Interview with Jack Kornfield on ‘Lamp in Darkness’

Candles courtesy Wikimedia Commons. Other photos today are courtesy of Jack Kornfield and his publisher.Jack Kornfield’s pilgrimage as a Buddhist teacher spans half a century of tumultuos world events. Born among the first Baby Boomers, he came of age in the ’60s, trained for years in Asia—and has been a beloved spiritual teacher for decades.

In Part 1 of our coverage of his new A Lamp in the Darkness we published a brief excerpt to introduce this very practical new book with audio meditation-starters.

In our interview, today,
Jack speaks for himself …

HIGHLIGHTS OF OUR INTERVIEW
WITH BUDDHIST TEACHER JACK KORNFIELD
ON A LAMP IN THE DARKNESS

DAVID: Let’s start with your home base: Spirit Rock. Tell us about it.

JACK: Spirit Rock is one of the largest meditation centers in the West in the Buddhist tradition. We train in mindfulness and compassion practices. We have thousands of people who come, not as Buddhists, but who come because they want to quiet their minds and use these extraordinary trainings to improve their own lives and the world. I am a founding teacher.

DAVID: This new book is full of training practices. On the audio disk that comes with the book, readers actually hear your voice leading them in some of these meditations. We will publish a brief excerpt of the book to introduce readers to the overall purpose. As I began going through it, I made a note to myself in the margin: “Buddhism 101.” Is that a fair catch phrase to describe this practical book?

JACK: No, I don’t see this book as Buddhism at all, actually. I see it as offering fundamental teachings of the human heart. This is universal and extremely accessible. This allows us to take our difficulties small or large and discover we’re not alone in them. We share this journey of working through joys and difficulties with so much of humanity. In the book, I am showing people that it is possible not only to survive, but to transform our difficulties into courage and in the process open up our lives. What’s so important about this book is that it offers about 10 different inner practices and trainings that people can use to relax their bodies, learn to live in their bodies, learn about forgiveness. There is a lot here, but I do see it as universal. Those who come to this book—whether they’re in a time of difficulty or they just want to learn more about riding with the waves of life—will find some of the best practices I’ve learned through the decades that can help people quite immediately and effectively. These practices at the heart of this book are offered in a nonsectarian and very accessible way.

BUDDHISM’S ‘WARM REPUTATION’

DAVID: I have circled the world writing about religion and talking to people about their daily spiritual lives. One thing I find, wherever I go, is that Buddhism holds a special status among the world’s religions. Many people will take issue with one religious tradition or another, but most people tend to say good things about Buddhism. Why does your tradition seem to enjoy this almost universally warm reputation?

JACK: To the extent that people really are respectful and open to Buddhist teaching, I can say that, at first, Buddhism doesn’t require a blind belief. You don’t have to exchange one set of religious beliefs for another. Buddhist teachings are immediate and pragmatic. The Buddha says: Take these and see if they are of benefit to you. The point is to become a Buddha and not a Buddhist. You can become a Buddha in the Christian community or a Muslim community or even an atheist community. Our classes and retreats at Spirit Rock are full of people who still are faithful Catholics or Jews or Muslims. We have priests and ministers who come to learn the transformative practices of forgiveness and mindfulness, of turning our hearts into zones of peace even in the midst of the world’s struggles.

DAVID: It’s easy to mistake what we’re talking about as an awfully somber pathway. But there’s a great deal of humor in Buddhism. I’ve covered the Dalai Lama’s appearances a number of times, over the years, and he is as famous for laughing as he is for saying wise things. How can such a serious tradition, which is so closely tied to compassion, wind up so—full of humor and joy?

JACK: In part that’s because Buddhist psychology and teaching start with basic human goodness. Instead of original sin—we focus on original goodness. We are born with a beautiful spirit that gets covered over by protective mechanisms. These layers of protection form because of traumas and difficulties that we encounter. Yet, under all of this is an inner goodness—a kind and compassionate spirit. Buddhist practice is to see the Buddha nature in ourselves and in others. That’s one reason the Dalai Lama laughs and people love to be around him. If he can keep his joyful spirit, even under the weight of the tragedies in Tibet and around the world, then perhaps we can, too.

