Sunday, November 29, 2009

20 verbs

Twenty Verbs to describe my day:

  1. awoke
  2. ate
  3. drove
  4. talked
  5. prayed
  6. thanked
  7. listened
  8. watched
  9. heard
  10. walked
  11. touched
  12. washed
  13. brushed
  14. communed
  15. sang
  16. napped
  17. meditated
  18. saw
  19. learned
  20. read
You?

Friday, November 13, 2009

litteroti: a sentence

Walking from near the tip of Tipperary Hill, I wended my way walking down Whittier, onto leaf-laden Lowell, onto sunny South Wilbur in front of Saint John's and its onion domes and on through West Genesee Street, its largest former car dealers shuttered, showing us the lonely signs of the Great Recession, ending my pedestrian promenade at Freedom of Espresso on Solar Street, but not before seeing the detritus of American consumption, the litteroti of careless consumerism: cigarette cartons (why so many boxes of Newport?), a cereal box, a can of Arizona ice tea, lottery tickets, a squashed plastic water bottle, and so much more lessening the landscape, aching for trash cans either missing or brimming over.

Monday, October 26, 2009

the landscape of wealth

". . . all those expensive citadels which simply to see triggered wonder at the immense wealth in America, at the vast depth on its bench. Who were these people? How could they have gotten so much money? How could there be so many of them? Their homes made his mouth water. They looked like fraternity houses, country clubs, embassies. Tudorial, stately, with high green hedges and curving driveways like painterly exercises in perspective. Blue Lake Michigan sucking up to their backyards. Attached to their carriage houses and wide garages were basketball hoops, gleaming cat's cradles of white net, taut and tapered as hourglasses. He imagined lean, expert girls in blue jeans, home from Radcliffe, Holyoke, Smith, setting them up, pushing them in, playing Horse and 21, with their tan, continent boyfriends who had once been pages in the Senate. The cropped lawns, green as felt on gaming tables, made him gulp, and an occasional sound from the swimming pool of splashing water like polite applause made his heart turn over. Lake Michigan and a pool. . . . "

-- from "The Condominium" in Searches & Seizures Three Novellas by Stanley Elkin, copyright 1973

Alas, what would Stanley Elkin write today if he were alive to describe our landscape of wealth or poverty or anything in-between?

Monday, August 24, 2009

One-Stop Folderol?

"I have never, ever heard a customer expressing the faintest wish for having everything delivered out of one hand." -- Léo Apotheker, chief executive of the German software giant SAP, as quoted in The New York Times, August 10, 2009

I love reading this counterintuitive declaration.

It provocatively questions a standard marketing and selling point: one-stop shopping, all services under one roof.

I mean, he has a great point.

Wasn't it actually intuitively obvious to us all, all along?

Deep down, we know that the firms who promise such sweeping excellence typically excel -- truly excel -- in niche areas.



Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Message in a Bottle

Sales of bottled water are declining, barely.

Bottled water. I remember having a Perrier or Poland Spring or S. Pellegrino now and then years ago, as a treat.

Now phobic consumers buy bottled water under the illusion they are drinking better water than tap water.

What a fraud! It's totally amazing that people buy bottled water, thinking they are acting healthier and being environmentally friendly.

Consider all the oil used to make the plastic. Consider where all those plastic bottles end up.

What a travesty.

Plus, tap water is exceedingly less expensive.

Friday, June 12, 2009

Truthiness


"It is not important why a man tells the truth. It is important that he is telling it. Even if he has one foot over the abyss."

-- Matvei Gonopolsky, Russian journalist, as quoted in The New York Times, June 10, 2009

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Oh, Brother, Where Art Thou?

It's a mystery. No one seems to know for certain the whereabouts of the wildly brave, bold, human, patriotic Tank Man of Tienanmen Square.

Will we ever learn?

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Take This Bread. Steal This Book.

Take This Bread by Sara Miles (Ballantine Books, 2008) serves up a nourishing and enthralling spiritual memoir. The book tells the true-life story of a lesbian atheist whose life is totally changed through one experience of Radical Hospitality. (Radical Hospitality is one of the Five Practices of Fruitful Congregations; see www.five practices.org). The story begins simply but dramatically:

“One early, cloudy morning when I was forty-six, I walked into a church, ate a piece of bread, took a sip of wine. A routine Sunday activity for millions of Americans—except that up until that moment I’d led a thoroughly secular life, at best indifferent to religion, more often appalled by its fundamentalist crusades. This was my first communion. It changed everything.”

Through partaking of communion at a table where she felt unconditionally accepted, Sara Miles found herself transformed in ways she never expected. And in being transformed, she transformed her own church and the community around her. But it all started with the Radical Hospitality lived out at Saint Gregory of Nyssa Episcopal Church in San Francisco (www.saintgregorys.org). The parish’s unconventional liturgy is rooted in the sharing of the Eucharistic Bread, taking very literally Jesus’ command to “feed my sheep.”

