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Karma

What’s Done In the Dark – Part I

My Mama raised my brothers and me using three tools, and I cite them in order: Jesus and the teachings of the Bible, psychology, and the belt (though she rarely used it). I decided quite early on that it made no sense to do anything that would cause me any unnecessary physical pain at the hands of my mother…or my grandmother, or grandfather, etc. You get the picture. I decided to be ‘good’ and follow the Christian system of values my Mama and all the other members of our family – immediate and extended, worked hard to instill in us.

When it came to behaving outside of the home, my Mama used to remind me that “What’s done in the dark will always come to light.” That was her way of telling me that while she may not be around to monitor my behavior, all those celestial beings in charge of the Big Book of Life see and record my every move, so if I wanted to evade the punishment of eternal hell, I needed to govern myself accordingly. I couldn’t really fathom the notion of eternal damnation, so my brother and I concocted our own analogy. We talked about the pot roasts that Mama used to prepare for us for Sunday dinners. The pot roast endured so much heat that it finally cooked well enough for us to eat. I couldn’t imagine roasting for that long a time and never getting ‘done’.

So, I behaved. I did as I was told. Usually.

There was one notable exception.
It was a Sunday after church. I’d asked Mama to buy me some candy. She said no. Said it would ruin my dinner. I got mad. I was mad at her for denying me one single piece of candy. But I was especially mad because I knew she was lying to me. I mean, how stupid did she think I was? How could ONE single piece of candy ruin my appetite?

I had an idea.

I would take it. Yeah. Steal it.

I could feel my heartbeat getting faster at the thought of this forbidden notion. I could hear my internal dialogues, warring against each other, back and forth, saying things like, “What?! I can’t believe you’re even thinking about this! You know your ass will be grass if you get caught! Mama thinks she knows everything. She shouldn’t be lying to me. It’s just a little piece of candy, and no one will notice.”

I looked around the store to see if anyone was watching me. I checked for mirrors. I counted the number of people that were in the store. I noted my Mama’s location (just in front of me with her back to me), the location of the candy rack (VERY close to my right), and the cash register (a few feet ahead to my left). I waited until Mama had engaged the cashier…apparently, they were high school chums. I turned away to the right and raised my hand to my face as if to scratch it, and as I moved my hand away from my face I snatched a piece of candy from one of the baskets and put it in my coat pocket. The deed was done.

I had stolen a Tootsie Toll.

I couldn’t get out of the store fast enough. I nearly knocked Mama down from behind, racing to get to the car, hoping she would get the car started and pull off before the cashier would discover that single Tootsie Roll, missing from amongst the hundreds of other Tootsie Rolls, and run out of the store to accost us.

I thought I shouldn’t eat it right away. On the way home, I fingered it in my pocket, being careful not to warm it up too much. I wanted the Tootsie Roll to melt in my mouth, not in my hand (so yeah, that was the M&M’s slogan, but it was true for Tootsie Rolls as well). I figured that if the cashier did come to recognize the missing candy and called Mama, my punishment would be less severe if I could actually produce the booty unharmed. Once home, I put the candy in my desk drawer and went to play. I couldn’t concentrate though. I kept thinking about the candy.

After three hours, I figured the cashier wouldn’t be calling my house, the police weren’t coming, and I wouldn’t be getting spanked into the next dimension. My triumph was now complete. I could relax now.

I let out a sigh of relief as I recalled my adventure to the dark side. As I pondered my deed, I still couldn’t believe that I’d had the nerve to do it. Even more incredulously, that I had gotten away with it! I couldn’t believe my good fortune that the eyes in the back of Mama’s head were either temporarily sleep or on vacation. I was so proud that for once in my young life I had outwitted and disobeyed Mama. Me! The goody two shoes! Oh, if the bad kids at school could see me now! And I knew, even the good kids would have a different kind of respect for me now! I could be popular! I would ascend into the ranks of the cool kids! I was excited as I held this daring secret. It was now time to enjoy my prize.

I began to unwrap it. I stopped. I put it down. The words of the Almighty through the voices of my Mama and grandmother began to thunder in my consciousness:

“What’s done in the dark will always come to light”, and “God sees All.”
My momentary pride and sense of accomplishment were eviscerated. I became so racked with guilt and shame that I couldn’t even eat the candy. I might as well go hide under the bed and wait for the lightning bolt that I knew was going to come out of the sky and fry me forever. I didn’t have to wait to die to go to hell and visit the devil. I was already there.

I returned the candy to my desk drawer where it stayed for weeks, just in case this wave of guilt would roll away and I could eat the candy without any remorse.

I ended up throwing it away.

This is the first time I’ve publicly admitted that my criminal career began and ended at the age of seven. I’ve never EVER nicked anything else.

Why am I sharing this story? A conversation I had with a former student about why they should always take the moral high ground when it seems that everyone around him isn’t. 

