The Day After

Earlier I went out for a stroll in my disability scooter. The sky was a dramartic blend of Mediterranean blue and cloud. Now overcast has spread across the sky, and the breeze moves the tree branches slowly from side to side.

Ever so slowly the chlorophyl drains away, and the foliage shows more red and yellow; a leaf changes here, and another there. The starlings move from tree to tree; sometimes we are treated to a murmuration. The murmurations thus far have been brief and almost impossible to photograph. Before they lift, the starlings chatter among the leaves, and I am reminded of these lines from T.S. Eliot:. Eliot:

And they were behind us, reflected in the pool.
Then a cloud passed, and the pool was empty.
Go, said the bird, for the leaves were full of children,
Hidden excitedly, containing laughter.

TS Eliot, Burnt Norton

I am at a loss for words in the face of the growing insanity playing out amongst us. How sadly human to kill because someone teaches hate or another love. How useless to believe that murder somehow silences ideology. 

I often think about Pema Chodron’s famous response when asked what she would have done had she met Hitler: “I would have killed him.” Looking back to the rise of the Nazis in Germany, her position makes sense, but retrospection tends to make things suspiciously clear, or to lead to dangerous generalizations. Perhaps timing matters.

Perhaps violence most often simply creates more violence. I suspect that the forms of political violence we are witnessing serve only to increase repression and are more likely to yield Norther Irelands than to bring sanity. 

Sadly, we in the U.S., trend, collectively, to forget, and/or erase history. I saw John Kennedy less than an hour before the  was killed; I spent weekends working locally for Robert Kennedy’s campaign and was awakened in the wee hours with the news of his murder; I looked up to Dr King. The list is ever so long.

Political murder is much more the norm than we might like to admit. Perhaps our Native prophies are spinning out as they must, and things will become progressively more dire until we collectively come to terms with our history of slavery and genocide. It seems that every now and again we come close to acknowledging what must be faced, only to turn away yet one more time.

We humans like to believe that we are acting from personal power, but shamanic experience tells us that very often what we think is free will is simply the enactment of the agendas of spirit beings much more powerful than we can imagine. What we imagine is vengeance is simply food for the beasts. The irony may be that the best way to move out of their influence is to have a deeply held sense of one’s own insignificance and frailty, compassion for self and others, and a desire to be kind.

I hope that all of us may experience moments of love, peace, play, and creativity this weekend. Please be safe.


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12 responses to “The Day After”

  1. Thank you Michael. I believe you are right. Killing Hitler might seem to have been a way to avoid all that happened, but would it? I sadly feel that these situations have to play themselves out. Finding a path through it while retaining ones dignity and morality, that is the hard part.

    1. Yes, the great task is to work at finding a compassionate way through. I guess if we did not encounter eveil we would not find ourselves having to grow. Still….

  2. It’s just all so hard right now. And, unfortunately, I don’t foresee things improving any time soon. But we must, individually, do what we can to make this a more kind and compassionate world. And we must remember history, not erase it as is now happening in our country.

    Yes, to love, peace, play and creativity. And to staying safe.

    1. Sane to you, Audrey! And yes, we each do what we can. If enough people take that on as a life task, things will change.

  3. “Sadly, we in the U.S., trend, collectively, to forget, and/or erase history. I saw John Kennedy less than an hour before the was killed; I spent weekends working locally for Robert Kennedy’s campaign and was awakened in the wee hours with the news of his murder; I looked up to Dr King.” I’m wondering if we as plain old humans regardless of where we live tend to forget…maybe not all human societies erase the history, but the forgetting seems characteristic of all humankind. And as for your activist creds…I stand in awe!

    1. Thank you, Laura!
      Yes, we all forget. That said, some forgettings appear to be more dangerous than others. The same holds true for personal trauma as for the collective, as you know so well. For all of us there is the need to balance remembering with forgetting.

  4. I personally find what we are going through as a nation to be almost unbelievable. The divisiveness is so deep I’m not sure how we will be able to dig out of it. So, I will continue to try and express kindness to my fellow humans and pray that things will get better.

    1. Judy, I think that one of the most radical teachings of many cultures and religions is the necessity of acting with kindness even in the face of meanness. Still, for most of us that has its limits. We do our best.

  5. Last week, I had never heard of Charlie Kirk. Now, he is all I am hearing about. I wonder what the long-term implications will be. Nothing? Major? Something in between? From the beginning violence was woven into our system. But this is true of many if not most cultures. After all, once upon a time, the Scandinavians were vikings, and look at them now. They are among the most progressive countries on the planet.The question is, can the U.S. come to terms with the shadow part of its collective psyche so that it won’t torment us and lead to destruction? So far, we have not been successful. But as always, I live in hope.

    1. Yes, that is the question. Perhaps we must go through the fire in order to reach some sanity. I, also, try to live in hope. How else can life be liveable?

  6. From what I’ve read, the Nazis were considered the “progressives” in conservative Germany at the time. When you look at their inventions, such as the VW, this could well be true. They were also involved in the occult. And the whole eugenics thing had been evolving over decades. Nobody knows how they would’ve acted in the past because you can’t judge the past by modern attitudes and beliefs. People who lived back then would’ve grown up within the culture of that time. I hear the same sort of stuff about the Confederate South. I do know that the current culture in America is a culture of hate. Whether it’s caused by politics, social media, or a need for self-destruction, is up for debate. If people can’t change their own hearts and embrace love, kindness, and respect for their fellow human beings, can civilization survive?

    1. Hi Dawn,
      I guess the question of whether civilization can survive these periods of hate is an open one.
      Anyway, thank you for posting this insightful comment, and for following this blog. We are all shaped by the times in which we grew up and lived. There is an ancient shamanic idea that we are all doing our best given the conditions.

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