Good morning. It’s my pleasure
and privilege to be here today to talk with you all about my understanding of
the 7th Principle of Unitarian Universalism, which, for those who
don’t know, is “Respect for the interdependent web of all existence of which we
are a part.” For me, I am most aware of that interdependence when I am in nature
– particularly in or on the water.
Ecologist and writer Rachel
Carson wrote about the innate curiosity that children are blessed with, and she
wished that all people could retain, in her words,
...a sense of wonder so indestructible that it would last throughout life, as an unfailing antidote against the boredom and disenchantment of later years, the sterile preoccupation with things that are artificial, the alienation from the sources of our strength.
...a sense of wonder so indestructible that it would last throughout life, as an unfailing antidote against the boredom and disenchantment of later years, the sterile preoccupation with things that are artificial, the alienation from the sources of our strength.
It is through snorkeling that I first
fully recognized that sense of wonder and curiosity in myself. An ugly word, snorkel, from the German schnorkel,
related to both snout and snoring, and a word that has only been in popular use
for about 70 years. What a crass sounding name for such a peaceful pursuit.
I was an accidental convert to
snorkeling. I had had glimpses over the years of how transcendent life in the
water could be; the wonder of bioluminescent plankton during nightswimming in the
Caribbean at the turn of our current century, my hands pushing apart the water
to see the trails of magician-like light in the dark sea, as well as a small
area of a coral reef so full of marine life and color that my father called it
“the cathedral.”
Having said that, however, my
“conversion experience” wasn’t complete until I lived in American Samoa, where
the warm South Pacific waters teemed with all manner of creatures, even in very
shallow water. A marine biologist friend provided an excellent education in my
initial days there, identifying fish for me and advising on the best spots to
see certain species. I snorkeled at least 3 days a week, and I started to dream
of dorsal fins. Off Gataivai, my favorite snorkel spot, I'd often see large green sea turtles, each sighting always a cause for delight as it flapped its front legs through the water like a child making a slow snow angel. In a couple minutes' swim from shore, I could often find and identify a whole catalogue of butterflyfish - from palest peach with light gray speckles to the glorious reticulated butterflyfish, with a pattern like a guineafowl. And there were bright yellow lemonpeel angelfish, parrotfish, aggressive Picasso triggerfish, pennant bannerfish, pink and green wrasses. Families of coppery spotfin squirrelfish. Moorish Idols, a name that always makes me think of "Othello" being performed before Simon Cowell.
Speckled butterflyfish and Moorish Idol, Samoa, December 2010
I was increasingly approaching my
time in the water with reverence: my father’s previous assessment of the
Caribbean reef as a cathedral seemed more appropriate than ever. Snorkeling
makes you very aware of your own breath; in the stillness and focus, it can be a
practice – of breathing in peace and breathing out love, as we will sing in a
few minutes. My time in the water reminds me of the unison affirmation we read
at the beginning of the service: Let us
open our eyes to see what is beautiful.
Being in the natural world
reminds me to be fully present. It is always teaching me to be grateful for what there is, not what there isn’t. One
of the most magical things about snorkeling – indeed, about being in the
natural world more generally – is that there’s always something to see, even if
you’re not in the tropics. Largemouth bass in lakes of New Hampshire and New
York have seemed to wonder why it is that a being so much larger is quietly
observing them for minutes at a time without any aggression or sudden moves. In
chilly waters off Cape Town, South Africa, I have marveled at purple sea
urchins and orange anemones. Closer to home, in Westerly and Jamestown, are
small translucent comb jellies known as “sea walnuts,” which appear to have
delicate bright rainbow wires running through their watery bodies. Perhaps it
was the abundant sea turtles and butterflyfish of my South Pacific waters that
first led me to snorkeling as a spiritual practice, but as I have learned, they
are not the only creatures worth revering.
Orange anemone, Boulders Beach, Cape Town, South Africa, May 2013
Similarly, there is a river I
visit every week. It’s a place that has become a sanctuary for me over the past
few months as I’ve been on medical leave and going through chemotherapy. I sit
on its banks and watch and listen for all manner of life it contains. I am
immediately lulled into relaxation by the white noise of ever-moving water. My patience is often rewarded with sightings
of my beloved herons, particularly a black-crowned night heron who fishes from
a mid-stream log, so still and patient as the water rushes by. But there aren’t
always herons.
My black-crowned night heron friend,
East Providence, RI, July 2016
East Providence, RI, July 2016
The burden of expectation can be
heavy – if I go hoping to see only one species and I don’t see it, then I risk
being disappointed. I have been guilty more times than I can count of what I
think is a mistake for naturalists: being so focused on seeing something
“special” to tick off a bucket list that I overlook the marvels of the
everyday. But if I go into nature with an open heart and mind, then whatever I
encounter will be rewarding. So I am
learning to remind myself that if I am only looking for herons, I might miss
the sandpipers. Or the cedar waxwings. Or the mink. Or the mama mallard trying
valiantly to get her ducklings to follow her upstream.
