Most lessons I have to
learn more than once.
When they first come,
I see the truth.
I get it.
And then I
forget.
Judgment of others
is a mirror
for my own inadequacies.
Right action is that
which is not attached
to the outcome.
Insanity is performing
the same behavior and
expecting a different result.
I know these things,
but I forget because
the world gets busy,
the noise gets louder,
and the distractions win.
I forget because I’m human,
and humans forget.
Do unto others
as you would have others
do unto you.
Fear and anger
cannot grow in a
garden of gratitude.
Karma
trumps
dogma.
I forget so I can
remember.
There is no joy
in mowing a short lawn
or vacuuming a clean rug
or washing a spotless dish.
The satisfaction of the scythe
is in the tall grass.
Nothing exists
other than
right now.
The opposite of love is not
hate; the opposite of love
is fear.
The path to awakening
leads through the heart,
not the head.
Faith is knowing that
what we learned once
is never lost,
and it will return
when we need it.
These three remain:
faith, hope, and love,
and the greatest is love.
What we put out
comes back to us
multiplied.
Love is
all you
need.
© 2020 Deb Moore, All Rights Reserved
Tag: faith
These Three Remain
If George W. Bush practiced the politics of faith,
And Barack Obama practices the politics of hope,
I wonder what the politics of love will look like?
The greatest of these, I have no doubt.
Small Magic
This is day three in the Seven Solid Days of Smiling Salute To the Original Unsplit Atom for bursting forth into the Big Bang of Bounty that is this life.
Day 1 – Emily
Day 2 – Music
My grandson, Triston, is spending the night with us as I write this. Earlier this evening he pulled a funny looking thing from the bedside jar where Susie keeps her pens for her nightly Sudoku. The object in question is a twisted wooden stick with an amethyst on top. It’s real purpose is to stick in a twist of hair to hold it up off your neck. There must be a name for something like that, but I don’t know what it is. However, I feel a personal obligation to answer any question Triston asks me with some degree of authority. It’s the natural teacher in me, or perhaps the natural bullshitter.
“What’s this, DeeDee?” He turned the witchy-looking stick around in his hands, perhaps looking for a writing point or an on button or a purpose of some kind.
“It’s a magic wand.”
“No, it isn’t,” and then a little less certainly, “is it?”
“Sure. It’s Mimi’s Mini Magic Wand. It’s for small magic.”
“Show me.”
Oh, boy. I hesitated, but only for a second. Triston has all the actual, factual, literal, fundamental information he needs from all the other sources in his life. I rarely miss the chance to sprinkle a little mysticism his way.
“Okay, sit on the bed facing me. C’mon, Mimi, join the circle.” I motioned Susie into our midst and then held the wand in front of me, the amethyst suddenly sizzling like a campfire in front of us. “What do you need magic to do for you, Triston?”
He didn’t have to think about it long. “I want to fly.”
Damn. “Well, Triston, most people don’t know this, but magic still has to work with the natural laws of the universe. Magic can do a lot, but it can’t make gravity disappear.” Okay, so it’s the natural bullshitter in me. Actually, I believe magic probably could make someone fly, but he was just a child and I was only a baby spell-caster, so I thought we had better take it slow. “What else would you like magic to do for you?”
He didn’t have to ponder this one at all. “I want a four-wheeler.”
I started to say something to direct him away from the material world. He had been out of sorts all night, whiny, demanding, rude, and difficult. I knew something was bothering him and maybe he didn’t even know what it was. I was hoping he would say that he wanted his mommy to be sweeter or his daddy to spend more time with him or his new baby sister to be fun to play with. I was hoping for a clue about his mood. But then I had the intuitive thought that I shouldn’t invalidate his desires, especially during a seven-year-old funkfest.
“Okay. A four-wheeler it is. Everybody focus on Triston’s new four-wheeler. We are setting our intention for Triston to have the desires of his heart. We don’t tell magic when or where or how. We just tell magic that Triston would like a four-wheeler. We see Triston riding his four-wheeler through a big field on a beautiful summer day . . . with his helmet on.” (Even mystical grandmothers are still grandmothers.) And we know that magic is working already to bring Triston his four-wheeler in the perfect way and at the perfect time.”
All night long, Triston had been distant, shut down, just not present with us. But, I peeked at him during this “incantation” and saw an unfiltered expression of pure belief. His eyes were squinted closed in prayerful concentration. His hand rested atop mine on the “magic wand.” I wondered if I could ever again believe as deeply as he was believing in that moment. And then I said, with renewed conviction, “And so it shall be.”
This was as much for me as it was for him. I’ll be watching for that four-wheeler to show up in Triston’s life. I’m going to fight the urge to go put one on a credit card and leave it on his front lawn on Christmas morning just so he’ll believe in magic. Instead, I’m going to believe in magic too and wait to see how it unfolds.
