Showing posts with label celebration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label celebration. Show all posts

Friday, November 18, 2022

Lines Composed on a Birthday


I keep forgetting that I wrote this. It was about six years ago when someone on Facebook suggested I write a few lines on my birthday. At the time I called it "a first draft stream-of-consciousness let-the-words-fall-into-place attempt." It was composed on Facebook, and for a while, it only existed on Facebook. I am re-posting it on my blog today as I make one more complete circle around the sun.

  

Birthday Lines

Years are passing
Sights are fleeting
Thoughts are bleating
In the meadow.

Days are ending
Someone calling
Night is falling
In the glen.

Forward looking
Sometimes seeming
Like the dreaming
Of a lark.

Looking back
Across the lake
The foaming wake
Disperses soon

In the moment
Breathing deeply
Nothing cheaply
Enters in

Moving forward
Careful choosing
No sense losing
In the flood

In the circle
All is counted
Faith comes mounted
On a steed

Quiet times
Though days are numbered
Unencumbered
Spring rolls in

Finding grace
When time is swirling
Love’s unfurling
Fills the day.

                       ~ CK

 


_____________________

Photo: Shades Creek, Birmingham, Ala.
Credit: Charles Kinnaird




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Saturday, July 4, 2020

Saturday Haiku: One Nation



a nation's largesse
can be measured by fireworks
or by daily acts



________________

Photo by Jean Beaufort (Public Domain)



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Thursday, July 4, 2019

Finding America on the Fourth of July

Downtown Woodstock, Georgia getting ready for the Fourth
 (Cherokee Tribune photo)


On this Fourth of July, there will be church barbeques, small-town parades and fireworks displays in cities across the nation. I heard that there is some kind of big to do up in our nation’s capital involving tanks and such. I’m staying home, though, where the real America is lived out each day. I’m going to delight in the idea of all of those small town picnics and plates of barbeque served by volunteers out of church basements and fellowship halls.

I’m also going to think about those things that have inspired me about life in America since my childhood days.  Maybe I’ll think about baseball. After all, we call it our national pastime. The game has inspired such movies as Bull Durham, Field of Dreams, A League of Their Own, Bad News Bears, The Natural, and Angels in the Outfield

I hope there are some baseball games going on somewhere on the Fourth, maybe sponsored by local Kiwanis or Lions Clubs. I remember one Fourth of July when I actually saw my mother in a baseball game. There was a day of festivities there in the small town of Jackson's Gap, Alabama. The community gathering was at the school where there was space for barbeque, pony rides, and other activities. There was a small ball field with bleachers where the baseball games took place.

My older brother came up to me and said, "Did you know Mom's going to play baseball?" I couldn't believe it, but there was a women's game coming up and they had talked Mom into playing. I must have been about six years old, but I can still remember watching her step up to the plate and actually getting a hit!

I have some wonderful memories generated by baseball. We could walk down to our small town ballpark on warm summer nights to watch the little league teams play. We kids enjoyed the summer night outings, the snow cones, and the gathering of friends before we understood the game. Then there were the peanuts.

There was a fellow in our home town who was at every outdoor event (which meant baseball and football) selling his own roasted peanuts. Everyone called him “Jam-up,” I suppose it was because he was a thin man, with a hunched back, but that was how he was known. Everyone liked Jam-up, and his peanuts were always perfectly roasted.

The game is so full of fun that we are disturbed when things go awry. The country was shocked by the “Black Sox Scandal” in which eight major league members were barred from the game for intentionally losing the 1919 World Series game. The memorable line from that story, “Say it ain’t so, Joe,” was reportedly uttered by a boy to “Shoeless" Joe Jackson, one of the eight team members indicted in that scandal, as he left the courtroom. I felt the same way the year that Sammy Sosa’s bat cracked, revealing a cork interior, and many have felt that way with the issue of performance-enhancing drugs.

Perhaps it is the memory of those small-town little league games that is where the true essence of baseball lies. There we saw the magic of teamwork along with the impressive individual feats of skill. We learned about winning, losing, and those especially harrowing moments when we were “Oh so close.” Then we all went back to our homes, talked about it a little bit, maybe recounted it with friends the next day, and then it was on to something else. 

Here’s hoping that we can let our national pastime can teach us a bit about how to navigate our national troubles. The game has endured scandals, cheats, bumbling owners, money schemes, and a few missed calls. In spite of it all, the game goes on. I can still enjoy a summer’s evening watching the Birmingham Barons out on the baseball diamond while visiting with friends and finding those snow cones and roasted peanuts. It’s still one place we can go to find America.



