Broken Corset

November 18, 2008

Shhhh… Don’t Tell.

Filed under: Agnosticism, Family, Presidency, Religion, Spirituality, politics — saracallow @ 2:30 pm

My husband and I are new owners of an “old” house.  Since we have a couple of months before we have to move into our new old home, we have decided to work on some home improvement projects.  And, since we’re out of money, we’re doing most of the work ourselves.  I spent both days this weekend stripping textured wallpaper, circa 1970 from the walls. 

As I washed and rinsed the last of the layers of wallpaper glue away, I felt a little sad.  The layers signified a time gone by, and I could almost feel the ghosts of previous owners looking over my shoulder, telling me that they hung baby pictures of their children on these walls. I pictured a family in the home, a little boy chasing up and down the halls, a teenage girl preening in front of the mirror in the bathroom, dinner cooking in the now very outdated kitchen, mom and dad relaxing in the nearby living room.  As I washed away the last remnants of this previous era, it was an ending, and while I don’t know exactly who existed there long before me, I mourned their passing and paused to honor the memory of what might have been. 

And yet, in this ending is our beginning.  As I wash away of the old, I prepare for the new.  We will now leave our mark on the walls, hang our pictures, hear the laughter of our children.  There is something beautiful and spiritual right there, in the readying of the old wall for new paint.

It is, of course, akin to the natural cycle… to winter and the death of a previous season, and spring and rebirth of the next.  The maturation of the garden and enjoyment of ripe tomatoes off the vine which will soon wither and decompose under the leaves, contributing their vitamins and seed to the soil for the next growing season. 

I find a great deal of spirituality in nature, in the natural cycle – absent the “intelligent design” of God. I’m not convinced that God doesn’t exist…. but in moments of deep contemplation, I sometimes wonder why we need a diety for life to be spiritual and to have meaning.  Examining nature on its own, evolution with all of its flaws, starts and stops, and slow progression forward is enough to inspire deep humiliation in any being.  The need of all species to work in community, care for one another and their environment, and strive towards world peace in order to ensure simple survival is possible without involving God… and in fact, quite amazing on its own.

I find myself at this juncture of thoughts now and then, and I think, it should be depressing to contemplate a world without God.  But I don’t feel depressed, and so I test myself… what if I die, and there is no God, no heaven, no afterlife?  And truthfully, I find myself in a peaceful position… I think, I’d like a simple burial so that I can decompose back into the earth.  So that the energy from my cells can provide the garden for some future generation to find joy and sustenance in.  I feel a spiritual connection to this earth, and a reverence for my life here, and now… because it might be all that I have.  I have heard people claim that the true rewards await in heaven, that God’s home is more our rightful place than the one we occupy now, that love of God precedes that for our children, parents, partners.  I truthfully don’t know what to make of all of this.  What is the point of the here and now then?  Simply a preparation for some unknown reward?  That  feels depressing to me.

But please… keep this on the DL (down low for those not familiar with the acronym).  I wouldn’t want anyone to know that maybe God doesn’t govern my soul.  Could there be anything worse?  Everyone out there knows that absent a belief in God, a person is basically a walking soldier of Satan.  While I struggle to reconcile this view of non-believers with what I feel when I contemplate the inherent spirituality and goodness of nature it is clear to me how widely it permeates our society.

As a society we still value religiosity quite highly.  Can you imagine a Presidential candidate who admitted to questioning God?  Quite the opposite is true.  At this point, candidates go out of their way to identify themselves as religious.  We may have been willing to consider a Mormon, an African American and a woman as president this time around… but an atheist or agnostic?  No way.  It is this public denial of uncertainty that drives me a little nuts.  Where does this strength in belief come from?  How does everyone see the truth so clearly?  You know what else bothers me about the situation?  I spend a LOT of time contemplating this issue.  I grew up in a fairly religious family, I have studied the bible, attended confirmation classes and church, questioned and prayed.  And yet, the only thing I’m certain of, is how uncertain I am.  But finding those who admit great uncertainty is like searching for the proverbial needle in a haystack. 

