Treasure was uncovered today while sorting through books and papers: a blank book with high quality paper measuring two and a half inches thick.* It was love at first sight when I spotted it on the sale shelf at the The Art Store in 2010. I purchased it without knowing what purpose it would serve. I just had to have it! So many possibilities!
On January 14, 2011, I made the first entry, after deciding the book would be the perfect place to write special sayings and poems I wanted to save. This turned out to be a harder task than I thought it would be. For one thing the book is awkward and heavy, difficult to hold on to. And where do you put it so it will be handy when you want to write in it? And hand writing the entries, who knew how long it would take to write something out long hand?
As they say, all good ideas don't work. The last entry was made on 10-28-2012. I wish I would have continued. It is great fun to see what I wrote. Here's one entry for you from 12-02-2011:
"Some of us need to discover that we will not begin to live more fully until we have the courage to do and see and taste and experience much less than usual."**
Do all your plans work out as you pictured? I'm trying not to be hard on myself about this, but what am I going to do with this treasure? I doubt I will write in it again. I wish I knew someone who would love it like I have. Should I paste stuff in it? Tear out the pages? WHAT should I do?
Please let me know how you handle your unfinished projects. What do you say to yourself? And do you think doing less good advice? Email or put in comment section.
Thanks for exploring the mystery - Nicky Mendenhall
*Just for the fun of it, hold your fingers apart 2 1/2 inches and imagine how big and heavy this book is.
**Thomas Merton as quoted in a Monk class.
Image is from a Buddhist Garden in downtown Hong Kong. It was odd to feel deep in Nature and then look up and see skyscrapers surrounding us.
Friday, April 29, 2016
Tuesday, April 26, 2016
Are You Ready For Macbeth? - #223
Since Shakespeare's 400th anniversary of death will be May 3, 2016, I thought it time exploring the mystery debut a quote from the person often regarded as the greatest writer in the English language:
"Give sorrow words; the grief that does not speak knits up the o'er wrought heart and bids it break."*
This is especially for you if you are grieving, which I imagine is all of us at some level. This reminds me of a story I heard from my Buddhist friends. A woman whose son had died asked the Buddha to bring him back to life, the Buddha said he would if she could find one home in the village where there had not been a death.
If you wonder about the image, I do to. It seemed appropriate somehow. Tell me if you can find meaning in it.
Does it help you to know that people were grieving 400 years ago?
Does anything help? Expressing my feelings and the passing of time helps. There is no magic pill or instant cure.
Thank you for exploring the mystery - Nicky Mendenhall
*Chapter 14's Epigraph in The Body Keeps The Score by Bessel Van Der Kolk, M.D.
"Give sorrow words; the grief that does not speak knits up the o'er wrought heart and bids it break."*
This is especially for you if you are grieving, which I imagine is all of us at some level. This reminds me of a story I heard from my Buddhist friends. A woman whose son had died asked the Buddha to bring him back to life, the Buddha said he would if she could find one home in the village where there had not been a death.
If you wonder about the image, I do to. It seemed appropriate somehow. Tell me if you can find meaning in it.
Does it help you to know that people were grieving 400 years ago?
Does anything help? Expressing my feelings and the passing of time helps. There is no magic pill or instant cure.
Thank you for exploring the mystery - Nicky Mendenhall
*Chapter 14's Epigraph in The Body Keeps The Score by Bessel Van Der Kolk, M.D.
Friday, April 22, 2016
Now I Know Why Mom Called - #222
When Mom was alive, she would call with news of "who died". It wasn't pleasant to hear about people dying. Death seemed far away. The calls about distant relatives or her high school friends, were really annoying. Wondering why she had to be so focused on death, I'm sure she could hear the annoyance in my voice.
I am beginning to understand that she was sharing grief with me. She was probably inviting me to grieve with her.
Last week I learned that two neighbors, who had lived on nearby farms while I was growing up, died. Almost immediately after learning of these deaths, I felt like calling someone,
While I was puzzling why my urge to share this news was so strong, my weekly email from Companioning the Dying: Opening Fully To Living, arrived in my inbox. Here's what it said:
"My life span is ever-decreasing. The human life span is ever-decreasing; each breath brings us closer to death. Holding this thought in mind, I delve deeply into this truth."
Perhaps the urge to tell someone "who died" is really about coming to terms with the fact that our own life span is decreasing. It is a way of facing the truth of life that includes death.
I wish I could apologize to my mother for being short with her when she called to report "who died". Now I would be gentle and figure that she was preparing for her own death. Maybe she was trying to help me recognize that death is a part of life.
What do you feel when you learn someone has died? Do you feel the need to tell someone or do would you rather keep quiet? What does it feel like to think of your life span decreasing? Do you think about death often?
Please share your thoughts by emailing or going to blog comment section.
