Welcome to “Waging Peace”
Remember, you’re the co-creator of this dive. Do as much or as little as you’d like, when you’d like, how you’d like, with the materials I provide. Just keep gentle faith with yourself.
Set your intention
Take a moment to name the primary intention you have for this month-long deep dive and/or this particular session. Take a quiet moment to center yourself in that intention.
Receive the music
Try to refrain from judging the music as “good” or “bad” or forming an “I like it” or “I don’t like it” opinion. For a few minutes, cultivate curiosity and openness. If resistance arises in you, be curious about that too.
Read the poem
I invite you to read this poem twice—aloud, at least once. You may also listen to the poet’s performance of the poem, perhaps with your eyes closed.
THE LOW ROAD Marge Piercy What can they do to you? Whatever they want. They can set you up, they can bust you, they can break your fingers, they can burn your brain with electricity, blur you with drugs till you can't walk, can't remember, they can take your child, wall up your lover. They can do anything you can't stop them from doing. How can you stop them? Alone, you can fight, you can refuse, you can take what revenge you can but they roll over you. But two people fighting back to back can cut through a mob, a snake-dancing file can break a cordon, an army can meet an army. Two people can keep each other sane, can give support, conviction, love, massage, hope, sex. Three people are a delegation, a committee, a wedge. With four you can play bridge and start an organization. With six you can rent a whole house, eat pie for dinner with no seconds, and hold a fund raising party. A dozen make a demonstration. A hundred fill a hall. A thousand have solidarity and your own newsletter; ten thousand, power and your own paper; a hundred thousand, your own media; ten million, your own country. It goes on one at a time, it starts when you care to act, it starts when you do it again and they said no, it starts when you say We and know who you mean, and each day you mean one more. (found at this link)
Contemplate/Create
Use any of these questions however you wish—e.g., as openings for meditation or prayer, as prompts for journaling or poetry-writing, as sparks for drawing or painting, as catalysts for change-making . . . You may also ignore my questions altogether to go off in other directions!
Reflect/write/create in response to this stem: “Peace starts when we say We and know _______.”
What do you think the poet means by “The Low Road”?
Want to visit with other Rafters in the Deep Dive?
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These materials are for educational purposes only. Not for sale or reproduction.
Join me and a SPECIAL MYSTERY GUEST
for a closing Zoom on February 1!
6:00-7:00PM Central (7:00 ET, 5:00 MT, 4:00 PT)
Let’s close “Waging Peace” with a time of voluntary sharing. (It’s fine just to listen!) Come and reflect with other Rafters on this Deep Dive.
Registration is required for this celebration.
(Note: Minimum of five people must have registered for the Refuge by midnight, January 31, in order for this Zoom to take place. Thanks!)
It starts when you care to act!
Though this a serious poem, I, as a serious pie lover,
chuckled out loud at:
“With six you can…
eat pie for dinner with no seconds…”
Truth!
A serious poem.
A serious poem about power.
A serious poem about power in numbers.
Not always true, I think.
Too many examples in history show otherwise.
“…it starts when you care to act,”
I like to think it starts when you care.
True caring will lead to action.
“…it starts when you say We
and know who you mean,
and each day you mean one more.”
Maybe when you say We
and mean not necessarily one more, but
know that we are one.
Valarie Kaur says, “Love is the only thing I have ever seen to create lasting change.”
(from:
http://www.dailygood.org/story/1527/a-call-to-revolutionary-love-emily-enders-odom/)
Then, of course, there’s Jimmy Hendrix:
When the Power of Love
overcomes the love of power,
the world will know Peace.
Amen. ☮️