andersoj.org oddments

2 February 2007

Entering the Emptiness

Filed under: Uncategorized — andersoj @ 9:27 pm

From Gerald May, Entering the Emptiness in The Awakened Heart:
Excerpt available at my website.

With both these people, as with so many others who have confided in me, the real problem was believing that their sense of inner restlessness and lack of fulfillment indicated psychological disorder. They had swallowed the cultural myth that says, “If you are well adjusted, and if you are living your life properly, you will feel fulfilled, satisfied, content, and serene.” Stated conversely, the myth says, “If you are not satisfied and fulfilled, there is something wrong with you.”

The myth is so widespread that the majority of adults in our culture accept it without question. There are three ways we actg out this belief: We may try to “fix” ourselves, our life situations and our relationships because we feel there is something wrong with them. Or we may repress our restlessness, trying to appear to ourselves and others as if we had achieved perfection. Failing this, we dull our concern altogether, seeking to lose ourselves in work, food, entertainment, drugs, or some other escape. Ironically, all three ways easily become addictions in themselves; addictions to self-improvement, to perfect adjustment, or to various means of escape.

The myth has pervaded virtually every aspect of our society. Popular religion promises peace of mind if only we will believe correctly. If we are not completely happy, it maintains, it is because we are somehow not right with God. Perhaps we are too sinful, or our faith is insufficient, or we have missed the one true doctrine. Countless people believe the religious myth, even when a cursory reading of the lives of saints reveals great agony, doubt, and struggle within themselves and their world. A slightly deeper probing of spiritual growth shows that as people deepen in their love for God and others, they become ever more open: not only more appreciative of the beauty and joys of life, but also moroe vulnerable to its pain and brokenness.

Popular psycholofy promotes the myth as well. It promises peace of mind for only two categories of people: those who grew up in perfectly functioning families and those who use modern psychology to rise above the scars of their dysfunctional families. Countless people believe this psychological version as well, even when the knotted lives of our most successful citizens are continually displayed in the media for all to examine and when no such thing as a truly functional family can be found.

Although it is very right to treat our real disorders and maximize our health, we make several great mistakes if we think life should or even can be resolved to a point of complete serenity and fulfillment. To believe this is to commit ourselves to a fantasy that does not exist and that, if it were true, would kill our love and end in stagnation, boredom, and death. It is also to remove our concern from the real issues of our life and worlad, to transfer our energy to a vague, self-serving agenda that must be carried out before we can get on with the business of living, loving, and creating a better world. Further, the myth perpetuates the willful delusion that we human beings are objects, like machines, to be built and repaired, meant for efficiency rather than love. Most importantly, the myth of fulfillment makes us miss the most beautiful aspect of our human souls: our emptiness, our incompleteness, our radical yearning for love. We were never meant to be completely fulfilled; we were meant to taste it, to long for it, and to grow toward it. In this way we participate in love becoming life, life becoming love. To miss our emptiness is, finally, to miss our hope.

4 October 2006

SRDS 2006 Conference

Filed under: Uncategorized — andersoj @ 10:33 pm

I have just wrapped up my visit to Leeds, UK for the IEEE Symposium on Reliable Distributed Systems. I presented a paper on distributable thread integrity, some details are available here.

–JA

29 May 2006

Missive #4 from our Journey

Filed under: personal — andersoj @ 9:16 am

After some long delay, I’m writing the final message (we hope) from our trip to Africa. We find ourselves at Johannesburg International Airport (again) due to a slight hiccup in our space-available travel plans. This is the first time I’ve gone through immigration twice in two hours before. Sadly, our luggage seems to have hitched a ride on our reputations and preceeded us to Frankfurt. South African airways assures my wife that this evening’s flight is “wide open”, so we hope to be enroute soon.

(more…)

21 May 2006

Missive #3 From Our Journey

Filed under: personal — andersoj @ 10:36 am


Friends-

Today I write from Gabarone, Botswana. We have been here with Phil Rotz for the last couple of days, and enjoying ourselves immensely. When last I wrote, we were in Cape Town. We rousted ourselves very early in the morning (as is our wont, and that of every space-available air traveller), and drove to the airport in Cape Town to divest ourselves of a rental car and hop on an airplane. Since both of these operations create stress in my life, I was very pleased to find that the airport offered omelettes and coffee.

