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Turning/Speaking
A
sermon offered at the Unitarian Universalist Church of Lafayette, IN
By
Rev. Hilary Landau Krivchenia
On
November 3, 2002
Reading
What
tiny fragments survive, mangled
into
our language.
I
am a woman committed to a politics of transliteration,
the
methodology of a mind
stunned
at the suddenly possible shifts of meaning –
for
which like amnesiacs in a ward on fire,
we
must find words
or burn.
From
Beginning with O
By
Olga Broumas
When I first
saw O’Keefe’s portrait of the Bridge I fell in love --
unrequited since I had neither the good fortune or the sheer moxy to
be a resident New Yorker. In
time, I read McCullough’s biography of the bridge, much like a
starstruck teenager would read a fan magazine.
This week I ran into my old flame on PBS.
It was designed just
after the Civil War. The
Roeblings wanted the bridge to stand for a new America. To
do more than link Manhattan with Brooklyn.
It was meant to lift people high above the river, nobly frame
the passage from shore to shore, to be a crown on the brow of New
York. It was the high
arching of the human spirit – renewed, capable of creating beauty,
wielding wise power, of building a new world of integrity and peace
-- suspended as the human spirit then seemed destined to be – in
1883, between heaven and earth.
Yet, for all the
shining and vibrant dreams, for all the bridge did stand like the
doors of a great cathedral with niches filled by the forms of
humanity, for all it stretched toward the sky --awakened poets to
rhyme, artists to paint, and voices to sing – for all that the
bridge was a bridge as humanity was and is human.
It’s easy to become
confused. Zen sayings
are good for highlighting this -- one says “Mountains are
mountains; waters are waters. This
does not mean mountains are mountains; it means mountains are
mountains.” Just so
– the bridge is a bridge – not a bridge but a bridge.
I can dream about the bridge and on the bridge but if I want
a better world I had better look at myself, at you – and at the
distance between us.
Our most real
constructions – the creations that make heaven or hell, that make
us isolated islands or havens of connectedness – our real
constructions are our relationships – all that passes between the
island of me and the island of you -- over the bridge of
communication.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
said: Language is a city to the building of which every human being
brings a stone. All of
history that is built this way – we bring our lives, we connect
with one another through language – a built a history, a culture,
a world. Stone by
stone, word by word. Good
fences don’t make good neighbors – that wasn’t what the poet
was saying – good bridges do.
It’s all in how we span the distance between us.
In every interaction and every connection or missed
connection.
In September, I talked
about listening deeply, about bringing to one another our full
attention. Each person
here is a treasure, a gift, a world deserving of our attention.
Think of how easy it is to be pulled into a television
program! But doesn’t
each person here, each person warrant a much greater curiosity, a
deeper attention than anything on the moving screen – we are real
– present – un repeatable.
Nelle Morton said
“we hear one another into speech” – the attention we bring one
another lifts us from hazy silence into clearer life.
Hearing one another into speech we also speak ourselves into
life – we emerge from indeterminate shadow and silence word by
word.
It is the quality of the words -- of the
listening and the speaking -- that builds a powerful or weak bridge
between us. In a
campaign season, I long for words of real quality.
This is a season of jockeying for power at any expense, a
time of lost voices. In
this chilling season, as we posture and perhaps prepare for war, I
feel a great hunger for words that count.
Just as Roebling was
inspired by the words of the Unitarian minister – William Ellery
Channing – so I wish we would recognize our celestial inheritance
and reverence humanity – in ourselves and in one another.
To recognize the inherent worth and dignity of every person
is to say that we are as great a miracle as the blowing clover.
Harry Emerson Fosdick said, Democracy is based upon the
conviction that there are extraordinary possibilities in ordinary
people. To treat one another with reverence is to make room for
extraordinary possibilities.
Let me make the scale
clear – I’m not talking about monumental bridges, historic
sermons, and extraordinary words – I am speaking of simple
interchanges -- the conversations that compose our lives – one
stone at a time. We
build that vision of the democratic world, the peaceful, the just
world – the world of our principles one word at a time.
Unitarian
Universalists revere words. We
believe in the power of speaking and of hearing them.
We hold precious the art of conversation and we value the
words that we share. At
times, we may even reverence our words more than we do one another. Words
have power – they’re not magic – but they’re powerful. In Ursula Le Guin’s story – A Wizard of Earthsea –
a young man learns of the power of language – of words and names.
To truly know the name of a thing, is to know its soul, to be able
to call it and even to shape it.
This power is so great that his teacher puts a spell of
binding on his tongue so that he can learn first before speaking.
As we revere words and
their power perhaps we could all use a Spell of Binding to keep
silent our tongues until we’re ripe, mindful – ready to use our
power of language wisely and constructively. Words
can become a tide that sweeps us under.
I know I need such a spell.
Of course, it’s not
words that kill people – but they have impact – they shape us
inside as we speak them and they ripple out to shape the world.
Not just sticks and stones.
I was reminded of this
a while back after a sermon in which I referred to the President of
the United States – George W. Bush -- simply as Bush.
