This space takes inspiration from Gary Snyder's advice:
Stay together/Learn the flowers/Go light

Sunday 16 August 2015

The meaning of feminine - by a woman

A multi-talented and adventurous woman has this to say about herself in response to an experience of "female" energy arising from the world of nature:
And I found myself in an open, receptive state to whatever might present itself. Not questing, not goal-driven. Just willing to wait and let things happen. To me, that's a feminine outlook, more passive, Zen-infused, if you will, than questing or acquisitive. It's a state where I live most of the time.
I find that an valuable insight as it comes from someone I known as an intelligent and alert commentator on the world and all its inhabitants. You can find more of her insights if you go to her blog here.

Wednesday 8 April 2015

The adventure of Easter

From a conversation overheard:
“Because the Lord is risen, life means something completely different. We are no longer bound by time and space, or limited by the frailty of flesh and bone.

“The Lord's resurrection means that life and its difficulties are not the final story and that even our eventual obituary will be only the quickly fading memories of fellow pilgrims. The real story is life eternal, our own glorified existence and eternal destiny with the One who redeemed us, while the things we see around us fade away.”

The gospels – and Paul – stress that there is good reason to accept the reality of Christ actually overcoming death with a return to a life more powerful than he had had as a human for 33 years. For those who do accept the reality, life can become filled with hope, and with the adventure of responding  to a God who has simply shown overwhelming love for us. As well as responding to God personally, our response is also expressed through our generosity towards those around us. 

Friday 9 January 2015

Owners, managers and staff united in love

With his concept of the Six Thinking Hats, Edward de Bono gave us a set of colours to make explicit a new way of coordinating our thinking to better solve problems, and Stephen Covey has given us the Seven Habits of Highly Effective People. Both have had an impact on business life, directing it away from capitalism "red in tooth and claw" toward, quoting Tennyson again, a way of conducting economic activity where " love [is] Creation’s final law".
However, rapidly gaining attention in the 21st Century is the way of doing business that goes under the name of the Economy of Communion.
This way of thinking is based of a schema of seven colours:
1. Red: Entrepreneurs, workers and business
The functions and the various business roles are defined with clarity and exercised with a spirit of service and responsibility. The directing style is that of participation. Business objectives are shared and adequately verified in a transparent manner, paying particular attention to the quality of relationships between all subjects involved (stakeholders).
2. Orange: Relationships with clients, suppliers, financiers, civil society and external subjects
Business members commit with professionalism to build and reinforce good and open relationships with clients, suppliers and the territorial community in which they operate, of which creating and safeguarding the betterment of all parties are felt to be integral parts of the mission.
3. Yellow: Spirituality and ethics
The work of the EoC is seen as an opportunity for growth, not only professional, but also spiritual and ethical. The business commits itself to concretely respect laws. It behaves correctly towards fiscal authorities, control bodies, unions and institutional authorities. It knows that the quality of working life is a dimension essential for a person’s growth as a human being. Those who work in EoC businesses learn to give value also to difficulties and hardships in the workplace, making them precious occasions for growth and maturity. In defining the nature and quality of its products, the business is also committed to evaluate the effects of its products on the wellbeing of consumers and the environment.

4. Green: Quality of life, happiness and relationships
One of the fundamental objectives of an EoC business is to become a community. To this end, periodical meetings are programmed to verify the quality of interpersonal relationships and to contribute in resolving situations of conflict, availing themselves of so called ‘instruments’ of communion, among which the occasional meeting between administrators and workers (at least once a year), moments of ‘fraternal correction’ between all members of the business, a time for listening, on the part of managers to dissent and suggestions. If these instruments of communion are not exercised, business life is impoverished, with a cost to economic performance.
5. Blue: Harmony in the workplace
Beauty and harmony in the workplace are the first impression of an EoC business since communion is also beauty, without need for luxury but for simplicity. Hygiene, cleanliness, and orderliness are part of the EoC culture as the harmony they bring will put people like workers, proprietors, clients and suppliers at ease.
6. Indigo: Formation, instruction, wisdom
The business will favor the creation of a climate of confidence among its members, in which it is natural to bring one’s talents, ideas and competencies to the advancement of professional growth of colleagues and for further progress of the business itself.
7. Violet: Communication
Entrepreneurs adhering to the EoC work constantly to create a climate of communication that is open and sincere, one that will favor the exchange of ideas and information at all levels of responsibility.
Excerpts from Guidelines for conducting a business

Sunday 4 January 2015

Waiting for God, no time is lost

Preface of the Mass

Christ
 the 
Light
Mass during the Night, the Nativity of the Lord


The 
Lord
 be
 with 
you. R.  And
 with
 your spirit.
Lift up 
your 
hearts.  R. We 
lift 
them 
up 
to 
the
 Lord.
Let 
us
 give 
thanks
 to 
the 
Lord
 our 
God. R. It 
is 
right 
and
 just.

