Thursday, November 29, 2012

Escape


NOTE: The following is the first chapter in what may be a forthcoming memoir titled No Secrets to Conceal

I escaped Dallas by the skin of my teeth on a Greyhound bus to Berkeley in early September 1962. My mother wanted me to stay in Texas to go to college. But I was dead set on going to the University of California. To get her approval, I had to make her an offer she could not refuse.

My determination to go to Cal was prompted by a special course on anti-Communism that the Dallas school district required every junior to take during the 1960-61 school year. The only textbook was J. Edgar Hoover’s Masters of Deceit. The whole exercise struck me as absurd. I considered the Soviet Union a brutal dictatorship, but the anti-Communist hysteria of the time felt misguided and repressive.

Being smothered by my mother’s love, totally alienated from the Dallas orthodoxy, and bored by my lousy high school, South Oak Cliff, I had already rebelled, timidly. This anti-Communist nonsense reinforced my rebellion, which had begun during my last semester in junior high.

One day in the lunch cafeteria I overheard another student eloquently advocate atheism, a concept that was totally new to me. Intrigued, I asked a friend about this troublemaker. He told me they were neighbors, his name was George Littell, and he was a good guy. My friend introduced me and George and I became best friends.

I taught him how to play chess and he took me to the Dallas Public Library for my first visit, which totally blew my mind. My mother had the Modern Library Great Books collection at home, but I rarely read any. Being set free to find my own books out of thousands was another story!

George showed me the philosophy/politics/sociology section, where I quickly discovered Bertrand Russell, the British mathematician and philosopher who wrote in a popular style that a high school student could understand. Why I Am Not a Christian and In Praise of Idleness were two of my favorites. Being awkward and shy with girls, I devoured his books, played lots of chess, and started a high school chess club, my first organizing project.

H.L. Mencken, the notorious, sarcastic columnist for the Baltimore Sun, was George’s favorite. I too read lots of Mencken, who railed against the stupidity of the “booboisie,” the ignorant middle class, and would occasionally be racy, like when he intrigued me by saying he preferred overweight women who had some meat on points “north, south, west, and east.” Mencken led me to other iconoclasts like Ambrose Bierce, Tom Paine, and Ralph Ingersoll.

The only essay I was ever assigned to write in high school – yes, the only one (it was a terrible school) – I wrote on Voltaire, the libertarian French satirist. But my favorite writers were Russell and Mencken,

When I first read Conscience of a Conservative by Barry Goldwater during my sophomore year, I thought it was excellent Then I read “The Case for Socialism,” an essay by Russell, who was an early vehement critic of the Russian Revolution but favored democratic socialism of the sort that became established in Great Britain and Scandinavia. So when I re-read Goldwater’s book, I realized that when he talked about “freedom,” he was talking primarily about unfettered freedom for Big Business and I disagreed with his notion that private business should be able to do whatever they want (regardless of the consequences).

My teachers were not impressed with my freethinking. None of them ever encouraged me, with three subtle exceptions. One, a beautiful young woman quietly let me know she was reading Anna Kareinna and suggested it was somewhat scandalous. The chemistry teacher would play chess with me in his lab when I skipped mandatory pep rallies (I’m still amazed he did that, probably jeopardizing his job.) And the civics teacher was not shocked when a fellow student told the whole class that I sat down during the Pledge to Allegiance at the city auditorium when Ronald Reagan appeared on his General Electric-sponsored speaking tour that catapulted him into his political career. (I did not reject the Pledge, but rather how it was being used.)

The civics teacher may have been sympathetic to nonconformists because he was gay. He took some of us male students to Austin for the State basketball playoffs and he and some of the others carried on behind closed doors in ways that puzzled me.

Dallas was dominated by the John Birch Society, the precursor to the Tea Party that was also funded by the infamous Koch family. The whole city was filled with John Birch Society billboards and tons of cars sported their bumper stickers. (When Bob Dylan was invited to appear on the Ed Sullivan Show, the top show on television, and sang “Talking the John Birch Society Blues” during rehearsal, Sullivan ruled he couldn’t sing it and Dylan walked out.)

One month before the Kennedy assassination, former Democratic Presidential candidate and then United Nations ambassador Adlai Stevenson appeared in Dallas and was jeered, jostled, hit by a sign, and spat on, prompting him to warn President Kennedy not to go to Dallas. (After the assassination, the local establishment became very concerned about the city’s image and most of those bumper stickers quickly vanished.)

The same oppressive atmosphere permeated my high school. I hated it and my teachers knew it, much to their displeasure.

The only thing I knew about the beats came from watching The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis on TV, listening to the comedian Dave Gardner, and reading Hugh Hefner’s “Playboy Philosophy.” But I identified with them and wore my bathroom slippers, Native American-style moccasins, to school.

I challenged rules that seemed arbitrary, like having to leave the cafeteria during lunch hour and not being able to cross an invisible line when we went outside. And I would sit down rather than stand up to sing the Fight Song during mandatory pep rallies (when I went) – even though I sat on the second-to-last last row, the coaches stood right behind me, and I played on the school’s baseball team.

But I never pushed it to the point of being overtly punished. I had been “teacher’s pet” prior to high school, was very repressed emotionally, and was basically a coward. The only fight I had ever gotten into was when a student spectator ran onto the field during a soccer game and took the ball from me when I was about to score a goal. I tried to mutilate him and got taken to the principal’s office, where my hands were slapped severely with a flat board.

My sophomore year in Speech class I gave two speeches. The first was on “Why I Believe in Flying Saucers” (my mother’s influence). The second, inspired by a C. Wright Mills book that I gave before the United States drove Cuba into the arms of the Soviet Union after the revolution, was on “Why I Like Fidel Castro.” Word surely circulated among the teachers.

On the first day of English Literature class, the teacher told us to read the introduction to our textbook and write at least three-fourths of a page about what we would like to have done if we had lived in Medieval England. I read it, quickly wrote the required minimum declaring there was absolutely nothing I could imagine liking about Medieval England, and put down my pin, probably with a smirk on my face. The teacher said, “Are you already finished, Mr. Hudson?” I said, “Yes.” She replied, “Well, I can see what kind of grade you’re going to get.”

Later that year, when I spelled “there” “their,” or vice versa, she gave me a poor grade and when I complained with tears in my eyes, she said, “Well, in college if you do that, they will fail you.” I did in fact get my worse grade ever in her class.

I believe it was a C, for I probably did get a few Bs. Mostly however I got As without hardly ever studying. Normally I’d do my homework at my desk while waiting for the tardy bell to ring and the teacher to take roll. The anti-Communism course instructor, who also coached the basketball team and taught history, clearly hated it when I scored 100 on his tests.

Math was particularly easy. On the Preliminary Scholastic Aptitude Test (PSAT), I answered every question correctly and scored in the top 1%. But my high school never assigned me to any honors courses, not even math, probably because they did not like my demeanor. Perhaps my parents or I could have requested that I be placed in an honors class. But I knew nothing about it.

So when I went to Cal planning to major in Physics, I was surprised to learn that I could not take the normal introductory Physics course because I had not studied calculus in high school. (At the time, I was disappointed, but on reflection, it may have been a stroke of good luck.)