That does not mean that things can’t get extremely hard in life. We go through periods when it feels like we’re dying. What we need to avoid is allowing that pain to turn us toward distractions and addictions. Instead, we need to lean toward the difficulty, like finding our center in a storm and leaning into the wind. In this way, we can allow ourselves to go through experiences that in some ways are deaths—deaths of the way things used to be in our lives. And when we do move through something like that, then we discover the indestructible within us. I’m not being a Pollyanna in saying this. I’m talking about something that has been known through many generations. There are thousands of generations who lived before us who have given us the capacity to face misfortune.

REDISCOVERING TRUE JOY IN LIFE

DAVID: That is a good description of what people will find in your book. You take joy—seriously. For example, you include a few jokes in your book. It’s notable that, like the Christian New Testament and the contemporary Christian writer C.S. Lewis, you find joy one of life’s great virtues. Is that fair to say? One of your central goals is rediscovering joy?

JACK: Perhaps this is the most important message in the book. We have our measure of sorrow and we need to learn to weep our tears honorably. In the Lakota tradition, tears are considered holy. Tears are potent. But tears are not the end of our story. The rain clears. If we become too loyal to cultivating our own suffering then we can mistake sorrow as defining us. But, that is not what we really are.

No one can imprison your human heart and spirit, if you refuse to let that happen. The point of these practices is not grim duty, but to free the spirit—to allow us to see the lavender color in the rain puddle at the end of a long day as the sun is setting. We want to see the miraculous arc of tangerine opening up across the sky as a new day is beginning. Without this renewal of the spirit, all the rest of it doesn’t matter. Joy is the treasure of humanity.

DAVID: You were born in auspicious times. I was looking at your biography before our interview and, for example, you were born in 1945. You were among the very first Baby Boomers. You graduated Dartmouth in 1967, a tumultuous year in American history—there were urban rebellions in some U.S. cities that year but ’67 was also the first “Human Be In” at Golden Gate Park and the musical Hair opened. That’s just one example of a milestone year in your life. In the span of your life, you’ve lived to see the end of the Cold War, the new millennium and this strange and violent post-9/11 decade.

JACK: I am so grateful to have lived in this period. At times, it has been terribly troubled with wars and assassinations and continuing racism and so forth. On the other hand, it’s been an enormously creative time in which the world has been woven together in a worldwide Web and the consciousness of women and of our environment has grown and there has been a great rebirth in interest in the contemplative life and inner training. Some of this comes from many, many years of work on bringing Buddhist teaching to the West; but some of this comes from the great outpouring of modern neuroscience. We are learning that the nervous system and the brain truly can respond in positive ways to these kinds of trainings.

We can prepare ourselves by learning techniques that can help us. The world may seem wonderful at one moment, then we all go through terrible times. I have an enormous trust. The poet Pablo Neruda said, “You can cut all the flowers, but you cannot keep the spring from coming.”

The final questions in our interview were about life after the 9/11 decade—and Jack’s responses were published closer to the 9/11 anniversary.

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Originally published at readthespirit.com, an online journal covering religion and cultural diversity.

Jack Kornfield: Finding A Lamp in the Darkness

WE CAN READ JACK KORNFIELD’s new book, A Lamp in the Darkness, on a Kindle or an iPad (as shown above), but the audio tracks of Jack leading short meditations are only available with the book version. Images of Kornfield and the Spirit Rock website are courtesy of Jack Kornfield.Jack Kornfield has brought Buddhism to countless Americans—maybe millions after 40 years as a leading Buddhist scholar. He teaches through books, including a 2004 collaboration with Bible scholar Marcus Borg that we highly recommend: Jesus and Buddha: The Parallel Sayings. And he regularly teaches in person at the Spirit Rock retreat center that he co-founded.
TODAY, we recommend his latest: A Lamp in the Darkness: Illuminating the Path Through Difficult Times, which you can order right now via this link or by clicking on the images at right.

