Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner

So, I’m about to agree with Marjorie Taylor Greene, never thought I’d write that sentence…it’s time to look outside for flying pigs. I have never agreed with her about anything…until the release of the Epstein files became a fight. That should not be a fight. It should happen. The victims deserve that…at least that. I respect that she has a relationship with several of the victims and I respect that she broke with Trump on signing a petition for the release of the Epstein files. Broke with the president and the republican majority. Seems like such a no brainer. Release them. Duh. There needs to be accountability for trafficking and abusing young girls…whoever was involved. Regardless of party affiliation. It’s one of the most horrific examples of sexual crimes against young girls in this country…ever.

Regardless of our differences, I would never think it was okay to send death threats to her or her family. I saw a clip of her giving a speech and she talked about the death threats and her fears for herself and her family. She said she reached out to people in the Trump administration for help and got no response…except Kash Patel who said he was on it. She told the audience, “I don’t know what he’s on.” That got a good laugh. But the most disturbing thing was the president’s response…and she saved the text messages. He told her she deserved the death threats. And as if that wasn’t bad enough, and it was, the President of the United States told her that if her son were murdered it would be her fault. What the total fuck?!

My daughter died four months ago, and it is the worst and most painful thing I’ve ever experienced. I would not wish it on anyone. I could never wish for someone to lose their child…no one…ever. It is inconceivable to me that anyone would want someone’s child threatened and that you would tell a parent that if anything happened it was their own fault. That’s some cold-hearted bullshit. I’m not big on calling people evil but this really challenges my thinking on that.

Here’s the thing, this administration does a lot of claiming and proclaiming their so called “Christianity” …flaunting it even. But there’s something off there…a disconnect. Saint Catherine of Siena said that freedom isn’t free until it serves. Service. To serve, “perform duties or services for another person or organization.” Freedom isn’t free until it opens itself to a belief, a cause, or a vision beyond itself, according to Saint Catherine. Something beyond ourselves. It’s not all about me…or you. That attitude of service, thinking of others, is not prevalent in our current government…with all its gold adornments and vanity projects. I’m not sure it even exists.

Since the president thinks he’s Jesus, he should be more familiar with what Jesus taught…love, kindness, compassion, standing up to injustice, defending the defenseless, modeling equality, treating people with respect. It doesn’t matter what your personal beliefs are or whether you’re part of a religion or an atheist, those are basic values we should be able to agree on. Seems simple. Duh, right? And yet the current administration does not. How do I know? Just watch the news or listen to interviews, these men tell you themselves. For example, the president, speaking about his war with Iran, said he was going to obliterate their country. Or saying he doesn’t even think about the American people and their struggles right now. Or trying to pick a fight with the Pope. Seriously? People in the administration said the Pope should stay away from issues about theology…hmmm. I’m pretty sure issues of theology are his job. Or saying that the Pope is for Iran having nuclear weapons when the Pope has consistently spoken out against war and the use of nuclear weapons. I disagree with the Catholic Church on many things, but the church is clear on its opposition to war and nuclear weapons. I realize in the olden days that was not always the case…the Catholic Church has a past.

Jesus was not so different than other great teachers and religious leaders in what he taught. They all talked about the need to love. Love your neighbors. Love your enemies. Love children. Love all people. Period. Full stop. Fairly straightforward and clear.

What would that look like? I’m glad you asked. This is an example from the Bible. The story is in the Gospels of Matthew, Luke, and Thomas…A man was having a dinner, so he sent his servant around to his friend’s homes to invite them…seems like you’d do that before you prepare a huge meal, but whatever. One by one all his friends decline the invitation. They’re too busy or have other plans. So, the man sends his servant out again and tells him to bring back anyone he can find until his banquet hall is full. Anyone. That’s a big deal back then…or now. This is a person of means and some standing in the community. Probably in a position of power, and he opens his home to everyone. People did not do that. There were classes of people and the upper did not mix with the lower.