Fortunately a clique of close friends helped me cope. In addition to George, who scored 800 on both of his College Boards and went to Harvard on a full scholarship, there was Terry Prince, who also scored two 800s and went to MIT, Roland Cunningham, who went to Texas Tech and ended up in the Seattle area, probably working for Boeing, and Mike Doughty, who became a top-level social welfare administrator and college instructor. We would stay up late smoking pipes and cigars, playing poker, and discussing life and philosophy (though we never drank and knew nothing about drugs). As Bob Dylan sang, “I wish, I wish, I wish in vain/That we could sit simply in that room again”

South Oak Cliff High School had another small group of quiet rebels who raced sports cars in a local shopping mall parking lot and listened to jazz. I became friends with one, Gary Bishop, now an accomplished photographer who after graduating finished second among Texas amateur racecar drivers and once drove at Daytona. I’d go over to his house and help him with his homework. Gary would also sit down during the Fight Song at pep rallies. But he had to sit close to the stage and one day the principal noticed and admonished him in front of the entire student body.
Gary lived on the “other side of the tracks,” in what was probably only a middle-class house, but seemed like a mansion to me. I lived in a tiny house, the first house my parents ever owned, without my own bedroom, with seven people, including my two sisters and my mother’s parents. (The neighborhood is now an African-American ghetto with a house church in almost every block and my high school is now almost all Black and Brown.) And he had a family who seemed to like each other. I enjoyed going there.

Gary turned me on to jazz and Joan Baez. At home we only listened to Frankie Lane, Johnny Cash, Johnny Mathis and such. Jazz and folk were a whole new world and I loved it.

Throughout high school, I only had two dates. On one, we went to hear the Modern Jazz Quartet on the campus of Southern Methodist University. I felt like a grown up and cherished the concert.  At the end, knowing nothing about the encore tradition, as everyone was clapping I asked her if we should leave. She said yes. Later I heard the quartet played a number of great encores and was disappointed. I blamed her.

At night, I would often go for long walks alone and sit in the swings at the nearby elementary school playground. After I had begun that habit, I read in a text book a Ray Bradbury science-fiction short story that was set in the future and featured a man who would walk alone at night while looking at the windows of homes that glared with the light of televisions inside where people were passively transfixed. Then an automated, driver-less police car drove up, interrogated him, and arrested him for improper conduct. (Is that the future for the Google car?) Like the character in the story, I felt scandalous, a freak.

The only other item in that book I liked was “The Wasteland” by T.S. Eliot. Sounded like Dallas to me!
George once suggested that we run away from home. I was tempted, but decided against it. He did it anyway, but on the first night, he called his mother from the edge of town and asked her to come get him.
Some time later, he was selected Dallas Optimist Club Boy of the Month and went down hill from there, as he glimpsed a future of “success.” He joined the JROTC (Junior Reserve Officer Training Corps), which struck me as strange. After graduation, we corresponded some (he told me I should become an op-ed columnist). Then one night at Roland’s house during Christmas break, we had a heated disagreement about the Vietnam War (he approved) and we never communicated again. (The last I heard, he worked for Mobil Oil and had his sights set on becoming CEO of one of the nation’s ten largest corporations. For all I know, he succeeded. He was “smarter” than I was, but I did beat him once in a citywide “numbers’ sense” contest after secretly prepping for it).

When it came time to apply to college, we had to go to the school counselor to get her recommendation. Terry said that when he went in, she asked him, “Is it true that George is an atheist?” Terry lied through his teeth and said no.

When I went in to see the counselor, I wanted to go to Rice University in Houston to study physics. She started to check the highest recommendation box but then noticed that the faculty had not selected me for the National Junior Honor Society. She asked why, I told her I didn’t know, and she left the office. After several minutes, she came back and checked the second highest recommendation. I assume she found out that I had some “character” issues. Rice rejected my application. (Thank God.)

This rejection prompted me to think back on that anti-Communism course, during which the instructor played a documentary, “Operation Abolition,” produced by the infamous House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC). The film included footage of a hearing the committee held in the Supervisors’ Chambers at San Francisco City Hall in 1960. So many protestors showed up to challenge the committee’s witch hunt the crowd overflowed onto the steps of City Hall and the police swept them away with fire hoses. The film’s narrator blamed the incident on agitators from the University of California at Berkeley.

Recalling that scene, I decided UC Berkeley was just the place for me and went to the downtown library to review the school’s catalog. The Introduction began, “Renowned for its richness and diversity, the San Francisco Bay Area….” That seemed like heaven to me!

After determining that my grades and College Board scores automatically qualified me for admission, my mind was made up. Tuition was free and I could work to make ends meet. The only task left was to persuade my mother.

For many weeks we went back and forth. Even the basketball coach/history teacher/anti-Communism instructor, who lived across the alley right behind us, told her, “Let him go. Let him get it out of his system.” Still she refused. She wanted me to stay close to home.

But I had an ace-in-the-hole: Father Tollifer. He was head priest at an upper class Episcopal Church in North Dallas. Once one reaches that level in the Episcopal Church, one is totally independent, like being tenured faculty at a University. So he was able to get away with being a totally eccentric spiritualist, including membership in the secretive Rosicrucian Society.

My mother and her small circle of friends, all of whom were women 40-50 years old, revered him. They were totally into the metaphysical world, read Edgar Cayce religiously, would go to séances and such, and one of them took LSD before I ever heard of it.

I liked Father Tollifer too. Mother would take me to his Tuesday night lectures on topics like “The Soul,” “The Mind,” and “The Spirit.” I didn’t agree with all of it, but it was far more interesting than anything I heard in school. And challenging. He was clearly an intelligent, thoughtful, nice person.

One night he casually mentioned that he thought prostitution should be legalized. I passed that on to my clique at school and two of them were discussing it in Honors English at the end of the school day when some cheerleaders overheard them and became very agitated. The teacher asked them to quiet down and stay after class to discuss it. I got wind of the controversy and joined in the heated discussion, taking Father Tollifer’s side. So the good priest spiced up my life and I appreciated it.

Knowing how much my mother adored him, I told her, “Look, I’ll go talk to Father Tollifer and if he says I should stay in Texas, I’ll stay in Texas. But if he says I should go to California, I’ll go to California. Ok?” As I expected she accepted the gamble.

When I explained the situation to Father Tollifer, he immediately said, “Go to California.” I replied, “But I don’t want to hurt my mother,” to which he responded, “Son, it’s a question of your own integrity.” We talked some more, I thanked him, and as I left, he asked me to go to the Rosicrucian library in San Jose. I told him I would. (I never did.)

After reporting our conversation, my mother backed off. Freedom was on the horizon.

(Later, while watching an interview with Frank Bardacke in the documentary “Berkeley in the Sixties,” I learned that many other students were inspired to go to Cal because of the film, “Operation Abolition.”)

I didn’t go to the high school graduation ceremony, or the prom. The sooner I had nothing to do with South Oak Cliff High School, the better. (Though the trauma did stick with me and for years I often thought about going back there to teach in order to show them how it should be done.)

That summer, in addition to going to some coffee houses to listen to folk music and going to the Unitarian Church to check them out, I participated in a marvelous study group conducted by two students at Perkins School of Theology. Our class valedictorian went to the same church as the seminarians, who suggested the study group. She invited our little clique to participate.

We read stuff like Plato, Freud, Marx, and most memorably, “Coney Island of the Mind” by the beat poet Lawrence Ferlinghetti. I had never encountered any of that kind of material in high school. So it was a stimulating summer and after the last gathering, the hosts served us mint juleps, the first alcohol I ever drank. A fitting sendoff to college!

