........................................................................................ - a weBlog by Snowy and me.

Sunday, 20 April 2025

Life Vs Eternity

Good news! The gospels pass the Beschdel test,
normally a test that is applied to fiction
and film scripts which tests for whether
two or more female characters are 1-named
2-have coherent speaking roles, and
3-get to talk in terms that are broader
than how they are attached to their betrothed,
their husbands, or their birth family.

We know little about the backgrounds of the two Marys,
hints here and there, inferences, and incidental detail
-same as the disciples get. But when the two Marys
become the first to both meet the risen Jesus
and recognise him (one them tries to hug him)
they are definitely looking at a life beyond
who they are the property of. They talk and think
about friendships that are for life. and maybe eternity.....
 

Saturday, 19 April 2025

The Best 'Easter Egg'

I am expecting this year
is the empathy in the silence
in the time that is symbolised
in print as the time between
the death of Christ and the time
when Jesus met the disciples, later.

The hope against hope in that silence,
the hope amid seemingly rational fears,
the hope suspended against expectation
is something anyone can have, anywhere,
throughout the year, as events defy description.

With the number of shoddy deals
and sham politics that goes on around us
the patience we draw from that  silence
is what will help us all to endure.  
    

Friday, 18 April 2025

On This Good Friday

I recognise that the church calendar
is different to the many other calendars
and clocks that operate around the world.

If the church calendar held more sway
than some of the less forgiving calendars
then more of our days would avail us
with time for reducing our enmities,
and seeing forgiveness in how we receive.

It remains up to us to make it that way.  

 

Thursday, 17 April 2025

As Spring Breathes On Gardens

I remember the breeze on my knees
when I was in short trousers,
walking with mother to her first allotment
when she was pleased to have a property
of her own-she had found the only loophole
she could find that made married women
less than the absolute property of their husbands,
besides family allowance for two children,
but not for one child, being paid to the mother,
which gave married women money in their own right.

Family Allowance cut the father control of the money
that paid for the clothing that his children wore,
but even that was done more for the sake
of the school uniforms the money would buy
than for the children, or for the sake of the mothers
who still had few rights, in their own right. 

Women could rent Allotments, not that many did
because it seemed to be a rather primitive feminism,
perhaps as comparable with the primitive Methodism
of historical memory, incorporated into The Methodist Union:
A married woman having an allotment was a feminist
form of non-conformism against married mores
that was going to be unfashionable with many women
who had more materialist aspirations within marriage.

One her early plans for the allotment that marked it out
as compared with male allotment holders was to plant flowers
near the path that was the route to all the allotment either side.

I was greatly taken by the colours of the flowers. If I'd had
a painting set and paper I'd have amused myself making daubs
of what I saw, but getting the colours right. How wrong or right
was Mother in childminding me whilst gardening? Minding one child
she could complete the tasks the garden demanded for growing food alright.
One child and one garden was fine for using up her time, multitasking. 

But often I was bored and alone, she said that the flower garden
'Was for me', or that it 'was mine'. If I had been allowed to read
whilst being minded I could have paraphrased Virginia Woolf
to Mother. 'An Allotment Of One's Own' and I would have felt
I had a share in it. But with the work she did there was no time 
to listen. Or explain that for the flower patch to be properly mine
she would have to teach me, the way her father had taught her
in the garden space that he rented, that was behind
the village Primitive Methodist Chapel/School she attended.

Alas there were no lessons, primitive or other, Mother taught me,
as to how to garden. What Mother meant when she said the flowers
'were mine' was that the rest of the garden was hers alone to keep me
from not looking where I trod and stepping on what she had planted.

The tasks the allotment required were hers to do alone, as she enjoyed,
or direct me in. My grandad, her father, was a good gardener.
He kept a neat suburban style front garden, grew his veg and salads
in the garden next to the Methodist Church, and was paid
to keep the planted borders around the nearby factory clean. 

I keep a cheerfully untidy garden in which the insects
are the top of the hierarchy, they will be around long after
my very limited gardening skills have withered, like the rest of me.

But with my mother aged ninety
and her still keeping an allotment
that may be some time away yet.

Wednesday, 16 April 2025

Empty Bottles

Love that is less buttressed
by the support of property law
which endures in the
 sharing
is rare indeed, and for the care
it shows it has to be cared for.

Expecting it a to renew
when once it has run dry
is like hoping for lightning
to strike twice, for storage
in the same bottle.

I know, I have been there
and know that I can't know
how empty bottles refill again....
 

Tuesday, 15 April 2025

The Self Reinforcing Vacuum Inside The Passivity Of World Opinion.....

For all who sin via technology
and the internet, Saint Isadore of Seville 
is not much mentioned nowadays,
but in the sixth and seventh centuries
he was a leading bishop and scholar
in a flourishing Catholic Church.

In these shifting modern times
the Catholic Church has recast him
as the patron saint of the internet
and of technology, with other saints
for bloggers, St Francis de Sales,
and computer programmers and gamers,
Saint Carlo Acutis, so that all who sin
online have these three names,
and more besides, as channels of grace
by which to seek forgiveness for their online life.

But there is a darker, less forgiving, side
to new technologies that renew themselves,
where technically secular and theocratic states
make their legal system a circular vacuum
where for those who are charges with a crime
cannot defend themselves in any language
that they know that the court has to respond to
-the charge denies them the language of a defence. 

After tightening up the law, such states
tighten up what can be said and done
in the courts, the press, and in public spaces
by installing security cameras to with an inch
of outside private houses, thus enhancing
the potential for prosecution by default.

In Kabul the authorities have installed a new
technological panopticon-style security regime
where women who before have no legal grounds
for being out in public alone, and multiple laws
that reduced their liberty, are now even more afraid
than before of leaving, or looking out of, their houses,
as 90,000 surveillance cameras impose shariah law
in the strictest, tightest, definition known in modern times.

It is as if The Taliban are restaging Duke Bluebeard's Castle
with the women of Kabul behind closed doors as the cast,
and the United Nations Observers making the world
a passive audience, unable to change the narrative
whilst having no choice but to watch it, or ignore it, on repeat...

Abandon hope ye who enter here and watch
as
 Afghan opium sells at ever higher high prices....  

Monday, 14 April 2025

Non-Doms On Mars

I used to worry that billionaires
might want to populate Mars
because they preferred the atmosphere
to them being too much in proximity 
to poor people, and in addition, in their new
unearthly non-dom status they would be kept
in unearthly luxury closer to their money,
whilst they evaded paying tax more efficiently.

Nowadays my worries are more earthly.
Has Donald Trump done all his homework
with his tariffs? Has he set up his beyond the earth
customs and excise offices corps yet? How else is he
going to collect the tax from the duty free
zone of Elon Musks new luxury travel scheme
for those who can afford to live so far removed
from where they were born, in the nuevo riches?