workout day.  A Sabbath.


  • The Night After

    74  bar steady  29.73  0mph ENE dew-point 56  Summer night, too warm

    Waxing Crescent of the Thunder Moon

    This is the night after the fourth of July.  No bangs, pops, whistles, booms, showers of color, whirling fountains.  No patriotic music or patriotic festivals on the TV.  A night whose character takes its shape from the night it is not.

    When I thought of this earlier, it made me reflect on all those night afters.   Each have their unique caste.  The night after Labor Day school begins for many, the serious, get-to-it season commences.  The night after Halloween the candy gets eaten or dumped, the costumes stowed, the lights taken down.  The Celts have begun their new year.  The night after Thanksgiving many of us groan and roll around on the bed or the couch, one too many turkey legs or dollops of mash potatoes or pieces of pecan pie still harbored somewhere in the digestive track.  The night after Christmas Santa has returned to the North Pole (where will he go if the ice melts?), no more presents and no more anticipation.  The night after Hanukkah the menorah goes back to it usual spot, the family gatherings end.  The night after New Year’s we settle into the next year, the hangover finished, the streamers and screamers and auld lang syne all put away until next year.

    In each case we leave the sacred or festive time and return to what the Catholics call ordinary time, a phrase I love.  The value of ordinary time comes from the leavening, the spice that holidays bring to it.  On the night after the frisson between ordinary time and the festive, sacred time of holiday is at its most poignant, the memory still fresh, yet the moment has passed.  So, happy night after the fourth of July.  I hope the sense of patriotism embraced by the revolutionary generation seeped a little bit more into your bones.

    While exercising today, I finished Lust,Caution by Ang Lee.  This film pushes boundaries like Brokeback Mountain, sexual boundaries and the question of love ignited in impossible situations.  It is a brave film, both for the director and for the two lead characters.  The context is the Japanese occupation of China.  Most of the film takes place in occupied Shanghai.  The struggle between the resistance and the Japanese, which forms the overall storyline, portrays the complex choices people make in situations that test loyalties at their core.

    The technical skills in Asian cinema–Chinese, Japanese, Taiwanese, Hong Kong, Korean, Singaporean, Thai–has developed over many years.  We are now beginning to see films that push into the east/west osmotic filter from both directions.  This is a rich and interesting time for cinema from Asia and I feel lucky to participate.


  • Bozo the Clown and Jesse Helms Die

    77  bar falls 30.01 1mph SW  dew-point 50  Summer, pleasant

    Waxing Crescent of the Thunder Moon

    Sometimes coincidence says things that would have not occurred to me:

    Larry Harmon, longtime Bozo the Clown, dead at 83.

    Former Sen. Jesse Helms dies at age 86.

    Mulch goes down today.  Old leaves and grass clippings from last year stored in plastic bags.  Straw baled on a farm.  Organic matter that will blend into the soil, enrich it and give it better composition.  Before it does that, it will suppress weeds and keep the soil beneath it cooler, helping plants fight the extremes of summer heat.  An all purpose good deal, mulch.

    A columnist referred to the 4th as the happiest of holidays.  It has sparklers, band music, cookouts, fireworks and family gatherings.  As for me, a solid northern European intellectually, I find it a sober holiday.  Our government, at its least competent level in decades, has not made tiny, forgivable, do over mistakes; no, they have blundered on the world stage as well as the domestic.  They have tanked the economy, made citizens suspicious of Washington, politicized the judiciary and made WC Fields and Mark Twain look like optimistic boosters.  On the foreign affairs we have reversed and three upped Teddy Roosevelt.  Now we speak loudly and shoulder nuclear RPG’s.

    In light of this July 4th is, for me, a time to redouble my own efforts to bring down these clowns (apologies to Larry Harmon, mentioned earlier) and to change policy at the national, state and local levels.  My own focus now is the natural world, the world that can go along on its own without human interference, if it does not have human interference, that is.  In times past issues of war and peace, civil rights and economic justice were stage front in my political world.  They remain critically important, but I choose to pass that torch to another generation of activists.

    On a lighter note I look forward to charcoaled hamburgers, potato salad, corn on the cob and cold watermelon when Kate comes home.  We also have a cache of sparklers to set out in the yard and light.  Star spangledness will live on in our Andover backyard.


  • Tell Your Inner Pharaoh: Let My Whole Self Go!