That adventure with alcohol prompted some of us to get some six-packs and find a dark field to drink. Unfortunately, however, some small round prickly balls got stuck on the bottom of my pants legs, so I got into big trouble when I got home and Mother noticed. I didn’t care though. I was about to be free.

The Greyhound bus ride to Berkeley was incredibly exciting. I had never been out of the state of Texas since we moved there from Arkansas, and had never been out of Arkansas before that, for our family never took vacations. And on the bus, a young Latin American female student attracted a number of boys, including myself. She spoke openly about sex in a way that was very titillating. I was on my way to a new world!

Little did I know that I was about to encounter a hurricane called “the Sixties” that would sweep me up and change me forever, for better or worse.

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Question #2


How do progressive activists need to change how they FEEL – that is, in terms of our tendencies, how would you like to alter your inner experience?

The responses listed below were offered in reply to Question  #1, “Do progressive activists need to improve how they relate to others? If so, how?“ That question dealt with outer behavior. This one addresses inner experience.

On reflection, though I found all of the responses to the first question helpful, the one that is most illuminating and challenging for me is the comment about patience. I find this response important in part because the author reports having given up on working with progressive activists. I suspect her experience is far from unique. And it’s timely because I’m re-reading The Myth of Sisyphus by Albert Camus, which inspires me to try to fully and simultaneously embrace both horns of various dilemmas, which is no easy task. For example, we can totally “want it all now” and at the same time realize and accept that we will never get all that we want.

In addition to Yahya's lengthy, thoughtful comment here on the blog which I just now saw and have not yet digested, the responses to the first question were:
  1. Become more instructive and less accusatory.
  2. I think both progressives and arch right conservatives have to improve their empathetic listening skills, be more open and less mired in their own beliefs.
  3. what...stop talking?
  4. Yes. The righteous indignation tends to turn people away. The ego, the judgement. a progressive activist (or any activist, I suppose) needs to not invest so much in immediate results, immediate rallying - but, be patient and be in it for the long term. Activism is a long and slow process without many immediate rewards, at times. Pretty soon after the rallying cry it can turn into "You're not doing it the way I want you to do it and I started this thing..." kind of stuff. Factions and splits form and - soon after - abandonment of the process. Patience is a virtue in leaders, and many social activists don't have a lot of patience to spare. In my experience of giving up on working with progressive activists...
  5. suggest Stephen R. Covey's book the Third Altenative, and no you don't stop talking , but you listen to everyone's ideas before inflicting your's on others.
  6. I remember when people started describing themselves as progressive I myself did a fellowship for the Center for Progressive Leadership which is now non existent. At that time I would describe progressive as trying to make progress in our society from the two party system as well as the box that people live in the political system in this country. That they cannot think outside the two party box and they themselves can't provide a solution to move this country forward and make progress. 
  7. frame the debate and go on the offensive rather than react to right wing obfuscation.
  8. Yes, of course. We need to listen more, insult less, and focus on positive visions that resonate and provide hope in addition to endlessly critiquing the many negatives. Progressive activists need to tell more stories, get ourselves and others to laugh more, celebrate more victories, build broader coalitions, stop cannibalizing our own as much, and never quit.  We have truth, morality, and history on our side, but nothing is inevitable or automatic; we have to go out and help make it happen.
  9. Yes! Be Fair, Firm and Calm.

Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Question #1

Do progressive activists need to improve how they relate to others? If so, how? 

Monday, November 19, 2012

Wade's Journal and Readers' Comments


CONTENTS
A Note to Readers
Wade’s Journal
Readers’ Comments

NOTES TO READERS

Please help build Wade’s Weekly, not for my ego but for the Cause. Given its growing and more responsive readership, I plan to work harder to make it worth reading.

You can support Wade’s Weekly in these ways:

  • Via email, recommend to your friends and associates that they subscribe to Wade’s Weekly. They can do so on the blog’s home page at http://wadeleehudson.blogspot.com or on the listserv’s homepage at http://npogroups.org/lists/info/wadesweekly. Readers can also bookmark the blog’s homepage.
  • On Facebook, share, “like,” and comment on the posts. The total number of likes and comments is displayed. The greater that number, the more credibility the post has. Sharing is especially helpful. My Facebook name is wadeleehudson.
  • On Twitter, re-tweet.
  • Send me feedback, which I’ll include in “Reader’s Responses.” The more public interaction there is, the more credibility the effort has. Feel free to include links and other information about your own work that is related. 

Wade’s Weekly currently has 165 subscribers who have opted in to subscribe. In addition, the website attracts about 150 page views each week (and that number is steadily increasing) from 10 countries. So this effort seems to hold some potential. With your help, it can grow.

By the way, according to Google’s stats, the most viewed posts so far are:


Since in the past I’ve missed a week from time to time, I may post more than once a week for a while, still staying within an average of once a week as promised.

In the future, I hope to post “Reader’s Comments” more promptly. You can post your comments directly to the website if you want.

Thanks again for your participation. I trust we can continue to learn from and inspire one another.

--Wade

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WADE’S JOURNAL – 11/19/12

Being in Mexico is always magical for me. The natural beauty, the warmth of the people, and the richness of the culture mesmerize me. It helps that the sun has shone every day since I arrived Nov. 8, the temperature has ranged from 68-82, and I can stare at the stars at night. Often when I stare at a star, I wonder if it is still alive, which amazes me. Then I reflect on the fact that I know it may be dead and I’m even more amazed.

As I posted on Facebook Sunday morning, I find that people in Mexico do not discriminate based on age and appearance the way people in the States do. Saturday night while sitting alone at El Mango processing email waiting for the music to begin, two relatively young women, Barbara and Isabel, sat down next to me and when I put down my phone, made eye contact. I started a conversation and we proceeded to enjoy ourselves. When I asked to take their photo, they insisted that I be included. Only then did I think about posting it to Facebook, which I did. None of us liked the music there, so I suggested that we go to another place and mentioned two options. They preferred the acoustic troubador music at Café Tantra (to see a video I shot there last year, click here), and when we got there they immediately began to sing along and laugh. Especially since my Spanish is poor, it’s hard to compare that style of music to anything in the States. Brett Dennen may be close, but this music that I call “troubador” is very romantic and often very humorous. Isabel used an Iphone app to translate some for me. She said the refrain for one song was, “Thinking of you” and the other computer-generated translation was, “The singer conquered to a woman who was man and composed a song why us fuck.” I offered to give them a good tour when they come to San Francisco and they offered to show me where to go hear music in Mexico City. When one of the singers joined us and the three of them started talking in Spanish, I said good night and took a taxi home. All in all, a refreshing evening.

On top of the rewards offered by Mexico, I find it valuable to be away from the States and not have to work for money. The distance helps me break bad habits and develop new ones. I’ve lost ten pounds, I’m stretching regularly, and I’m refining my daily routine. I try to write for at least two hours in the morning, read a real book for at least two hours in the afternoon, and network/socialize for two hours in the evening (which mostly involves email, Facebook, and Twitter, visiting with neighbors, and talking with friends on Skype). Soon, once I empty my Inbox, otherwise get organized, and find I have the time, I hope to focus some on the big bank issue and help publicize the January 19 Social Transforming Using the Three-Fold Path workshop, on which the planning committee back home appears to be moving forward.

