Send me an invite for Discord! monk@anchorwind.net
A bit different
I think I’m going to try something a bit different, this time.  If it works I may keep up with this format.  I am going to include Part 1 and another piece for context in addition to the main bit.
2025 : A Year of Compassion (Intro)

2025 : A Year of Compassion

I initially wanted 2025 to be A Year of Focus.  2024 got away from me;  it felt like the bad news piled on, and I lost myself just trying to do my best day to day.  My instinct is to try to work harder, but as I’ve come to learn, that’s been a contributor to the problems at times.  If ‘work harder’ was the solution to everything, our world would look drastically different.  I know in my heart if I could be doing something, I would be doing it already, so having a Year of Focus wasn’t the correct answer.  My second instinct is to ask, ‘Why?’  Why can I not accomplish what I’m attempting to at the time I’m attempting it?  Such a self-analysis led me to realize I’ve been treating myself poorly, and before I can focus the way I want to, I must learn to be compassionate with myself.

What is Compassion?  At the level most of us have right now, compassion is some form of caring about something that doesn’t impact us or forgiving something that does.  However, compassion at a deeper level does not have to forgive at all as we never made a judgment to begin with – and being most of us sit with regrets about our past, we haven’t reached this level yet.  Compassion requires detachment, but westerners don’t understand detachment either.  Westerners think detachment is apathy, something elections show they’re good at.   Detachment only means we remain stable in a changing world or put similarly – something else can change, but that change doesn’t automatically force us to respond.

My instinct to work harder stems from a powerful imposter syndrome, one that is going to take a lot of hard work to quell.  As I sit here and meditate on it, I become saddened as I get a better sense of just how far-reaching it is, from my past to my work to my relationships. It is deep-seated and influential.  I know one of the consequences of it is I refuse to allow to see myself as others do.  Others compliment me, and while I generally do not doubt their authenticity, I refuse to allow myself to view myself in the same light.

I’m not where I want to be with my health, my house, my ability to be creative, or my ability to rest.  I have stripped my ability to enjoy life in multiple instances and have mainly become either anxious or exhausted.  I address this by trying to ‘soldier through’ it and, get things done in spite of anything, and manage life waiting for the next bit of bad news.  I’m glad that through all of this my ability to be kind and thoughtful to others has remained a strongsuit, as such I know I’m capable of doing it, I merely need to learn to apply it to myself.

I harbor a deep inward anger and an equally deep outward hope.  Yes, there are a select few others I am angry with, but those are the war profiteers and the exploiters making lives worse for us all – the everyperson trying to get by is generally good, even if they have trouble showing it through the scars of the system.  I know I’m a typically good person, too, but I’m very aware my outward expressions have been more painful than I’d like for far too long.  Before I can (A Year of) Focus on it, I need to be compassionate with myself.  Only endlessly working harder isn’t the answer, even if my heart is in the right place.  I know I have positive things to offer, and I’d like that to be the core of how I see myself as opposed to accidental successes.  I’d like to believe in myself, and that will take time and practice.

Watching Villages Burn

18 Sep 2020

Twenty years ago, I was the Editor for the newspaper, discussing Bush v. Gore and trying to ensure maximum voter participation. I could not have guessed how against the will of the popular vote, court-ordered cessations of recounts in a state with direct family ties to the would-be winner. The election was gifted to an administration who could continue the GOP time-honored tradition of burning down villages. I was angry, but I didn’t understand the gravity of what was about to be set in motion; few of us did.

The anger had not yet subsided when 9/11 happened. I remember how 9/11 was presented didn’t feel right; the images, the narrative, and mostly what the Bush administration did in response left a deep unsettled feeling in me. Shortly after, I was a part of the intelligence services hoping to learn a greater truth. Whether I like it or not, I’ve learned vastly more than I ever bargained for, and there is no returning to a state of ignorance. I was helpless as in the wake of 9/11, the USA’s ugly authoritarian side was given fresh life to rise and become even more ruthless and exploitative. As mass surveillance was given the green light and other rights continued to be stripped, I was off to war.

