The Weather and Everyone's Health
Thursday, August 23, 2007
Hitchens, Obama and Mother Teresa
- Christopher Hitchens, I think you can also be added to my People Who Can Shut Up Now list.
- Barack Obama, unfortunately because of your Pakistan statement I have to give you a yellow card. Anyone without your record would have gone straight to the List (see above). You know and I know that what you are really about is transcending binaries and getting to the underlying truths of the matters and working WITH people for win-win solutions, and we know that that does not include threatening to send an unauthorized military force into another sovereign nation uninvited just so you can't be accused of being "soft on terror." You're better than that--or at least I thought you were.
Ok, I have to admit that some of the relating-to-God-as-a-lover stuff gets a little weird when it's taken this literally, and the need to punish oneself to destroy the ego seems counterproductive to me (not necessarily the ego-destroying itself--arguably--but the means) but here are some quotes that really get to the point IMHO:
- The book is hardly the work of some antireligious investigative reporter who Dumpster-dived for Teresa's correspondence. Kolodiejchuk, a senior Missionaries of Charity member, is her postulator, responsible for petitioning for her sainthood and collecting the supporting materials.
- The church anticipates spiritually fallow periods. Indeed, the Spanish mystic St. John of the Cross in the 16th century coined the term the "dark night" of the soul to describe a characteristic stage in the growth of some spiritual masters. Teresa found ways, starting in the early 1960s, to live with it and abandoned neither her belief nor her work.[...]However formidable her efforts on Christ's behalf, it is even more astounding to realize that she achieved them when he was not available to her - a bit like a person who believes she can't walk winning the Olympic 100 meters. [This is what Camus, the French (atheist?) existentialist tells us to do in "The Myth of Sisyphus": it may very well be that life has no inherent meaning, but you can still make the decision to push your rock up the hill. In fact it is the only decision you can make, but it is the foundation of human dignity and the ability to live life with open eyes (your other options are to not really live, or to close your eyes)]
- "If I ever become a Saint - I will surely be one of 'darkness.' I will continually be absent from Heaven - to [light] the light of those in darkness on earth," she wrote in 1962. [What is that if not a bodhisattva?]
Monday, August 06, 2007
Interesting Things for today
Temping again this week. That's not the interesting part.
Had lunch near 24th and Potrero, which gave me an opportunity to:
- Remember the name and location of this place, St. Francis Fountain, where I once enjoyed a half-order of Nebulous Potato Thing (that's what it's called on the menu). (This quote from citysearch sums it up: "a retro dream come true, a picture-perfect old-school soda fountain rescued from obscurity by hipster owners." Meaning they have boca burgers AND garden burgers, and oh yes of course meat.)
- Stare at a big blue mural of flood/crying scenes and realize that it's theme must be related to La Llorona. So my class freshman seminar on magic realism in Latin American literature has had a use! Who'dathunkit?
- Stare in wonder and amazement at the Punjab Chinese-American restaurant. No, not Indian-Chinese, which would almost (but not really) make sense.