Starting tomorrow, I’m going to begin writing a memoir and reevaluate that project after a few chapters. I’ll probably share drafts as I proceed. I also want to get back into the big bank issue, share a Wall Street reform proposal, and offer to help with research if needed. And now that I’m learning how to use Facebook more effectively, I hope to do the same with Twitter. By the time I return to the States, when I’ll have less time, hopefully I’ll know how to use those platforms efficiently.

The growing response to Wade’s Weekly has been heartwarming, icing on the cake. I would do it anyway for my closest friends and for myself, because writing helps me sort out my thoughts and feelings. And Wade’s Weekly has helped me develop promising connections with some new projects, such as:

  • Shryl McCormick and her Fearless Communications newsletter.  
  • Rabia Roberts,  an international peace and justice advocate who will soon be launching a new website, Waking Up Together: Feminine Wisdom and Great Transformation. To subscribe, email http://pathofthefriend.org/contact-us/
  • The Next Edge, a by-invitation-only Facebook group with almost 3,000 members which is “a container for those of us creating and embodying the transformative emergent new paradigms of being & doing as a response to the profound challenges we face at this moment of the 21st century. This group was started as an experiment in curated emergence to see what value might be co-created.” If you would like to join, please let me know.

I was particularly honored when Seb Paquet, who is very astute and one of the more active The Next Edge members, recommended Wade’s Weekly after a member asked, “What juicy books/blogs are people reading at the moment?” Seb’s response was:
 After reviewing Opencollaboration and Whiskey River, I was even more honored to be included in that company.

And I appreciated that Richard Moore, Cyberjournal editor, shared “No Secrets to Conceal” with three of his email lists.

Writing can be lonely. They say a “writer” is someone who must write. In that case, I am a writer. I would write even if no one responded. Nevertheless, it helps to know that readers are out there and they care enough to reply.

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I recently completed the encouraging, well-done survey my.barack.obm just sent me. They said, "Our work isn't over. We didn't do all this just to win a campaign. We have more progress to make, and there's only one way to do it: together." Following are my responses to some of the more important questions:

  • Is there anything that could have encouraged you to get involved earlier or increase your level of engagement? A real commitment to ongoing grassroots organizing dedicated to growing supportive communities that nurture open-ended personal development.
  • What is your general feedback on the Obama campaign offline, including field offices, campaign staff, interactions with volunteers? After the 2008 California primary, the official campaign became dormant locally. It offered no support or encouragement for ongoing grassroots organizing. Many months later, it merely mobilized for the General Election. When it folded with the Democratic Party after the election, neither it nor the Democratic Party made a commitment to transform the Party into an activist organization dedicated to implementing the Party platform between elections. If this was necessary to avoid alienating power centers that were needed to win in 2012, I can accept it. However, now that Barack is not running for re-election, I would like to see it happen. 
  • Is there anything else you’d like to tell us? Barack, become a community organizer again!

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Two fascinating resources I learned about through The Next Edge are:


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To see a video of  Tepoztlan, click here.  I hope to do something similar soon.

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Dave Robbins told me The Eyes Were Watching God is the best American novel ever written. I just finished it and loved it.

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READERS’ COMMENTS

Re: Facing Fear 

I know that as a little child, my own mother crushed me internally with her words, but even then, I knew she was wrong. I did not realize at the time that she she suffered from mental illness, but I knew in my heart that she was wrong about me. I think I've spent the rest of my life proving her wrong, and since then, we have developed a loving relationship with each other.

I've had to fight feelings of inadequacy at times, but overall, I'd rather be a person who openly shares my feelings, fears, joys, and sadnesses with others. Yes, there are people who can use this against me, but to what end, I do not know...I'm still here and I will continue to reach out to others in the hope that we can help each other create better lives for all.

After all, why do we live at all if not to create something positive?
Anonymous

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Re: No Secrets to Conceal

One of your finest pieces Wade.  Touches on issues in a personal moving way that makes the analysis tangible, credible.
Richard Cohen

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Hey Wade; thanks for your post here on listening...
Tom Ferguson

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Thanks for sharing these thoughts, Wade.

Listening is definitely an underrated skill and activity.

I wrote an article on listening and social change, with some spirituality as well, a version of which can be found here: http://jewishmag.com/90mag/listen/listen.htm
Dan Brook

NOTE: After reading his essay, I emailed: Dan, I just now saw this comment and read your essay, which is very good. Thanks for referring me to it. I think you could also talk about how deep listening can lead to changes in oneself, as well as be a way to prompt change in others.

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Years ago, there was a technique that grew out of the encounter consciousness movement in the Bay Area that I participated in for a while.  It was called “co-counseling.”  We arranged to meet with a perfect stranger somewhere.  The whole idea was that one person would talk and the other would listen.  Then, the other person would do the same thing.  We were encouraged to act out emotions too…. The whole idea was to remain anonymous and to use each other to sort of act like counselors.  Although, we weren’t to offer our opinions, etc. to one another.  The whole idea was to listen to each other.   You reminded me of that when you said people need to learn to listen and that most people talk at each other without actually listening to one another.

It’s a difficult world these days.  It’s true that many of us don’t trust very many people.  I know that the last time I entrusted someone with some information I now wish I hadn’t, I noticed how that person did share my information with others without my permission and even retold to me my information in a taunting manner as well as rewriting my information in the process so that it was even more lascivious than the original true version.  Her memory had contrived a gossip version of my life.  So, it’s small wonder that people don’t trust people.  I also notice that once you tell people something intimate about yourself, it puts you in a lower position.  I think it’s because we are like pack animals.  When a dog is top dog, the dog never looks at the other dogs.  He/she looks away.  That’s how it is for people too in a way.  If you reveal too much of yourself, people think of you as weaker.  I know it’s shitty; but, I think it’s hard for us to learn to trust each other.

…[I]t seemed like that took me down a few pegs.  It wasn’t until I let everyone know that I was better and I could drive myself that everyone seemed to respond to me better. Sometimes, it’s risky to let people know too much.  They like you better when you have on your best face.
Anonymous

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Enjoyed reading this week's "Weekly." Your new motto could be, "listen, listen, listen.”…. Earlier in the day I came across this gem:

Candor is a compliment; it implies equality. It's how true friends talk.
PEGGY NOONAN, in Dr. Mardy's Quotes of the Week, www.drmardy.com, 18 November 2012
Leonard Roy Frank

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Re: Dylan at the Greek 

[Thanks for] the previous Dylan centered one... speaking of which, his influence on me as a songwriter may be evident.... You Them Me Us, album #10 covering the songs in my Songbook 1969-2012  in batches of ten.... free listening               http://thinkspeak.bandcamp.com
Tom Ferguson

NOTE: I’m listening to the album right now. It’s quite good.

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Thank you so much for this message!

You reaffirm my own feelings that it's only the authentic encounters that matter, and that (despite my own love of language) most words are wasted.

Dylan's songs meant much to me growing up, though I haven't kept track of anything after "Blood on the Tracks".  And I readily confess I don't - or can't? - see the meanings in his songs that you draw from them.  So it's good to know how you interpret them; not that any of your meanings surprise me, coming from you.

