On Being Blog

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A Meteor ShowerPhoto by Flo Legendere / Flickr, licensed under Creative Commons

For many years I taught incarcerated people. During a course called "Explorations in Reading," at the women's prison in New Hampshire, we managed to persuade the officer to let us hold a class session outside, on the edge of the blacktop basketball court where several women were sunning, pant legs and tee-shirt sleeves rolled up. I looked beyond the wire fencing to a stand of trees and read aloud Mary Oliver's poem, "Some Questions You Might Ask," wherein the poet wonders about the nature of the soul: who and what have one? Is there a shape to it?

I told the women in class I love the poem because I believe that trees have souls. Immediately, someone suggested that when I die my soul might enter a tree.

"That would be perfect," I said, "as long as I don't end up a bench." We laughed and a woman said, "You could end up paper that someone writes on." Another piped up and said, "You could end up being a disciplinary write-up form."

"No not that," I exclaimed. But then it hit me, what if every thing, every being potentially held some particle of spirit or soul of something or someone I loved? What if the disciplinary write-up form were printed on paper that came from a tree that possessed a great soul?

The answer came tumbling out of my mouth: I would be more apt to treat all things and all beings more compassionately. My vision and relationship with the world and all its inhabitants would change.

Rabbi David Cooper in his book, God Is a Verb explains five levels of soul — the first is Nefesh, the Hebrew word for vital life force, which refers to the soul of atomic structure. Every particle of matter has Nefesh.

Rabbi Cooper cautions us against limiting soul to a particular body or entity. He likens it to magnetic field, a kind of spiritual current that flows through every thing, every being, connecting us all.

Alice Walker begins her novel, Possessing the Secret of Joy, with a line from a bumper sticker:

When the ax entered the forest, the trees said, “The handle is one of us.”

To see ourselves in those who seem most definitively them is a kind of vision I desire though it frightens me. Often, when I feel tethered by fear, I long to be free of it, yet there are moments when what I want is to be willing to be afraid, and still enter the forest where trees are brave enough to recognize themselves in the handle of axes that seek to cut them down.

In part, that's why I began working in prisons, to find in myself those who reside there. That came easily enough. Were it not for the privileges, the resources, the chances, and choices I've been so abundantly given, but for the grace of God, there go I. The challenge was finding myself in the correctional officers. I thought a lot about who becomes one and why. I remembered how I, too, needed a job once, which led to teaching in a locked adolescent unit of a psychiatric hospital where we assessed and tallied behavior on point sheets, where fluorescent lighting and sealed, chicken-wired windows taunted fresh air and sun.

I never really subscribed to the treatment model, nor did I like much of what I saw, but it paid well. To the teenagers on that unit, no matter how empathetic I tried to be, I was still "staff," the hospital equivalent of a correctional officer.

When the ax entered the forest, the trees said, "The handle is one of us."

Before I knew it, I found myself behaving like some correctional officers I'd observed: leaning too far into the face of an angry adolescent whose confinement embittered him. I heard myself telling him like countless other adults had, what I could do to him. In that split second when he screamed at me and I knew I was powerless to change one iota of his pain, I reached for what power I could, and did nothing but sully myself and fuel his cynicism.

I heard the words of Maya Angelou who said there is nothing sadder than a young cynic because she or he goes from knowing nothing to believing nothing. In that moment of mutual frustration and powerlessness, neither of us believed there was anything else to do. Neither of us recognized the soul of the other, or anything we had ever loved. In that moment, the sparks of the divine in each of us, lay dormant, dispossessed. We saw only the ax blade, not the handle.

When does a child embody the soul of an ax instead of a tree?

Each time I have volunteered in a penal facility, I have been warned: Do not trust the inmates. They are called "cons" for a reason. They will ask you for things and try to manipulate you. Not once in the ten years I taught or brought in artists or speakers, did anyone con or manipulate me. I did not expect them to. I offered my respect and received theirs in return. I have no doubt that prisons, like society at large, are rife with negative behaviors. They breed like bacteria on stale bread, seizing the most opportune conditions: distrust, disrespect, dehumanization. It is challenge to enter a prison and keep cynicism at bay; it is a triumph of spirit to dwell there, for an eight-hour shift, or a sentence, without surrendering one's humanity.

In her "Morning Poem," Mary Oliver speaks of daring to be happy. I asked the women in class what that meant to them. A woman said, "They hate it when we are happy in here. They can't stand to see us smile."

