Wednesday, June 23, 2004

Perspective

Sometimes all you need for a little perspective...





... is to step back.








Passing Strangers

Thanks be to God for the kindness of passing strangers.

As we took a little stroll through downtown Seattle today (I took the day off work to spend a little quality time with my family - a sort of 1 day mini-vacation) I decided to take a picture of my wife and daughter in front of this fountain. A passing stranger asked if we'd like a shot of all of us together.

Usually I say "no" (could it be a ruse to steal my camera? will they be able to figure out how to take a picture of me? and a dozen other questions...)

Well, this time I took a look at my daughter and wife. Their faces were rosy and I felt good too. It occurred to me that we hardly have any photos in our family arsenal of all of us together. So, I consented to the kindness of this passing stranger.

As I sat down - oh, what a fool I had been. This was clearly a housewife with a stroller and two or three other children swarming around her and another woman, children like bees bees around a pair of fine, fragrant roses.

So, now I have this beautiful photo, probably the best photo ever taken of myself with my wife and daughter.



A thank you to the kind stranger.

Basil

Thursday, June 17, 2004

Friday, June 11, 2004

In A Moment, There is Death

I must confess I have always been, have always been concerned somehow that it was not normal, that it was not ordinary, for me to have this morbid interest in death. I am obsessed with the possibility of my own death. I see a grim around every corner. See the possibility of my death everywhere I look

In everything that is alive around me, I see death. Life thrives on death, and someday will not the life of others thrive on my own death?

It is not so much that I am afraid I will die. No, I do not fear death, nor what I shall meet on the other side. What I fear is all that I am leaving behind: the shadows and darkness, the confusion and sense of loss. I fear what will become of those I desired to nurture and shelter. I fear of what will become of the world I tried to build for them.

Yes, I know, I should fear that I have not built for them the world of love I intended. That I have been faithless in my attempt to be faithful. That I have left things undone that should have been completed. Yes, that I do fear. That I do fear very much indeed.

But it is not for any sense of judgment that I fear them. I am able to bear any suffering I am given at the Mighty Throne of Judgment, save that I fear the most: the judgment of knowing what a mess I leave behind. The judgment of knowing what I have left undone that can no longer be completed. The judgment of the impact of my passing on the lives I leave in my wake. Did I teach my daughter well when I had my chance? Did I train her up in the way that was right, so that in her old age she too will give Glory to the God who formed her? Did I teach her to be kind to others? To forgive and forbear rather than to judge another? Was I kind to my wife? Did I leave her with a sense of purpose and confidence, or did I make her question her faith: relieved that I am finally gone from her?

Questions of death impress themselves upon me. I go down into Sheol, into the depths of hell. Deep, deep into the abyss. Thinking about what I leave behind on this earth: those things I did not accomplish, that I should have - those things that I did that I shouldn't have done. Now, I think I can comprehend the meaning of hell. It is more than simply being in the presence of a God we cannot stand to be near. It is also being in the absence of all that we might have done, and being in the presence of all that we did evil.

The question that pursues me, like a coon-dog hounding after a squirrel: when is my time and why? Why wasn't today my day to depart this earth? Will it be tomorrow?

I sense that miracles happen every day around me. Every step I take on this earth is filled with grace and mystery. Why does God love me so? How can I be worth it? I know that His grace does not end when my days here expire like grass. I know that His love goes with me, even though I travel through the depths of Hell. But why does He endure my stupidity even here on this earth?

Today I was driving home from work. I saw up ahead a woman get off the bus. I saw her walking northward along the sidewalk alongside the bus. The traffic was thick, and the bus was at a standstill. I thought the bus stop was beyond that crosswalk there. I could have sworn it was. I started to pass several cars in the right lane. I soared past them at maybe 30 to 35 mph, trying to read all the awful signs the city engineering department placed everywhere (covering both sides of the street at the crosswalk). Signs about street closures. And while I was trying to think: 132nd, 132nd, which of these cross-streets is 13...... SCREEEEEECH. There she was suddenly standing in front of my car in the crosswalk.

