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Perceiving is not necessarily Seeing!

Editor's DesktopThis item will stay here at the top of this page indefinitely. So if you’ve already read it, drop down one because that’s where new stuff will be.

The subject of this item is the name Francis Sinclaire that appears here. I write it for those of you who have known me here as Stefan and may be wondering. About a year ago, I had a seemingly serious dream instructing me, in effect, to replace Stefan with Francis. Of course, my first thought was about Francis and Clare of Assisi (Francesco Bernardone and Chiara Offreduccio). He is the only Francis I have ever known, and I have admired the two of them, and loved the town of Assisi, since, well, forever. But eventually I came to thinking that it is about something different, something about my spiritual journey. We’ll see. In any case, until a couple of months ago, I ignored the dream. I mean, I thought about it, but did nothing. Finally, recently, I figured it was time to take the dream seriously, so I began changing appearances on The Zoo Fence of Stefan to Francis. Some I have chosen to leave because they clearly relate to me in an earlier time. What does all this mean? Dunno. Why did I wait to do this and not before? Dunno. Was it just a dream, a few meaningless images? Dunno. Am I likely to rethink this before you have had a chance to read it? Probably. But at least now you know as much about it as I do.

Also, at the outset, it seemed to me that Francis needs a last name. I have decided on Sinclaire (Saint Claire) — Francis Sinclaire. Why am I spelling Clare there as Claire? Dunno.

November 12, 2023, May 29, 2024
Please read the next item.

Editor's DesktopJune 11, 2024: Oops. Years ago, while Anna and I were living in Honolulu, I remember a stand-up comedian telling a funny bit about watching a movie on a commercial airplane when the dialog is abruptly interrupted by “This is the captain speaking. Aloha! Immediately below us is Waikiki Beach,” after which the movie’s dialog resumes; but the interrupted section is lost, to which one of the passengers shouts out “Back this plane up!” (It was funny in the hearing.) What has that got to do with anything? Just that it seems Francis has ‘decided’ to ignore all of the above, and continue life as Stefan. In effect, this plane has backed up. Once again, I thank God for having created the eraser. Re Francis, please see also here. And here.

Editor's DesktopA personal memory. My family moved from the US to Italy in June 1946 because my father was sent by the US Government to Rome as an officer of the newly created United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration (UNRRA) whose purpose was to return Italian war refugees to their homes and otherwise assist in the democratization of fascist Italy after the Allied victory. We traveled from New York to Naples aboard USNS Marine Carp. On our arrival, my mother realized there was no school in Rome for me and my two siblings, so she along with two other mothers in similar circumstances founded Overseas School of Rome which even now continues to flourish. Remembering which brings me to a favorite true story from 1946. It was told to me at the time by my mother who was present at its initial telling. Involved is a village in the Italian Apennines whose name I do not remember, so here I will call it “Montevillagio.” A large group in Rome at an American Embassy cocktail party had gathered around a US Army bomber pilot who was talking about his experiences over German positions. He said that one day he and his fellows began receiving on their radios a woman’s voice pleading in English, “Do not bomb Montevillagio. We have gathered children here. Please do not bomb Montevillagio.” Over and over again. The pilot’s concern was obvious: Is it a legitimate voice or is it the voice of the enemy? If it’s the latter, Montevillagio must be important to the Germans, so bomb it. But if it is the former, well … . The pilot said that after extended consideration, the decision was made to believe the voice, and not bomb the village. At that point at that cocktail party, a woman who was among the group listening to the pilot’s story, spoke up. “That was my voice,” she said.

Here is another memory from that time. Among the first teachers at the school was Madeleine Fabris Brown. She had been engaged to an RAF fighter pilot who lost his life in the Battle of Britain, so, at war’s end, she moved away from England to Italy, to the ultimate advantage of everyone who came to know her. She spent two summers with us, at Santa Marinella and Sorrento. One day in Sorrento my sister and brother and I were walking with her when we encountered a tough looking farmer beating his donkey hauling a wagon full of stuff. Miss Brown grabbed the man’s stick, broke it over her knee, and scolded him. Another day in Rome, on a student outing along Via Appia Antica (the ancient Appian Way), we came upon a crew putting up signs and other stuff for filming of the movie Quo Vadis. Miss Brown spotted an error in one of the signs’ Latin, and informed the workmen. She made them promise to correct it. They did so; promise, that is.

Editor's DesktopAs regular visitors will have noticed, I recently made some changes (updates) to the home page (index.html) of the full version of TZF (that is, not the mobile verson). The initiative for this effort were the two cartoons. They are large files relatively speaking, and so for years I have been reluctant to put one, much less two, on the home page. On the cartoons’ own home page (theohome.html) I specifically mention that (‘These cartoons are large graphic files’) so visitors are alerted on arrival. File size was a genuine issue years ago when servers and devices were less able to manage them. Now I suppose you could park a fully loaded truck on a website page, and still have room and speed to spare. Although perhaps not so much in some nations? Anyway, all of that said, unfortunately yesterday I mistakenly deleted that home page, and have been unable to retrieve it. Today I installed a new home page. I really liked the lost version (and so did some of you, for which comments I thank you). I am doing my best to duplicate it.

August 26 and September 5, 2024

Editor's DesktopAs some have mentioned, content in the mobile version of TZF — https://www.zoofence.com/mobile — continues to lag behind the regular (desktop, laptop) version. The common remark is How come? And my continuing response is, I’m old. There is, of course, some stuff I cannot put there, like the cartoons — https://www.zoofence.com/theohome.html — but keeping the rest current is simply a matter of aging attention. I regret that, but there is no point in my apologizing. I mean, exhibiting symptoms of age is not a matter of choice. They come, and they stay, and they impact. All who are at this stage know that, and all the rest will find out. That said, I thank you for your interest. I will continue doing the best I have in me.

December 11, 2023

Editor's DesktopPosting the item about Jesus being married generated a few questions from viewers. Here is how I see it: If Jesus was a rabbi, as suggested by many experts, then he was probably married (again, according to many experts), and most likely to Mary of Magdala (according to some experts). If that is the (likely) case, then why do Christians insist otherwise? My guess: If Jesus allowed (encouraged?) women to play an active role in his organization (as Mary Magdalene seems to have done), it would be difficult (blasphemy?) for the church not to follow his lead. So, on little to no evidence, they argue he didn’t do that, so why should they do it? And from there arises their insistence that priests be male and single. I do not think it is misogyny, as some insist, so much as it is lack of self-confidence. My experience has been that women make excellent teachers (no, of course not all women), and I suppose that threatens some males, especially those who enjoy being in authority. Also, I suspect that if priests were allowed (not to say required) to be married, presumably fewer of them would be inclined toward molesting young boys and girls. Surely that would be a good thing. Another personal thought: Increasingly, my experience as a seeker has been that gender becomes irrelevant and so matters not. I have never come across, nor can I imagine, a Teacher who sees it otherwise, and that includes Jesus (Issa), I am (pretty much) certain.

November 3, 2023

Editor's DesktopThe past few days, I have been working on the jname.html and jandj.html TZF pages (desktop and mobile), so I apologize to anyone who has experienced difficulty opening them. On the jandj pages, I added a note about Pope Gregory I’s decision that Mary Magdalene was a prostitute. Here that is. See also here. I presume the Pope considered the woman at Luke 7:37ff to be Mary Magdalene. Yes, that woman is described as a sinner but not as a prostitute. After all, let’s face it, most of us are sinners, maybe even the pontiff, but that does not make all of us prostitutes. I guess my point is, even if the Magdalene was a prostitute, Jesus did not consider it worthy of mention; why did Gregory? I hope his answer would be that his intention was to assure women and men who are driven to prostitute themselves that they too are loved by the Teacher every bit as freely and generously and thoroughly as everyone else. Let’s be clear, prostitutes are people, and as people, they are no more likely to be sinners than politicians, priests, physicists, plumbers, professors, popes, police officers, pilots, or practitioners of any other profession. My favorite picture of Mary Magdalene is the one painted in words by Kahlil Gibran here. Please consider this.

August 30, 2023

Editor's DesktopThe past few days, I have been making some changes to the site’s home page, mostly shifting stuff around, removing existing bits, adding new ones. Specifically, I have replaced the Silence your thoughts piece that has been on the site’s home page for many years with this one. I mention that here because some visitors have expressed affection for the original (one of you told me you placed it on your home page), affection which I share. I have not yet decided where to put it, but it will be there somewhere soon.

Here it is.

July 30, 2023, September 8, 2024

Editor's DesktopAt the request of a long time friend of The Zoo Fence, I have reinstalled an original second page of Editor’s Desktop “just for curiousity’s sake.” It dates back to 1998. I am not adding it to the “Go directly to” list on TZF’s index page, but I will leave this entry at the top of this page indefinitely, so anyone who comes here will learn of it. Scanning it quickly, I notice that, over the years, I have moved bits of it here and there on TZF. Also, some of the links on it are to TZF pages that no longer exist, and so generate the Oops! page. Just ignore those. Anyway, here it is.

August 21, 2022

Editor's DesktopAs some regular visitors to TZF have observed, I am making increasingly fewer “Additions, Deletions, and Alterations” to The Zoo Fence. (In fact, I have removed that feature from TZF altogether.) One of the reasons for this, of course, is age. I am eighty-plus, and not getting any younger. I have been working on The Zoo Fence almost daily, certainly weekly, since 1996, the year of the first issue. In those days, TZF was published in hard copy, “printed” (actually, copied on a Xerox or Xerox-like copier) at a shop in Hancock, Maine. That was a couple of decades ago. Since then, Nancy and I have said pretty much all we know how to say, by which I mean, as all seekers will undoubtedly understand, there have been and there continue to be, ideas, concepts, experiences, we are unable to put into words. All the rest is here.

