Experience
July 21, 2008 | 1:08 pm
We are travelers on this road of life – all of us. Come pitch your tent next to mine, because I want to learn from you. I want to know how you came to your insights and how Life has shaped you, and what lessons you pass on like precious pearls to others.
Experience is sacred. For it is experience that teaches. Nothing else. It is experience alone that allows us to truly own knowledge. Think about that. Knowledge is academical until we are able to integrate it through experience. Then the path within becomes illuminated – not because you listened to a captivating sermon, or read the charismatic and enchanting words of another. But because “Know Thyself” is the most fundamental of all instructions given to man – and that does not come without incorporating what you think you know through experience.
Eons ago, I declared my need and desire to investigate other religions and discern for myself from whence came their devotion and wisdom. I said I wanted to learn how to meditate. When in front of me sat a clergyman; his mouth, like a dark cave opened in slow motion and echoed hollow words: That is best left alone. Everything from the East is heathen.
I left in haste for I was in the presence of great ignorance. Ignorance is only harmless, if it lacks an agenda. And the agenda was unmistakable.
When I stood outside with the sun on my face, I clearly knew the error of his statement. If we only ever know one thing, and keep investigating the same source, it is the very same thing as lowering your bucket down the well every day and expecting to draw anything but water to the surface.
So I took off and investigated as much as I could. I joined the festivals of many different religions and groups, I read their books and ate their food, and talked to them endlessly. I looked into the eyes of those who held different beliefs, and saw worthy human beings – who like me – were treading the path of life. Some clasped their holy books to their hearts and said that they had found the ultimate answer, others like me, knew the journey had to be internal. I began to understand that the interconnectedness of everything was a golden clue. If we are all one, and if the God spirit was everywhere and thus also within me – then the age old message, found in all the holy scriptures of the world, indeed was sound advice – to Know Thyself.
The better I get to know myself, the better acquainted I become with All that is. It is logical to me that to know God without knowing yourself is a fallacy.
So, you are welcome to pitch your tent next to mine. If at night, you burn incense and hum softly as you read from your Bagavad Gita or Vedic scriptures, I shall inhale the fragrance and admire your devotion, and marvel that we are all simply travelers on the same road. And while we are gathered under the stars, look about you, there will be others about their business, like you and me. Some will be reading the Koran, others cherish the Bible, or the Menassah Ben Isael – but if you’re lucky, you will notice the unassuming tent of the Bushman made of animal skins who lives in the Kalahari Desert in Africa - always pitched a little distance from all the rest. They too reach for God, but they don’t read holy books, or try to convince others of their beliefs. They worship the spirits of their forefathers personified in the elements – Fire, Air, Earth and Water. And their “knowing” might not be as academic as yours and mine – but it has an element of reverence and humility unsurpassed by any. Every expression of devotion is worthy – who are we to judge?
Have you noticed that severe judgment sacrifices humility for fanaticism? And ironically, that is the very first sign of a very puny faith. Fanaticism impresses few, for all who listen to it knows that it lacks any real experience.
The God spirit clothes itself in the fabric woven from our collective experiences. Interconnected as we are, every experience we learn from and integrate, benefits mankind – and adds to All that is.
Posted by: law of attraction books, Spiritual issues, Happiness, Joy, Difficulty, Overcoming difficulty, Overcoming obstacles, growth — epretorius
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What Is Wrong With This Country?
May 28, 2008 | 8:02 am
No, this isn’t going to be a political diatribe. Not really. Well, almost not.
But I’m struck as I’m out promoting Open Your Heart with Reading by the inability of many well-meaning people to understand how destructive it is to live in a country with 90 million functionally illiterate adults. That’s the kind of statistic one expects to see in third-world countries. That’s the kind of statistic one never expects to see at “home.”
And yet it’s true.
Emma Goldman, one of my favorite rabble-rousers, said, “The most violent element in society is ignorance.” It makes for a clever bumper sticker, but it also reflects a clarity of thought we’d do well to consider and even emulate.
No, I can’t be light-hearted about this. Because it’s my fault. It’s my fault, and it’s your fault: it’s the fault of anyone who can read these words that we’ve allowed this kind of situation to develop. Why aren’t we clamoring for better education? Why aren’t we out on the streets, claiming that a basic education — the minimum amount of eduction required to navigate through life in a first-world country — is not accessible to all and required of all? Why aren’t we more appalled? 90 million people in this country cannot read what I am writing here. More importantly, 90 million people can’t read voter registration cards or warning labels or lease agreements. They can’t supervise their children’s schoolwork. They can’t function in an environment that many of us take completely for granted.
And the fact that we’re not appalled is itself appalling.
Other countries take it more seriously. Today’s Shelf Awareness carried this tidbit of information: “I think that each book has its own soul; they know how much I love them,” bookseller Phan Trac Canh told Viet Nam News, adding that during his student years, his book obsession was a challenge. “I skipped breakfast so I could use the money to buy books. I sometimes even rummaged through rubbish bins looking for books.”
If many people in this country did that, they wouldn’t be able to read what they found there.
So I’m not going to be bright and chipper in today’s blog. I’m not going to say that all we have to do is open our hearts and everything will be wonderful. Part of opening our hearts is opening them to others, to take responsibility for ourselves and our communities, and to make sure that everyone has the opportunity to open their hearts as well.
No one can do it for you. Consider contributing to or volunteering with a literacy group today: 90 million people are waiting for you.