Later that afternoon in prison, when we had returned to the building, to the room we shared with vending machines, we were all laughing, and I looked up to see four people with visitor badges on a tour of the prison staring in at us. "Now see," I joked, "they're going to think prison is fun." But underneath the irritation of being studied lay the recognition that the four people on the tour saw something important as they passed by. They saw incarcerated women who knew their bodies could be chastened, but not their souls. And maybe, like the trees, they understood, "the handle is one of us."


Leaf SeligmanLeaf Seligman is a minister, writing teacher, and author of Opening the Window: Sabbath Meditations. Leaf listens intently to life's conversations and hears in the brokenness what makes us whole.

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Lego Nativity Scene with KatalumaA Lego nativity scene with kataluma created by Jacob Hosanna.

As a prophet said, we are capable of so many things, us humans.

You may be used to it — the nativity story as told by wonderful, small humans from St. Paul’s Church in Auckland, New Zealand, or the recordings from the early ‘60s of Bible stories told by children in Dublin City. They are charming, beautiful. They are full of such potential and pleasure in the art of the imagination and the craft of storytelling.

However, as Pope Benedict XVI pointed out recently (and many others, including Ken Bailey), the way we tell the story is often unfaithful to the text. Luke’s gospel, from which much of the story comes, records no stable, no animals, and, most importantly, no inhospitality. Luke, normally so kind and gracious, giving so much time to stories of the marginalized, rushes through the birth of Jesus as if it was of little importance. Joseph and Mary had gone to Bethlehem for the census (oh, those number-loving Romans) and:

While they were there, the time came for her to deliver her child. And she gave birth to her firstborn son and wrapped him in bands of cloth, and laid him in a manger, because there was no place for them in the inn.

See? No animals, no inhospitality, no stable.

The word used for “inn” here is a curious one. In Greek, there are two words for "inn": "kataluma" and "pandocheion." It is the latter, pandocheion, used by Luke in the telling of the story of mobbed man resembles what we understand to be an inn — a resting house, with an owner and rooms.

Kataluma, the word used in the nativity story (and interestingly, also used to denote the upper room of the last supper) was really a different thing altogether. Most people of the time lived in a one-room structure. In that room there was space for living and sleeping, a fireplace. Additionally, the animals were brought in for the night to that same space — for protection and also because of the warmth they’d give. Those houses lucky enough to have a kataluma had an additional guest room. This room, the kataluma, could be rented out. So, it seems that Joseph and Mary, arriving in Bethlehem, could not find a kataluma, so they had the baby and laid him in the manger, which would have been in the living space of a family who made room for them in their own place of life.

There's a wonderful Lego image of the kataluma by Jacob Hosanna. It is much more ordinary. Much less dramatic. Much less offensive to the good people of the Holy Land who are aghast at Western tellings of the nativity story implying that anyone would turn away a woman in the last moments of pregnancy.

Those New Zealand kids were right about one thing though: the sense of celebration. Matthew's recounting of the arrival of those strange Magi details, with a superfluity unusual in the gospel texts that they e˙ca¿rhsan cara»n mega¿lhn sfo/dra, literally, "they rejoiced with a great joy exceedingly."

The way we tell the story tells so much. Stars and angels and joy and delight. Also, inhospitality, cruelty, insult, and limitation.

We must always be attentive to the edges of our own storytelling. Attractive as it may be to children, and lodged as it may be upon the portrayed scenes of religious Christmas cards, it is simply incorrect to think that Mary and Joseph were forced into a stable. They found shelter in the kindness of a family, presumably Joseph's kin, in his traditional homeland of Bethlehem. This kindness was so ordinary, so expected, so taken for granted that Luke, the gentle evangelist, did not even make mention of the family whose home was used for what we consider to be the birthing of a godchild to confused parents.

As Krista Tippett wrote, it's not provable. But, the telling of the story can make many things possible.

We might realize that every moment of human encounter, every small demonstration of hospitality, carries within it the possibility for incarnation. We can see that human touch, the actual touching of flesh, and flesh is in itself sacred. We can also see that religion at its best can communicate an honor for the ordinary, the everyday, the unremarkable — and find something remarkable in the midst of this parochial normality.

We are capable of so many things, us humans. Hospitality and hostility. Kindness and cruelty. What prophet said that? I don't know. I made it up. If one didn't say it, one should have said it. While it may not be true, it's definitely not untrue.


Pádraig Ó TuamaPádraig Ó Tuama, originally from Cork, now lives in Belfast where he works in poetry, theology, mediation, and dialogue projects. He neglects his website on a regular basis and has recently published a book of poetry Readings from the Book of Exile.


