Loading....
Recent Article links:

Something to Think About

    Great abundance is heaped up as the result of brutalizing labor, but a miserable life is the result.
    deism.com


    Wealth, like happiness, is never attained when sought after directly. It comes as a by-product of providing a useful service.
    Henry Ford


    Different men seek after happiness in different ways and by different means, and so make for themselves different modes of life and forms of government.
    Aristotle


Archive for March, 2007

Stages of Social Development

Clare W. Graves (December 21, 1914–January 3, 1986) was a professor of psychology and originator of a Level Theory of Human Development. He developed The Eight Stages of Social Development in an attempt to explain how cultures emerge. The 8 stages are shown below, and below the table is a link to an article explaining each stage in detail.

Continue reading

Wait, There's More!

Thanks for stopping by to see what all the fuss is about. I hope you enjoyed it! If you did, and you'd like to be updated whenever I publish a new post (totally randomly, but never more than once or twice a week) you can subscribe - for free - and receive regular updates. To receive updates by email, simply complete the Subscription Form in the top right hand corner of every page or, if you're so inclined, click here for the main RSS feed.

And if you want to leave a comment at any time - even if it's just to say hi - you're more than welcome - just leave your thoughts in the block at the end of every post. I look forward to hearing from you. Thanks again!

Oh, and before I forget, you really should read my Why I Blog post. It might numb the shock of some of the heretical things I say!

The Middle of Nowhere.

“All the roads that take us away from God lead to no where.”

I heard this yesterday.
From my experience, it’s true.

Wonder why we often choose to remain lost in nowhere? Have you ever been lost? Wondering about in the middle of nowhere? Some stop and ask for directions; others in their pride and ego choose to continue to wander in the middle of nowhere until they are worn out, scared, and completely lost.



I know that some would suggest that all roads lead to God, but I am not so sure. Some choose to never face themselves and their lives; to “white-knuckle” life on their own terms, and end up way down the road and find themselves out in the “middle of nowhere” lost in the dark. Some “prefer the darkness over the light.”


The question I have to ask myself during this season of Lent, is the road I am on taking me away from God or am I getting further lost in the “middle of nowhere”?

I know when I’m lost that it is because I have been walking away from the Light.
How did I get there?

How do you know when you are on the road walking in the Light or toward the Light? How do you know if you are in “nowhere land”?

I think of the story of Jesus spitting in the mud and rubbing it on the man’s eyes. At first his vision was blurry, and so Jesus touched him again. Usually when I am in nowhere land, I’m in the dark and my vision is blurry, and that’s when I know I need the gentle touch of God to open my eyes so that I can see. That’s when I know I need to stop and admit that I am in the middle of nowhere; that’s when I know I need to drop my ego and ask for directions.

Turbulent Souls

One of the less attractive features that Christianity, Judaism, and Islam have in common is a significant number of loveless (no, hateful) fanatics. Whatever territory they control some of them will to go to any length to protect the purity of their environment.

Stephen Dubner, born in New York in 1963, was in the third generation of a family of Polish Hasidic Jews who had settled in Brooklyn among multitudes of people of the same persuasion.

Stephen’s father and mother grew beyond the tribalistic culture of their birth; his father served in the Army in WWII, and his mother began a budding career in ballet. They rubbed shoulders with gentiles, which most of their families had never done. More, they wandered into a community of Catholic youth, and in the course of time they became ardent Catholics; in their language they converted.

Their children were raised just a strictly, not to say rigidly, as they had been, but of a different religion. But these children went into the secular world and did not seem to be overly affected by the religious rigidity of their Catholic parents or Jewish grandparents.

There had been practically no communication across the first two generations. Stephen studied at Appalachian St. Univ in NC and then moved to New York City. Curious about his ancestors he reestablished a relationship (after many lost years) and became better and better acquainted with the Jewish culture………

With Turbulent Souls Stephen Dubner has written a spiritual autobiography of the highest caliber.
Three examples came to mind of religious absolutism at its worst:

1. When Stephen’s father became a Catholic his grandfather acted as if he had died and thereafter refused any further contact with him; he forbid his son’s name to be mentioned.

