Sara S. Nichols Follow me on Twitter at @snicholsblog Sara S. Nichols is a former progressive lawyer/lobbyist turned new thought minister/spiritual scientist-- she is moved to share her thoughts on politics spirit movies, plays & books My best rating is (:)(:)(:)(:)(:) out of a total of 5 Snouts Up -- I almost never give 5 Snouts--that's just for the best ever.
Tuesday, September 24, 2019
Saturday, September 21, 2019
past lives/parallel lives
What we used to call past lives, I now call parallel lives. What we used to call soulmates, I now believe are just people we already know from one of our parallel lives. When I was a professional public interest advocate, people rarely talked about past lives or soulmates to me. But in the years that I trained for and have been a woo-woo Centers for Spiritual Living minister, they do. A fair amount.
Something about past lives never really rang true to me. I remember my kids, when little, once trying to do the math on past lives. "Mommy, if there are millions more people today than there were 200 years ago, how could all the people today have past lives? would there have been enough lives to have?"
People with psychic abilities have sometimes volunteered that I was all sorts of mostly terrifying things in a past life. I've been told I was a high level inquisitor in the Spanish Inquisition (which nobody expects, by the way), a Kamikaze pilot in WWII, and, a fearsome pioneer woman on the Oregon trail (what a relief after the first two).
Having studied our version of quantum physics with Amit Goswami at Holmes Institute for Consciousness Studies, I know that at the level of the quantum field there is no time. At the ground of all being is only space and light. In the quantum field the exact same particle can be in multiple places at the exact same time. This is practically impossible for us time-based beings to understand but it is one fact that even "real" scientists (Goswami is a real physicist who dumbs it down for the rest of us) agree upon.
Meanwhile, mathematicians (without whom physics would be impossible) mostly agree (something about String Theory I think, totally don't understand any of this but like to throw it around as if I do) that is it mathematically probable that there are multiple universes and timelines existing simultaneously.
A minister friend and I were talking yesterday about how this makes more sense to us than past lives: parallel lives. Since consciousness, or choice, collapses possibilities into probabilities and reality and since the exact same object can being in different places doing different things at the same time, to me that means that there are multiple versions of my life happening simultaneously.
In some of them I am thinner; in some I am fatter. In some of them I am still practicing law. In some of them I agreed to run for public office. In some of them I'm an episcopal priest. In some of them I'm probably in jail. But right now, in this timeline, I'm in my mother's new home in Davis watching her "pack" to go "home" and I have no idea how I'm going to handle this delusion. Maybe in another timeline, I do...
Thursday, September 19, 2019
Who Does that Biker Think He Is?
The other day I brought my automobile to a complete stop in a bike lane in downtown Davis, California. I didn't know which way to go and I needed to check my phone. No one was in the bike lane and I didn't see any parking spaces, so it seemed like the safest option. After I had been sitting there a while figuring out my next move, a cyclist hit me. Not hard. And not like he didn't see me. Like he DID see me and was ramming me to send me a message. He then screamed at me, "get out of the fucking bike lane!" and sped off.
I started shaking and came very close to tears from the experience. I felt like a victim. I had been lost. I had been late. I was in an emotional state regarding one of my family members already. To be screamed at and judged by this angry man, felt like the last straw. I pulled myself together and drove safely off. I passed the cyclist in question and turned left at the next corner. He turned left too, again it seemed deliberately, and used the opportunity of passing me at the next light to scream at me a second time. This upset me mightily.
The following week I read How I learned to bike like a Dutchman in The New Yorker. In this lovely piece, Dan Kois describes his American family's experience of living in the Netherlands without a car and merging into their bicycle-oriented culture. Thought it wasn't the point of the piece, my eyes were opened by this article to the arrogance, privilege and primacy I assume behind the wheel of a car in the United States. In the Netherlands, as the article informed me, there are "18 million residents with more than 22 million bicycles." In Holland, bicyclists not drivers own the road. There it is the cars' responsibility to get out of the way of the bikes not the other way around. Kois describes how difficult it was for him and his family to stop cautiously assuming that at any minute they were going to be hit by a car. He tells how they kept disrupting the massive flow of bicycle traffic by slowing down.
After reading this article, I realized how incredibly thoughtless it is for me to casually use a bike lane as a place to pull over. Imagine how I would feel as a driver if a biker (or any vehicle) came to a complete stop in the lane of a super busy car thoroughfare. I would be outraged and terrified. "What the hell do they think they're doing?" would be among my best thoughts. When I bike, I ALWAYS assume that cars have the right of way. Same as a pedestrian (although legally, its the opposite).