I skid about 10 to 15 feet. My laptop-briefcase on the seat beside me is suddenly caught in my right hand. Caught by the handle. Somehow I have managed to skid, and hit the clutch at the same time so that I don't stall the car. My heart is pounding up in my throat and the woman is standing in front of my car with a wild look in her eyes: a look of terror.

But, I thought I just saw her walking up the street past the crosswalk, I muttered to myself aloud: barely audible over the sound of my pounding rock music. Keeping rhythm with my heart.

Why did I not hit that woman, and wind up in jail? Why did God spare me, and why did God spare her?

Our lives are filled with miracles we cannot comprehend. We cannot even begin to fathom them.

Standing there at Fr. Thomas' funeral, thinking to myself of the children and wife he had left behind. Why was it his time to go? In a sense I was quite angry. Why did God see fit to take him at this time? Why him and not me? Why is it anyone's time? How do we know when we are at the end? Will I go to sleep this night and not waken?

There was once a day when a tanker truck exploded on the freeway. It was right where I might have been if I had been taking that freeway that day instead of a side road. People were killed, but why wasn't I?

What is His plan for me? Why does he keep me here on this earth?

And other miracles, no less sincere, no less heart wrenching.

On a day several weeks ago, my tea kettle started screeching. I went to the kitchen and pulled it off the stove. With my right hand I lifted the tea kettle, and poured hot water over my left hand and into a cup. Of course, I was frightened by what I had done in my clumsiness. I jerked my hand away quickly, wincing as if I were in pain. But... What's this? I looked at my hand in horror, terrified at what I was experiencing. There was no pain! My hand was drenched. Soaking wet, and no pain!

And it's not like I had just been at the sink or something. No, I'd been down the hall typing at my computer. My hand was wet, my teacup was steaming, the tea was already turning brown from the teabag. I placed the kettle back on the burner and it immediately came back to a boil, screeching out the spout, from the heat of the burner. There was no question that the water was scalding hot. I tried to stick my right forefinger in the teacup and couldn't. It burned the tip of my finger. There was no question that the water in the cup - the very water I had poured over my hand - was near boiling temperature. And yet, my hand wasn't the slightest bit burnt or singed. It was wet, and I felt the water on my hand, and that water was cold - not refrigerator cold, but room temperature, and yet the water in the tea cup was scalding.

A miracle? How can it be anything less? Why does God fill our lives with miracles?

I am convinced that our lives are constantly filled with miracles. That every day he does countless things to protect us. But why? Some day I will die. Perhaps tonight I will die, but this afternoon he spared me for some unknown and inexplicable task? Today, perchance I am kept from stumbling and falling down the stairs and never realized it. I might have broken my leg, or I might have skinned my elbow against a rough stone wall, or I might have been bitten by a flea that carried some exotic disease that will kill me in ten or fifteen years, or I might have gotten sick to my stomach at something I ate (perhaps even while denying myself meat). But I have avoided all of that, and why? So that I might get hit by a car when I walk to my mailbox and end my life? So that I might die in my sleep of a heart attack? So that I might suddenly have a blood vessel burst in my head?

We do not know these things. We do not know the when or the why, except that we know this: we must learn to love Him. We must learn to see Him. We must learn to worship Him with our each and every breath.

Another time, years ago when Helen and I were just married. We had gone on a walk or out to eat dinner or something, and had come back home to find the stove on and our tea-kettle melted to the stovetop. The plastic of the handle was smoking like it would burst any minute into flame, and I was stupid and tried to pick it up off the stove, as if that were the way to prevent something. I dropped it instantly, and it fell into the middle of the kitchen floor where it melted the linoleum. If we had come back 5 minute later would the apartment building have been on fire?

Thank you God for sparing us all! Thank You God for sparing us again and again.

But when is my time to go from this earth, and for what reason has He spared me.

