Interesting
days! Last Saturday whilst facilitating a group tutorial at the University of
Chester I noticed some coloured auras around some of the students. It had been
a deep sharing including a mention of shamanism(!) but it was my first time in
years that I had seen these colours.
Wednesday, 5 June 2019
Interesting days
Thursday, 21 March 2019
Angels
Angels
1)
During
the month of December I became very aware of the suffering in my extended
families and close friends. It seemed so unfair and raised important issues for
me about what is Life about and some of these touched on my spiritual faith. I
felt like that I got my ideas about human existence all wrong. It was in a Unitarian
Service in early January and during the final hymn a thought came to me that
left me speechless and unable to sing. It was ‘We are meant to be broken
because we are not angels’. Then I thought further about how being broken lets
the light in. And I thought about Wilhelm Reich saying you can’t straighten a
bent tree. And then I realised that I needed to see the beauty in the bent tree
and in nature as whole, and some plants die quickly maybe after a late
flowering and some die slowly. And then the seeds they leave behind germinate
and fresh life appears.
2)
The
problem with being (semi) retired is that I think a lot about my past or rather
memories just turn up. I wince at how I have treated people on occasions. I
have some real regrets - things I have done or not done. I can try and make
amends where appropriate and possible and vow to not make the same mistake
again. However, I am not perfect. Thinking about this in the Unitarian service
at Cross Street Chapel this morning (March 2019), these words came, "I am
not perfect, because I am not an angel" Somehow that feels a bit better!
Wednesday, 20 March 2019
Encountering Jamie
Encountering Jamie
I came out and gave him a quid. He thanked me and said that
he now had enough money to go to the hostel that night and began to gather up
his meagre belongings. For some reason I lingered. He told me he was 50 and I
said he didn’t look it. He then said he would die soon. I queried this and he replied
that if you haven’t achieved things by the time you are 50… I challenged this
and said that people with a few months to live could still achieve things. He
thanked me for this and offered a handshake which I accepted and told me his
name was Jamie. We then said goodbye. There was something about this that I
found moving and I think he did too.
Wednesday, 2 January 2019
On stumbling across Unitarians
On stumbling
across Unitarians
Nearly 4 years ago just before my ‘retirement’ I found myself in hospital for 13 days after surgery on a broken leg following a bicycle accident. During those days and nights I had plenty of time to think and to stare out of the window. Some of my planned retirement plans that I had held for a number of years were dropped. One in particular was to be more involved with Quakers. I had been a member for over 20 years during the busiest time of my life. It suddenly became crystal clear to me that being a Quaker no longer fitted for me.
So what next? Once mobile again I decided to check out my local Christian churches in South Manchester. Over the next 18 months or so I visited 8 such churches – 3 C of E, 1 Baptist, URC, joint Baptist-URC, Methodist, and Metropolitan. I could almost have drawn up a trip adviser table of my reactions to these churches or perhaps it was more like Goldilocks! I found myself enjoying singing hymns again, enjoying the ritual of communion and some parts of some of the sermons I heard. I was made welcome in all situations. I found myself attending 2 of the churches fairly regularly for a while but not feeling totally happy with either.
I
was more of less reconciled to this situation when I was at someone’s
graduation meal one year ago and a stranger mentioned that she went to a
meditation class held at my local Chorlton Unitarian chapel. ‘Hmm’ I thought, ‘why have I not tried them
out?’ Curiously I had visited a Bridge club held there and also had been at a
rehearsal of the choir I belong to in Cross Street Chapel.
My
first Unitarian service in Chorlton was life changing! We were sat in a horse
shoe formation so I could see everyone and a chalice was passed round. There
were readings, prayers and hymns/songs from a range of religious and spiritual
perspectives many of which resonated with me. One of the biggest surprises for
me was to hear transpersonal language and ideas used in the service which was
lead in an engaging way by Laura Dobson. I had never experienced transpersonal
ideas in a religious setting before.
In
the end it was Cross Street that did it for me. There were a number of
synchronous events. For example one Sunday walking to the service I found
myself thinking of the medieval mystic Julian of Norwich – ‘All will be well’
and then in his sermon Cody Coyne refers to Julian and this same quote. Then on
another Sunday on the way to Cross Street I was thinking of the Serenity prayer
and Cody quoted it that morning. Another time in another sermon I am hearing an
implicit mention of the philosopher Martin Buber, a favourite of mine and Cody
confirmed yes he was thinking of Buber.
Somehow
I managed to get over my habitual shyness and respond to the warmth of the
welcome I received. It was helpful that in the service Cody usually invited any
of us who wished to come forward and lit a candle to celebrate an event in our
lives or to commemorate something more painful. This put me in touch with the
realities of the lives of my fellow attenders. It led people to ask me about
events in my life that I mentioned. It also
helped that we all sat at one table so I did not have to make an awkward choice
of which table to sit at. Curiously volunteering one Sunday to serve tea and
coffee also helped to break the ice – a great way to strike up casual
conversations.
Later
I came to realise that Unitarians have a range of experiences, beliefs and
words to describe how they understand spirituality and that there is no
pressure on me to fit in or accept other people views; more the delight in
swapping experiences, ideas, meanings. And of course Unitarians seem a great
place to discern my way forward and to deal with the spiritual uncertainties
raised by my ‘retirement’.
Tuesday, 9 October 2018
Manchester Pride
Manchester Pride
– Some After Thoughts
This year I finally got to take part in the Manchester Pride march. It was stunning; I enjoyed it so much and felt a real energy and excitement. I marched with my new Unitarian friends. It felt so good to be seen among a religious group that welcomes and indeed will marry LBGTQ+ people. The march was delayed for half an hour due to an evangelical Christian protest against it. This may well have added to the warmth of the reception we received on the march particularly from young people.