KORNFIELD ON HEALING AFTER 9/11 DECADE:
Our regular readers will recall Jack Kornfield’s spiritually challenging reflection on sprouting compassion again, after the trauma of living with global fear. Many readers praised that 9/11 meditation by Kornfield, the text of which came from the in-depth interview we will publish later this week.

TODAY, we’re sharing a short excerpt of “A Lamp in the Darkness” to illustrate why we so highly recommend this resource for—as the subtitle says—“illuminating the path through difficult times.” No, you don’t have to “become a Buddhist” to appreciate this volume. In this book, Kornfield has gleaned his lessons from timeless spiritual truths, as he explains in our interview later this week.

EXCERPT FROM
JACK KORNFIELD’S
A LAMP IN THE DARKNESS

THERE IS praise and blame, gain and loss, pleasure and pain, fame and disrepute. Did you think this would not happen to you?
The Buddha

If you’re reading these words, you’ve probably hit hard times. Perhaps you’ve lost a loved one, or maybe you’ve lost your job, or received a difficult diagnosis, or someone close to you has. Maybe you’re divorcing or you’re in bankruptcy or you’ve been injured, or your life is falling apart in any number of ways. Maybe daily life itself has become too much for you—or not enough. But even in the best of times there’s plenty to worry about: seemingly endless wars and violence, racism, our accelerating environmental destruction. In difficult times, personally or collectively, we often begin to wonder not only how we can get through this difficult patch: we begin to question existence itself.

One of the most difficult things about hard times is that we often feel that we are going through them alone. But we are not alone. In fact, your life is only possible because of the thousands of generations before you, survivors who have carried the lamp of humanity through difficult times from one generation to another. Even Jesus had hard times, and Buddha did as well. At times they were hounded, threatened, physically attacked, and despised. Yet their gifts outshone all their difficulties. And now, as you read these words, you can feel yourself as part of the stream of humanity walking together, finding ways to carry the lamp of wisdom and courage and compassion through difficult times.

Several years ago I was giving a talk on compassion with Pema Chodron in a large hall in San Francisco filled with at least 3,000 participants. At one point, a young woman stood up and spoke in the most raw and painful way about her partner’s suicide several weeks before. She was experiencing a gamut of complex emotions, such as agonizing grief and confusion, guilt and anger, loss and fear. As I listened to her I could feel her loneliness, and so I asked the group when she finished, “How many of you in this room have experienced the suicide of someone in your family, or someone really close to you?” More than 200 people stood up. I asked her to look around the room at the eyes of those who had gone through a similar tragedy and survived. As they gazed at one another, everyone in the room could feel the presence of true compassion, as if we were in a great temple. We all felt the suffering that is part of our humanity, and part of the mystery that we share. But it’s not only in great difficulties like the suicide of a loved one that we touch this truth: in the midst of our daily confusions, self-doubts, conflicts, and fears, we need support, reminders to trust in ourselves. We can trust. We were designed to journey through the full measure of beauty and sorrows in life and survive.

Come back later this week for our interview with Jack Kornfield, one of the world’s most important Buddhist teachers.

Please help us to reach a wider audience

Conversation is far better than the dangerous shouting matches we’ve been witnessing in our global culture. So, please, tell a friend to start reading along with you!
We welcome your Emails at [email protected]
We’re also reachable on Twitter, Facebook, AmazonHuffington PostYouTube and other social-networking sites. 
You also can Subscribe to our articles via Email or RSS feed.
Plus, there’s a free Monday morning Planner newsletter you may enjoy.

Originally published at readthespirit.com, an online journal covering religion and cultural diversity.

Praying for Our World: Turning 9/11 memories to hope

HOPE IN ACTION! Top: NASA image of the world. Second: One of many young people who added lines to this prayer on newsprint pads at A-OK. Third: Old friends gathered; new friendships formed. Bottom: The A-OK banner. A-OK photos courtesy of coordiantor Gail Katz.We invited men, women and children to contribute to a prayer that starts with these simple words:
“I hope for a world where …”

You responded with emails, Facebook posts, hand-written letters and, on 9/11, people wrote their lines on pads of paper set up on easels during a huge urban service project. Today, we are sharing three examples of what people have done with this idea. As we explain in the first link, below, you are welcome to add your lines to this ongoing project.
AND, most importantly—you are free to share these prayers far and wide. (Just include a link to the original readthespirit.com version as you share a copy.)