Thanks for exploring the mystery - Nicky Mendenhall
|
5:00 AM (14 hours ago)
![]() | ![]() ![]() | ||
April 22, 2016. |
Tuesday, April 19, 2016
Picture Taken On A Beautiful Spr!ng Day - #221
Driving or walking around in April and May is such a pleasure. Des Moines has a plethora of flowering trees; this year they are really glorious.
I wander around, Powershot 1200 IS in hand, yearning to capture Nature's beauty. Each year, despite my efforts, my Powershot and I fail to capture the multiple shades of white, purple, lavender, and pink blossoms.
This year I didn't even try.
I did receive the above image, an image that when I scrolled through my data card, I didn't even recognize. Do you know what it is?
This is a contest though there are no prizes. Just encouragement to enjoy the beauty of spring.
Thanks for exploring the mystery - Nicky Mendenhall
Friday, April 15, 2016
Do You Ever Open A Book at Random? - #220
I have so many books. Volumes and volumes on Somatics, Psychoanalysis, Health, Brain Research, Writing, Memoirs, Novels, Poetry. Every one of them - well almost everyone - would be great to sit down with and dive into head - or is it feet? - first.
I've been told by a couple of people to hold a book in my hand and if it brings me joy, keep it. If not, pass it on.
I'm doing a version of that - if I open a book and I want to read what is on the page, I keep it.
Jetsunma Tenzin Palmo, who is pictured above on my meditation altar, wrote Into the Heart of Life. I bought it from her when I was in India. The meeting was so fraught with meaning,I didn't even ask her to sign it!
I opened it at random today to read about The Eight Worldly Concerns:
"We are not generally aware of our appetite for praise and our dread of blame. We are not generally aware of how we yearn for a good reputation and fall anxious at the thought of the bad. We are not generally aware of how much we gravitate toward what we regard as pleasurable, nor how much we try to avoid what we regard as painful. But it is these eight worldly concerns that keep us revolving around and around in this cycle of birth and death, samsara."
Don't worry about what samsara is - or the cycle of birth and death. (You can Google it if you really want to know the Buddhist definition.) In my case, I want praise, hate to be blamed, yearn for a good reputation, become anxious if someone has an ill opinion of me, grasp for pleasure and avoid pain.
Do you recognize any of these behaviors as your own?
Thanks for exploring the mystery - Nicky Mendenhall
Tuesday, April 12, 2016
This Inspired Me - #219
The following two quotes by Bill Walton* impress me:
"For a long time, everything constantly hurt."
"My recovery took two years, during which time I stopped taking pain medication and began water therapy at the local Y and weight-training at home."
When one of my body parts hurt, I think of Bill.
I hate it when my feet hurt! Finding shoes to fit my narrow feet that are attached to toes that need a wide toe box, is not a trivial pursuit. Reading reviews on ShoeBuy or Zappos lets me know I'm not alone.
Often when we have a bodily pain, we feel alone. This isolation adds to our pain. Pain can be a mystery to explore.
My heart goes out to you if you are suffering with bodily pain. For Bill Walton, Jerry Garcia's Grateful Dead music soothed him. Reading about Somatic Medicine calms me down. What helps you when you are in pain?
Please share with us by replying to this email or going to blog comment section.
Thanks for exploring the mystery - Nicky Mendenhall
*Bill Walton, 63, played on two National Basketball Association championship teams.
Friday, April 8, 2016
Does the Speed Of Life Shatter You? - #218
Life does not accommodate you; it shatters you. Every seed destroys its container, or else there would be no fruition.
|
FLORIDA SCOTT-MAXWELL*
|
I have seen quotes from Florida Scott-Maxwell before and wondered about her. Google says she was born in Florida and died in 1979.
Her quotes are quotable. Here are two more for you:
"Anger must be the energy that has not yet found its right channel."
"I grow more intense as I age."
You may be hearing more from her as I just ordered, The Measure of My Days, for a penny - plus of course 3.99 postage.
The speed of life shatters me. How about you? Let me know how you are dealing with the fact that it is April!
Thanks for exploring the mystery - Nicky Mendenhall
The image above, in my mind, represents the speed of life in 2016. Barely time enough to see the forest, let alone the trees. I found the first quote on A Network for Grateful Living: Word for the Day.
Tuesday, April 5, 2016
The Contagion of Emotion - #217
Here is the world.
Beautiful and terrible things will happen.
Don't be afraid.*
It is difficult not to be afraid sometimes.
When I watched my CA grandson skateboard ramps at his skateboard park, I was afraid.
I am glad to report that only beautiful amazing things happened.
If I watched him more often, I would have to find a way to manage my fear so it wouldn't contaminate his fun.
Did you realize fear is contagious?
Have you ever caught fear from someone else? Has your fear contaminated others? What are you afraid of?
