Joy Harjo should need no introduction, but if you do need to know more about this amazing award winning Muskogee poet and jazz musician go visit her weblog where today she proclaims that your spirit knows the difference between honesty and lies:
�In Navajo, a warrior is the one who can use words so everyone knows they are part of the same family. In Navajo, a warrior says what is in the people�s hearts. Talks about what the land means to them. Brings them together to fight for it.�
Tiana Bighorse
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More on patience and it’s relationship to emergence.
Roshi Bernie Glassman is a Zen teacher and an activist. In this interview with Andrew Cohen he describes the relationship between enlightenment and action: “practices for enlightenment,” he says,”have to lead to action in the world.”
For Glassman coming out of Zen Buddhist practice, enlightenment comes from reducing your attachments and cultivating sunyata, or emptiness. In a brilliant statement, Glassman connects this emptiness to action that is of the most valuable kind: action directed at an unknown outcome:
BG: I think we become overwhelmed only because of our expectations?our expectations that we are going to be able to resolve the problem.
AC: I see, so that’s the key.
BG: Step by step, see it in its broadest perspective, and then do the things that you can do without any expectations.
AC: Without any expectations that you’re going to solve the problem completely?
BG: Yes, or even help it. You’re going to do what you can do, and something’s going to happen?who the hell knows what.
This is a tricky place to be. It’s what my friend Myriam Laberge calls “chaordic confidence,” a term I have adopted to describe a whole set of practices that allow us to sit in the unknowing and trust that order will emerge from the chaos.
Glassman argues that in terms of “doing” that we do what we can with what we have. To work on a problem you just begin to attack what is immediately in front of you. If you want to reduce greenhouse gases, start by driving less. Then find other things you can do, like inviting others to do the same. By assuming that the problem is too big for one person to solve, you abdicate your responsibility for being a part of the solution. Problems that are too big need multiple actors to contribute to emergent solutions. There is no top down way to solve world hunger or climate change or the perils of colonization. By being patient though, and directed to the work at hand, you add to what becomes the emergent solution.
BG: I think they’re the same state. But it’s not a passive state; it’s very active. And that active state is bearing witness. That’s, for me, the way to approach it. Instead of waiting for something else to happen, say, “Right now, I, to the best of my ability, will approach this situation from the state of not knowing.” I think that gives you the best shot at doing something. It gives people permission to do something from their state of enlightenment. And it means bear witness to the suffering; don’t run away from it. Bearing witness is really important. To bear witness is to sit with it?and by “sitting,” I don’t necessarily mean physically sitting?but to sit with it, and try to simultaneously keep coming from that place of not knowing. Stay with it and bear witness to it?then you can do something.
Now, each one of us has got whatever attachments we have, and that’s why I say that the degree of our enlightenment is the degree of passion that we will have for the whole world. That passion will arise. Stay with it. Bear witness to what’s coming up. Out of that, action has to happen.
This is so beautiful: the degree of our enlightenment is the degree of passion that we will have for the whole world.” When we bear witness and do what we can, action has no choice but to show up.
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In Saskatoon, Raymon points to a new online atlas of urban Aboriginal peoples published by the University of Saskatchewan. He follows the link with this little note:
I left him a comment saying that the little bit of work I have done with Aboriginal youth in Saskatoon has been remarkable. You have young kids with multiple ancestries – Cree, Metis, Ukranian, Scottish – trying to get a handle on what it means to be Aboriginal living in Saskatoon. And to make things more urgent, the simple demographics mean that in 15 years, these guys will be in charge of the whole province.
I think this new generation of youth in places like Saskatoon, Prince Albert and Regina are leading the way. In around 2020, Saskatchewan will be a largely Aboriginal province within the Canadian federation, and literacy in multiple identities will be a huge skill to making that work. With the youth coming up now who are sorting out these issues there is an emerging generation of leadership who are going to create some fantastic new ways of reconciling the sometimes competing needs of these different worlds.
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I’m synching up my blogroll with my RSS subscriptions. This means that what you see on the left under “Good Reads” are actually the subs in my Bloglines account. I lament the fact that this means I can’t keep up with some very good blogs, because they either don’t publish feeds, or they publish partial feeds. It’s a time and convienence issue. Also, partial feeds just don’t work for me. The only site that manages to pull me with a partial feed is defective yeti. Everyone else usually gets a miss. I know this is not a quirk specific to me either. My advice to any blogger is turn on your feed and make it a full feed. Then you show up on your readers’ radar in all your glory!
I’m going through my old blogroll and checking who’s got their feeds turned on, so the list will change a little over the next week. After that, it’s synched and I’m rolling. Let me know if I miss you.
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One of the things I love about the connectivity of the Internet is that I end up finding people in my own backyard who are doing really interesting things.
So today, here’s a link to Jessie Sutherland a Victoria BC woman who is pioneering some reconciliation strategies using a set of tools called worldviewing which help people to understand their own world views and those of others.
Worldviewing entails three sets of skills:
2. Learning to engage across worldview difference
3. Regenerating Indigenous cultures and re-civilising Western cultures.
Jessie is using these strategies with indigenous and non-indigenous parties where reconciliation is much needed in many fields, whether it’s residential school healing or Aboriginal title issues. She has recently published a book in both electronic and hard copy format called “Reconciliation from the Inside Out: Worldviewing skills for everyone.” And no matter where you are in the world you can engage in more of her work with a series of weekly teleconferences.
It’s great to have people like this out there. I wish she had a blog! I’ll have to settle for the odd email back and forth and promises of a future meeting next time I’m in Victoria.