I felt it this morning-- a something Sunday, a kind of ease. Rest, meditate and the muse whispers. It was possible, I thought, as I walked the white-washed road to the woods with my dog. We entered the dark, cool woods, entanglement of branches, smatterings of green. I perched on my rock and framed by a tree was a great egret, a picture of grace with its soft curves and softer plumage. Across the tidal river, the cars glided along the road. I got up from my rock, looked for her; I'm always looking for her. I may never see any of them again.
We hike up through the blues. The foxes must've eaten all of them. A boat sent a wake across the river; small waves splashed on the shore. A vixen had left her mark right in the middle of the trail. "This is mine," it said. I walked down a path that had every shape of mystery and myth. Where were they all, the totem beasts? Buried in the piles of mulch they dumped on the edge of the playground? Sleeping in their dens between the rocks? They say the fishers hang out in the trees, but I have yet to see one up there. We have seen the northern flickers scampering through the wood, their white patch like a star ascending in the dark. We passed an opened door and there was singing. If there were only some shade I may have stayed a bit. I headed back home to clean, to do everything that is expected of me. To do everything I expect of myself.
Tuesday, August 25, 2015
Cool Confidence
I think of the monarch butterfly in its jeweled sheath, transforming. Is this process rushed? Does she slide out with half a wing? No, she dangles elegantly until the sheath is torn. She waits silently in transformation, is patient about her tender wings. The sheath shrivels and is whisked away. In that moment just before flight, she is certain; she is confident. This is the characteristic of a genesis un-rushed--confidence. A cool confidence is valuable to an artist. A cool, mindful confidence is everything.
The butterfly tests her paper wings. The eye of the wing is awake. One moment to wave, another to lift, up, up, up.
She looks down and sees the world.
The butterfly tests her paper wings. The eye of the wing is awake. One moment to wave, another to lift, up, up, up.
She looks down and sees the world.
Letter from the Editor: Taking the Namby-Pamby Out of Compassion
Taking the
Namby-Pamby Out of Compassion
I found the essay “Keep Your Compassion, Give Me Your
Madness” (NYTimes, June 20, 1987) while doing research on compassion in
literature and I felt like I struck gold. In it, the writer and critic Anatole
Broyard wonders “whether it isn’t oxymoronic for a novel to be brilliant and
compassionate at the same time” and “whether compassion isn’t just another form
of writer’s block.” Finally, he claims there’s something “sticky, pious, or
namby-pamby about the word.”
There it is in print, namby-pamby,
further evidence of how compassion, often mistaken for pity or sentimentality,
gets a bad rap. Broyard wants characters “to survive on the strength of their
deviousness and stubborn wrongheadedness.” That’s what makes a novel brilliant according
to him, because after all, novels are a form of “sadomasochism” anyway.
Huh.
Broyard provides no examples of the namby-pamby,
compassionate novels of which he speaks and abruptly shifts his essay into a
review of a non-fiction book about the neurotic utopian socialist, Charles
Fourier (Charles Fourier: A Visionary in His World, University of California
Press, 1987) who sought to construct a society based upon human pleasure and
“passionate attraction.”
This essay/book review provoked a reader to write a letter
to the editor titled “Compassion in the Novel” (NYTimes, August 1, 1987). The
reader chastises Broyard for not giving evidence to prove his point, as any
college freshman knows to do. That reader was bestselling author and National
Book Award winner John Irving.
Irving refutes Broyard with the classics, concrete examples
like Tolstoy’s Anna Karenina, and
specifically the character Levin, who believes life has meaning by the power of
goodness he puts into it. Levin’s relationship with the peasant people who live
on his land is exemplary in the novel: it shows the interconnectedness of
humanity, which in the good, translates to compassion. I would like to add to
Irving’s list the Grapes of Wrath: who
doesn’t remember that last scene where Rose of Sharon, after having lost her
baby, nurses the half-starved man back to life? Or in Ethan Frome when the hypochondriac misanthrope Zeena changes her
tune and devotes her life to caring for the crippled Mattie and Ethan? In these
beacons of literature, compassion has a sort of power and is anything but
namby-pamby.
In the summer edition of The Compassion Anthology we are including
“The Cloak” a classic itself, by Nikolai Gogol. Fyodor Dostoevsky said of the
short story, “We all come out from Gogol’s overcoat” speaking here of Gogol’s
influence on Russian literature and literature in general. The story is
timeless in its premise of lack of compassion and how a society will be
“haunted” by remorse when the powers-that-be don’t do the right thing. We have
contemporary examples in Michael Brown and other black men killed by police;
these men may not have been as innocent as Akakiy Akakievitch, but they certainly
did not deserve the fate that befell them.
Also included here are works by Janel Houton, whose colorful
paintings lend awareness to endangered species living among us; Mikele Rauch’s
paintings of compassion and healing after violence; Don Cooper’s photographic
collage of Mother Teresa (the icon of compassion) amidst the destitute in
India; Cansu Bulgu’s “Eye of Oneness” that portrays how, in the stillness of
the self, unity and compassion show up; Laura Foley’s poetry based on her
fearless plunge into “compassion predicaments”; and Marina Cantacuzino’s
reflection on the complex nature of forgiveness.
I hope you find these works and the others published here
inspiring and evidence that art, too, can touch this innate power in us all.
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