Tuesday, May 19, 2026
Do not be concerned with the faults of other persons. Do not see others' faults with a hateful mind. There is an old saying that if you stop seeing others' faults, then naturally seniors and venerated and juniors are revered. Do not imitate others' faults; just cultivate virtue. Buddha prohibited unwholesome actions, but did not tell us to hate those who practice unwholesome actions.
“That sadness—the sadness of loss—is a different flavor than the sadness of reckoning. The sadness of reckoning feels visceral and angry and tinged with violence. It feels healable, somehow, with revenge or justice.
But the sadness of a lost childhood feels like yearning, impossible desire. It feels like a hollow, insatiable hunger.
I’d spent
my life telling myself I didn’t need a mommy or a daddy. But now I was
beginning to realize that this hunger isn’t childish—it is a universal,
primal need. We all want to be taken care of, and that’s okay. The woman
who appears to me when I meditate, in her soft, baggy clothes—she isn’t
quite the same as a parent, and she never will be. But she takes me
into her arms and whispers, “I want to love you.” I lean in and let
her.”
―
Stephanie Foo,
What My Bones Know: A Memoir of Healing from Complex Trauma page 231
The drug dealers are back and they are attracting a parade of addicted misfits. Mother's Day was a demented circus, a steady stream of drug addled humans teetering in the parking lot, terrifying everyone. The neighbors have been complaining to me over the fence, There's a woman living in the car! She was nodding off at 5AM! Yesterday when we came out with the dogs at 4:45AM, my husband was looking up at the Mars and Saturn. The dealer hidden in his car thought we were looking at him and he jumped out to identify himself. It's creepy and unsettling. We are all rattled. Every day we don't know what we're going to see when we pull into the shared parking lot. The daily zombie apocalypse. As long as the landlords get their rent money, they do not care.
Stephanie Foo's Memoir: What My Bones Know
I learned two critical things that day. First: Just because the wound doesn’t hurt doesn’t mean it’s healed. If it looks good and it feels good, it should be all good, right? But over the years I’d smoothed perfect white layers of spackle over gaping structural holes.
And the second thing I learned was: My parents didn’t love me. It's not as if I hadn't suspected this. There was that whole childhood abandonment thing, after all. But in my head, there were reasons and excuses for this. And now, for the first time, I saw the truth—the real reason they could not love me, had never loved me. I believe that they hated themselves too much to love me; their sadness made them to selfish to see me at all. The reason I hadn't been loved had nothing at all to do with me or my behavior It had everything to do with them.
There are people who love me. I will be cared for And I have my capable self. Everything is going to be fine.
My parents didn't love me, and it's okay.
Monday, May 18, 2026
George Bilgere Poem
A Nice Place to Live
This summer, as the missiles went back and forth
between the one sobbing angry country and the other,
I went from the shallow end to the deep end,
my evening laps at the public pool,
wondering if there was something wrong with me
for not hating anyone that much.
Not the guy in the Hummer
who cut me off at the exit yesterday,
then gave me the finger.
Not my father, even in my worst moments.
Not even my ex-wife.
I’m a hater from the bush leagues, a small-time hater,
although I have, it’s true, gotten myself
through some long patches of self-pity
more or less on hatred alone.
Then I forget. Lose interest.
It’s called being white
and well-off in America,
where it’s all just handed to you
by a nice brown server with no English,
or a white person with bad teeth
and no dental plan.
And the gravy train is just so smooth
that when the big ideas—the ones
you would have died for, or even killed for,
the ones that take root and flower
only in the harshest desert climes,
wither inside you and die and turn to little figs
at the edge of your plate,
and you don’t even like figs—
then it’s time for a stroll down to Murphy’s
and a couple of beers with Roger
under the evening news.
And tonight it’s a weeping bearded man
holding the tailfin of a rocket
that killed his son,
a rocket made by all of us
sitting here at the bar tonight,
waiting to turn it to the Indians game.
Nice people, basically.
We don’t even bother to hate him.
Monkey Mind
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Sunday, May 17, 2026
Gabriel Barsawme: True freedom is the quiet, radical act of slowing down —
We do not need to fix our brokenness. We need to hear it.
https://gabrielbarsawme.substack.com/p/the-freedom-to-fall-apart
Gabriel Barsawme is a Licensed Social Worker, researcher, and ordained minister working at the intersection of psychology, theology, and philosophy.
Saturday, May 16, 2026
Loved this book
Not My Father's Son: A Memoir Book by Alan Cumming Not My Father's Son is a memoir by actor Alan Cumming that explores his difficult childhood in Scotland, marked by an abusive father, and his journey to uncover family secrets, prompted by a genealogy show. The book intertwines his past with his present, revealing shocking truths about his father and his maternal grandfather, leading to a profound re-evaluation of his identity and family history. It's known for its honest, witty, and moving account of overcoming trauma and finding peace.