War is hell, a sentiment shared by countless individuals spanning the length and breadth of the human experience for hundreds of thousands of years. In the chaos of all the moving parts and the speed of the operational tempo, my base persona shone. I demonstrated myself to be relentlessly compassionate and deeply troubled, likely the only things still accurate today. I understood we invaded the wrong country. I was angered by those in my uniform who killed out of racism and revenge. I wanted to help those who acted in a manner virtually identical to how we would if we were invaded. The value of people because they are people was reinforced down to the core of my being.

Those trying to carve out a small pocket of solace and stability in a swiftly de-stabilized homeland were given ogre’s choices, ultimatums, from bad-faith actors on different fronts. While we were no saints, making widows and orphans in another man’s kingdom, extremist forces on their side would also kill them for working with us. I saw that in real-time, in person. I experienced people who proclaimed themselves authority figures use fear to manipulate people and do their best to destroy whoever did not comply. They would label whoever did not conform and then eradicate all those with said label. I watched with a growing despair, a confused helplessness as burned wreckage and human remains were left as messages to those who dared to defy. The Defense Contractors were the only winners in the war, and eventually, I came “home.”

I’ve spent many years trying to get past despair, confusion, and helplessness. I am far less confused, but only because I have a greater understanding of how deep the rabbit hole goes on fear being used to manipulate people into compliance here in the USA. One needs not look far, a cursory look at how Christianity, White Supremacy, or any resistance to Late Stage Capitalism has been wielded and fear is in the DNA of the USA. One or multiples of those three had caused villages to have been burned here since at least 1619 when slaves arrived at the Virginia colony, but likely even earlier when white men devalued indigenous peoples.

Now, a new digital landscape arises in Social Media. This instantaneous gratification satisfies the American appetite and gives a hungry and radicalized audience everything they need to gorge themselves. Instead of just individual isolated voices or outlets, like Limbaugh or Fox News, the firehose is endless. Overnight, people were inundated with techniques they’ve never seen before, and it worked. You no longer need strictly nuanced approaches like Reagan’s War on Drugs, which was a dog-whistled way to go after minorities, while at the same time doing nothing about the AIDS crisis. If the prisons fill with ‘them,’ the justification is always going to be, “they shouldn’t have done anything illegal.” I imagine these same people would turn over German Jews and Jesus, that is following the law. Villages were burning, but it was ok; it was ‘their’ villages.

I watch with the same despair and helplessness as there are still some dog-whistled approaches, voices screaming about the dangers of suburbs dying and different types of housing ‘invading.’ Those don’t need to be as prevalent anymore. As the Senate has abdicated its responsibilities to govern, it is poisoning the judiciary branch with malicious intent, and we have a malignant narcissist in the Oval Office who views a pandemic approximately seventy 9/11s in casualties as ‘acceptable.’ The Late Stage Capitalists are cheering as they hoover up wealth at the expense of us all with no moral compass other than the one that points to themselves. People who view themselves authority figures are killing people in the streets with wanton abandon. Citizens in the streets with a clear desire for peace shout their consent to be governed via authoritarianism is not being given. I watch villages burn here, and the parallels between here and there hurt.

My life has been a constant struggle to put out the fires. I am one person in a world of people who profit from the fires and who view equality as oppression. I am not alone; I am a part of a long lineage of honorable women and men who have wanted little more than to be valued as people because they are people, and the opportunity to contribute to the chorus of the world with their unique voice. It is difficult right now when everywhere you turn, there are the forces of religious, racial (social), and economic oppression and their defenders, and they’ve allied, mainly, in one political party.