Email me or to to the Comment section of blog and let me know.
Thanks for exploring the mystery - Nicky Mendenhall
The image above was received on my walk this afternoon. The longer I was out in the world, the more I hoped the Weather Channel's forecast of 100% chance of rain beginning at 9 PM.was correct.
*Frederich Buechner, from Barnstorming by briarcroft (no date).
Friday, April 1, 2016
Thank Heavens Aporia Is Impermanent! - #216
Impermanence means that as things in life change, we are able to change with them.*
"Oh Tenzin, when I knelt before you in 1996 to capture your image, I wish I would have summoned the courage to ask you your personal views of impermanence. I like your definition above because it indicates that we need to make changes in response to the changes in the world. I wish I could have continued the conversation and found out what your opinion is on aporia."
It feels natural to converse with Tenzin as I see her every time I meditate. Her presence is very reassuring.
It feels natural to converse with Tenzin as I see her every time I meditate. Her presence is very reassuring.
I'll be the first to admit that I'm not the best dealing with change; as I age I'm seeing how everything does change whether I like it or not. Life is easier when I don't fight change.
But what about situations that feature an unresolvable internal contradiction - one definition of aporia?
Trees change. Some grow scraggly. Some are in the way of new landscaping projects. But to think of chopping down a dignified tree that has grown for a decade or more seems cruel treatment of a living being.
I wonder what you, Tenzin, would say? What do you readers think and say?
Please email me or leave a comment.
Please email me or leave a comment.
Thanks for exploring the mystery - Nicky Mendenhall
*Into the Heart of Life (2011), Jetsunma Tenzin Palmo, Pg. 7.
Tuesday, March 29, 2016
A Word I Felt This Afternoon - #215
Listening to trees being butchered made for a lamentable afternoon.
I've written about my love of trees before - specifically trees in my backyard. Luckily they are not under attack.
The trees under the knife are ones that provide beauty outside my office building. The unmistakable sound of the chainsaw and the grinder this afternoon made me really angry.
When I grumbled to a new tenant, a woman who recently moved in across the hall from my suite, she disclosed that previous to her move, she was informed there were plans to update the office building.
Suddenly I was feeling APORIA.
This new word (to me) doesn't show up in every dictionary but when it does make an appearance, it is a word I love.
It is late and I need to stop writing. Next post, I will define it and tie it in to impermanence.
Let me know if you find it and how you think it relates to impermanence.
Thanks for exploring the mystery - Nicky Mendenhall
The image is of a tree I named "Post-it-note Tree that was discovered in OR last year.
Tuesday, March 22, 2016
Are You Seeking To See - #214
"Sehnsucht" (German pronunciation 'zeːnzʊxt')
Sehnsucht is a German word for yearning (seeking to see).
It is a difficult word, according to several sources, to translate adequately.
When I first found the word it was defined* as follows:
Expresses a profound desire that life would have meaning beyond the "seen."
I read this to mean that most of us want to find meaning in the irrational and the nonmaterial.
I find meaning in the story of Jesus' life here on earth. I find meaning in The Four Noble Truths discovered by the Buddha. I find meaning in Nature and in the changing of the seasons.
Where do you find meaning? What are you seeking to see? How do you deal with the irrational and nonmaterial? Send me an email or comment on the blog.
exploring the mystery will be back next Tuesday! Nicky M.
*Once again I lost the source. I apologize to the originator.
Saturday, March 19, 2016
Never Doubt the Power of the Unconscious - #213
Post #212 was lengthy. It occurred to me after it was published that since reading it would take more of your time, I would skip the next post. No final decision was made; my assumption was that a new post was needed.
Friday evening, the window of opportunity for pushing the "publish" button (for Saturday delivery) came and went. No thought whatsoever of exploring the mystery.
This morning, Saturday, I woke up a bit disoriented. Something didn't feel right. What day was it anyway?
Clarity came slowly. I had forgotten to post last night. I have plenty of excuses why this didn't happen but my best guess is that my unconscious interfered. I thought I could (or is it would?) skip the post and so I did.
Do you catch your unconscious interfering with your plans? Do you even believe in the unconscious? I suspect there is at least one person reading this that no longer "believes" in the unconscious. I'd love to hear how you would think of situations like this.
I offer my apologies for the late arrival of this post plus an image of an idyllic beach scene from a trip to Brazil in 2010 coupled with the thought - how can it be almost six years? I remember the fresh fish - caught minutes before lunch - grilled over the open fire.
What is your experience at the beach? Do you "believe" in sitting on the beach listening to the ocean? Let us know in an email or in the comments section of the blog which you can get to by scrolling to the bottom of the email you are reading and clicking on the underlined phrase, exploringthemystery
Thanks for exploring the mystery - Nicky Mendenhall
Friday evening, the window of opportunity for pushing the "publish" button (for Saturday delivery) came and went. No thought whatsoever of exploring the mystery.