I do not know. I cannot say.

My friend Barnabas says: "well maybe you aren't a saint" (and I can assure you I am not) "but he wasn't to give you the chance to be one. Maybe he's letting you stay on this earth until you have become a saint."

That's a frightening thing to consider, but I find another possibility even more frightening: is he leaving me here to perfect my sin? To seal myself off completely from Him in the debauchery of my ways? For I find there are two fates that linger in my flesh. On the one hand I might worship and glorify Him, and on the other hand I might give myself up completely to earthly pleasure. It seems the two extremes, albeit distant and extreme, are always close at hand. Ever near.

And I wonder again, which one this day have I chosen?


Basil






Thursday, June 10, 2004

Washington State Bird

For those of you who don't know, the Washington state bird is the Goldfinch.

Well, I have to tell you an irony. I consider myself an avid amateur bird watcher. I love watching birds. I have learned the names of most birds I can find, and for many of them, I have learned what their song is. Maybe someday I will start a web page devoted to Northwest Birds.

Anyway, the irony is, that I have never seen a goldfinch since I've lived here in Washington state. I know it is the state bird. People tell me they see them from time to time. But I never did. The purple finch - see it all the time. The house finch, same thing. But never the Goldfinch.

Well:




this little guy has a nest in the trees outside my office window. He comes up onto the ledge right next to my desk and picks up cottonwood seeds.

He and his wife come regularly. I keep bringing my camera to work, but for some reason they never come up to the ledge when I've got my digital camera. So, here I have resorted at last to taking a picture of him with my camera phone. Not only is the quality poor, but I had to hold my camera phone about 4 inches away from the bird to take the picture. They don't seem to be afraid of me... I think they must have somehow figured out that I can't get to them through the glass.




No joke, in this shot here:



I was literally holding the camera phone against the glass opposite the bird.

Well, so there are my finches. I'm going to try to take a picture of them again when I've got my digital camera, and so we can hold out hope for something nice and crisp and clear.

Regards,
Basil


Wednesday, June 09, 2004

Peacemakers

"The good people of this world are very far from being satisfied with each other and my arms are the best peacemakers."
--Sam Colt, 1852


Friday, June 04, 2004

Crow

For those of you who have asked:


Here's Baby Crow:


And here again:


Baby Crow is up in a different tree now. I find it a bit amazing how much he/she can get around when he/she can't fly yet. So, I'm going to try to take a better picture of her today if possible.

Regards,
Basil

Monday, May 31, 2004

The Baby Crow
by Basil Miller


My wife was first to see The Crow, or I should say, the first to notice it. I had seen it a few minutes before, but hadn't noticed it. The Crow was about to provide me the opportunity to consider human nature, the appalling animalistic quality of it, the troubling nature of creatures in general. The Crow was about to provide me a much needed afternoon of self-reflection. But I hadn't noticed that yet either.

I was working in the yard. To be specific, I was emptying garbage bags of kindling we had picked up by the roadside ("Free Wood"), and pulling all the rusty nails out of the rotten boards. Someone had definitely torn down something. More than a fence I suspected. A barn, a shack of some sort, an old shed? The nails were a combination of newer, tiny, zinc coated nails, and enormous old rusty spikes. The oldest, and rustiest nails were in wood that was rotten clear through. Someone had added on to something. Someone had added on to something old. I imagined it something left over from the pioneer days, wondering if I might find a stray slug embedded in the wood here or there.

If the nails were protruding and had a head, I used my 15 inch pry-bar and pulled them out. If there were too many nails, I took my axe and split things up. After going through several bags, I picked up a large bag old roofing shingles and carried it to my shed. The old roof shingles would lay under my workbench in my shed, while the rotten, splintered, broken up wood would be outside in an easily accessible kindling bin I had under my deck.

"Did you see the Baby Crow?"

My wife's voice was coming down from the deck directly above me. I glanced up, and before I could turn all the way around to my wife my eyes caught the eyes of the crow, atop a pile of sticks, the remnants of the neighbor's cherry tree that had gone down in a storm a month ago, about three feet away.