Davis, California, home of UC Davis, is one of the most bike-friendly cities in the US. Out of the 69,000 residents of that city, the majority are students at the UC and of those a huge chunk rely on bicycles as their main transportation (with the lack of parking and the size of the campus it is by far the smartest option). When I came to a halt in that bike lane, I was selfishly endangering the lives of these students with my arrogance and privilege as a driver.
If I want there to be alternative transportation options in the world, I need to bike more like a Dutchman myself, and drive less like an American.
Wednesday, September 18, 2019
Everyone had better pay close attention
Spencer Platt/Getty Images Photo is from Stan Greenberg's piece in the New York Times |
Sometimes, as with the recent criticisms against housing crisis in California or the poverty of Baltimore, or on the campaign trail with trade policy, we are being directly called to face what even those who perceive themselves to be the most compassionate makers of public policy have tolerated or ignored.
Again, I must apply the excellent question Stan Greenberg asked in The New York Times (which I examined after last week's debate: Which Democrats in last night's debates understand this "transformational moment"?). Greenberg's article should remind every person in this country, whether a candidate for higher office or simply a member of the Sovereign People, that if you think that all that needs to be done right now is to change back to the kind of leadership we had before is tragically mistaken.
#HWSNBN got elected because people in this country are no longer willing to tolerate the way things have been: the growing gap being rich and poor, the homelessness, the financial insecurity. He is continuing to fan those flames that elected him. We cannot go back. We have to go forward. Those who have disproportionately benefited from the current system need to understand that a sea change is underway.
Monday, September 16, 2019
4 Snouts for Between Riverside & Crazy at Capital Stage thru Sept 29
(:)(:)(:)(:) 4 snouts up out of a possible 5 snouts (click here to understand my snout-based rating system) for Between Riverside and Crazy up at Capital Stage in Sacramento midtown through Sunday September 29th.
Written by Stephen Adly Guirgis, who wrote Jesus Hopped the 'A' Train' perhaps the best play I ever saw produced at Capital Stage, this play toggles between hilarious dialogue and performances and genuine pathos. Guirgis's writing and Judith Moreland's direction are superb. The performances are very strong, with notes below.
There are more characters and actors on stage then one usually sees on the Capital Stage--that's great fun. They're all strong. Darn it I recycled my program and can't find the cast list online. Particularly strong performances by the actor who plays Oswaldo the sober (or not) ex-con friend of the son and the manipulative self-serving Lieutenant.
My only note would be that while the lead actor, James Wheatley, who I believe is also the artistic director of the wonderful Celebration Arts theater in Sacramento, gives a physically and emotionally strong performance, he doesn't seem to have fully inhabited the words of the script--he stumbled over some of what he was saying and it didn't feel as if his character embodied those wonderful lines.
The music is also fabulous. Please catch a performance this weekend or next and tell your friends.
Below is everything I could cut and paste from the website about the play
Between Riverside And Crazy
Between Riverside And Crazy
by Stephen Adly Guirgis
Directed by Judith Moreland
August 28 – September 29, 2019
2015 Pulitzer Prize Winner
Sacramento Premiere
2015 Pulitzer Prize Winner
Sacramento Premiere
Ex-cop and recent widower Walter “Pops” Washington and his newly paroled son Junior have spent a lifetime living between Riverside Drive and crazy. But now, the NYPD is demanding his signature to close an outstanding lawsuit, the landlord wants him out, the liquor store is closed—and the church won’t leave him alone. When the struggle to keep one of New York City’s last great rent-stabilized apartments collides with old wounds, sketchy new houseguests, and a final ultimatum, it seems that the old days may be dead and gone.
“Capital Stage launches its 15th anniversary season with one of its best productions ever.” —SN&R
“New Capital Stage Play is ‘Crazy’ Good.” —Sacramento Press
“…It’s chock-full of entertaining surprises.” —Sacramento Bee
“If you only have time for one play in Sacramento this month, ‘Between Riverside And Crazy’ at Capital Stage is the one see…This darkly funny drama [is] a must-see theatrical event.” —Outword Magazine
Act I: 60 minutes. Act II: 50 minutes. One 15 minute intermission.
Saturday, September 14, 2019
The End of Overeating?
I almost don't remember a time I didn't struggle with food, body image and eating. Like many in my strange fraternity, I wake up every morning resolving to eat healthy food that serves me. For decades, I would be able to do so until some point in the afternoon and evening, at which point I would fly off the rails into eating whatever was available. I would wake up the next morning hungover, sick and ashamed from eating food that didn't serve me. I would resolve to do it differently. And I would fail.