This morning, Saturday, I woke up a bit disoriented. Something didn't feel right. What day was it anyway?
Clarity came slowly. I had forgotten to post last night. I have plenty of excuses why this didn't happen but my best guess is that my unconscious interfered. I thought I could (or is it would?) skip the post and so I did.
Do you catch your unconscious interfering with your plans? Do you even believe in the unconscious? I suspect there is at least one person reading this that no longer "believes" in the unconscious. I'd love to hear how you would think of situations like this.
I offer my apologies for the late arrival of this post plus an image of an idyllic beach scene from a trip to Brazil in 2010 coupled with the thought - how can it be almost six years? I remember the fresh fish - caught minutes before lunch - grilled over the open fire.
What is your experience at the beach? Do you "believe" in sitting on the beach listening to the ocean? Let us know in an email or in the comments section of the blog which you can get to by scrolling to the bottom of the email you are reading and clicking on the underlined phrase, exploringthemystery
Thanks for exploring the mystery - Nicky Mendenhall
Tuesday, March 15, 2016
Reader Posits Puzzling Paradox - #212
"I have hope," Karen writes after consulting her medical professional.
Karen: "What about your post that talked about staying with the worry and disappointment? I never know what to aim for!"
As you so astutely pointed out, the posts have offered two diametrically opposed opinions: ”stay hopeful” and “stay with suffering.”
Finding the word paradoxical in my Kindle dictionary, I learned it is an adjective meaning seemingly absurd or self-contradictory. This didn't seem rich enough for me so I kept looking.
My research unearthed: para="beyond" and dokein="to think." To me this implies one has to go beyond thinking to understand a paradox.
A paradox, writes Kerry Walters,* "properly elicits from us a lived response, not a conceptual analysis."
Walters also writes that a paradox takes us into a "mysterious realm that stubbornly resists the battering ram of reason."
"Mysterious realm" - doesn't that sound like natural material for exploring the mystery!
So Karen, here's one idea for dealing with this particular paradox: "Stay with the suffering; feel your feelings. Stay as long as you can with whatever feelings arrive on the scene. As you sink into the feelings, at some point you will notice that these feelings shift and change. You don't have to make that happen, the nature of feelings is that when they have our full attention (occupied center stage as long as necessary) they will shift and change."
And here's another idea: "Stay with a feeling of hope. Stay as long as you can. Picture the glimmer of hope. Feel it manifesting in your life. If hope begins to flicker, talk to someone you trust. Get support."
In other words - don't aim for anything. Just sit with yourself. Flip a coin if you don't have any idea where to start. You can switch back and forth between the two options for as long as you want.
Don't analyze. Experience your experience. Wait for a lived experience.
How would you respond to Karen? What paradoxes trouble you the most? Is it easy for you to go beyond thinking? Please let us know by emailing me or going to comment section.
Thanks Karen for exploring your mystery with us
Thanks to everyone for exploring the mystery - Nicky Mendenhall
*Kerry Walters, Soul Wilderness (2001), page 3.
Note regarding image: There is not a hidden paradox in this image, don't drive yourself crazy trying to find one. If you find one, please notify me immediately!
exploring the mystery: "That's good - it's important to have hope!"
Karen: "What about your post that talked about staying with the worry and disappointment? I never know what to aim for!"
exploring the mystery : "What good questions. I'll get back to you - I need time to ponder."
Few days later:
Few days later:
Dear Karen,
This response may not help. I fear that postponing my response may have raised your expectations.
This response may not help. I fear that postponing my response may have raised your expectations.
As you so astutely pointed out, the posts have offered two diametrically opposed opinions: ”stay hopeful” and “stay with suffering.”
Finding the word paradoxical in my Kindle dictionary, I learned it is an adjective meaning seemingly absurd or self-contradictory. This didn't seem rich enough for me so I kept looking.
My research unearthed: para="beyond" and dokein="to think." To me this implies one has to go beyond thinking to understand a paradox.
A paradox, writes Kerry Walters,* "properly elicits from us a lived response, not a conceptual analysis."
Walters also writes that a paradox takes us into a "mysterious realm that stubbornly resists the battering ram of reason."
"Mysterious realm" - doesn't that sound like natural material for exploring the mystery!
So Karen, here's one idea for dealing with this particular paradox: "Stay with the suffering; feel your feelings. Stay as long as you can with whatever feelings arrive on the scene. As you sink into the feelings, at some point you will notice that these feelings shift and change. You don't have to make that happen, the nature of feelings is that when they have our full attention (occupied center stage as long as necessary) they will shift and change."
