Tuesday, January 18, 2022
Beware the False Identities Roaming the Metaverse
Monday, September 27, 2021
Clear Vision in a Murky World
COVID has been enlightening in shining a spotlight on the darkness and disorder within our own minds. It shouldn’t be a surprise that the relative madness of these days seemingly demands simple explanations: a black and white answer for what troubles us and why. In this age of social distancing, closed places of learning, and, ultimately, fear itself, why not turn to unusual sources of information for answers; traditional sources certainly haven’t offered a great deal of wisdom or thoughtfulness in the present age of darkness.
In fact, many public channels of communication concerning COVID in particular seem condescending and virtue-signaling to many of us on the conservative side of the political spectrum. Rather than invite dialogue or suggest reflection, they cement our biases or perspectives from the outset. If state and federal governments really want to create inroads with this demographic, they should put all of their chips on the table and engage in authentic, meaningful communication. For instance, what potential impact might be made if a state leader were to invite skeptics along for a tour of a hospital’s COVID ward? Yes, there are HIPPA issues to address, but that shouldn’t present an insurmountable barrier. Go outside your bubble and meet them.
Those who take the bait of the conspiracy theory are certainly not engaging in anything new. These wild stories first came up on my radar when I ran for the Oregon House of Representatives almost a decade ago, but conspiracy stories have been around in one way or the other since the earliest days of modern civilization. The anti-Jewish conspiracies of the Middle Ages after all paved the way for modern genocide. (CNN did a recent story on this topic, and it can be accessed HERE.) At their core, conspiracy theories seem particularly sinful for the Christian, given it’s taking the worst of gossip and melding it with characteristics of false witness, then running one’s view of the world through this inherently defective (subjective) lens. We shouldn’t cling to information that is beyond our reasonable knowing. Matthew 7:5 comes to mind here.
Many years ago, I wrote a short story entitled “Clear Vision.” It was likely encouraged by too much reading of Hemmingway and not enough of finer literature, but the goal of the story remains valid enough. While it can be argued that there is no truly objective reality, this is likely a construct of minds content to swallow the lie of moral relativism. As people of faith, we should recognize that there likely is a true reality or perspective of the present day. This clearer vision can begin to be understood through careful reading and studying of current events and their context or place within the complex tapestry of history. Using this and our faith, we can create a lens that brings the murkiness of current events into somewhat sharper clarity. We can see where we are sailing and perhaps avoid the rocky shoal. There are no shortcuts here, though. It takes effort to even begin to understand the complexities of the modern world. If you look for it to be handed to you on a silver platter, you’re surrendering your intellectual independence to manipulators and charlatans. If they're people in
I’ll share something here that I’ve not mentioned many times before. A few days before September 11, 2001, I had a troubling dream featuring steel and glass towers burning above my head. I remember trying to make the way through the smoke and flames before the dream ended as quickly as it had begun. Truth be known, I believe we probably are in end times, but we’ve been here for quite some time. No one knows the day or the hour of Christ’s return, so I suggest we should strive to live as intelligent and discerning people of Christ within a world that is quickly passing away around us.
One important dimension of this awareness is not to attribute contrived motivations to people we don’t personally know. Yes, misguided organizations such as the World Economic Forum and our own president seem to cry out for it sometimes…but we have to be stronger than that. We have to face the irrational with the rational. We need to accept that COVID is not part of a one-world conspiracy and that Trump did indeed lose the election last year. In short, we need to grow up a bit and realize the world needs deep thinkers more than it needs loud and screeching voices creating a false panic.
Additional Resources (more to be added/no particular order):
Ethics of the vaccines for Catholics (from Vatican)
Pope urges vaccination.
Jimmy Akins talks about COVID vaccines here and here.
Conservative radio hosts die of COVID..
Business Insider reports on COVID deaths of conservative hosts.