Throughout my teens and adulthood, I would go on a series of diets (in my case, only the kinds where you can eat an unlimited amount of X, never the kind where you have to weigh and measure or buy your food from someone else who made it). I was EXTREMELY successful at these diets. I would lose whatever the maximum predicted amount you could lose very quickly: sometimes as much as 40 pounds in one month.
When I was 16 years old I was cast in the part of Ethel Toffelmeier in the The Music Man because I was pudgy and so is Ethel. I was horrified (that is not me on the left, but remarkably evocative of the part and my state of mind) . I seized onto the popular Liquid Protein Diet. For 30 days, while rehearsing for this summer production, I ate only 3 tablespoons of liquid protein a day. I lost something like 35 pounds during this period. I drove the costume mistress crazy. As performances neared and my weight dropped, she kept sewing more and more padding into my costume to retain the pudgy look of Ethel. Then, in the final rehearsal week, while my parents and younger brothers were out of town on a family vacation, I passed out during a dance number and fell into the orchestra pit, my fall broken by a cello case. I woke up with a physician parent force-feeding me Oreos and OJ and asking, "when did you last eat?" "What day is it?" was my reply.
Whatever I lost I would quickly gain back with interest. As a result I got heavier and heavier. I oscillated between a normal size and pretty darn fat. When I am a normal size, people look impressed and compliment me and ask me what how I did it. When I am heavier, they ask me if I'm okay and look concerned. When I am heavier, I have hated how I look and judged myself harshly. I have also judged myself for not being perfect and doing this perfectly.
Finally I stopped trying to do this alone. By having help I have been able to stay a lot closer to my goal weight for years at a time and to refrain from dieting or yo-yo plans. I have a healthy food plan that I work hard (with a huge amount of support from others) to stick to. The most important part of my recovery is that I largely am also able to be loving and kind to myself. Today I love my healthy body and how I look.
I learned, as this book details, that I have a disease, which the scientists call "conditioned hyper-eating" and that there is treatment available. In my case the treatment involves getting a lot of support from others and staying out of my own head. This book, written by the former head of the Clinton Food and Drug Administration, who says that he himself is a "conditioned hyper-eater, " is really three books in one. The first third is a description of how the fast food industry has manipulated ingredients to get people hooked on certain products and eating them compulsively. The second third is a description of the science that proves that there is such a thing as "conditioned hyper-eating." And the final third is the science that explains what works to help people recover from "conditioned hyper-eating."
I have found this book to be the best scientific explanation of why my approach works. For 14 years, I have been more free (not completely free) from the constant obsession with my body and food and eating.
Friday, September 13, 2019
Which Democrats in last night's debates understand this "transformational moment"?
Last night's Democratic presidential debate at Texas Southern University provides an opportunity to examine the candidates in light of this wonderful recent question presented in the New York Times by Stan Greenberg-- "The Republican Party Is Doomed: This is a transformational moment. Do the Democrats understand how to take advantage of it?"
Candidates who do NOT understand this transformational moment:
Joe Biden--While most pundits observed that Biden "did well" last night, which means he didn't meander, dodder or make any giant gaffes, he also continues to demonstrate quite clearly that he does not understand that a sea change in the country is underway. Hillary Clinton was the last major candidate to make that mistake. IT is possible that he can win the nomination with this strategy (because it is possible that a majority of those who are likely to vote in a primary are all about the past not the future) but it is NOT possible that he can a) win a general election with this strategy or b) govern for a world that works for everyone.
He is clinging to a patchwork healthcare system whose only benefits are catering to corporate clients.
He still can't talk about race for s**t.
He still demonstrates no urgency on dealing with the effects of climate change.
The only urgency he demonstrates is defeating Donald Trump.
Uh, yeah, we all get that, thanks, Joe.
Candidates who definitely DO understand this transformational moment:
Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren, Cory Booker, Julian Castro, Beto O'Rourke and Marianne Williamson
Bernie of course has played a YUGE role in creating and guiding us to this moment. So to say he understands it is a massive understatement. Every major initiative being talked about on stage last night, with the possible exception of gun buy backs and reparations for slavery was brought to you by Bernie.
Elizabeth, who has largely embraced Bernie's policies with her emphasis on regulating capitalism, and her focus on some key consumer protections, also is part of the movement for change.
Cory shows that he understands the moment. He is a great talker and could win it all. So far, I don't hear the cynical manipulation that I detect in Kamala and Pete but it's possible that it's lurking.
Julian did not create any of this and, like Biden, is associated (former cabinet secretary) with the Obama administration but unlike Biden does show that he knows there is a sea change and he wants to be part of it.