And here's another idea: "Stay with a feeling of hope. Stay as long as you can. Picture the glimmer of hope. Feel it manifesting in your life. If hope begins to flicker, talk to someone you trust. Get support."
In other words - don't aim for anything. Just sit with yourself. Flip a coin if you don't have any idea where to start. You can switch back and forth between the two options for as long as you want.
Don't analyze. Experience your experience. Wait for a lived experience.
How would you respond to Karen? What paradoxes trouble you the most? Is it easy for you to go beyond thinking? Please let us know by emailing me or going to comment section.
Thanks Karen for exploring your mystery with us
Thanks to everyone for exploring the mystery - Nicky Mendenhall
*Kerry Walters, Soul Wilderness (2001), page 3.
Note regarding image: There is not a hidden paradox in this image, don't drive yourself crazy trying to find one. If you find one, please notify me immediately!
Friday, March 11, 2016
Can You Celebrate the Muddy Mess? - #211
"There is a hard truth to be told: before spring becomes beautiful, it is plug ugly, nothing but mud and muck. I have walked in the early spring through fields that will suck your boots off, a world so wet and woeful it makes you yearn for the return of ice. But in that muddy mess, the conditions for rebirth are being created."*
*Parker Palmer, Word for the Day, 2/7/2016, Network for Grateful Living. Thanks for exploring the mystery - Nicky Mendenhall |
Tuesday, March 8, 2016
Do You Have To Stretch For Patience? - #210
Pulling into the driveway at 4:00 this afternoon, the squawking from this pair of geese captured my attention. I went into the house to find my camera. When I came back out, I discovered that the noise wasn't from just these two, they were communicating with another pair on a roof two houses over. In addition, there was a single goose in between the two pair who was the loudest of all. The dark clouds seemed part of the story.
I wish you could have heard them! The sound was raucous! It made me laugh to see them stretch their necks and squawk!
This was a marked contrast to what I faced inside the house: the internet was off line. Don't you just hate twenty-first century technological problems?
I guess that's where patience should have blossomed inside me.
What I really want to share with you are a few lines from Christine Valters Paintner's post from the Abbey of the Arts newsletter on March 6, 2016. I found them quite fitting for our discussion:
"The cultivation of patience.....the Greek word is hupomone, which essentially means to stay with whatever is happening.
"On a deeper level, the call is to not run away when things become challenging. Stability demands that we stay with difficult experiences and stay present to the discomfort they create in us."
I don't know about you , but I like comfort. Stretching myself to appreciate discomfort will be quite a stretch. As much of a stretch as the geese did with their necks!
Does Christine's take on patience add anything for you? Please email me of go to the comments section and let us know.
Thanks for exploring the mystery - Nicky Mendenhall
Friday, March 4, 2016
Did the Guardian Make a Fried Egg? - #209
"Patience is remaining present."
The above wisdom is not original. I jotted it down, omitting the source. I was confident I would remember and give credit to the author.
But alas the memory of the source is no longer available. This type of wisdom saying, so obvious and so true, is beginning to feel like something I must have said. If you said it, or know the source, please let me know.
The Guardian statue is always present when I raise the shade to see the rising sun and brilliant sky in the morning as well as when I begin to settle in for the evening and lower the shade.
I find myself pushing to get items on my list(s) crossed off or pushing things out of my mind, often things I am not ready to know. I admit that patience is not my long suit.
The Guardian sits there in all types of weather accepting what is. The Guardian is patient. The Guardian is a model for me. The Guardian is always present.
I find myself pushing to get items on my list(s) crossed off or pushing things out of my mind, often things I am not ready to know. I admit that patience is not my long suit.
The Guardian sits there in all types of weather accepting what is. The Guardian is patient. The Guardian is a model for me. The Guardian is always present.
Scroll back to Post #191 and you will see another image of the Guardian. Keep scrolling until you reach the Post for 12-29-2015 for yet another.
Next time you lose patience, remember to be present. Remember the Guardian.
Do you have lots of patience? What makes you impatient? Is it your normal state to be in the present moment? What interferes? Does this make sense to you? Do you have a Guardian?
Thanks for exploring the mystery - Nicky Mendenhall
Next time you lose patience, remember to be present. Remember the Guardian.
Do you have lots of patience? What makes you impatient? Is it your normal state to be in the present moment? What interferes? Does this make sense to you? Do you have a Guardian?
Thanks for exploring the mystery - Nicky Mendenhall
Tuesday, March 1, 2016
Observe Your Phalanges - #208
"Plants have learned how to arrange their branches at the exact mathematical angle that allows each leaf to absorb the greatest amount of sunlight.
"Our finger bones or phalanges embody this exact same mathematical ratio, which allow the hand to integrate the part with the whole and to open and close in the most efficient, elegant way."*
When leaves return in a few weeks, notice how the branches are arranged to provide maximum sunlight for them.
