Author Archive for Steve Roberts – Page 2

Covid Fear & Love

Trump says don’t be afraid of Covid.  Even the pope says that’s crazy from a man whose disrespect for the virus has caused tremendous harm to the human family.  Thing is, Trump’s got a point.  Though his meaning of don’t be afraid is on another planet from my own. 

There are endless reasons to be mindful of Covid, respectful of Covid, aware of the potential harm of Covid.  And all that is possible without being brutalized by the fear of it.  The contamination spreads not from a lack of fear, but from a lack of attention, a lack of honest engagement, a lack of common sense you might say.  

Of course this isn’t Trump’s meaning at all. Read More

Ginsberg’s Reminder

If you were to die today, would your last thought be, “Please don’t let Trump replace Ruth Bader Ginsberg before the election”?  

Or maybe the reverse: “Please let Trump replace Ruth Bader Ginsberg before the election”? 

Either way, the thunder and lightning ignited by justice Ginsberg’s death makes it easy to fantasize that, for some of us, one of those thoughts might color our grand farewell, should it occur any minute now.  Read More

Difficult Times

A 12 year-old Little League batting champion faces a major league pitcher who has just won the Cy Young award as the best at his trade.  Fifty pitches.  Fifty swings.  The kid hits nothing but air.  Electrocuted with frustration, the boy then does his all-star best to transform his Louisville Slugger into toothpicks.  

Why?

Did the pitcher make him miss?  

Did his misses make him angry?  

That would be the easy answer. 

The popular vote, I bet.

 But as when we say

 the sun rises in the east,

 the truth is far more illuminating.  Read More

Fear is not a Thought (Music by Roy Orbison)

What might be the most meaningful thing for any of us to know at this time? 

My answer is: 

Fear is not a thought. 

Read More

Heal and Move Mountains

Looking around suggests there are a lot of us who might feel, “I was made for this time.”  To be a grounded, loving force in the face of catastrophe.  How well we can pull it off is a whole other matter, speaking for myself.  All I know, it’s who I’ve always aspired to be.  What I’ve been in training for. Read More

"The push to change the words “nigger” and “injun” in Mark Twain’s Huckleberry Finn, because the so-called offensive nature of those terms might limit today’s readership and appreciation of that literary classic, is a wonderful opportunity to reflect on how we avoid taking responsibility for our feelings––and therefore miss the chance to become more awake, more whole, more useful friends to one another."

The Essay: The Gold in Niggers and Injuns