Birmingham's Regions Field (Photo from Baseball Parks.com)

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Wednesday, April 2, 2014

Hope Is Reborn Every Spring


Myth runs deeply in any culture, even down to the very core where collective memories are held which individual minds have all but forgotten. How else can you explain the joy of Easter? In the Bible Belt of the Deep South, even conservative fundamentalists seem to have no qualms about celebrating a holiday named after the Great Mother Goddess of Northern Europe, Eostre (a.k.a. Eastre). Even though the holiday was given Christian trappings centuries ago, the term "Easter" is nowhere to be found in the Bible. Easter is, after all, associated with the vernal equinox as was the ancient rite of the Mother Goddess, whose name the holiday still bears. This makes sense to us as we live within the natural rhythms of the earth. When we begin to see new life arising all around us, and we feel the chill of winter letting go, we naturally feel the hope of new life deep within us. 

The heart celebrates; the mind later tries to give meaning to the experience. It is only natural that the greatest hope that Christianity has to offer would become inexorably linked with the greatest blessing the earth has to give.

Years ago, I wrote a poem relating one Easter experience. It was something I had wanted to write about and finally found the vehicle to present it when I began writing about a snow day. As we are emerging from a cold winter, looking ahead to Easter, may the memories expressed here color your expectation as you wait. 


Southern Snowfall
                       
It was one of those rare days
When all the conditions were right
And a bright soft snow fell
All day long.
Everything was covered in beauty.
Unneeded activity came to a halt.
No hurry.
A wonderful quiet in the city.
All is well.
It will last a day (two at the most)
Then there will be mud and slush
And life as usual.

One Easter at midnight mass
I suddenly saw that everyone was aglow.
A subtle light from within
Revealed wonder in every person,
Joy in every action.
Everything was covered in beauty
And I was completely connected
(Not the usual outsider).
No doubt that all shall be well.
Life returned to normal after a day (two at the most)
Except I carried with me the realization
That what was seen only for an instant
Is always true,
Even while life goes on as usual.
                                   
                                                                  ~ CK





_______________________
Pictured: 
Top: Illustration of Ēostre by Jacques Reich, originally with the caption "Eástre."
From  Myths of the Norsemen by H.A. Guerber (1909)
Public Domain 
Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons
Bottom: People hold candles during an Easter vigil mass in the Cathedral in Vilnius, Lithuania
Image found at Word of Technology

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Sunday, May 23, 2010

Walking in Mystery

(Part 8 in the series, Experiences of Mystery and Wonder)
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The very existence of life is grounds for mystery and wonder to me. Consider the fact that life arose on this planet and has evolved in such variety and with such tenacity that every square inch of the planet - land, water, and air - is occupied by some life form. That in itself is a wondrous phenomenon. Even more mysterious and wondrous is the fact that you and I are present to talk about it. We are representative of the arrival of human consciousness. With human awareness, Life became capable of observing and reflecting upon, as well as participating in creation. With 6.8 billion people in the world it is safe to say that not a single sunrise or sunset goes unobserved, and on an increasing basis, hardly a sparrow goes unnoticed.

Why do we have those direct experiences of mystery and wonder? We walk in mystery and wonder every day. For practical reasons, perhaps, it is easy to ignore the wonder or to take the mystery for granted. Then on occasion the curtain is torn for a brief moment and we experience the impact of the vast mystery and wonder that is around us, beneath us and within us.

However and for whatever reason we experience mystery, it seems to be human nature to celebrate it. This is why some television audiences have been enthralled to hear the now familiar French horns followed by the voice-over narration, "Space...the final frontier..." It is why many flock to see the latest horror flick on the big screen. For others it is the eager discussion of UFO's or lost civilizations. Still others prefer the symphony, or a spiritual commitment as a means of celebrating mystery. The examples I have given in this series have been attempts to hint at the essence of mystery and wonder. Early on I talked about a little boy who thought he saw a ghost. Later I related a dream sequence about the creative anima. One illustrates an outer mystery, the other an inner mystery. I have spoken of music and storytelling, seeing lions and watching movies, worship events and natural wonders. All are approximations that are relatively easy to describe. All are illustrations pointing to a greater mystery. Whether we set out to explore the outer world of universe or the inner world of the human heart, we will come up against that awe-inspiring mystery and wonder.

There are a thousand and one ways to culturally and/or religiously celebrate the mystery and wonder about us. We humans are naturally adept at making meaning out of our lives, and doing it in a palatable manner. At some point, or at some level there is the realization that all of our activities and celebrations only hint at the Great Mystery that is beyond words, beyond deeds, even beyond silence, but somehow underlies existence itself.




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