Observe your hands gracefully open and close. Notice how often you use them every hour.
Two ways to continue exploring the mystery - Nicky Mendenhall
Nature and our bodies will be coming to life soon! Are you ready for the season to change? Please let us know what you look forward to as well as what you dread.
*David Fideler, Ph.D. as quoted in Kosmos magazine, Volume xiv, number two, 2015.
"Our finger bones or phalanges embody this exact same mathematical ratio, which allow the hand to integrate the part with the whole and to open and close in the most efficient, elegant way."*
When leaves return in a few weeks, notice how the branches are arranged to provide maximum sunlight for them.
Observe your hands gracefully open and close. Notice how often you use them every hour.
Two ways to continue exploring the mystery - Nicky Mendenhall
Nature and our bodies will be coming to life soon! Are you ready for the season to change? Please let us know what you look forward to as well as what you dread.
*David Fideler, Ph.D. as quoted in Kosmos magazine, Volume xiv, number two, 2015.
Friday, February 26, 2016
Smoking & Snow - #207
This afternoon I thought, if it is true, what they say, that sitting is the new smoking, I better close my Tricycle* for Spring and get my body moving.
Making my way down the nature path and then through the neighborhood, I noticed that the snow was almost gone. What was left was dirty and unattractive.
Feeling the pressure of being faithful to my promise that images are connected to the post, I snapped the above photo.
When I returned home, I reopened the Tricycle and read an article, The Dharma of Snow.
The science, provided by a geophysicist, explained how melting is a nonlinear process which makes it seem that snow melts all at the same time. Obviously this pile didn't get the memo.
What I really resonated with was this paragraph that I want to remember:
"The highest expression of our human nature is to purify our minds. To clear away the clouds, the sheets of snow, the ice that we're encased in."
I am looking forward to spring but want to enjoy the rest of winter. There has been something nice about hibernating that I'm not quite ready to give up yet. How about you? Are you ready for Spring? Do you enjoy the change of seasons if you live in Iowa? Do you have noticeable changes in seasons where you live? Do you appreciate that?
Thanks for exploring the mystery - Nicky Mendenhall
*Tricycle is a monthly Buddhist magazine. The article, The Dharma of Snow was written by Ayya Medhanandi Bhikkuni.
Making my way down the nature path and then through the neighborhood, I noticed that the snow was almost gone. What was left was dirty and unattractive.
Feeling the pressure of being faithful to my promise that images are connected to the post, I snapped the above photo.
When I returned home, I reopened the Tricycle and read an article, The Dharma of Snow.
The science, provided by a geophysicist, explained how melting is a nonlinear process which makes it seem that snow melts all at the same time. Obviously this pile didn't get the memo.
What I really resonated with was this paragraph that I want to remember:
"The highest expression of our human nature is to purify our minds. To clear away the clouds, the sheets of snow, the ice that we're encased in."
I am looking forward to spring but want to enjoy the rest of winter. There has been something nice about hibernating that I'm not quite ready to give up yet. How about you? Are you ready for Spring? Do you enjoy the change of seasons if you live in Iowa? Do you have noticeable changes in seasons where you live? Do you appreciate that?
Thanks for exploring the mystery - Nicky Mendenhall
*Tricycle is a monthly Buddhist magazine. The article, The Dharma of Snow was written by Ayya Medhanandi Bhikkuni.
Tuesday, February 23, 2016
Sometimes I Forget......- #206
Post 205 had the logo for shredder truck above - I forgot to mention that the image was an original - not harvested from Google. The proof is in the picture above: observe the container of papers stuck into the truck ready to be shredded and the friendly man I spoke to about his business.
Here at exploring the mystery the pictures used are all (unless otherwise noted) original. You can probably tell that because often they are off center or blurry. There will always be a connection between the image and the post. If you need help figuring out what the connection is email me, Nicky.Mendenhall@gmail.com with your question.
Today's post is from A Network for Grateful Living, 2/21/2016 and the connection to the image is pretty obvious:
Here at exploring the mystery the pictures used are all (unless otherwise noted) original. You can probably tell that because often they are off center or blurry. There will always be a connection between the image and the post. If you need help figuring out what the connection is email me, Nicky.Mendenhall@gmail.com with your question.
Today's post is from A Network for Grateful Living, 2/21/2016 and the connection to the image is pretty obvious:
We don't receive wisdom; we must discover it for ourselves after a journey that no one can take for us or spare us.
|
MARCEL PROUST
|
|
Friday, February 19, 2016
What Can You Give Up? - #205
In 1908, Sigmund Freud wrote the classic paper,"Creative Writers and Day-dreaming."