It 
is 
truly 
right 
and
 just, our 
duty
 and 
our 
salvation,
always 
and everywhere 
to 
give 
You
 thanks,
Lord, holy 
Father, almighty 
and 
eternal God.
For
 in 
the 
mystery 
of 
the 
Word 
made
 flesh
new 
light 
of 
Your 
glory
has 
shone 
upon 
the 
eyes 
of
 our
 mind,
so
 that, as 
we 
recognize 
in 
Him 
God
 made visible,
we 
may 
be caught 
up 
through 
Him
 in 
love 
of 
things invisible.
And 
so, with Angels 
and 
Archangels, 
with Thrones and Dominions,
and with
 all
 the
 hosts 
and
 Powers of heaven,
we 
sing
 the 
hymn of
 Your 
glory,
as without end we acclaim:

Holy, Holy, Holy, Lord God of hosts,
Heaven and earth are filled with your glory.
Hosanna in the highest.
Blessed is He who comes in the name of the Lord.
Hosanna in the highest.

I believe in one God - The Nicene Creed

I believe in one God,
the Father almighty,
maker of heaven and earth,
of all things visible and invisible.
I believe in one Lord Jesus Christ,
the Only Begotten Son of God,
born of the Father before all ages.
God from God, Light from Light,
true God from true God,
begotten, not made, consubstantial with the Father;
through him all things were made.
For us men and for our salvation
he came down from heaven,
and by the Holy Spirit was incarnate of the Virgin Mary,
and became man.
For our sake he was crucified under Pontius Pilate,
he suffered death and was buried,
and rose again on the third day
in accordance with the Scriptures.
He ascended into heaven
and is seated at the right hand of the Father.
He will come again in glory
to judge the living and the dead
and his kingdom will have no end.
I believe in the Holy Spirit, the Lord, the giver of life,
who proceeds from the Father and the Son,
who with the Father and the Son is adored and glorified,
who has spoken through the prophets.
I believe in one, holy, universal and apostolic Church.
I confess one baptism for the forgiveness of sins
and I look forward to the resurrection of the dead
and the life of the world to come.
The Nicene Creed and its origins 

Sunday 2 November 2014

Common Good - The Lost Jewel


From both sides of the Atlantic, observers have commented on the results that are becoming obvious within each society of the loss of people's vision that they live in a community and accept that there are limits to the freedom of  behaviour because of their respect for others.

From the United States, Rod Dreher sadly surveys the evidence that Americans have taken personal liberty to an extreme. Hi finds this especially obvious ahead of the mid-term elections: He writes:

The general feeling seems to be that personal liberty now trumps all other issues.
Who really believes in the common good anymore? We have become an atomized nation of individual consumers who believe our preferences must be indulged no matter what. It’s true of the Right as well as the Left. The main reason it’s so hard to talk about the common good is that so few people are willing to recognize an independent authoritative standard for determining that good.

He gives examples of how no one wants to be inconvenienced, even because of their own action or decision.

Think of a liberty that you would be willing to give up for the sake of the common good. Hard to do, isn’t it? We Americans have come to think of “the common good” as “maximal individual liberty.” In fact, individual liberty is a necessary condition for achieving the common good, and for that good to have meaning (because freely chosen). But in America today, it has become our idol. It has become the end of our politics rather than a means to an end. It is so in our personal lives, so why shouldn’t it be in our public ones?
 All politics is about balancing the rights of the individual against the community. Too much collective power is oppressive; too much individual power is anarchic. In a democracy, we will always be struggling with this tension. What has changed, I think, is that we have come to a point where people no longer think of the common good. This is Dante’s great lament about Tuscany in his day: that people only thought of the good of themselves and their own party or tribe. The result was chaotic, and tore at the fabric of society. This is where we are headed.
In Britain of the 1980s,  "modernity was defined by the energy of the entrepreneurial individual, set free from the bonds of tradition or social responsibility", according to Jeremy Gilbert, who is at pains to plot of path for good governance that would counter the worsening consequences of social irresponsibility arising from the breakdown of a spirit of community.

In many places in the West, a new society is apparent, one where people are merely consumers trying to maximize their pleasure and minimize their pain. An effort to apply the concept of the common good will provide the needed balance in materially rich but spiritually poor societies of the First World. Further, that renewed appreciation of the fundamental principles of good governance within "advanced" sovereign states will inspire people in the rest of the world to conduct themselves as a community, rather than join the race to the bottom, which would be unrestrained freedom and total disregard of the role of government in enhancing the general welfare of all citizens.