Imagine what that would look like now…the president, Jeff Bezos, or Mark Zuckerberg are having a party. They send a chauffeur around to pick up their friends, and they all turn down the offer. So, Mr. T, B, or Z send the chauffeur out again with instructions to pick up anyone they can find. Who would they find? Women, the unhoused, people suffering from poverty, people with mental illness, LGBTQ+ folks, the disabled, African Americans, Asian Americans, Pacific Islanders, people from the Latin X community, non English speakers, people from other countries, folks with substance abuse problems, gang members, people who have been in prison, people on parole or probation, the hopeless, the weary, Buddhists, Christians, Muslims, Hindus, atheists. This list is not all inclusive because there are so many possibilities…so many people. Hopefully, you get the idea.

When you include everyone, you find a lot of people who are not usually, or ever, on the list of acceptable guests. You get the real people from the real world. People with real lives and real struggles. That’s life. Real life. Not a bunch of white, male, billionaires pretending they have any clue what life is like for 99% of this country, or this world. I’m not sure those men give the 99% of us much, or any, thought at all. We are invisible to them…too far beneath them to care.

Richard Rohr, a Franciscan priest and author, says that we make a mistake when we try to be spiritual before we learn to be human. I think that’s a major problem in our country…not enough humans. We have plenty of people proclaiming their spirituality, or their connection to a god, but having zero humanity. Jesus modeled humanity. That’s why he told that story. To show us how to be human. It seems like it should come naturally to us, but it doesn’t. We like to exclude and favor, to rank and shun. We decide regularly who matters and who doesn’t. Who deserves our kindness or attention and who does not. Jesus lived his values. His words matched his life. Other great teachers modeled the same thing. They embodied the principles they followed. They lived what mattered to them. Lao Tzu, author of the Tao Te Ching, a foundational text of Taoism, said that a ruler leads not by acting important but by their speech and their steps…their actions. It’s a powerful thing when our words and actions align in our lives.

So, how do we become more human? What did Jesus model for humanity? It starts and ends with love. That may sound simplistic but imagine a world where everyone acted from love. Where every person, no matter their position, power, money…no matter what…the only motivation was love and the intention across the board was to show love in every word and action. Imagine all the people living life in peace. You can’t bomb someone you love. You can’t turn your back on the needs of people you love. You can’t live comfortably having everything when people you love have nothing. You can’t claim a spirituality, or a religion, or a God and watch your neighbor starve.

Love is a powerful force…it transforms the lover and the loved. And in the end, all that matters is how we love people. That’s the starting point for learning to be human. It’s the whole point. Loving is human. Loving is divine. It’s time to become the humans we claim to be. Love will win…but only if we do it. Actions speak louder than words. Love speaks the loudest. Let’s turn up the volume and manifest the power of love. Just imagine.

Why Would It Be Different In Heaven?

Mother’s Day was Sunday. I was asked several times how I was doing on my first Mother’s Day without my mom. There is no simple answer to that…or maybe no nice answer. The last two Mother’s Day’s were horrible. My mom was angry and mean. She spent the day yelling at my dad and I and slamming things around. So, it would be dishonest to say that I really missed her Sunday. I was grateful to spend this Mother’s Day with my daughter, grandchildren, and great-grandson. It was a beautiful day.

Prior to the last two years, I didn’t see my mom for twelve years. And although I sent her a text message each year, I know she didn’t read them…possibly because I sent them and also because she didn’t do texting. I always struggled to find a Mother’s Day card for my mom. They tend to be pretty mushy and sentimental…two things I don’t feel about my mom. I wouldn’t give her a card with words I didn’t mean and so I always got her funny cards, which she hated. She liked to be gushed over. The last two years I gave in and gave her sentimental cards and they didn’t make any difference to her. She wasn’t speaking to me, so she didn’t even acknowledge them.

