QUESTIONS, ANSWERS AND PREMISES

A friend sent me this extremely well written and thought provoking article: 

QUESTION: How can such hatred be passed down the generations for so long? I have never experienced a family grudge against another, so it is hard for me to…

Source: Armstrong Economics

https://search.app/739cCNesmjKh5gcJ7

Here is my response to her/this author: 

All of this perfectly ignores the driving force for any and all atrocities: the ongoing presence of Evil.  

Here, again, the writer does an excellent job of reviewing the history and never considers the Energies that feed, pushing and shoving, humans into revenge, an eye-for-an-eye biblical thinking.  That is the hidden history and the power that nurtures anger and hate.    

We only hate because we are led to it by programming that initially we have no control over as children.  It is only if we are NOT programmed (that seldom happens) OR if we use the wisdom of applied experience to realize that forgiveness is the most powerful tool we have for a happy and fulfilling life does one avoid/stop hating and begin Loving. 

I know this sounds like it comes from the pulpit, it does not.  In fact, no pulpit that I know of teaches this wisdom…Quakers maybe.  Karmic teaching maybe.

If we are all one because we all come from One then this makes sense and is our most powerful tool.  

“‘I am sorry, please forgive me, thank you, I love you’

“A lot of people know ho’oponopono as the Hawaiian forgiveness prayer, and although forgiveness is a very important part, there is a lot more to it, like repentance and transmutation. In fact it’s all about healing yourself, releasing your limitations and negativity, and becoming free. 

In those areas where the people are waiting for revenge for a 700 year old offence even the soil reeks of evil.  You’ve felt evil when you’ve walked into a place and wanted to get out asap.  We’ve felt evil when we understood that we were being followed and were in danger.  

Addressing the Evil is a priority –and it can’t be addressed if it is not recognized.  We are at war, a spiritual war and I think we are close to escaping the prison that humanity has been held in for thousands of years.  When we win all those hatreds will dissolve and we will once again have Joy in our lives.  

ILLINOIS PUTS NATURAL GAS OUT IN THE COLD

On Mon, Jan 29, 2024 at 11:10 PM Linda Lucienne Ehlers <llehlers@aol.com> wrote:

Why we were absorbed in other issues the City of Chicago, and the State of Illinois was hard at work to make sure that our City and State would become urban disasters.  They are trying to pass this measure to stop all new buildings from having natural gas.

If it wasn’t so insane one would think it was just stupid.  But, no it really is insane.  

In the first place, our power grid is woefully in need of repair.  Our primary sources of power come from nuclear plants and those have been under the gun for decades.  Add to that the onslaught of Electric Vehicles, each of which sucks as much power daily as a single house!

www.recurrentauto.com/research/illinois-electric…

As of 7/15/23, there are 76,071 electric vehicles registeredin Illinois. That’s a 43% increase since this article was first published in 2022.

there are now 76,000+ EV’s in our State. 

Last week, when the Temperatures dropped below zero and the wind chills were in the minus 15 to minus 20 degrees, Chicago became the Poster Boy for EV disasters as the National news was flooded with images of EV’s stuck in the cold with no power, dead batteries, no power sources and drivers in life threatening conditions. We were the laughing stock of the Country and rightfully so.   

It’s so cold, Teslas are struggling to charge in Chicago : NPR

Now a major source of our heat and power, Natural gas, is under attack by the folks who have no idea what it’s like to be cold or need to cook food, who’ve never lived through a power outage or a tornado or a blizzard. 

Save the environment, my left gluteal muscle. China is building dozens of new coal fired plants every year, Indonesia happily throws all of its garbage into the Pacific, and the planet can’t provide enough silver to support the electronics industry much less the production of EV’s and Solar panels, not to mention what Lithium mining is doing to the planet.

It is all about disregarding the facts and shoving something down the populations’ throats that most of the population does not want, need, or would ever consent to.  So much for “democracy’ — they didn’t ask us because they knew the answer would be “NO”.  

Could Chicago be first major Midwestern city to give gas the boot? | Grist

My Dying Cat and A Thanksgiving Show of Love

Thanksgiving Day November 25, 2021

My cat Samson is dying. 