Beto has no chance whatsoever at this point, but he still has shown he knows what is going on.
Marianne was NOT in this debate but I watched part of her livestream. It was good. I missed her in the debate. Obviously she gets that this is a transformational moment. More than anyone other than Bernie.
Candidates who have demonstrated they are willing to hijack this transformational moment and bring corporate america along:
Kamala Harris and Pete Buttigieg are both very clearly cynically using the language of this transformational moment and paying lip service to the issues that bring it forth while assuring the corporate oligarchy with code words that they will do nothing to change the status quo that Sanders and Warren are working to change. If corporate America were smart, they would hitch their wagon to Harris, who has the best chance to go all the way with this strategy.
Last night they both blew the corporate dogwhistle on healthcare by talking about "choice." Trust me, from years in the trenches working for universal health coverage. "Choice" is the word that the health insurance industry has market-tested as the way to stop government financed insurance. As Elizabeth Warren so eloquently articulated last night, consumers do not care about choice of health plan, they care about choice of physician. Government financed insurance once universal, should provide considerably more choice of physician than any closed panel HMO most of us are currently on, but managed care plans have continually used "choice" as their buzz word to avoid losing their add-nothing profits.
Amy Klobuchar
Amy may or may not understand this moment. She explicitly and clearly positioned herself last night as the centrist midwesterner who finds others positions extreme. Yet I find her to be WAY better at talking about this moment than Joe Biden plus she is female and better at talking. That is smart. If she can stick around long enough for Biden to implode (which I still think is inevitable), she could split his support with Kamala Harris.
I find Amy's approach a lot more honest and appealing than Kamala's and Pete's--ironically, Kamala and Pete like to talk like transformational progressives and raise-money from huge corporate donors, Amy Klobuchar is probably more of a real progressive than either one of them but is posturing as a midwestern centrist. I'd rather a transformational sheep in status quo clothing than a status quo sheep in transformational clothing.
I find Amy's approach a lot more honest and appealing than Kamala's and Pete's--ironically, Kamala and Pete like to talk like transformational progressives and raise-money from huge corporate donors, Amy Klobuchar is probably more of a real progressive than either one of them but is posturing as a midwestern centrist. I'd rather a transformational sheep in status quo clothing than a status quo sheep in transformational clothing.
And, yes, I'm still married to Bernie and dating Warren, Booker and Williamson (goodbye to Tulsi Gabbard).
Thursday, September 12, 2019
The Spiritual Wisdom of "well that happened..." both personally and politically
Lately I am appreciating the spiritual wisdom of "well that happened." Way back in 2009 when it entered the lexicon, it had a snarky dismissive feel, often used to cut off conversation. And some people probably still use it that way. Urban Dictionary: Well That Happened
But now I feel like it's a profoundly useful spiritual and political concept. In my culture, so much (maybe all) of the pain of life comes from a strong sense of judgment, that something has gone wrong. I wake up every morning with a to do list and then life happens and certain or all things on it don't get done. The derailing is painful to me, because I often judge it and think it should be different from how it is. As the Buddhists say, all suffering comes from attachment, and all suffering is optional (depending on my ability to release attachment).
"Well that happened" may seem pointless but actually it is just true. The things that I'm worried about and upset over are really just stories I'm believing. I think things should be one way and they actually appear to be another way. This phrase, this spiritual truth, is really a great way to release attachment and sometimes feel better fast
It's not, I'll hasten to point out, the same as "it's all good." "It's all good" is actually judgmental. It's a "good" judgment, but its still a judgment. At the level of the unified field/One/Divine Love/God there is no judgment. It/S/he/They always say "yes" without judgment. Judgment is a human idea, not a Divine one. "Well that happened" (which, yes, I do want to insert a comma in, but that's not usually how it's written) is something that the Divine would say/feel/know/be.
In the political realm this can be even harder than in the personal. First, a reminder that there's not something out there that is political that is separate from the spiritual. We are all One. There is no separation in the Mind of the Universe/One/unified field. So what's true in the personal is necessarily true in the political realm. And, indeed, the pain of the political is entirely experienced as personal, right? I am in pain when elected officials/the government does something that I don't feel should have been done. It feels as if something has gone terribly wrong.
In the personal realm as well, the worse the experience is the harder it is to refrain from judgment. It's one thing to say "well that happened" when I can't find my car keys and I'm late to a minor appointment. It might be possible for me to find relief from the application of "well that happened" to my mother's very interesting conviction that Netflix fiction is true (even when she's very very angry and yelling at me about it). But if I were to get a life-threatening diagnosis or lose a close loved one or to have my house or business burned to the ground, I suspect I would have a violent reaction to anyone saying "well that happened." The higher the perceived stakes are, the greater the degree of attachment, the more I will probably cling.