Take good care of yourself.
Yahya Abdal-Aziz

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Truly a fan's notes.
Mike Larsen

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Thanks for sending us these great lyrics for Bob Dylan...I love hi and also Mark Knopfler.  It must have been a wonderful concert.
Suzanne Schecker

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You the Man  thanks loads for da lyrics made my day
Marvin Surkin

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Loved the way you shared his lyrics in your own message...
Marcella Womack

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Re: Social Transformation Using the Three-Fold Path Workshop 

Lurking in the name of the workshop is the title of a book.
Mike Larsen

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Re: I want to know and be known and I want to touch and be touched 

wow, 2 wondrous poems.  I will print them out so we can return to them again and again.  hope you are doing well.
much love,
Kristen Walsh

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Progression towards intimacy is fascinating. It feels so dangerous before you go there. Maybe because it is?
Seb Paquet

Thursday, November 15, 2012

Facing Fear


Being open and honest is dangerous. We have good reason to be afraid. The threats are real, they are many, and we need to learn how to deal with them.

In response to last week’s “No Secrets to Conceal,” one reader commented:
It’s a difficult world these days.  It’s true that many of us don’t trust very many people.  I know that the last time I entrusted someone with some information I now wish I hadn’t, I noticed how that person did share my information with others without my permission and even retold to me my information in a taunting manner as well as rewriting my information in the process so that it was even more lascivious than the original true version.  Her memory had contrived a gossip version of my life.  So, it’s small wonder that people don’t trust people.  
Does that sound familiar to you? It does to me.

That reader also said:
I also notice that once you tell people something intimate about yourself, it puts you in a lower position.  I think it’s because we are like pack animals.  When a dog is top dog, the dog never looks at the other dogs.  He/she looks away.  That’s how it is for people too in a way.  If you reveal too much of yourself, people think of you as weaker.  I know it’s shitty; but I think it’s hard for us to learn to trust each other. 
I also find a lot of truth in that statement, though human beings also hold innate tendencies toward altruism and cooperation.

The same reader reported on an instance when she was in great need, asked for assistance, and found that “it seemed like that took me down a few pegs.  It wasn’t until I let everyone know that I was better … that everyone seemed to respond to me better. Sometimes, it’s risky to let people know too much.  They like you better when you have on your best face.”

That well-put insight, “They like you better when you have on your best face,” was new to me and instantly rang true. We wear got-it-together masks, relate to others who do the same, and end up in a make-believe world.

Often we hold back because we’re afraid the other will end the relationship. Men in particular are prone to drop the woman once the “conquest” is complete. But women can do the same when the initial glow of the chase has worn off.

The Sufi poet, Rumi, wrote, “The rose’s rarest essence lives in the thorn.” On the Internet, I found the following analysis of that line:
All roses grow thorns naturally, it is truly a hallmark of the rose, but it is so infrequently observed or appreciated. To ignore such a feature, though, is to deny a part of what makes the rose what it is. It is a fragile beauty that has one line of defense, to bite those that would touch it. Without this key trait, I doubt it would have survived long. Beauty attracts admirers, and admirers will unwittingly harm such a plant in the process of taking it for themselves. The thorns prevent the admirers from harming the rose bush in their ignorance. Instead, it teaches the admirers to appreciate the rose from a distance.
It’s no easy task to be close from a distance. Smothering one another in mutual, possessive dependency is a real risk. To prevent this scenario, we often try to push others away by extending our thorns. That way we avoid the risk of getting sucked into a downward spiral of oppressive neediness.  .

Waiting for the ideal relationship, whether friend or lover, we judge others and ourselves harshly, put up a false front, and withdraw behind our thorns. We make the perfect the enemy of the good and end up alone, or almost alone. We shut down and if we aren’t careful, we freeze up inside.

But if we are rooted in the Ground of Being and maintain enough distance, without trying to “take” the rose for ourselves, we can avoid being devastated when others prick us with their thorns. We can escape to “Desolation Row,”  be open and vulnerable, not worry too much about what others think of us, admit to ourselves when we are hurt, fully experience that pain for what it is, and let it go. After all, what’s a little prick? Then we can look for close friends who don’t look down on us when we reveal ourselves.

Growing up, I often heard, “Sticks and stones may break my bones but words will never hurt me.” In The Phrase Finder, Gary Martin reports, “The earliest citation of [that saying] that I can find is from an American periodical with a largely black audience, The Christian Recorder, in March 1862.” There it is referred to as an “old adage,” which suggests that it had been in circulation for some time.

One wonders if children today grow up hearing that or some similar aphorism. With its title, a recent Psychology Today article, “Sticks and Stones May Break My Bones . . . But Words Will Cut Me Deeply”  seems to reflect today’s spirit.

Language matters. One often hears, “When you said that, you hurt my feelings.” Or, “I’m sorry I hurt you.” I speak and think that way myself at times.

But it seems more accurate to say, “When you did that, I felt disappointed,” or, “You did not hurt me. My ego did.” The greatest danger is internal: our own ego and the damage it inflicts. By inflating the importance of our own individual concerns and blaming others for our distress, we evade our own responsibility and undermine the power of our true self to find peace and understanding.

Our true self is compassionate, knows that others do what they do for understandable reasons, and accepts their decision to do what is best for them. But our ego wants what it wants and declines to try to understand the other.

Once we move beyond our fear, we can tap our innate desire to learn. As Shryl McCormick states in her latest Fearless Conversations newsletter: "Curiosity is the desire to know; that desire leads us to inquire. Inquiry does not always come naturally to us, especially because it has an almost opposing energy to judgment [NOTE: I would say 'being judgmental.'].  Inquiry is a practice; it takes intention…."

To blame the other for our emotional pain is not accurate. The way we think influences what we feel. And we have great influence over how we think.

As Seb Paquet told me, “Progression towards intimacy is fascinating. It feels so dangerous before you go there. Maybe because it is?” One reason we end up being hurt is that we lapse into wishful thinking, relating to an illusion rather the real person in front of us, and then suffer when reality breaks in. As Zora Heale Hurston wrote in her great novel, Their Eyes Were Watching God:
Janie stood where he left her for unmeasured time and thought. She stood there until something fell off the shelf inside her. Then she went inside there to see what it was. It was her image of Jody tumbled down and shattered. But looking at it she saw that it was never the flesh and blood figure of her dreams. Just something she had grabbed up to drape her dreams over.
When we fail to see others for who they really are and reality finally crumbles our fantasies about the future, is it fair to blame the other for our pain? Why not pay attention to and accept Reality in the first place? If we do, what is there to be afraid of?

It may be no coincidence that the sticks-and-stones aphorism became embedded in African-American communities during slavery, when the difference between external and internalized oppression was crystal clear.  As I discussed in “Thurman, King, and Deep Nonviolence,” the great African-American theologian, Howard Thurman, addressed how to deal with fear and dishonesty in Jesus and the Disinherited, which is basically a self-help manual (that greatly influenced Dr. King).

Fear, he said, can be “a climate closing in… like the fog in San Francisco…  nowhere in particular yet everywhere… a mood which one carries around…. The result is the dodging of all encounters…. This fear which served originally as a safety device…becomes death for the self.”

Thurman eloquently described how allowing oneself to be victimized can be debilitating. He said that Jesus of Nazereth
recognized with authentic realism that anyone who permits another to determine the quality of his inner life gives into the hands of the other the keys to his destiny. If a man knows precisely what he can do to you or what epithet he can hurl against you in order to make you lose your temper, your equilibrium, then he can always keep you under his control…
According to Thurman, fear often “arises out of the sense of isolation and helplessness…. [I]t is not the fear of death that is most often at work; it is the deep humiliation arising from dying without benefit or purpose.”

