Foggy Peace

Sometimes, you’re just overwhelmed with beauty, filled to the very brim. What a blessing in those times to be given a day to just stop and exhale… and to do it in the company of loved ones… what a gift… Time to simply be present and to make memories that will last a lifetime. Really. Who would believe that fog was so generous? and that the living of life as a prayer is sometimes just stopping and sitting still…

Life is so abundant, and I am so lucky… counting my blessings and giving gratitude for the bounties of Nature and Love.

PeaceJuly20

 

 

More Gold, Less Peace

Well, as you know I was agitated yesterday when I posted my musing. My friend Wayne responded with information from his friend the geologist who spends his summers in Alaska. It seems we learn nothing… and doom ourselves to ghastly repetition. This land is sacred and we are holy instruments. Let us not pervert our power for greed. Let us pray for Balance, Sense and Peace. Amen.

Sorry, don’t have any more than that.

PeaceJuly19

Gold vs Peace

It always seems so romantic when you say Gold Rush. You never think about how crazed and desperate people must have been to sell everything on the off chance that you might strike it rich in a world alien and distant from yours. There were about 75 million Americans at that time. About 1 in every 750 people picked up stakes and left for Alaska.

When you get there and realize what they went through to get there… each miner had to bring a ton of equipment with them and haul it up the mountain passes. Not a ton as in a lot, but a ton as in a ton. Everyone was cheating them, horses, particularly the ones they were sold, were not equipped to make this trek and they had no idea what enduring this kind of weather meant. There wasn’t enough to eat. People got sick. People went insane, People died. They have no idea how many.

Once again, in the mindless pursuit of one group’s better life, it was deemed acceptable to force the nomadic, indigenous population onto a reservation where many died from the new diseases introduced by miners. My history books didn’t mention that and neither did the tours. Even the Wikipedia site only has a one line mention of the Hän people.

We took a bus ride that climbed from Skagway through the White Pass and the train trip back down. It was beautiful on a beautiful summer’s day. We looked at all the geological wonders, but talked only sporadically about the hunt for gold and all it cost the miners and the Native people of Alaska.

The promise of easy riches… it’s never what it seems. And it always costs far more than we imagine for far more people. Most people never recouped their $1,200 investment (In today’s dollars, that would be $33,456). Shopkeepers and Swindlers got rich.

Maybe it’s time to consider what the real prizes are in this world and work for something that lasts; what kind of world do we want to envision and dream of? Let us consider balance. Let us work for Peace.

PeaceJuly18

Wild Peace

It was the pared away, elemental nature of Alaska that kept seizing at my heart. Such stark Beauty! And the ship really had done a good job making sure that there were places that you could view that Beauty without being overwhelmed with all the people and activities. In the bar on the 9th floor there were recliners facing a wall of windows to which you could retreat.

But then there was that lovely thermal room just one deck down. I was plenty happy to stew in that mineral hot pot and devour the scenery Nature had on display. But occasionally, even I would get too warm and sneak out on that tiny deck. There you were, alone in the world and all that wind. It’s as close as I may ever come to flying. I was struck while standing there that this is how it must feel for the gods to review their handiwork or for the angels to play in a place where they weren’t about to be ensnared in the telephone lines of civilization.

There was something that encouraged and engaged my fanciful nature… but all the fantasies were ones of power, built from the awe the landscape engendered… this is strong and powerful country, not made for cupids or putti

That moment on the balcony was a reminder that when you’re offered the opportunity to see the world the way the gods do, open your eyes and breathe it in!

PeaceJuly17

Water Peace

I had a couple very wonderful water moments on this cruise, so i can’t say this was my very most favorite water moment, but it’s got to come close. To be floating in a pool that’s rocking on the ocean… the water is warm the wind is wild… yep. pretty spectacular. and an interesting blend between a completely sybaritic experience and worship! I can’t separate them. the only thing better would have been to have been naked… but the other ship visitors were probably not ready for that!

(And just fyi, should you ever be seasick on one of those large vessels, floating in a pool is a great place to be. I remembered that from an earlier cruise.) Look, helpful hints AND theology!

The wonders of Nature and the sweetness of hedonism… it’s a pretty wonderful combination.

PeaceJuly16

Bubble-net Peace

Off all the things that I saw in Alaska that amazed and delighted me… and if you’ve been following this blog, you know there are many… bubble net feeding circles may be the most impressive. I’ve looked up this information several times, because what I remembered didn’t seem possible. Yet, seeing it stunned me enough that I couldn’t help but remember…

What I didn’t manage to work into the musing is that the herring (or whatever) are not high on the conceptual ladder. When they see the air bubbles rising from the circle that starts below them, they cannot tell that it is not a net. So they are doomed to stay within the confines of the circle formed by these enormous whales (who grow to be up to 52 feet long, yet feed only on tiny little herring.

These gigantic humpback whales eat for only three months out of the year and fast for nine… the nine months when they’re swimming from Alaska to Hawaii (well over 3,500 miles, which takes them about 40 days to swim), mating or birthing their babies and swimming back. It’s a good thing a few of the Matriarchs put their heads together. Who’s your Mama? The one who helps you eat the most efficiently with the least effort… What inspired them to improve on Nature?