In politics right now, I perceive that a great deal is at stake. I might be able to rub some "well that happened" on the leader of the country for deceiving people as to the trajectory of a hurricane (despite the incredibly dangerous possibilities that brings), but it's a tall order to be nonjudgmental and nonattached about racist policies, children being separated from their parents, global instability and policies that encourage wildfires, record heat and rising sea levels. It's seems like the stakes are too high to see these things from God's perspective. Which is a very interesting statement if you think about it.
Is it possible for me to use the "well that happened" Divine invitation of nonattachment and nonjudgment to remove the stuckness of the polarities of the current moment in order to free up space for new possibilities? Is it possible for something to shift in the void that nonjudgment can bring?
What energy, space and consciousness can me and my body be to release all judgment and attachment and be "well that happened" in all aspects of my life in order to receive a new idea, a new moment in a life and world that works for everyone and everything that doesn't allow it, can I destroy and uncreate it all right now?
Monday, September 09, 2019
My Training Regimen to Care for Mom
I remember a few years ago a couple of friends of mine infuriated me with stories of the loving and wonderful time they were having caring for their aging parent. They were far along in the process and I was just beginning it. Why should this have infuriated me? You would think that I would want to wave a magic wand and be having a "loving and wonderful time," right? There was nothing loving and wonderful about the time I was actually having. Mom was leaving three to six angry blaming voicemails a day on work, cell and landline (remember landlines?).
Later, I remember another friend, who is the full time primary caretaker for her angry mother with dementia, saying "everybody's always talking about the importance of self care when you're caring for an aging parent. Who the fuck has time for self care? How would that even happen?"
Down the road aways, I find both perspectives equally relatable and mystifying. My brothers and I recently moved our 85 year old mother with advancing dementia from her (our) home of 53 years to a little house in northern California near all three of us (and all six of her grandchildren).
This frugal public schoolteacher did us the immense favor of saving enough to pay people besides us to provide the care and to keep her in a private home, rather than institution. I am extremely grateful to be one of the few only daughters on the planet who can rely upon her two brothers to be equal partners in this endeavor. Even so, the business of arranging, supervising and filling gaps in care along with managing her affairs is quite challenging. At least once a week I have been the primary caretaker for an overnight or two. I have found even the best of these nights to be exhausting and stressful and I get relieved by others.
To get through even my version of elder care, I have to attend therapy every week, meditation, prayer, support groups and exercise pretty much every day, and work very hard not to use food, shopping, Netflix or controlling other people to manage my feelings. I find I am crying a real lot.
All of it helps but none of it has yet transformed the experience into "loving and wonderful." I am often angry at my mom for being the way she is. The night before last she woke up a whole household furious and terrified that a woman was being threatened with murder. She was sure this was true and that we were not doing anything about it. This is my fault for turning her on to Jane The Virgin. Sigh. To be sure, I started out very compassionate for how scared she was. But compassion wanes at 3am when someone has been screaming at you since midnight that you are a co-conspirator to murder.
I cannot imagine what it would be like inside my head if I had to do that day in and day out without a care regimen. It's heartbreaking to think of all the people who do.
Even in all this there actually have been many loving and wonderful moments. I have had great lunches with mom. I have enjoyed having her fall asleep on my lap. I have often felt humbled at the opportunity to help her with this phase of her life. I didn't exactly expect that to happen but it has.
I think the thing I wish that everyone would do is just admit that this is incredibly difficult. Its a marathon not a sprint. So let's train for it.
Later, I remember another friend, who is the full time primary caretaker for her angry mother with dementia, saying "everybody's always talking about the importance of self care when you're caring for an aging parent. Who the fuck has time for self care? How would that even happen?"
Down the road aways, I find both perspectives equally relatable and mystifying. My brothers and I recently moved our 85 year old mother with advancing dementia from her (our) home of 53 years to a little house in northern California near all three of us (and all six of her grandchildren).
This frugal public schoolteacher did us the immense favor of saving enough to pay people besides us to provide the care and to keep her in a private home, rather than institution. I am extremely grateful to be one of the few only daughters on the planet who can rely upon her two brothers to be equal partners in this endeavor. Even so, the business of arranging, supervising and filling gaps in care along with managing her affairs is quite challenging. At least once a week I have been the primary caretaker for an overnight or two. I have found even the best of these nights to be exhausting and stressful and I get relieved by others.
To get through even my version of elder care, I have to attend therapy every week, meditation, prayer, support groups and exercise pretty much every day, and work very hard not to use food, shopping, Netflix or controlling other people to manage my feelings. I find I am crying a real lot.
