I sat in Lloyd Coffee Eatery yesterday looking at bodies. Young ones, old ones; thin and fat; lean and blobby; smooth and wrinkled; white and brown and black.
No judgments … just a marvelling at the infinite variety.
I thought of the Spirit inside, and whether it reaches the outside. What if we could see each other’s hearts as easily as their skin and bones? Well … we can. The openness or closeness comes from the eyes.
I decided to seek out paintings of the physical heart, in the realms of ease and disease. Here are images that speak to me. I wonder if they have things to say to you …
Look at the fancy clothes. Look at the beaming faces. I think weddings are such grand celebrations, especially if the bride and groom really kiss and if everyone’s boogieing at the dance. It’s all a big “Yes!” to life.
I’m hoping that before I die I discover my next beloved. I’ve named her “Elise”. If “Monique” is the one, I’ll make the change.
I had lunch with my friend Maryna yesterday. She knows the story of my future romance. And she had an idea …
“Let’s see what Chat GPT has to say.”
So she took my picture and inputted something like “Find the ideal woman for Bruce.”
Another friend told me about Chat GPT a year ago but I’ve never explored the app.
Maryna turned her phone to my eyes.
Woh!
Disoriented (I still am), boggled, yearning …
Are you ready for this? Elise and me. Sorry I didn’t invite you to the wedding.
I wonder what it’s like to be a woman. I’ve been married, and have seen the issues that Jody went through. But that’s not experiencing it in my body. I sense that I’ve had previous lives, some of them no doubt as a woman, but I don’t remember.
And so … I want to sing. Words in melody spoken by a woman. That will deepen my empathy, I feel.
On Friday, February 6 I will sing “When I Dream” at an open mic session at Salvatore’s. If you’d like to hear me, come to 113 Sint-Salvatorstraat in Gent at 20:30. It’s a yellow building. I realize that for you North Americans it’s a long flight … but consider it.
Here’s the song:
I could have a mansion That is higher than the trees I could have all the gifts I want And never ask please I could fly to Paris Oh, it’s at my beck and call Why do I go through life With nothing at all?
But when I dream, I dream of you Maybe someday you will come true
I can be the singer Or the clown in every room I can even call someone To take me to the moon I can put my makeup on And drive the men insane I can go to bed alone And never know his name
But when I dream, I dream of you Maybe someday you will come true
There are two lines especially that hit me hard. I wonder if you can guess them.
I need to evolve my understanding of other human beings. “When I Dream” helps.
If every moment you could really see things as they are, every moment you’d be weeping. If I could see more and more clearly, I’d be crying out of sheer joy and wonder, but also out of grief for all I’ve missed and continue to miss. I’d be on my knees, soul brimming with gratitude and reverence and awe for the astounding, beautiful, terrible reality of it all – for everything I’m blessed enough to see, and for all that’s unseen.
(Anonymous … to me)
This is August, the prime character in the movie Wonder. He makes me think.
What does it mean to “see things as they are”? What do I see when I look at August?
How easily negative thoughts come to my mind when I see a face that’s different from most of ours. I’m conditioned by my society, which keeps whispering to me about what’s cool and what’s not.
I see skin. The eyes ask me to see soul. I need to sit down with August and listen to what’s important to him. I need to “see more clearly”.
Sometimes the humanity of a person is bright the moment they walk through the door. Sometimes it needs to be gradually revealed, agedlike fine wine. So be patient, Bruce. The butterfly is coming.
I choose to not have the physical appearance of another person stop me. To not have it be thick and black and my thoughts coming to an abrupt end.
Rather, my seeing needs to be porous, mysterious, and branching out into unknown possibilities …
For those of you who read yesterday’s post, I sang well last night. My eyes met those of the audience, and I touched the hearts of many.
“Remember When The Music” is a profound creation from Harry Chapin. Here’s a sample:
Remember when the music Was a glow on the horizon of every newborn day And as we sang, the sun came up to chase the dark away And life was good, for we knew we could
***
I’m beginning my career in a care home as a volunteer with residents who have dementia. Yesterday our group of fourteen went for a walk through the old streets near the centre.
(The photo you see here is from the Internet – not us)
The staff don’t know that I spent three years managing volunteers at a hospital in Canada. Yesterday my task was simply to walk beside a resident I’ll call Pascal. Other staff and volunteers were pushing folks in wheelchairs. I smiled as I remembered teaching volunteers how to be gentle and alert with patients in wheelchairs. Ah … the chapters of a life.
Pascal didn’t speak English and my Dutch is a work of very slow progress. Plus there’s the fuzziness in his mind. And the probability that he’s known a particular dialect of Dutch all his life – something that’s incomprehensible in mine.
On the surface of things, Pascal and I weren’t a good match, but there were depths available. I composed short sentences, with grammatical mistakes and incorrect pronunciation. But mostly he got my words. And I know he got my intention to be kind. We smiled a lot.
***
The care home is where I want to be
The residents with dementia are whom I want to be with
I lay in bed this morning worrying about this evening. I’m singing a song called “Remember When The Music” at an open mic session. I sang it a few weeks ago at another venue but now I’m struggling to remember the words.
I love singing to people. And I wonder if this is my future: forgetting the lyrics as I stand on stage. Oh well. I’ll deal with it in my brain and heart. No way am I going to sing while gazing at my phone screen.
As I ate breakfast today at Martens, an old memory surfaced. I was on a spiritual retreat in the Rocky Mountains of Canada. It was evening, and we participants were enjoying a drink in the hotel pub.