I found a quote from Albert Einstein that I found quite interesting.  “What I see in Nature is a magnificent structure that we can comprehend only very imperfectly, and that must fill a thinking person with a feeling of humility.  This is a genuinely religious feeling that has nothing to do with mysticism.”  This feeling described by Einstein is the only certainty I have on the issue of God and religion.  I see it the wonders of nature in my garden, the changing seasons, and even wallpaper.  Absent this religious feeling… I guess I’m still questioning.

But shhhh… don’t tell.

November 7, 2008

Going on a get-away

I’ll be gone, with my family, for the long weekend to celebrate a family occasion.  My husband’s sister is getting old (which of course says nothing about us) and she’ll need our help to blow out all the candles! 

So I doubt I’ll post here for a few days… but I wanted to leave you with a link that is memorable, and along the lines of my last post – a source of inspiration.

Judith Warner’s column this morning for the NY Times brought tears to my eyes.

If for some reason the hyper link doesn’t take you there (I have a subscription, so it might not be fully available through the link) my guess is that if you search for Judith Warner, Domestic Disturbances, Tears to Remember you can find the text somewhere out there.  It is worth a read.

Have a great weekend. 

I’m committing to coming back to blog with something a little lighter and less political.  Maybe a weekend with three families in one house will provide that inspiration.  I’ll just have to recover enough sleep to write it.  :)

November 5, 2008

Give Birth Again to the Dream

Filed under: California, Civil Rights, Homosexuality, Marriage, gay marriage — saracallow @ 9:10 pm

Lift up your faces, you have a piercing need
For this bright morning dawning for you.

History, despite its wrenching pain,
Cannot be unlived, and if faced
With courage, need not be lived again.

Lift up your eyes upon
The day breaking for you.

Give birth again
To the dream.

– From Maya Angelou’s “On the Pulse of Morning” – Inaugural Poem at Clinton’s inauguration, 20 January, 1993.

Yesterday, as millions of Americans stood in line to cast their vote – the dream was born anew.  Votes, cast one by one, and the long lines preceding them, were a testament of rebirth.

Yesterday night, as I watched the later Senate races and state ballot initiatives come in, I heard tales of car horns honking, and hands reaching out to give high fives to the strangers passing in the darkened streets of Washington D.C.  This morning, my facebook newsfeed erupted with virtual cheers for the United States – my computer screen bursting with the pride of my friends scattered across the nation – from coast to coast, from sea to newly shining sea.  Today, as I drove my children home from school, I saw helium balloons and flowers attached to Obama campaign signs still adorning front lawns. 

The evidence of enthusiasm was reported on every news station, in every newspaper. 

Barack Obama is the living embodiment of Martin Luther King, Jr’s dream from 1963.  And while no one would suggest that the ugly clouds of racism have completely cleared… it is obvious that the sun shines through brighter today than ever before in our history.

And yet this morning, as I contemplated the results of the election – I was unable to hold the sweet breath of victory in my lungs.  I tasted instead the bitterness of Proposition 8’s passage in California.  I have struggled with what to write here all day long about this example of bigotry and discrimination…  

Should I pridefully proclaim that I struggle to keep faith with God?  Should today be the day where I happily turn my back on faith - and the prejudice and bigotry a few of its members have promulgated in my state? 

Should I denounce my marriage, sue my state, and allow the cynicism I feel towards my fellow man to go unchecked… raging through my blood and overtaking my rational thought?  Should I give each car I pass with a “Yes on 8″ sticker a gesture that clearly conveys my feelings?  (Believe me, it was a struggle not to this morning).

These thoughts and feelings are what sucked that sweet breath of victory from my system this morning.  Which is why I didn’t write.  Instead, I read.  I read Maya Angelou and Abraham Lincoln.  And I read and read and read again, Martin Luther King, Jr. 

