[Image: poster for magic act performed by one Harry Kellar (1849-1922) — click for a full view. Later in his life, Kellar mentored Harry Houdini; you can read an admiring account of one of his shows, in a letter from Theodore Roosevelt, at the blog of the TR Center at Dickinson State University. One source I consulted said Kellar also inspired the bald-headed Wizard of Oz in an early edition of the book. (This poster, among others for Kellar’s various illusions, is shown at a number of sites; I found it here.)]
From whiskey river:
Money-Madness
Money is our madness, our vast collective madness.
And of course, if the multitude is mad
the individual carries his own grain of insanity around with him.I doubt if any man living hands out a pound note without a pang;
and a real tremor, if he hands out a ten-pound note.We quail, money makes us quail.
It has got us down, we grovel before it in strange terror.
And no wonder, for money has a fearful cruel power among men.But it is not money we are so terrified of,
it is the collective money-madness of mankind.
For mankind says with one voice: How much is he worth?
Has he no money? Then let him eat dirt, and go cold.And if I have no money, they will give me a little bread
so I do not die,
but they will make me eat dirt with it.
I shall have to eat dirt, I shall have to eat dirt
if I have no money.It is that that I am frightened of.
And that fear can become a delirium.
It is fear of my money-mad fellow-men.We must have some money
to save us from eating dirt.
And this is all wrong.Bread should be free,
shelter should be free,
fire should be free
to all and anybody, all and anybody, all over the world.We must regain our sanity about money
before we start killing one another about it.
It’s one thing or the other.
(D. H. Lawrence [source])
…and:
Many of us are using our spirituality as a way to avoid life, to avoid seeing things we really need to see, to avoid being confronted with our own misunderstandings and illusions. It is very important to know that life itself is often our greatest teacher. Life is full of grace—sometimes it’s wonderful grace, beautiful grace, moments of bliss and happiness and joy, and sometimes it’s fierce grace, like illness, losing a job, losing someone we love, or a divorce. Some people make the greatest leaps in their consciousness when addiction has them on their knees, for example, and they find themselves reaching out for a different way of being. Life itself has a tremendous capacity to show us truth, to wake us up. And yet, many of us avoid this thing called life, even as it is attempting to wake us up.
(Adyashanti [source])
…and:
Loves
(excerpt)Who isn’t selfish enough
to love zoos? Flamingos, baboons,
iguanas, newts.
Surely evolution has a sense of humor.
Surely the world would be something to love
if it weren’t for us, insatiate,
our history of harm.
How hard even to love oneself,
all those things I’ve done
or dreamed of. Those vengeances.
(Stephen Dunn [source])
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