If you are making small talk with the neighbors and there's an awkward pause that needs filled, throw in the only sentence of Freud's paper that I underlined:
"Actually, we can never give anything up; we only exchange one thing for another."
I've been thinking about this statement all week. Is it true we can never give anything up?
It feels to me the old farm house I grew up in was given up when the decision was made to burn it down to clear the land. I would love to set foot in it again but I have to give up that dream. I don't know if that's the kind of thing Freud was talking about or not.
Can think of anything that you gave up without exchanging it for something else, please let me know.
Thanks for exploring the mystery - Nicky Mendenhall
If you are making small talk with the neighbors and there's an awkward pause that needs filled, throw in the only sentence of Freud's paper that I underlined:
"Actually, we can never give anything up; we only exchange one thing for another."
I've been thinking about this statement all week. Is it true we can never give anything up?
It feels to me the old farm house I grew up in was given up when the decision was made to burn it down to clear the land. I would love to set foot in it again but I have to give up that dream. I don't know if that's the kind of thing Freud was talking about or not.
Can think of anything that you gave up without exchanging it for something else, please let me know.
Thanks for exploring the mystery - Nicky Mendenhall
Tuesday, February 16, 2016
In Case Winter Is Wearing On YOU - #204
Using words over and over tends to flatten their meaning. We aren't able to feel a word because we've heard it so many times. The words sadness and loneliness are ones that may lose their capacity to move us.
Susan Piver, in the wisdom of a broken heart, offers suggestions for healing breakups with romantic partners that we can adapt to help us when winter desperation sneaks up on us.
When you are sad because ice makes you a prisoner in your own house, don't get angry at yourself or others. Piver suggests sadness can be a form of gentleness. Be gentle with yourself. Don't berate yourself because you are sad; recognize that sadness means you are in touch with your feelings.
If you begin to feel lonely, Piver might suggest that loneliness can be a form of fearlessness. She writes: "Our definition of fearlessness is the ability to open up to, accept, and even take delight in your world, in all the fabulous and insane things that happen within and around you." Recognize the insanity of dreading a blizzard that never happens.
Stay with your feelings fearlessly and you will develop inner strength. You will learn that feelings, no matter how strong, won't always be there and that Winter Storm Warnings do have an expiration date.
Hang in there - we are soon to be turning the corner into Spring!
Let me know if thinking about sadness as gentleness and loneliness as fearlessness gives you a new sense of the words.
Thank you for exploring the mystery - Nicky Mendenhall
www.susanpiver.com
Friday, February 12, 2016
A Valentine For Readers - #203
A special Valentine to all of you who regularly read and comment on exploring the mystery.
Thanks for all the ways you let me know that you are also exploring the mystery.
Picture us as a community of people all over the country who are exploring the mystery.
Happy Valentine's Day!
Picture Lisbeth and Mason, April, 2015, Portland, OR.
Thanks for all the ways you let me know that you are also exploring the mystery.
Picture us as a community of people all over the country who are exploring the mystery.
Happy Valentine's Day!
Picture Lisbeth and Mason, April, 2015, Portland, OR.
Tuesday, February 9, 2016
A Different Kind Of Valentine - #202
"Love has sacred power, not because it makes us high, allowing us to rise above ordinary life on clouds of blissful glory, but because it helps us relax the struggle between self and other that is at the root of human suffering."
That Struggle happens between self and other is a given. Through struggle with a significant other, learn what is important to you. Learn to welcome struggle. Relax your roots.
"Love is profound because it roots us in the earth…."
Look at the roots in the image above and imagine your self grounded in the earth's soil.
"The profound question love poses is, ‘Can you face your life as it is; can you look at all the pain and darkness as well as the power and light in the human soul, and still say yes?’"
Say yes to Life with all it's different parts. Don't banish anything. Out of the struggle comes new knowledge and new Life.
Have you ever seen these sentiments expressed on a commercially manufactured Valentine? What do you think of Valentine's Day? Do you give others Valentines? Let me know by replying to this email or commenting on blog comment section. I love to hear from you!
Thank you for exploring the mystery - Nicky Mendenhall
John Welwood quotes in italicized bold print.
Inward/Outward is a project of the Church of the Saviour in Washington DC. January 8. 2016
Friday, February 5, 2016
A New Kind of Seeing - #201
My eye is healed. Many thanks for all the support and love this week. I appreciated your personal stories describing problems you were having with various body parts. Together we were exploring the mystery of body parts!
In Post 200, I quoted David Ulrich* who spoke of the exchange of energy that occurs between us and what we are paying attention to.
Ulrich continues: "In losing the sight of my eye, I learned to depend to a greater extent on efforts toward self-awareness and connecting with my own body and feelings."
Three days in the dark, nursing the corneal abrasion, made me wonder what life would offer if I couldn't see.
