Edwin Markham

Outwitted by Edwin Markham
He drew a circle that shut me out -
Heretic, rebel, a thing to flout,
But Love and I had the wit to win:
We drew a circle and took him in!

miércoles, 19 de septiembre de 2012

Future Tense


In the waiting room
   I sit.
In the not yet here,
    but can´t rush it.
Aspiring to something
   meaningful
To look back
   from ahead
and nod; it was a worthwhile
   life.

Eh May 2009

lunes, 17 de septiembre de 2012

¡Viva Chile!

¡Viva Chile!  This week is full of independence celebrations.  The 18th of September is Chile's Independence day and a holiday.  Here is a video you may watch with the music of "Chile Lindo" (Beautiful Chile).  And for those of you who want to practice your Spanish, the words of the song are included.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zxXwi2b35uM&feature=related

domingo, 9 de septiembre de 2012

Shalom Center Prayer


The Shalom Full Body Prayer
            Shalom is the Hebrew word for peace, but it means much more than the English word.  Shalom also means health, wholeness, completeness, soundness. “Paz” is the Spanish word for peace.  “Pya’guazú” [you can pronounce it as if it were Spanish, but the sounds like uh but is pronounced in the back of the throat] is the Guaraní word for peace.  The Guaraní are the indigenous people of Paraguay.  The meaning of the word is “tranquil stomach.”  The first place we feel a lack of peace is in our stomachs.  It also has a meaning accompanied by justice because when all the people in the community are well-fed so that everyone has a tranquil stomach, there is true peace.
We’re all called to go out and share with others the peace that God is bringing into our lives.  We recognize that this peace is not an easy peace.  It comes with justice, truth, and mercy.  It is a full peace with the sharing of power not like the Pax Romana which was peaceful for the Romans but certainly not for the peoples they conquered! Whenever we do this prayer, we do it in a circle to remind us God has no beginning or end, and we are all on the same level when it comes to building peace.
Gather in a circle.  Hold out your left hand, put your right hand on top of the next person’s left hand.  Feel the sensations of holding the different hands.  One hand may be warmer, the other colder, one may be thinner, the other thicker.  Notice that you are offering support to someone else, but that you are also receiving support from another.  This symbolizes the fact that to build shalom, sometimes, in humility, we offer our gifts and sustain others, and other times we are the ones who are receiving from others and being sustained.  This is the way we do mission work around the world in the United Church of Christ.
[As the group is gathered in the circle, one person may pray aloud, and then the Full Body Prayer may be used with the following instructions.]
  Hold out your right hand while you say Paz.  Then hold out your left hand while you say Peace.  As you bring both hands toward your mouth, say Pya’guazú.
In silence, raise both hands and say to yourself, “I commit to healing my relationship with God.”  Place your hands on your heart and say to yourself, “I commit to healing my relationship with myself.”  Put your left hand on the shoulder of the next person and say to yourself, “I commit to healing my relationship with others.”  Take one step forward and say to yourself, “I commit to healing my relationship with the earth.”  Then, because God doesn’t call us to close our circles, but to reach out and bring others in:   Turn around to face out of the circle and count in your head, “One, two, three.  Then shout, “Shalom.”  When we shout “Shalom” at the Shalom Center in Chile, the Andes Mountains echo back to us.  We probably can’t shout loudly enough here for the Andes Mountains to echo back, but we can shout loud enough to remind ourselves that we are the ones to carry peace into the world.
Simplified instructions to use after the above explanations have been given:
Gather in a circle.  Hold out your left hand and put your right hand on top of the next person’s left hand and feel the different sensations.  Drop your hands as one person prays aloud.
            Hold out your right hand as you say Paz.  Hold out your left hand as you say Peace.  Hold both hands to your mouth as you say Pya’guazú.   
 (In silence, raise both hands and say to yourself) I commit to healing my relationship with God, (with both hands on your heart say to yourself) I commit to healing my relationship with myself, (put your left hand on the shoulder of the person next to you and say to yourself) I commit to healing my relationship with others, (take one step forward and say to yourself) I commit to healing my relationship with the earth.   Then turn around to face out of the circle and count in your head “One, two, three” and then shout Shalom.

jueves, 30 de agosto de 2012

Rolling Stones and the youth in Paraguay

Dear Friends and Family:

A few weeks ago, I sent you a video of 500 youth playing their harps together at a concert in Paraguay.  My friend, Carolina, who has a deep passion for peace and justice in her native country of Paraguay, continues to work faithfully with "Sonidos de la Tierra", an organization that brings music to the hidden corners of the country believing that "When there is music, history changes." I am hoping that I will be traveling to Paraguay in March of next year to facilitate several workshops at the Jack Norment Camp.  Please be praying that all the pieces might fall into place so that I might be able to go, and that the program there might empower and bless the young people who volunteer at the camp.  

I include part of Carolina's letter:

"I know I haven't written in a long time because of the trip with the World Orchestra of the Sounds of the Earth and the Ars Canendi
Choir from Italy through different cities of Paraguay taking music and building bridges that bring together generations, cultures and countries beyond the divide of language.  I returned to the Asunción where there was great upheaval because of a new requirement from this government that many of us refuse to recognize as legitimate. 

Just as if we were still in the times of the dictatorship, the government was requiring that all the young men turn in  the document which proves that they have completed the process of Obligatory Military Service.  The requirement came to all business and companies who had to solicit from their male employees this document or be heavily fined.  Praise be to God, we have been witnesses to a small but strong revolution.  Thousands of young men have decided to declare themselves Conscientious Objectors.  At first the government was going to obligate these young men to be detained in different forts and military installations but there were too many so that the process was derailed. 

I add to the joy of the results of this commitment on behalf of the young men of Paraguay, a video which we would like to become the MOST SEEN video of Paraguay with more that 1 million viewers.  We hope that the video gets to the Rolling Stones in celebration of their 50th anniversary as we celebrate 10 years of Sounds of the Earth.  Please help us!  In this video, more than 2000 young people gathered for the National Music Seminar in July.  Please share the video with as many contacts as you can so that we can reach our goal! 

We want to tell the world that Paraguay is still beating with hearts seeking to build a better country!"

Please share the video, and if anyone happens to have contacts with the Rolling Stones, please share it with them, too!


Shalom
E

lunes, 27 de agosto de 2012

The Problem Tree


The Problem Tree

The carpenter that I had contracted to help me repair an old barn had just finished a hard first day of work.  His electric saw had malfunctioned causing him to lose an hour of work and now his old pick up truck refused to start.  While I was taking him home, he sat in silence.  Once we arrived at his house, he invited me in to meet his family.

While we were heading toward the door, he stopped briefly in front of a small tree touching the tips of the branches with both hands.  When the door opened, a surprising transformation occurred.  His tanned face, previously tired and worried, filled with smiles.  He hugged his two small children, and he kissed his wife. After a brief stay, he accompanied me back out to the car.  When we passed near the tree, I remembered what I had seen, and so I and asked him, compelled by my curiosity, about what I had seen him do a few moments before.

“Oh, that is my Problem Tree,” he answered.  “I know I can’t avoid having problems at work, but one thing is certain.  Those problems don’t belong at home, and I mustn’t take them out on my wife or my children.  So, I simply hang the problems on the tree every night when I get home.  Then, the next morning, I pick them up again.  The funny thing is,” he said with a smile, “that when I go out in the morning to pick them up, there aren’t ever as many problems as the ones I remember having hung there the night before.”

What problems do you have that you need to hang up overnight in order to gain a new perspective in the morning?

From Cuentos con Alma by Rosario Gómez, Santiago: Por un mundo mejor, 8th edition, 2003