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We've got the biggest Balls of them all...Photo by Guru Sno Studios/Flickr

"I'm not going to buy any presents this year. We will go shopping as a family for these homeless teenagers, and I'll try to be honest about the equivalent I would spend on my own children on the commercial holy days if I believed in them. I report this in some hope of feeding a little rebellion I sense many of us are quietly tending. But I also make it public to be sure I follow through."

    ~Krista Tippett on "Why I Don't Do Christmas"

Me and ThemKrista (@kristatippett) isn't a big fan of playing the "Christmas game" of obligatory gift-giving. As a matter of fact, she's a bit of a Bah Humbug character.

I confess to my inner Scrooge - how I think Xmas has come to distort us; how I'm seeking recovery this year.

She's not alone. Diane Warren commented:

"Thank you for expressing so eloquently what I feel. It is always good to know there is connection, and through that validation, with others on an internal level that is so deep it is not often expressed. Belief systems are tricky; even to oneself."

Advent ConspiracyPeople aren't just stewing in their "Scrooge-friendly juices" though. People are telling us about the many good works going on: an Episcopal church sponsoring a "diaper ministry," an artist helps save local wildlife by selling paintings of tigers (inspired by Alan Rabinowitz), an adolescent working on his Eagle Scout project buys new undergarments for others less fortunate because he put himself in somebody's place and thought "I would want to wear new underwear and socks."

Check out the hundreds of comments on our Facebook page, our blog, and on Twitter (@beingtweets). Read, share, and discuss "Why I Don't Do Christmas" with your friends and family.

Native Detroiter Gloria Lowe, whom you might remember from our show "Becoming Detroit," echoes Krista's sentiments. Barbara Jones, Gloria Lowe, Krista Tippett, and Barbara Stachowski.How about these closing lines from "Turning To Instead of Against Each Other":

We are facing an economic and spiritual crisis that threatens our survival and our deepest humanity. But it also an opportunity. It is an opportunity to create a more just way of living. In earlier, more dangerous times we created families, villages, places of worship and respect for one another. We have that creativity within us still.

Let us all celebrate this holiday season through the eyes of a "beloved community," turning away from wanting things to valuing people. We can turn to one another and ask what kind of community we can create together.

Take a few minutes and read the rest of Gloria's essay. You won't regret it.

Anger is a moral response. But the exacting measure of our humanity is how we wield and transmute it - the legacy we give it in the world.

Presence in the Wild with Kate BraestrupLike many of you, we are still thinking through the horrific tragedy in Connecticut. We heard from many kind listeners who thanked us for broadcasting Krista's interview with Kate Braestrup as a response to the unfolding news. Though it was not our intent, it was the right conversation during some of our country's darkest hours. I offered a brief explanation about why we chose last week's program.

As we plan the next season of The Civil Conversations Project, we're thinking about how we can foster a better public dialogue. But what's our approach? As Krista said to me this morning:

"How do we talk about gun violence without it devolving into the same old debate? If we try to turn this into a discussion that draws on our shared humanity, surely we'll find a way to bring in subjects like mental illness."

How do you think about our national conversation on these subjects? Who would you like to hear in dialogue wrestling with these important issues? Write me at tgilliss@onbeing.org or @trentgilliss.

On a bit of a lighter note, this image by C. Edward Brice paired with "The nitrogen in our DNA, the calcium in our teeth, the iron in our blood, the carbon in our apple pies were made in the interiors of collapsing stars. We are made of starstuff." ~Carl Sagan photo by C. Edward Brice http://bit.ly/VUx0VaCarl Sagan's words really grabbed our readers this week:

“The nitrogen in our DNA, the calcium in our teeth, the iron in our blood, the carbon in our apple pies were made in the interiors of collapsing stars. We are made of starstuff.”

Two shows we're working on for 2013:

Editing last summer's interview with the wonderful Roshi Joan Halifax @upayazen - the embodiment of "engaged Buddhism." Will air in Jan.

Segovia Youth Commemorate MassacreTalk about unforeseen adjacencies, Roshi Joan quotes this week's subject:

"We have gravely underestimated the human spirit." ~Teilhard de Chardin, "Evolution proceeds towards spirit."

And a conversation we recorded last week:

Lovely, unusual interview yesterday with Natalie Batalha of @NASAKepler - on exoplanets, love, and the future of space.

"What we observe out there is that nature is creative, prolific, robust." ~Natalie Batalha, Kepler Space Telescope Mission

Here's wishing you all a very merry Christmas and a happy new year!

