Category Archives: Blogging

Miasma

Churning and burning, the waves whip and sizzle.
Thinking, drinking… the feeling… sinking…

I drift into the emptiness, the primordial void
A hollowness so full it crushes… me.

The great sea resting on nothing, I just can’t
The waves whipping so hot they freeze…

The beasts that swim in the miasma and chaos
attacking ever inward be.

Where Leviathan and Behemoth are not tamed
And Tehom, like a vacuum absorbs all light.

Yet, this is not an evil place.
It is just another place to be.

Because from this place the fool creates their future
From Magician to World… all things come from this sea.

Emptiness compressed into raging waters.
Because without the chaos I am nothing.

Spiritual Practice At Home: An Introduction

At the beginning of the pandemic, I started baking bread. Since that time I have collected many of the receipes in a small binder, being the person I am, I wrote an introduction to that Binder, this is that introduction.

I was with my grandmother one afternoon; I am not sure where we were going but we meandered by Jones St. Outside of Wheeling West Virginia to the apartment she and my grandfather lived in when they were first married. She told me rent was 30 dollars, 15 to be paid twice a month. She talked about the months when there wasn’t enough money or work to go around. In these times she would say to my grandfather, “I can’t afford food and rent, what should I do?”

He responded saying, “Pay the rent, buy flour, and I will make bread.”

I don’t remember much about this context, I don’t remember why we were talking about it, but the strangest thing I do remember while listening to her, is that she told this story as if she were reliving every moment in her head. She wasn’t sad , or angry about it, she was simply thoughtful.

My grandmother had a pantry, full of canned vegetables, fruits, and all other things necessary to survive. Today a “prepper” might call it a 6-month pantry, she just called it the basement. They grew their own food, canned their own vegetables, and once a year made a giant batch of applesauce. If I were to ask her why they did it all I am sure she wouldn’t understand the question she would just say something like, “That’s just what we did.” I know looking back, that she grew up during the great depression, and that the memories of hard times were burned into her being, she came from a generation that truly understood that all jobs, money, and security were passing. What held her together, was her family, her faith, and trust that even if the worst happened, she was not alone.

I don’t think my generation understood that, and I don’t know if the generation before me did either. But the generation that are children now… they may know better than ever, life can be turned upside down in an instant, and in moments systems can fail. I wonder if they will be more like my grandparents, I wonder if they will have pantries full of home-grown vegetables, and applesauce.

When the nation went under quarantine for Covid-19 I thought about my grandmother as I read through Facebook and saw someone post a recipe to make a sourdough starter. I had time and I didn’t have anywhere to go. So I thought of my grandmother’s story and my grandfather’s words, “Pay the rent, buy flour, and I will make bread.” But I never asked Grandma while she was alive, so I had to learn now, how to bake bread.

These recipes did not come from Grandma, they came from the internet and from friends. They are my process to baking bread.

Chewing and the Art of Biting off Too Much.

Like many of you the most recent pandemic has been very difficult for me. I learned a lot about myself, most of which is that I was not prepared to live though a pandemic. During this time, I often found that I was keeping myself busy. During times like this I often learn something new and continue to work through older things I’ve learned. Basically, I pick up hobbies. I did find however, that through quarantine I struggled with my depression and anxiety. And just in case you are curious, I don’t bare shame about my depression and anxiety. In fact, I am open about them. I choose, as a minister and all-around human being, to be open about them because of social stigma around mental health. Mental health is no different than any other health issue, in fact the refusal to practice self-care around mental health exacerbates other issues you may have. But that isn’t the topic I have chosen for today.

As a religious person, I try to practice spirituality, you might have heard this called spiritual practice. One of the ways I do this is through living authentically. Jean-Paul Sartre once said, “My life and my philosophy are one and the same.” When I consider spiritual practice, I think of Brother Lawrence and Saint Therese Lafleur. I think of my life lived as spiritual practice, also what makes me feel alive. The biggest thing that helps me through difficult time is throwing myself into something I’ve never done and learning a moderate proficiency in it. Often these are the things I post about in my blogs. The problem is that during the pandemic I started to learn a lot of different things, and the one thing I didn’t feel like was processing those things spiritually.

I had plans, during the pandemic do write about my Commodore 64, but before I could I started baking. I actually prepared some articles on the baking but before them I threw myself into a live action role playing game called “Call of Cthulhu.” I was considering an article on that, when I began to work on my ham radio license.

While all this was happening, I lost two canine members of the family, you may have seen my post about Princess, two weeks later we lost our friend Gizmo, he was a shock, his death broke me. Oh and there was work, adapting the church to a fully online model took a lot of time. I no longer just though about how to have a service, but how to do it livestreaming and archiving legally.