"Yes," I answered. "I saw it before, but I didn't know it was still sitting there. I figured it had flown away."

Earlier in the day I had noticed the dog staring off the deck toward my wood pile. She wasn't barking which meant it wasn't a squirrel. She was just sitting there staring, which meant... I don't know what. So I got up to go out on the deck and see what she was staring at.

There it was, a crow sitting there all by itself atop a pile of half-heartedly chopped up branches. I thought to myself, "oh, how strange... it's just sitting there."

Well, it was four hours later and the crow was still sitting there. So, now I noticed!

"It's a baby," my wife continued. "It can't fly yet."

"Well, I guess not," I interrupted. "It's been there several hours."

"I wonder if we can help it," she finished.

I didn't figure there was much we could do to help it. But might as well try, I thought.

"Let's leave it be for a while and keep an eye on it," I said. "See if any other crows come down to visit it."

I was on a role pulling out nails and didn't want to stop when I'd just gotten going.

So, I sat down and worked, keeping the corner of my eye on the Baby Crow.

The old rotten wood and large, rusty, spike-size nails made me contemplate an older day and age, when men worked out in the yard all day long, not for the fun of it, but for survival. You had as many kids as you could, back then, not for your personal entertainment, like today, but because you needed them to survive. You had to have people working for you... people on your side. Everyone else out there, every stranger, couldn't be trusted. So you worked your hands to the bone, and only rested late in the evening, reading a book or smoking a pipe by the fire.

Some like that had nailed these nails into this thing. Built himself a shack, a barn, a stable. And now, here I was tearing apart the wood. Not because I needed wood to keep my house warn in the winter, but because I wanted wood to keep my house warm for the winter. Entertainment.

My wife was coming out the downstairs sliding glass door with some broken up crackers.

"Good idea," I said. "I guess I'll help you try to feed him. Crows love cherries. I wonder if they like strawberries."

I headed for the front yard where I have so many strawberries growing (and rotting, and being devoured by slugs) that I couldn't harvest them all. In another time and place, none of these strawberries would go to waste. Now it was cheaper to buy a flat of them down at the grocery store for a couple bucks. I couldn't afford to pick my own flat of strawberries. It would take me all day. My time was worth more than a couple bucks. Wasn't it?

Anyway, I came back with a few half-slug-eaten berries. My wife was crumbling up the crackers on a tall stump.

"I don't think he can get there," I mumbled. "I've seen him hop all around on the wood pile, but I haven't seen him hop up on top of the stump. I don't think he can."

I moved in closer and dripped the berries down on a lower stump in the middle of the pile of branches. Took a few crackers from my wife and crumbled them there with the berries.

I went back to work. Remembering that ancient time when people road stage coaches across the plains in order to find some land on which to settle. Now days, you couldn't afford land. You could only afford a tiny lot that surrounded your house. Just enough space to plant bushes and trees - give yourself some privacy. But in those days. Those were the days!

Of course, you needed land, because you would live off it.

The Crow didn't eat. In fact, the other crows swooped down and snatched up all the crackers and flew away. All the while the baby squawked at them, and they squawked back.

Maybe that was how they taught their babies to survive, I thought. Steal all their food from them so that they fight for something to eat. Maybe that was why crows were such prolific creatures. They learned to survive from the time they were a newborn.

Could their parents really treat them like that? Starve them and steal food from them? How inhumane!

I sat there and thought about a bygone era when men and women all lived to survive. I remembered a conversation I'd had with my wife the day before:

"Those people in ancient times weren't all that stupid. They were pretty smart!"

"What?" As usual, I couldn't understand my wife's muttering. "What are you talking about?"

"I've always thought," she said with her usual sheepish innocence, "that in ancient times people weren't as smart as they are today. That people were really stupid back then."

"Oh," I answered. The unuttered what times? what people? what are you talking about? in the back of my mind.

