[Oe List ...] grief and Christmas
Jack Gilles
jackcgilles at gmail.com
Sun Dec 27 08:34:50 PST 2020
Jim and Marshall,
Thanks Marshall for your experience and Jim for your response.
This transparency into the Event that is awaiting each human being is universal. When it happens the suffering of all is grasped and weeping follows. Sociologically it is the separation of all created society from the Mystery. The crisis of our time is that we need to face that reality as well. There is no return to normal, for “normal" is the state of separation. The door is shut and a new society needs to be invented that puts the suffering of humanness at the center of the Social Process. Since this is difficult (perhaps impossible) a New Myth is required. But the good news is the New Myth is the same as the old myth. It just has to be told for the new world that is coming. And that new world is here and becoming at the same time.
Peace,
Jack
> On Dec 27, 2020, at 9:58 AM, James Wiegel via OE <oe at lists.wedgeblade.net> wrote:
>
> Thanks. For the first time this year, I am attracted to the beginning of the Gospel of John for a "Christmas" story. "The Word became flesh and dwelt among us, and we beheld the glory, full of grace and truth."
>
> That glory is hard to see, yet it has dwelt is dwelling among us . . . Maybe just sobbing on a beach would help.
>
> Jim Wiegel <http://partnersinparticipation.com/?page_id=123>
>
> The unknown is what is. And to be frightened of it is what sends everybody scurrying around chasing dreams, illusions, wars, peace, love, hate, all that. Unknown is what is. Accept that it's unknown, and it's plain sailing. John Lennon
>
>
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>
>
> On Sunday, December 27, 2020, 08:17:16 AM MST, W. J. via OE <oe at lists.wedgeblade.net> wrote:
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>
> Dear colleagues,
> This Christmas season has been loaded with a mixture of joy to the world and global grief unlike anything I have previously experienced in my 80 years on earth.
> Sometimes it's easier to let our celebrative spirit and holiday cheer obscure our communal grief over the dire straits so much of humanity is experiencing this year and the next. And the reality that our health and that of our family members may be at risk.
> In this moment I was 'inspired' last night to screen two Fellini movies--La Strada and Nights of Cabiria-- for a very small group of invited colleagues, along with a meal and movie discussion. It was our last weekly Movie Night in this year.
> Some of you may remember that we used to show La Strada on Saturday night in RS-1, long before Requiem for a Heavyweight became our standard fare.
> I recall showing La Strada at a Lake Junaluska Methodist youth conference back in the early '60's with Mathews, Slicker, and Pierce on the teaching team. And maybe Fred Buss. My memory is slightly dimmed with the passage of time and my brain drain.
> But the movie still ends with that powerful scene <https://youtu.be/rR-JvfjXS9M> in which Anthony Quinn (as Zampanò, not Mountain Rivera!) is lying drunk on the beach and finally just wailing and overwhelmed with grief over realizing how much he's lost by living in his illusion that other people don't matter to him.
> They do.
> And especially the young woman he lived and worked with and then abandoned when it was convenient.
> Hearing a woman singing that little bit of Nino Rota's theme music <https://youtu.be/tcecJ0WjI38> brings it all back to him.
> It's the last of several transformative events (or 'Christ-events' as we called them) in the movie.
> Let us not forget that celebrating Christmas is about rehearsing the story of a transformative event happening in our midst. THE transformative event, if you will, that brings forth a new, transformative era in human history.
> In the movie Gelsomina <https://youtu.be/_vIvjl4H524> is a very strange, weird, childlike female clown, a Nobody Christ-figure. Without exactly knowing what she's doing, Gelsomina embodies a transformative spirit that speaks to the pervasive suffering of human beings around her.
> In this Christmas season, let us be the Nobodies whose transformative presence acknowledges our common grief and calls others to hope.
> Marshall
> You can stream La Strada for free on Kanopy (with a library card). Or on TCM, the Criterion Channel, or HBO Max.
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