The Spiritual Dimension Of Gardening

Finding God in Gardens

St. Ignatius of Loyola tells us that God can be found in all things. St. Teresa of Avila uses the garden as a metaphor for our own lives. She writes that we must “cultivate a garden on very barren soil full of weeds” and that we “must take pains to water [the seeds] so they don’t wither but bud and flower.” George Bernard Shaw writes, “The best place to find God is in a garden. You can dig for Him there.” Indeed! I have found God in my gardens. They give me great joy. Butterflies, wasps, ladybugs, bumble bees, and other insects happily feast and dance among the blooms. They also find great pleasure. And in them, I also find God.

Tulip Bulbs

I began gardening over twenty years ago. For years I subscribed to Better Homes & Gardens. The spring and summer issues were filled with pages of beautiful gardens and bright flowers of all kinds. One autumn day I purchased a bag of tulip bulbs. I planted them in an area I call the shady garden during the summer. Today two huge maple trees serve as a canopy over the garden that is also home to a thriving pine tree.

I followed the directions on the tulip bag and planted the bulbs in the autumn soil. Winter passed. In the early spring, the tulips began to sprout. Fully bloomed pink tulips bordered what was now a tulip garden. The following year I planted more tulip bulbs underneath the white dogwood.

The Spiritual Dimension of Gardening

In the process of caring for and admiring my tulips, I encountered the spiritual dimension of gardening. One sunny late afternoon as I walked past the tulips, I was drawn to one tulip in particular. The tulip’s pink petals were wide open. The inside of the delicate tulip revealed the exquisite intricacy of the tulip’s black and soft yellow stamen and a brighter yellow pistil. I was overcome with awe and wonder. Something so beautiful could not be designed by human hands. An overwhelming sense of peace came over me. This moment was a God experience. The next morning the tulips were tightly closed and asleep. Their petals were sprinkled with droplets of morning dew. Simply magical! My success with the tulips and my God experience with them planted the seed for my growing love of gardening. Little by little, I planted more gardens and more kinds of flowers.

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©Miriam Diaz-Gilbert

Perennials and Annuals

Before the advent of the Internet. I bought gardening books. For years, I flipped through more pages in Better Homes & Gardens for more tips until I became an “expert.” I learned about planting zones, soil, shade, sun, and the difference between perennials and annuals. I began planting perennials that would resurrect every year – roses, purple iris, daffodils, daylilies, Asiatic lilies, hostas, lavender gayfeathers, lightening bugs, gladiolas, purple Liatris and other perennials. I planted annuals – impatiens, petunias, and marigolds. Annuals bring more beauty to my gardens, if only for a season.

Body, Mind and Spirit

Gardening has taught me a few lessons. Gardening is strenuous but spiritually fulfilling. Gardening involves not only the entire body in the physical act of planting but also the mind and spirit. With planting comes preparing the soil and pulling weeds through out the flowering season. This means getting your hands dirty, even with gardening gloves, kneeling on the earth and using, along with gardening tools, your feet, arms, shoulders, and hands to dig deep. Thirsty flowers need to be quenched. This means filling the gardening water bucket heavy with water or dragging a water hose to shower and spray the gardens a couple times a day. Gardening requires and teaches patience and care.

As I faithfully care for my gardens, they nurture me spiritually. The hard work of gardening rewards me with spiritual calm. As I engage my body muscles, my mind is still and quiet. Almost always, the chorus of singing and chirping birds perched on trees and power lines accompanies this stillness. As I plant, weed, and water the flowers, l listen to their calming chatter and I contemplate. I set my worries aside. I have a silent conversation with God. The physical activity of gardening is a spiritually soothing exercise.

New Life

With my husband’s help, I plant in the autumn for spring flowers, and plant in the spring for summer flowers. As autumn approaches, my spring and summer perennials begin to wither. By winter their beauty has disappeared but their life remains tucked below the soil for a long winter’s sleep. The snow covered frozen winter earth protects and keeps the gardens warm. The maple and dogwood trees have shed their leaves. Only the pine tree, evergreen trees, holly bush, and other shrubs remain alive in the dead of winter. The gardens sprout with resurrected life again in the spring and summer. From death comes new life and hope. Toil, care and time commitment makes this possible. Each planting, weeding, and gardening season bestows the gifts of joy, quiet time, contemplation, and hope. Gardening strengthens my spiritual health.

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©Miriam Diaz-Gilbert

Plant a Garden and Watch It Grow

I never imagined taking up gardening. Pictures of beautiful flowers in a magazine, and a bag of tulip bulbs planted the seeds. Begin planting your own seeds. Surf the Internet for images of garden flowers. Read gardening books and websites. They offer great ideas, tips, and plans for growing a garden. Then plant a garden and watch it grow. Be patient and tender with your garden. It will yield great pleasure, joy, peace, and calm. You might even experience the spiritual dimension of gardening and find God among the weeds and the blooms.

God Almighty first planted a garden. And indeed, it is the purest form of human pleasures. – Francis Bacon

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Colombia: Learning To Love Soccer Again

By PETER R. PIZANO and GABRIEL M. VELEZ

Today, Colombians have much to celebrate. As President Juan Manuel Santos signs a cease-fire with its oldest guerrilla group, the country is overrun by soccer fever. Our national team lost recently in the semifinals of the Copa America. It was a solid performance nonetheless, and there is widespread respect in the country for how far the team advanced.