"I was just reading about saint..." (I didn't catch the name) she continued. "And he really knew what he was talking about."

I attempt to contribute to this discussion. "Well, of course, in the ancient times they didn't know as much as we know today scientifically and all that, but they were pretty astute as far as understanding human nature is concerned." There, that should suffice.

"But Justinian... or was it Justin. I'm reading about Justinian and Justin," she continued. "One of them, I forget which..."

"Well, Justinian made a mess of the Roman Empire. But he cranked out some awesome code of law. In fact, the first thing they teach you in law school is the code of Justinian. It's the foundation of all modern law."

"Yeah, that's it. He and Theodora bankrupted the empire giving away to the poor."

"Ah, I see." I answered. So now I know what the Orthodox had to say about the very thing one of my co-workers who is reading the full history of the Byzantine Empire by John Julius Norwich happened to mention to me the other day. That Justinian made an incredible mess of the Roman Empire.

"Well, the main thing was," I had to add, "that people back in those days didn't have time to think. Only the independently wealthy had time to sit around and do nothing but think. Everybody else worked from sun-up to sun-down trying to survive. Trying to get together enough food for themselves to eat and to feed their children. Trying to have enough children so that someone survives long enough to take care of them in their old age. It was a vicious cycle, taking care of the children, struggling to survive, and them taking care of you when you could no longer work."

It wasn't that I recounted the whole conversation with my wife as I sat there pulling nails out of rotten wood that would someday be burnt up in woodstove. No, it was that I remembered again that nugget of truth we had passed over in our discussions. "People didn't know everything back in those days." (And the unmentionable: we still don't now.) "People worked hard to survive. It was only those who had plenty of leisure time that did the thinking."

Now days, all people do is think. Everyone is an amateur philosopher, an amateur theologian, an amateur historian. Everyone is an expert on something, some moment in time, or some idea once up born by the winds of public opinion, and forever epitomized in a name someone had made for themselves. Now days, everybody thinks. Ninety percent of all the work out there was intellectual. Man, how things had changed! But I still enjoyed the rugged outdoors survival sort of work as a past-time. It was a form of entertainment, plain and true. What was more: it was what differentiated between us and the animals.

I looked up at my friend The Baby Crow. My wife was coming through the door again, this time she had the scrambled up contents of a hard boiled egg. "I looked it up," she shouted across the yard at me. "They say to feed baby birds a hard boiled egg."

Okay, I thought. So they are cannibals.

"It's true," she continued. As if she could read my thoughts. "The crows always eat up all the hard boiled eggs people leave on the tomb stones at Pascha."

Yeah, that made sense. Cannibals.

"It probably won't do any good," I told her. "All the other crows keep diving down and taking away the baby's food."

"Really," she exclaimed. It was the sort of "really" that meant she believed me, and felt deeply disappointed. "That's terrible!" I know that's what she'd say next.

"Yeah, I guess it's all survival of the fittest for the crows. Every crow for himself."

My wife left the egg. "Don't leave it on the stump," I shouted. "He can't get up there. I've watched him try."

He really couldn't. He couldn't fly yet at all. All he did was hop from branch to branch across the heap of cut up branches. The stump was too tall for him.

So, I went back to my ancient scraps of wood. Those that had too many nails to remove, I now just pounded down so that nobody would cut themselves trying to put it in the fire. I could always imagine my daughter scratching herself on a nail, and running away wailing. It would be the only time she volunteered to help. A special thing to help daddy. And she'd get infected and die. An agonizing, and painful death, each day getting sicker than the one before. I pounded the nails in hard.

I watched another crow swoop down across the back yard and snag an enormous piece of egg. Almost without stopping he sailed back into a tree. Probably the tree where her nest was, I figured. I looked up high. You could hear a lot of squawking between the Baby, the Thief, the other Crows in the neighborhood. It was hard to tell if any were squawking up in the tree.

