Saturday, March 12, 2011

Grasping for Gratitude

Sometimes life can be overwhelming,
and it can feel that we are rowing
against the current of a stormy sea.
Focus on the far horizon,
not on the waves.
There are some who believe that what we focus on and think about becomes our reality, and that our "thoughts become things." Sometimes I am one of them. Sometimes not so much. Lately it's hard to know what to think, and easy to confuse cause and effect, or to know for sure whether there is any relationship between thoughts and events at all. During weeks like this one I certainly hope not, because it does not bode well for the human race if we do not gain control of our thoughts and change what we think about.

Of course in simple terms I'm talking about prayer (as if prayer itself isn't complicated). I mean, what is prayer other than focused thought on a desired outcome? Jesus taught us to pray, as well as how to pray. He said that where two or more are gathered "in his name" he would be among them, suggesting that collective prayers are more powerful than individual prayers. 

There is a group of modern day scientists who would say that there is physical evidence to back up that claim. Their suggestion is that a thought actually has mass, and (as I hope we all learned in high school science classes) anything with mass exerts a gravitational force on other objects, however small. While a grain of sand does not have much mass, nor much gravitational force to exert, the moon has so much mass and such a powerful gravitational force that it influences the tides of the entire planet Earth.

Noetic science would suggest that while one thought may not have much power to affect noticeable change in the world, many thoughts focused on the same outcome may indeed have the power to affect noticeable change. (If you would like to learn more about noetic science, go to the Institute of Noetic Sciences (IONS) website and check it out. I am not submitting it here as something that you should or should not believe, but it is intriguing to consider the possibilities. However, that is not what this particular blog entry is about, per se.)

What this blog entry is about is this: I became alarmed this week at what I perceive to be a rising level of insanity in the world, particularly in the United States (behaviors over which we do have control and can change, but seem to choose not to); and on the tail of this observation the 8.9 earthquake in Japan followed immediately by the most horrific devastation I have ever witnessed in video news coverage. It seemed to me to be a lot of horror to take in within such a short period of time.

To recap: our own federal legislature attempting to strip Americans of a hard-won victory for human rights by attempting to repeal our newly passed health care reform legislation; followed by oppression in Egypt resulting in the deaths of many citizens, on the heels of a similar situation in Tunisia, followed by another in Libya; followed by an American state governor attempting to strip public employees of collective bargaining rights and their hard earned benefits (for which they pay entirely with no input from tax payers--this seems like outright robbery to me); in the midst of a steady and growing attack on public school teachers that has been escalating on the part of the federal government and the American public for several years, now; followed by the incomprehensible gang rape of an 11-year-old girl in Cleveland, Texas, where the rapists are the ones receiving the sympathy because they will have to live with what they have done, while the girl is blamed for causing the rape; followed by the earthquake and tsunami in Japan on Friday. There is more, but those are the events that seemed to me to come together all at once and cause a serious amount of disquiet in my soul, and from what I can tell, the collective American psyche as well.

This disquiet showed up on my own Facebook Wall, as I felt moved to share article after article on the various crazy-making topics. It also showed up in my Facebook News Feed as my friends apparently felt the same imperative.  I've had the flu for about 10 days, so my daily gratitude statements went unposted; but all the while I was finding the energy to post these news articles about the human species and the planet we live on going absolutely crazy.

One does not need to believe that noetic science is operating on a solid theoretical footing to postulate that human beings are not in their right collective mind when the world is going that mad. One need only to believe in the power of prayer--it would be easy to surmise that at the very least the praying people of the world are not holding the forces of evil at bay by gathering together to gratefully express our thanks to the Universe for our miraculous and inexplicable existence, and to endeavor to evolve into a more compassionate race of good stewards of the earth's resources. We could easily do something to change that.

Will you join me in focusing your thoughts on the reality you would like to create? If your temptation is to say "no" because you don't believe in such, I would implore you to look at the people in this country who do believe in the power of prayer, the ones who call themselves things like "the Christian right" and "the Moral Majority"--they dofighting against these people, instead of joining with others who think like you do in a peaceful collective action of positive meditation on the improvement of the human condition for all, then I ask you to reconsider. The majority of American people who have no compunction about bowing their heads in prayer seem to be winning the "war" on compassion, peace, and justice.

So will you join me? It only takes a few moments of focused thought each day to create a landslide, a tsunami (if you will) of positive change in the world. I hope you will join me. Start right now: I am grateful for all of the good that is in the world, and all of the good that is in people, and all of the good that we will do together, and all of the positive change we will will create. And I am grateful for you

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