Category Archives: Green

What I Learned From Other People Last We

What I Learned From Other People Last Week: If you say you’re an island you’re full of beans.  Everybody learns fr… http://wp.me/ppc1y-sP

What I Learned From Other People Last Week

Update 7/18/19:  My club still uses the flag but we’re now called Cabal Fang Temple, and we’re a 501(c)(3) non-profit educational charity.  Visit our website or purchase our 12-week personal growth program at Smashwords, Amazon, B&N, or wherever fine e-books are sold.

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Original post:

If you say you’re an island you’re full of beans.  Everybody learns from everybody else.  No, life isn’t a big lecture hall, it’s more like a big wine tasting where people sort of hang out and soak up things from other people, often without knowing it.  Sometimes you just see something going on and you learn something.  As Yogi Berra said, “You can observe a lot by watching.”

Here’s a run-down of what I learned from other people last week:

  • My wife taught me, in her sweet and gentle way,  that the best intentions are meaningless if they’re wrapped up in a crappy attitude.
  • I learned from my Mom that, when it comes to loved ones living or dead, there is a time for judgment and a time for mercy, a time for remembrance and a time for forgetting, and graceful is the way of knowing the time for each.
  • A guy I work with at the office reminded me that you don’t need to be an expert at every task in your wheelhouse in order to be a great manager.  You just have to know who the experts are and how to put them to work for you.
  • I learned from an old friend that distrust is a doorway to the loneliest hell, but the way out is always there if you knock.
  • And I learned from my pals at the Order of Seven Hills that pretty body mechanics is no match for reaction time, distance control, and killer instinct (and I have the scrapes and bruises to prove it).

What did you learn from other people this week?  If you think you learned nothing, you might need to open your heart and your eyes.

Steve Earle Put on a Heck of a Show

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Merch from the Steve Earle concert at The National in RVA 8/23/13

The line for autographs was long.  Morgan and I waited patiently.  People were hugging him and getting their pictures taken.  I watched him paste on a smile and pose for each person.

It was my turn.  I held out a book and CD for him to sign.

“Nobody shoots straighter or tells it truer than you do Steve,” I said.  “Thanks for what you do.”  I stuck out my hand.  He shook it and said thanks.  “Travel safe,” I said.

Morgan wanted to know why I didn’t ask him to pose for a picture.  “He’s an artist, one of the greatest poets of our time, not a trained monkey.  I didn’t want to make the man pose.  I just wanted to say thanks.  That was more important than the autograph.”

Steve, for pouring out your heart and sweat and honesty for almost three hours the other night, for your tireless dedication to hard-working everyday folks like me, for a body of work that includes activism, music, literature, film and television, my sincerest thanks.  You’re the outlaw poet of my generation and it was an honor to shake your hand.

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Title page of “I’ll Never Get Out of This World Alive” signed by the author

 

Aidan Kelly’s Article Pushed My Buttons

“I spend about as much time as any other well-informed person being concerned about the problems America is facing and, like everyone else, not having a clue about what I can do to help ameliorate the situation. I feel that I should be doing whatever I can. I certainly agree with Edmund Burke’s observation that evil can triumph only if good people do nothing. But evil has no objective, ontological existence. It consists entirely of the absence of the good, as darkness is merely the absence of light, not a black fog that can overwhelm the light. Only adult human beings can intend evil, and evil is always intentional. It is simply gratuitous malevolence, the intent to harm another human being (or perhaps any living being) when doing so is unnecessary. As Scott Peck argued, evil is a mental illness. It could conceivably be cured and eradicated. And that should be a goal of any and all genuine religions.”
~Opening paragraph of  Why We Must Help Those Who Cannot Help Themselves by Aidan Kelly
Aidan, I respect the work you’ve done and the places you’ve been.  I salute the successes you’ve enjoyed.  I can tell your heart’s in the right place.  But this article is just plain awful, and as much as I’d like to stay off your lawn, I have to express my feelings.  Let me begin by saying that the reason you feel clueless is that you’re standing on shaky philosophical ground.
Your definition of evil is undeveloped at best (and at the worst dead wrong).
Evil is the absence of good?  Evil is not only perpetrated by humans?  Your statements sound like ideas my first grade teacher might have taught me back in ’68, back when we all started the day by reciting the Pledge of Allegiance followed by the Lord’s Prayer.  Now we know that chimpanzees perpetrate massacres, ants wage genocidal wars, and cats torture prey they plan to kill (eventually) but never eat.  Ever been attacked by a dog?  I have, and that bitch was evil.
Tying evil — and by extension good also — to humans was was your first mistake.
People are animals.  We’re never going to make progress on any front, socially and especially environmentally, until we realize that the Great Chain of Being is one of the greatest and most damaging lies ever promulgated.  Humans are not better than animals, who are not better than plants, who are not better than insects.  Every living thing is necessary and equal in the web of life.  We’re all evolving and everything is possible.  On a long enough time line, provided we don’t exterminate them all, a Bengal tiger is going to write a book that reads like something by Anton LaVey.