Thurman also addressed the connection between fear and dishonesty, when he wrote:
Deception is perhaps the oldest of all the techniques by which the weak have protected themselves. The weak have survived by fooling the strong…. [But] the penalty of deception is to become a deception…. Life is only a tale told by a fool, having no meaning because deception has wiped out all moral distinctions [emphasis added].” 
As a result, life is cheapened by an “artificial and exaggerated emphasis upon not being killed [or, we can add here, not feeling hurt].”

Jesus responded by preaching, “Take therefore no thought for the morrow” in order to foster a “sense of belonging, of counting” that establishes “the ground of personal dignity, so that a profound sense of personal worth could absorb the fear reaction [emphasis added].…. He senses the confirmation of his roots, and even death becomes a little thing.”

If one humbly sees oneself as a child of God, Thurman wrote, “He is in a position to appraise his own intrinsic powers, gifts, talents, and abilities.” Then he can experience
a profound faith in life that nothing can destroy…. It is true that a man cannot be serene unless he possesses something about which to be serene…. Here are the faith and the awareness that overcome fear and transform it into the power to strive, to achieve, and not to yield.
Thurman envisions instead “a complete and devastating sincerity” as Gandhi recommended in a letter to Muriel Lester where he stated, “Speak the truth, without fear and without exception,… You are in God’s work, so you need not fear man’s scorn.” Inspired by Gandhi, Thurman wrote:
Be simply, directly truthful, whatever may be the cost in life, limb, or security. For the individual who accepts this, there may be quick and speedy judgment with attendant loss. But if the number increases and the movement spreads, the vindication of the truth would follow in the wake. There must always be the confidence that the effect of truthfulness can be realized in the mind of the oppressor as well as the oppressed.
We can relate as one human being to another. “A man is a man, nor more, no less,” Thurman insisted. “The awareness of this fact marks the supreme moment of human dignity.”

As Thurman concluded:
Jesus… assured us that "the Kingdom of Heaven is within." He announced the good news that fear, hypocrisy, and hatred, the three hounds of hell that track the trail of the disinherited, need have no dominion over them….
He projected a dream, the logic of which would give to all the needful security…. The basic principles of his way of life cut straight through to the despair of his fellows and found it groundless. By inference, he says, “You must abandon your fear of each other and fear only God.  You must not indulge in any deception and dishonesty, even to save your lives….”  
Those are ideals. Occasional exceptions, it seems to me, are inevitable (and Thurman, I believe, acknowledged it elsewhere). In some situations, deception is a practical necessity. But when we do deceive, we can do so consciously, after carefully considering the alternatives. And we can always aim to see others and ourselves clearly and move in the direction of increasing transparency, as we learn how to be more honest with compassion.

In the real world, people end up feeling disappointed, hurt, and angry. So we need to learn how to communicate compassionately when we are honest in order to minimize fear and pain. We shouldn’t just think, “That’s your problem.” And we need, for example, to take steps to reduce verbal abuse and bullying (which is often a way for bullies to feel better about themselves).

By accepting responsibility for our own feelings and learning how to acknowledge and let go of our pain when others’ actions prompt us to feel hurt, we can steadily reduce our fear of honest encounters. Then we can start being more honest ourselves, serve as examples for others, grow a movement based on fearless compassion, and cultivate a more open and transparent world.

Saturday, November 10, 2012

No Secrets to Conceal


Increasingly people don’t really listen to each other. In 2006, researchers reported,  “A quarter of Americans say they have no one with whom they can discuss personal troubles, more than double the number who were similarly isolated in 1985.” The average number of confidants had dropped from three to two.

A 2011 study found that when asked to list the names of people they had discussed “important matters” with over the previous six months, about 48 per cent of participants listed only one name.

Rarely do people in the modern world ask probing questions, such as: Why? And, why not?

Instead they tell stories, gossip, discuss sports, talk about their children, engage in intellectual discourse, or stay on the surface in some other way. No wonder the martini, the symbol of shallow 1950's cocktail parties, has made a big comeback!

The explosion of the Internet and the use of cell phones have aggravated these trends. People interact more, but they do so more quickly, briefly, and superficially.

In response, some people simply stop talking. A “quiet” daughter of a friend once explained her quietness by saying, “Mom, don’t you realize people talk all the time without ever saying anything?”

Others respond by almost always talking about themselves.

People indicate they understand what the other said by talking about how they've had a similar experience. That form of empathy is better than none, but hardly constitutes deep listening.

Jacob Needleman once said, “A real revolution needs to start with a ‘listening movement.’” I agree.

Years ago a friend and I had lunch weekly for one hour and divided the time equally. First one talked spontaneously for 30 minutes about whatever was on his mind. Then we reversed roles. We did that for a few months and each of us seemed to find it valuable, but for some reason, we stopped.

Recently another friend and I tried a similar approach. This time we agreed that the other could ask clarifying questions, but the focus would be on one or the other. Repeatedly I found myself interrupting the focus by talking about myself. Old habits linger.

As much as I complain about the lack of deep listening, I’m often guilty of not being a good listener myself. Sitting in my Inbox are a number of unanswered emails from people I care about and who care about me. And one dear friend told me weeks ago that he wants to talk on the phone and I haven’t found time to do it.

So I promise to be a better listener – whether or not the other wants to listen to me.

The art of listening is fading for many reasons. Chief among them I suspect is growing economic insecurity. As competition intensifies for decent jobs, people learn to be careful about what they say. This caution often starts in families where children learn to fear disapproval and in school where students learn to curry favor with teachers.

These habits carry over into all spheres even when the risk to advancement is absent.

Naked ambition is another reason for lack of openness. People want to get ahead. So they guard what they reveal.

Take President Obama, for example. A friend recently accused him of being a “phony.” At first, I reacted defensively. But the more I reflected on the issue, the more I remembered instances when I did not totally trust that Obama and his close associates were being completely honest, though I consider him more authentic than most politicians. I’ve tended to excuse him for such actions due to the need to get re-elected. But now that he’s achieved that goal, maybe we’ll find out more about what really motivates him.

On election night, CNN’s White House correspondent reported that Obama’s aides told her that in the future they will “take it on the road” to rally popular support for their proposals. During the summer, Obama said that if the Republicans refuse to compromise, he will “go around them.” During his election night speech, he spoke of the need for citizens to remain engaged between elections. So perhaps he will more fully use his position as a community-organizing tool, as he mentioned during his very first electoral campaign.

We may soon learn to what degree he’s motivated by ego and his “place in history” compared to compassion for others. Then again, separating out those motives is not easy. And going down in history as a great President will probably require mobilizing the grassroots to overcome Republican opposition.

Doing so will likely also require a vigorous effort to elect Democrats to the House in 2014, which Obama did not do during this election, to the chagrin of many Democrats. I can only assume that his polling found that running against Congress as Truman did in 1948 was problematic with swing voters who don’t like hyper-partisanship.

But now that Obama has been re-elected, if the Republicans don’t decide to be flexible, he’ll probably need to be more honest. Fox News coverage of Obama’s election-night speech suggests that the right-wing radicals will persist, for Fox barely discussed the speech after broadcasting it.

Or maybe we’ll have to wait until after he leaves office to get a better read on the “real Obama.”

Myself, I no longer want to be recognized as a “great man,” as my mother repeatedly told me I would be. I do believe the world would be in much better shape if more people were more like me. I am self-confident. I would, for example, be glad to serve as President of the United States.

But the world is on a much different wavelength than I am. Soul mates are few and far between. I may have accomplished as much as I can in the material world.

