Hola Everybody,
I'm pissed because when I got home last night, I meant to post a blog -- keeping with my commitment to post one bog per day for the year. I fell asleep and didn't wake up until 3:00 AM...
I'm pissed because when I got home last night, I meant to post a blog -- keeping with my commitment to post one bog per day for the year. I fell asleep and didn't wake up until 3:00 AM...
Gentlemen, consider the following: Imagine for a moment that through some
random evolutionary adaptation, our penises grew from our foreheads instead of
between our legs (after all, it makes more sense from a woman's perspective LOL).
Now, imagine how it would feel if every time you went out in public women would
make untoward remarks about the size (or lack thereof), shape, attractiveness,
or unattractiveness of your penis. Complete strangers commenting on something
highly personal, something you have mixed feelings about (because it’s either
too small or too big, or bent at the head, etc.). Imagine that as soon as you
reached puberty (or even before) women would make cruel, oftentimes publicly
humiliating remarks about your penis. If you can imagine how this would feel
(and let's be real: most of you would die if a woman so much as pointed
at your penis and laughed), then you have a very small idea of what it feels
like to be a woman and do something as mundane as take a walk.
Listening to the Songs of the Sirens
Excerpted from Taking the Leap: Freeing Ourselves from Old Habits and Fears
By Pema Chodron
By Pema Chodron
Ulysses, the hero of
ancient Greek mythology, exemplifies the courage it takes to consciously choose
staying receptive and present when the temptation to get swept away is intense.
When he was making the
sea voyage home to Greece after the Trojan War, Ulysses knew that his ship
would have to pass through a very dangerous area that was inhabited by
beautiful maidens known as the sirens. He had been warned that the call of
these women was irresistible, and that sailors couldn’t help but steer towards
the sirens, crash their boats onto the rocks, and drown.
Nevertheless, Ulysses
wanted to hear the song of the sirens. He knew the prophecy that if anyone
could hear their voices and not go towards them, the sirens would lose their
power forever and wither away. This was the challenge that compelled him.
As his ship neared
the sirens’ homeland, Ulysses told his men to put wax plugs in their ears and
to tie him tightly to the mast, instructing them that no matter how hard he
struggled and gestured, no matter how wrathfully he appeared to be ordering
them to cut his ropes, they were not to untie him until the ship reached a
familiar point of land well out of earshot of the sirens’ song. This story, as
you might expect, has a happy ending. The men followed his instructions and
Ulysses made it though.
To a greater or
lesser degree we will all have to go through similar discomfort in order not to
follow the call of our own personal sirens, in order to step through the open
doorway to awakening.
*
* *
My name is Eddie and I’m in recovery
from civilization…
No comments:
Post a Comment
What say you?