Read the Original Invitation: This story explains the project, which you’re still welcome to try.
Turning 9/11 into a Day of Hope:
Learn how young and old voiced their hopes at AOK Detroit.
A Retirement Community Prays
: This prayer came from the Chelsea Retirement Community.
Women of WISDOM:
The creators of the Friendship and Faith project gathered their prayers, too.

Pray: ‘I Hope
for a World Where …’

WHAT IS A-OK DETROIT? Following an example from Syracuse, New York, Detroit now is in its second year as a national hub for creative, community-wide responses to the 9/11 anniversary. A-OK is a convenient way to remember the focus: Acts-Of-Kindness.
Event coordinator Gail Katz explained it this way:
The aim of A-OK Detroit is to transform 9/11 from a day of mourning into a day of caring and service by bringing together diverse community groups with common missions of unity, peace, and mutual understanding. The A-OK mission is to change 9/11 into a day for people to work side by side to find our commonality as human beings, to reduce myths and stereotypes about the “other” and increase respect and understanding. In Detroit volunteers from a wide range of groups met at one of Detroit’s major centers of community rebirth—the Focus: HOPE campus—to spend a day serving in nutrition, education and community revitalization efforts. (Read more about A-OK Detroit at the Interfaith Leadership Council of Metropolitan Detroit.)

THE A-OK DETROIT VERSION: TRANSFORMING 9/11

I pray for a world where …
No one is picked on
No one is made fun of
No one is discriminated against
There is no room for poverty or war
No room for racism or phonies
No room for gaps through which we let the vulnerable fall.

I hope for a world where …
We learn
We realize we are made for goodness
We finally see that everyone is brilliant
All children receive a quality education
We can keep learning throughout life
And we can find meaningful jobs to support our families.

I hope for a world where …
Justice is a given everyday—for everyone
Where injustice is never met with apathy
A world where people don’t take things for granted
Where we make an effort because we want to,
not because we are trying to outdo anyone.
A world of teamwork
A world where compassionate service is common enough that
we all may find courage to be who we really are.

I hope for a world where …
We can trust each other
Neighbors care for neighbors near and far
A world where we finally understand each other
Where people are judged by their character.

I hope for a world where …
Peace is such a universal priority
That we all work toward peace.
Peace happens.
Peace is everywhere.
And peace is there for everyone.

Originally published at readthespirit.com, an online journal covering religion and cultural diversity.

Why are these college kids laughing? A rabbi???

CAUGHT ON VIDEO! College kids laughing at Rabbi Bob Alper. (Photo courtesy of Bob Alper.)ReadTheSpirit is nationally known as an advocate of peace and Peacemakers.
So, we had to respond when we heard the news: “Bob’s on college campuses—and he’s killing!”
Translation: This is comedian-speak for “He’s going over big! They’re laughing like crazy!”
This bizarre chemistry is true: White-haired, bespectacled rabbi—plus—college kids—equals laughs.
There’s nothing more helpful in peacemaking than laughter.

As Editor of ReadTheSpirit, I spoke at various 9/11-related events in recent weeks. During one Question-and-Answer session with a college audience, a man asked, “I’m concerned about all the jokes I’m hearing about religion. I think some of the Christian-targeted humor is offensive. And there really aren’t any Muslim comedians are there? What do you think about the state of humor when it comes to religion?”

My answer: Book Bob Alper and his friends in the Laugh in Peace comedy tour!
Bob Alper, whose appeal among the young is obvious in this video (which you can watch below), works with comedian (and New York City Baptist pastor) Susan Sparks and Muslim comedians as well.
Want more? Here’s Bob Alper’s Schedule page, where you track his tours nationwide.
Here’s Susan Sparks’ Laugh in Peace page, where you can learn more about her part in these joint shows.

CLICK on the video screen below to watch Alper in action with college kids.
No video screen in your version of this story? Click the headline to reload the story and the video should appear. Or, visit Bob Alper’s website where you can watch this video and others.