The second part of the unison
affirmation is Let us open our minds to
learn what is true. Aside from the respect and reverence I afford to the
water and its myriad creatures, snorkeling – and being in nature more generally
– sparks my intellectual curiosity, so that after I’ve experienced the peace
and focus of observing, I want to learn more about what it is that I see. Anyone
who has visited my home knows that I have an amateur naturalist’s
ever-expanding collection of specimens, be they shells, feathers, or butterfly
wings; moreover, there’s an entire row of nature guides on a shelf in our
living room dedicated to birds, salt and freshwater fish, clouds, butterflies,
and the like. I bring my field notes together with these and other references –
like my trusty Audubon iPhone app – to answer my own questions, such as What winter
shorebird is making that frog-like croak? A male hooded merganser. Why are the
markings on this young angelfish so different from an adult angelfish? Because
they transition into different colors as they mature. Just as there is always
something to see, there is always something more to know.
Why do I turn to the natural
world to comfort myself? The poem The
Peace of Wild Things by Wendell Berry guides me:
In and on and under the water I find solace. It
is so easy to despair, when each day seems to bring a fresh global horror, when
neo-Fascism is ascendant in our politics, when so much chatter in the public
sphere or social media seems to deny our interdependence. When we fail to
recognize that each of us is as holy and broken as the next, just as our planet
is. And that’s not including the slings
and arrows in our personal lives – from the frustrating little stuff, like the
driver that cut us off merging onto the highway or the stranger who left a
bunch of beer cans at a campsite, to the big things: grief of losing those we
love; devastating, debilitating illnesses; toxic relationships. But we can find
some measure of peace, perhaps, in nature. It is grander than I, and yet I
belong. As do we all.
And then, I hope, we can look
outside ourselves to return to the human world, which brings me to the third
part of the unison affirmation – Let us
open our hearts to love one another, because the 7th principle
is not, of course, merely an environmental statement about the interconnectedness
of the natural world: it is about how we all are interconnected personally as
well.
The work of Mary Oliver is likely
familiar to many of you – I like to think of her as the de facto poet laureate of Unitarian Universalism. There’s a line
from her poem “The Summer Day” that I often think about – “I don’t know exactly
what a prayer is.” And I don’t. But I do know that just as they say there are no
atheists in foxholes, there are no atheists the night before brain surgery,
either. And I know that in the wake of my initial diagnosis with brain cancer
almost six years ago, my family and I were blessed with remarkable love and
support from across the globe. As many of you know, I was medically evacuated from
American Samoa to Auckland, New Zealand for treatment. A Muslim doctor from
Singapore accompanied us. Kiwi hospitality was remarkable – a retired couple in
the apartment next to ours baked cookies for us, and took my dad on a fishing
trip to their weekend getaway. A Methodist minister with an Anne Lamott quote
in front of his church and a statue of Buddha at the door of his parsonage took
me out for tea every week.
And my own tribe across the globe
– religious, agnostic, humanist, and atheist – kept me in their thoughts and
sent up prayers to their higher powers. One lapsed Catholic friend told me that
his mother only has mass said for people in really tough situations – but she
had a mass said for me. Observant Jewish friends traveling in Bangkok visited
Wat Po – the temple of the reclining Buddha – and dropped coins into bronze
bowls for me, which is supposed to bring good fortune. There was so much
positive energy in the world being directed our way, a diversity of religious
and spiritual traditions and practices that lifted us up in our time of need.
Call it the grace of God, call it holiness, I know that we experienced it, with
deep gratitude, as the interdependent web of existence.
(Brief choral interlude - I sang the chorus of this unaccompanied. This is a fun version.)
(Brief choral interlude - I sang the chorus of this unaccompanied. This is a fun version.)
I
don’t generally consider myself a cancer “survivor,” since the reality is that
I will probably live with my brain tumor for the rest of my life, however long
that may be. But last October I decided that I wanted to literally mark the
five-year anniversary of my diagnosis, so I asked a friend who’s a gifted
tattoo artist to help me commemorate it. I chose a heron since I believe that
they are always teaching me how to me more fully present in the natural world.
And I chose words of hope from a haiku by Kobayashi Issa, often quoted by our
previous minister James Ford: This
world/is a dewdrop world/And yet/And yet…
And
yet. And yet... These words are now engraved in ink below the heron on my back.
I want the hope contained in “And yet” to remind me of respect for
interdependence. May we all be stewards
not only of our earth, but of each other. Thank you.