Your second mistake was that you failed to distinguish between Evil (with a capital “E”) and evil (with a little “e”).  “Evil” is quite a bit different from everyday “evil.”

Jung understood this better than anyone.  As he said, “The unconscious is not just evil by nature, it is also the source of the highest good: not only dark but also light, not only bestial, semi-human, and demonic but superhuman, spiritual, and, in the classical sense of the word, ‘divine.'”  The evils (with a little “e”) you rail against later in the article, and rightly so, are better called by their specific names — perfidy, greed, maliciousness, and so on.  Those evils with a little “e” spring forth from the unconscious.  They aren’t going anywhere.

Big “E” evil is just as powerful and important as big “G” Good.  As Jung said in The Seven Sermons to the Dead, in which his supreme god was Abraxas, “What the god-sun speaketh is life. What the devil speaketh is death. But Abraxas speaketh that hallowed and accursed word which is life and death at the same time. Abraxas begetteth truth and lying, good and evil, light and darkness, in the same word and in the same act. Wherefore is Abraxas terrible.”  Jung’s vision isn’t unique.  Every pantheon has an evil deity or two, except Christianity.  But then, Jung would have remedied that by making the trinity a quaternity if he’d had his way.

In short, little “e” evil is ubiquitous, normal, not unique to humans, stems from the unconscious, and therefore can’t be eradicated.  Big “E” Evil is part of the Godhead, and therefore it can’t be eradicated either.  So it doesn’t matter whether you meant ‘evil’ or ‘Evil.’  Either way you were wrong.

You’re a gnostic.  You should know this stuff.

You used an outmoded definition of religion.

You said that eradicating evil “should be a goal of any and all genuine religions.”  As a witch, I start to look for a fire extinguisher whenever somebody starts talking about what should and should not be considered a “genuine” religion. A religion should be about whatever a religion wants to be about.
You used to be a hippie, commie, beatnik witch.  Don’t you know this stuff?

You don’t understand the rules of the game.

Your love of the Golden Rule — you even quoted Hillel to close your article! — is destroying your chances of making the world a better place.  To quote Carl Sagan from his article The Rules of the Game, “The Golden Rule is not only an unsuccessful strategy; it is also dangerous for other players, who may succeed in the short-term only to be mowed down by exploiters in the long-term.”  The Golden Rule, is well, stupid.  It just doesn’t work.

You aren’t going to have a tinker’s chance in hell of making the world a better place if you don’t understand the game.

Don’t get me wrong.  I don’t have all of the answers.  It’s just that, because I’m on solid philosophical ground, I don’t feel clueless.  I feel small and insignificant.  But with the help of my Gods, spirits, and familiars, I’ll do what I can to fight evil — the little “e” kind — as hard as I can.

On Vacation until Monday Sept. 2nd

Scheduled blog posts and tweets will go out this week but I’ll be unplugged.  Completely.  I’ll reply to comments when I get back on the laptop Monday morning.

If you don’t totally unplug a few times a year your head will explode.  This week I’m taking a guitar, a couple of books, and a sketch pad.  No working, and other than my grip tools, I’m not even working out.