Originally published at readthespirit.com, an online journal covering religion and cultural diversity.

John Dominic Crossan brings us ‘Challenge of Jesus’

JOHN DOMINIC CROSSAN teaches via video in The Challenge of Jesus. Image courtesy of www.FaithAndReason.org

John Dominic Crossan:
‘Trying to re-old Christianity’

John Dominic Crossan is so famous from his appearances in TV documentaries about the Bible that he often is stopped in airports and other public places by fans who want to shake his hand. Viewers tend to like him because it is obvious that Crossan loves the central figure in his life’s research: Jesus. But, as a former Catholic priest and a lifelong scholar of Christian history, Crossan also is convinced that Christianity is in danger of losing its original message for the world.

“Now, we’ve got to radically change what we’re saying to the world about Christianity,” Dom Crossan says in a new interview with ReadTheSpirit, which will be published later this week. “But you’ve got to understand: I’m not talking about a message that is new. I’m not trying to re-new the church. You might say I’m trying to re-old Christianity. I want us to return to the original, real and radical challenge Jesus posed to a world dominated by the Roman empire.”

Crossan is the author and star of an elaborate new small-group Bible study with both a full-color book and video messages from Crossan. The Challenge of Jesus couldn’t have come at a more crucial moment in American history. The post-9/11 decade is dawning and Crossan hopes that Christianity can get back on track—and help the whole world get back on a more peaceful course.

“After 9/11/2001, I remember that big service at the National Cathedral in Washington D.C., but I remember thinking: We’ve just missed a tremendous opportunity for leadership as a country. Someone needed to stand up in that cathedral and say: Today, we have joined the pain of the rest of the world. Most countries in this world have been invaded, desecrated, attacked. In that day of 9/11/2001, we understood the pain in our world. We could have invited people all around the world to join with us—not under us—to move toward a better world. At that moment, the whole world was with us—even France. We missed an opportunity to move toward a different vision of how we can live together as people around the world.”

His new 16-week Bible study begins with an in-depth look at the Roman empire into which Jesus and the first Christians brought their startling message of hope and a different approach to human relations. In stark contrast to the Roman mantra of Religion-to-War-to-Victory-to-Peace, Jesus brought a vision of peaceful cooperation in building God’s kingdom. Roman emperors taught—as world leaders do today—that peace comes through war and victory. Jesus taught that peace comes through courage, compassion and a just distribution of God’s resources.

Excerpt: The Challenge of Jesus

By John Dominic Crossan

The study guide is a 160-page book, divided into 16 lessons with color maps, illustrations and photos. The DVDs include 16 lively illustrated talks by Crossan, filling a total of more than 4 hours. Any excerpt merely scratches the surface, but here are a few paragraphs from the opening chapter …

Image from The Challenge of Jesus DVD set.Before Jesus ever existed, there already was in the first century Mediterranean world a human being whose titles were Divine, Son of God, God Incarnate, God from God, Lord, Redeemer, Liberator, Savior of the World. Those were the titles of Caesar the Augustus, that is, Caesar the One To Be Worshiped.

What happens when the titles of the Emperor in Roman Imperial Theology are taken from Caesar and given to Jesus in Christian Jewish Theology? What has changed? Imagine somebody saying to Paul, “What do you mean that Jesus is the Savior of the World? Caesar is already that—so we already have a Savior of the World. Who needs a second one?” How and why, then, did Caesar get such a title, Savior of the World, or Augustus, or all those other divine titles?

Crossan then shows us through words and images how the leadership of the Roman empire violently broke apart into various political factions taking up arms against each other. Finally, there was a showdown that ended these deadly conflicts. Crossan writes …

One of the images of Actium from The Challenge of Jesus.The date was the 2nd of September, 31 BCE. The place was off Cape Actium, on the northwest corner of Greece. It was the fateful last round in Rome’s Civil Wars. On one side was Anthony, backed by the wealth and power of Cleopatra’s Egypt. On the other side was Octavian. He was not yet Augustus. He would be, in effect, Augustus, by that evening.