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Me and ThemIllustration by Libby Levi

I played the Christmas game when my children were little. I was not reckless with the sense of wonder that collects around Santa Claus and the Baby Jesus and, alas, morphs the two together. I bought presents. Some years I even decorated a tree. Though some years I could let their father do this — a rare plus of raising children in two households. As he is an Episcopal priest, they would also go to church with him, leaving me to stew in my Scrooge-friendly juices.

Don’t get me wrong. I enjoy giving gifts. I think ritual is essential to human flourishing and to family life. We need more of it. I have a deep reverence for the incarnational heart of Christianity. I even still recognize faint glimmers of these impulses in the trappings of Christmas as we know it now, 21st-century style. But I think this season has more overwhelmingly become a distortion of them — a distortion of us as a culture, as humans, as families. And I for one am done.

Why do I dislike Christmas now? Let me count the ways.

I don’t like — don’t approve, refuse to throw myself into — the spirit of obligatory gift-giving. In my lifetime, this has become existentially linked to a commercial orgy that has now even co-opted the ritual angle. We have Good Friday and Maundy Thursday; we have Black Friday and Cyber Monday. Unlike Good Friday and Maundy Thursday, however (though like “fiscal cliff”) these terms are repeated and reported by the most serious of journalists. Like all mantras of ritual, they work on us from the inside. They are an economic event by which we measure a certain kind of cultural health.

This form of cultural health is not health at all. It is overwhelmingly an exercise in excess and trivia.

When I was growing up, even in a financially comfortable family, we waited all year for the new bicycle, the new Barbie, the new book. Christmas was a reward for a kind of patience. It was, in some sense, an exercise in delayed gratification. Those gifts were even presumed to be a reward for a year of goodness — a proposition, to be sure, that always had its fluff factor.

But we who are fortunate to have money to spend on Christmas presents inhabit a world now where the new bicycle — in modern-day translation: the new phone, the new video game, the latest greatest shoes — are purchased on demand throughout the year. I routinely wake up to find that my teenaged son has left my laptop desktop open to the “checkout” page, usually of a sports clothing website, where he has graciously filled in all the fields but my credit card number. I don’t always buy what he wants, but I cave in more than I’m happy to admit. That’s January through November.

Then there is the religious distortion of Christmas. Good Christians out there who do this with dignity, I don’t mean you. In most of the churches I’ve attended as an adult, Christmas is dressed up as a children’s holiday. A play. Not really for grown ups, not really about us. Make no mistake, I’ve teared up at that re-enactment of the manger scene many times myself, especially when my own children were sheep. It does not begin to do justice to the message of God become human.

When I became a mother for the first time, I was studying at Yale Divinity School, learning vocabulary like “Christology” — all the ways Christians have pondered the complex notion of Christ as both fully divine and fully human for the past two thousand years. So it was with incredulity and not a little annoyance that I found myself, in a state of severe sleep deprivation, singing “Away in a Manger” where “the little Lord Jesus no crying he makes.” Please.

More recently, there is also the maddeningly superficial way we’ve thrown other holidays into the mix, subsuming them all into general cultural buzz. The December that the Clinton-Lewinsky scandal was full-blown, my daughter traipsed through the house playing with her imaginary friends and singing “Oh Monica! Oh Monica!” to the tune of “Oh Hanukkah!”

Here’s what I take seriously. There is something audacious and mysterious and reality-affirming in the assertion that has stayed alive for two thousand years that God took on eyes and ears and hands and feet, hunger and tears and laughter and the flu, joy and pain and gratitude and our terrible, redemptive human need for each other. It’s not provable, but it’s profoundly humanizing and concretely and spiritually exacting. And it’s no less rational — no more crazy — than economic and political myths to which we routinely deliver over our fates in this culture, to our individual and collective detriment.

So here’s what I’m thinking about this Christmas. Recently I followed up on a promise I’ve been making myself for years: to wash and sort and give away all the good clothing my kids have outgrown as they’ve left childhood behind. It’s embarrassing that I never took the time to do this all along. In the course of digging around for where to donate, I stumbled on the site of a charity that works with homeless teenagers. It turns out that they’re not asking in the first instance for all these Levis and good-as-new, cool t-shirts. They’re asking for donations of socks and coats. They’re asking for newly purchased underwear, noting that most of us take for granted our ever-renewable supplies of clean underwear that fits.

I’m not going to buy any presents this year. We will go shopping as a family for these homeless teenagers, and I’ll try to be honest about the equivalent I would spend on my own children on the commercial holy days if I believed in them. I report this in some hope of feeding a little rebellion I sense many of us are quietly tending. But I also make it public to be sure I follow through.