Damn shame, them crows. Stealing the food from their own Children. It was what, I supposed, separated man from the animals. The ability to make a sacrifice for others: particularly your own Children.

Then suddenly I had an idea. Ideas: they were what separated man from the beasts. Only humans could come up with ideas: solutions to problems that only they could foresee.

I had been entertaining the thought of throwing sticks at one of the Thief crows. Or perhaps a rock. But I didn't think I could do it without scaring the baby. But then I had The Idea. I Remembered. (The mind: it was what separated man from the animals.) It was the garage-sale-new double barrel high pressure, super squirter I had recently picked up. That thing could shoot thirty feet. I knew it could, because I had already tried it. My daughter knew it could too.

The next time the Thief Crow swooped down to steal some food I'd nail him. I went out into the yard where I had a bucket of water waiting and loaded the gun. A double barrel jet action that would make that thief think twice.

I was back at my scraps of wood and nails again when he came swooping down and landed in the lower branches of the tree. I slowly crept over to where I had the water gun laying, but that thief was onto me. By the time I had the gun raised, he was further up in the tree. Squawking madly. I knew I couldn't nail him through all those branches. Probably couldn't even mist him. I slowly stalked the foliage beneath the trees until he gave up and flew away. A few minutes later he was back, however, and I repeated my stealthy approach. But once again he flew away before I could so much as mist him.

That was the difference between man and animals, you see. A man could rationalize, could think, could figure things out. A man could decide who he would let eat, and who he wouldn't. And by George, I was always in favor of the underdog. Give me a victim, and I'll help them trade places with the victimizer any day. That's how I always was, always had been. That was the difference between humanity and the dumb beasts. On top of the immortal soul, of course. We could make choices that were a sacrifice to ourselves, and we could make choices to feed one mouth, while keeping the other at bay with a double-barrel extra-sharp 30 foot super-shooting squirt gun.

We repeated this process, bird and I, several times before I finally decided to forget about him. I let one squirt fly thought the air at one point, but it was all just for show. (Another important aspect of human nature: inspiring the fear of man in the dumb beasts.) There wasn't much food left down there for the baby anyway. And the baby wasn't even trying to eat.

I thought that was strange. Screeeeeeeh... a big long rusty nail slid nicely out of a rotten board. Awfully strange. Why wasn't the baby eating any of the food we'd brought her?

Then suddenly it hit me: He couldn't eat!

Of course, that had to be it. This baby crow was too young to eat solid food. In fact he was at the age where... I looked up nervously at where the crow stood atop the pile of sticks, looked up guiltily into the branches of the trees above him. He was at the age where he had to be feed by his mother. His mother would eat something, and regurgitate it in a liquid form and stick it into his beak. I'd seen it many times on one or another of those nature shows.

My wife came popping out the door again at the perfect time. Any longer and I would have had time to feel more guilty. It was I who was keeping the bird from getting fed by scaring all the other crows away.

The main difference between man and the beasts: we are untrusting, and therefore can make stupid mistakes.

"Has it eaten anything?" my wife asked.

"Nope," I answered uneasily. "Probably nothing we can do... but... I... uh... I plan to just play it low key for a while and sit back here working... see if anything interesting develops. Maybe we are scaring the bird giving it too much attention."

"Maybe I should call PAWS," my wife said.

"Yeah, good idea. Call PAWS and see if they have any suggestions."

My wife came back several minutest later. "Yeah, they said that the only problem we might have is being dive-bombed by a whole bunch of crows that are trying to protect the baby."

"Hmmm..." It didn't seem likely to me. I mean, I'd seen one or two others come, but certainly no dive-bombing. Maybe they understood about the double-barrel super squirter? "Did they say anything about her eating?"

"Yeah, they said that crows are always fed by their mother until after they can fly."

Ooops. Sure enough. It was all my fault. I'd been keeping them from feeding it half the day.

"Okay," I answered. "Well, I'm going to go inside now."

Main difference between man and the animals. We are just plain stupid.