Saturday, July 4, 2020

July  4,  2020



  
“HURRY”


"Hurry." I'm filled with too much hurry.

“Hurry …. Hurry .…”  is my inner sound.
Sometimes I add an “up” – as in “Hurry up!”

“Hurry …. Hurry….”  I keep watching my watch –
which doesn’t seem to go faster…. “Faster!”

I hear an ambulance getting closer. Good!
“Hurry!”  as I inwardly scream.  It gets past
me as I assume it’s heading for whatever
is causing this traffic jam – on this road
that is blocked. I sit back in my stopped
car – close my eyes. I had put my car
in park.  Traffic will start flowing again.
It always does. I’ve been in dozens of
traffic stoppings – dozens of conversation
jams – supermarket check-out wrong
choices. I breathe. I meditate. I let go of
this need - this scream to “Hurry – hurry up!”  

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2020

July   4,   2020





Thought  for  Today

 “The one thing to do is to do nothing.  Wait …  You will find that you survive humiliation and  that’s  an experience of incalculable value.”  


T. S.  Eliot, 
The Cocktail Party, 1949








Friday, July 3, 2020

July   3,    2020



PAST

My past haunts my future ….
Can’t shake it off. It’s like
a sliver  of old scotch tape –
stuck to my left hand –
which my right hand doesn’t
know what it’s doing.

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2020

July  3,  2020

Thought   for   Today

 “Old age is … a lot of crossed off names in an address book.”


Ronald Blyth in
The View of Winter  1980

Thursday, July 2, 2020

July  2,   2020


 SPONGE

The pale blue sponge
on the sink still held half
of its grey dish water
till the next morning.

Its smell as well –
mushroom and meat fat ….
“Oooh!” Then and there,
I realized this is me.

Then and there I resolved,
“Never again!” And I’m
the one who hated the sink
rag face wipe as a kid.

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2020


July  2,  2020



Thought   for   Today  

“To   my  mind the most poignant mystical  exhortation ever written  is ‘Be still and know that I am God.’” 

Arnold Bennett  Journals,
December 1929
Cf. Psalm 46:10

Wednesday, July 1, 2020

July  1,   2020



OUTLOOK 

To understand another’s outlook, 
we must take an inlook at where we 
got our outlook on the same situation. 

Check it out with our parents if they 
are still alive  - or with our brothers 
and sisters if we have them – or others. 

Then see options – different opinions – 
and last – but not least – if possible – 
talk to the other person – and listen. 


© Andy Costello, Reflections 2020