How long is "Now" or is the real question when is "Now"? →
Anything that has just been experienced and thought and has not yet been forgotten is still present but when did the “now” happen?
Was it when the experience started? If your told to start walking now, does the now start when your foot crosses the starting line, or does it start when your told to start walking now?
Just because a person seems to be standing on the starting line is it fair to assume that the course to be followed or the goal for doing so is known? Maybe “now” includes finding those things out?
Service by helping others on my mind today because of past memories of giving service →
About 35 years ago in early December I got a phone call from a man who was a neighbor and who I went to church with. He was in jail and expected to be so for a few weeks. He didn't know if he would be able to go home and be with his wife and young's kids even if it was for Christmas Day. He wanted some help in getting a few things that if he did get out could be from him. My wife helped buy some socks and a few things and we wrapped them taking them to his wife for the kids. He did get to go home for Christmas Day and the help was appreciated. It has been a long time, but I have thought of this event many times, this time of year.
It may have been closer to 40 years ago, but one summer a group of church kids and myself went and painted a house where an older lady lived alone. For a few years I would drive just by to see how the paint was holding up but again I find myself thinking back about this.
I hate to admit how many years ago this next memory happened. When I was a young boy our scouts and other young kids went to and area about 50 miles from where we lived where fires had damaged most of the trees. We replanted thousands of trees. For years as I would occasionally drive that highway I would look up a canyon off the highway to where we planted them to see how they were doing.
Even with a lifelong habit of serving others when the opportunities happen the events are remembered not just by those served but by you.
Service helps those served, of course, but it helps and is important to those that serve. Those memories left me feeling glad I help but left the impression that I could be of help to others.
Looking for someone to help anytime during the year would be a good thing.
Find your perfect solitude to find your important answers →
Good advice on writing is to have a regular private place to do it. Turn off the TV, and work in the quiet. This same special place can help you find important answers to your life questions.
I recently listened to a nutritionist discuss healthy life habits. She suggested that sleep was especially important, and that it should be done in a room with no noise or lights. She added that the cell phone ought to be turned off or not left in the room to ding all night. Nothing new here but even so it suggests some changes.
Solitude is healthy, apparently. Background lights and noise may not be healthy, or even helpful, at certain times. I do write with a TV on sometimes but quiet is better. Sometimes you think habits and routine are important because they are habits and routine, but working in solitude is better. Creativity is easier when you have no competition for your attention. Eliminating distractions helps bring focus to your past life experiences and how they may apply to your questions.
I went for a walk today. As usual, I was thankful for the blue skies and the crisp air. It was peaceful and quiet, and of course I did notice that. Walking is a opportunity to think and ponder, and that personal quiet time is an easy habit to look forward to and it is helpful.
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Wilderness Shows the Importance of Balance →
I posted, in the Stories Section on December 7th, a quote from John Muir. The quote resonated with my thoughts about a favorite running trail called the Pipeline. I have used the "Stories" section for things that I personally had some involvement in.
Thoughts in this "Daily Comment" section are mostly about what happened on a particular day, or what I spent time pondering that day. Today I have come back to this same quote and some thoughts found in a book I am reading.
The book, "American Wolf, A True Story Of Survival And Obsession In The West by Nate Blakeslee", offers some insight into Muir's comment: “The clearest way into the Universe is through a forest wilderness.”
Yellowstone Park is a 3500 square mile wilderness. When the Wolf was reintroduced in 1995 after having been gone for 70 years it was hoped they would help manage a rising Elk population, but they did much more, and in many ways, saved the park.
Beavers feed on willows surrounding the streams but so do Elk. With Wolves present, the Elk didn't linger as long in the low valleys and moved higher and didn't consume as much willows, so the Beaver population increased.
The Coyote population had been unchecked and they were eating most of the rodents but with Wolves present the coyotes were reduced by half causing the rodent population to rebounded. This gave more food for owls, hawks, ravens, eagles, weasels and foxes, so their populations began to grow.
Antelopes were a favorite food of the coyotes but the Wolves didn't bother with them. The Bear population had been dropping but that changed because their food supply increased which included Antelope calves and nuts. They didn't have to rely as heavily on bark pine nuts and this helped the squirrels.
The wolves packs grew more when the Elk were plentiful and the grew less with smaller Elk herds.
The resulting change in this forest wilderness was in the balance of animals and plants. Getting back to a natural balance added understanding to John Muir's comment and suggests that the entire universe may have a optimum balance. Finding what the natural balance in the universe is will likely take a lot more work.
Review of this book, American Wolf, A True Story Of Survival And Obsession In The West by Nate Blakeslee, should post in the next day or so.
To understand where were going and why look back →
I think our life will seem very different when we reach the end and look back. All that we have explored, learned, and have done, will change us. Will we even recognize our beginning self?
We will see the whole of our life very differently than we did as we experienced the parts. The beginning, the journey, and all of the related circumstances to the journey will be clear, for the first time.
It will be the first time we see the past through the prism of all our experiences and that knowledge will let us know what really happened.
I have always loved this quote by T.S. Eliot:
"We shall not cease from exploration, and the end of all our exploring will be to arrive where we started and know the place for the first time".
Soren Kierkegaard seemed to be saying this when he said:
"Life can only be understood backwards; but it must be lived forwards."
In the Essay Section of this website I wrote an article titled Reflections on Life . In that article I said:
"There is no one whose story I am as familiar with as my own. The same is true for you. This seems so obvious, but then what surprises me a little is how I see that story differently almost every time I tell it". It really is different when you look back."