
Do not travel far to other dusty lands, forsaking your own sitting place; if you cannot find the Truth where you are now, you will never find it.-Dogen

Do not travel far to other dusty lands, forsaking your own sitting place; if you cannot find the Truth where you are now, you will never find it.-Dogen

If we forgive life for not being what we told it to be, or expected, or wished, or longed for it to be, we forgive ourselves for not being what we might have been also. And then we can be what we are, which is boundless.
-John Tarrant

The Brook Would Lose Its Song If You Removed The Rocks- Brook Would Lose Its Song If You Removed The Rocks-
American Proverb

“At one time you were a mountain, you were a cloud. This is not poetry, this is science.” -Thich Nhat Hanh
I didn’t expect a difficult ride.
The trees weren’t blowing, I didn’t think there was a breeze. It was a sunny, happy morning.
So I headed north on the trail. The pedaling was hard. I dropped a gear. Still a struggle.
I mumbled, complaining about it the entire ride. Until the turn.
Heading south, I felt no wind at my back, but the ride was easy.
I saw the pair of cardinals, fluttering in their faithfulness.
The rabbits with their fuzzy faces full of grass, munching.
So many birds were singing.
Had I missed all this just moments before when I was riding north, complaining about unexpected struggles with my cycling?
Had I missed many other beautiful things in my life when I was in the middle of things not “going as planned?”
Probably.
I stood at the edge
of that high, high cliff
and saw the expanse of All.
I wanted to lean forward
and just fly – float- forever
so I could see everything that is offered.
Go into the Expanse that is not limited Self.
For a moment I imagined myself there.
Then I stepped back
to the grounding of the rocks and trees,
taking some of that Sky with me.
“There is nothing noble in being superior to your fellow man; true nobility is being superior to your former self.” –Ernest Hemingway
I’m skeptical about the book, Lean In, by Facebook executive Sheryl Sandberg and its affiliated women’s power movement. Let me explain.
I completely support the concept that girls and women should “lean in” and actively participate in “the conversation.” To be actively engaged in your life and not a passive bystander while others make decisions. To realize your full potential as a person…being as smart as you can be, exploring, developing ideas and initiating action, and so on. I believe in equal rights for all people, I just don’t think the world (not even the supposedly more “progressive” US) allows for fair and equal treatment and opportunities for women. In fact, my direct experience is that if you are female and “lean in” you’ll have your head chopped off. In some countries, literally.
In America, only 23 of the Fortune 500 companies have a female CEO; women only make 77 cents for the same job as a man who makes a dollar; and women have always held significantly fewer seats in Congress, and that number is declining.
When the economic crisis of 2008 was in affect, there was not a week when an experienced professional working woman didn’t contact me to say she had been “downsized out” of her company. I didn’t know one man with similar circumstances. When a man lost his job it was when the entire company went under.
While I have been fortunate to be a high ranking executive in my current and previous institutions, in both cases I am “training” my (male) boss. In both jobs, the man was placed in his position with the CEO knowing he was not skilled or prepared. I accepted my current job knowing this and taking the chance that my boss was going to become the next CEO and I’d move up into his slot. (That didn’t happen) In my previous job, however, the CEO actually asked me to train a male “peer” who was later promoted to a level higher than me.
It’s not just me. I know women all over the world who regardless of profession or age are “moved over or moved out” when they become more visible and more successful in their organizations. A good friend of mine from London, was the international director for an organization based in the US when the CEO began an obvious campaign to “improve the international presence.” She was allowed to save face and resign. Rather than replace this very successful executive with an internationally experienced professional, the American CEO hired another American, a male with an “exotic sounding” name.
While I continue to hope that all people can have fair and equal treatment based on skills, experience and personal characteristics, I don’t see it happening.