• We are a multilingual website again. Read the notice about this.
  • Understand AI use at MyPTSD: all AI use is explained in our AI help page. AI use is by choice here. It exists if you want it, but does nothing unless you choose to use it.

Just Some Inspiring Readings

Status
Not open for further replies.
......Just some Inspiring Readings

Just Sitting Can Be Pure Joy

ANNDEE HOCHMAN


There is a list on my desk, a page ruffled on one edge where I tore it from a spiral notebook I keep in the car. At the top it reads: walnuts, tuna, eggs, butter, baby carrots. Below that: go to bank, file bills, bring clothes to homeless shelter, make dinner date with Mom. On the side, in tinier printing because I was running out of room, I jotted down our menus for the next three nights.

That's just one list. There's a separate agenda for work, with deadline items in boldface. There's a list of house repairs—Patch bedroom ceiling! Get estimate for stonework pointing!—with exclamation points to underscore urgency.

I relish checking items off my lists, tangible marks of accomplishment and industry. And I've always been like this. Whether by nature or nurture, I got the habit from my mother, herself an obsessive list maker who still works full-time, keeps a social calendar that makes me look like a recluse, and routinely accomplishes more in a day than many people do in a week.

Four years ago, when my daughter was born, I raced off to the hospital with lists in hand: relatives to call after the birth, questions to ask the pediatrician. And then I brought my daughter home—five pounds and thirteen ounces of undiluted, 24-hour-a-day need.

Suddenly, I couldn't make lists because my left hand was always busy: cradling a baby, maneuvering her in and out of the bathtub, functioning as an ever-ready pacifier, pinky finger plugged into her rosebud mouth. Even with a hands-free telephone headset and a sling carrier, I was unable to multitask. In my sleep-deprived state, I had to focus 100 percent in order to do anything on the precipitous learning curve that is early parenting: change a diaper, warm a bottle, find just the right syncopated back pat to soothe Sasha's cries. Whole days slipped by, and I floated with them, untethered by agendas.

One bright Sunday I decided to take Sasha to an art museum an hour away. As soon as we arrived, she began to sob with hunger. Flustered, I plopped down on a bench in the first gallery, several rooms away from the drawings I'd come to see. Sasha ate. I sat. And because there was nothing else to do, I looked at the paintings, a collection of large portraits. I noticed the way honey-colored light bathed the face of the young girl in one painting, the stiff-shouldered bravado of a boy's pose in another, the deeply lined cheeks of an old woman in a third. The more I looked, the more I saw. Shadow and expression, a gnarled hand, a sideways glance.

By the time Sasha finished, the museum was almost ready to close. I breezed quickly past the drawings, then packed her into the car. As I drove home, my mind, for once, didn't jump ahead to the next day's plans. Instead, I focused on each pure and present moment: russet leaves waving against a Wedgwood sky, the hint of cider from a roadside stand, the steady rhythm of the car rocking us home.
 
......Just Some Inspiring Readings

Placing Your Bets
(Values)
By, WILLI UNSOELD

Another question that has fascinated me is, "Where are you placing your bets?" Are you laying your chips on nature? Is the world of nature where it's at? Because it seems like it, that's where I've tried to take you. Or, are you laying your chips on Man? What's your ultimate value locus?

Imagine yourself God. You're reared back to produce a miracle. You're going to create, but you've got two ideas in mind. You're going to create either an earth with water and plant life and animals, or you're going to produce an earth with water and soil and flowers and mountains and animals and men, you know; and you can choose wither one you want.

Earth without man or earth with man. Let's have a show of hands. How many would create earth without man? How many, earth with man?

I've agonized over this, but I come out very clearly on the side of man. I'm man-centered when it comes to value; it's probably because I was born one. Therefore, it provides you with a final test. Why don't you stay in the wilderness? Because that isn't where it's at; it's back in the city, back in downtown St. Louis, back in Los Angeles.

The final test is whether your experience of the sacred in nature enables you to cope more effectively with the problems of man. If it does not enable you to cope more effectively with the problems — and sometimes it doesn't, sometimes it just sucks you right out into the wilderness and you stay there the rest of your life — then when that happens, by my scale of value, it's failed. You go to nature for an experience of the sacred; and I point out to you that is not the only place that one can go, but in my experience it's the one that tends to be emphasized. You go there to re-establish your contact with the core of things, where it's really at, in order to enable you to come back into the world of man and operate more effectively.

So I finish with the principle: Seek ye first the kingdom of nature that the kingdom of man might be realized.
 
No time to add any possibly inspiring reading today, but I particularly have enjoyed reading this one: Good Luck? Bad Luck? (post #3), many times before and even still.

I still like and find it most helpful in positively influencing my thinking while worried / in need / or seeking some relief.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Donation drives

2026 Donation Goal

Goal
$1,800.00
Earned
$910.00
This donation drive ends in
0 hours, 0 minutes, 0 seconds
  50.6%

Trending content

Featured content

Back
Top Bottom