When the vet saw him two weeks ago he thought that Sam needed a tooth pulled.  He drew blood and said that they would check to confirm that Sam was healthy enough to survive the anesthesia required for dental surgery.  At that time Sam’s tongue was protruding a little bit which was the indicator to me that I take him in for a check-up.  They scheduled the surgery for this coming Friday morning, nearly two weeks after I first brought Sam in.  The Vet is so busy that that is the first appointment he had available for the procedure. 

I brought Sam back in this past Sunday because I thought he was getting worse too fast.  Again he was checked out and the vet said wait until this Friday. 

Wednesday morning I heard Sam cry out in pain.  It woke me up.  When I found him his tongue was sticking out almost a half inch and I knew something was really wrong.  I was unable to get him into see his regular vet due to their schedule.  I took him to another vet.  This vet identified the tumor and agreed that Sam was dehydrated and losing weight because of being unable to eat.  He offered to keep Sam for a few days, rehydrate him and give him pain meds.  The cost was over $1500. 

I had him rehydrate Sam and brought my little guy home to see if I could use anything I had here to help him.  I asked them for a small syringe so I could slip water and food into Sam’s mouth, which they gave me. 

If you’ve taken care of a sick cat then you know how awful it was trying to get even simple water, in small squirts, into his mouth. I blended some of the stuff I have here and made a slurry of it to insert with the syringe.  Sam was neither cooperative nor happy about the whole procedure.  I got some of it into him and eventually let him go off to bed. 

This morning before I called for him I set up the large dog crate I have (for the Airbnb folks) with a small litter box and blankets.  When he finally came into the kitchen, I picked him up and realized that he was bleeding from his mouth and that his tongue was turning blue.  I did what I could for him, including setting him up with a Rife therapy, and left to have Thanksgiving dinner with a friend. 

When I returned he actually seemed better.  I tried to slip more nutrition into his mouth with the little syringe.  That’s when I saw even more blood come out.  I called the vet’s office and said I would keep the appointment in the morning so that we could put him down. I came upstairs to the office to get away from his calls of pain and to look up feline oral anatomy.

Through out this as you don’t need much imagination to believe, I was often in tears.  Sam is the smartest cat I’ve had.  He had been a buddy to me, going up and down the stairs during the remodeling, in and out to the yard, sitting by the fire pit in the summer and greeting me every day when I get out of the shower and when I come home.  He learned how to tell me what he wanted and I learned how to get it for him.  Losing him will leave a silent hole in my life.  Add that to Randy’s death just a month ago and the grief/loss/loneliness has been daunting to get through. 

When I came upstairs to do some research about feline it was because I had a sudden inspiration:  if Dr. McDavitt could excise some of the tumor tissue and allow Sam’s tongue to function somewhat normally, there was a chance that I could reverse the cancer.  So I wanted to see what the anatomy was like.  I wanted to know what and how to ask. 

I had been in the study before I left for Thanksgiving to get my purse.  I’d walked into the space did whatever, and then turned around and left for my friend’s house.  When I got home late this afternoon I’d gone right down into the basement to check on him.  I did not go up to the first floor. 

When I opened the door to the first floor this evening I stopped completely when I saw this: 

 

How this book fell onto the floor in that exact position; how the funeral card from my mother’s death in 1998 fell on the floor in that exact position I do not know.  I did not place them there.

This is a small miracle, but a powerful one.  I know who’s watching over me, who’s guiding me through all of this and who’s love continues to bless me.  Whatever happens with Samson it will be the best thing possible and a blessing. 

I TRIED TO GO HOME TODAY 10.13.2021

I had to go down to 181st & Halsted this afternoon.  Met a client at 2:30 there at the Panera’s and we had one of those fun conversations where you get a focused amount of business done and enjoy yourselves too.  It was raining so we used that as an excuse to hang out and just chat until late in the afternoon.  As I was settling back into my car for the drive out of the parking lot and back to Palos I got the message to go to Colin’s grave and visit.  It was only a mile or so away.  So I drove over to the Homewood Gardens cemetery on Ridge Road. 

I wondered if it would still be open and when it would close.  I’d forgotten that it had no gates, just a gatehouse and 2 simple entrances off of Ridge.  What was nice was that I knew exactly how to find his grave.  Back in the far corner of the cemetery.  I looked for the infamous bench with his name on it, saw it and said a quiet Thank You for its presence, a visual reminder of so many sad things. 

