Yes, after months of preparation and reflection, today was the day that we took the plunge.
In other words, we took nayaswami vows, which means complete dedication of our lives to the search for God.
Outwardly, we’ll wear blue — the color of the Nayaswami Order — but the main work is inward. We’ll have our same jobs, see our same friends, live our normal life, but all in the ever-increasing awareness that we are living our lives for God.
For various reasons it had been all too many years since I attending a Brooks-Stroud family gathering. So, today was the day!
The picnic was in Sunnyvale, which is usually a three and a half to four hour drive (depending on traffic). Well, today — thanks to traffic, detours, and a grass fire along 580 — it took closer to six.
I enjoyed a couple of hours connecting with Dad, siblings, aunts and uncle, and also getting reacquainted with a number of cousins. But since the friend with whom I was planning to spend the night came down with COVID 😱, I decided to go ahead and drive back home.
Lots less traffic and a dinner break along the way with another friend both helped a lot. But I was definitely getting a little tired about halfway through.
Thank goodness I happened to throw a couple of CDs into the car when I left!
Between the high energy Irish music of Orla & the Gas Men (my Irish friends from way back when) on their Minding Mice at Crossroads CD and the high energy singing of Ella Fitzgerald (“Newport Jazz Festival, Live At Carnegie Hall“), I was able to stay engaged and alert all the way home!
It was Ramesha who read this morning that Tony Bennett had passed away at the ripe old age of 96. He told me the news and then asked who Tony Bennett was.
Of course, I immediately started singing “I Left My Heart in San Francisco,” which meant exactly nothing to Ramesha, who was born and raised in Switzerland.
But as I sang the song — the entire thing, remembering pretty much all the lyrics — I remembered just how much I loved “the City by the Bay” for the twenty-odd years I lived there.
And even though I was never a huge Tony Bennett fan, I feel a lot of sadness on his passing. As well as a whole lot of gratitude for gifting us with this wonderfully iconic song.
“Perhaps the most valuable result of all education is the ability to make yourself do the thing you have to do, when it ought to be done, whether you like it or not.” — Thomas Henry Huxley
I’ve got quite a bit of education, but I have not yet achieved this oh-so-valuable result.
I first saw this as a post in Facebook. Curious to know more, I read a detailed article on a website about World War II history.
The enduring friendship that was forged during the 1936 Olympics in Berlin, Germany between American athlete, Jesse Owens, and German athlete, Carl “Luz” Long was truly inspirational.
I highly recommend reading the full article, and especially the last letter that Luz Long wrote to Jesse Owens. It’s deeply touching and also a real testament to the truth of our oneness in spirit.
Titled “One Day On The Fields of France,” it’s based on a true story from World War I, and conveys a beautiful message of healing through forgiveness. At the same time it reminds us that wars and division and conflict are not our natural state.
Swami Kriyananda also put it beautifully in one of the most beloved of his songs, “Brothers”:
Then brothers, why endeavor To set ourselves apart? The fences we’ve been building Squeeze tight upon our hearts! Come sing the truth that all men are brothers! Come sing the truth that all men are— Brothers!
But of course, I had to once again get up early and make it through a morning of singing for Sunday service. It was beautiful and inspiring, as usual, but it took some real work to keep my energy up.
But then…?
…aahhhh. Nothing. Niente. Nada.
Ramesha went off to the Buttes with a friend and I pretty much crashed…but in the nicest, most quiet and subtle way possible.
I read a silly novel. I napped a little. I caught up on a few emails (but nothing demanding). And read some more while drinking a cup of herbal tea.
I eventually worked up to folding laundry and doing dishes.
I didn’t go anywhere or talk to anyone. And it was just what I needed.