The last time I saw my mom she was not in a great space or mood. She looked at me and pretty snarkily said, “I should have never moved to Wisconsin!” I told her we weren’t in Wisconsin. She asked where we were and then said, “I should have never moved to Florida.” Shortly after that she turned away from me, curled up, and went to sleep. That was the last conversation I had with my mom. She’s been on my mind so much.

I’ll be honest…I’m tired of grief. I am way the fuck over it. It isn’t as neat and orderly as I’d like it to be. It’s a fucking mess. I’m a fucking mess. I would like to know when I’ll be okay…when will I just feel like me again. Maybe I won’t…I mean I am an orphan after all. I would like to know something else…actually I’d like to know everything else, but specifically, right now, I want to know what it’s like to die. What does it feel like? I have some fears around dying…not so much the actual death but the being dead. I’m afraid I’ll miss people and be sad and lonely. I suppose at that point it won’t matter…it’s not like I can be suddenly undead…aren’t zombies the only people that can do that? Are they even people? I digress.

This is what happens to me when my wife travels. My mind runs wild with unanswerable questions. She had to go back to Colorado for work. Leaving my English Bulldog, Abby, and I alone in Florida. It’s the first time I’ve been here without either of my parents alive. I’d like to say Abby is helpful, but mostly she’s just sleepy. She needs her full 22 hours of sleep a day.

P!nk wrote a song after her dad’s death called, “When I Get There.” In the song she asks why things would be different in heaven than they were here. Or why would her dad be different in heaven. I think she says he was always first in line, and he always said what was on his mind…things like that. It’s funny because I’ve been wondering the same thing…mostly about my mom. Why would things suddenly be different just because someone died? Why would she be different just because she’s dead?

I floated this idea past my wife, just to see what she thought…she didn’t like it. She reminded me about all the accounts people have given of near-death experiences…I guess more accurately they are dying and being brought back to life stories. People report seeing a bright white light that’s warm and welcoming. They hear the voices of people they love who have died. This reassures her, and millions of others, that there is a heaven, and it’s our final destination.

Personally, I don’t believe in heaven or hell. I do believe in reincarnation. The energy that is the core of who we are, our soul or spirit, has to go somewhere. I think it comes back in another form. I’m pretty sure I’ll be back as a gnat or an ant, because I’ve killed many of them when they’ve invaded my home. Side note…The other day there was an ant on our counter. Now instead of killing it, I picked it up and went to put it outside. And that little fucker bit me. It left a red lump on my palm. That’s karma baby…but I still didn’t kill it. I used to tell the little kids in my mindfulness program that we don’t kill things just because we can…they would usually stomp ants anyway. I tried.

I have read several of books by James Van Praagh, the psychic medium. I’ve also seen him in person and watched him connect people in the audience with departed loved ones who have a message to give…or just something to say. He’d ask the audience if a name or specific situation, that he was describing, meant something to anyone in the audience. Someone would raise their hand and then he would begin to tell them about who was there to talk to them and what they were saying. He was able to provide very specific information about people, situations, causes of death, etc. He’s really impressive.

I have heard James Van Prague talk about what happens when we die. He had said that through his readings he’s learned that there isn’t a heaven or hell, although he does use the term heaven anyway. He explained that when we die our energy goes with like energy. If you were a loving and kind person in your life you would be surrounded by others with similar loving and kind energy. If you were mean and hateful then you would be attracted to the mean and hateful energy of the departed. So, in a sense we create our own heaven or hell. I suppose that’s good news and scary news.

Now I was raised Catholic. I come from an Irish Catholic family that has its attachment to Catholicism rooted in Ireland. My grandmother went to church early in the morning, before she had to work, at least several days a week. Then church on Sundays and confession probably every week. Now all of that is to say that there was no other option than being Catholic in my family…and it wasn’t really an option to just not be anything.

In my Catholic training (catechism classes…yay.) I learned about purgatory. Purgatory is an intermediate state between death and heaven. It’s a place of temporary suffering. Merriam-Webster says that it’s a “place or state of suffering wherein…the souls of those who die in God’s grace may make satisfaction for past sins and so become fit for heaven.” I’m gonna have to say “no thank you” to that good news…yikes!

