I closed my eyes and fell into a dream. Someone was complaining about the bother of a person who saw the world as it is and insisted on changing it. "She'll never fit in," he said, "She'll always be a few steps off the path." Then another voice, this one attached to a body slanting up the hill toward me. I sensed a strength, but I could not see a face. "Everybody has a piece of God in them" said the voice. "Even her?" scoffed the other. "Especially her!" said the voice. From the hill we could see far down across the roofs of the town to the ocean, a shining sliver of silver just under the sky. Something so vast poured into the thinnest horizon line . . . but that was all we needed to know it was there.
Author: bearcee
My degrees are in Journalism (M.A.,Andrews University) and Philosophy of Religion (M.A., Ph.D., Claremont Graduate University). I taught for 34 years at Columbia Union College in Takoma Park, MD—mostly religion, philosophy, communication and media studies, public relations and advertising. Then I was an adjunct professor in philosophy at Trinity Washington University (DC) and an adjunct in Business Communications at Stevenson University, MD. I love design, reading, writing, teaching, and learning. I'm married and have a son and a stepdaughter. I am a Christian with Taoist and Buddhist influences. I am now retired and writing full time. My first collection of essays, "Wandering, Not Lost," was published in November 2019 and is available from Wipf & Stock and Amazon.
Take the Good
Take the good as you find it; don't set down a marker to say, 'This far and no farther' or nothing may come to you that you could recognize. And if you could recognize it you would be saying, 'Hello, old friend, I wondered if I'd see you again.' But then how to find the new, the good newness that is out there, slipped in between the hard rocks of experience, the sudden shiver on the water's surface, the quiet breath of the person next to you leaning into the vast open vault of forgiveness there for the taking, not depleted, a spring of everlasting life, a seeing through the grime and dust to something beautiful, ancient, original — yours.
Fog Like Horses
Why does every bright day with wind arrive like San Francisco in '68? The fog pouring in like horses over the Golden Gate and the cough of seals down at Fisherman's Wharf. City Lights opens its narrow stair and Ferlinghetti is there at the top to turn and welcome you with his slow smile. And the feeling of reaching toward the bread of something substantial, the bread not yet broken, the sacrifice not yet made, the world still a kingdom to be discovered.
The Bodhisattvas Among Us
The rain began precisely when the weather app said it would. First, the street was spattered, then the drops crowded in like tourists. I never believed I could lay claim to anybody, to say, "You are mine," like they do in all the songs we knew. This is serious, what we call love. Maybe it is rare. I don't want to overthink it; I do that too much already. There was no one to say, "Watch now, this is how you do it, this is how you love without tethering someone." So, I fail, fail gloriously. Fail at arm's length and fail up close. The rain begins and begins, and all the while the bodhisattvas among us wait patiently. They will not enter Nirvana until all have found their way.
Thoughts and Prayers
I am thinking of that chain link fence around the schoolyard meant to keep out intruders. I am thinking of the sound of shell casings hitting the ground, dancing up in slo-mo, golden offerings to Moloch. I am thinking of adults who will not protect children because ambition matters more. I am praying this grief we share will become a prayer. I'm praying this anger remain a hard knot in my throat. I am praying that the broken ones who break others will be helped before they kill. That the ones who make the laws to keep the broken wreaking havoc will be stopped. I am praying that the ones who cannot find a reason to go on will find the breath to pray.
What Angels Think of Us
That we are slow, unwitting, confused. Prone to mistakes, predictable. That we are flightless, but a little lower in the great chain of being than they are. How simple it all seems to them, our lives: Born, walk awhile, lie down, die. What could they know of us? Not all of us cross a rickety bridge as children. Some will go out for bread and not return home. Perhaps they think of us as younger siblings born as a late, last surprise, another generation between, yet familial duties remain — and they pity our constant stumbling. When we went to the movies, they would gather in the parking lot, comparing notes, sharing a smoke. You could almost see them in the slight distortion around the lights. They are messengers bearing announcements. They stoop a little when they approach us. "Don't be afraid," they often say. They don't linger. Like older siblings they have to be somewhere else, holding back the Furies, pouring out plagues, circling the throne.
Under the Skin
Where the road cuts deep in the mountain's flank there are seams of ash in stone. There was violence once which a wound reveals and the fractured bones still strain to stand. Only the wound reveals. The janitor rests his head against the window of the morning bus to home. He lives alone. He shuts the door. And when he dies he leaves a million dollars to the music school for scholarships. Who could have known? The heart sets out on its way, a pilgrim through the world. The heart draws to itself all that which can be seen, though words are not yet born to name it all to sound. The heart bears all. In the end the apostle writes, "There were many things that Jesus did. If they were all to be written down, I suppose the world could not hold the books." There is so much more to tell.
Over the Fence
I slept out in the field under the oak. The rain was soft. I'd climbed the fence just off the road. One light through the mist from a shed across the field. In California it was rush hour, all traffic stopped in stinking heat. But I was there in Wales in the night hours, grinning like a fool. Still praising the great world. At home in the fields of the Lord.
Secret Things
There are secrets in the forest, quiet movements of coming and going. A communion of deer reaching out with delicate tongues for the Host, administered by an invisible priestess. If you hold your breath you might hear their murmured Amens, see the green shoots as the body of their god moves gently in response. I was thinking as I walked, 'Where are the deer?' and I looked up to see one regarding me placidly. Then there were five more and two off in a thicket by themselves. Theirs is a language of movement, of gestures. They have no secrets; they are like the books on the table by the window that you meant to read. You walk by today, tomorrow. Soon, you cannot see them.
Parabola
Parabola: The path of a projectile under the influence of gravity. And we arrived squalling, after deep immersion in warmth, projectiles shot into the world, tumbling end over end, caroming off walls of bent law, jolting down the rough scree of injustice, dragging the long tail of generations. We split the air, the air streaming around us, feathering up behind in colors only seen against the dark clouds of history. What drew us forward was hunger for justice, memory and longing. Also, accidents of place, conjunction of powers, and limits. How long we ascended, thrust over gravity! The arc of ambition, a certain defiance of inertia and the cost of fuel. The wide heart of goodness, the cool fire of sacrifice. History is a book of stone, open always to the chapters that will break your bones when you fall. Leap! We who are alive shall be caught up in the arc of this parabola. We shall rise and fly, somehow stay aloft against the gravity of this hour.