As they said to me, “It’s all in the headlines. The stories in the daily news feeds.” They concluded that lying, gossiping, stealing and other vices are the new norm. And what often appears as a glimmer of morality is later discovered as duplicitous, used as a cover for more immoral behavior. I understood. After all, my grandmother used to say on the regular that “The biggest devils are in church.”

I don’t know that we humans are less moral than any other time in history, but if we watch the evening news and social media feeds, it can be easy to draw that conclusion.

We may think that others are ‘getting away with’ bad behavior and aren’t getting caught. But that’s not true. The law of Cause and Effect is always in place. In ways visible and invisible, we always receive the fruits of our thoughts, feelings, and actions. An embezzler may momentarily feel powerful, but may never truly enjoy spending the money taken. Someone who cheats on their significant other may never know a moment’s peace, knowing that at any time the person with whom they are cheating could get fed up and put out the dirty laundry for all the world to see. I know of a case where a husband suffered for nearly a decade with ulcers and all kinds of gastric distress until the truth finally came out: His troubles began with an outside relationship in which he had fathered a child…ten years earlier.

In my case, I knew what I’d done was wrong. No amount of rationalization (it was just one thing; it was a small thing; there were too many of the things to notice one missing; I’d never done this before, etc.) could make this be anything other than wrong. I’d violated a moral principle. End of story. Not only had I let my Mama down…I’d let myself down.

Back to those headlines. I won’t mention names, but just consider how some people are getting their day of reckoning, sometimes decades later. As I reminded my former student. We never get away. The laws of Cause and Effect are always in play, and somehow, some way, What’s done in the dark will always come to light.

Dinosaur

 

Deletta Gillespie
Deletta Gillespie

Whew! I’m back!

Hello Readers,

During the last few months, I’ve been teaching, traveling, performing, and writing my first book. The result? I’ve been neglecting this blog. However, it’s summer, AND the book (I’ll tell you more about it in the next installment) will be off to the press this weekend.

I had a bit of a rant a few weeks ago and wanted to share it with you. Here                                          it goes!

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We have lost our minds. We have lost our way.

I will always say that I am grateful for every day The Creator lets me take another breath, but some days, particularly the days I check my phone or turn on the news before my feet hit the floor, I lose my breath. Somedays it’s not worth my sanity to get out of bed. This country is becoming increasingly unrecognizable. I just wanna know…when did being so angry, hateful, cantankerous, confrontational, gossipy, nasty, vengeful, and violent become so vogue? This is not who we say we are!

Character assassinations have been with us since before Moses came down from the mountain with the tablet containing the 9th commandment – Thou Shalt Not Bear False Witness Against Thy Neighbor. But now, verbal smackdowns are commonplace, and no longer considered a naughty little pastime. They’ve become a full-blown sport. We verbally clothesline each other –  openly, daringly, calmly, then we boast about it. 

The hunting of human beings has always belonged to the province of war. However, today, it’s a staple upon which our contemporary obsession with violent video games and testosterone-laden action flicks is built. These days, any Harry, Dick, and Jane with a gun can feel entitled to act as God, passing final judgment on some poor soul. And the reasons for which this judgment, condemnation, and justice is exacted? Illogical differences such as religion, ideology, politics, race, ethnicity, gender identity, and sex. Or something even simpler, and more ridiculous. Our bullets literally take someone’s last breath from them, and we try to justify the reason the life was taken, blathering on and sounding completely bereft of common sense.

We kill people all the time – with actual bullets, with words, with shame.When did this become acceptable?

We don’t seem to care.

We have supposedly evolved. I fear we are devolving. We always hear religious and political leaders talk about God being on our side, but if I were God, I’d be in the market for a new team. I think the more appropriate question is are we on God’s side? If we are God’s greatest creation, then surely we are capable of doing much better than this. When will we make the ultimate decision to honor each other as fellow travelers and seekers? Now, some may say that I’m not being realistic; that I’m being too altruistic or pollyanna-ish. Some may say that the world doesn’t work that way anymore and that I should take my ‘we are the world’ self and sensitivities elsewhere. I don’t care. Some of us have to be the balance. We all need something to feel good about to counteract this jungle of negativity before the overgrowth engulfs us.

What can you do to bring a little light to your corner of the world? What can you do to add some beauty to this day? To make this life more bearable for someone else? Can you offer a smile? Call and check up on someone? Make a donation to your favorite cause? Offer a prayer? Meditate? Volunteer? Abstain from negativity? Buy someone lunch? Each of us…we have to start somewhere…

Some days I feel as though I’m living the lyrics of the song ‘Dinosaur’, sung by the late Al Jarreau. I’ve put the link here…have a listen to this beautiful masterpiece and take a few minutes to reflect.

 

 

If You Don’t Have Anything Nice to Say…

Deletta Gillespie
Deletta Gillespie

I am feeling more and more disgusted and saddened by the level of hatred, vitriol, personal attacks and general unpleasantness that currently characterizes conversation in our culture. It is as though Civility (yes, I capitalized it!) has been banished to some deep, intractable wormhole.