As I said, we need each other. And that impulse, surely, is deep in the original heart even of the most secular things like Santa Claus and surrounding your home with lights: examining what we are to each other and experiencing that, sometimes when we do this, something transcendent happens.

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Kate Braestrup with Game Wardens

I edit and produce a national public radio show called On Being with Krista Tippett. It’s played on about 250 public radio stations at different times throughout the week. Part of my gig is deciding our programming line-up. Why do I tell you this?

About a week ago, we had a gap in our schedule and I suggested rebroadcasting our interview with Kate Braestrup, a UU chaplain who works with Maine’s game wardens on search-and-rescue missions and such events. She also lost a husband early in her life. For some, it seemed counter-intuitive to put a show on about death, loss, and grief during this festive time of year. But we know that the holidays can be a lonely time of despair, depression, and loss for many; I hoped our program could meet those people suffering in some minor way — and remind all of us of the gift of grace and happiness during this season.

I never could’ve envisioned (nor wanted to) this horrifying scenario before us. And so I worried about the programming decision.

Well, my beloved wife Shelley and I just finished listening to the production on MPR News (yes, believe it or not, on the radio). Kate Braestrup’s stories and insights on love, death, and loss are profound — and more relevant than I could have ever imagined. It’s wise people like her who are most needed during our country’s darkest hours and brightest holidays. Bella and I cried a little; we danced.

This show doesn’t make sense of the tragedy in Connecticut; nothing can. But, Kate Braestrup offers a framing for how to think about love and tragedy, how we live forward. If you’re looking for something to listen to with your loved ones, listen to this show. And, if you do, please write me and share your thoughts. It would mean a lot to me: tgilliss@onbeing.org or @trentgilliss.

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Anna Monroe of the Michigan Municipal League Helps Detroit Families at the HolidaysAnna Monroe of the Michigan Municipal League works with a young girl from Detroit during the holidays.

We live in difficult times. Stories of corruption, violence and down right evilness surround us. Trying to make sense of this state, it sometimes seems easier to close it all out, becoming numb to our pain and the pain of others. Often we pretend things will somehow get better tomorrow.

Many of us come to this holiday season with fear. What do we say to our children and our friends when there is no money for the "things" they have come to expect from us? What do we do when we cannot buy our way out of pain?

Many of us have been chasing the American Dream, trying to consume our way to our image of the "middle-class American." We have come to believe we are what we can buy. Everywhere we look, corporations encourage us to value things over people. Over the last fifty years the average American family has spent more hours working, chasing an ever-decreasing paycheck to buy things. We use these things to replace the time we no longer spend with families and friends.

The holiday season, sacred to all faiths, has become nothing more than a hyped-up consumer season and a wretched time of the year for those with no money. As more people are thrown off state support for the barest of necessities, as foreclosures increase and unemployment checks decrease, people are turning against one another. This season we have an opportunity to rethink our values and what it means to be a human being. Can we begin to look past the superficial ways we judge one another by what we wear, what kind of car we drive, or what church we go to? Can we learn to see each other in our hearts and not just with our eyes?

As a community we have a long history of transcending pain, of turning fear to hope and hope to action. We have learned to reach out to each other in service. We have known that a fragmented heart manifests a fragmented world. We have always made a way out of no way.

This holiday season is an opportunity for all of us to dedicate ourselves to building authentic relationships with our families, our friends and our communities.

We may not have money for toys and trinkets but we can wrap our arms around our children and show them how to love. We may not be able to spend money, but we can spend time. We can set aside time and talk to one other about our hopes and dreams. We can take time to reconnect across generations, sharing stories of family and friends that pass on the values and skills that have enabled us to endure for centuries.

We can ask ourselves what do we need to do to create peace in our homes, in our families and in neighborhoods? How do we decide what we need, not just what we want? How do we live more simply, to consume less and love more?

We are facing an economic and spiritual crisis that threatens our survival and our deepest humanity. But it also an opportunity. It is an opportunity to create a more just way of living. In earlier, more dangerous times we created families, villages, places of worship and respect for one another. We have that creativity within us still.

Let us all celebrate this holiday season through the eyes of a "beloved community," turning away from wanting things to valuing people. We can turn to one another and ask what kind of community we can create together.


Gloria LoweGloria Lowe is founder and CEO of We Want Green, Too!


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"I was in the same moment confronted by an unbearable loss and also by the realization that there were people and community that were there to help me bear it." ~Kate Braestrup

Front Page of Hartford CourantMy oldest child is a first-grade student, seven years old. My youngest five. The news out of Connecticut hits much too close to home.