So I’m going to stop trying to make things happen. I’ll float trial balloons from time to time, make myself available to collaborate if and when such partnerships are possible, and go with the flow. It looks like a promising collaboration is developing with the January 19 Social Transformation Using the Three-Fold Path workshop. The planning committee is proceeding in fine form without me while I’m in Mexico for two months.

But mostly I plan to read some great books (like Their Eyes Were Watching God), develop some better close relationships, and maybe write a memoir, whose working title is No Secrets to Conceal.

Friday, November 2, 2012

Dylan at the Greek, 10/19/12


I went on my annual pilgrimage to a Bob Dylan concert on October 29, this time at the Greek Theatre in Berkeley, my favorite venue for music in the Bay Area. Having been a loyal Dylan devotee for 49 years, I pay homage most every year. Even when he was drinking so heavily he titled his worst album Knocked Out Loaded, I still enjoyed the concerts. With Mark Knopfler offering a perfect opening set, this year proved to be a marvelous evening. Following are some lyrics from the songs he sang, with those lines that strike me most strongly marked in bold, followed by some personal comments.

Bob opened with “Watching The River Flow,” a song written during his mid-Sixties rural retreat at Woodstock where he recuperated from the madness of his sudden fame. The song took on greater meaning two days later when I heard readings from Deep River by Howard Thurman at the 17th Annual Howard Thurman Convocation at the Church for the Fellowship of All Peoples. In that book, Thurman addresses how “the river,” which is ever changing and uncontrollable, carries deep metaphorical meanings.

Bob sings:
If I had wings and I could fly
I know where I would go

But right now I’ll just sit here so contentedly
And watch the river flow… 
People disagreeing everywhere you look
Makes you wanna stop and read a book
Why only yesterday I saw somebody on the street
That was really shook
But this ol’ river keeps on rollin’, though
No matter what gets in the way and which way the wind does blow

And as long as it does I’ll just sit here
And watch the river flow
I would rather be with a true You, but absent that, I’m content, present, waiting.

First released on his early Another Side of Bob Dylan album, “To Ramona,” a haunting lament to a lover who’s about to return to the South, was performed at the piano with the band playing quietly at first.
And there’s no use in tryin’
T’ deal with the dyin’

Though I cannot explain that in lines…
But it grieves my heart, love
To see you tryin’ to be a part of
A world that just don’t exist

It’s all just a dream, babe
A vacuum, a scheme, babe
That sucks you into feelin’ like this
I can see that your head
Has been twisted and fed
By worthless foam from the mouth…
You’ve been fooled into thinking
That the finishin’ end is at hand
Yet there’s no one to beat you
No one t’ defeat you
’Cept the thoughts of yourself feeling bad…
 
From fixtures and forces and friends
Your sorrow does stem
That hype you and type you
Making you feel
That you must be exactly like them… 
For deep in my heart
I know there is no help I can bring
Everything passes
Everything changes
Just do what you think you should do
And someday maybe
Who knows, baby
I’ll come and be cryin’ to you
I can only support Your efforts to overcome society’s brainwashing as best You can.

“Things Have Changed,” was written as the soundtrack for the movie “Wonder Boys,” which deals with an author suffering mid-life writer’s block. Normally, I take the song to be from the main character’s point of view, not Dylan’s. But on this night, Bob and his band performed it with such verve I could feel “another side” of Bob identifying with the movie’s character with life-affirming relish.
I’m well dressed, waiting on the last train
Standing on the gallows with my head in a noose
Any minute now I’m expecting all hell to break loose… 
Gonna take dancing lessons, do the jitterbug rag
Ain’t no shortcuts, gonna dress in drag
Only a fool in here would think he’s got anything to prove
Lot of water under the bridge, lot of other stuff too
Don’t get up gentlemen, I’m only passing through… 
I’ve been walking forty miles of bad road
If the Bible is right, the world will explode 
I’ve been trying to get as far away from myself as I can 
Some things are too hot to touch
The human mind can only stand so much 
Feel like falling in love with the first woman I meet… 
I hurt easy, I just don’t show it
You can hurt someone and not even know it 
The next sixty seconds could be like an eternity
Gonna get low down, gonna fly high 
People are crazy and times are strange
I’m locked in tight, I’m out of range
I used to care, but things have changed
Having sex is merely icing on the cake. Deep nourishment comes from getting away from one’s ego and loving a true You. But being real can reveal “too much information,” as they say.

“Tangled Up In Blue” is another story of a quest to find lost love.
…But all the while I was alone
The past was close behind
I seen a lot of women
But she never escaped my mind, and I just grew
Tangled up in blue… 
Then he started into dealing with slaves
And something inside of him died
She had to sell everything she owned
And froze up inside… 
So now I’m goin’ back again
I got to get to her somehow
All the people we used to know
They’re an illusion to me now… 
We always did feel the same
We just saw it from a different point of view
Tangled up in blue
Lifeless zombies, shut down by fear, are everywhere. I seek authentic encounter, but time and again I discover I was in fact relating to an illusion, a victim of wishful thinking.

All of Bob’s music is rooted in the blues, which can be liberating when it helps one face reality head on. Once when introducing the great blues man John Lee Hooker, Bob called Hooker “the godfather of our music.” When accepting a Grammy, in reference to another blues legend, he said, “Like Robert Johnson said, ‘Our music will bust your brains.’” The night of this concert, the biting humor in the blues came through more clearly than ever, often prompting me to laugh, like with “Cry A While.”
To break a trusting heart like mine was just your style
Well, I cried for you—now it’s your turn to cry awhile 
I’m on the fringes of the night, fighting back tears that I can’t control
Some people they ain’t human, they got no heart or soul
Well, I’m crying to the Lord—I’m tryin’ to be meek and mild
Yes, I cried for you—now it’s your turn, you can cry awhile 
Well, there’s preachers in the pulpits and babies in the cribs
I’m longin’ for that sweet fat that sticks to your ribs
I’m gonna buy me a barrel of whiskey—I’ll die before I turn senile
Well, I cried for you—now it’s your turn, you can cry awhile
Smiling at the futility of trying to be humble, I move on and buy some whiskey, determined to enjoy life when I’m alone, while preferring to cuddle with a dear friend.

Love unfulfilled also comes through poignantly in “Make You Feel My Love.”
I know you haven’t made your mind up yet
But I would never do you wrong

I’ve known it from the moment that we met
No doubt in my mind where you belong 
I’d go hungry, I’d go black and blue
I’d go crawling down the avenue
There’s nothing that I wouldn’t do
To make you feel my love 
The storms are raging on the rollin’ sea
And on the highway of regret
The winds of change are blowing wild and free
You ain’t seen nothing like me yet 
I could make you happy, make your dreams come true
Nothing that I wouldn’t do
Go to the ends of the earth for you
To make you feel my love
Allowing the perfect to be the enemy of the good, we often fail to appreciate the true You standing right in front of us, not trusting that we deserve the love that is at hand.

Written after Katrina, “The Levee's Gonna Break” weaves the personal and the social.
I paid my time and now I'm as good as new
They can't take me back, not unless I want them to… 
If it keep on rainin' the levee gonna break
Some of these people gonna strip you of all they can take… 
I can't stop here, I ain't ready to unload
Riches and salvation can be waiting behind the next bend in the road… 
I picked you up from the gutter and this is the thanks I get
You say you want me to quit ya, I told you no, not just yet… 
Put on your cat clothes, Mama, put on your evening dress
A few more years of hard work then there'll be a thousand years of happiness… 
If it keep on rainin' the levee gonna break
I tried to get you to love me, but I won't repeat that mistake… 
If it keep on rainin' the levee gonna break
Some people still sleepin', some people are wide awake
I can’t force Others to wake up and be a true You. They may use me and use me, but they won’t use me up and I resolve to remain available, praying for another ecstatic moment of authentic mutuality.