I stood for a long time looking at the Memorial for Sam Angelich, his 6 month old son Sam and on the far right of the tombstone, his grandson and my nephew Colin Sam Ehlers.  The tombstone is a burgundy/orange color and it was surrounded by large piles of Pin Oak leaves.  They too were burgundy/orange and brown.  The rain had soaked everything and the leaves never moved and were silent as I stood there, shuffling my feet occasionally.  Because the cemetery is so old, and was in a far flung area when it was started, not only is it hilly, the trees are huge with age and everywhere.  Unlike where my folks are buried, this place has a calm about it that is healing and nurturing.   I was moved to take a few pictures of the tombstone knowing I would send it to Colin’s Mom, who now lives out of State. 

I turned around and saw a silver sedan pull over and stop on the far south side of the area. I sensed, because it was late in the afternoon (rush hour) and probably close to closing that this was an employee checking to see who was in the place and what was I up too.  Eventually I got into the Subaru and slowly drove off.  Only then did the silver car leave and return to the area by the Maintenance shed in the cemetery’s Southeast corner.

I got onto Ridge road and drove through the Quarry into Thornton, turning on the block before Williams to go into the old neighborhood past Bozo’s Hot Dog Stand.  It was still there, but closed and looking abit delapadated.  Turned right on Hunter Street and mentally gasped at how huge the building at 213 South had become.  Current owners have built a full 2nd story on it.  I’ve seen it before, but this time its size startled me and erased any urge to stop.  I went straight down Hunter into Brownelle Woods and turned around in the parking lot.  There was one car parked there, but no one was in it—out hiking or whatever. 

I stopped half way back to the entrance and got out of the car to go look at the empty filed that was there.  I knew from hanging out in that field watching the Fire Departments have annual battles with the pumper trucks to see whose hose pressure was stronger.  They’d suspend a metal ball on a wire, hung way high up to my little kid’s eye and do sorta’ a fireman’s version of tug of war over getting the ball to the other guy’s side.  Silly fun and a big event back in the day.  Tucked back in there was the farmer’s field that we use to go take pickles out of and eat raw. 

As I walked over to the field I noticed that the flagstone perimeter of the driveway’s border was slightly askew, the stones covered with that black stuff that means they are very old.  I was about to step up onto the flagstones for a little bit closer look when I realized that there was a White-tailed doe watching me off to my right.  I stood still, put my hands in my pockets and started to tell her my stories of the area.  She politely listened for a few minutes, licking her lips and gauging who I was and the threat level she was in.  When I got a little teary eyed about the history of the place she decided to meander off to the right and into a small cluster of trees.  Her fawn was off to my left and he stayed and watched me until I left. 

Driving back north on Hunter I saw how dingy and used the houses and everything looked. There didn’t seem to be the ‘life’ I knew from before thriving there.  It felt dull and struggling.   Carl Johnson has a pair of pickups parked on the north side of the house.  He still has the old asphalt like shingles on the building.  The old oak that had the basketball hoop opposite our driveway is gone.  He used to beat me at hang-man there all the time. 

Then I drove over to the Brewery by the creek.  It’s been renovated into a condo building that’s four stories high and directly next to the creek.  I spent some time there thinking about when Dad had his pop stored there, about how haunted the old place was.  Some of the old building remains and is now a bar/restaurant.  Wondered if the Condo folks had the old ghosts show up occasionally.  Wondered how they could enjoy their balconies, perched right there over the creek and its population of mosquitoes. 

When I left I headed across the bridge, there’s a traffic light there now (!) and turned right to try and find the house that belongs to the Librarian who I loved so much, Ms. Templan. 

The whole tour was a process of realizing the scenes I remembered were just that.  Everything was familiar, and everything was different.  Although I’d experienced this before today’s tour was different.  The impact and realizations were deeper, more severe, more tender. More clarifying. 

Home to me will always be the same, a place only in my memory; I was so lucky but I’ve lost so much that can’t be shared or replaced. In their place is a feeling that can’t be taught and requires years to acquire/ripen.   

How innocent were the days that I lived in Thornton.  How safe and protected my life and how remarkable that was in that era.  How grateful I am for the gifts of that time.   Is this true?   Or is it just a biased memory?  Nope, true.  I know the innocence of the era, stunningly difficult to find now.  I know the caliber of the people in that area in that era.  Findable now, but certainly more difficult.  