We arrived back in Johannesburg at 8:00am, at which point we set about getting into town, to the bus terminal at Park Station. One would think that public transport of some kind would be available, but no dice. A short but fairly spendy taxi trip got us to Park Station, where we cooled our heels until 2:30pm in Buffalo Bill’s Pub and Grille. We then hopped on the Seabelo bus bound for Gabarone. After an enjoyable communal experience of watching Maid in Manhattan (go, J-Lo!) with our fellow travelers, we arrived at the border with Botswana around 7:30pm. Then the magic of border crossing by bus commenced. It took quite a long time, involving unloading of bags, wandering around, and aimless-looking official types milling about sending SMS messages and generally not paying attention.

Happily, we reboarded the bus and made it into Gabs by 9:30. Phil and companions picked us up and ushered us to a hot meal at very trendy digs.

We had a chance to have dinner last night with a number of friends of Phil — more later on this — and today, we visited a wildlife preserve at Mokolodi. Lots of good pictures, and we got to see Elephant, Rhino, and Cheetah close up. Angela had a chance to pet the Cheetah, but it seemed to react badly to Phil and I.

This afternoon, Phil drove us by an artist’s community. We had a wonderful discussion with the owners of a pottery shop and picked up some interesting pieces.

Tomorrow, to Maun and more wildlife.

I have posted a few more of our photos at:
http://andersoj.org/gallery/v/2006-africa/

For those of you who have missed the earlier emails, I’ve also posted these at my much-neglected blog:
http://andersoj.org/oddments

But I have had to cut down on the uploads due to the fact that this is a
satellite internet connection, with end-to-end latency with the US of
about 3.5 seconds. That makes for a 7 second roundtrip, and TCP/IP was
not designed for such insanity.

Cheers.

JA


Jonathan S. Anderson — andersoj@andersoj.org
tel: 540.961.0229 (H) 540.818.2896 (C)
www: http://andersoj.org/oddments
pgp key: http://andersoj.org/personal/0xF0BE7EF8-pub.asc

Missive #2 From Our Journey

Filed under: Uncategorized — andersoj @ 10:30 am


All-

This will be a short one. Today we visited the wineries of Stellenbosch and Franschhoek, the wineland of South Africa. (Nazarenes out there should substitute the words "grape juice" every time they read "wine".)

Angela drove around quite a bit, maintaining her grasp of left-handed driving. Oddly, the gearshift doesn't change polarity, but you operate it with the other hand. Jonathan lounged around and listened to Mars Hill Audio the whole way. And navigated, Angela points out.

We made it to five wineries, and tasted about 17 varieties and one Port, and had some great food. Also, we had a sampling of cheeses at one of the locations. This evening, we had dinner at the African Cafe (http://www.africacafe.co.za/) which was outstanding. They have a set menu (see the website) which includes a zillion little dishes of various things, including a very tasty Ostrich curry.

We've posted some of the photos from the last few days at:

http://andersoj.org/gallery/v/2006-africa/

Cheers.

JA

--
Jonathan S. Anderson -- andersoj@andersoj.org
tel: 540.961.0229 (H) 540.818.2896 (C)
www: http://andersoj.org/oddments
pgp key: http://andersoj.org/personal/0xF0BE7EF8-pub.asc

Missive #1 From Our Joruney

Filed under: Uncategorized — andersoj @ 10:28 am


All-

I write from Cape Town, the first place we actually stop for a little while. We left on Sunday, arriving here midday on Tuesday, which with a bit of arithmetic wrangling yields about 45 hours of travel. Happily, some of that was spent asleep on a couch in the flight-attendants' in-flight lounge in Frankfurt.

Frankfurt has gone a long way to redeem itself in my eyes on this trip. Both the Lufthansa and South African airlines folks were outstanding, and very helpful. We actually bought chocolate for a very nice lady who helped us sort out our midstream change to standing by on South African air. A very nice flight, if a bit long. (10 hours, and still in the same time zone. wierd.)

I'm making a bit of progress through Rush's "Mating", a National Book Award-winner novel set in Botswana, and recommended by Phil. Depressing though it is, it still doesn't hold a candle to that Coetzee book Stoller got me to read last Christmas.

Spent most of the time on the airplane programming. Those of you who know me well will be amused that I have now tried Eclipse, an integrated development environment. It highlights syntax and spell-checks your programs, and otherwise acts way smarter than EMACS. This is an experiment to see if I can be more productive with an IDE for this looming demonstration I have to do.

The only hiccup so far is that the car reserved for us in Cape Town had a dead battery. We were quickly shuffled to a new car with equally confused polarity. I am glad that Angela is taking the lead on driving down the wrong hand side of the road.

Tomorrow, hoping to see a bit of the famous markets here in town, then some of the wine country.