All of it helps but none of it has yet transformed the experience into "loving and wonderful." I am often angry at my mom for being the way she is. The night before last she woke up a whole household furious and terrified that a woman was being threatened with murder. She was sure this was true and that we were not doing anything about it. This is my fault for turning her on to Jane The Virgin. Sigh. To be sure, I started out very compassionate for how scared she was. But compassion wanes at 3am when someone has been screaming at you since midnight that you are a co-conspirator to murder.
I cannot imagine what it would be like inside my head if I had to do that day in and day out without a care regimen. It's heartbreaking to think of all the people who do.
Even in all this there actually have been many loving and wonderful moments. I have had great lunches with mom. I have enjoyed having her fall asleep on my lap. I have often felt humbled at the opportunity to help her with this phase of her life. I didn't exactly expect that to happen but it has.
I think the thing I wish that everyone would do is just admit that this is incredibly difficult. Its a marathon not a sprint. So let's train for it.
Sunday, September 08, 2019
American Alcoholic Family System Called Marianne Williamson to Run for President
In today's New York Times Magazine, "The Gospel According to Marianne Williamson: do spirituality and self-help have a political constituency?"
Great piece. In it, she says that what called her to run for president was the realization that entire country is like an alcoholic family system in which the children just know something terrible is going on.
There is truly only One mind. In August of 2017 I wrote Father Knows Worst: America's Dysfunctional Family Reality TV Show. Unfortunately its as apt today as it was 2 years ago. And yes, I'm the sort of person who is quoting myself. Not from egomania, just expediency:
"Some of the kids are really really clear that Dad is out of control and has to go. Some of them try to pacify him and hope that he will not hit them or Mom. He invariably hits them anyway. He blames all the victims. Nothing is ever his fault. It is always the kids' fault or Mom's fault. Or someone else's fault. Some kids, the ones that are emulating him the most, sometimes hurt the other kids. "
Friday, September 06, 2019
Why and How I Believe in the Power of Prayer Despite Everything
I grew up in a household led by an Episcopal altar cowboy turned socialist agnostic professor and a Methodist southern belle turned "I'd like to go to church someday, if only I could get out of the house on Sundays." My father's mother believed in dreams and synchronicity.
We never prayed. We marched. We carried signs. We protested. We canvassed. We voted. We called our representatives. But we never prayed.
I went to law school. I became a member of Ralph Nader's cadre of lawyers in Washington DC working for consumer rights, including single payer health care (enhanced medicare for all). I wrote reports. I held press conferences. I called people sell-out pigs. I went on talk shows. I buttonholed congressmen. I never prayed.
Then we moved to California with our 2 small children. I worked in and out of California legislature. I analyzed legislation. I raised money. I wrote letters. I never prayed.
Then one of our closest family members spent several years in a living hell of the body. And I learned to pray. I couldn't decide whether it worked or it didn't. It took that family member a long time to get well, but I felt better fast.
Simultaneously, I saw almost no fruit from hard work in Congress and the California legislature. Where was the single payer (Medicare for all) that we had worked for? Where was campaign finance reform? Where was the carbon tax? Where was a living wage? Where were real protections for consumers and workers? If hard work as an activist in the real world is SO darn productive, where the heck were the results?
For over a century, Religious Science (now called Centers for Spiritual Living) has taught people how and why prayer works. Lately the actual hard science has caught up with the early teachings. We know that at the level of the quantum field below and including all things human consciousness directed purposefully "collapses" potential (waves) into material form (particles).
And now, after over a decade of study and practice, I'm an ordained minister in the Centers for Spiritual Living. I no longer am engaged in the business of politics or legislation. What do I do for a living? I pray.
I teach people how to use the power of prayer to bolster whatever it is they want to accomplish or change in the world be it heal their bodies, heal the planet, or heal the body politic.
When we mock Marianne Williamson for suggesting that we pray to effect the hurricane, we are rejecting our own spiritual power and authority. We are forgetting a huge amount of what we can do to change the world. We are not just human beings. We are spiritual beings having a human experience. The 21st century is a time where we are going to be learning more and more about the power of who we are. Unfortunately, part of the president's success is he knows how to mobilize his spiritual power for what he wants and we don't. See Donald Trump and the power of the word.
Folks are working hard to create and bring forth a world that works for everyone. Many of those fighting to change seek to stand side by side with indigenous peoples, and learn from their ways which are in harmony with the earth. All indigenous peoples pray. The original meaning of the word "protest" on the other hand was a bit patriarchal, it was to swear witness on one's testicles.