On one hand, I felt proud that I didn’t call him Shrub, on
the other hand I was reminded by a caring friend that the office of
the presidency – regardless of the occupant -- deserved respect.
And I knew that his plain humanity – no matter what our
differences or my fear of him may be – his humanity deserved
respect. I wanted to
criticize the President for his warlike attitude and yet my own
words were negative and unmindful.
We make peace with every word we speak – as we make life or
breed despair.
Slow as we are to
learn language we’re even slower in learning how to speak it with
care – to bring our full minds to the project of speech.
In every word we make
choices – and with every word we evoke power. Speech is a holy
power. In the Talmud it
is said that the tongue has a power so great that it must be kept
shielded behind two walls – the tongue and the teeth – to
protect the world from its power. The Koran advises that long with constant acts of charity and
generosity, kindly words must be spoken – and that those who take
part in the sacred Pilgrimage will be guided to goodly words. First Corinthians warns us that if we speak in the tongues
of angels yet without love our words are in vain. The eightfold path of Buddhism carries the precept of Right
Speech – Loving Speech.
Buddhists
always make things sound so easy – it’s only the idea which is
easy – the practice that takes time and deep attentiveness. We
muddle along well enough – getting our points across.
Why should we do such hard work?
I ask you to imagine a
world in which we spoke in honesty, care, and reverence with one
another. With
compassion. Imagine a world in which more people understand and carefully
use the power of words. Now,
we’re like gun owners without licenses or training.
Our words fire off – both on purpose -- sometimes very much
on purpose -- and quite accidentally in government, between nations,
in our homes, at our workplaces, and even in our church.
Too often words explode and we hardly understand why -- we
just know that something blew apart and we are standing in smoke and
sadness. Edgar Allan
Poe asked -- Is not every word an impulse on the air?
It’s a lovely image – but I want more than impulse
guiding the words from me and around me. I want intention,
integrity, compassion, honesty, and trust.
In every place that we can, we can change our world
acknowledging the power of words.
Our world is so habit ridden that to step outside of habit
and expectation and speak with love is to transform any exchange –
there are hundreds of opportunities in every day.
So, instead, let us also acknowledge the power
of our words – not The Word – but all words – and use them as
the power that they are – with integrity and intention to build a
finer world with them. To acknowledge the real power of words – is
to become mindful of them and to lift them to conscious awareness.
To raise them like a bridge.
To find the right words or burn…
If words are a bridge
we are the place where our words begin -- the anchorage.
Before words emerge they are in our hearts and minds –
embedded in our feelings, reactions, and habits.
Did you ever just begin to talk – your words rising on a
tide of feeling? Words
pouring out – and then later in reflection you recognize that that
was not quite what you wanted to say.
Not quite.
The way to anchor our
communication is to first take the time to become aware.
So first you take a
deep breath and listen to the other person – observe – pay
attention—allow their words to enter your mind with freshness.
Sometimes more than one breath is needed to stop reacting and
really begin listening. And we may be able to really listen yet we
may become caught up in judging, agreeing, disagreeing, and thinking
ahead.
You know the
difference between waiting for someone to finish so you can have a
turn speaking and really listening, observing them.
I recognize that these may be familiar ideas to many of you
– but bear with me – I know that I need reminding – and I more
than suspect that most of us do – it takes practice to become a
mindful speaker. Sometimes
– okay – perhaps often one needs more than one deep breath –
to stop reacting and be able to clearly hear.
So – the beginning
is hearing without judging. Here’s
an example – We’re in the kitchen and you say “The smell of
cilantro bothers me – it’s just not pleasing to my nose” –
how do I hear that? Can
I hear that without thinking – “I love Cilantro! Why
don’t you agree with me” or, if insecure – “Why don’t I
agree with that?”
It’s worse if you
carelessly say – “I hate cilantro” – evoking a rather strong
word. Perhaps I think “They are certainly is missing out on
something – a really limited palate. I
have wider tastes.” How hard is it to hear and simply observe
“Oh, you have intense feelings about cilantro.” And let that
observation exist without judgment or evaluation.
To listen, understand, and even acknowledge is the next step.
The way to firmly
anchor words – not to be swept away on a tide of feeling and loose
the precious moment for real connection – begin by really hearing
and observing. The next
step before spanning the distance with speech is to observe and
acknowledge what you yourself are feeling.
Another breath or many more will be helpful here – just to
be fresh and able to be honest and clear with oneself.
Down one path I may be tempted to say “What a culinary
bore! I have offered
you an adventure of herbaceous delights!”
Instead of being over powered by my feelings there is another
path. Down that one
there is no need to over react – or even to react – only to hear
and respond. I could
then say simply, “Oh, I like cilantro on my burritos.” These
are the anchor pins – set firmly and clearly in the mind – that
begin to keep our outreaching words from swinging wildly in space.
Once these are in place it’s possible to contemplate
creative responses – responses to your needs, responses to my own.
I want cilantro and you don’t.
