Dear Jim,Thanks for this reply. ‘Where angels fear to tread.'In birth and in death, carnality is still tinged with the sacred, as in the birth myth of Jesus, and in his bodily death; as in the birth of a new family member and the death of an elder. In our cohort, this is nearly all of our ’news’.
How to re-sacralize human love is challenging these days.
Given the craziness of much of social media, (dating through TikTok) and the reams of sexist ads that went with the Daily Mail's brief report on the ‘love hormone’ oxytocin, where is 'the sacred’ expressed? Body hatred and sex-ploitation abound. This is an even more de-humanizing Victorianism.
In the context of our approaching deaths, that Mary and I are having the best sex of our lives, seems too extraordinary not to share with our family and friends. Who knew? We did not. We want to address the reclamation of one’s body, and every body as sacred.
The eleven-week 20,000 death count of mostly Palestinian women and children, a number that is one third of all the Canadian casualties of the five years of WWII, is also a statement of our humanity’s tragedy.
Eros and Thanatos is ever our nature.
Here’s to 'the peace that passeth understanding’.
Ken & Mary
On Dec 23, 2023, at 10:05 PM, James Wiegel <jfwiegel@yahoo.com> wrote:
Dear Colleagues,
Many months ago, I consulted with you about my partner, Mary Farrar and I making a Kierkegaard Pilgrimage in July ‘23 to Copenhagen.
With Michael May as my primary accountability in completing my reflection, I offer it to you in humility, gratitude, and compassion.
I am also grateful for the input of Alan Richard (Realistic Living), Beret Hansen, Jo Nelson, Gene Marshall, and David Dunn.
I am grateful for the response of Christina Clark.
I am ultimately utterly obligated, dependent, and grateful for our time in the O:E, and our JWM, SK heritage.
Let me tell you now, that this is sexually explicit.
Ken
<23-07 Ken's Kierkegaard Pilgrimage e.pdf>