However, having said all of that, I hope to still add posts about bread baking, my Commodore 64, RPG, Ham Radio, spirituality, and even my friend Gizmo. I am beginning to feel renewed, let’s hope for a while.

My Little Lady

I’m staring at empty space trying to work. I never knew silence could be so deafening.

Princess on a trip to the Mississippi Delta

I’m used to hearing the click clack of little dog feet. I’m used to looking down and seeing big eyes staring up at me. It was an absolute joy to adopt Princess in her last two years of life. Don’t get me wrong, having a geriatric dog can be difficult. She had to be penned in at night and surrounded by pads because she was losing control of her faculties. Most mornings we woke, and we found a mess, but we cleaned it up and moved on without day. She was a little dog, so as she aged, she began to struggle more and more getting up and down the two steps into our back yard. Understand Princess was already in decline when we brought her home, but we knew that whether it was 6 months or years she would be a perfect addition to our home.

Her owner had died, and we loved her, so we thought the best way to show that love was to take care of her little Princess.

Every morning when I came out, I looked at her and said, “Good morning little lady, lets go outside.” She looked up at me with acceptance and love, one of my greatest joys upon returning home after a long day was hearing her excited howl as I approached the door. When I picked her up just right and held her against my chest she would chitter very quietly, almost like a purr, then she would sigh, try to turn and lick my face.

Princess in her pretty sweater

In the last few months, her decline had become obvious. She was tripping over shoes, she could no longer climb easily into her bed, and she tried to hide from us when she couldn’t control herself. That’s when we start having the conversation. If you’ve never owned an elderly animal you may not know what I am talking about if you have you are probably crying just a little while you read this.

See, our animals can’t tell us when they are in pain, and unlike us, they don’t have an active imagination with a wonderful history to pull on. I am not saying they don’t remember, but for them, the moment is primary. I begin to ask, how are the moments that she’s having. More often I would reach down, and she would back away for just a moment because she was frail and sometimes touch hurt. Some mornings she couldn’t get out of her bed and I had to pick her up and walk her to the yard and set her down, and others she would pop right up and be waiting at the door.

The problem is, we don’t want to go too soon, and we don’t want to wait too long. There is no simple answer to this question. I know only that she shy’s away from our touch, she has little control when she has to go to the bathroom, and she sleeps most of the day. Oh, there were other signs but none of these seem good enough, because they are so good at loving us unquestionably and they want to make us happy too, and letting go of that is hard.

Then princess had a seizure.

I first laid her down on her bed, and her mouth immediately locked on her blanket. Then, powerlessly I picked her up and wrapped her in the blanket she was unable to release. She lost control of herself when I put her in my car, and she looked up at me with shame. I knew then that we could never let her go through this again. When we went to see her, she was so excited to see us, she reveled in us, her seizure had passed, but she was still 16 and I remembered her eyes when I laid her in my car to take her to vet, they were like a prayer. Maybe we could have gotten a few more days, weeks, or months of love, she would have given freely, but then I’d have to reckon with her eyes that moment that I laid her in my car.  

Saying Goodbye

She was my little lady, and her eyes alone spoke volumes of joy and love… and trust. The decision is hard to make because it can’t be unmade, because if we can get just a little more love from them if we can just feel that acceptance one more time, but when does that become selfish? That is the price we pay for their love and that is why no one should take on pet ownership too soon. Having a pet is forever, maybe not our forever, but theirs, they trust us, depend on us, they love us, and want to see us happy. It’s more than walks and feeding. It’s more than spending time with them, they are family. The ultimate responsibility we have, is the willingness to say goodbye when their forever is over. And we have to make that decision, they cannot.

See, there is no real way to repay the love that comes from owning a pet, but then true love can never be repaid. But there must willingness to love them truly and that their pain is just as real as ours and they can’t always tell us.  

It has been a day, my little lady is gone, I didn’t have a mess to clean up, I don’t hear the clip clop of her feet, I am not babysitting her to make sure she can get outside in time. But you know what I miss the most, her eyes, her eyes when she gets excited, when she pretends to bite my fingers, or licks my face. I miss the clip clop of her toenails on the floor. I miss the way she sighs when I pick her up and hold her against my heart.

And though I know it was not too soon, I will spend the next few months wondering if she went too early, that is the final price we pay for their love. And it is proof that we loved them truly.  

Ramblings From the Black Creek Trail, Mississippi

Black Creek Trail Sign: that is my finger in the lower right hand corner… GoPro’s are small.

I thought it important, to sit down and write my thoughts before they become too distant from my current state.