When we see some people as different or ‘other’ to our selves it can be the start of something not good, even toxic. Yes we all have differences around class, age, sex, race, gender, faith, disability and health. But these differences can be the basis of prejudice – conscious or unconscious. ‘Othering’ is one way of thinking about and catching hold of this moment. Think for a moment about the wonderful T shirt that says ‘Never kissed a Tory’. That is ‘othering’. There are some decent good Tory voters out there and even the odd MP. OK the T shirt is a joke but….
So welcoming different people rather than ‘othering’ them changes our faith groups, Bridge classes, workplaces etc. for the better. But it feels even more than that to me; when I stop ‘othering’ you I also stop ‘othering’ parts of myself.
I
have a very good old friend of mine who has been in hospital, in intensive care
for all of the summer. We used to go to a weekly Bridge class together and then
have lunch over which we put the world to rights as well as occasional bike
rides. He retired the year before me, also has grandchildren, has an
understanding of the therapy world (which is important to me) and shares most
of my politics. In his absence from my life, since even though I visit him
regularly most of the time he has been unable to speak, I have reflected on
what he means to me.
He
has meant many seemingly little things to me, mostly unacknowledged until now
but when this is all added up I start to see that it is about love. I then
reflect on the other men who are important to me (and women too) and
acknowledge that I love them as well. So when I get forms that ask me: am I
single, married, divorced etc. or straight/ heterosexual, gay, lesbian, trans
etc I feel this is missing the real or fuller me. It is no longer whether I
have sex with someone that defines who I am its whether I love them or not.
This may reflect my age but I am glad to know this and it feels like it is part
of my ongoing experience of Glad Pride.
Friday, 15 June 2018
The Boss consults Q his spiritual director once more
The
Boss consults his spiritual director Q once again
-
Hi Q.
-
His Boss, what’s happening?
-
Well, a very good friend of mine is very ill
in hospital and it raises all sorts of faith issues for me. (Q nods)… If I can
have an explanation-
-
Of suffering?
-
Yes, of suffering…. If I can have an
explanation that makes sense to me that would be a real comfort. I don’t want
glib stuff about karma or God’s will – I can’t fight God in any case though I
do get angry with her or him….. But I want to know why horrid illnesses exist
and why good people suffer them and what we are supposed to do learn – enlightenment
in the suffering? It seems like the impact of other people’s suffering is both making
me more tender about human life and planet earth but also distancing me from
putting my trust in my life continuing. It’s saying ‘Wow! All you have is now.
Nothing more is guaranteed. Sooner or later you will die – possibly after (what
will seem like) endless pain and suffering.
-
Oh.
-
Yes, oh!
-
I have no answer to that.
-
Gee thanks!
-
But…
-
But?
-
But life is all about love and loss… Don’t
fight it …. Feel it … move on….
-
That’s all very well.
-
I know.
-
Well then… It’s like I am being asked to
change how I am in relation to existence and it feels like trauma or the eye of
a needle and as sure as hell I am a fat camel* (They both laugh.)
-
Don’t fight it…breath and accept it.
-
Oh Christ!.... Sorry Q for the blasphemy.
-
Didn’t seem like blasphemy to me.
The Boss nods.
-
Well it now feels like the Serenity prayer
- God grant me the serenity/To accept
the things I cannot change/Courage to change the things I can;/And wisdom to
know the difference. And sure as hell I can’t do much about suffering; some of
it is inevitable. But that wont stop me loving people in my life!
Q
smiles – that’s it!
*Jesus
said somewhere in the New Testament that it was easier for a camel to pass
through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of heaven.
But apparently the Eye of the Needle was a narrow gateway in Jerusalem that a
camel could squeeze through.
Tuesday, 29 May 2018
The Boss meets Q his Spiritual Director once more
The Boss meets Q
his Spiritual Director once more
- Hi Q.
-
Hi
Boss…. How goes?
The Boss sits down in the usual comfortable chair in Q’s study and, as ever, admires the icon on the wall beside him.
-
I
wont let myself be distracted by that wonderful icon.
Q nods.
-
The
thing is now that I am, kind of retired (sucks air threw his teeth noisily)…
need another word for retirement, but….the thing is, I feel that I should be
offering some kind of care to others, maybe part of a charity or whatever but I
don’t want to! And I feel guilty that I could be doing this good work but I
wont. I keep coming back to this question but a small voice inside says ‘No’.
-
Hmm,
how long has this been going on?
-
For
years but when I was working full-time I could resist this without feeling much
guilt. Indeed it was part of my fantasy retirement to do such good works but
no. And every time I pose the question to myself the answer still comes back as
‘No’… So I guess I have to trust it.
-
Hmm….
And what then?
-
What
then (Q nods) (the Boss sucks air in threw his teeth once more)…. Well, it
might sound stupid but…..but I feel something is going on for me spiritually which
I don’t truly understand – it may not even be helpful for me to understand it
just yet…. So I have to be patience but (the Boss grits his teeth) that is hard
for me!
-
Have
you been there before?
-
(The
Boss nods vigorously) Yes I have had moments of deep change in my life and they
have taken years to happen.
-
Ah.
-
Yes,
years and then it all makes sense. It feels like that I am in the middle of
such a change now and just have to have patience.
-
Where
else can you be?.... And what helps?
-
What
helps?..... Talking with you, friends and family. Making sure that I am not going
crazy…. Having some quiet times…. Long bikes and so on.
-
Sounds
like you know what to do.
-
Hmm
(grumpily) thought you say something like that.
-
Well….
If it true put it to use…. If it does not seem to be so let’s examine it again.
Meanwhile keep talking.
-
Yeah
(reluctantly).
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