Father Tim Mockaitis Presentation
Sunday, July 25, 2021
A Modest Proposal (Desalination for Oregon)
Unlike Jonathan Swift's work of the same name, today's post is aimed squarely at the topic of clean water management and creation in Oregon: just some food for thought, or...water for drink, if you like. Let's begin by acknowledging that we may indeed have a problem here. Between the wildfires of this year and last as well as the water wars of Southern Oregon's Klamath Basin, and this year's deadly heat wave, change seems to be afoot in the beautiful Pacific Northwest. Consistent water reserves may be turning into a luxury of the past. While I am no alarmist, and I remain somewhat skeptical of Global Warming as a process created by human beings' industrialization and development, I think it may be prudent at this time to point out some strategies or approaches that could facilitate improved clean water distribution throughout our drying state.There's nothing quite like waking up to a morning view like this (summer 2020) to get you asking yourself some tough questions. I lived through Mt. Saint Helens' eruption on May 18, 1980 in my hometown of Yakima, Washington; this was the closest thing I've experienced since that frightening day from my childhood. While there is certainly a lot of blame to go around--e.g. lack of comprehensive forest management--let's focus on one particular option that might offer a degree of hope.
Monday, July 19, 2021
Lake Pamelia Hike (Updated from 2012)
A Day Hike to Lake Pamelia
| Wild Rhododendrons in bloom around the lake. |
The first thing to bear in mind is that this is a limited access area. This means that a special wilderness use permit must be acquired first online. You will also need a parking permit for the trailhead. See the Cascades Wilderness Permit and the NW Forest Pass. Here is a link to the annual NW Forest Pass.
The Pamelia Lake Road, leading to the trail head, is located about fourteen miles east of the ranger station off of Highway 22. It's paved most of the way, but it is a single lane. Use caution also due to the irregular road surface which can cause underside damage if you try to go to fast. (No comment on how I know this.)
The hike itself is not that difficult, but it's probably not fair to call it easy either. Moderate difficulty is probably the most accurate description. Make sure that you bring more food and water than you think you'll need, and remember that weather conditions can change rapidly, so bring appropriate clothes (and sunscreen). The pleasant sound of Pamelia Creek accompanies the hiker for much of the way--a good reminder to stay hydrated!
About three miles of hiking uphill, the winding trail deposits the hiker on the lake's west side with impressive views of Mt. Jefferson to the northeast and wild rhododendrons gracing the lake's shoreline in early summer. It's a great place to sit and relax for a while.
The only last suggestion I'd offer is to watch your way carefully. There are a number of poorly marked and intersecting trails on the lake's western side. It's easy to get a little turned around and find yourself going in a circle--not exactly filling the hiker with wonderful feelings of accomplishment. If you get confused or lost, it's best to return to the lake to regain your bearings.
I hope the reader finds this information of some value. It's a great little hike for those of us in the beautiful Willamette Valley.
(Here is one more link that may prove useful! Particularly good explanation of the trails in this area.)
New: You may also enjoy "Injured and Alone."
Monday, July 5, 2021
The Ripples of Emotional Abuse
I’ve never really written about emotional abuse before, but I thought I’d pen a few paragraphs on this dark topic tonight. My wife and I know of a couple where the domineering female half of the couple has made life increasingly difficult for the man, whom we will call Germaine. Every time we have a suspicion, it seems that something odd happens that somehow verifies the accuracy of our instincts. Earlier in the relationship, the female half, for instance, somehow managed to accidentally dial us in the middle of a terrible (verbal) fight. If you heard it, you’d understand the destructive nature of emotional abuse—whether it’s a man or woman on the receiving end. She was screaming awful things at the top of her lungs—completely unaware of the open line being recorded on our voicemail. Shortly after, the male half attempted to leave her.
For a while, we were thankful that the man began to finally have an opportunity to heal and speak again to family members—particularly his daughters of whom she harbors a deep and baffling jealousy. He confirmed much of what had been previously suspected. Germaine verified that she held his phone and screened his calls and texts. This has led to injured relationships with family members and old friends, missed opportunities, and a general lack of connection with family and friends with whom she doesn't wish to connect. She took away the television they had out of fears of him being drawn away by another woman he might catch sight of on the screen. Her narcistic tendencies also had a devastating effect upon his livelihood, but further details here can’t be shared at this time. As we feared, though, he decided in the end to return to the isolation and pain of abuse. It felt like a gut punch to those who love Germaine.
Most recently, she impersonated him on a long and viscous series of texts to one of his daughters in particular. When the truth of her deception came to light, it was shared with Germaine; sadly, he seemed less surprised than simply deeply grieved by this broken trust. To those whom she does not see as a threat, she’s as sweet as pie. Germaine’s own brothers don’t appear to have the slightest idea at the degree of emotional abuse he’s suffering daily. Going home for Germaine is less a retreat than it is a war zone filled now with her hoarded belongings. But, he said yes: for better or worse.
