ratzistarwars 300x290 Recap: Attachment bad, Star Wars all knowing, never piss off a writer.

So what have we learned this week? We’ve shared our experiences with the church and how we continue to work on our feelings related to this incredible betrayal.  Please understand, in some really fucked up way, we are thankful and grateful for this experience.  We have ultimately created a healthier relationship with God and look forward to sharing this with our kids.  We discussed the bigotry of the church and how they twist their beliefs and the message of Jesus to fit their homophobic agenda.  And all of this has to do with attachment. 

Lee says: ‘If you love something, set it free…’  I’m not referring to the Sting ditty but to the quote.  The words are not about breaking up as some believe but about attachment.  Being attached to things, places, routines and people creates anxiety and chaos in your life.  I’m not the one that get’s all Zen with you.  That’s Paul.  I’m talking simple psychological processing.  If you hold on to something with both hands and maintain all focus on this thing, then any change in the situation or threat to your hold will cause you anxiety.

Most people hate change. It’s understandable since most people have issues with attachment (I am not saying attachment disorders since my fellow psych professionals would be all up my ass for using a diagnosis incorrectly). The main cause of anxiety is change. The complications of grief or recovery or a simple break up are more due to the drastic change in one’s life and the attachment to the way life used to be. We cultivate our anxiety by finding new ways to make attachments and substituting one for another.  You ever heard of drug addicts finding Jesus in recovery?  You ever hear of rebound love? Did you think only Rainman freaks out if he doesn’t see Wapner at 3? 

Far be it from me to question someone’s conversion experience.  I am sure all drug addicts who find Jesus are genuinely moved just like Paul of Tarsus (from the Bible).  But even when we examine this story, the attachment still rings true.  He was the ‘Hebrew of Hebrews’.  He was the persecutor of Christians.  And one flash of light and the voice of Jesus later, he is the biggest Christian and the architect of the Christian revolution. A zealot.  An addict.  What’s the difference?  Isn’t fanaticism another form of attachment?

Another quote I like is ‘Opinions are like assholes…’ We become so attached to our point of view, our life, the way it is, that any deviation is an abomination. Life is change and we fight it all the way. We are convinced that any variation to our beliefs, lifestyle, or being, is wrong. Change is like New Coke. Don’t mess with our favorites and stay away from improving things as well. We like our sodas in the red can, we like our Oprah fat, we like our religions conservative, we like our principals accommodating and incompetent, we like our sex missionary and we like our families ‘traditional’.  What’s wrong with that?

Paul says: Everything is wrong with that. I my case, I seek out change just to break unnecessary attachments. I do not recommend it for everyone but there has to be an acknowledgement that things do change and we need to grab that change with the same vigor that we hold on to our attachments. If not, then change rolls over us and we become victims when we could be conquerors. If I learned anything from this experience, it is not to cling to the lemons nor to be attached to the lemonade but to revel in the new experience of setting up the booth. Or, to return to the all important Star Wars analogy, it’s not about whether Darth Vader is following the evil emperor or Yoda but his transformation within the Force. Who knew that all relationship advice could be found in Star Wars?

 

sharebookmarx Recap: Attachment bad, Star Wars all knowing, never piss off a writer.

darth priest A Buddhist and a Hindu walk into a church...

Paul says: My wife and I worked at the parish. My son went to school there. We were members of the church. People, who wished me peace on Sunday, compiled a dossier on my family on Monday. They ran a background check, called past employers, searched public records and contacted anyone that they saw as a questionable. When they were done, they produced a 110 page packet, complete with questions that they needed answered and accusations to scenarios that never happened, and gave it to the pastor, all without my knowledge. This was all done by parents, not employees, of the school. And, let me remind you, this job was at a church, not the CIA. This is the background that you need to follow me down the path of my unresolved anger. Let’s go take a walk.

Buddhist philosophy talks about transcending attachment to the material. I’m pretty good with this concept and try to diffuse it throughout my daily thought process. I am not attached to my house; it’s only concrete and I have insurance. Likewise, the car can be replaced. The place where the philosophy breaks down for me is with family. I am attached to my family. And these dickheads were fucking with my family.

At this point, you have read our stuff. You know that Lee and I are pretty progressive in our thinking but I must admit that down in my espiritu mundi consciousness, I see myself as the head of household, provider and daddy. Or in the vernacular of this week’s theme, I was attached to the role of alpha male. I was the pack leader of my family and this church was kicking my ass. At one point, I called my lawyer because, let’s face it, children punch and adults litigate. That really was not the path that I wanted to take but I needed to feel that I was doing something. In reality, Lee and I cried, raged and finally tucked tail and put our heads down.