I truly want health care, economic opportunity, clean air, clean water, safety and security and quality education for all people. The current Congress and political establishment cannot achieve those goals without a sea change. That requires phone calls and money and voting and, yes, it requires prayer.
The energy of Spirit is not a man in the sky with a beard directing events. It is a responsive powerful field of love. I have learned that Spirit always says yes and it is infinitely patient. It says yes when we say we will fight and fight and lose because we believe there's a conspiracy against us. It says yes when we say say that we hate and distrust half the country. And it says yes when we say, Great Spirit, of ourselves we are not enough, we are tired of losing. We are sick and tired of being sick and tired. We need your help. We know that there is more than enough shelter, clothing, love, clean air and clean water for everyone. But we don't know how to distribute it. We need the power that moves the tides to change the tides. We do not know how, by ourselves, to keep our children safe from hurricanes or from violence. We do not know how, by ourselves, to work together to create a green economy. We do not know how, by ourselves, to create the political will to provide affordable cradle to grave health care for every single man woman and child in the country. We do not know how, by ourselves, to live together in love and harmony and truly respect every person. And so we need your help. We are asking for your help. Thank you, thank you, thank you, God, thank you, Great Spirit, thank you, Jesus, for your help, your power, your guidance and your love.
We never prayed. We marched. We carried signs. We protested. We canvassed. We voted. We called our representatives. But we never prayed.
I went to law school. I became a member of Ralph Nader's cadre of lawyers in Washington DC working for consumer rights, including single payer health care (enhanced medicare for all). I wrote reports. I held press conferences. I called people sell-out pigs. I went on talk shows. I buttonholed congressmen. I never prayed.
Then we moved to California with our 2 small children. I worked in and out of California legislature. I analyzed legislation. I raised money. I wrote letters. I never prayed.
Then one of our closest family members spent several years in a living hell of the body. And I learned to pray. I couldn't decide whether it worked or it didn't. It took that family member a long time to get well, but I felt better fast.
Simultaneously, I saw almost no fruit from hard work in Congress and the California legislature. Where was the single payer (Medicare for all) that we had worked for? Where was campaign finance reform? Where was the carbon tax? Where was a living wage? Where were real protections for consumers and workers? If hard work as an activist in the real world is SO darn productive, where the heck were the results?
For over a century, Religious Science (now called Centers for Spiritual Living) has taught people how and why prayer works. Lately the actual hard science has caught up with the early teachings. We know that at the level of the quantum field below and including all things human consciousness directed purposefully "collapses" potential (waves) into material form (particles).
And now, after over a decade of study and practice, I'm an ordained minister in the Centers for Spiritual Living. I no longer am engaged in the business of politics or legislation. What do I do for a living? I pray.
I teach people how to use the power of prayer to bolster whatever it is they want to accomplish or change in the world be it heal their bodies, heal the planet, or heal the body politic.
Washington Examiner: Don't Mock Marianne Williamson's Emphasis on the Power of Prayer |
Folks are working hard to create and bring forth a world that works for everyone. Many of those fighting to change seek to stand side by side with indigenous peoples, and learn from their ways which are in harmony with the earth. All indigenous peoples pray. The original meaning of the word "protest" on the other hand was a bit patriarchal, it was to swear witness on one's testicles.
I truly want health care, economic opportunity, clean air, clean water, safety and security and quality education for all people. The current Congress and political establishment cannot achieve those goals without a sea change. That requires phone calls and money and voting and, yes, it requires prayer.
The energy of Spirit is not a man in the sky with a beard directing events. It is a responsive powerful field of love. I have learned that Spirit always says yes and it is infinitely patient. It says yes when we say we will fight and fight and lose because we believe there's a conspiracy against us. It says yes when we say say that we hate and distrust half the country. And it says yes when we say, Great Spirit, of ourselves we are not enough, we are tired of losing. We are sick and tired of being sick and tired. We need your help. We know that there is more than enough shelter, clothing, love, clean air and clean water for everyone. But we don't know how to distribute it. We need the power that moves the tides to change the tides. We do not know how, by ourselves, to keep our children safe from hurricanes or from violence. We do not know how, by ourselves, to work together to create a green economy. We do not know how, by ourselves, to create the political will to provide affordable cradle to grave health care for every single man woman and child in the country. We do not know how, by ourselves, to live together in love and harmony and truly respect every person. And so we need your help. We are asking for your help. Thank you, thank you, thank you, God, thank you, Great Spirit, thank you, Jesus, for your help, your power, your guidance and your love.
