First, my morning moral
dilemma:
I looked out my kitchen window to see a little
pillow-like blond thing in the flower bed. When I saw it throw dirt on its back
I realized it was my free-range chicken Chick-a-dee, having a dirt bath and
sunning herself in the morning sun.
Well, maybe this dilemma isn’t a moral one, but it’s concerning to
me. I want Chick-a-dee to be happy. She likes
her freedom. She likes roosting on the back porch.
I’m
tired of cleaning the porch, and with spring coming on I would like it to look
good.
Who do I please?
She
likes to be close to us, and if we don’t watch carefully she will follow the
dog inside. She will, wiggling her little fuzzy butt, run after me when I go out
to feed the three penned chickens behind the Wayback house.
She will come to my call.
She will come to my call.
I bought wire to make a
run between the old chicken yard to the new kenneled yard with its off-the-ground
hutch. My plan is to put her in the old house, and with the run between the
two, let the chickens decide what is best for them. The not-so-tame chickens
are afraid of Chick-a-dee and will cower in their house when she is in the yard.
Will they work it out?
I don’t know. Chickens like chickens and
Chick-a-dee had a sister she was close with, but
when her sister came up missing, Chick-a-dee adopted us. But I will miss
Chick-a-dee at the house and telling her, “Good night Chick-a-dee.”
Okay, I left my window,
got my coffee, and sat down at the computer to begin my day, and…
Wow, this blew me away:
“We should do away with the absolutely specious
notion that everybody has to earn a living. It is a fact today that one in ten
thousand of us can make a technological breakthrough capable of supporting all
the rest. The youth of today are absolutely right in recognizing this nonsense
of earning a living. We keep inventing jobs because of this false idea that
everybody has to be employed at some kind of drudgery because according to Malthusian Darwinian theory he must justify
his right to exist. So we have inspectors of inspectors and people making
instruments for inspectors to inspect inspectors. The true business of people
should be to go back to school and think about whatever it was they were
thinking about before somebody came along and told them they had to earn a
living.”
―
―
I heard Buckminster Fuller speak in San Diego
California, and my mouth dropped when he
said he made $300,000 a year and spent every penny of it. He would make another
300,000 the following year.
How cool is that!
That was 30 years ago.
I have been taking a course begun in Portland Oregon,
called The Right to Exist. Now it has
moved to another location and to new writers
named Dominika and Cedric. Their course is The
Trailblazer.
When I first began following the Right
to Exist site, I thought about how people work like slaves,
often hate their jobs, go home tired,
grumbling, watch television and fall into bed, only to repeat the same procedure
the next day.
And working mothers get their three-year-old child up
at 7:30 to take her to day-care, drop the son
off at school, work for 8 hours, pick up the children—go home to whatever
happens in the evening, and then begin it all over again. The little girl
spends 40 hours a week in day-care.
And our social system, in giving any financial assistance,
keeps the precipitant at the poverty level, for we have the belief that if a
person doesn’t work, they are lazy, and we don’t want to support that. One must
justify their right to exist.
“Overcoming
poverty is not a task of charity, it is an act of justice. Like Slavery and
Apartheid, poverty is not natural. It is man-made and it can be overcome and
eradicated by the actions of human beings. Sometimes it falls on a generation
to be great. YOU can be that great
generation. Let your greatness blossom.”
—Nelson
Mandela
On the other end of the socioeconomic spectrum are
individuals who rush to “jobs” they love so much
they say they would do them even without pay. These individuals often make an
enormous amount of money, buy jets and such, send cars into space, and are the
envy of others sitting at home watching TV.
Of course, those glorious ones got off their butts and worked for the thing they loved. As a result, some received high financial rewards. However, some have a problem. In their effort
to reach the top, they forgot that inner work is required to become a whole
human being. They became despondent, couldn’t handle the pressure, their
relationships fell into the toilet, they used drugs to calm the savage beast and ended up killing themselves.
It’s such a dilemma.
And crap, this will break your heart:
"If there is a country that has committed unspeakable
atrocities in the world, it is the United States of America. They don't care for human beings.” –Nelson Mandela
We care.
Okay, now I am putting myself out on a limb. I am in
the process of writing a course—for me? Yeah, and for anyone else who chooses
to sign up.
While working my way through the Trailblazer processes
I hit a spot where I questioned what I wanted to do, where my strengths lie, and found, that while I thought I knew what
I wanted—to write, to blog and to write books. Another
possibility came pecking at me.
I wanted to write my own course, not to copy others who
have gone before me, but my own—to work through it with my participants, for, you know there is more than the external trappings of life.
There is also the inner work of how we relate to other
human beings and to ourselves.
Few of us have escaped life unscathed, and most people feel they aren’t good enough.
Few of us have escaped life unscathed, and most people feel they aren’t good enough.
If one’s psychology is 80% of the battle in living the
life we choose, then the place to begin is with clearing the path to our
greatness.
I have taken more seminars, workshops,
courses, and training programs than you can shake a stick at. (Words of my
mother. Although I still don’t know what that means.) It is time to stop
soaking up information and to pour some
out.
Like spaghetti thrown to the ceiling, I will throw out my information to see if it sticks.
Share what you
know. We need to hear it.
Thank you for being here. You are awesome!
So, how was your week?
Love,
Joyce
From the brilliance of Shel Silverstein, Where the Sidewalk Ends