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Getting our gaze back. (Spirituality).


My office widow faces East. Our neighbor unfriendly planted a peach tree in the tiny green space between her building and ours. My window frames the tree and the bright yellow spikes of winter cabbage gone to flower. Someone has dangled a plastic great horned owl great horned owl

Horned owl species (Bubo virginianus) that ranges from Arctic tree limits south to the Strait of Magellan. A powerful, mottled-brown predator, it is often more than 2 ft (60 cm) long, with a wingspan often approaching 80 in. (200 cm).
 from the telephone wires. I stare out. Two houses down, during the war, a blue and white banner hung from the second-floor porch. It said "Kalamazoo for Peace." Michigan is far away. Swallowtails, cabbage whites cabbage white
 or cabbage butterfly

European cabbage butterfly (Pieris rapae). Its larva is a major economic pest, attacking cabbage and related plants. Introduced into North America c.
, skippers, and orange sulphurs Orange Sulphur (Colias eurytheme) also know as the Alfalfa Butterfly and in its' larval stage, Alfalfa Caterpillar, is a butterfly of the Family Pieridae, which includes yellows and whites.  follow scent trails to the tiny patches of flowers blooming furiously in the middle of the city. The window's iron security bars cast vertical shadows across my computer screen in the morning.

I've noticed about myself recently that I stare out the window and daydream when I'm desperate. The unrelenting beam of information aimed at me via the computer screen too often occupies my eyes. My gaze is clouded with data bits. The mind silts up with details, images, pleas for help, advertisements, and thousands of worthy campaigns for social change. "Life shouldn't be this hard," I think.

Eventually, nothing can float freely in the stream of my consciousness; everything is stuck. After some time staring at my mind-mud, I turn to the window. A psychological switch is thrown. I watch butterflies and wonder about color variations on peaches.

"Daydreaming," says artificial intelligence researcher Erik Mueller, "is spontaneously recalling or imagining personal or vicarious vicarious /vi·car·i·ous/ (vi-kar´e-us)
1. acting in the place of another or of something else.

2. occurring at an abnormal site.


vi·car·i·ous
adj.
1.
 experiences in the past or future." He argues that it improves efficiency, assists creativity, and regulates emotions. The odd thing is that Mueller is studying human daydreaming in order to teach computers how to do it. I find this interesting because computers were developed primarily to process information. What flows through my e-mail and the Internet is an explosion of semi-random details from wider and wider sources. The human brain, however, is not made to process data. It works by matching patterns. Our minds create order out of chaos by learning patterns and then using those patterns in unique ways. It's our secret of survival.

Is one reason I look out my window while thinking "life shouldn't be this hard" because the saturation of data forces my brain to work against itself? Is daydreaming a dose of self-medication in a data-processed world?

BERNARD OF CLAIRVAUX Ber·nard of Clair·vaux   , Saint 1090-1153.

French monastic reformer and political figure. Widely known for his piety and mysticism, he was instrumental in the condemnation of Peter Abelard and in rallying support for the Second Crusade.
, a Benedictine monk, wrote in 1149 about the necessity of resting the mind in God. It is this kind of meditation, he says, "which replaces confusion with order, checks the inclination to lose oneself in uncertainty, gathers together that which is dispersed dis·perse  
v. dis·persed, dis·pers·ing, dis·pers·es

v.tr.
1.
a. To drive off or scatter in different directions: The police dispersed the crowd.

b.
, penetrates into that which is hidden, discovers at is true and distinguishes it from that which merely appears as such."

Meditation and daydreaming are not the same thing. Daydreaming that is not directed toward God can become egoistic e·go·ist  
n.
1. One devoted to one's own interests and advancement; an egocentric person.

2. An egotist.

3. An adherent of egoism.
 fantasy; it can produce a preference for illusions rather than for life. Though they are not the same thing, meditation and day dreaming nave nave (nāv), in general, all that part of a church that extends from the atrium to the altar and is intended exclusively for the laity. In a strictly architectural sense, however, the term indicates only the central aisle, excluding side aisles.  corresponding patterns. When I gaze at the little garden outside my window, I remember the ordered beauty God placed in the world. I allow God to re-create me in the divine image. This is what Jesus meant when he said, "Consider the lilies of the field lilies of the field

more splendidly attired than Solomon. [N.T.: Matthew 6:28–29; Luke 12:27–31]

See : Beauty
, how they grow." We are not computers, not machines. We have more in common with flowers than microchips.

By mid-afternoon the view outside my window is deep in shade. Pigeons and doves are settled in alongside the owl. The butterflies are absent--perhaps moved on to warmer micro climes. The dark green leaves are still, A rusty bedspring leans against the fence and trash from the alley dumpster is caught in the fence. I give over my intellect, my tired eyes, and some part of my soul to the cool of the afternoon. I rest.

Isn't this kind of holy daydreaming an essential quality of sabbath? I learn humility from a tree that flowers, fruits, and multiplies whether I sleep or am awake. I am awed by butterflies that can trace the scent of sweetness without extensive computer-generated data and global positioning satellites. I look out my window through the security bars. My mouth waters in anticipation of summer peaches.

Rose Marie This article is about the actress. For other persons of the same name, see Rose Marie (disambiguation).

Rose Marie (born August 15, 1923) is an actress who had a career as a child star under the name Baby Rose Marie
 Berger, an associate editor of Sojourners, is a Catholic peace activist A peace activist is a political activist who strives for peace, and against war. Peace activists are part of the peace movement. The role played by peace activists in preventing wars have been questioned in a paper published by Dr.  and poet.
COPYRIGHT 2003 Sojourners
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2003, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:unlike daydreaming, meditation fills spiritual needs
Author:Berger, Rose Marie
Publication:Sojourners
Date:Jul 1, 2003
Words:708
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