I completed a thru-hike of the Black Creek Trail just south of Hattiesburg Mississippi outside of a little town called Brooklyn. I have to admit, the hike didn’t start the way I’d hoped, and some of the emotional struggles were not part of my planning. We started late, we had later starting times every day and I was in constant fear of not finishing. On every crossing and every hole, I saw the opportunity for failure with a twisted ankle, a slip, and at one point a bite from a diamondback rattler. But I finished, I finished with the original members of my party. Even through much disagreement and frustration with each other we crossed the finish line together, we did that because we committed to one another silently, that when we started this journey we would end it together.

This snake looked me in the eyes and told me to stop complaining.

I remember while hiking the trail thinking, “I feel miserable, and I wish I’d never started.” On the last day while we were heading toward my car (to which I now call, My Blue Heaven) every step felt as though, in the moment my foot hit the ground, a hammer hit the bottom of my foot. The blisters tell me that I am not ready for an Appalachian Trail Thru-Hike, the pain from my feet tell me that I have more work to do. And in the moment, I ask, “Is this even worthwhile, coming out to hike just trying to get home?”

However, the problem with deciding “to never do this again,” while on the trail is, that feeling pales, in hindsight, to the feeling of finishing, the feeling of euphoria that drives me to get into these “messes,” in the first place. The problem is, now I know I can hike 13 miles in a day, and I know the peace of sleeping next to a rushing river in the cold.

When I came home last night I sat quietly in front of an off television and a computer that had yet to be turned on. My mind clearer than it had been in a long time. I sat and looked my record player considering playing a record, but then remembering the silence of the wilderness. My phone that had been off for 4 days now sprung to life, and with every beep and message I was afraid I would lose the peace of not knowing what to do next. But I didn’t lose that peace… at least, not yet…

 

I understand why many philosophers and physicians agree that nature can be helpful to stress. Because in the wilderness the concern is not a board meeting, a financial report, or a reading list, it’s practicing the necessary self-care to simply, “Get to the next campsite.” By the last night, sleeping in the woods, I began to dream again. The night would fly by, I wouldn’t wake up multiple times, I had worn myself out during the day, and was in a tech blackout, the only light was from the campfire built by our camping guru, and the stars reminding us how small we are.

 

Left to Right
Paul, Micah, Justin

We all had our purpose on the hike, the peacemaker, the naturalist, and me, the logistician. I knew the map of the trail and had done more research than necessary but even in that time had forgotten the map of the human heart. Micah did that. While Paul made sure every sight in which we slept was warm and comfortable.

Today I sit on the far end of a goal I set for myself three years ago when I began to get healthy. I spent three years, the planner I am, gathering gear, reading trail guides and searching for partners, but now that day is over. Life in the modern world calls me. I hope I can carry this peace for a week before I am back to the ball of anxiety that everyone knows and love.

But even if I can’t, today I know peace, and that makes the misery of wilderness worthwhile.

Black Creek Trail, Brooklyn Mississippi

The True Sacrifice to God

I awoke this morning reflecting on the time I spent as a medical chaplain, and the past years I had spent in ministry. I noticed as a hospice chaplain I never met a normal family, that every family, no matter how shiny on the outside, was filled with rough edges. And though, there was a sense of degree to familial health it was never as dramatically differnet. All families struggle, all people struggle, and if I were to be honest the difference between us was not that great

When I met someone in the hospital, body riddled from addiction, often I would get tired. I would find myself sitting in the jury box of an unofficial court. I did this as I walked the streets at night in downtown Memphis with my friends, looking behind me, as the crowds of homeless would meander among themselves, not hurting anyone, just wishing to be left alone. It was hard for me, raised middle class and white to find empathy, and early on to deal in grace, I would be lying if I didn’t say I still struggle.

Many years later, I lost almost everything, at least that is what it felt like. After spending 15 years cultivating a career I found myself left unemployed. It is strange, it seems I was split in two at this moment. My faith telling me I had worth and my heritage telling my worth was connected to my employment. As time went on a different battle for my soul began. I was becoming someone else, someone foreign to the me had known, someone who’s fear was giving way to despair. I know in hindsight but I did not know then that the despair would soon give way to self-hatred; I didn’t see I was already on that path. I must admit, I didn’t like that person.

Some Buddhists practice a Death Meditation. It was through this process I began to confront the fear that was giving way to despair. I took the image of the homeless man and asked, “What would it take for me to be there,” and in my mind, I walked that path. I remembered the hospital patients admitted for suicide attempts and asked, what would it take for me to be there? Once again in my mind I followed that path. It is important to note I didn’t do this alone, I had people to process with.

This idea was not new to me, only a forgotten, but it helped me let go. As my mind went down the path, my heart broke and the Psalms came alive, God once again came alive, and I knew as David did after his sin with Bathsheba, that the only sacrifice I had to offer was a broken and contrite heart. I would love to say that healing began that day, but it took much longer than I would have liked.