An interesting thing about emotional abuse is the people it hits beyond its initial victim; both daughters are greatly suffering. One of them in particular is dealing with incredibly painful fibromyalgia, which seems to be linked to the stress and pain of the lost relationship with her father. Having lost her mother some years back, she now feels essentially that she’s lost her father too. She has to try to back away from the relationship to safeguard her own mental and physical health.
So…if you’re considering returning to an abusive relationship, understand that yours is not the only life that will be darkened by this evil. It's like a cancer that races out from a starting point with a desire to infect and corrupt.
Enough is enough.
Resources:
National Domestic Abuse Hotline
Sunday, March 7, 2021
A Call for Your Miracles!
Miracles are not contrary to nature, but only contrary to what we know about nature.
--St. Augustine
Do you have family miracles that have not been widely shared, stories that should really be told? I am considering creating a compilation of Catholic and Orthodox miracles from the last century, or so. Too many times people believe that these episodes are over; I want to help share that they continue. If you wish to remain anonymous, please state so in your communication. Please e-mail me your accounts in a summary form. I'll let you know if I am moving ahead with the project and whether, or not, your contribution will be able to be utilized in the book. Please e-mail me at miracleswithapurpose@gmail.com and copy me also at karl@karlerickson.com . Thank you!
A Review of Caravaggio, A Life Sacred and Profane
Caravaggio’s art is made from darkness and light. His pictures present spotlit moments of extreme and often agonized human experience. A man is decapitated in his bedchamber, blood spurting from a deep gash in his neck. A man is assassinated on the high altar of a church. A woman is shot in the stomach with a bow and arrow at point-blank range. Caravaggio’s images freeze time but also seem to hover on the brink of their own disappearance. Faces are brightly illuminated. Details emerge from darkness with such uncanny clarity that they might be hallucinations. Yet always the shadows encroach, the pools of blackness that threaten to obliterate all. Looking at his pictures is like looking at the world by flashes of lightening.
In 2017, at the Gallery Borghese in Rome, I had the opportunity to view a magnificent painting by Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio (1571-1610): Madonna Dei Palafrenieri. Caravaggio’s masterpiece is captivating in its beauty and expressive detail. The painting’s lifelike faces of Christ, Mary, and Saint Anne as well as its vibrant colors held my attention for some moments before I noticed something else. Looking closer, I observed that Mary’s bare foot was squarely atop a serpent’s head and the young Christ’s foot was atop hers. This detail might go unnoticed by some visitors, but the theological implications behind this symbolism is not only rich and profound, it also transforms the beautiful image into something much more complex and nuanced. Andrew Graham-Dixon’s book does a particularly outstanding time describing this painting and its journey from Saint Peter’s Basilica (a short stay of about a week) to the Borghese family. Like so many other pieces of his art, truly born of sweat, tears, and blood, the pages tell the fascinating backstories of each work.
The Madonna of the Palafrenieri, sometimes known as the The Madonna of the Serpent, is an unsettling picture. Monumental in scale , almost ten feet tall and most than six across, it shows three figures in a tall room, absorbed in a confrontation with pure evil. The Virgin and the infant Christ together crush the head of a serpent beneath their feet. As the foul creature writhes in its death agonies, St. Anne frail and bent by age, looks on in solemn contemplation. By God’s grace, the devil is defeated.
At the same time that I was finishing this book, I was also listening to a Sacred Music course on the Great Courses platform, taught by Dr. Charles Edward McGuire, that touched on some of the same Roman families as mentioned in the in the book. This serves as a good reminder that there is no such thing as wasted knowledge. Even the smallest detail can add to greater understanding of the subject being studied, lending clearer context to the matter at hand. The interconnected nature of the great families of the past—such as the Borghese family--have a way of coming up again and again in the study of art and music. We owe a debt of gratitude indeed to the great patrons of the arts for commissioning and helping to safeguard the classic works of art of Caravaggio and so many others.
Reading this powerful book on Caravaggio, it feels as if I’m drawn again into those ancient Roman churches and museums to gaze at his awe-inspiring paintings. I can’t wait to see them again in a year’s time—Lord willing.
Resources for the Reader:
Church of San Luigi De Francesi
Rome and London (See 22nd minute.)