The imagination reaches into the darkest caverns where a parent's mind dare not go. I have no idea what I might say to my boys, but, like many, I have gazed upon them with awakened eyes as they lie asleep tonight.

Our heartfelt condolences to all the families and the victims of the tragedy at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown.

In times like these, let us turn to some of our wisest elders for light, hope, and a way forward. Our colleague Kate Moos (@katemoos) found solace in listening to a dharma talk titled "Mindfulness of Anger: Embracing the Child Within":

Thich Nhat Hanh is the voice for me today. @Beingtweets' recording of the Zen monk on mindful anger.

HKG2005011836125This passage from the Buddhist master is particularly poignant:

"…there is a seed of anger in every one of us. There are many kinds of seeds that lie deep in our consciousness, a seed of anger, a seed of violence, a seed of fear, a seed of jealousy, a seed of full despair, a seed of miscommunication, a seed of hate. They're all there and, when they sleep, we are okay. But if someone come and water these seeds, they will manifest into energy and they will make us suffer. We also have wholesome seeds in us, namely the seeds of understanding, of awakening, of compassion, of nonviolence, of nondiscrimination, a seed of joy and forgiveness. They are also there.

"Whatever age you are you have a soul, you have a spirit, you have a heart, you have a mind; use them." ~Arnold Eisen from http://bit.ly/VcFRTC photo by Pilar Castro What we see, what we hear, what we eat, always water the seed of violence, the seed of despair, the seed of hate in us and in our children. That is why it's very urgent to do something collectively in order to change the situation. Not only educators, but parents, legislators, artists, have to come together in order to discuss the strategy that can help bring the kind of safe environment to us and to our children where we shall be protected from the negative watering of the seeds in us. The practice of transformation and healing could not be effective without this practice of seeking or creating a sane environment. When someone is sick, you have to bring him to a place where he or she can be treated and to heal.

"Our sense of beauty and our understanding of the nature of the good life are intertwined." ~Alain de Botton http://bit.ly/So0cIk photo by Indy KethdyIf the human person is affected by the poison of violence and anger and despair, if you want to help heal him or her, you have to bring him or her out of the situation where she continues to ingest the poisons of violence. This is very simple. This is very clear and this is not only the job of educators. Everyone has to participate to the work of creating safe environments for us and for our children."

You can listen to the entire talk here. Write tgilliss@onbeing.org or @trentgilliss and tell me what you find relevant in Brother Thay's words or where you are finding solace.

At this time, I also recall a moving story by Vincent Harding, a theologian and speechwriter for Martin Luther King Jr., who recounted a grave moment when civil rights leader Bob Moses learned three protestors had been murdered in Mississippi and told a group of mostly white, college-age protestors that they could Vincent Harding on a Kumbaya Momentquit and return to their families:

"In group after group, people were singing:

Kumbaya. 'Come by here my Lord. Somebody's missing Lord. Come by here. We'll all need you Lord. Come by here.'

I could never laugh at kumbaya moments after that. Because I saw that almost no one went home from there. This whole group of people decided that they were going to continue on the path that they had committed themselves to and a great part of the reason why they were able to do that was because of the strength and the power and the commitment that had been gained through that experience of just singing together, Kumbaya."

"It maybe that you are not yourself luminous, but you are a conductor of light. Some people without possessing genius have a remarkable power of stimulating it." ~Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, photo by Tai Chang HsienOn this final night of Hanukkah, these final two stanzas from a poem by Rachel Barenblat (@velveteenrabbi). She reminds us to rededicate our lives to the hard work of trusting and opening up — and "to the task of bringing light."

At last I light the lamp:
the glint, the glow
regenerating, the homefire
eternally burning.

Learn to trust again
that this oil is enough
to open my eyes
to God, already here.

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Segovia Youth Commemorate Massacre

In looking for a lead image for our show with Brené Brown, I tweeted out a request for people to send me "shots of vulnerability and shame." I was intentionally vague; I wanted to see how people might run with it. The truth is, I didn't receive that many submissions. I didn't need to.

All because of one powerful photo (above) from Brit Hanson, a poet and digital storyteller living in Barrancabermeja, Colombia. Here's the context as she tells it:

"Several weekends ago, I attended a commemoration of the massacre of 43 people in Segovia, Colombia on November 11, 1988. A group of young men and women from the area performed a theatrical vignette in commemoration of the victims of the massacre.

I love the story this photo tells. The one in which young folks in imminent danger act courageously. The one in which their creative act is a subversive and nonviolent statement of power. The one in which they remember the past and imagine a different kind of future.

