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We each have our own song

When a woman in a certain African tribe knows she is pregnant, she goes out into the wilderness with a few friends and together they pray and meditate until they hear the song of the child. They recognize that every soul has its own vibration that expresses its unique flavour and purpose. When the women attune to the song, they sing it out loud. Then they return to the tribe and teach it to everyone else.

When the child is born, the community gathers and sings the child’s song to him or her. Later, when the child enters education, the village gathers and chants the child’s song. When the child passes through the initiation to adulthood, the people again come together and sing. At the time of marriage, the person hears his or her song. Finally, when the soul is about to pass from this world, the family and friends gather at the person’s bed, just as they did at their birth, and they sing the person to the next life.

There is something inside each of us that knows we have a song, and we wish those we love would recognize it and support us to sing it. How we all long to be loved, acknowledged, and accepted for who we are!

In the African tribe there is one other occasion upon which the villagers sing to the child.

If at any time during his or her life, the person commits a crime or aberrant social act, the individual is called to the centre of the village and the people in the community form a circle around them. Then they sing their song to them. The tribe recognizes that the correction for antisocial behaviour is not punishment; it is love and the remembrance of identity.

When you recognize your own song, you have no desire or need to do anything that would hurt another.

A friend is someone who knows your song and sings it to you when you have forgotten it. Those who love you are not fooled by mistakes you have made or dark images you hold about yourself. They remember your beauty when you feel ugly; your wholeness when you are broken; your innocence when you feel guilty; and your purpose when you are confused.

Alan CohenThey’re Playing Your Song

There’s really nothing I can add to this … so I won’t.

Family values

problem_child

Reds are in yu beds

Banks are in de red

Bombs are in de city

Taxes burn

Crime rates soar

Hospitals fight

Schools rebel

Water kills

Cops kill

Cover-ups uncovered

Neo-nazis rise

Pension funds not trusted

Talks fail

War looms

An yu hav da cheek to call me

A

Problem

Child

Benjamin Zephaniah

This was written in 1996 by the British poet and seems to me that it’s just as relevant today as it was 13 years ago. I found it in one of my lighter (!) books for summer reading ‘Mind Readings: Writers’ Journeys Through Mental States’.

For those in the Northern hemisphere, I hope you are enjoying your summer.

I’m getting back to the blog after some break … check back in a couple of days for resumption of normal service!

What makes sense and what does not

Today I have a guest post from Sanja, a person dear to my heart, but who I see far too rarely.

It was originally published in ‘The Budapest Times’ and we would both love this story to reach as many people as possible – so if you enjoy it, please pass it on, recommend it, Stumble it, Digg it or whatever’s your favourite poison.

Over to you Sanja ……

I told this story to my colleagues recently after many years, and it left quite an impression. I was advised to put it in writing and try to spread the word, in this moment of economic crisis, on voting against any crazy politics in the world and inviting ordinary people to think bigger.

Place: Budapest, Hungary

Setting: Colleagues gathered for Friday drinks.

A diverse bunch from the UK, Australia, New Zealand, South America, Hungary and Serbia. All unwinding at the end of another week in a small, cheapish, Budapest watering hole. It is January, 2009 and the global financial crisis has naturally, crept into the conversation, inspiring many anecdotes and much speculation. As expected, the only thing they could all agree on was to disagree about what the future held, so the conversation moved more to trying to work out where we may be going, based on what we had personally seen in the past.

Sanja from Serbia, a generally enthusiastic and positive person, tentatively said: “I am just worried that there might be another war, it feels almost déja vu for me. First comes economic instability, and then national emotions get stirred up and then it’s so easy to manipulate people against each other, especially when they feel poor and scared.”

Kevin, from New Zealand, vehemently dismissed such thoughts with the response: “No way that this can happen, people are not crazy, it doesn’t make sense…”

But Sanja was already thinking back to many years ago when she had heard exactly the same thing. With eyes fixed to the corner above the bar, she began to tell what she remembered:

“It just reminds me so much of a story from 1991 when my country was still Yugoslavia and when I was a 16-year-old kid. It was summer and, as I had been doing for many years, I was camping in a small camp-site on the coast of Montenegro with my family.

Throughout the whole year my sister and I would be eagerly looking forward to the coast and getting together with our usual gang. We had a big, cool crew of kids of similar age from different Yugoslav cities, though mostly from Bosnia and Serbia. We had so many stories that connected us over the years, funny stories, adventurous stories, love stories… we couldn’t get enough of each other. During the year we would exchange letters, calls and visits.

And finally it was again summer, and we were together, careless and happy. One night we were laying on the beach, each with their list of wishes written down on a piece of paper waiting for a decent meteor shower. We were all excited, staring at the sky, ready to tick off the wishes from our list as soon as the falling stars started to appear. The night sky by the coast was beautifully clear and we were seeing so many shooting stars we had to agree to concentrate and have wishes ready so that we didn’t waste a star… We were quiet. All you could hear was the sound of crickets, some far away conversations and music from a radio.

The music was then interrupted by an announcement.

The war in Yugoslavia had started. There was a serious incident in Croatia.