Crossan describes the battle and how Octavian, as he became Caesar Augustus, believed that Rome’s gods had sealed his victory. More than that, the Roman leadership came to believe that peace was only possible through war and victory. Crossan describes temples and other inscriptions carved in stone that proclaimed this program around the Roman world—and proclaimed Caesar’s divinity. Crossan writes …

Rome never claimed to have invented that program of peace through victory. They would only claim to have perfected it, to have received it at the will of the gods, to have universalized it to the whole world. Rome would have said that peace through victory was the way of the world, of civilization itself. What other way, Rome would have asked rhetorically, could you even get world peace except through world victory?

We are beginning to see clearly the incarnate program of Roman Imperial Theology. The first title given to Caesar is none of those divine ones I have mentioned up to this point. The first title on inscriptions is always Imperator—which we usually translate as Emperor—but it actually means Victor.

After a successful battle when the general addresses the troops, you can imagine the soldiers, as it were, beating with their swords on their shields: “Imperator! Imperator! Imperator!” It does not mean Emperor. It means Victor or Conqueror! When it became the first title in every inscription—usually abbreviated as IMP—you are making the claim that the Emperor is World Conqueror! It became the title of Caesar, and, thereafter, nobody else gets it except somebody who was part of his imperial family. You are making the claim that the only way you ever get to peace is through victory—and that victory is incarnate in Caesar.

The question we are going to ask is whether there is another way. Is victory the only way to peace? Is violence the only way to non-violence? Is there another way?

READ PART 2: Our interview with John Dominic Crossan.

Interested in The Challenge of Jesus?

Visit the www.FaithAndReason.org website, where you also can see a video clip.

Please connect with us and help us to reach a wider audience

Conversation is far better than the dangerous shouting matches we’ve been witnessing in our global culture. So, please, tell a friend to start reading along with you!
We welcome your Emails at [email protected]
We’re also reachable on Twitter, Facebook, AmazonHuffington PostYouTube and other social-networking sites. 
You also can Subscribe to our articles via Email or RSS feed.
Plus, there’s a free Monday morning Planner newsletter you may enjoy.

Originally published at readthespirit.com, an online journal covering religion and cultural diversity.

9/11 Reflections: Do you remember the crowds?

Photo courtesy Wikimedia Commons.Crowds were a distinctive part of the 9/11 experience ten years ago: first, the dust-covered crowds moving away from the fallen towers, then the crowds of people who showed up at houses of worship and memorial events all across America—and eventually the crowds of photographs honoring the lives lost in the towers. The image at right is just one example of a photo collage recalling those killed on 9/11/2001.

The Rev. Craig Goodwin is a Presbyterian pastor known nationally for his family memoir, Year of Plenty, which tells about a year he and his family dedicated to eating locally and also to showing concern for an impoverished community in Asia. You will enjoy our earlier interview with the Goodwins about their Year of Plenty.

YEAR OF PLENTY NEWS! The Goodwins have posted a study guide to help you discuss Year of Plenty. The new guide is free to download via a link in the right margin of the Year of Plenty blog.

NOW, Craig Goodwin closes out our 9/11 series:

9/11: Remembering
the Crowds

By Craig Goodwin

At Clear Lake Presbyterian in Houston, where I was a pastor at the time, the sanctuary was standing room only the weekend after the towers fell. I’ve never seen so many unfamiliar faces in worship and I remember such an earnest desire to connect with God. I was also struck by the half dozen Muslims who joined us that morning in an act of solidarity.

That season had the feel of revival and renewal in sanctuaries across the nation. Church leaders speculated that the religious landscape in America would never be the same again. But after a couple months—attendance at Clear Lake Presbyterian and most other churches in America returned to pre-9/11 levels. A recent USA Today article recently describes this slide back to the religious status quo:

“A decade later, the soulful response seems fleeting. Statistically, the rush to the pews was a mere blip in a long-standing trend away from traditional religious practice, according to tracking studies by The Barna Group, a Christian research company.”

Regardless of these trends, 9/11 still stands as a signpost that points us to our deepest longings and desires to connect with God and community. In the busy-ness and distractions of everyday life, it’s easy to forget.