Beach, play, food, sleep.

Spicy Pork Bowl

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I forgot to take the picture before I started eating. This is what half a Spicy Pork Bowl looks like.

Continuing my habit of posting one healthy recipe a week that is four ingredients or less, tasty, healthy and slow-carb, I now submit for your approval…

Spicy Pork Bowl

(makes 5 servings, just in case you want to cook on Sunday and take it to work all week long†)

  • 2.5 lbs of boneless pork chops or a port loin (humanely raised if available)
  • 1 can of organic black beans
  • 2 lb bag of organic mixed veggies (the kind without corn if you want it to be 4HB-compliant)
  • Salt, black pepper, and Rooster Sauce to taste

Cook your pork until done (internal temp of 145° — and remember that temp rises about 5° after it comes off the heat, so don’t overcook).   While you’re waiting for it cool, cook mixed veggies per package directions.  Drain and rinse black beans in a colander.  When the pork has cooled to room temperature, slice it thin on the diagonal, and then into narrow strips.  Mix everything up in a bowl.  Add salt, black pepper, and Rooster Sauce to taste.

Nutrition info per serving (makes 5): Calories: 639, Fat: 29, Protein: 54, Carbs: 37 (much less if you use veggie mix without corn), Fiber: 13.

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†Don’t forget — when you reheat a dish in the microwave that contains meat, always use 50% power or else the meat will be so tough it will be suitable only for dog treats or flip-flop soles.

Full Nelson, the Beer

wpid-IMG_20130811_074214.jpgI’m not a beer expert, I just like to have a beer on cheat day (for more on what this whole cheat day thing is all about, see here and here).

So when I saw a beer on the shelf called Full Nelson, being an aficionado of the great Western martial art of wrestling and all, I had to put a couple in my mix-n-match six pack.

How was it?  Just the right about of bitterness, lots of hops and a few flowers for finish.  I’m telling you, this is good stuff.  Hat’s off the folks at Blue Mountain!

And if it’s not enough that it tastes superb and it carries the name of a classic wrestling hold, it’s sustainably made right here in the mountains Virginia.  It doesn’t get any better than this.†

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†Did you get that joke?  Remember the Old Milwaukee commercials: “It doesn’t get any better than this…”  I couldn’t resist.

Very Veggie Breakfast Shake

wpid-IMG_20130811_074033.jpgHere’s another breakfast and/or recovery shake that’s 4HB/Slow Carb Diet compliant (as far as the ingredients go anyway — on 4HB drinking calories isn’t encouraged).

You’re going to say this sounds disgusting.  But if you like tomato-based veggie juices you’ll like this one.  I promise!

In your blender or Magic Bullet, put the following and blend until the spinach liquifies and the mix is smooth:

  • 1/2 cup ice
  • 1 cup Knudsen Organic Very Veggie Juice
  • 2 cups raw organic spinach
  • 2 raw eggs (wash your eggs with soap and water first)
  • a dash of hot sauce (if desired)

Nutrition info: Calories: 230, Protein: 16, Fat: 10, Carbs: 14, Fiber: 5

Take the Leap

Mo_Jump_Swim_130809My first post is up over at Writer’s Lunch.  Check it out.

 

 

 

Peanut Butter Cup Low Carb Shake

imageHere’s a shake that you can enjoy after a workout or anytime.  It’s low carb and delicious (to me anyway).

Just put everything in your blender or Magic Bullet and voila:

  • 2 raw free range eggs
  • 1 cup Almond Milk
  • 1 tbsp peanut butter
  • 1 tbsp unsweetened cocoa powder
  • 3 stevia packets
  • 1/2 cup ice

Nutrition info: Calories (285), Protein (17), Fat (21), Carbs (8), Fiber (4).

WARNING: This recipe contains raw eggs. I’ve regularly eaten raw eggs for years with no problem, and contend that if you wash the shells with soap and water before you crack them you’re fine (a 2002 study showed that only 1 in 30,000 eggs was contaminated, and most of those positives were for contamination outside of the shell).  Others disagree.  Eat raw eggs at your own risk.