One of the most affected features is “Here’s A Thought” which was first suggested by a regular visitor in the early days of TZF’s presence on the web … probably while it was on a server at America OnLine or GeoCities. As I recall, he suggested we include a feature offering inspired or, at least, inspiring, quotations; he thought it should be changed daily. I liked the idea, but settled on changing it weekly … and it has been. But no more. There was a lot of good stuff there over the years, and so I am compiling as many of the quotations as I have records of, and putting them together on the website as a simple list. The first “edition” of that effort is posted as hat_archive.html. I will add to the list from time to time until I have included there as much as I can recover.

January 14, 2020 & May 11, 2021

Editor's DesktopI have restored TZF's front page to its original design. By doing so, I do not mean to suggest that the world – the political world – has returned to normal; far from it. But it seems, or at least I am hopeful, that the “division of powers” designed into the US Constitution by our brilliant Founding Fathers are serving their purpose in keeping us and the Republic safe from the worst instincts of those who seem intent on proving themselves to be the worst of us notwithstanding the opportunity they have to prove themselves better than that.

May 6, 2017

Editor's Desktop To those of you who have wondered about TZF’s revised index page (home page) in the days since the inauguration of Donald John Trump to the Presidency of the United States, I offer this explanation.

Over the years, Nancy and I have met with a few true Gurus (and read many more), and almost without exception, they insist on “No politics!” Let’s face it, politics is a divisive, perhaps the most divisive, subject, and so clearly it is to be avoided by spiritual seekers who are trying to rid themselves of the separative perspective “I am me, and not you” and its countless entangling implications which define and inform what we take to be our selves. So, from the outset of TZF, the rule has been “No politics!”

So why now the revised index page that clearly is political in content and intent? To that question the Teacher would respond “Because, Stefan, you're an idiot; well meaning, perhaps, but nonetheless an idiot,” and I could not deny it. My (measly) excuse is “I’m human.” For many in the United States, including me, and for many in the world (please click here), the election of Donald Trump is disturbing at least, terrifying at worst. And so I succumbed to my (worst) instincts, and decided to have TZF take some minimal note of it. But, perhaps in hope of fooling the Teacher (yeah, right!), I have limited display of the new page to a few seconds.

Why the phrase “We The People”? At the Daily Beast’s website, I read an article calling for a name for the movement that Trump’s election has generated. The article suggests several but acknowledges that none has the necessary oomph. After reading the article, it occurred to me that a good name would be “We The People!” It is simple, inclusive, to the point, quintessentially American, and, for me at least, it’s got oomph.

February 4, 2017

Editor's Desktop This month — in the wake of November’s election — I have revisited the blog I started in 2004. Like a lot of other Americans (and others!), I am hoping that this man will, once the dust has settled, succumb to the better angels of his nature. But, just in case, heeding the lesson of Niemöller’s experience, I will use the blog to speak from time to time, if only to get stuff off my chest. (All the while, of course, my own better angels are reminding me of the teachiing of Nisargadatta, among others: Find out who you are in Truth, and then see if this issue signifies.)

The blog’s URL is http://theophyle.blogspot.com.

The server and format are provided by Google. I am not as fond of the design and function of the feature now as I was twelve (!) years ago when I signed up for it, but for now it is fine.

December 15, 2016

Editor's Desktop A long time ago, we had a DVD video about J. Krishnamurti, his life and his teachings. At one point in the film, the narrator relates the story of a visit to K, as he was known, by an Indian holy man or sadhu. Following a discussion between the two, the fellow departed, apparently satisfied. But, not long after, the man returned, in agitation and distress, his earlier composure gone. He expressed his discomfort at length and in detail.

When he was done, K responded gently, softly, simply, “See what your mind is doing to you.”

The man’s composure returned, his agitation and distress gone.

He thanked K, saying he would not need to bother him again: what he had just heard was enough, and would serve him thenceforth.

Nancy and I have never forgotten that story. Over the years, we have repeated K’s instruction to ourselves, to one another, and to others.

See what your mind is doing to you. It’s one of the half dozen or so most powerful expressions of lively and living spiritual teaching I have come across.

November 27, 2016

Editor's Desktop After the Brexit vote in the United Kingdom,Safety Pin there appeared safety pins on shirts and blouses and elsewhere indicating support for and solidarity with those who felt marginalized and threatened by the vote, specifically, but not only, various immigrant groups. I do not know where the safety pin image evolved in this context, but I suppose it is intended to indicate to any who see it, “You are safe here!”.

Over the last couple of days, the safety pin image has been appearing in the United States, again on clothing but also throughout social media, as an indication to all those who feel threatened by the election of Donald Trump — his narcissistic personality, his disrespect for diversity, his feral regard towards women, and so much more. Specifically, I suppose those most fearful are African Americans, Hispanics, Muslims, LGBT, and, again, women, but also probably recent immigrants generally. We should all include ourselves among those numbers, for a threat to any one of them is a threat to every one of us. Indeed, on various reliable newspapers' websites, I have seen reports of threats being made by Trump supporters against members of those groups and others, threats made in the name of Donald Trump.

For whatever it may be worth, I have written a couple of people who I expect might have access to the Trump world, asking them to urge Donald Trump himself to speak out forcefully against those kinds of activities and to denounce their perpetrators. Hopefully, others are doing the same. (Update November 24: As far as I know, Donald Trump has not yet spoken out with force and conviction about the violence against diversity which he encouraged as a candidate and which continues in his name here and there across the nation, particularly in schools against children. When asked about this by Lesley Stahl during an interview on the CBS television program 60 Minutes, Donald Trump did take a few seconds to turn to the camera, and mutter “Stop it”.)

All safe here!

I am grateful to Shutterstock for the royalty free images of safety pins that I have posted here and on a few other pages of TZF.

November 12, 2016

Update: As I consider, in the context of the preceding paragraphs, the implications of America celebrating its Thanksgiving Day just a few days after the election, I am unavoidably reminded of Martin Niemöller’s immortal lines repeated here.

November 24, 2016

Editor's DesktopIn a vivid dream one night three weeks ago, I received a postcard urging me to develop a mobile version of The Zoo Fence website for visitors using smartphones and other mobile devices instead of desktop or laptop computers, which is, of course, what the website has been designed for. The dream was sufficiently “real” to convince me to act, and so, over the last three weeks, I have translated a chunk of the website’s material for use by mobile devices. To date, there are selections from Consider This!, Letters, The Gazebo, A Sacred Riddle, Stories, and Definitions, with more to come. To be sure, it is, and likely will remain, an abbreviated version of The Zoo Fence, for I doubt that the entire TZF website will ever be, ever could be (at least by me), made mobile-accessible.

I have tested the readied pages on an Android smartphone and on an iPod, and they all open properly, although the two operating systems generate slightly different displays. The mobile-intended pages can also, of course, be opened by a laptop or desktop computer, but on those devices, the pages will not look “right”.

For those who are interested, the URL of the home page of the mobile version of The Zoo Fence is https://www.zoofence.com/mobile or https://www.zoofence.com/mobile
June 21, 2015

Editor's DesktopWe have received a promotional e-mail message from the publisher of Conversations with God by Neale Donald Walsch, announcing the author’s new title, God’s Message to the World: You’ve Got Me All Wrong.

In the publisher’s words, this “could be one of the most important books ever published”.

Sample chapters are available free-to-read on the internet at www.godsmessagetotheworld.info/.
November 10, 2014

Editor's DesktopOur friend, Steven Callahan, has written us that his book “Capsized” is now in a second printing. In Steve’s words, “‘Capsized’ chronicles four men’s 119-day drift aboard a flipped, half-flooded boat, spending most of their time crammed into the space of a double bed with 20” of headroom. To me, the book is many things – a story of redemption and discovery of what is important in life, the discovery of love; a tale of true friendship; and a yarn with a surprising amount of humor. It chronicles the longest survival voyage in cold waters of which I am aware. It demonstrates the ultimate safety of multihulled boats. At base, it focuses on how even very different people must learn to rely upon and support one another to survive and create a functional society, despite their weaknesses. It reveals how everyone possesses strengths and desirable qualities, but also how even strengths can become liabilities at times while at the same time, people’s weaknesses can emerge as strengths or things we actually need.”

Steven is perhaps most known to the public for his best-selling book Adrift, which chronicles his own seventy-six day ordeal at sea after losing his boat in a storm. Since then, he has been an active writer, speaker, designer, and adviser on nautical matters. Most recently, Steven worked with noted director Ang Lee in the production of the Oscar-winning film, Life of Pi.

We are delighted by this good news about the book “Capsized”. In our view, it is an excellent story, highly readable, and thoroughly suited for film. We urge those who are capable of making it happen, to do so. Although Nancy and I rarely make it to movie theaters, we enjoy watching movies on DVD, and we look forward to having “Capsized” on our television screen soon! In the meantime, we wish Steven and his wife, TZF’s long-time friend Kathy Massimini (co-author of “Talking with Children about Loss”), continued success and joy in this venture and in all their work, inner and outer.

For more about Steven Callahan, personally and professionally, please visit his website “Steven Callahan and Associates” at http://www.stevencallahan.net
November 16, 2013

Editor's DesktopToday, I locked TZF’s Open Forum. As we have aged, it seems to me the time has come to make a few changes. Shutting down Open Forum is one of those. However, there is a lot of good stuff there, some of which may be of interest to future TZF visitors. So, rather than remove the forum, I have decided simply to lock it down; that is, convert it to “read only” mode.
June 27, 2010

Editor's Desktop In the past few weeks, two long-time, good friends of The Zoo Fence have died. One is the writer of the article Fully Involved, and the other is author of Christ: Yes, Religion: No, as well as a frequent contributor to TZF’s Open Forum where he was known by the username W4TVQ, and to TZF’s Open Space — not to mention his contributions at other spiritual and theological forums across the internet.

In the words of another equally good friend of The Zoo Fence, their time has come, ours is coming.

TZF, and we personally, will miss both of these good friends. We wish them wisdom, strength, endurance, enthusiasm, and love, endless love, as they continue their onward journeys.
June 17, 2010

Editor's Desktop The shift of The Zoo Fence from one server to another at our webhost OLM.net seems to be complete.