We are surprised and pleased that we'll be meeting up with Dave Kao and AJ Nadelson later in the trip, in Maun. The winds of Providence blow heartily on our sails.

All our best, and hopefully the next missive will include a photo or two (and a snippet of code, for those so inclined.)

JA

--
Jonathan S. Anderson -- andersoj@andersoj.org
tel: 540.961.0229 (H) 540.818.2896 (C)
www: http://andersoj.org/oddments
pgp key: http://andersoj.org/personal/0xF0BE7EF8-pub.asc

3 January 2006

Ben Cannon for Oregon District 46 Rep

Filed under: wlhs — andersoj @ 5:12 am

Ben’s website is now online. –JA

17 November 2005

Always go to the funeral…

Filed under: Uncategorized — andersoj @ 5:32 pm

Take a moment and listen to this installment of NPR’s “This I Believe” by Dierdre Sullivan. Click on the “Listen” button next to Ms. Sullivan’s name on the NPR page to hear a RealAudio stream, or read the transcript. –JA

Fun and Exciting Book Services

Filed under: reading, personal — andersoj @ 3:34 pm

Enough with this “virtual world” nonsense. I love to see it when folks use the internet to push people back into the real world in new ways. Here are a couple of services I’ve recently discovered and taken great pleasure in:

The first is LibraryThing, a simple mechanism for listing the contents of your personal library online. By making use of open APIs provided by Amazon.com, Library of Congress, and others, they make it quite simple to add items to your collection, “tag” them into categories, and share with others.

Second: Commit random acts of literacy! Read & Release at BookCrossing!. The BookCrossing service provides an way of building community by sharing books. As a member, you are encouraged to place a simple bookplate with a numerical ID into books you leave laying around in bus stations and doctor’s offices. When someone picks up one of these books, they are implored to read, make a journal entry online for the book, and pass it along to a friend or stranger. I’ve just had my first release caught by a VT student, and it’s oddly thrilling… An old NPR interview.

–JA

To Heal a Fractured World

Filed under: creationcare, reading, sundayschool — andersoj @ 2:37 pm

Recently our adult Sunday School class at Blacksburg Presbyterian has been reading and discussing Jonathan Sacks’ book, The Dignity of Difference. Sacks is the Chief Rabbi of the United Hebrew Congregations of the Commonwealth, and Dignity is an excellent and challenging book I can recommend to anyone who takes seriously the role of religion in public life, and is troubled by the new challenges offered by globalization and related trends.

In the last few days, I have had the pleasure of digging into Sacks’ newest book, To Heal a Fractured World: The Ethics of Responsibility. This is a prophetic book and should be read as such by the faithful in any of the Abrahamic traditions. I offer here a brief excerpt (boldface mine) from the opening chaper (p. 9 in the US Hardback edition):

Why [have I written this book] now? Partly because I am troubled by the face that religion often shows to the postmodern world. Too often it appears on the news, and lodges in the mind, as extremism, violence and agression. Tobe sure, religion is not the cause of conflict in the Balkans, the Middle East or elsewhere. Instead it forms the fault-line along which sides divide. But that in itself is serious. When political conflict is religionized, it is absolutized. What in politics are virtues — compromise, the willingness to listen to both sides and settle for less than one would wish in an ideal world — are, in religion, vices. Religion can therefore act not as a form of conflict-resolution, but, rather, conflict-intensification. This work is my personal protest against suicide-bombers, religiously motivated terrorists and preachers of hate of whatever faith. The religios imperative to which I have tried to give voice in these pages is the one that says: create, do not destroy, for it is my world you are destroying, my creatures you are killing. The only force equal to a fundamentalism of hate is a counter-fundamentalism of love.

To this I add a further concern about religion generally. The prophets warned against a rift between the holy and the good, our duties to God and to our fellow human beings. It still exists today. There are those for whom serving God means turning inward — to the soul, the house of worship and the life of ritual and prayer. There are others for whom social justice has become a substitute for religious observance or God. The result, as I put it later in the book, is like a cerebral lesion between the two hemispheres of the brain. The message of the Hebrew Bible is that serving God and serving our fellow human beings are inseparably linked, and the split between the two impoverishes both. Unless the holy leads us outward toward the good, and good leads us back, for renewal, to the holy, the creative energies of faith run dry. For six days, so the first chapter of Genesis tells us, God created a universe and pronounced it good. On the seventh day he made a stillness in the turning world and declared it holy. Unless we reconnect the holy and the good we do less than justice to the unity that is the hallmark of the monotheistic imagination.

Stern stuff, and sensible. I’ll post more about Sacks’ book as I complete more of it. –JA

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