2. Large numbers of Christian fundamentalists today support Israel avidly, not through any sense of kinship but because they hope to see the Jews provoke Armageddon, a preliminary to The Rapture, where they expect to be definitively and finally separated from the rest of us.

In the last century bigoted and violent Catholics in at least one large South American country cut off the right hand of any Protestants they could find.

3. We have already been adequately exposed to the excesses of Islamic absolutists.

Thankfully a large proportion (probably the majority) of Christians, Jews and Muslims have not been infected by the aggressively exclusivistic brands of their faith. Love and charity are universal and include not only these three faiths but many others.

My Beliefs

My principles, ideologies and beliefs have changed over the years. This used to concern me. How could I change core beliefs? This would mean acknowledging that something I firmly believed in previously was now wrong. For years I resisted changing my beliefs. It was comforting to find a belief system and wallow in it’s welcoming wooliness.

In late 2006 I stumbled across a tiny bookstore in Bangkok called Aporia Books at 131 Tanao Road (road that runs at ‘T’ junction with Khaosan Road. The eclectic range of books is superb, and I’ve been back many times since.

Anyhow, it was there that I first stumbled across Ken Wilber. After reading many of his books, I can now accept that changing beliefs is part of the process of human development. Using Graves’ terminology, I am now at Stage 7: the Yellow, or Integrative Stage. But let’s see what that means…

Continue reading

New Waldorf Kindergarten in Nicaragua

Welcome to our first newsletter about the achievements and daily life at the Sacuanjoche Waldorf Kindergarten in Granada Nicaragua.

The kindergarten has now been open for more than five months, and much has been achieved thanks to deeply engaged people; parents, teachers and friends of the school. We have also received many appreciated physical and financial donations. We are very grateful for all the help and support that we have received to allow us to carry through this project.

We are now a group of 12 children with hopefully more children to begin soon. We possess an even mixture of boys to girls, older children to young ones and Nicaraguans to foreign children so that the team of children works well together, helping each other through their development. After our first long vacation for Christmas, the children slipped back into the rhythm with much joy and creativity. Their voices were rhythmic with familiar songs from the previous year and their hands were busy creating new paintings, clay statues, new baking recipes and our lunch times were filled with laughter and stories. They still sing songs from the Lantern party we celebrated in November, as well as from the Christmas play in December. The sewing group was busy preparing the costumes, for shepards and angels and has now taken up the challenge of making dolls.

read more

Orthodoxy Scientifically Explained

Orthodoxy Scientifically Explained
This from Galsworthy’s Forysyth Saga:

“Jolly looked at his father.

“Do you believe in God, Dad? I’ve never known.”

At so searching a question from one to whom it was impossible to make a light reply, Jolyon stood for a moment feeling his back tried by the digging.

“What do you mean by God?” he said; “there are two irreconcilable ideas of God. There’s the Unknowable Creative Principle—one believes in That. And there’s the Sum of altruism in man—naturally one believes in That.”

“I see. That leaves out Christ, doesn’t it?”

Jolyon stared. Christ, the link between those two ideas! Out of the mouth of babes! Here was orthodoxy scientifically explained at last! The sublime poem of the Christ life was man’s attempt to join those two irreconcilable conceptions of God. And since the Sum of human altruism was as much a part of the Unknowable Creative Principle as anything else in Nature and the Universe, a worse link might have been chosen after
all! Funny how one went through life without seeing it in that sort of way!”

Wow! ‘orthodoxy scientifically explained’ indeed. Is any of the rest of it necessary?

Please Help!

You can help maintain the hygiene of this site and thereby advance the progress towards mastery for others. Find out how here.

Global Snapshot

US$ Index 77.34 <<
US Debt 9.057 tril >>
US Debt Limit 9.815 tril

>

Gold $765 >
Silver $13.50 >
Oil $88.60 >
Mil. Bases 760 -
Mil. Expen. $634 bil >
Population 6.62 bil >
Religion 84% -
What is This?

Translate

 

March 2007
M T W T F S S
« Feb   Apr »
 1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031  
Top of Page