The shift was necessary because the group that provides the software for TZF’s Open Forum (phpBB.com) announced that future updates of their software would require a version of PHP which was not available on the server where TZF had been. That server had a PlusMail platform, which I had gotten quite used to over the years. Anyway, that is why we had to move to a different server. The new server has a cPanel platform, which I am now learning to use. So far, I like it.

While transferring Open Forum’s files between the two servers, I encountered a wrinkle generated by the fact that the servers had different versions of MySQL, the software which manages the board’s database. It got a little complicated (by which I mean, over my head), but eventually, with the help of a couple of internet support forums, I deciphered the problem, found a solution, and it worked! However, in that process, some Open Forum passwords were jumbled. So, if you find you are unable to log into Open Forum, write me, and I will fix it.

Thank you for your patience
June 2, 2010

Editor's Desktop During the next ten days or so, I will be moving all the files that comprise The Zoo Fence website from one server to another at our host OLM.net. To some extent, this activity will be in the background, invisible to the website’s visitors. But at some point, there will be a period during which TZF, including Open Forum, will be inaccessible. Browsers directed to TZF will yield an error message like “website not found”. It will be so only for a short time. I thank you all for your understanding and patience.
May 12, 2010

Editor's Desktop I am done. I have come to the end of The Zoo Fence. Since January 1996, when The Zoo Fence was first published in its original hard-copy form, I — and Nancy too (she is sometimes known on TZF as Anna) — have put into this website in one form or another everything I know about the spiritual process. Whatever I know, whatever I have to share, I have freely shared here.

I know that The Zoo Fence has been useful to some, for they have told me so. I am grateful for that. In the hope that it will continue to be of use to some others, The Zoo Fence will remain in place more or less indefinitely.

I will continue to post new items to Here’s A Thought and probably the Gazebo, and there are Theophyle cartoons in my head which I want to draw and eventually post. In addition, there are a couple of items in train which I will post in the next days or weeks. And there may be additional contributions from others to Open Space, which I will post. But that is likely to be the extent of it.

TZF’s Open Forum will remain in place, and I will participate there irregularly from time to time as I am doing now. However, The Sand Box feature will no longer enjoy the protected status it has had. That is, The Sand Box will be as open to view as is everything else on Open Forum, indeed as is everything else on The Zoo Fence. Therefore, any Open Forum members who have contributed material to The Sand Box which they would prefer not be publicly viewable, should log in and delete those entries.
December 29, 2009

Editor's Desktop As frequent visitors to The Zoo Fence are aware, the page Selections, Sources & References provides source information for the many selections and quotations and other stuff that appear scattered here and there throughout the website. Originally, I had included on that page, also known as que.html, source information for prayers that appear in The Quiet Room, but because the source page has now grown so large (as the website itself has grown), I have moved the source information for The Quiet Room material to a separate source page, called quepray.html. This event will be of interest only to those who, like me, have an interest in html-stuff.
December 6, 2009

Editor's Desktop This week's selection at TZF’s Here’s A Thought is from Bart Ehrman’s Lost Christianities, which I have been reading along with his Misquoting Jesus (Issa); both books are about the New Testament and particularly the Gospels. Their focus is not theology as such, but the evolution of early Christian and pre-Christian sects, the conflicts and controversies among and between them, and how that influenced the development of New Testament canon: who wrote the books, how many books were there to start with, why were some books included and others rejected, and so on, as well as detailed consideration of the additions, deletions, alterations, and errors in the texts, some significant, some minor, some intentional, some accidental.

These are scholarly books in the sense that Ehrman is a scholar, and his work is well researched with lots of end notes. But they are an easy read, and offer a fascinating look into the evolution of Christian scripture. I enthusiastically recommend them to all seekers.

As expected, other books have been written attacking Ehrman’s work and in “defense” of the New Testament. I have not read them, but I have read reviews of them, from which I gather that they are essentially apologetic (in the theological sense of the word, meaning that instead of addressing Ehrman’s points, they pretty much simply reassure the faithful that there is nothing to worry about).

For my part, I do not doubt for a moment that the canon we have today has gone through numerous manipulations along its way to us. Even among current spiritual groups whose teachers or gurus are still alive, Anna and I have seen manipulation of the leader’s and the group’s history, in one case even rewriting a living teacher’s autobiography to remove mention of events in his life which now seem inappropriate to a man of his presumed stature.

For me, none of Ehrman’s conclusions detracts from the power of the Gospels. On the contrary, Ehrman’s books have made the Gospels more, not less, meaningful. In my mind now, they fit far more comfortably and sensibly with the scriptures of the world’s other great spiritual traditions.

I had hoped to post at TZF’s Ampers&nd a lengthy excerpt from Ehrman’s “Lost Christianities”. Unfortunately, the publisher denied me copyright permission to do so.
July 5, 2009

Editor's Desktop Today is Memorial Day in the United States. It is a day intended to celebrate those who are serving and who have served in the nation’s armed forces, particularly those who have lost their lives in that service. This year I am moved to include TZF in that celebration by changing the website’s home page to the Brother Theophyle cartoon on war. It will be so for only today. Those of you who use the regular index.html page as your portal to TZF need make no changes. Tomorrow we will be back to normal.
May 25, 2009

Editor's Desktop This morning, I added to TZF’s My Space feature a link to LibForAll Foundation. I like the sounds of it a lot, and I recommend a visit. I learned of the website by reading Nicholas Kristof’s column in the New York Times about a recent conference at Notre Dame University described as “an international conference … on the latest scholarship about the Qur’an”. It is a good column, and an interesting conference.
April 23, 2009

Editor's Desktop I am delighted to report that we have received and granted a request from a Vietnamese student at a university in Korea for copyright permission to translate The Cranberry Tales into Vietnamese for posting on his blog. From his messages to us, he seems an enthusiastic fellow who is up to the considerable challenge he has undertaken for himself. I will report his progress here as we learn of it, and again when the task is completed. In the meantime, we wish him well in his effort to teach the Vietnamese language to Pilikia, Cantachiaro, Tancredi, and their friends!
March 22, 2009

Editor's DesktopThis morning, I restored TZF’s regular home page. Barack Obama is now in office, doing his thing, hopefully restoring some balance to this country (and the world), and TZF can return to normal, whatever precisely that is. We continue to wish him well. The special home page I posted last month (about which, see the item immediately below this) is still at the site, but the only link to it is this one.
February 1 , 2009

Editor's DesktopFrom the beginning, I have purposely kept politics out of The Zoo Fence. The Google blog is the closest I have come to commenting publicly about politics, and even there I have written little and rarely. I ran a special home page after the events of September 11, 2001, because they seemed to me to call for notice. That page remained in place for about a month. Likewise, the inauguration of Barack Obama as President of the United States is so immense an event from almost every imaginable angle and perspective that it demands attention. Accordingly, today I posted a special home page. It will remain in place for a while, by which I mean I don’t know just now how long I will leave it up. Once opened, the page displays for a few seconds, and then jumps to TZF’s familiar home page (which is temporarily renamed indexa.html).This automatic jump works in most browsers, but not all; so I’ve included a clickable link, too.

I just wanted to explain what and why I’m up to — particularly for our long-time, frequent visitors.
January 18, 2009

Editor's DesktopAs some of you will have noticed, The Zoo Fence website (zoofence.com and zoofence.com), including TZF’s Open Forum (and our email), was down and inaccessible much of yesterday and today. Our domain host, OLM, experienced technical problems which took longer than expected to resolve. I regret the inconvenience, and thank you for your patience. Unfortunately, computers, like lots of other stuff, do these kinds of things from time to time.

In the process of their work, the OLM technicians needed to restore TZF to their server using their backup files, which were made a couple of days ago. As it happens, during that interim, I had uploaded some new or revised files which were not reflected in OLM’s backup package. Fortunately, I keep copies of all TZF files, and so today I have been able to replace those few files (notably the new Theophyle cartoon) which OLM inadvertently lost.

Now, the affirmation “I keep copies of all TZF files” in the preceding paragraph does not include Open Forum material. What that means is that if any new Open Forum members signed on, or if any existing members worked on their profile (like, changed their password), or if anyone made any new posts in the last day or so, that information may have been lost, and, if so, will need to be redone.

I guess this event is just one more example of why God created the eraser!

Other than this cyber wrinkle, we are looking forward to, and we expect, an exciting and uplifting new year ahead, and we wish the very same for all our friends and visitors.
January 4, 2009

Editor's DesktopThere are some extraordinary photographs of the recent volcanic eruption in Chile at http:// megagalerias.terra.cl/galerias/index.cfm?id_galeria=30734! The first ten or so, of the accompanying electrical storm, are breathtaking.
May 8, 2008

Editor's DesktopAs frequent TZFers know, for some years TZF’s bookstore pages have been “in association with Amazon.com”, meaning that we are able to sell books, videos, and other stuff through Amazon.com directly on The Zoo Fence, and Amazon pays us a small percentage for each sale so transacted … for which we are grateful, particularly to those TZFers who regularly make the extra effort to purchase from Amazon through TZF! Now, Amazon has initiated a new feature, called “aStore” (presumably for “Amazon Store”, a play on eStore?), which seems to me to be essentially the same service writ large. All the same, I have installed the page, and we’ll see how it plays. To jump directly to this new feautre, please click here.
April 30, 2008

Editor's DesktopThe folks at phpBB.com who provide the software that drives TZF’s Open Forum have issued an update to it which I installed yesterday and this morning. Happily, it went without incident. The instructions that accompany their update and upgrade packages are normally clear and easy to follow. However, for me at least, the process is a little scary because the scripting language of the software is PHP, about which I am not as fluent as I am in straight HTML, for example. It can get particulalry iffy where I need to insert or reinsert my own tweaks to their scripts, which their updates sometimes undo, like the TZF logo (the kestrel & “Open Forum”) on each page. Like the rest of life, it is a learning process! As the kids say, we should be good to go now, but please let me know if you encounter any unexpected difficulties or obstacles at Open Forum.Thanks.
April 11, 2008

Editor's DesktopAt the author’s request, I have re-posted Fully Involved at TZF’s Integral Health after having removed it about a year ago, also at her request. The author is a long-time friend of The Zoo Fence. The piece is the story of her son’s leukemia, and how she and her husband dealt with the emotional, physical, and insitutional rigors associated with the disease. Thus, it is a mother’s story, and compelling as such, but it is all the more so because she happens to be a Registered Nurse (RN), and therefore brings to the telling all the knowledge and experience which that profession offers.
March 1, 2008

Editor's DesktopThis morning, I posted a new submission to TZF’s Open Space. It is an article entitled The Awakening, and is apparently also the first chapter of a book by the author. I do not know any more about the author or the experience reported in the article than appears on that page. However, I can say that it is a beautiful story nicely told. I am glad to have it on TZF.
February 22, 2008

Editor's DesktopThe folks at phpBB.com have issued a new version of the software that drives TZF’s Open Forum. I am in the process of installing it now. I expect that it will be up and ready to go tomorrow or the next day. I will post updates here. Thanks for your patience.
December 18, 2007

Update December 19 morning: The new software is installed and, on first glance, it seems to be working fine. Accordingly, I expect to re-open the forum Thursday (tomorrow) or Friday.