-Jeannette Cézanne
Open Your Heart with Reading
Posted by: reading, reading books, Words, Opening the heart, Difficulty, Overcoming difficulty, Overcoming obstacles, growth — jcezanne
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An exercise in microclimates
April 1, 2008 | 8:36 am
4/1/08
Normally I’m a stay-at-home girl, but occasionally I have cause to travel. Over the past week, separate outings took me to the wetlands of Lake Champlain; the banks of major rivers through Vermont, Massachusetts, and Connecticut; up and over Vermont’s Green Mountains and Massachusetts’ Berkshire Hills; and through the rolling terrain of Connecticut to the shore of Long Island Sound.
Less than 300 miles as the crow files. But a textbook illustration of microclimates.
In general, the trend was white in the north to golden brown in the south, as one would expect. However, the graduation was not smooth. With a small rise or dip in altitude, the snow cover appeared or disappeared. Likewise, around a corner or through a ravine, clear land suddenly became snowy, and vice versa. Acres of sunny open fields would contain, inexplicably, a wide patch of white. Waterways flowed clear for part of their course then were frozen over for the next part.
Settled areas held the same pattern. One yard would be starting to green up and featured blooming crocuses; across the street, or maybe even next door, the grass was still sere and snow filled the backyard. In some wet areas, shrubs and trees glowed red, yellow, or green in their terminal branches, getting ready to bud; while other wet areas remained gray and brown, their branches ready to snap at the slightest pressure.
Such pockets of different light and temperature can challenge (or torment!) gardeners. Perhaps the single best investment of time you can make in garden planning is learning the microclimates of your own environment. Most gardening how-to books emphasize soil as the biggest influence on plant quality. I agree with its importance but would put microclimates at the top of the list.
You can have great soil but if there’s not enough sunlight, or if that patch of great soil doesn’t emerge from under the snow cover until 3 weeks after the rest of the yard, or there is too much wind or water, good soil won’t be able to do its job. Besides, you can do a lot to improve soil quality but not so much to change the lay of the land (unless you enjoy working with bulldozers and chain saws!).
Siting a garden in the correct place, and populating it with plants which like that environment, always gets better results than arbitrary planting — and takes a lot less work! So knowing your microclimates will help make gardening a pleasure you’ll return to year after year.
Carolyn Haley
Author: Open Your Heart with Gardens
Posted by: Opening the heart, Overcoming obstacles, gardens, gardening, yard, plants, cultivation, growth, spring — Carolyn Haley
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A Strange and Wonderful Gift
December 26, 2007 | 7:04 pm
My family celebrates Christmas, and this year I received a special gift from my mother-in-law: a piece of polished amber that had belonged to her mother-in-law, my husband’s grandmother. She had brought it to America with her from Poland, and when she died my mother-in-law inherited it.
The circumstances of her arrival from Poland bear commenting on. The family was poor and a decision had been taken to send my husband’s grandmother, then thirteen, to live with extended family in Philadelphia (one gathers that the reason was less her potential to prosper in the new world and more the fact of thus having one less mouth to feed, though the specifics remain murky). So there was a family trip to a seaport, at which time and not before — the thirteen-year-old was told that she was in fact getting on the ship in the harbor and leaving everything and everyone she had known … forever.
I try to imagine that girl, the fear, the rebellion, the horror that she must have experienced upon hearing that news. And then there was this piece of amber. Had she already been carrying it around in her pocket? Or was it pressed upon her by anxious parents as a good-luck talisman? Either way, it was one of very few articles she was able to bring with her from “home,” and even though she lived in the United States for another seventy years, I cannot help but imagine her touching that amber and touching the memory, the last time she saw her parents, the last time she saw her homeland.
And now it is mine.
I keep touching it, too: it draws one in, like a Arab worry-stone, like my own rosary beads: a physical grounding in something that transcends physicality. I feel connected to that girl on that long-ago dock, I feel the amber in her pocket, her fingers wearing it down, and my own fingers slide over it with wonder.
It reminds me of the millions of stories we all have, the stories of our forebears, the stories that help to make us who we are. And as the new year begins, it’s not a bad thing to look back on, to rehearse the oral histories that have come down to us, to remind ourselves of who we are. Stepping into the future through the past, and possibly — just possibly — learning a thing or two along the way.
And a very, very happy 2008 to all!
– Jeannette Czanne
http://www.JeannetteCezanne.com
Posted by: Opening the heart, Difficulty, Overcoming difficulty, Overcoming obstacles — jcezanne
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National Literacy Day
November 1, 2007 | 9:26 am
Just a quick note today to remind everyone that today is National Literacy Day, so it’s a great time to do something simple: give a child a book by visiting the Literacy Site today.
With the holidays coming, you might also want to consider patronizing some of the advertisers on the site, too, and shop for some of your holiday gifts there.
Check out this Squidoo lens for LitLife, another program that’s easy to get involved with. And there are scores more, some of them highlighted in my book, Open Your Heart with Reading. The point isn’t which group you help, but that you help someone; because in the end, do we really want to live in an illiterate society? Call it enlightened self-interest. Call it kindness. Call it caring. Just do it!
One-third of all Americans, 90 million people, are functionally illiterate. We should be ashamed. On this day of all days, let’s do something about it!
– Jeannette Czanne
www.JeannetteCezanne.com
Posted by: reading, reading books, Opening the heart, Joy, Overcoming difficulty, Overcoming obstacles — jcezanne
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