Bedlam Farm Blog Journal by Jon Katz

10 April

The Spiritual Life: Being, Not Wanting. The Essence Of A Spiritual Life

by Jon Katz

What meaning and coherence comes into our scattered daily lives?  We mostly spend those lives conjugating three verbs:” to Want, to Have, and to Do. Craving, clutching, and fussing on the material, political, social, emotional, intellectual – even on the religious – plane, we are kept in perpetual unrest, forgetting that none of these verbs have an ultimate significance, except so far as they are transcended by and included in, the fundamental verb: to Be. Being, not wanting, having and doing, is the essence of a spiritual life.”

—Evelyn Underhill, The Spiritual Life

10 April

Canned Fruit Alarm At The Cambridge Food Pantry: The Food Bank Sent None: Sarah Is Asking for Pineapple And Mandine Oranges, Urgent Request: Canned Peaches.

by Jon Katz

 

(Volunteers Unpacking)

Yet another issue plagues every food pantry, especially conscious ones like the Cambridge Food Pantry. Most pantries wait or hope for the best, but Sarah never accepts failure or defeat. Today, she needs help getting the pineapple and Mandarin oranges; the urgent choice is canned peaches, essential items for spring.

Nobody knows why the food bank has stopped sending canned fruit; it usually means their donors have had to stop, hopefully for a short time. In the meantime, she’s out of all three. We would appreciate any help we can do to help.

Every day is different; the pantries have little control over what is sent to them, and there are always surprises. Sarah got one on Tuesday when the truck arrived from the food bank without a single canned fruit, which means there may be none for the families for a week or two or perhaps even longer. Nobody will starve, but that is a loss for the families and children.

My research found this from my AI search:   “Canned fruit can be a healthy part of a child’s diet, especially when it’s a convenient and affordable option. It’s nutritionally comparable to fresh fruit and provides essential nutrients like carbohydrates, fiber, vitamins, and minerals.”

That would be a tough loss. I hope we can help.

 

 

Sarah’s eager to get some of these canned fruits onto the shelves. They are all gone.

Del Monte Mandarin Oranges in Extra Light Syrup, 8.25 oz (Pack of 12), $18.34.

Del Monte Pineapple Chunks in 100 Juice ($15.25, Pack of 12), $17.78.

______

Also Urgent Today:

Yellow Cling Sliced Peaches in Fruit Juice, 15 oz. (Pack of 6), $10.14.

 

(Thanks to the Army of Good for keeping the women’s shelf full. The volunteers send blessings to you. So, the women who come to the pantry for much of their food. This leaves them funds for oil and gas and some foods.)

The  Amazon Cambridge Pantry Urgent Wish List is accessible anytime, day or night. Click on the links here or use the green button at the bottom of every blog post. Every item on the wish list is urgent and updated several times daily.  Some people are adopting favored items and sending them when they can. Thanks for the messages; the pantry volunteers greatly appreciate them.  It’s hard and demanding work. I hope we can send some canned fruit Today.

 

10 April

Morning At The Farm: The White Hen Struggles, Zip, The World’s Best Mouse Trap, My Pin Photography Starts Tonight (Hopefully)

by Jon Katz

It will soon be that time when we have to decide what is really the most humane thing we can do for the White Hen. She is puffing up and looking increasingly confused. The alternative to me is to get the rifle out and let her leave the world in peace and comfort.

Maria said we are not there yet, but we are getting close. She has only one road ahead. Today is Pinhole Photography Day, a new chapter in my photography. I’m getting a special cap and connector for the Leica, and we’ll see what happens. I’m excited.

 

 

Zip never stops working to earn his keep. I love working animals, and Barn Carts are among the best. Border collies are second in my life. Zip has made himself a new mousetrap; he’s found the hole the mice have been using to get in and out of the house and hides under the bush. The birds are at the feeder above the bush, but he seems to show little interest in them.  He’s on the job.

 

 

The White Hen continues to deteriorate. We want her to have a chance to die naturally, but if she seems in distress or pain, I’ll take care of it. Maria agrees.

Sunlight on the wet marsh.

Cleaning up the barn each morning was the perfect life.

Manure spreading every morning.