Update December 19 evening: The new version of phpBB software appears to be performing correctly. It looks different, and it has some new features, but it seems okay, so I am opening it. All the usernames and threads appear to have transferred successfully. However, if you have any trouble logging in, or anything that does not seem to work properly, please let me know.

Also, please note that the internet address (URL) has changed. It is now https://www.zoofence.com/openforum

Editor's DesktopToday I have added a link at TZF’s home page to a blog I started some time ago. Originally, I chose not to link it to The Zoo Fence because the focus of TZF from the beginning has intentionally been “spiritual” – that is, matters related to the spiritual quest, path, and growth process – and the blog, except for a couple of items – is not about that; it is more about “the world”. But all the while, I have been fully aware that one cannot successfully separate the two, as indeed is the underlying premise of what we call The Simple Way. So, today I have overruled my earlier decision, and linked the two together in fact as they always have been in substance.
November 24, 2006

Editor's DesktopAs regular visitors to TZF have observed, Open Forum has been inaccessible for several months. The reason, as a few have guessed, has been the nearly epidemic increase in spammers who “visit” the forum with no intention other than to leave behind links to advertising sites and various other unpleasant websites, or simply to use up server space for no reason other than to complicate the lives of others. It seems pretty clear that TZF generally nor Open Forum itself is being specifically targeted. Rather, these rascals write computer programs which then search the internet for any forums using phpBB software (as we do), and then there leave behind their footprints … or worse. Mostly, it is just a nuisance, but it got to be a sufficiently serious nuisance (a couple of days, there were hundreds of such “visits”), that I decided to turn off the forum for a while. Eventually, I will turn it back on, but I have not yet decided just when.
September 21, 2006

Editor's DesktopThe Zoo Fence, including Open Forum, will probably be inaccessible this coming Friday, September 5, from about midnight to about four in the morning on Saturday, September 6, while OLM, our domain service provider, performs maintenance on their equipment. We apologize to TZF visitors who may be inconvenienced by this interruption.
August 29, 2005

Editor's DesktopA few days ago, we received a message from an artist named Mindy Sommers introducing us to her work. This morning, I posted one of her pieces, titled “Forgiveness” – which is part of a deck of tarot-like cards she created – to TZF’s page “Forgive You, Forgive Me” at https://www.zoofence.com/consdr16.html. To see the work, scroll past the article, toward the bottom of the page. Once you have enjoyed that piece, I urge you to visit the artist’s website, where you will find one of the most beautiful assortment of colors I have ever seen on the internet. My compliments to the artist who mixed them, but equally to whoever created the graphics from her artwork and designed the website itself.
July 27, 2005
The website originally sent to us by this artist seems no longer to exist. Here is another featuring her and her work that I found today.
May 29, 2014

Editor's DesktopFor years, I posted on TZF’s Technical Stuff page reports of virus and other alerts that we received from Symantec or McAfee, or that I came across elsewhere. I stopped doing that because there are just too many of them, and most people seem now to have anti-virus software installed, and, perhaps most importantly, Symantec offers a free alert service that updates itself automatically, which I have installed on the Technical Stuff page. To see it, please click here. I will continue to use that page to alert or inform TZFers of other tech stuff that may be of special interest.
June 13, 2005

Editor's Desktop On Monday, May 30, from about 12:00 AM to about 5:00 AM Central Daylight Time which is 5:00 AM to 10:00 AM Coordinated Universal Time (also called Universal Coordinated Time, Universal Time, and Greenwhich Mean Time), all of the features on The Zoo Fence website, including Open Forum, will be inaccessible while our hosting service performs maintenance on their servers and related equipment. We regret this inconvenience, and thank you for your understanding and patience.
May 28, 2005

Editor's Desktop Today, I instituted a new feature on The Zoo Fence called “Miscellanea” to which I moved three items of mine that had been at TZF’s Open Space. They never really belonged there, because Open Space is specifically intended for the work or contributions of TZF’s visitors. The problem was, I didn’t know where else to put them, so that’s where they ended up. Now they have a place. Miscellanea, as the name is intended to suggest, is where I’ll put anything that doesn’t seem to fit exactly anywhere else on TZF.
December 5, 2004

Editor's Desktop Today, we altered TZF’s sub-title from “A Commentary on The Spiritual Life” to “A Commentary on Life & Living”. The former still appears on some of the site’s graphics, and will do so until I get around to effecting all the changes; but at TZF’s two home pages (index and index3), where visitors are first introduced to us, the new sub-title is in place. We took this action because the distinction “spiritual” in the expression “a spiritual life” no longer seems to us to be appropriate. That is, the phrase “a spiritual life” suggests that there is such a thing as a life that is not spiritual, a non-spiritual life, and increasingly that does not make sense. As we explain at The Simple Way, if God is Infinite, then the entirety is Godly … or spiritual. And if that’s the case, then “a spiritual life” is a redundancy. At the same time, I moved the lines “Silence your thoughts …” from index.html to consdr13.html, where is The Simple Way (scroll down the page, just below the painting of the lion). For now, it seems more appropriate there.
November 27, 2004
Update, six months or so later: I have undone that change. I am unable to explain precisely why, except that the earlier way seems to me to ring better. Maybe it has something to do with feng shui!

Editor's DesktopI have revised TZF’s  Definitions pages. The new set of pages is arranged alphabetically, so that the first page contains words that begin with the letters A, B, or C, the second page has words that begin with the letters D, E, or F, and so on. The definitions index page remains the same, except instead of a single (very long) column of words, there are now two (fairly long) columns. Those of you who are familiar with HTML will understand that this process required editing a LOT of hyperlinks across the entire website. I am (reasonably) confident I got them all, and that wherever a word on the site is hyperlinked to its definition on the definitions pages, the link works.
July 18, 2004

Editor's DesktopLately, we have been receiving so much spam, sometimes as many as fifty spam messages a day, that I have reluctantly decided to take some action that may stem the tide. It is my understanding that spammers send robots across the internet harvesting anything they find that has the symbol @ in it, which they take to be an email address and then send spam messages to it. The obvious solution is to remove our email address from the site. However, I do not want to do that because many visitors seem to enjoy writing us, and we certainly enjoy hearing from you. Therefore, today I am trying an alternative, which I hope will help. Wherever it appears on this site, I have altered our email address to a format which I hope the robots will not be able to use, as in the entry immediately above this one. I know that this change will inconvenience (and undoubtedly confuse) some TZF visitors, and I apologize for that; but I hope you will understand the need for it.
May 18, 2004

Editor's DesktopA visitor to TZF has just published a new book about spirituality and celibacy (about which please see here) in which she has reproduced our own article, Do We Have To Give Up Sex?. Curiously (or perhaps not), that article has drawn as much attention as anything else on TZF (among the other most remarked upon items are The Quiet Room, Anna’s Page, the article about forgiveness, Bo Lozoff’s piece at Ampers&nd, and our definitions pages, where particularly namaste, ahimsa, religion, and seeker). Frequent visitors may remember that a little over a year ago, the TAT Forum, which is dedicated to the teaching of Richard Rose, reproduced the same article on their site, at http://www.tatfoundation.org/ forum2003-01.htm (towards the bottom of that page).
April 20, 2004

Editor's DesktopThis morning, I inadvertently deleted an incoming email message sent to our link exchange address suggesting a link exchange. The message started out by referring to TZF as a “content rich site” (for which observation we are very grateful!). I apologize to whoever sent that message, and if you are reading this item, please resend the message. This is the second or third time that we know of when we have inadvertently deleted “real” messages. Clearly, the spam/scam/virus/worm epidemic has made us counterproductively cautious. We are going to have to do some re-thinking.
September 9, 2003
Today, we were able to recover the deleted message. So, problem solved.
September 20, 2003

Editor's DesktopToday, at index.html I replaced “The very One” with “Your very Self”. For those interested, the history here is: When those seven lines first came to me, many years ago, the sixth line was “Your very Self”. Then, when we added the septet to the front door of The Zoo Fence, the general consensus here was that we should replace that line with “The very One” which seemed to us more likely to be compatible with the many paths and various traditions TZF visitors travel. Now, we are moved to restore the original, and so I have done so. I hope that’s okay with everyone here!
May 10, 2003

Editor's DesktopDavid Wertman has written us about a new CD of spiritually uplifting music that he has published. It is called “May The Spirit Be With You”. On his site at http://www.songsofpeace.homestead.com , there is a link to several song clips which we enjoyed, and I am sure others will too.
March 15, 2003

Editor's DesktopAnna’s Page has been restored. I apologize for any inconvenience its absence may have caused, and I thank you for your patience.
March 10, 2003