These young folks were brilliant and brave and incredibly vulnerable as brutal violence continues in the Segovia community today. I thought this photo really captured the vulnerability of their courageous act of performing in such a volatile context. And that's the irony about vulnerability, isn't it? Vulnerability is always courageous, no matter how grandiose or mundane the expression.

Their vulnerability was performing. Mine was admitting that I was scared to even be there."

Thanks, Brit. It's just what we needed.

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Joyous ReunionCpl. Colton Duran hugs his wife Cathia during a return ceremony at the squadron’s hangar aboard Marine Corps Air Station Cherry Point, North Carolina. (Photo by Lance Cpl. Stephen T. Stewart / U.S. Marine Corps)

For the first time in history retail sales on Black Friday topped $1 billion as millions of Americans began their holiday gift shopping early — and in earnest. But the momentum didn't stop there as Cyber Monday saw a 30 percent increase in sales over last year.

At first blush this looks like pretty good news. If nothing else it would seem to indicate that consumer confidence is growing, even though by most accounts a broader economic turnaround is still a distant dream. On the other hand, such increased spending — as well-intentioned as it may be — could simply be an indication of an on-going and potentially unhealthy consumerism that is forever seeking solace in the latest, greatest gadget.

I say "unhealthy" not because gift-giving itself is bad but because the media-driven desire to buy this or that can cause considerable stress, particularly if the cost is beyond our present means or the desire is left unsatisfied.

While most of us consider stress no less a part of the holidays than Santa Claus and mistletoe — unavoidable but essentially harmless — medical research paints quite a different picture. In fact, some studies indicate that stress accounts for between 60 and 90 percent of all visits to the doctor and acts as the precursor to a variety of more serious health issues.

The underlying problem, of course, is not one of material lack. If it were, we'd see doctors prescribing fewer drugs and more widescreen TVs. It is, instead, a kind of spiritual void that would have us believe that happiness is to be found in things, that our worth is measured in terms of material possessions, and that this void can only be filled with more spending.

This is not to say that buying fewer Gameboys and Furbys will make us happier and healthier. (I mention this in case anyone reading this column has already bought me a Furby for Christmas). Over the years, however, I've found that it's the simpler gifts that are the most meaningful.

I remember a time during my first trip to Nepal over a decade ago when my hosts greeted me with a garland of marigold flowers. To this day I keep it inside a small earthenware pot as a reminder of what it means to give what you have to another, no matter how simple or insignificant it may seem.

This offering was accompanied by my host saying, "Namaste," along with a slight bow of the head and hands pressed together in front of the heart — an outward expression of the belief that there is a divine spark residing in each one of us. Although I'm not accustomed to greeting people this way, I do make it a habit of seeing the God-given good in others, even if I don't share this sentiment as often or as visibly as I might like.

As it turns out, even the simplest expression of gratitude — even the slightest acknowledgement that we are loved — has been proven to have a significant impact on our health.

Whether or not this sort of thing will have any impact on the national economy remains to be seen. What is certain, however, is that these gifts from the heart are by far the most readily available, the most lasting — the least expensive — and the most enriching.


Eric NelsonEric Nelson is the media and legislative spokesperson for Christian Science in Northern California. His articles on the link between consciousness and health appear regularly in a number of local, regional, and national online publications.

We welcome your reflections, essays, videos, or news items for possible publication on the On Being blog. Submit your entry through our First Person Outreach page.

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The Piano GuysFor many Christians, "Oh Come, Emanuel" was sung from choral sanctuaries and blasted from organ pipes at the back of the church on the first Sunday of Advent. In the spirit of the season, we posted a video of a pianist and cellist performing the classic hymn. It's gorgeous and definitely our most visited page this week.

Matthew 25: "I was naked, and you clothed me. I was sick, and you visited me. I was in prison, and you came to me."

NYC Police Officer Buys Boots for Homeless Man

Krista shared this tweet by Bill Antholis (@wjantholis), managing director of The Brookings Institution, who cited this New Testament verse after reading a touching story about a NYPD officer who bought a new pair of boots for a barefooted, homeless man. The officer keeps the receipt in his pocket. When asked why, he replied:

"To remind me that sometimes people have it worse."

May we all be this aware of others and offer similar kindnesses during this holiday season.

For us Downton Abbey fans on staff, what a joy to have the British actor Dan Stevens Krista's Twitter Exchange with Matthew Crawley (aka Dan Stevens) of Downton Abbey(yes, the Matthew Crawley!) reach out to Krista from across the Atlantic:

@kristatippett recently discovered your podcast; an absolute revelation. Beautiful, engaging & important. Great work. Thank you!