I told my neighbours about some emotional issue that was polluting my mind. The woman next to me stood up and said “Do this.”
She extended her arm straight ahead at waist level, palm up. Then she slowly raised her hand until it was above her head.
I got it. The words that appeared inside my head weren’t as powerful as seeing the physical movement.
Many times since, my hand has ended up way high in the sky. Today is another opportunity for elevation.
***
And now for a song … Bruce Springsteen wrote My City Of Ruins. His words speak to me:
Now the sweet bells of mercy drift through the evening trees Young men on the corner like scattered leaves The boarded up windows, the empty streets While my brother’s down on his knees My city of ruins My city of ruins
Come on, rise up! Come on, rise up! Come on, rise up! Come on, rise up!
It began in a coffee shop where the heating was broken. Sitting in winter with my four layers of shirt, sweater, down jacket and shell (plus a toque on my head) … shivering.
This isn’t right.
Wondering how cold I really was, I bought a tiny thermometer on Amazon. The answer: 14° Celsius (57° Fahrenheit).
I don’t go to that coffee shop anymore. I’ll probably return when they fix things.
Now I lounge in a new place – Lloyd Coffee Eatery. Very nice … and adequately warm. I’ve started a ritual of pulling out my thermometer as I sit down, even though I’m confident about the heat.
Fifteen minutes ago, fresh from the outside world, the display said 9.3°. The photo shows 18.7°. And now it’s 19.8°, heading to 20.
As well as writing these words, I’ve been observing the progression of numbers. It feels akin to another favourite pastime of mine – watching my clothes turn over in the drier.
Oh … now it’s 20.1!
One more time I am fascinated with my mind. Wouldn’t it be more worthwhile to read an inspiring Buddhist article in Tricycle magazine?
I need your help. I’ll just talk and you listen. Maybe together we can figure this out.
Many nights lately I’ve had the same dream. I’d borrowed someone’s DVD player, and then I lost it. Now I have to buy him or her a replacement. But I can’t remember who I borrowed it from.
No kidding … most mornings I lie in bed trying to remember who the person is. Not knowing if I really borrowed the machine or if my brain made all this up.
Even now, in the light of day, I’m wondering. But as I write, the disorientation isn’t as strong. Maybe because there are people out there (You!) listening to me. My mind is leaning over to the “It’s a dream” side of life. But still not absolutely there.
I consider myself intelligent. But this cloud of uncertainty gives me pause. Shouldn’t a smart guy immediately dismiss the realityof a DVD player being borrowed and lost night after night?
Forty years ago, I gave a speech to high school students. I called it Mastery of the Moment: Fifteen Attitude Choices. I don’t remember their reactions.
I gave them little yellow laminated cards with the choices listed, hoping a piece of paper would make a difference in their lives. I pray that for some of them it did.
I put one of those cards in my wallet. Although particular wallets have come and gone, the card is still there.
Most of the old words still vibrate in my soul. Here they are:
Mark Carney, Prime Minister of Canada, gave a speech to the World Economic Forum on Tuesday, January 20. It will be remembered.
His focus was on co-operation between nations, especially “middle powers” such as Canada.
I think of families: mom, dad, kids … and what truths reside for them in Mark’s words. Here are some excerpts. Each time I see the word “nation”, I’ve changed it to “person”. And “nations” becomes “family members”.
***
Other family members, particularly middle powers like me, are not powerless. They have the capacity to build a new order that embodies our values, like respect for human rights, sustainable development, solidarity, sovereignty and territorial integrity of family members.
There is a strong tendency for family members to go along to get along. To accommodate. To avoid trouble. To hope that compliance will buy safety.It won’t.
…
“In 1978, the Czech dissident Václav Havel wrote:”
Every morning, this shopkeeper places a sign in his window: “Workers of the world, unite!” He does not believe it. No one believes it. But he places the sign anyway – to avoid trouble, to signal compliance, to get along. And because every shopkeeper on every street does the same, the system persists.
Not through violence alone, but through the participation of ordinary people in rituals they privately know to be false.
When even one person stops performing – when the greengrocer removes his sign – the illusion begins to crack.
It is time for family membersto take their signs down.
…
Many family members are drawing the same conclusions. They must develop greater strategic autonomy: in energy, food, critical minerals, in finance and supply chains.
This impulse is understandable. A person that cannot feed itself, fuel itself or defend itself has few options. When the rules no longer protect you, you must protect yourself.
But let us be clear-eyed about where this leads. A world of fortresses will be poorer, more fragile and less sustainable.
It is building the coalitions that work, issue by issue, with family members who share enough common ground to act together. In some cases, this will be the vast majority of family members.
Middle powers must act together because if you are not at the table, you are on the menu.
In a world of great power rivalry, thefamily membersin between have a choice: to compete with each other for favour or to combine to create a third path with impact.
We should not allow the rise of hard power to blind us to the fact that the power of legitimacy, integrityand rules will remain strong – if we choose to wield it together.
I am a stable, reliable person – in a world that is anything but – a person that builds and values family relationships for the long term.
This is the task of the middle family members, who have the most to lose from a world of fortresses and the most to gain from a world of genuine cooperation.
We are taking the sign out of the window.
The old order is not coming back. We should not mourn it. Nostalgia is not a strategy.
But from the fracture, we can build something better, stronger and more just.
That is my path. I choose it openly and confidently.
And it is a path wide open to any family member willing to take it with me.