Music: Tom Jones, remembering John

I wrote you a sermon, I did, about the pitfalls of takin’ yaself too seriously.

Then I dumped it, in favour of sharin’ this little vid. Does it better, dint ya think?

Love,
Brother Ian

PS> Practicin’ writin’ with a Welsh accent…na goin’ sa well….

Wordplay: And here’s to you, Joltin’ Joe….

Screen shot 2014-01-09 at 1.29.01 PM

I believe the takeaway on this little story is simple: Always tell the troof.

A man walks into a bar with a dog.

The bartender says, “You can’t bring that dog in here.”

“You don’t understand,” says the man. “This is no regular dog, he can talk.”

“Listen, pal,” says the bartender. “If that dog can talk, I’ll give you 100 bucks.”

The man puts the dog on a stool, and asks him, “What’s on top of a house?” “Roof!”

“Right. And what’s on the outside of a tree?” “Bark!”

“And who’s the greatest baseball player of all time?” “Ruth!”

“I guess you’ve heard enough,” says the man. “I’ll take the 100 in 20s.”

The bartender is furious. “Listen, pal,” he says, “get out of here before I belt you.”

As soon as they’re on the street, the dog turns to the man and says, “Do you think I should have said DiMaggio?”

Music: Come to the sunshine, with Joni

One of our favourite poets, singers, and life-livers – Joni, in a video from 1967 or so….

Now comes the morning
Wet with the kiss of midnight
Shadows stayed sulking in the way
Sunshine for dreaming
Blackest magic to believe in
Spectrums and rainbows and days
I never saw a sky so free
Never so blue
Morning with mystic pageantry
Unveils a time for sharing love with you

Come to the sunshine
Share in the quiet of knowing
No need for telling you sometimes
When all the answers are
So plainly showing

Teach me to tell you
All the feelings I’ve been learning
Tell me to teach you my heart
New words are crazy
Old love words keep returning
All words seem wrong from the start
So I will tell with my eyes
Say it with a kiss
Silence that asks and looks so wise
And needs no answer on a day like this

Come to the sunshine
Share in the quiet of knowing
No need for telling you sometimes
When all the answers are
So plainly showing

Joni Mitchell

Writings: The problem: Civil obedience, according to Dr. Zinn

Howard Zinn
Howard Zinn

Those of you who know me know that I am a huge fan of Howard Zinn (he made his transition in 2010, but his clear, easy-to-read writing will live in folks’ hearts for a long time, and hopefully will shape the way we do things.)

That’ll be clear as you listen to this short video, as actor Matt Damon reads a bit from one of Dr. Zinn’s essays, as he expands on what Jefferson was after when he said, “The spirit of resistance to government is so valuable on certain occasions that I wish it to be always kept alive.” Martin Luther King overlays that with the necessity of speaking up & speaking out: “Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter.”

Some people find civil disobedience distasteful, but it’s pretty easy to see that unquestioning civil obedience has been pretty harmful to millions of people in the last century.

Over to you, Dr. Zinn. We miss you, but your flame still burns.

– Brother Ian

Starpeople: Canada’s ex-defence minister calls for open talk about UFOs

Sophie Shevardnadze checks in with Paul Hellyer about his research and experience & discoveries....his conclusion: it's happening.
Sophie Shevardnadze checks in with Paul Hellyer about his research and experience & discoveries….his conclusion: it’s happening.

This interview is a bit long (26 minutes), so you may have to wait till you get off work to check it out…Paul Hellyer adds his credible (I think) voice to the chorus of people who call for opening government files about what we know & what we can learn. When asked why there are no “credible” scientific evidence of UFO/extra-terrestrial life or contact, he answers that any real researcher who reviewed the cases he’s found would have trouble proving otherwise.

(In the video, the lips sometimes are a bit off from syncing with the voices, just to let you know it’s not you & your computer).

Let me know what you think:

Thoughts: A little note from Rumi…

1507249_10201566030044856_1763889725_oYour face is a beautiful sunny day;
More beautiful than the brightness of the day.
Brighter than the day.
Wine is good, but the cupbearer
Is better than the wine.
Every hidden thing opens today.
The heart reaches endless wishes.
Like a falcon catching a pigeon.
Every lover gets his deserved
Blessing from the Beloved.
Everyone who is thirsty
Sits by the side of Kevser.
Every moment, the Beloved offers
A new glass and says,
“Today our assembly is open,
Give this to the lovers.”
It is such a thin glass that
It appears as if the wine has become the glass.

Rumi

Thoughts: Over & over, with joy

cam-woods-sm
In the ever-renewing woods of Mount Young, San Juan Island, Washington USA  –  photo by Ian Byington

When we complain of having to do the same thing over and over, let us remember that God does not send new trees, strange flowers and different grasses every year.

When the spring winds blow, they blow in the same way.

In the same places the same dear blossoms lift up the same sweet faces, yet they never weary us.

When it rains, it rains as it always has. Even so would the same tasks which fill our daily lives put on new meanings if we wrought them in the spirit of renewal from within–a spirit of growth and beauty.

— Helen Keller, from an Easter Message to the Boston Community Church, 1932

Thoughts: Hold on, but not too tight….

The lessons are all around us, and it’s neat to have a friend that catches them.  I love this picture of the way things work, caught by my friend Ingrid in the post-winter solstice sun:trree

I was out in the yard the other day while my landlords were landscaping and planting saplings in anticipation of spring and the returning light.

Once in the ground, the young trees needed to be staked and my friend said, “Don’t stake them too tight.  They need some support, but also need to be able to bend in the wind.  If they are held rigid, they won’t grow strong enough roots to stay upright on their own.”

I reflected on how this is both true for trees and human saplings as well.  We all need care and encouragement to sink deep stable roots in our lives.  Roots that will feed compassion, love and community.  But too much support can also leave us fragile and unable to bend when adversity or even change threatens to blow us down.

Life always seems to be seeking this delicate balance between holding on and letting go.

Ingrid Gabriel