Lost love is also addressed in one of his very best songs, “Shelter From The Storm.”
’Twas in another lifetime, one of toil and blood
When blackness was a virtue and the road was full of mud
I came in from the wilderness, a creature void of form… 
And if I pass this way again, you can rest assured
I’ll always do my best for her, on that I give my word

In a world of steel-eyed death, and men who are fighting to be warm… 
I was burned out from exhaustion, buried in the hail
Poisoned in the bushes an’ blown out on the trail
Hunted like a crocodile, ravaged in the corn… 
She walked up to me so gracefully and took my crown of thorns… 
Now there’s a wall between us, somethin’ there’s been lost
I took too much for granted, got my signals crossed… 
I bargained for salvation an’ they gave me a lethal dose
I offered up my innocence and got repaid with scorn… 
Well, I’m livin’ in a foreign country but I’m bound to cross the line
Beauty walks a razor’s edge, someday I’ll make it mine
If I could only turn back the clock to when God and her were born
“Come in,” she said, “I’ll give you shelter from the storm”
Innocently taking too much for granted leads to walls of mixed messages and no-win double binds, leaving only memories of pure grace.

From these opening songs that speak of romance and its loss, Dylan shifted to social and political commentary with “Highway 61 Revisited.”
Now the rovin’ gambler he was very bored
He was tryin’ to create a next world war
He found a promoter who nearly fell off the floor
He said I never engaged in this kind of thing before
But yes I think it can be very easily done
We’ll just put some bleachers out in the sun
And have it on Highway 61
Not so surreal after all.

Probably one of my five favorite Dylan songs, “Desolation Row” continued the shift to social commentary with a reflection on the value of vulnerability.
And the riot squad they’re restless
They need somewhere to go…
Now Ophelia, she’s ’neath the window
For her I feel so afraid
On her twenty-second birthday
She already is an old maid
To her, death is quite romantic
She wears an iron vest
Her profession’s her religion
Her sin is her lifelessness
And though her eyes are fixed upon
Noah’s great rainbow
She spends her time peeking
Into Desolation Row…
Dr. Filth, he keeps his world
Inside of a leather cup
But all his sexless patients
They’re trying to blow it up
Now his nurse, some local loser
She’s in charge of the cyanide hole
And she also keeps the cards that read
“Have Mercy on His Soul”…
They’re spoonfeeding Casanova
To get him to feel more assured
Then they’ll kill him with self-confidence
After poisoning him with words
Now at midnight all the agents
And the superhuman crew
Come out and round up everyone
That knows more than they do
Then they bring them to the factory
Where the heart-attack machine
Is strapped across their shoulders

And then the kerosene
Is brought down from the castles
By insurance men who go
Check to see that nobody is escaping
To Desolation Row…
All these people that you mention
Yes, I know them, they’re quite lame
I had to rearrange their faces
And give them all another name

Right now I can’t read too good
Don’t send me no more letters, no
Not unless you mail them
From Desolation Row
Words deaden. Our society teaches people to talk all the time without talking about anything important, afraid to share openly and honestly, jealous and resentful of those who do, striking back to hurt others in order to keep them away, unwilling to deeply experience and share one’s dark side or to accept others non-judgmentally when they reveal themselves. As Emerson warned, “society will retaliate.”

“Thunder On The Mountain” continues to comment more broadly while addressing one individual.
Feel like my soul is beginning to expand
Look into my heart and you will sort of understand
You brought me here, now you're trying to run me away
The writing's on the wall, come read it, come see what it say…
I don't need any guide, I already know the way
Remember this, I'm your servant both night and day…
Gonna forget about myself for a while, gonna go out and see what others need
I've been sitting down studying the art of love
I think it will fit me like a glove…
Everybody got to wonder what's the matter with this cruel world today…
I got the porkchops, she got the pie
She ain't no angel and neither am I
Shame on your greed, shame on your wicked schemes
I'll say this, I don't give a damn about your dreams…
I did all I could and I did it right there and then
I've already confessed – no need to confess again…
I'll plant and I'll harvest what the earth brings forth
For the love of God, you ought to take pity on yourself
In the midst of a wicked world filled with greed, I try to forget about myself and focus on the needs of others, doing what I can with compassion, for myself as well as others, accepting rejection when it happens.

Apparently using a straight man walking into a gay orgy as a metaphor, “Ballad Of A Thin Man” lacerates narrow mindedness.
You walk into the room
With your pencil in your hand
You see somebody naked
And you say, “Who is that man?”
You try so hard
But you don’t understand…
You have many contacts
Among the lumberjacks
To get you facts
When someone attacks your imagination
You’ve been with the professors
And they’ve all liked your looks
With great lawyers you have
Discussed lepers and crooks
You’ve been through all of
F. Scott Fitzgerald’s books
You’re very well read
It’s well known
Because something is happening here
But you don’t know what it is
Do you, Mister Jones?
The lack of imagination and the reluctance to let go stultify.

When local radio in Dallas in 1965 played “Like A Rolling Stone” once an hour and had listeners call in to express what it meant to them, I knew something was happening I never expected.
You’ve gone to the finest school all right, Miss Lonely
But you know you only used to get juiced in it
And nobody has ever taught you how to live on the street
And now you find out you’re gonna have to get used to it
You said you’d never compromise
With the mystery tramp, but now you realize
He’s not selling any alibis
As you stare into the vacuum of his eyes
And ask him do you want to make a deal?…
Princess on the steeple and all the pretty people
They’re drinkin’, thinkin’ that they got it made

Exchanging all kinds of precious gifts and things
But you’d better lift your diamond ring, you’d better pawn it babe
You used to be so amused
At Napoleon in rags and the language that he used
Go to him now, he calls you, you can’t refuse
When you got nothing, you got nothing to lose
You’re invisible now, you got no secrets to conceal
The pretty people only get close with pretty people. Myself, I prefer to relate soul-to-soul.

Dylan continues the themes of social oppression and the need for authenticity with “All Along The Watchtower.”
“There must be some way out of here,” said the joker to the thief
“There’s too much confusion, I can’t get no relief
Businessmen, they drink my wine, plowmen dig my earth
None of them along the line know what any of it is worth” 
“No reason to get excited,” the thief, he kindly spoke
“There are many here among us who feel that life is but a joke
But you and I, we’ve been through that, and this is not our fate
So let us not talk falsely now, the hour is getting late”
Why not be honest? In certain instances, it makes sense. But withholding and dissembling easily becomes a deadly habit.

Bob closed with “Blowin' In The Wind.”
Yes, ’n’ how many times can a man turn his head
Pretending he just doesn’t see?…
The answer, my friend, is blowin’ in the wind
The answer is blowin’ in the wind
How many times must a man look up
Before he can see the sky?
Yes, ’n’ how many ears must one man have
Before he can hear people cry?

Yes, ’n’ how many deaths will it take till he knows
That too many people have died?
The answer, my friend, is blowin’ in the wind
The answer is blowin’ in the wind
And how long will it take for us to really listen to that person in front of us?