    44  bar rises 29.89 2mph N dewpoint 40  Spring

                    Full Moon of Growing

    Have a good weekend!  This cheery greeting, usually delivered on Friday to departing co-workers or customers, has a bittersweet undertone.  It might mean, have a good week-end, because how could you have a good work week.  Week-ends in American culture, at least since the 50’s, have been a time of personal autonomy sandwiched in between the days spent workin’ for da man.  We might go up to the cabin or  hop on our John Deere and mow that suburban lawn.  It might be the time for a brew and a game.  Church on Sunday morning.  A picnic.  Play time with the kids.  Whatever.  The essence of weekend is whatever.  Whatever you choose to do.

    It is this last that always captures me.  Each day, not just on weekends, we have choices about what to do.  We might perceive our week as so packed with duty, so loaded with responsibilities and obligations that there remains no room for choice, for the exercise of free will.  No escape.

    It is not so, however, not ever.  As humans, we have not only the freedom, but the responsibility to scan our lives and decide whether the choices we make match up with our own deepest values.  If they don’t, something needs to give and it might be all those duties and obligations. 

    Too hard, you say?  The downsides too great?  I can see how you might say that, but let me reverse those questions.  What is the price of continuing on your present course?  What downside do you face from chewing up your soul each day, then trying to patch it back together at night or, on the weekend?

    We celebrate this weekend such a crisis moment for the Jews of Ramses II’s Egypt.  In those days the Jews, according to the Torah, had traded their rescue from starvation for the life of slaves.  They spent their days working in the fields, on construction gangs, making bricks.  It seemed, to any objective observer, that they had no freedom, no choice in the matter.  After all, they were a poor, subject people ruled by the mightiest land in all the known world.  They lived out back in the slave quarters, while the Egyptians lived in the big house.

    What could they do? 

    Moses, a child of the slaves, had grown up in the pharaoh’s court through circumstances which you know.  God spoke to him.  Tell pharaoh to let my people go.  This frightened Moses and frightened many of the Jews.  Freedom scares us.  Something bad might happen.  Yes, things are bad, but they could be worse.  Just imagine.

    God was insistent.  Moses came back from Canaan and confronted Ramses.  He would not let the Jews go.  They were his slaves, why should he?  Let the Jews go.  Ten times Moses insisted, ten time Ramses said no.  After the tenth plague–one followed each of Ramses’ refusals–Ramses’ relented.  The death of the first born proved too much.  The angel of death had been thwarted in the slave quarters by lamb’s blood smeared on door frames, so death passed over the homes of the Jews.  Thus was born this celebration of liberation we know today as Passover.

    There is more to the story.  The Jews leave Egypt and set out on the Exodus, one of the great emigration stories of world literature.  What happens along the way?  Many of the Jews don’t like the sudden freedom, the necessity to fend for themselves, the lack of certainty about where they will find next week’s and next month’s food.  Some want to go back to Egypt.  Even Aaron, the brother of Moses, helps the people melt down their gold to create a golden calf, an object toward which they could send their pleas.  There is a lot of backsliding, a desire to return to that old, familiar world where freedom didn’t exist, where choice was not a possibility. A world known. 

    Every day we face the same questions the Jews faced in Egypt.  Every day we face the same questions Ramses faced.  Our frightened inner self, fearful of the consequences of autonomy kneels in front of the cultural Ramses we have each inherited as we grew up.  A brave, hopeful aspect of our self, perhaps the dreamer or the rebel or the advocate rises up every now and then against our inner Ramses, but all too often all he has to say is, no.  Think of the cost.  Think of the choices you will have to make on your own.  No, better to not quit your day job.  No, better to not take the risk with the significant people in your life.  No, let’s just leave things as they are.  At least we know what happens.

    Some day though, on some great wakin’ up  mornin’, the dreamer within us decides that pharaoh must let his people go.  That no matter what the risks, the desert of an unknown future is better than continued subjugation.  Then, we step off the plantation, turn our back on the south and head north, toward the drinking gourd.

    Is life easy then?  No.  Do we build our golden calves, false idols that try to subjugate us once again?  Of course we do. We are, after all, only human.  Yet now we have tasted freedom.  We know how to say no to pharaoh; and that lesson, once learned, cannot be unlearned.  It will always prod us forward, keep our legs moving toward the promised land.

    So, over this weekend, this passover weekend, I hope you’ll take a moment in private and consider a confrontation with your inner pharaoh.  Send him ten plagues, hell, send him twenty, but don’t give up.  Tell him he has to let  your whole Self go.