Of course, this thing that happened, it was a gift, and I understand that I am privileged that I can call it that. Because now when I see the broken, those who are as I was, the homeless person, the suicide patient, the heroin addict, the alcoholic, I don’t see bad choices and I have no seat in their jury box. I see my reflection, I know that I am only a few steps from being there myself. And when I see my face in the broken, I am reminded not only of what was or what could be. I am reminded of what is, I am broken and just maybe that’s what God wanted me to see all along! Then something new is birthed into the world, compassion.

Playing Tricks and Wasting Film

 

I spent a lot of time this week playing tricks with my camera, actually a lot of time trying to shoot double exposures. In fact, I have a lot of pictures that are completely black or completely white, and more where I can barely make out the target.

However, lets just look at some basic pictures, I am continuing to work on light levels.

FondrenBarber01 UUChurchSign01

But Like I lost most of my film trying to double expose. With my camera the way I double expose I by opening the loading bay at the bottom of the camera to keep the picture from advancing through the rollers. I had some great early shots.

DoubleJustin

Zeppelin Four and Me

DoubleJustin02

This is me appearing to Star Lord in a vision.

I have to admit that these shots were fun, I thought I had the hang of the process so I took these shots next. My face is a lot more clear in the second picture but I think it worked. Neat thing about this film, often when it doesn’t work it still looks cool. There is often something special about the picture, even when they don’t come out right. After these pictures came out so well I tried the ones below the next day.

Taken at the Unitarian Universalist Church of Jackson

Taken at the Unitarian Universalist Church of Jackson

Supposed to be a Chalice over a Brass Tree

Supposed to be a Chalice over a Brass Tree

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

So obviously I don’t have the hang of it. These wash outs are amazingly bad. I have a few ideas about the problem, but at the end of the day I don’t really know. I know that I have an entire cartridge of completely washed out pictures from attempted double exposures, and completely blacked out photos from my attempts at mirror selfies (none of the mirror selfies worked).

But there is no reason to end this post with wash outs and overly dark photos so here are some fun pictures . I played with the light/dark settings on the camera. I can’t say I like one of these pictures over the other, actually I am not sure if I really “like” either of them. On the left side the Minecraft figure is in focus but the candles wash, on the right the candles look great but the Minecraft figure is out of focus. But hey, what can you do?

Just some candles and minecraft.

Just some candles and Minecraft.

Candles02

Fuzzy Minecraft guy

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I think I will get some color film next time. It may help with the double exposures, but if anyone has any feedback let me know.

Why I Write and What I Expect

I am trying to write more, at least trying to write again. Writing for my church blog has been a reminder of the joy I first felt in publishing my early journey. I never blogged for fame but I always wanted to be read. I wonder what I will leave behind when I say goodbye to this current existence. I write to leave something behind. I read old posts and laugh, because my I have changed since 2002 when I started blogging.

As I said before, I started this revival while writing for the church blog at UU Jackson , then at Friday Vinyl. Friday Vinyl, my music blog, actually started because I had time on Friday’s to stop and buy a new record, and after buying the record I began to sink into the memories of the songs. I have thoroughly enjoyed the process. I needed something more though. I needed a place to share everything else. The church blog is not appropriate for politics and Friday Vinyl is not appropriate for non-music related topics.

About that time I bought a domain and started this space. I have considered over and over again what to add to this blog and when to add it. I have decided that my posts to this blog will not be scheduled, and will follow no specific thread. I will post as ideas come up to post.

I love writing, I love it because it reminds me of divine creation. When I type the words, or write them on paper I have created something that before did not exist. The words and the ideas rattle around in my mind, then I channel them through my hands and they are birthed onto the screen. My words are like children, they are part of me but I know as soon as I put them down they will take on meaning of their own. I can argue for authorial intent but let’s be honest the written word is alive and when read people join their minds to it and create something new.

My struggle with writing tends to come in two ways. The first is emptiness, separate from writers block. I struggle with the void. I read many blogs and posts that have no actual content to them, people write because they are paid to or because they decide to not because they have something to say so they say nothing. When they write they ignore the void, I don’t know if I can do that, I don’t know how to write if I have no topic.

It is hard to define the next struggle. I begin with a direction, and the goal of about 600 words, I find that 600 words later I am entrenched in a struggle to get to where I am going. Maybe I can call this problem, focus. I sat, right before I started this post, to write about a book I have finished. I had to stop when I realized that the post will have to be expanded to two parts, and I will have to rework the material I have created have created only a seed, and I am struggling to guide the growth, while letting it flow naturally. If I don’t guide the growth there will be 1500 words staring you in the face, and no one wants that.

Keep reading, and let me know you read. I would like to know what you create with my words, for when we read I consider the words of Bradbury through Faber “You play God to it (Fahrenheit 451).”