Sunday, September 27, 2015

A Silly Question:

But first, let me explain. I am not a religious kind of guy and haven’t attended Mass in decades. And that is not likely to change. On the other hand, during the past several days, I seem to have noticed a few subtle changes within myself and in the air.

1. Has anyone felt an urge to forgive, hint of joy, or (for lack of a better term), a sense of oneness?  Or maybe, even a whiff of Grace?

Sunday, February 15, 2015

The Water Thief: A Likely Future?

Although this book is said to have been around since 2012, Wally first heard of it only a few days ago.  “I skimmed a review online and immediately placed an order.

“Upon arrival, the first thing I noticed, it was self-published and I almost gave it to Goodwill without a second thought.  And no matter my feelings about the author, I’ve never met a self-published novel that I actually liked.  That is, until a few days ago,” he said.

According to Wally, Nicholas Lamar Soutter’s, The Water Thief, is way more than just a good read.  And should corporate manipulation and disinformation, along with citizen apathy, continue on its current path, it’s a promise of things to come.

On a planet where unions have been crushed, education a heresy and corporations in charge, the CEOs, Executive Class and top one percent rule supreme, while the rest of us are literally, left to eat shit and die. 

And that pretty much describes what life might become, in the not too distant future, where everything is privatized and for profit.   It is a place where the sum total of one’s existence is objectively determined by your worth to Human Resources.


There is no right and no wrong.  Criminal behavior is objective and measured by damage to the corporation.  And perception is everything.  Perception is truth!  And whatever you may do, never ever set a bucket out in the rain and attempt to steal the corporation’s water.  “But that,” says Wally, “is a whole other story and well worth a read.”


Friday, January 02, 2015

Weird Wally’s Cognitive Dissonance

It’s the day after New Year’s and Wally is still meditating on last year.  For him, it’s been a confusing year.   As a matter of fact it’s been more like total cognitive dissonance and it first started sometime around March of 2012, shortly after the fatal shooting of an unarmed teenager by an angry white guy, either civilian or law enforcement.   And although he didn’t realize it at the time, it was only the first of many.

“Up to that point,” he posted on a progressive website, “I had no problem with white people and doubted that would ever change.”  But what Wally seldom considered, until very recently, was the fact that a lot of white people have a problem with him.  And it’s not because he does anything to offend them.  They seem to take offense at the very fact that he lives and breathes and is a citizen of these United States.  “Add a black president to that already explosive situation,” he said, “and you get a lot of heads exploding with rage.”

And now that he’s learned so many white people have a problem with him, Wally is realizing that he now has a problem with white people.  And with the exception of longtime friends and some family members, he has noticed that he has avoided most whites and made neither a new white friend nor acquaintance in the past couple of years.   Worse yet, the few he’d met and seemed to click with, he’d started avoiding.  “Things that were important to me weren’t important to them and they didn’t really want to talk about important shit and the many things we had in common were far overshadowed by the things we didn’t.

“I even started avoiding a few good white friends over this and was surprised to find out how many of them believe that if a cop arrested you, you were doing something wrong.  And if he actually shot you, then you were doing something wrong and threatened the cop’s life.  I know that’s bullshit, but how do I explain to someone else that their opinion is wrong if they’ve never experienced what is normal for me and, can’t even conceive of the possibility in the first damn place.”

With local law enforcement killing an unarmed black teenager or young adult on an average of more than once a week and usually getting away with it, Wally also finds himself avoiding the police, both black and white, even more than he avoids most whites whom he doesn’t know, and a few whom he does.  “So how do I communicate with someone who totally discounts my experiences simply because my experience can never happen to him?”

And like most all people, when confronted with cognitive dissonance, Wally is choosing to decrease his stress by totally avoiding these conflicts of dualities.    And although he knows nothing is resolved by his avoidance, he also knows that even cognitive dissonance is impermanent and that it too shall pass.  “Meanwhile,” he said.  “It is what it is.”

Click here for additional comments which appear in Daily Kos