Was I naive?  Of course.  I was primed to believe that the whole of the Planet was as safe and open and honest as the four blocks that I grew up on were.  That the adventures were only going to be as dramatic as the ones we had in the forest preserves finding dead turtles and falling off logs, spitting on mosquito bites to stop the itch and hunting, drying and then ‘smoking’ cattails from the bushes because that’s what kept those mosquitoes away. I didn’t learn that change would always come. Always.

Nothing would ever keep change away.  Nothing.    

January 20, 2021 – RESPONSE

I want to take you up on the invitation to express how I feel, which is very grim.  As someone who listened in horror to the radio reports of President Kennedy’s murder I have hoped for a better world for a long time. 

I tried to do my part to make it better, even getting my license as a doctor and working with folks to heal their pain and return their life to normal.  Along the way I encountered betrayal after betrayal in both my personal life and in my professional life.  Each time I picked myself up and moved on.

Slowly I began to understand that there was evil in our world.  Fortunately not much in mine, but still its presence became clearer.

After learning that ‘soon’ the energies would lighten/brighten ‘should’ I recite the right prayer/incantation/mantra and ‘change’ my style of eating/drinking/living/acting/thinking  then the good stuff, i.e., no wars, no tragedies, no taxes, no child abuse/slavery/torture, etc.,  would be ours. 

Ha!

This moment feels like one of the worst betrayals of all.  After listening to one lovely ‘voice’ after another, each one saying “soon”, “should” and the best of the worse, “change” I am clear that there is no end to these cycles of promise and betrayal.

I was ready for the knowing and it has not shown up – again. 

I am left with the grim awareness that, once again, I have to take a deep breath and practice putting one foot in front of the other until the dread and the pain become shadows trailing behind me, not next to me.  I’ve done it before, I can do it again. 

But this time feels different.  I’m not jumping off a bridge, shooting myself or quitting in any other way. 

I am focusing on how to use all the stuff I’ve learned to move beyond this physical life/3D life. 

“Hope, belief, and faith prove nothing.”  (T.T.Braun, 2014 )

Growing Where They Planted Me.

OK, so I don’t know who ‘they’ are…well actually I do, but more on that later.

One of my favorite cartoons is that of an elephant sitting at a Grand Piano on a concert stage The voice bubble says, “What am I doing here, I’m a flute player”.

And that’s what I felt like realizing that I had gotten planted in the boonies of this urban environment. Totally not what I wanted, but then little did I understand who, or what, was in charge.

It all started because I had my degree and did not wnat to work for anyone else. So set out to start my own business.

I was looking for a physical site to open the business. I had a lease all ready to sign, but I wanted to make one last exploratory trip to make sure that the location was one that I would be happy with for years or decades or whatever…businesses in that era were not exactly portable.

Off I drove, and on a whim took the left turn instead of the right turn when got into this area. I drove just a few miles, headed west on the main street — in an area that I thought would be great, but had never explored this sector of the region — and I pulled into an empty parking lot, on the north side of the street, in front of a building with only one vacant unit and a sign that said, “For Rent”. I knew, I just knew, that was the building/space that I was supposed to rent and start my business.

It’s hard for me to imagine anyone not knowing the feeling of certainty that I felt. If you don’t that’s alright, just unfortunate. If you do, you know that there is no ignoring that knowing. Once you acknowledge it you enter a vortex of ‘everything falling into place’ which is exactly what happened to me. My business stayed in that place for almost 40 years.

At first I tolerated the long drive to the office on a daily basis. Ha! We have only two seasons here, Winter and Construction, and Construction started as I signed the lease. The commute was a bore, how many rear trunks do you need to see before you have seen them all? Sigh. I started to look for housing close to the business to avoid the commute and found first a local apartment and about a year later a condo.

Then one day I realized that I was living in the suburbs! The clients required lots of teaching, were politically not my style and few of them had ever heard an opera or classical music. A lot of them had hearing damage from music that was electric and loud, way too loud. The sidewalks rolled up about 10 pm and all the businesses close their doors by then too. What!

What the heck? I’m a city girl. I belong where the heart of the city is, where there are events, folks my age and politics, concerts, bars and dancing and staying up all night, etc., etc. With a business to run and a mortgage to pay there was no fast escape. I was forced to try and figure out why I was planted where I was planted. Totally not my choice.

Or was it?

I came to understand both me and the purpose and value and beauty of where I was planted. I’ll write about that next.