Light on the sheep, sunrise.

 

The donkeys get the sheep out of their special feeding bin. They are not into sharing.

 

10 April

Meditation: Bird Watch, Sunrise, Bedlam Farm. Each Day I Set My Own Agenda, I Don’t Bow To Anyone Elses.

by Jon Katz

I have a lovely new ritual to add to my morning photos. The bird watch, I call it, is a precious way to start the day. I love watching these creatures. They settle me and set me up for a good day. They work so hard to eat some seeds.

 

Our President, love him or not, is a genius at speaking his mind and intentions and making sure to dominate the manipulable media every single day of the week, day after day. It’s almost a spell, perhaps an addiction.

If I weren’t careful, I would think of little else. My choice in the morning is about what to put in my head every day, not what to take in from someone else’s head. Birds are a good place to start, along with the farm, my photos, my wife and dogs, etc. That and my flower photos are what I want in my head.

I like the mystic idea: acknowledge the reality of the universe but also follow your feelings and go inside to make sure you know what they are. That’s the hard part but the most important one.

This advice has positively altered my life.

I choose to wake up with the birds, not with any politician. I don’t want junk and cruelty in my head. I’d rather do some good and feel good about myself.

The famed poet and mystic, Evelyn Underhill said the challenge of modern times is not stepping willingly into anyone else’s trap. I want to make my own. We don’t need to suck in all of the hard news in the outside world; there is a lot of it, and there has always been a lot of it.

In her study of the spiritual life, Underhill wrote a half-century ago that, “The people of our time are helpless, distracted, and rebellious, unable to interpret that which is happening, and full of apprehension about what is to come, largely because they have lost hold of the eternal, which gives to each life meaning and direction, and with meaning and direction gives steadiness.

Imagine what Underhill would say about America today. My life will have meaning and direction if I love and help as many people as possible, especially those with nowhere else to go. Hate and lament do not give lives meaning and direction.

9 April

Abstract Flower Art. White Iris, Blue Iris, A Bunch Of Dafodils, A Mystical Gathering, Knowing And Feeling. In The End, It’s The Love And The Will

by Jon Katz

 

These past few weeks, I’ve been reading Evelyn Underhill, The Brilliant British Poet And Mystic. I read her when I first came to the mountain on the hill with two dogs, and now, even though she’s been dead for many years, she has my attention again. She is one of the best writers on spirituality, mysticism, and the power of meditation; she was a mentor to me.

She helped me pursue a spiritual life in her books, and now I’m turning to her again to understand the mysticism I sometimes feel and the “reality” that so often fails me.

At the beginning of this week, I was told—we all were—that we were on the edge of an Apocalypse – rich people were losing money.

Money finally got our society’s attention; suffering was ignored, as always. We moved on to something else two days later, and life continued.

It’s challenging to know what reality is or to embrace it. Mysticism is the reality of one’s self, the only reality we can know. Go into yourself, she said. Reality is on the inside, not outside

 

My assistant…

 

This paragraph below meant a lot to me then and now; it’s about mysticism and the meaning of turning inward and meditating.

You are not to fall into the clumsy effort,” she wrote, “of supposing that the things beyond the grasp of reason are necessary unreasonable things.”  Immediate feeling, so far as it is true, transcends the highest results of thought.” I had not only fallen into it, I realized, but I was choking in it.

She predicted that in the preliminary but essential act of gathering myself for meditation and in those explorations through myself, “You come to a knowing and a feeling of yourself as you are.”  You keep a realistic understanding of the world and the mystical world of feeling.

But the mystical always ends with feelings, no matter where she or she begins. One has to learn with the other; no one can completely hide from reality. I learned about feeling in my meditation, which was not a clumsy attempt to stay within the grasp of reason and the things I could see.

 

 

 

In this meditation, Underhill wrote, “The powers of analysis, criticism, and dedication found work that they could do.” But now, she wrote,  it is the love and will—the feeling, the intent, the passionate desire—of the self that will govern our activities and make our success possible.

Few people, she cautioned, would brave the difficulties of a courtship conducted strictly along intellectual lines. Contemplation – meditation –  is the act of love, the wooing, not the critical study of reality.

 

 

 

 

 

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