Editor's DesktopI am working on Anna’s Page, and so for the next few days her stuff will not be accessible. I apologize for the inconvenience.
February 12, 2003

Editor's DesktopRecently, we received a message from a TZF visitor who has set up a site to collect stories and reports of miracles and other nice news. It’s a happy venture, and we wish it well. The URL is http://www.tobeablessing.com.
January 9, 2003

Editor's DesktopI have decided to close down TZF’s Open Forum. There are numerous serious, mature “spiritual” forums on the internet, more nearly every day, including many that are dedicated to some of the specific topics that have been addressed on Open Forum. Thus, it seems to me that our forum does not fill a real need. To help bridge whatever gap this decision may create for other TZFers, I have added a “Groups & Forums” category to TZF’s Links page where I will list some that come to our attention. The Zoo Fence itself will remain unchanged. I thank all of you who have participated at Open Forum, and, as always, wish you bountiful success and joy along your own continuing inner journey.
October 3, 2002

Mandela This item just goes on and on … I originally posted the second paragraph below (which begins “The story continues” – if you have not yet read it, you may wish to do so before continuing) on August 20. Now, October 4, I have received a message from TZF’s cherished friend, Wayne Manning of Unity Auburn, who stumbled across the same attribution error way back in 1995. He writes me that someone had given a colleague of his “a framed copy of the quote, attributed to Mandela. It was taken from the very reputable and usually reliable UTNE magazine. Still, it just didn’t ring quite true, so I did an exhaustive search on his inaugural speeches (there were four, as I recall, in different cities, with no two exactly alike) and the quote appeared in none of them. We then contacted UTNE who, as I remember, printed a small retraction on page umpty-ump in a subsequent edition. Marianne has since made numerous public statements owning the quote, in print and verbally, but the ‘folk myth’ continues”.

The story continues … On October 28, 2000, I posted to TZF’s “Here’s A Thoughta few lines that I came across on a website dedicated to Nelson Mandela. There, they had been cited as being from his 1994 inaugural speech, and so I attributed them accordingly. Then, in June, 2001, a TZF visitor wrote to inform us that although the lines in question were spoken by Mandela, they originally appeared in Marianne Williamson’s book, A Return to Love, which was first published in 1992, two years before Mandela was said to have spoken the words. Thus, I concluded that Mandela was quoting Williamson, and I changed the attribution accordingly. Now, today, I have received a message from another TZF visitor correcting me once again by informing me that those lines never were spoken by Nelson Mandela! And, in fact, a search of the speech itself at the African National Congress’s own site, confirms that. This visitor writes, “A search of all of Mandela’s archived speeches at the ANC site does not find the quotation, either. I’ve been searching elsewhere, too, but have found no solid evidence that these words ever crossed his lips. I have come across a couple of people who inquired directly to the ANC, and were told that he never spoke them”. I am very grateful to this second visitor for re-setting us straight! For me personally, the lesson of this episode is to check carefully before attributing words to anyone! I apologize for this confusion. On the other hand, had I caught the error back in October 2000 before posting the lines, I would not have enjoyed the exchange of email messages with the two TZF visitors which the error generated, and that would have been a loss.
August 20, 2002

Point of LifeI am very pleased to report that The Zoo Fence has been presented The Point of Life Gold Award of Excellence. Please check it out … and check out their site, too!
August 3, 2002

Thank youOnce again, we extend our heartfelt thanks to those of you who use TZF’s Bookstore page as your access to Amazon.com. As you may know, we receive a small commission from Amazon on all purchases (books or anything else Amazon sells) made by TZF visitors who go to Amazon’s site from our bookstore. What you may not know is how much we appreciate it. Of course, we have no way of knowing who you are (Amazon reports only the sales & commissions to us, not who made them), but whoever you are, we know you are generous and thoughtful, and we thank you for that, very much!
August 2, 2002

EcoLinksLast June, I added the feature “Eco-Consciousness” to The Zoo Fence. The page is coming along nicely, if it is still working on its personality. Today, I added an “eco-links” page to it, providing links to other sites whose focus also is on the planet, its inhabitants, environment, prognosis, and so on, broadly defined.
November 25, 2001

Art HaleTZF’s long-time friend Art Hale has written a new book, “Christ, Yes: Religion, No”. In it, Art makes a nice distinction between Jesus (Issa) as a “preeminent teacher, way-shower and spiritual guide” and “the sectarian chauvinism of the 30,000-plus Christian denominations”. This issue is not unique to Christianity, of course, and the book will be of interest to a seeker on any path. For more, please visit http://www.iuniverse.com where the book is available online or in hard copy.
November 2, 2001

Wow!A TZFer wrote us about this NASA site - http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/archivepix.html. Check it out for some eye-popping graphics … like “Saturn at night”. Wow! Thanks for sharing the URL.
April 23, 2001

Earth at NightPlease check out this site suggested to us by TZF’s ISP Administrator. It’s a view of the planet at night from space … pitch black except for electric lights! What a view. To get the full affect, some evening after dark, browse to it with MS Internet Explorer, then press F11 (Full Screen). Then, turn off your room lights. I’ve put a link to it on TZF’s Thisenthat page, under “Science”.
April 13, 2001

Maya AngelouI recently came across a wonderfully powerful poem by Maya Angelou written in celebration of the fiftieth anniversary of the United Nations. It is “A Brave and Startling Truth”. I had hoped to post it at TZF’s Ampers&nd, but unfortunately we have been denied copyright permission to do so. Still, I heartily recommend your reading it at any of the numerous sites across the web where it does appear (here is one such).
April 5, 2001

Editor's DesktopYesterday morning, as I was putting together the “Here’s A Thought” item for the week, I was suddenly, unexpectedly, and irresistibly moved from within to retire the candle that had been at TZF’s front door since September 11, and restore the site’s original first page. So, I did. Thus, I made the change for no logical, topical, or rational reason, but just because somehow it was clear to me that it was time to do it. In the weeks since the candle has been in place, a number of TZFers have commented on it, and I thought you’d like to know why it has been replaced.
October 29, 2001

Editor's DesktopToday, I posted to TZF’s Integral Health a piece written by a good friend of The Zoo Fence, whose son, and therefore whose family, has been dealing with leukemia in all its ramifications since 1986. Theirs is a moving story, but it is also a powerful reminder to us all that we err grievously when, in illness, we look to our doctors, nurses, and other technicians to do it all for us. That is, just as we need their help, so too do they need ours, and in this mother’s words, the best way we can help is to become fully involved. We extend our thanks to her and her family for sharing this part of their life with The Zoo Fence, and we wish them joy and peace and health.
August 22, 2001

Editor's DesktopToday I posted to TZF’s EcoConsciousness page a poem called “The Power of Toads”. The poet is Pattiann Rogers, whom I first heard of a few weeks ago while listening to a radio program on which she was featured. Other than her publisher’s website (Milkweed Editions at http://www.milkweed.org), the only site I could find dedicated to her work is http://www.mindspring.com/~pattiann_rogers/. I don’t know whether that’s her own page or a tribute posted by a fan. In any case, I really like the work. It is clean and clear and refreshing. I am delighted to have “The Power of Toads” on The Zoo Fence.
July 24, 2001

Editor's Desktop TZF’s in the Big Apple … virtually. Some days ago, we received an email message from Beth Vishnevsky, a columnist for the Greenwich Village Gazette. She asked about reproducing Bo Lozoff’s “Simple Living, Simple Joy” which we have at TZF’s Ampers&nd. Well, we’re pleased to report that (1) Beth quotes Bo’s article in her column this week and (2) she mentions The Zoo Fence as the site where she first came across it. Back in prehistoric times, one of our favorite television programs, set in New York City, used to open (or was it close?) with the line, “there are ten million stories in the naked city”. Well, if so, TZF’s now a small part of one of them!
June 28, 2001

Editor's DesktopA few days ago, we watched an excellent PBS television program produced by Bill Moyers about the environment, called Earth on Edge. I heartily recommend it. The planet’s health, and what we are doing about it, is frequently in the news, but too often more argumentatively than informatively. For obvious reasons, the subject generates a lot of noise on both sides – accusations, denials, defenses, and so on. This treatment by Moyers seems to me to avoid posturing. It is, simply, about what it’s about, and it is more than just a little scary. Afterward, talking about it amongst ourselves, we decided to add to TZF a new page called Eco-Consciousness. We’re not sure what form it will take, but for now it’s there, and we’ll see what’s next.
June 24, 2001

Editor's Desktop Yesterday, on public radio (PRI), there was a program about the relationship between sacred music and sacred spaces. A fellow being interviewed mentioned visiting somewhere in South America where he heard pygmies performing their sacred music outside, in the rain forest. To that, the interviewer opined, “I guess pygmies don’t have sacred spaces”. I presume she was referring to cathedrals, temples, and the like. Nonetheless, the fellow responded, “Oh, yes, they do. The rain forest is their sacred space. They consider it sacred because God created it”. Very nice.
March 27, 2001

Editor's Desktop Today, I moved the “flags over TZF” feature to its own page. Regular visitors will remember that initially I had been posting those here; but this page began to get a little crowded. I love posting new flags to that feature, so I am very grateful to visitors who sign in at TZF’s Guest Register, and let us know what country they’re coming from.
March 27, 2001

Editor's Desktop As discussed on this page, this morning I removed TZF’s Frequent Visitor’s page. As I explained, the combination of faster computer processors, video cards, and internet connections seems to have pretty much rendered the graphics-free access page obsolete.
March 27, 2001

Editor's Desktop Today, we visited a Unitarian-Universalist Church in Ellsworth, Maine. At the front of the meeting room, next to the podium, on a low bookshelf, there is a set of books that sets the tone of the space very nicely. Among the titles are: The Origin of The Species (Charles Darwin); Science and Religion; The Philosophy of Humanism; A Chosen Faith; World Bible; Holy Bible; The Qur’an; The Tanakh; Apocrypha & New Testament; Black Elk Speaks; Native American Wisdom; Lost Goodness of Early Greece; The African Religions; Dhammapada; Rig Veda; Lao Tzu; Confucianism.
March 25, 2001