Thursday, September 05, 2019
I Don't Believe in Arthritis -- Part 1
First of all, hi, I didn't post once in August. I am crawling out from a compressed summer of tons of short and longer fun fun fun travel punctuated by moving our 85 year old mother from her home of 53 years in San Diego to a little home she has owned in northern California where she can be near us all.
So my first post out of the gate is: I don't believe in "arthritis." What do I mean by that? Well, I believe there is deterioration in bones and it can be witnessed and measured by x-rays and the like. But what doctors call "arthritis" (and regular people think of usually as being caused by deterioration in the bones) is actually just a medical term for the pain and the stiffness and swelling that many people experience.
And while I do very much believe that people are experiencing that pain, stiffness and swelling, I do not believe there is something called "arthritis" that causes it. It's tricky because arthritis is really not a cause, it's an effect. But of what?
What I don't believe is that there is some permanent condition that makes us have pain or discomfort and that cannot be healed. And neither does Dr. John Sarno.
Dr. John Sarno, a physician who wrote such bestselling books as Healing Back Pain, Mind Over Back Pain, The Divided Mind, & The Mind-Body Connection, studied and published articles in respected medical journals about the mind's role in pain in the body.
In these studies, which have been replicated many times, he showed that deterioration of bones does not cause pain. Pretty much every single adult over the age of 40 has deterioration of bones, compressed or crushed disks in the spine, and the like. The vast majority of those who have these experience or report no pain, swelling or discomfort in the area of that deterioration.
However, when people come into a doctor complaining of joint pain or swelling or discomfort and an x-ray is taken, these deteriorations in the area of the discomfort are discovered and connected with "arthritis" and then people come to believe that there is something called arthritis that caused their pain and that is caused by something called aging and it is not going to go away.
You could read anyone of Dr. Sarno's books to understand how you can actually heal yourself from almost any condition by understanding the role your brain/mind is playing in keeping you ill. Or you could watch this old but still riveting 20-20 investigation into Sarno's work and how effective it has been for people.
90% of Dr. Sarno's work (he died last year, but his clinic in New York continues on) is really working with people to understand that they can direct their brain to heal their body and it will work. A huge number of people can't hear that. They think that they are being told that their pain is all in their mind--it demonstrably isn't. They think that they are being told they caused it--they didn't.
What the work of Dr. Sarno is telling people is once they understand how the mind-body connection works, they can heal themselves of almost any condition (which is super exciting).
For more on Sarno's work go to this: Tension Myositis Syndrome wiki and resources
So my first post out of the gate is: I don't believe in "arthritis." What do I mean by that? Well, I believe there is deterioration in bones and it can be witnessed and measured by x-rays and the like. But what doctors call "arthritis" (and regular people think of usually as being caused by deterioration in the bones) is actually just a medical term for the pain and the stiffness and swelling that many people experience.
And while I do very much believe that people are experiencing that pain, stiffness and swelling, I do not believe there is something called "arthritis" that causes it. It's tricky because arthritis is really not a cause, it's an effect. But of what?
What I don't believe is that there is some permanent condition that makes us have pain or discomfort and that cannot be healed. And neither does Dr. John Sarno.
Dr. John Sarno, a physician who wrote such bestselling books as Healing Back Pain, Mind Over Back Pain, The Divided Mind, & The Mind-Body Connection, studied and published articles in respected medical journals about the mind's role in pain in the body.
In these studies, which have been replicated many times, he showed that deterioration of bones does not cause pain. Pretty much every single adult over the age of 40 has deterioration of bones, compressed or crushed disks in the spine, and the like. The vast majority of those who have these experience or report no pain, swelling or discomfort in the area of that deterioration.
However, when people come into a doctor complaining of joint pain or swelling or discomfort and an x-ray is taken, these deteriorations in the area of the discomfort are discovered and connected with "arthritis" and then people come to believe that there is something called arthritis that caused their pain and that is caused by something called aging and it is not going to go away.
You could read anyone of Dr. Sarno's books to understand how you can actually heal yourself from almost any condition by understanding the role your brain/mind is playing in keeping you ill. Or you could watch this old but still riveting 20-20 investigation into Sarno's work and how effective it has been for people.
90% of Dr. Sarno's work (he died last year, but his clinic in New York continues on) is really working with people to understand that they can direct their brain to heal their body and it will work. A huge number of people can't hear that. They think that they are being told that their pain is all in their mind--it demonstrably isn't. They think that they are being told they caused it--they didn't.
What the work of Dr. Sarno is telling people is once they understand how the mind-body connection works, they can heal themselves of almost any condition (which is super exciting).
For more on Sarno's work go to this: Tension Myositis Syndrome wiki and resources