What I don’t understand is if you go to confession, as required in the Catholic Church and you do your Hail Mary’s, or whatever the priest assigns, you’re supposed to be forgiven…so why the pit stop to be punished again? Although it sounds super fun…I’ll give it a hard “oh fuck no.” Why change if you still end up suffering before you’re good enough for heaven? Heaven being the goal for most people. I don’t believe in purgatory either. I do think there’s a gap between when we die and when we are reborn, but I don’t think it’s punishment.

So why is all this on my mind? I’ll tell you. I worry about my mom. I worried about her when she was alive, and I worry about her now. My mom was not a happy person…at least not the mom I experienced. She had a difficult life as a child and that shaped who she was and how she saw herself. She didn’t believe anyone loved her. She didn’t think my dad loved her, even after almost 70 years of marriage. She was damaged as a child and that kept her from fully accepting who she was. It also kept her closed off to recognizing and receiving love. She may not have had love as a child, but she was loved by many as an adult. It’s very sad to me that she couldn’t accept love. I worry now that she might feel alone. She didn’t like to be alone. She was scared alone. Nothing I learned in catechism told me how to address those fears.

Personally, I believe that our souls or spirits are timeless because we’ve been here before…many, many times. I don’t think that a love connection you shared with someone while you were alive is gone when you die. I think that love bonds go on forever. Maybe it’s like object permanence…even when a person you loved is gone from your presence, you know they still exist out there somewhere. And the love you shared with them continues.

I think part of the process of death and reincarnation is our souls working out past karma…karma from our current lives and past lives. James Van Praagh has explained that after death people of like minds gravitate together and share a natural attraction. So, for example, a soul like Hitler, who created mass destruction, devastation and death, will be attracted to similarly dark energetic souls.

James Van Praag describes “heaven” as having many levels and that the one that we enter right after we die is similar to our existence on earth and that people eventually evolve from these earth-like levels. He says that our soul’s movement is enabled by understanding that religion is a human tool and is not needed in the higher planes. From his experience communicating with spirits, he has learned that the only religion is love.

If we enter heaven with a similar mindset that we had while we were alive, then why would things be different in heaven? If you go to heaven as the same person you were two minutes before you died, then what’s different in heaven, besides being dead? I wonder if that’s confusing to a spirit…seems like it to me. I guess there’s no instant angelhood…I’m not sure that’s a word or a thing.

My mom was an angry person and she held on to resentments. I worry that heaven might not be great for her right now. I want her to find peace and rest but I’m not sure that’s immediately available to everyone. I don’t want her to live in an eternal place that’s as painful for her as her life was. The good news, according to James Van Praagh anyway, is that there’s no mental illness after death. Mental illness is a condition of the physical world. I don’t know who my mom would have been or what she would have been like without mental illness…maybe now she’ll have the opportunity to find out.

Honestly, I hope there’s healing in heaven…if there is a heaven…or wherever we end up. I don’t think there’s a place up in the sky where the dead, the “good” dead, reside, playing the harp and laying on clouds. But if heaven is where we go to work out our past karma and await rebirth, that makes more sense to me. If our mindset can continue to evolve and progress even after we die, then the work never ends…the work of becoming never ends. We are always becoming even after we cease to be on this planet. Maybe we have the ability for clear retrospect when we die. Maybe we can see more accurately what was available to us when we were alive. Maybe we see missed opportunities or missed understandings. Maybe we get to have all that we thought we missed out on…love, belonging, gratitude, rest, being seen and loved for who we are.

I definitely have more questions than answers with all of this death stuff…and I’m in no hurry to experience it firsthand. What I do know for sure is that in the end all that matters is how we love people. Because love wins…always.

And for you mom…May you find peace. May you find rest. May you know you are loved.