Editor's Desktop TZF has just learned that last month Jack Schwarz of Aletheia died at his home in California. Along our spiritual path, there have been a half dozen or so things (people, books, encounters) about which Anna and I rightly say: “This changed everything”. Jack Schwarz is among those sacred few, and we are very grateful. We will miss him. We wish him love and peace and joy.
December 16, 2000

Editor's Desktop This morning, I posted in The Quiet Room a prayer attributed to St. Ignatius of Loyola (sixteenth century founder of the Jesuits). I took the prayer from the book, Martyrs & Miracles. Now, here’s the thing. In the book, the seventh line reads “that you dispose of me”. That doesn’t seem to me to make sense; and I wonder if the publisher didn’t leave out a word, so that it would read something like “that you may dispose of me”. That is, in effect, “I surrender myself to You, that You may do with me as You see fit”. Anyway, I searched the web for the prayer, to determine if there is a word missing here, and could not find it. So, with apologies to St. Ignatius and Carolyn Trickey-Bapty (the book’s author), I took the initiative, and added the word “may”. So far, no lightning or thunder. If any TZFer can help here, I would be extremely grateful (send email to editor(at)zoofence.com).
September 30, 2000

Editor's DesktopA longtime friend of TZF called yesterday to say that one of her computers had been infected by a Trojan horse, a particularly destructive form of computer virus. Fortunately, she subscribes to a virus protection program, and so was spared what could have developed into a very unhappy experience. All of which should remind us all that some very nasty viruses are out there, and they can infect even the nicest sorts of people. So, please, (1) protect yourself with an anti-virus program like Norton’s or McAfee’s, (2) update it at least weekly, and (3) do not open or click on or in any other way activate attachments to e-mail messages unless you are ABSOLUTELY certain they are clean.
     As one of our favorite characters on one of our favorite TV shows used to say, Let’s be careful out there.
May 18, 2000

Editor's Desktop There is a web service which, from time to time, graciously alerts us to links on The Zoo Fence that do not work, usually because the site to which they point either no longer exists or has moved. Dead links are a real source of frustration for surfers, and, with as many onward links as there are on The Zoo Fence, it is difficult for us to ensure they are all always current. So, I very much appreciate the notices this service sends us. Evidently, they have developed a robot that wanders around the web looking for, and alerting webmasters to, what they call “link rot”. They call themselves “Seven Twentyfour”, and their motto is “always watching the web”. If you own a large website with a lot of onward links, particularly a commercial site where your visitors are your customers whom you would like to keep happy, I urge you to visit this site, and consider their service. The URL is http://www.seventwentyfour.com/
April 24, 2001

Editor's Desktop Here’s another site passed along by our ISP Administrator – The URL is http://www.shibumi.org/eoti.htm. When you’re done there, back into the site’s other pages (delete the “eoti.htm” in your browser’s address space, and press your keyboard’s Enter key). Whoever Dan Hughes is, he has a sense of humor.
April 10, 2001

Editor's Desktop A couple of evenings ago, we rented the movie “The Devil’s Advocate” with Al Pacino and Keanu Reeves. While this is most certainly not for the entire family (which is why I am not putting it on TZF’s “Books & Videos” page), and it is not a film I would want to watch just before retiring for the night, there are nonetheless a lot of very powerful ideas here, particularly for a seeker reaching to understand the nature of temptation, and how we so often get ourselves into trouble with the very best of intentions. A warning: There are a few demons, some disturbing scenes, and even a little blood & gore, so you may want to stand ready at the Mute and Fast Forward buttons. But if you are an Al Pacino fan, as I am, you’ll love him here.
July 7, 2000

Editor's Desktop We saw Franco Zeffirelli’s movie “Brother Sun, Sister Moon” about the young adult years of Francis of Assisi. It is nice, even sometimes very nice, but also a disappointment. Francis was undoubtedly a powerful and inspiring seeker, and while some of that comes across, here he seems a little too wimpy. And I believe there are some historical inaccuracies, as well. Properly told, the story of Francis, his conversion, his journeys, his relationship with Clare, the founding and development of the Franciscans and the Poor Clares, would make a wonderful movie. But this isn’t it. Still, it’s worth seeing.
March 8, 2000

Editor's Desktop We saw Bernardo Bertolucci’s movie “Little Buddha” about a Tibetan Buddhist monk looking for the reincarnation of his teacher in an American boy. That story is accompanied by a beautiful and inspiring retelling of the life and teaching of the historical Buddha. It’s a beautiful story, well told. We loved it. [PS Tomorrow, the 29th, is “Leap Year”, another Y2K hurdle for our computers. We’ll see.]
February 28, 2000

Editor's Desktop My in-laws visited this weekend, and in discussion offered this bit of ancient wisdom: “A person persuaded against his or her will is a person of the same opinion still.” As seekers, we do well to learn that lesson, and to remember, just as we do not like being pushed, we should not push others, however much we may be convinced that it’s “for their own good”. Remember, too, that whatever we have learned along the path, whatever we have Remembered, isn’t actually ours anyway!
September 21, 1999

Editor's Desktop Wandering the web this morning, I came across a site called “The Watchful Shepherd” at http://www.watchful.org/. It breaks my heart to consider that such a site is necessary! … but I am grateful to those who manage it.
September 4, 1999

Editor's Desktop We just rented and watched the movie “Meet Joe Black” starring Anthony Hopkins, Brad Pitt, and others. It is wonderful! The script, direction, acting, editing … all of it is flawless. I urge you to find it at a video store, and then set aside an evening to be enchanted, entertained, and taught!
(6/20/99)

Editor's Desktop From “Markings” by Dag Hammarskjold: Do not look back. And do not dream about the future, either. It will neither give you back the past, nor satisfy your other daydreams. Your duty, your reward -- your destiny – are here and now.
(5/13/99)

Editor's Desktop I was in South Africa yesterday (Is the internet great, or what!) visiting a TZF visitor’s website, and there I found this magnificent dancing fool! I gratefully reproduce it here with its creator’s permission. As graphics software programs grow in size, complexity, and price (and, yes, capability), it’s nice to be reminded how much can be accomplished with just a few keyboard strokes (and a great imagination). Thanks, Peter!
(4/19/99)

He's
                    a dancing fool!

Editor's Desktop From “Discourses of Rumi” by A. J. Arberry, Jesus (Issa), upon upon whom be peace, was asked, ‘Spirit of God, what is the greatest and most difficult thing in this world and the next?’ He replied, ‘The wrath of God.’ They asked, ‘And what shall save a man from that?’ He answered, ‘That you master your own wrath, and suppress your rage.’
         Plant wrath, harvest wrath.
         The One speaks to itself in its own voice.
(3/8/99)

Editor's DesktopOn the advice of a good friend of TZF, I purchased from Amazon.com, and have just received, a translation of the Qur’an by Abdullah Yusuf Ali. It includes excellent commentary and notes. Already I like it a lot. On first handling, I was surprised to find the book opens from left to right. Of course, I assumed an error at the bindery! I even queried Amazon about it. They reminded me the volume includes the original Arabic, which, like Hebrew and unlike English and some other languages, is written from right to left. That explained the layout. But now, I find I am discomforted by having to turn the pages “the wrong way.” How many such habits and predilections do we have that we are not even aware of, and how much do they interfere with our accepting “what is” the way it is!
(2/20/99)

Editor's DesktopA good friend of TZF recently sent us several excellent books by Timothy Freke, a British (I think) writer and seeker. Among them is “The Hermetica - The Lost Wisdom of the Pharaohs.” A set of religious and philosophical teachings, the Hermetica is attributed to the Egyptian god Thoth, which name was translated into Greek as Hermes or Hermes Trismegistus. Hermeticism has been an important influence in the development of Western thought. Consider these few lines describing Atum, an ancient Egyptian name for the One:

To conceive of Atum is difficult.
To define him is impossible.
The imperfect and impermanent
cannot easily apprehend
the eternally perfected.
Atum is whole and constant.
In himself he is motionless,
yet he is self-moving.
He is immaculate,
incorruptible and ever-lasting.
He is the Supreme Absolute Reality.
He is filled with ideas
which are imperceptible to the senses,
and with all-embracing Knowledge.
Atum is Primal Mind.

He is too great
to be called by the name ‘Atum’.
He is hidden,
yet obvious everywhere.
His Being is known through thought alone,
yet we see his form before our eyes.
He is bodiless,
yet embodied in everything.
There is nothing which he is not.
He has no name,
because all names are his name.
He is the unity in all things,
so we must know him by all names
and call everything ‘Atum’ …

Atum is everywhere …
All things are thoughts
which the Creator thinks.

(1/8/99)

Editor's Desktop From Yogananda’s commentary accompanying his translation of the Gita, at Chapter 18, verse 49:

          That devotee attains the “uttermost perfection” of his individualized incarnate status when he realizes his true Self, the soul, as being of the essence of God’s transcendent consciousness, untouched by bodily experiences, even as the Lord is immutable beyond the activities He sends forth through Cosmic Nature. The way to liberation lies through this realization of the Self, by God-communion and by remaining in this God-aware state of the soul while performing dutiful actions. Any individual can reach this supreme actionless state by the renunciation of all fruits of actions: performing all dutiful acts without harboring in his heart any likes and dislikes, possessing no material desires, and feeling God, not the ego, as the Doer of all actions.
          That yogi who is not attached to his own body or his family or the world, even though he joyously works for them with the sole desire of pleasing God; who is in full control of his mind, intelligence, ego, and heart; who is free from all desires for sense pleasures; and who works, yet renounces the fruits of actions, becomes free from the reincarnation-causing triple qualities of mortal and natural actions. The consciousness of such a yogi rests in the immutability of the eternal Spirit.