I remembered Kate, my massage therapist, mentioning when she needs to evoke feelings of love, she gazes at a picture of her favorite dog.
Thinking of Kate's technique, I remembered a deckle edged black and white photo of my first dog Yip. I was on my knees with my right hand reached out touching his back.
Lying in the dark, I felt my way into a memory of that relationship with Yip.
It was an experience that didn't require my eyes.
What do you see with your eyes closed? Remember the movie Eyes Wide Shut? What did that mean? Do you take care of your eyes? Tell us about your relationship with your eyes. Or your first pet. Or anything you want us to know about seeing.
Thanks for exploring the mystery of seeing - Nicky Mendenhall
*The Widening Stream by David Ulrich (2002).
In Post 200, I quoted David Ulrich* who spoke of the exchange of energy that occurs between us and what we are paying attention to.
Ulrich continues: "In losing the sight of my eye, I learned to depend to a greater extent on efforts toward self-awareness and connecting with my own body and feelings."
I remembered Kate, my massage therapist, mentioning when she needs to evoke feelings of love, she gazes at a picture of her favorite dog.
Lying in the dark, I felt my way into a memory of that relationship with Yip.
It was an experience that didn't require my eyes.
What do you see with your eyes closed? Remember the movie Eyes Wide Shut? What did that mean? Do you take care of your eyes? Tell us about your relationship with your eyes. Or your first pet. Or anything you want us to know about seeing.
Thanks for exploring the mystery of seeing - Nicky Mendenhall
*The Widening Stream by David Ulrich (2002).
Tuesday, February 2, 2016
Seeing - #200
Today, corneal abrasion meant most of my day spent with eyes closed. Lacking energy tonight which is because:
"Seeing is an exchange of energy that takes place between ourselves and the perceived objects of our attention."
Do you appreciate your eyes? Do you realize how much energy they provide you?
I do!
Quote from David Ulrich, 2002.
Friday, January 29, 2016
Are You Awake? - #199
If you befriend a Buddhist, you will learn that the Buddha vowed to sit beneath the Bodhi tree until he became enlightened (woke up).
Pessoa (Post 198) reported that upon waking up, he needed time to know if he existed.
Joseph Mauricio spoke for Daily Dharma Gathering on January 2, 2016. His topic: Becoming Awake.
My eyes squinted as I experienced a mini enlightenment flash when I heard Mauricio say, "Thinking is not being awake."
The implication is that while we are in our in our heads thinking, we are not awake. What do you think of this idea?
Being in our bodies, feeling sensations and feelings may be when we are truly awake. This is not my usual state but since working with a Somatic therapist to correct kyphosis (rounded shoulders), I have more awareness of my body sensations - which sometimes are uncomfortable. Sometimes I'd rather not be awake.
What do you think constitutes being awake? Do you want to be awake?
Thanks for exploring the mystery - Nicky Mendenhall
Tuesday, January 26, 2016
Another Wild Fernando Pessoa Quote - #198
"I'd woken up early, and I took a long time getting ready to exist."*
*Long term readers may recognize the name Fernando Pessoa. Fernando was many authors in one having numerous selves, each with a distinct biography, ideology, and horoscope. This quote is from The Book of Disquiet, Page 31.
Thanks for exploring the mystery of existence :
Nicky Mendenhall
*Long term readers may recognize the name Fernando Pessoa. Fernando was many authors in one having numerous selves, each with a distinct biography, ideology, and horoscope. This quote is from The Book of Disquiet, Page 31.
Thanks for exploring the mystery of existence :
Nicky Mendenhall
Friday, January 22, 2016
True or False - Aging Causes Stiffness -- #197
"Age does not cause stiffness."*
According to Burras there are five key reasons why the body hardens and stiffens as we get older. None of these reasons has to do with the aging process itself.
1. Trauma
2. Repression
3. Stress
4. Inactivity
5. Contractive Movement
Burras explains each of these reasons in an article you can find on his website: JonBurras.com. Click on articles and find Aging Does Not Cause Stiffness - it is #13 on the list.
As you get older, do you have more stiffness? What do you think causes it? Do you think Burras' ideas about stiffness have merit? If you have questions, ask me in an email or in the comment section.
Thanks for exploring the mystery - Nicky Mendenhall
Image is from booklet that came with my model skeleton last year. I received permission to use it!
Tuesday, January 19, 2016
Where Do You Look For Happiness? - #196
"One of the best-kept secrets is that the happiness we’re striving for so desperately in the perfect spouse, the great kids, the fine job, security, excellent health, and good looks has always been within and is just waiting to be unveiled.
"Knowing that what we are seeking comes from within changes everything."*
*Daily Dharma, January 16, 2016, B. Alan Wallace, "What is True Happiness?"
Photo: Restaurant in Riquewihr, France. Look closely at the awning for a surprise!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)