Do I love that it’s Matriarchs? Oh, indeed I do. That there are only twelve of them who can call this circle? Magic. You go, you wise old women, move those whales from their solitary to feeding to cooperative fishing. So if Twelve Wise Whale Women can change their worlds… can we? Can we bring about Peaceful coexistence?

Today when my heart is heavy with all the news to take in about Trayvon Martin, I have to find somewhere to start hoping.

PeaceJuly15

 

 

Whale Peace Sabbath

They are so large. Huge. And they eat krill. Humpbacks spend the summer eating and then fast for about 9 months. I guess that’s one way to keep your girlish figure!

Even though I understand that in Nature, you are somewhere on the food chain, there is, nonetheless, something very calming and reassuring about this notion. I probably wouldn’t be as sanguine if I’d seen an orca eating a sea lion or a baby humpback, even that while a bit more bloody than a luncheon of herring by a gang of humpbacks, it’s still just how life goes on. And there we were in the sea just mere yards from 14 whales. It was awe-inspiring.

So, may you have a sabbath in which you are at one with nature, and witness to it’s incredible beauty… and may you be at peace.

PeaceJuly14

Peace and the Eagles

I don’t know about you, but I think of eagles as majestic birds of prey. They are that. They are also scavengers of the worst sort. Just as do their pesky, distant cousins, they will snatch food right off picnic tables. Unlike their pesky, distant cousins, they’re HUGE. So pay attention to your fish and chips!

But there they were, swooping and soaring and nesting all along the waters around Juneau. We saw hundreds of them, which was surprising, because i always thought of them as territorial. On that day the skies were clear and deep blue and the waters were still. To see the eagles stoop on a fish and fly away with full talons was amazing. It’s said that eagle’s sight is so keen that they can travel three miles from their nests and still have one eye on their mate and the eaglets. So that phrase eagle eye means something.

I was certainly in agreement with them about the salmon. Oh, it was good. The cruise ship made sure Alaska’s bounty was always offered. I was happy to indulge.

But the eagles (and the salmon) were just one more piece of Alaska’s abundant beauty. I found it next to impossible to look away from Nature’s display. I’ve never been anywhere that I was as consistently awed and amazed. (But I’ll be glad to keep looking!) There was something about that stark, elemental Beauty that I found incredibly Peaceful. I haven’t quite sorted out all my reactions… but will persevere…

PeaceJuly13

 

Where Peace Finds Its Power

As I think back on Alaska, I am so aware of the power of the wilderness. There are certainly micro-climates, it’s far more moderate in Ketchikan than in any of the other cities we visited, but the landscape is still very similar. To the untrained eye, at least, the trees look similar, the rock is similar, the water chilly and the sky open and endless. It would certainly take me a while to adjust to the balance of light and dark… and the rain and the dark in Ketchikan could get tiresome, but then it would be what was normal… and we all adjust eventually. I have friends in Portland who are so glad when the rain finally returns after three long days of sun…

But the wilderness is so present and powerful here. The towns look so vulnerable. And Nature isn’t far, when bear and moose can be seen dashing or plodding through the edges (really, if you move to Ketchikan, DON’T leave your garbage in an unlocked can!) Left on its own, the land is balanced and peaceful. A Native woman said to me when I was asking her one question or another: “But that’s the thing, you see, we never believed the land belonged to us, we believe it belonged to the animals.”

That would certainly change how you would live on it, wouldn’t it. That would bring you to peace with what is. So how do we, in our plodding steps toward Peace, recognize and lean on the Natural to encourage and empower us?

We’ll have to keep thinking… (it’s a particularly challenging thought for me today as I not only struggle with a breakdown in technology and wander the streets of NYC with dear friends.)

PeaceJuly11

 

 

Peace and Getting By…

One of the main shopping districts in Ketchikan was at one point the red-light district. Prostitution was the #1 industry in Ketchikan in the 1920s, somewhat ahead of fishing. Not only did the women offer “comfort” services, you could also get bootleg Canadian whiskey. Is it only me who finds it odd that it’s now the quaint shopping district? And that people flock to shop there… without a thought to what it meant to women whose only business options were their bodies?

I was happier shopping in Saxman Park, which is a living Native Village that is working to preserve and celebrate their heritage. They have (and are working to restore and build new) the largest collection of Totem Poles. There was a fascinating conversation on what they were and what the symbols meant… That was a highlight…

I felt myself a rather odd and uncomfortable witness to the wild dreams that brought people to this area that turned into grueling work and difficult conditions. Oddly, however, thanks to the Japanese current… one of those hardships is NOT bitter winters. Ah, the nature of humans and the nature of Nature!

But on a pretty summer morning,Ketchikan was a place of serene beauty and Peace. except of course for the bears running through the streets. They were pretty excited about the salmon.   eek! Ah Mother Earth!

PeaceJuly10