Because of all the uproar that these squeaky wheels caused, all of our plans to generate new revenue streams stopped and, as a result, Lee and I were laid off, along with about a half dozen other people that should not have lost their jobs. It was after that that I found that shred of insight, that little indentation in the grass that showed that there may be a path coming up. We were meeting with the priest as a type of pastoral exit interview and, in a bout of unexplained vulnerability, I said, ‘the one thing that most bothers me about this is that I was looking for somewhere to belong and I thought that I had found it.’ The pastor just looked at me and, without saying a word, shook his head no.  

It was then that I became a Buddhist. Not out of spite, though there is a part of me that would like to shave my head and roll up on that parish brandishing some well blessed middle fingers, but because I do believe that God speaks directly and concisely. I had an unhealthy attachment to the trappings of God, family, self and community. I would never find God in the bricks of man. I could not be part of a family while standing alone on the hill. I found that self and community are one when I stopped hearing the sounds of the people who claim to speak for the Divine and listened instead to the Divine Himself.

All of this fluffy talk aside, I do have one little thing to share. In the lovely freedom of nighttime sleep, there is one penis headed bitch that started it all that I dream of going Nancy Kerrigan on her ass. I told you I still had some unresolved anger.

Lee says: As a Hindu, I believe in karma.  Paul and I are good people who trusted that a collar and cross could create a community that modeled the life of the son of God.  We were wrong and those who wronged us will unfortunately experience the shock and gut wrenching pain of having a whole congregation turn their back on them. In the Christ Consciousness that I strive to attain, I am working hard not to point and laugh.     

 

sharebookmarx A Buddhist and a Hindu walk into a church...

nundoesntlikeyou Problem with religion...the people.

As we enter Holy Week and the end of Lent, we decided it was time for us to purge as well.  We have been writing this blog for a little over two months and enjoying every minute of it.  However, those closes to us have asked, on several occasions, when are you going to bust out the good stuff?  And by good stuff they are referring to our experiences with the Catholic Church. In keeping with the spirit of this website, we will discuss our experience from the point of view of relationships and the dysfunctional things we do to maintain unhealthy patterns.  So, in the name of the Father and the Son we will rip this scab open for your viewing and educational pleasure.

Lee says: Nearly a year ago, Paul and I worked for a Catholic Church.  Paul was the business manager and I worked in development.  It was an arrangement that allowed us to be involved in something bigger than ourselves and we felt, at the time, part of a community.  I will admit, prior to being contracted, I was already expanding my belief system and, as a person raised Catholic, I was comfortable in the routine of the faith but not wholeheartedly invested.  My faith, albeit very strong in God, had moved to the East.  Paul, however, really wanted to give it another try.  So we attended mass every week with our children and enrolled our son in Catholic school so as to be taught in the faith. 

          Our foray back into the faith took a turn when the pastor laid off the school principal.  This set off a series of events that, to this day, is hard to believe.  A few of the congregation members decided to blame us for this.  And, because of their sense of entitlement and attachment to the school and status quo, they went on a personal vendetta against us.  The beauty of this was that no one stopped them.  They ran background checks, maligned us and spread rumors that reached every corner of the congregation.  We were the bad guys.

          The pastor, attached to this belief that he was put into this miasma of crap of a parish unfairly, asked us to ‘lay low’ saying it would ‘blow over’.  He did not actively stop our methodical deconstruction and actively avoided confrontations of any kind.  Meanwhile, the former principal, still attached to her position of power and glory, campaigned to retain her job through attorneys and the feeding of the rumor mill. 

          So where were Paul and I during all this shit?  We were laying low, being the better people, walking in faith and all that crap that garnered us absolutely nothing.  You see, we were slowly coming to the realization that we were attached to this religion because of our upbringing and the familiarity of the faith and its rituals were comforting.  Was it true worship?  No.  It was attachment.  And when we become attached to things we lose sight of boundaries and the opportunity to grow.  Our attachments were not allowing us to grow in our own spirituality and thus foster a deeper relationship with God.  The Pastors attachment would not allow him to see that it was his job to maintain the integrity and safety of his flock because of his attachment to the feeling of being screwed.  And the rumor-mongering few were attached to their belief that the church and school belonged to them.  So nearly one year since this all began, we forgive you nasty people for all the horrible things you said about us.  This Carnival Tattooed Lady is better than all of you.  I’m going to go chant now.       

          Paul says: I don’t forgive them. I’m not the bigger person. If it wasn’t for my lawyers, I’d be post names, addresses and social security numbers. I’ll do my cathartic rant on Thursday.

 

sharebookmarx Problem with religion...the people.

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