It’s all right there, in two short paragraphs. Notice he writes that “any individual can reach this supreme actionless state.”  Any individual. All that’s wanted is our sincere aspiration. With that, the rest will follow.
(1/1/99)

Editor's Desktop A recent TZF visitor left an invitation in our Guest Book to visit their website, which is dedicated to Vivekananda, and am I glad they did! Among its very nice features is a “Childrens” page, where I found this wonderful anecdote contributed by “Daksha Patel, London” [I have edited it slightly]:
          Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson were on a camping trip. After a good meal and a bottle of Ribena, they lay down for the night, and went to sleep. Some hours later, Holmes awoke and nudged his faithful friend.
          “Watson, look up, and tell me what you see,” he said.
          Watson replied, “I see millions and millions of stars.”
          “What does that tell you?” Holmes asked.
          Watson pondered for a minute, and then answered. “Astronomically, it tells me that there are millions of galaxies and potentially billions of planets. Astrologically, I observe that Saturn is in Leo. Horologically, I deduce that the time is approximately a quarter past three. Theologically, I can see that God is all powerful and that we are small and insignificant. Meteorologically, I suspect that we will have a beautiful day tomorrow. And what does it tell you, Holmes?”
        Sherlock Holmes was silent for a minute; then, he said, “Someone has stolen our tent.”

(12/15/98)

Editor's Desktop I have been reading from “Women Saints, East and West” (Vedanta Press), and it is a very nice book indeed, not only for its content but also for its reminder that not all Teachers are male.
     As most human societies are male-biased (Although that is changing … isn’t it?), most of us naturally think of Teachers as being male (like Abraham,Issa (Jesus), Mohammed, Gautama, Ramakrishna, Lao Tsu, and so on), but Truth is genderless, and as seekers we must welcome that Fact, embrace it, and live it. It is not enough simply to say it, much less mutter it. The male bias has been in us all, men and women, so long that it has become, one might say, part of our DNA. So here, as elsewhere, the inner work must literally go all the way to the cellular level, until we automatically, even instinctively, think genderlessly.
     Anyway, the chapter on the Sufi saint Rabi’a lists the stages toward Union, as she sees them. Beginning at the “lowest” (earliest along the way) they are,
     1) Repentance, described as both the consciousness and the admission of one’s own sins and shortcomings, both of commission and omission, including (and this is nice) our misunderstanding about our own nature and the Nature of God;
     2) Patience, being the complete and unconditional acceptance of whatever unfolds in our lives;
     3) Gratitude is like patience but a little “higher,” in that it is actively (in today’s jargon, we might say proactively) positive. Thus, if patience means accepting our lives, however they unfold, with quiet resignation, gratitude is doing so joyfully!
     4) Hope and Fear, being the hope for Union with God and the fear of separation from God. At first, these might function as a selfish motivation to stay on the path (”Seek Paradise, avoid hell”); later, they are simply the recognition of and affinity for the Natural State;
     5) Voluntary Poverty, “a complete cleansing of the heart of all selfish desires, and turning it towards God alone.”
     6) Asceticism, meaning “the perfect control of the lower, physical self by the higher, spiritual one.” That is, freely, easily, and happily releasing all the distractions in our lives, one by one, until nothing remains but the One, which is Truth (God);
     7) Dependence on God, which is the complete dedication of one’s being to the Sole Being; in effect, (borrowing Witter Bynner’s wonderful phrase from his translation of the Tao Te Ching) “an obedience not commanded but of course.”
     8) Love, meaning love that is constant, effortless, self-sustaining, all-absorbing, and disinterested (for no reason). In a word, What Is.
     The book “Women Saints, East and West” can be purchased from Vedanta Press at their website (enter the title in the search box).
(12/5/98)

Editor's Desktop From “The Autobiography of Malcolm X” (Ballantine), page 340: Speaking of his experience during a pilgrimage (Hajj) to the Ka’aba in Mecca with Muslims of all races and colors, “We were truly all the same (brothers) – because their belief in one God had removed the ‘white’ from their minds, the ‘white’ from their behavior, and the ‘white’ from their attitude. … I could see from this, that perhaps if white Americans could accept the Oneness of God, then perhaps, too, they could accept in reality the Oneness of Man.”
     His point is so obvious, it is almost a cliche. But then, why is it so difficult for us to remember it, not to mention practice it!
     Clearly, if every one of us would keep God’s Nature or Buddha Nature or Truth or whatever we chose to call It in the forefront of our mind all of the time, then it would be impossible for us to strike a blow against another, whether in thought, word, deed, or attitude.
     So simple. So difficult.
(12/1/98)

Editor's Desktop From the book “Vivekananda, The Yogas and Other Works” -

After every happiness comes misery; they may be far apart or near. The more advanced the soul, the more quickly does the one follow the other. What we want is neither happiness nor misery. Both make us forget our true nature; both are chains - one iron, one gold. Behind both is Atman [the immortal Self], who knows neither happiness nor misery. These are states, and states must ever change; but the nature of the Soul is bliss, peace - unchanging. We have not to get it; we have it. Only wash away the dross and see it.

Editor's Desktop This morning, looking through an old journal, I came across this lesson by Farid-ud-Din Attar, a Persian Sufi poet, copied from the book “The Message in Our Time” by Pir Vilayat Inayat Khan —

Renounce the good of the world,

Renounce the good of heaven,

Renounce your highest ideal,

And then renounce renunciation.

And again, from the same book, “In order to arrive at spiritual attainment, two gulfs must be crossed: the sea of attachment and the ocean of detachment.”

I suppose, as seekers, we all know we must release our reliance upon and attachment to the world’s stuff (our thoughts and things), but who among us expects to become attached to detachment? The egoic mind is devious. If it can’t have what it wants, it wants whatever it can have (and then takes pride in it!) – including, it seems, not wanting.

Rereading this reminded me of a phenomenon called the “veil of darkness” and the “veil of light.” (I cannot remember where I first heard or read those terms.)

The former is our normal and natural ignorance of what is. Thus, the veil of darkness is what most of us live behind most of the time. It is lifted by the light of knowledge. So, in effect, each of us starts out on the path, lost somewhere behind the veil of darkness (unaware of our true nature), but with time and aspiration and grace, the veil is lifted to reveal the Truth.

That is when we are most vulnerable to the other one, the veil of light, for this is what blinds us when we think we know! With just a glimpse of the Truth, we convince ourselves we know it all, and woe betide those who perceive it differently. Here, we have discovered a little, but still too little to realize how little.

The veil of light. It doesn’t sound like a trap, but it is.

Thank God for God, or we’d never make it through this maze.
(10/4/98)

Editor's Desktop There is a family of red foxes that lives in the woods nearby. Last evening, our neighbor saw one of the kits calmly trotting into her barn. This morning, she found the fox in an empty horse stall, curled up against one wall, as if asleep. But the fox was not asleep; the fox was dead. There is a wound on one leg that may have been the cause of death. The warden reports it is not unusual for foxes to select a barn as a place to die.
     But here’s the thing that’s getting to me. All the evidence at the scene suggests this fox died calmly and easily, as if it considered death as natural a process of life as hunting field mice, feasting on wild blueberries, or prancing down a country road. There are no signs of frantic digging, scratching, wall climbing, or other desperate behavior. This fox was not trying to escape its fate, and it did not struggle against it. Instead, it seems that some time yesterday, this fox realized somewhere within that it was going to die last night, and so it found an appropriate site, and, without any fanfare, it simply did so.
     Compare that performance with how any of us would have reacted to similar news. We would have fought tooth and nail! What is the difference between us and the fox? Is it perhaps that we perceive death as the opposite of life, and so we fear it terribly; and the fox recognizes death is the opposite of birth, and so takes it in stride.
     For anyone in search of a meditation practice, permit me to suggest: Consider the foxes, and how they die.
(8/3/98)

Editor's Desktop Those who knew TZF in hard copy may remember the “The Seven Giant Steps” we lifted from J. Vaughn Boone’s book, “De Riva - The Magic Formula”. Today, I posted it on the site, on the first letters page. We shared a podium with Vaughn many years ago, and loved him instantly. He is a wonderful fellow, who sheds healing and light everywhere he goes, on whomever he encounters. Wherever he might be now, we wish him well.
(3/24/99)

Editor's Desktop The world will miss King Hussein of Jordan. Inextricably caught between all sides in the endless ‘Arab-Israeli Conflict,’ King Hussein was a bright light, preaching sanity, practicing good sense, and reaching for resolution. He was a direct descendant of the Prophet, and it showed. In the words of Muhammad, ”Do you love your Creator? Love your fellow beings first.”
(2/7/99)

Editor's Desktop We just saw the movie “City of Angels.” If you want to understand why you are in the flesh, why each of us has chosen a separate and separative, incarnated identity, with all their ups and downs, please see this movie.

Editor's Desktop I have come across a site that offers several excellent essays on “Centering Prayer” – what it is, how to do it, suggested book titles, some references. On the use of a “Sacred Word” to help in centering and focusing, consider this observation: Sometimes you will need the sacred word only a few times, and other sessions you will need to use it a thousand times. Remember that whenever you use it, you are saying to God “I want to be with you, and I consent to You being with me and changing me in any way that You want to.” So don’t be discouraged during the times you need to use it frequently - that is just so many more times you say YES to God!
     Nice.
(2/4/99)
(Update: When I came across it, this website was on GeoCities's server – as was TZF for a couple of years. But GeoCities has long since disappeared, and apparently this website with it.)

Editor's Desktop I have just been to a website called “Mysticism in World Religions” at http://www.digiserve.com/mystic/. If you have not been there, I urge a visit. You will find a wealth of quotations from the world’s great mystics. There is a very nice page called “Comparison of Mysticism in World Religions” where the treatment of various subjects (like ego, desire, humility, grace) by different religions is compared.
(1/17/99)
(Update: Unfortunately, this website seems no longer to exist. While searching for it, I came across a website called Age of The Sage which, while not the same, is similar and looks interesting.)