I used to think this period was just a dark stain on our history, instead of understanding it’s an accumulation of decades of effort from people rotting us from the inside. When I returned from living abroad, the culture shock that hit me was tangible. The America I returned to wasn’t the one I left. In truth, the America I departed was just a naive romanticization from a youthful idealist whose innocence hadn’t yet been entirely destroyed. I was not a social child, but even as a kid, I had little patience for immaturity. As a teenager, I was frustrated by a church that had no answers for applying critical thought to mythology. I was learning how difficult it was to reason your way out of a position when one did not reason themselves into that position. I have this struggle now with the theocrats, the racists, the authoritarians, etc. We are often at an impasse wherein their views of a white Christian utopia does not exist, but if I’ve learned anything lately is reality is a village that has to match their agenda, or it gets burned. I’ve had enough of watching villages burn.

I was working on this piece for sometime when the news broke of RBG’s passing. I started crying as I knew life was going to get even worse. I want to take tonight to celebrate her accomplishments before I wake up tomorrow to mourn her passing, but I can’t. Plato is quoted to have said only dead men know peace. The forces of evil determined to prevent America from being a better version of itself are a constant reminder he was right.

Toward What or Who am I being Compassionate? (2025 : Part 2)

I am reminded of why monks live in monasteries. Monastic life, on the one hand, has its tasks to accomplish while never letting you forget that you and the environment are one and the same. On the other hand, monastic life does not inundate you with news of outside events.  The news is painfully negative at the best of times, but what’s truly sad is the almost gleeful coverage of events during the worst of times.  Having compassion means our hearts go out to those suffering, but it is easy to become drained hearing one negative outcome after another.  The real tragedy is that’s by design.

Southern California burns; it’s a topic difficult to discuss.  Obviously, we don’t want to see anyone get hurt in the fire.  Seeing people online take pleasure in watching those they politically disagree with suffer like this is another daily reminder of the social wildfires started and spread constantly by those who don’t want us as a united people.  Matters are only made worse when, at the bottom of my heart, I know the everyperson who was living in those communities and lost everything will be priced out of coming back a lot more than the exploiters who will rebuild themselves into a more exclusive community.

France recently took to the streets and celebrated the death of Le Pen.  “Good Manners” and “Decorum” say we shouldn’t do such things.  I’ve thought about this for some time, and I am torn about the matter.  The French aren’t afraid to show outward anger towards a system that is profoundly flawed and want people to believe they are powerless to change it.  Here in the USA, such anger is directed toward wildfire victims, or worse – shooting a school or attacking the capital.  So, celebrating a death seems very rude on the surface, but the relief of knowing that person isn’t going to do harm anymore is a powerful feeling that many of us don’t express openly.  I think we should.

Beyond the principle “Democracy progresses one funeral at a time,” Toward what or who are we being compassionate?  Recently, I was at an aquarium with a special soul.  Part of the aquarium’s message was about invasive species and what the local biome would look like if conversation efforts failed.  I look out my window at birds flying around and tree branches dancing in the wind, and I wonder how much worse the California fire is due to the removal of Oak Groves and us imposing our will on the environment again and again (*1).  When I think of ‘us inserting our will’ as a form of invasive species, I immediately think of the Trumps, the Le Pens, the Limbaughs, and a whole host of others starting and spreading wildfires that are now out of control in their way and the damage done is already great, with no signs of containment ahead.

Toward what or who are we being compassionate?  The answer has to be, first and foremost, ourselves, but how do we accomplish this without being ignorant or consumed?  Detachment is part of the answer, but fostering a positive environment is another. When news large enough arrives requiring us to act, we can give earnestly and return to something rejuvenating.  Another part of the answer is emotional integrity; when it is time to celebrate or mourn, we allow ourselves to do so.  We’re not going to be in the streets celebrating every death, but for those select few that deserve it, be honest with our feelings.  If we can’t be honest with ourselves, we have no hope of being truly compassionate.  Unless we tune out entirely, I think it’s ok to be angry that more of the world is on fire than needs to be (*2).  However, it’s also ok not to take on the weight of the world all on yourself; we are capable of wonderous things together.

—-

(*1) To be clear I’m not trying to place blame on any one person, developer, etc.,  I understand this situation was complicated by incredible winds and other factors.

(*2) Yes, we do set things on fire intentionally!  In fact California, among other places, is in an area where regular burn cycles is part of its natural health.