Beware of the dogma

May 12, 2008

Beware of the dogma

I liked this ….

There in the garden, a young monk speaks: “Master, I’ve been thinking about getting a dogma, and I seek your advice. Any thoughts on the matter?”

The Old Monk collects his thoughts, and calmly replies: “Well my son,everyone has a pet belief, so why should you be any different? Yes, we human beings have had dogmas since the dawn of recorded history. This is understandable. You cannot imagine how comforting it is to curl up with a warm fuzzy dogma on a dark night of the soul. Or to take him to the park on a fine sunny Sunday in January and watch him sniff and chase other dogmas,and bark at strangers.

Some folks keep dogmas for protection. It’s reassuring to have a guard dogma to scare away frightening thoughts – and it’s great to have a loyal companion to fetch you an explanation when you get home from a hard day at work.

And dogmas come in all varieties. Some humans like big dumb dogmas, and others prefer squeaky little irritating ones. And with compassion, someone has to stand for the under dogma. Dogma is truly wo/man’s best friend.

Now, some may ask, why not let sleeping dogmas lie? But who really wants to be lied to? And what about menacing dogmas that bite? Or dogmas that run wild and get in everyone’s garbage? I know, I know you’re probably thinking,”It isn’t my dogma making all the mess, it’s my neighbor’s dogma.”

And indeed you can look out any night and see a pack of aggressive dogmas running down the street chasing a doubt. And what should you do when you are walking down the road and a threatening dogma appears in your path? Stay calm and let the unfamiliar dogma know who’s boss. Say, “Bad dogma, rollover!”

It is a fact of life that dogmas have sharp teeth, and when backed into a corner, they can bite. As a dogma owner it is your responsibility to see that your dogma does not bite. And – if it does, well, sometimes a vicious dogma has to be put down.

Another fact of life is that dogmas inevitably get old and sick.
Perhaps you’ve spent years lovingly taking care of a tired old dogma – and still the time comes to put th
at old dogma to sleep.

It is sad when you must give up a loyal dogma like that – so I say enjoy your dogma while it is alive and playful. You know how uncanny it is that dogma owners come to resemble their dogmas. So, my son, you may have a dogma. But just make sure your dogma doesn‘t mess on your neighbor’s lawn.

And know that on non-judgment day, all our dogmas will run free, and surely they will bother no one.

P.S. Always be careful not to run over your dogma with your karma.

author unknown – found at http://www.burninglibrary.com/zoology/archives/24

Kiribati

January 27, 2008

Kiribati

“It began to dawn on me then that, beyond the teeming romance that lies in the differences between men – the diversity of their homes, the multitude of their ways of life, the dividing strangeness of their faces and tongues, the thousand-fold mysteries of their origins – there lies the still profounder romance of their kinship with each other, a kinship that springs from the immutable constancy of man’s need to share laughter and friendship, poetry and love in common. A man may travel a long road and suffer much loneliness, before he makes that discovery.”

from A Pattern of Islands’ by Arthur Grimble (1952)

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