Miles felt instantly and fully welcome at Saint Gregory’s. She was a stranger; she was welcome. She did not first believe; but she was welcome. She did not understand; she was welcome. She was not a regular; but she was welcome. She did not dress for the occasion; she was welcome. She was an unprepared outsider; yet she was welcome. Saint Gregory’s parishioners did not treat her as someone crashing a private party; they did not react to her visit as if she were an interloper, a rude uninvited guest. The parish practiced Radical Hospitality. The parish practiced Christ’s message.

Of course, Miles took the parish and its message of Radical Hospitality seriously. In doing so, she challenged old assumptions. She challenged how committed the parish really was to its core message of feeding Christ’s sheep. Her church membership and communion had consequences: she was baptized, she was confirmed, she got involved. More important, she saw food as a literal metaphor for spirituality. She started a successful food pantry that was built around the Eucharistic Table. Hungry people (mostly working families) got food with no questions asked, no complicated forms, no test for neediness. Unconditional acceptance. This unruly and unsettling step challenged the comfortable life of the congregation and had far-reaching consequences beyond the church, ultimately spawning grace upon grace with the creation of food pantries well beyond the parish’s neighborhood.

Here is a sampling of some provocative passages from Take This Bread:

• “What happened once I started distributing communion was the truly disturbing, dreadful realization about Christianity: You can’t be a Christian by yourself.”
• “My first, questioning year at church ended with a question whose urgency would propel me into work I’d never imagined: Now that you’ve taken the bread, what are you going to do?”
• “ ‘At St. Gregory’s we have great community dinners—everyone brings, you know, pasta with truffle oil—but we don’t feed people who aren’t like us. We’re all arty and overeducated and terrified of people who are different.’ “
• “My suspicion was that committees in churches served the same purpose as committees in other institutions: They were holding tanks for people who professed interest in an issue but didn’t always want to act.”
• “ ‘Churchly legitimacy get its hand in rather than crazy hospitality, the open extravagance of the Last Supper. And you get further and further from the power and genius of that meal.’ ”

Food for thought, indeed.

In the early Seventies, Abbie Hoffman wrote a book with the provocative title Steal This Book. It caused a stir with its title and its contents. While I cannot be so reckless as to recommend that you steal this book, I am tempted.

May you likewise be tempted.

p.s. I rather doubt that the author of Take This Bread would be strongly opposed to your theft of this book if it were to lead you to faith in action, although I'm sure she has bills to pay, too.

Saturday, April 4, 2009

The Albatross of Retronovation

And then we wonder why the Detroilt automakers are failing.

Just remember we were warned as early as now and sooner.

Headlines in The New York Times of Thursday, April 2, 2009:

China Vies To Be World's Leader In Electric Cars

New Threat To Detroit

Plan Built on Research, Recharging Stations and Incentives

Yes, we'll be driving around in Chinese electric cars next year and the year after that and wondering why.

Just like in the early and mid-1960s with Japanese cars.

We've been warned.

Sunday, March 29, 2009

The Albatross of Repo Reality

People are destroying their own vehicles in order to collect insurance rather than have the vehicle repossessed.

The Wall Street Journal of March 25, 2009, had an enlightening story on this.

It is also enlightening that the article, with large photo, on page A3 of the WSJ was surrounded by the following:

  • A large ad, without image, from Tiffany & Co.
  • A large ad for Only NetJets, the "fractional jet ownership" folks.
  • A large ad for David Yurman jewelry (in this case, for an item ranging in price from $950 to $1,950).
  • A large ad for Ulysse Nardin watches (prices not shown)
  • A news story headlined "Spector Won't Support Union-Backed Bill"
The Albatross of Context.

Form your own conclusions.

Thursday, March 19, 2009

The Albatross of Anonymity

We fight wars by joystick now.

I can see how War by Joystick (good name for a band) saves lives of the joystickers, protects troops on the ground, acquires video intelligence, et cetera ad infinitum. I get that. Surely, if such a tool were adding a vital layer of protection to my own son or daughter, how could I not add an homage to the joystick in my never-ending litany of gratitude? How could I not? The virtues of Predator drones are well documented.

But.

But.

But. A word of infinite consequence.

Starting from B-52 bombers lobbing bombs down below, miles below, to atomic weapons being detonated in the sky at Hiroshima and Nagasaki, humans (I say "humans" because all wartime opponents engage in the most advanced warfare technology they can) have found ways to distance themselves from the consequences of their combat actions. The emotional detachment of launching armaments by video screen surely must differ from, say, hand-to-hand combat.

What's my point? Change the Geneva Conventions to forbid all but the most primitive forms of battle engagement? Of course not.

But.

One wonders what it does to us, all of us, when we are so removed from the visceral consequences of our actions, when death becomes as realistic, or as fanciful and fantastic, as a video game?

Still. Still it must give us pause.

And stillness is what we need more of.

Sunday, March 1, 2009

The Albatross of Sin

Today I heard a great definition of sin.

Incurvatus in se.

To be turned solely inward on one's self, solipsistically.