@thatdanstevens I'm honored!

Public radio infrastructure.As many of you know, we take you behind the glass by offering our unedited interviews.

Public radio infrastructure at Minnesota Public Radio / American Public Media

While our technical director Chris Heagle (@caheagle) was sorting things out during Krista's interview with Seth Godin, I shot this "inside" perspective. Of course, our director of operations gave me some grief, but Tamara Brantmeier, an associate professor of art at the University of Wisconsin–Stout replied:

All I see is a painting.

I think it's beautiful too. And as Krista reminds us:

"Above all remember that the meaning of life is to live life as it if were a work of art." ~Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel

Einstein in Fuzzy SlippersSome other good reads Krista shared this week:

Fascinating new correlation between the way galaxies, our brains, the internet grow - organically, by connection.

Good piece on the "Green Patriarch," His All Holiness Bartholomew.

More fodder for us converts who can't believe we love Twitter - it's present-oriented.

And, how about this observation:

Words for Friends is now a board game. The good irony that great things digital remind us why we like to get together in the flesh.

For a bit of levity and beauty, check out our Tumblr where you'll see the Smithsonian Magazine's absolutely brilliant photo of the Hindu festival of Janmashtami."Ring the bells that still can ring. Forget your perfect offering. There is a crack in everything. That's how the light gets in." ~Leonard Cohen, photo by Theophilos PapadopoulosThe composition is outstanding. On Monday, Pope Benedict VXI put a smile on my face with this shot; sometimes man and beast are not in perfect harmony.

Poetry? One of our more popular Instagrams this week paired a refrain from Leonard Cohen's poem "Anthem" and Theophilos Papadopoulos' photo of church bells on the island of Crete:

Ring the bells that still can ring.
Forget your perfect offering.
There is a crack in everything.
That’s how the light gets in.

Tom Waits Reads Charles BukowskiMore poetry? You must listen to Tom Waits reading of Charles Bukowski's poem "Nirvana." It's a pairing for the gods.

This week two cultural icons passed away. Brazilian architect Oscar Niemeyer (who was 104!) once noted:

"For me, beauty is valued more than anything — the beauty that is manifest in a curved line or in an act of creativity."

CathedralHe created some of the world's iconic masterpieces such as the visually arresting Catedral Metropolitana de Nossa Senhora Aparecida and said:

"Humanity needs dreams to be able to survive the miseries of daily existence, even if only for an instant."

I would've loved to have seen what he would have created on the Great Plains.

We also mourn the loss of one of this country's jazz legends, Dave Brubeck Playing PianoDave Brubeck, who said:

"For as long as I'’ve been playing jazz, people have been trying to pigeonhole me. Frankly, labels bore me."

Take a moment (no puns allowed) to remember and listen to his music.

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Recent Programs

May 23, 2013

The poet Christian Wiman is giving voice to the hunger for faith — and the challenges of faith — for people living now. After a Texas upbringing soaked in a history of violence and a charismatic Christian culture, he was agnostic until he became actively religious again in his late 30s. Then he was diagnosed with a rare form of incurable blood cancer. He's bearing witness to something new happening in himself and in the world.

May 15, 2013

Disruption is around every corner by way of globally connected economies, inevitable superstorms, and technology’s endless reinvention. But most of us were born into a culture which aspired to solve all problems. How do we support people and create systems that know how to recover, persist, and even thrive in the face of change? Andrew Zolli introduces "resilience thinking," a new generation’s wisdom for a world of constant change.

May 9, 2013

The best way to nurture children's inner lives, Sylvia Boorstein says, is by taking care of our own inner selves for their sake. At a public event in suburban Detroit, Krista Tippett draws out the warmth and wisdom of the celebrated Jewish-Buddhist teacher and psychotherapist. And, in a light-hearted moment that is an audience pleaser, Boorstein shares what GPS might teach us about "recalculating" and our own inner equanimity.

May 2, 2013

How do we prime our brains to take the meandering mental paths necessary for creativity? New techniques of brain imaging, Rex Jung says, are helping us gain a whole new view on the differences between intelligence, creativity, and personality. He unsettles some old assumptions — and suggests some new connections between creativity and family life, creativity and aging, and creativity and purpose.

April 25, 2013

An enchanting hour of poetry drawing on the ways family and religion shape our lives. Marie Howe works and plays with her Catholic upbringing, the universal drama of family, and the ordinary time that sustains us. The moral life, she says, is lived out in what we say as much as what we do — and so words have a power to save us.