Or maybe Civility got sucker punched one time too many and decided to abandon the madness in favor of an indefinite sabbatical on some uncharted, uninhabited fjord.

In Civility’s absence, it appears that Ugly speech reigns supreme. It especially seems that since President Obama’s residency in the Oval Office began, the lid on Ugly has not only been blown off – it’s been obliterated. Hateful, racist, xenophobic and misogynistic rants have become the norm.

If you read the comments on social media or nearly any website, you’d think that very few of us like anybody, and if you give us a minute, we could list and mock every single last one of everyone else’s faults and flaws from as far back as the womb through to the very present moment.

But it isn’t just the hateful, the racist, the xenophobic, and the misogynistic rants that have me ranting.

From the playground to the office to the home, bullying in the form of verbal abuse is a pandemic. Some kids commit suicide after being victimized by it. Adults cower from it by taking refuge in the bottle, the pipe, the fridge, or in the retail outlets. People take verbal aim at celebrities, and even children aren’t immune from adults’ verbal taunts and insults. Remember Elizabeth Lauten, communications director for Rep. Stephen Fincher (R-Tenn.)? She wrote this to the Obama girls on Facebook: “Dress like you deserve respect, not a spot at a bar.” She also wrote they should show “a little class.” 1

In the heat of a moment or height of anger, many people completely drop whatever filters they have and spew whatever they’re thinking or feeling. Some people will voice what they’re feeling to someone close, even if it’s hurtful, all in the name of ‘keeping it real’.

Still worse, it seems as though this behavior is now the norm and acceptable. Even fashionable and hip.

How and why did we get here?

Why do we demonize each other? Diminish each other? Dehumanize each other? When did it become acceptable to verbally clock  somebody because you don’t like them or the way they look/walk/talk/ dress/speak/think/worship/believe/behave?

Aren’t we all made from, as Crosby, Stills, and Nash wrote in their song Woodstock “billion year-old carbon”? “Dust in the Wind” as the group Kansas sang? No matter your zip or post code, we’re all on the same planet, right? Doesn’t the sun rise and set on ALL of us? Doesn’t the moon do the same?

And what happened to the Golden Rule?

Every major religion has its version of it.

The Baha’i Faith says: “Ascribe not to any soul that which thou wouldst not have ascribed to thee, and say not that which thou doest not.”

Buddhism says: Hurt not others in ways that you yourself would find hurtful.” Udana-Varga 5:18

Confucianism: “What I do not wish men to do to me, I also wish not to do to men.” Analects 15:23

Judaism: “What is hateful to you, do not to your fellow man. This is the law: all the rest is commentary.” Talmud, Shabbat 31a.

Islam: “None of you [truly] believes until he wishes for his brother what he wishes for himself.” Number 13 of Imam “Al-Nawawi’s Forty Hadiths.”

Christianity: And as ye would that men should do to you, do ye also to them likewise.” Luke 6:31, King James Version. 2

Are we now better than the Creator of The Golden Rule?

I believe that words are the second most powerful tool of creation (Thought is the first). If you verbally attack someone, you can apologize until the sky cracks and falls, but words spoken can never be taken back. You may be truly sorry afterwards and claim to have never meant what you said, but once said, you can’t un-mean your words.

In other words, words materialize into a sort of karmic historical record. They never go away. They float around in the ether, materializing and growing until we magnetize them back into our lives. And when they return, we get to experience what we have created, and those creations manifest as love, fear, joy, and pain.

By abusing this powerful gift, we are creating a karmically toxic environment in which we are all negatively affected.

So let’s cut the crap. Let’s step up. Let’s bury Ugly and welcome Civility back into the fold. It’s time for us to honor the best of ourselves by honoring the greatest commandment – the commandment to Love.

Some say Love doesn’t work. I say if we believe in and practice love as much as we believe in and practice love’s opposite, it will absolutely work.

So, let’s agree. Let’s disagree. Let’s agree to disagree. Let us passionately share our ideas, thoughts, opinions and feelings without descending into condescending, juvenile, and destructive speech.

And,  let’s LISTEN at least as much as we speak. Not just with our ears, but with our entire selves.

I’m not for a moment suggesting that this is an easy thing to do. I am suggesting that this is an essential thing to do.

In the end, it’s really about respect, which we all want. And we have to give it in order to get it.

When I was growing up, I was always admonished to say nothing about a person if I couldn’t think of anything nice to say about them.

I am committed to modeling that behavior. Why? Because I believe our survival depends on it. Because it’s the right thing to do. Because I choose to honor my Creator by doing so. Because I believe in the transformative power of Love. Because it’s who I am.

Who are you?

 

1) http://www.msnbc.com/msnbc/obama-girls-targeted-criticism-again-conservatives

2) http://www.religioustolerance.org/reciproc.htm