Let us not seek to satisfy our thirst for freedom by drinking from the cup of bitterness and hatred.

And I began to breath in.  Because the dream is what Obama is all about.  Inspiration, passion, record participation, joyous celebration, the swelling of pride in America is our gift today.  And tomorrow.  And the day after.  If we can take even a small portion of what we feel right now as a nation forward with us, we will be a better nation.  That hope is what Obama offers us.

Martin Luther King, Jr. traveled down a road of faith to give his exalted speech in 1963.  The America of King’s time offered him plenty  more reason for bitterness than we see today.  And yet, instead, he had a dream.  He inspired thousands of people to share it.  And today millions more celebrate it.

So I will take my cue from him.  I will not drink from the cup of bitterness.  I will not lose faith.  Not today, not in this  America where there is now so much evidence to the contrary.  I will look upon today  as the catalyst for tomorrow.  As the beginning.  Which is what giving birth is anyway… simply a start, but also a miraculous beginning.

I will give birth again to the dream.  Thank you Barack Obama.  Thank you Maya Angelou.  Thank you Martin Luther King, Jr.  Yes we can.  Yes we did.  And Yes,  we will.

November 3, 2008

On Real and Really Great Presidents

Filed under: Presidency, politics — saracallow @ 2:11 pm

It became quite clear to me this weekend that Bill Clinton isn’t reading my blog.  If he was, he would have known it was unnecessary to call here and ask us to vote “No on 8″.  Wasted energy…  my vote is already cast, and my husband is clearly on the “No” side as well. 

While I hung up on the previous 5 political calls, something about the voice of a past President on the line causes one to pause and hear him out.  We’re actually big Clinton fans here - one of my sweetheart’s most treasured possessions is probably the photo taken of him shaking Clinton’s hand at an industry event.  (How lucky is he??!) But certainly, we wouldn’t argue that his was an infallible or inspirational presidency.  Interesting to watch, but sometimes more for the Barnum and Bailey aspect than the soaring rhetoric and inspirational stances.  Nonetheless, I wouldn’t want to come across as even lukewarm.  I’d elect the guy again in a heartbeat… unless he was running against the other president that called us only 20 minutes later…

Who was none other than my most revered elected official - President Josiah Barlett.  Okay, okay… I know.  He wasn’t REALLY elected – except in our living rooms, where he presided over our nation by seeing the grey in issues, working hard for legislative compromise, and fighting for the good with lofty rhetoric as his battle sword.  His was an inspirational presidency – and so, though my votes had already been cast, I also listened to Martin Sheen.

I’ve thought about the fact that I stopped and listened to Sheen MANY, Many, many times now (and only one day has passed).  At first, I berated myself.  Why pause for a Hollywood celebrity – even if they are a politically active fellow citizen of my state?  I find it insulting to think that we’d vote for something just because Cameron Diaz asks us to.  It’s even WORSE than the expectation that women would rally around Palin because of her panties.

But when I thought about the two presidents I listened to – the bigger picture came clear.  I stopped and listened to Clinton because he was a real President… and it felt odd to hang up on him, even if it was a robo call – clearly understandable.  But I stopped and listened to Sheen because he was a really great President… even if it wasn’t real.  Sheen’s Bartlett made us feel good about America, about the political process, disagreement, compromise, and sometimes even scandal.  America wasn’t easy in the West Wing World… but it was intelligent, reasoned, principled and compassionate.  It’s not ridiculous that Sheen’s Bartlett and the West Wing’s America caused me to pause.  If only we could expect so much for real….

But today, I’m going to sound completely starry eyed, influenced by Hollywood, and naive and tell you that we can.  I’m going to tell you that we are on the brink of a Bartlett presidency… or at least the closest we’ll come, in what I imagine might be my lifetime.   

Tomorrow.  I believe.  We will elect President Barack Obama.  Real, and really great.  And I don’t care if I sound ridiculous… tomorrow will be an historic day for our Nation.  And maybe I won’t pine for the West Wing any longer.

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