Editor's Desktop We recently saw the movie “Kundun.” Directed by Martin Scorsese, this is the story of the current Dalai Lama, from early childhood to his escape out of Tibet into India. It is wonderful!
(9/5/99)

Editor's Desktop A good friend of TZF suggested we read The Cosmic Serpent - DNA & The Origins of Knowledge by Jeremy Narby, and we’re glad she did. Narby is an anthropologist who, while doing research in Peru’s Amazon jungle, discovered what he interprets to be a link between what western scientists know about the nature of DNA and what Amazonian shamans know about everything. Specifically, he suggests that the serpent mythologies present in virtually all cultures, are really about the double helix we know as DNA. Narby’s findings and his conclusions, not to mention his experiences under the influence of a local hallucinogenic plant, make for interesting reading.

Editor's Desktop In one of the episodes of the PBS television program “A Science Odyssey with Charles Osgood,” there is a wonderful comment by Robert Kirshner, astrophysicist at the Center for Astrophysics, that, although he is talking about his own work as a scientist, is almost a perfect description of a seeker’s path, making once again the point that those at the farthest limits of science and religion are reaching for the very same thing.
     “The actual measuring and so on, it’s very laborious, and it’s slow. And you sit there, and it takes all night for these photons to dribble in. But the thing that makes it exciting, even thrilling in a kind of quiet way, is that we’re after a big question. We’re really after a question that people have been interested in for a long time, ever since they could kind of frame the question. What is the fate of the Universe? Is it going to last forever? How will things end? These are big questions, and we’re really on a path that could give us a concrete answer in the context of how we understand the universe today of which of those possibilities is really the right one. So, that’s a lot of fun, and it keeps you awake at night.”

Editor's Desktop Rented the movie “Michael”, about a mission on earth by the Archangel Michael. We liked it so much we watched it twice! John Travolta plays the title role, and he performs it flawlessly. I have heard that some folks dislike the film because of the way it depicts the lead character. I can understand their discomfort, for it puts into question many of the assumptions all of us have about angels. For example, in this movie, Michael has a sweet tooth gone berserk (”You can’t eat too much sugar,” he tells us), he smokes cigarettes, he eats sloppily, he sleeps standing up and he snores, he evidently enjoys sex, his wings are soiled, he can be a little crude, and he loves to do battle (he even picks a fight with a bull in a pasture!). But, through it all, Michael is thoroughly, delightfully, consistently, and unquestionably angelic.There is never any doubt that he is a Divine Creature.
     So, for a seeker, here’s the question the movie raises: If an angel can live and behave in effect as we do, and still remain “angelic” — that is, clearly, spontaneously, and uninterruptedly aware of and expressing the Divinity of the Universe and of his own Nature, then why cannot we?

Editor's Desktop From Adonais by Percy Bysshe Shelley,

The One remains, the many change and pass;

Heaven’s light forever shines, Earth’s shadows fly;

Life, like a dome of many-coloured glass,

Stains the white radiance of Eternity.

Editor's Desktop “Love is presupposing love; to have love is to presuppose love in others; to be loving is to presuppose that others are loving.” W.H. Auden in “The Living Thoughts of Kierkegaard”. Thus, one might say that he or she is wise, and believe, rightly or wrongly, that others are unwise. But one cannot believe that he or she is loving and that others are not, for to be truly loving is to recognize love in all.

Editor's Desktop “What is demanded of man is not, as some existential philosophies teach, to endure the meaninglessness of life; but rather to bear his incapacity to grasp its unconditional meaningfulness in rational terms. Logos is deeper than logic.” Viktor E. Frankl in “Man’s Search for Meaning”. The mind cannot understand the meaning of life, of one’s life, because the mind is part of or an aspect of that life. Just as a flashlight can cast light on anything in the universe except itself! For that, one has to go beyond the instrument, to what precedes it.
     An eminent psychiatrist, Viktor Frankl was imprisoned for three years in Nazi concentration camps, where he observed that some of his fellow inmates “behaved like swine, while others behaved like saints.” The difference seemed to be that the latter retained a sense of meaning to their lives. Remarkably, they were able not only to survive the horrific environment of the camps, but to grow in it. Quoting Nietzsche, “He who has a why to live can bear with almost any how.” From this, Frankl developed his own theory of psychology, logotherapy, whose basic tenet is “that man’s concern is not to gain pleasure or avoid pain, but rather to see a meaning in his life.”
     This is an extraordinarily moving, uplifting, interesting, challenging, and sometimes disturbing book. (To purchase it from Amazon.com, click here.)

Editor's Desktop “A vessel that grows as it is filled will never be full. The soul is like that: The more it wants, the more is it given; the more it receives, the more it grows.” From “Meister Eckhart” by Raymond Blakely (page 233, Harper).

Editor's Desktop Discover magazine (5/97) article about Richard Zare at Stanford, talks of Alfred North Whitehead (English philosopher & mathematician, 1861-1947) as having defined Unitarianism as “the belief that there is at most one God.” What an extraordinary way to put it! It is almost impossible to read it without considering it.

Editor's Desktop “God speaks in parables to mankind.” Qur’an, 24:35 (trans. N. J. Dawood, Penquin) Notice there are no qualifiers, no “usually,” “sometimes,” “mostly.” Just, God speaks in parables. As I understand the term, a parable is essentially a metaphor. I remember reading somewhere that a parable is a “metaphorical analogy.” So, “God speaks in parables to mankind.” could as well be stated “God speaks in metaphors to mankind.” Thus, the Qur’an offers this is as the answer to the question everyone of us asks from time to time: How does God speak to mankind? And the answer is, In metaphors. Of course, it must be true. After all, clearly God cannot speak other than the Truth, and the Truth cannot be spoken (cf. Lao Tzu among numberless others). (Who was it who said, “I never spoke the Truth in all my life”? I do not remember.) So, if what you and I each call “my life” (the world, reality) is ultimately the One being that (What else can it be, the One being Infinite, and there being no thing else but the One?), then our lives too must be metaphors. Indeed, we are ourselves metaphors. Consider that.

Editor's Desktop From “The Sufis” by Idries Shah (page 396, Doubleday/Anchor, available on our Bookstore page):
              A seeker approaches a Teacher, and says, “I wish to learn, will you teach me?”
              The Teacher replies, “I do not feel that you know how to learn.”
              The seeker says, “Can you teach me how to learn?”
              The Teacher responds, “Can you learn how to let me teach?”       

Editor's Desktop On EWTN (Global Catholic Television Network), a program covering the 1997 World Youth Day in Paris, an American cleric (I think he said he was from New York) reports that on the day (presumably many years ago) he became a bishop, he encountered Mother Teresa outside St. Peter’s church in Rome. Although he recognized her, Mother Teresa would not have known him, he said. Anyway, she approached him, and said, simply, gently, “Give God permission.” Nothing more, just “Give God permission.” What an idea. An infinite, omnipotent divinity, the creator of everything, the creator that is everything everywhere always, the creator that is us … needs our permission! Think about that.

Editor's Desktop On a Public Broadcasting System television program “Michelangelo, Restored” about the restoration of the frescoes in the Vatican’s Sistine Chapel, the artist is quoted as having said or written, “If life was found to be agreeable, then so should death, for it comes from the hand of the same Creator.” As I recall, they said this was a response by Michelangelo to someone who was worried about death. I tried to find the item on PBS’s web site, to be sure I have the quotation right, and for the citation, but was unsuccessful. Any TZF visitors know? Anyway, Michelangelo’s absolutely right. If God created death, then what’s to fear? Why don’t we know that?

Editor's Desktop From Malcolm Muggeridge’s book “Jesus Rediscovered” (page 70, Doubleday), quoting HughKingsmill: “What is divine in Man is elusive and impalpable, and he is easily tempted to embody it in a collective form – a church, a country, a social system, a leader – so that he may realize it with less effort and serve it with more profit. Yet the attempt to externalise the kingdom of heaven in a temporal shape must end in disaster. It cannot be created by charters or constitutions, nor established by arms. Those who set out for it alone will reach it together, and those who seek it in company will perish by themselves.” Wow!

Editor's Desktop PBS’s NewsHour (7/9/98), a “Dialogue on Race” chaired by Jim Lehrer, with President Clinton and others, discussing racism in the US. Recalls to mind Rodney King’s haunting question, “Can’t we all get along?” What’s a seeker’s perspective on this issue? Can we all “get along” in any meaningful (that is, fundamentally peace-full) way as long as we consider ourselves to be different, separate, apart? If each of us starts from the presumption that “I am me, and you aren’t,” then our relationships, however well intentioned we may be, will always start from confrontation, and will always be informed by it. Each of us will constantly be defending our limits and observing the other’s! (What a waste, not to mention misuse, of energy! No wonder we’re all so tired all the time!) Even a “group hug” cannot erase that fundamental sense of separation. So, as long as you and I each think of ourselves as being white-not-black or black-not-white, Catholic-not-Protestant, straight-not-gay, Arab-not-Israeli, even male-not-female, or whatever-not-whatever else, we will never be able truly to erase the arbitrary, artificial boundary we place between us because as fast as we erase it with one side of our brain, we will be redrawing it with the other – like Emmett Kelly’s clown act, trying to sweep away the light beam! So, the answer to racism, or any other form of ’ism, is not some form of “being nice” but the discovery of our True Nature, remembering who we are in Truth. That alone can erase all of the boundaries, definitions, and fortifications each of us has erected around ourselves, and they will disappear not because erasing them is “the right thing to do” but because there simply won’t be any. Thus, ultimately, True Peace requires no effort! Find out “Who Am I?” – even just seek to find out “Who Am I?” – and racism will dissolve and disappear on its own. How can a true seeker discriminate against another when she or he knows the other to be himself or herself?

Editor's DesktopTo read TZF’s earlier Desktop entries click here. Some of the links there are to TZF pages that no longer exist, and generate the Oops! page. Just ignore them.

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