The key here is that this next step is like the suspension
cable across the river – strong and flexible – responsive and
responsible. The next step is to be responsible for my own feelings
and needs. It is the
tower that lifts our cable high above the rough water.
This is tough. It is so easy to try to shift the responsibility away “You
make me feel like cilantro is bad”
“You are making our dinner more complicated. It’s never
easy to eat with you.” “You’re
just like an oppressive parent – You’re too picky.” And on and
on. Any creative
thought is jammed shut.
How much harder it
seems to acknowledge my own feelings.
“I wish we loved the same things.
I got the cilantro as a treat for you – but it was really
for me. To be
responsible for one’s own feelings is terribly hard and here
we’re only talking about cilantro.
Still – not taking
responsibility for your own stuff crowds the wires – prevents
connection and leaves us stuck on opposite sides of the river. And
worse.
As I fail to take
responsibility you may also retreat – am I going to have an
awkward lunch? Will I have to eat cilantro? Do I have to get blamed
for everything? Didn’t she notice the flowers I brought?”
In taking responsibility I can feel strong enough to reach
out again.
I think, “my, I’m
feeling defensive about cilantro – I just like it!”
I can go a step further thinking, “I want to feel good
about what I like but I don’t have to make you feel bad to do
that.”
This is
where creativity becomes possible – at last I’m calm and say
“I really like cilantro and I want some on my burrito – but I
see that you really don’t want any.
I can set it on a small plate the side.”
The more I breathe and take time to be a true individual –
free – interdependent, yet not chained to your reactions – the
more I do this the more creativity becomes possible.
I realize that here we’re only talking about cilantro.
Every day we face tougher conversations, tougher differences,
unwilling partners – maybe – and more sensitive issues.
But – how often do
you feel pressed to really acknowledge the person you are trying to
connect with while honoring and being responsible for yourself?
Do you contemplate the impact of your words on others as
often as you contemplate the impact of their words on you?
How often can you simply set aside your reaction, fears, even
your need to be heard, need to win, how often do you set these
things aside and hear another person – exercise compassion?
You may discover that
they are right – or that it does not actually matter either way. Or
that you want both of you to walk away feeling positive – both of
you to walk away feeling positive.
Or even that you want to help someone else instead of
yourself? I’m asking
myself these questions. I’m
asking these questions of us all.
I’m only talking
about cilantro -- but I’m aware of our lives – our hard work
lives, family relationships, civic involvements, border disputes,
and even here in our church.
Here – in this place
of covenant.
While we bring our own
needs here we are not here simply to self serve – we are here also
to serve one another. How
often do we get stuck, entrenched, defensive, critical when we could
reach out to one another and find support, creativity, and answers
to questions we really – despite our illusions – we really could
not find alone.
With a commitment and
a practice of mindful communication – some people call it
non-violent communication – with such a practice we can reach out
– renew one another – thank one another for hard work – find
joy together – discover a middle ground, a new ground, a play
ground – we can make discoveries we cannot make alone.
That is the beautiful bridge – simple – lovely,
utilitarian – with twined suspension wires, a harp strung across
turbulent waters, the wind singing in the weaving of lives and
minds.
That is what happens
when complex distances are spanned – beauty is created.
When the work that went into the bridge is solid, it lasts
lifetimes – as we hope that this place will.
Here we can begin but here certainly, we can create a world
of mutual care, safety and healing.
This is a community of good will – truly – and good
intentions – truly. Yet
we know we can pave the way to hell with those.
We live in trying
times when it is easy to feel helpless, easy to blame the President
– to pass our helpless time squabbling over the exact text of a
mission statement for the peace group, over the immediate detail and
turn away from the larger struggles, wounds and fears.
But we are not so helpless – neither in the world nor
especially here in our own sphere.
In fact, to honor the spirit of Unitarian Universalism we
have to engage in mindful speech – otherwise we may eternally find
ourselves a small group when we could reshape then world with a
democratic religion. We come together here with visions of a just
world – a world where Reconstruction came to pass – where
tyrants – tremble but we sing for the light.
We come here because although we know all of the brute
history of humanity we still cherish the possibility of a future –
of the ability of the bulk of humanity to grow in wisdom and peace.
Remember Harry Fosdick said, “Democracy is based upon the
conviction that there are extraordinary possibilities in ordinary
people.” That is the
root and branch of Unitarian Universalism – to take the human
dimension always into account – to bear toward one another and
ourselves respect and compassion.
It is easier to do this for the Palestinian terrorist than
the person sitting next to us in church, perhaps – but that is the
spiritual path we are on – we come here not to worship God so much
as to invoke the sacred in ourselves and one another.
It should not take
wire rope and concrete to span that short distance.
We span that distance with mindfulness and care.
We span that distance with practice and intention – we span
that distance with our principles.
Our spell of binding is writ into our covenant.
From one to the other of us we build our amazing bridges –
It does not take wire ropes and concrete – though there will be
that in our future. It
takes a material both tougher and finer – a material we can mine
if we but reach deeply and diligently enough into ourselves –
love.
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