So, as the 10-year anniversary approaches, it’s a helpful exercise to remember how those events opened us up to God and each other. Remember the grief and lament that we poured out in prayer because we didn’t know where else to turn. Remember how our hearts were softened toward our neighbors and forgiveness came a little easier. Remember how generous we were with hugs and loving concern. Remember how we committed to getting our priorities straight because life is precious and we only have so much time. Remember the questions about justice and peace and terror that drove us to our knees in repentance. Remember how, in our suffering, we were drawn to the cross of Jesus who suffered and died for a sin-broken world. Remember the clarifying moment when we were compelled to be at church because we knew it was a place of orientation and hope in the midst of disorientation and despair.

And let’s also remember that the status quo tugs at us and makes it hard to remember. It’s easy to get mixed up and lose sight of our most basic desire to know God.

May we never forget.

Table of Contents:
All of our 9/11 reflections you can use …

Originally published at readthespirit.com, an online journal covering religion and cultural diversity.

9/11 Reflections: Quaker songwriter Carrie Newcomer

This year, Carrie Newcomer is circling the world with her music, releasing an innovative album this autumn that combines her American musical traditions with Indian traditions. As a Quaker, the vocation of peacemaking runs thorughout her music. Visit www.CarrieNewcomer.com to learn more about the new album Everything Is Everything. The following 9/11 reflection is part of a longer interview with Carrie that ReadTheSpirit will publish in October, closer to the album’s release date.

Table of Contents:
All of our 9/11 reflections you can use …

9/11/2011: ‘Breath In, Breathe Out’

By Carrie Newcomer

The first song is called Breathe In Breathe Out, and it says that we must let some things go. That letting go process is not always easy. We may forgive once and then we think it’s all done. But, some experiences in our lives—and in our collective community life—we may breathe in and breathe out and let go. Then, we have to breathe in and breathe out, again. That’s part of this calling to a life of love. Some things you can let go once, but other things you have to leg go of—over and over and over again.

The song says, “I held anger like a coal … with the thought that I could throw it at someone.” I can understand the pull of that idea. There is a lot of energy that can come from our anger. Anger can motivate and push us forward—it can push an entire movement forward—but it’s not sustainable. It burns out. It’s not healthy for the long haul.

We all have love and compassion for the people we’ve loved and lost. We need to recognize and be grateful for all the folks who so selflessly helped after 9/11. But we collectively need to move on to the next decade. We need to ask now: How can we make the world a better place in this new decade? We can honor what’s gone before but we don’t want to live there for the rest of our lives. My own goal right now is to do my small piece, whatever I can do each day, to make the world a kinder place, a better place.

Here are the words to that song from the album that will be released later this year:

Breathe In Breathe Out

To live we learn what we love most,
Embrace it all and hold it close.
Breathe it in and breathe it out, let it go.

To live is to love so many things,
Fly on beautiful wax wings.
Breathe it in and breathe it out, let it go. 

Breathe it in and breathe it out, let it go.
Breathe it in and breathe it out, let it go, let it go.
Breath in breath out, let it go, let it go. 

I held anger like a coal,
Burning hot but did not let go,
With the thought that I could throw it at someone.
Such a hard lesson to learn,
My own hand was what got burned.
Breathe it in and breathe it out, Let it go.

Breathe it in and breathe it out, let it go.
Breathe it in and breathe it out, let it go, let it go.
Breath in breath out, let it go, let it go.

What is won is won,
What is done is done
Let it go.
What is real is real,
What we feel we feel
Then let go.

I saw one candle in the night,
Become a thousand lights.
Breathe it in and breathe it out, let it go.
Life is fleeting this I know,
Short and draped in marigolds.
Breathe it in and breathe it out, let it go.

Breathe it in and breathe it out, let it go.
Breathe it in and breathe it out, let it go, let it go.
Breath in breath out, let it go, let it go.

Care to read more with Carrie Newcomer?

In addition to her website, linked above, you may enjoy our last interview with Carrie Newcomer.

 (Originally published at readthespirit.com, an online journal covering religion and cultural diversity.)