Category Archives: Observations

High Coo – July 25 – Threading the Needle

https://yogarove.com/thread-the-needle-pose/

July 25 is National Thread the Needle Day. The saying “threading the needle” means different things in different contexts. Whether it’s billiards, football, golf, or politics, sewing or yoga; the general implication is the challenge required to navigating a narrow passageway.

Here is today’s haiku: Threading the Needle

Knowing the target

is not enough; achievement

takes careful action.

For more information about this national holiday see: https://nationaltoday.com/national-thread-needle-day/

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High Coo – July 24 – Walking in Beauty

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Today is the 205th day of the year; 160 days remain until the end of the year. As the Navajo Saying above reminds us, may we walk in beauty today and in the days ahead.

Today’s haiku: Walking in Beauty

Regardless of time

temperature or the sky

let’s see the beauty

My partner who reminds me of Lord Byron’s poem: She Walks in Beauty https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/43844/she-walks-in-beauty

High Coo – July 21 – Happy Birthday Ernest Hemingway

Ernest Hemingway born July 21, 1899 and died July 2, 1961 – photo from The Toronto Star

Ranked among the top 5 authors of the 20th Century, Ernest Hemingway was known for his terse writing style which he called his iceberg theory. Best known works include A Farewell to Arms (1929), To Have and Have Not (1937), For Whom the Bell Tolls (1940) and The Old Man and the Sea (1952). He received the 1954 Nobel Prize in Literature.

Here is today’s haiku In Memory of Ernest Hemingway

We cannot outrun

our family’s history.

May we learn from it.

He died from suicide in 1961 less than three weeks before his 62nd birthday. For more information on his life and death see: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ernest_Hemingway

For more information about the suicide risk linked to family history see: https://www.webmd.com/mental-health/news/20021010/suicide-risk-linked-to-family-history

For more information on the new national suicide hotline see: https://www.samhsa.gov/find-help/988

High Coo – July 20 – National Moon Day

Neal Armstrong takes the first step on the moon July 20, 1969

Fifty-three years ago, the first moon landing took place. I saw it on television.

Apollo 11 astronauts, Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin, were the first humans to walk on the moon. The United States had won this leg of the space race and nations have been competing ever since to explore the cosmos.

Here is today’s haiku:

National Moon Day

Earthling spacemen land

and collect precious moon dust.

“Look Mom, we did it!”

For more information on this national holiday see: https://nationaltoday.com/national-moon-day/

life24into7.com

“Science Has Become My Spiritual Director”

Sharing this beautiful and related post from Sr. Joan Chittister at https://mailchi.mp/5f96105bae30/do-no-harm-to-the-earth-750105?e=be693754a4
The cosmic God is a surety
“I have no doubt now that God is with us all and comes often to many in a burst of awareness. The difference is that the Presence becomes a guide, a warmth, not a vengeful human being writ large. Instead, the cosmic God is a surety, a promise of support, a reminder of what the Jewish community has always called “The Covenant” and the Quakers call “The Inner Light’. God is the internal voice calling me to give myself to the fullness of life. It is the trek of the soul to wholeness and understanding. It is an awareness within me of my identity with all creation and the strength I need to wrestle my own uncertainty, indifference, spiritual deafness to the ground.

Let me explain: Science has become my spiritual director.

It is science that brought me face-to-face with the awareness of the overwhelming, immeasurable presence that is God. It took me to the edge of life, beyond the fairytale God. It helped me to understand that the Light was the energy from which all things come. It brought me to realize that the Cosmic Presence, the beginning and end of everything, has been consumed, dwarfed, shrunk, and reduced to magic, warring, vending, judging, and manipulating the laws of life. God, to be God, is the substance, the embrace, the whole of life. It’s out of five basic elements – oxygen, hydrogen, nitrogen, phosphorus and carbon – that all the elements of life come. These five elements are at the base of all life processes, in all of us, in all living things everywhere. “We are made of the same makings as the stars,” Dr Ashley King, a planetary scientist and stardust expert teaches. “Nearly all the elements in the human body were made in a star…”, and so, I believe, will return to stardust at the end.

The poets tell us that we are nothing but stardust. But stardust is the same stuff of a Cosmic God as we are its cosmic dust. Think of it: God is within us and we are within God, the Light – God, the energy of all life, God the Creator of the universe.

God within us is Light, the essence of revelation and insight. God within us is energy, the pointer toward the tomorrow that comes out of today. God within us pours out on us the reckless generation of the gifts of life.”           
        —from An Evolving God, An Evolving Purpose, An Evolving World by Joan Chittister (Fortress Press)
Recent Photos from James Webb’s Telescope
 FIVE GALAXIES   TWO DYING STARS
Photo of 5 Galaxies Dying Stars              
To read about the most recent innovation in space exploration, click here.

High Coo – July 19 – Chaos Theory & Murphy’s Law

Sciencecodex.com

Edward Lorenz, meteorologist, accidentally discovered an interest in chaos theory, when he noticed “that small changes in initial conditions produced large changes in long-term outcome.” Or, in other words, you can never fully predict the weather (or anything else for that matter) because of all the variables involved. (See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chaos_theory)

And then there’s Murphy’s Law which says, “Anything that can go wrong will go wrong.” (See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murphy’s_law)

For example, the James Webb space telescope mirror appears to have suffered more damage than originally thought when it was hit by asteroids in late May. (See https://www.msn.com/en-in/news/other/big-setback-for-nasa-james-webb-space-telescope-badly-damaged-by-asteroid/ar-AAZJfgx)

So how might we respond to the theory, the law, the news of the day? Here is today’s haiku:

Enjoy the Show

Be thankful for flaws,

we are here to discover

our imperfections.

boldomatic.com

High Coo – July 17 – Thank You Tara for RAIN

Yesterday we reached 104 degrees Fahrenheit. This temperature is not unusual for this geography for this time of year. Still, it’s hot.

I woke up this morning to a gentle rain and at 6am it’s only 78 degrees. We are projected to reach a high of 84. Ah, blessed relief.

All of this reminds me of RAIN and the guidance provided by American psychologist and Buddhist meditation teacher Tara Brach. She teaches radical self-compassion for dealing with challenging feelings. While Tara didn’t invent the acronym, she has gone on to provide much comfort to many with her teachings.

Here’s today’s haiku:

RAIN

Recognize, allow,

investigate and nurture.

Smile to your relief.

For more information on Tara Brach’s teachings see: https://www.tarabrach.com/rain/

For more information about Tara Brach see: https://www.tarabrach.com/about/

High Coo – July 16 – Ida B. Wells

Ida B. Wells born July 16, 1862

Former slave, investigative journalist, early civil rights leader and Pulitzer Prize honoree, Ida B. Wells is a role model for all of us. Two of her many famous quotes are:

“The way to right wrongs is to turn the light of truth upon them.”

“Virtue knows no color line.”

Today’s haiku: In Honor of Ida B. Wells

Step up, speak out, do

what must be done, for justice

requires persistence

For more information about her heroic accomplishments see: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ida_B._Wells

High Coo – July 15 – Give Something Away Day

We all have something we can give. While clothing, money and food are the most common donations, we can simply give a smile, a word of encouragement or a dedicated moment of undivided attention and appreciation.

As the Dalai Lama reminds us, “Be kind whenever possible. It is always possible.”

Today’s haiku:

Why Give

How might we practice

generosity today?

It’s good for our health.

For more information on the health benefits of giving see: https://www.rush.edu/news/health-benefits-giving#:~:text=Why%20giving%20feels%20good%201%20Greater%20self-esteem%20and,giving%20your%20time%20may%20have%20protective%20benefits.%20