We sat up one by one, slowly, confused, looking at each other, not saying anything, trying to make sense of what we had heard. It did not make sense… wait, what were we supposed to do? Then… and only then… I stared thinking of who was who.

Davor – was he Croatian?

Adnan, he must be a Muslim!

My sister and I are Serbian … and so on.

And what does it mean now? Are we on different sides? And then someone said: “This is crazy, it will not spread, and it cannot happen in Bosnia. We come from mixed families, there are Muslims, Croats and Serbs living on the same floor of the same building, we celebrate Christmas and Ramadan together. People are not crazy, it does not make sense!”

Soon, the war spread to Bosnia and it was the bloodiest of all, probably because there was no sense to it. We, the crew from the beach, ended up on different sides, still caring for each other, calling each other and checking if everyone was alive and if their families were OK. Those conversations tended to keep to safe, superficial topics – “How are you?”, “OK, and you?” – not going deeper, or crossing the invisible line after which you knew you could have debated who was right, what was really happening and would then be forced to face suppressed anger, guilt, accusations and mainly confusion.

When I heard that Adnan’s father was shot because he kept a stock of guns and ammunition in the house, the same house we had eaten baklava in the summer before, when my family and I stopped on the way back from the coast, I stopped calling. Those conversations were pointless from then on. They did not make sense any more, nothing did.”

Kevin from New Zealand, who had  dismissed the idea of unrest as crazy, was quiet for few seconds. Then he quietly asked Sanja to write down this story.

And she did.

Sanja Kovandzic

Latest economic news: Christmas bought in recent takeover activity

If you’re not in the mood for a Christmas rant, I suggest you turn to one of my more positive and upbeat posts. You might want to check back here in a few days when you’ve had enough festiveness. My rant has been building up for a while and had to explode sometime. I guess just before the festival begins is as good a time as any.

Let me say first of all that I really enjoy the Christmas of holiday, family, gifts, pine trees, pretty lights, good food and mulled wine. What I don’t enjoy is the blatant commercial pressure to celebrate in a particular way. The Corporate Way.

It’s hard to avoid the constant bombardment of messages about what Christmas ’should’ look like with its avalanches of snow, expensive gifts and fake smiles. When it’s combined with crystal clear messages about what presents to buy (assuming that you do, in fact, LOVE your children!) then I just want to hide away and only come out when it’s over. I really sympathise with the Grinch and Scrooge.

Leave me alone – I want to be free to celebrate in my own way!!!

I was impressed when I first moved to Eastern Europe in 1994. Decorations started coming out a few days before Christmas and giving gifts was much more a symbolic matter with shops subdued in their promotion of the concept. Kids, generally speaking, received a few small gifts and adults none. The focus was on family gatherings, going to church, eating and celebrating together. I found there to be a real respect when everyone greeted each other with personal wishes spoken face to face rather than written on a garish card. It seemed that generosity was from the heart and not from the pocket.

14 years on and the Corporate Takeover is almost complete. Around mid-October the retail trade starts reminding us of the impending joyful days and the message is clear. Spend! Spend! Spend! A few shops don’t even bother to take down the tinsel and baubles but leave them up. Why remove them when you can use Christmas to encourage people to be buying all year round?

Over recent decades a new Church (of Commercialism) has copied the early Christians and has been stealing Christmas from under our noses. Originally, of course, it was a pagan festival to mark the winter solstice until the early Christian Church cleverly stole it. As they did it so gracefully and so long ago, we’ve accepted Christmas as a mainly Christian festival to celebrate the birth of Jesus, a reasonably important symbol to Christians.

Now it seems the takeover of Christmas is almost complete, with the corporate world mopping up with what might best be described as a ‘re-branding exercise’. It’s become ‘politically incorrect’ to talk about ‘Christmas’ for fear of alienating people of other faith or no faith. After all, non-Christians have money and know how to party too, don’t they? Why should they be excluded from the spending spree? I’m not sure what ‘politics’ has to do with this and it’s more accurate to call it ‘corporately incorrect’.

Even Santa Claus is not exempt from the re-branding. He’s increasingly called ‘Father Christmas’ which I suspect is transitional and a step away from his Catholic roots (Santa = Saint). Clearly ‘Father Xmas’ would be a bigger step on the way to becoming the ‘Festive Parent’. Come to think of it, he’ll only fully meet the high standards of corporate correctness when he gets rid of the kids on his knee and the white beard to become ‘Seasonal Person’. After all, he/she needs to appeal to every single buyer on the planet.

Apparently unconnected, we’ve seen corporate induced climate change destroy many a white Christmas. The ‘good’ news is that it’s done wonders for sales of fake snow, tinsel and white lights. Is it really coincidence that the takeover has gone hand in hand with polluting the Earth? Is climate change part of some evil plan to make us buy more? Hmmmm!

Rant over. Sorry about that, but I do feel a whole lot better.

Finally, here’s my Christmas message.

Christians

Reclaim Christmas as your own and don’t give in to corporate correctness.

Everyone else

Relax, have a good time with your family and party (Christians – you can party too if you want)

Find your own way to celebrate Christmas (or not)


PLEASE! PLEASE! PLEASE!


resist the pressure to ‘Do’ Christmas the Corporate Way

Happy Christmas Everyone!