This moment is a far cry from twenty-two years ago when we stopped loving soccer: even as young boys, something felt very wrong when a player from our National Team was murdered for scoring an own goal for the United States.

Twenty-two years ago yesterday, we were children — we were eight and ten — cheering for our sports idols. We loved soccer more than anything in the world. But on June 22, 1994, at the Rose Bowl, Andrés Escobar made a mistake. Ten days later, he was murdered in Colombia.

There are very few things worth dying for, and a soccer mistake is not one of them. Even though fanaticism and nationalism, as primary tribal instincts, will remain in the hearts of humans forever, we have come a long way from watching lions maul people to “dying for” our soccer team. We as humans have changed the narrative.

In Colombia, however, the narrative of violence runs deep. Colombia has been dying for more than just soccer. Since its birth, the country has been marked by death in struggles for gold, for rubber, for land, for communism, for capitalism. These narratives of violence have permeated the world beyond Colombia’s borders through television shows like Narcos, the war on drugs, and fear of kidnappings. To a degree, this reputation is fitting: Colombia has died and it continues dying.

But as of June 23rd, 2016 — the conversation has changed. Today, the government and the longest-standing guerrilla force sign an accord that ends five decades of fighting. This one event represents a much broader project. Over the last few years, the Colombian government and civil society actors have worked hard to change societal narratives. They have attempted to change a dominant idea of the country and its citizens as marked by violence, to one where we are marked by a “culture of peace.” The growing discourse and promotion of peace as a way of life takes shapes in the schools (through mandated peace curriculum), in the police and armed forces (who are being trained with peace education), and in businesses that are being pushed to think of development as promoting stability and the basic conditions to prevent violence.

Colombia will be in the news today because of peace. With the presence of United Nations’ Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and five heads of state, the world is paying attention. Optimism abounds.

Nevertheless, Colombia is a good example of how changing such deeply rooted historical narratives can be complicated and mired with pitfalls. “Peace” permeates government rhetoric, social media networks, and everyday conversations across the country, but a more permanent change is still in the balance. Prominent political forces seek to prevent the peace accords, in many communities the end of warfare will do little to combat the inequality and lack of basic necessities that feed the current conflict, and there is significant disillusionment with the length and complexity of progress.

A culture of peace is far from inevitable. Delineating victims, perpetrators, assigning blame, recognizing those who have suffered, and reconciliation will take years and possibly remain forever contested. As lessons from countries as diverse as Northern Ireland to Peru to Rwanda demonstrate, new post-conflict narratives of peace and unity may hide deep scars.

How then can peace, human rights, and a more just and equal future be promoted in Colombia? Will the attempt to change the narrative change the lived reality and situation on the ground?

We need to collectively construct a peace narrative not only of the future, but that recognizes the past and the present. We must promote Colombia’s future with a culture of peace, but we cannot ignore the collective construction of the troubling and violent past. We cannot deny the human, social, and economic cost of our conflict: over 200,000 dead, almost 6 million displaced, a GDP estimated to be half of what it could have been. We need to acknowledge all of this and bring together the multiplicity of actors who have been affected to weave together the past, present, and future so we can make the narrative cohesive.

For Colombia, this challenge looms large because a true sense of the country and its citizens as a “collective” working together contrasts with the long and deeply segregated nature of its society. Building a new narrative means acknowledging the inequality and oppression of the past, the unequal effect of the conflict, the absences and failings of the state, and the ways that inequality is institutionalized. It means bringing together the displaced with the owners of multinational companies, the police with the campesinos, the children of the elite with those of the street vendors.

Like twenty-two years ago, today’s events once again bring together soccer and conflict. This time, however, shows how far the country has come and how much the narratives have changed.

Twenty-two years after that fateful day in the 1994 World Cup, Colombia played the U.S.A. again. Escobar’s family was present at Levi’s Stadium when, before the first game, Copa America was dedicated to Andrés Escobar. His family said that it helped them heal.

And just a few days later, Frank Fabra scored an own goal against Costa Rica in a game Colombia lost 3-2. But by the next time Colombia took the pitch, his mistake was easily forgiven and the fans salsa-ed and screamed for joy as their team continued to advance.

Through pain, mindfulness and understanding, the narrative is changing. We can hope and be a bit more confident that no one will be killed because of yesterday’s game. We can believe that peace will finally be here.

We can start loving soccer again. #HazelFútbolYNolaGuerra

*Peter Pizano is a Colombian-born JD/LLM student at Northwestern Law, pursuing a joint-degree in International Human Rights Law. He is currently interning in Manhattan. Follow him on Twitter and Facebook.

*Gabriel Velez is pursuing a Ph.D. in Comparative Human Development at the University of Chicago. He is currently working at Fundación Ideas por la Paz in Bogotá, Colombia.

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Donald Trump Boasts About Making Money Off British Economic Uncertainty

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As the British pound plummeted to a 30-year low following Britons’ decision to leave the European Union, Donald Trump made clear that the economic turmoil was good for at least one person: Donald Trump.

Trump arrived in Turnberry, Scotland on Friday to officially open his golf resort there and quickly embarrassed himself by tweeting that Scots were “going wild” over Britain’s decision to leave the EU. The majority of Scotland had voted to remain.

Asked about the uncertainty of the pound, Trump responded by pointing out how he stood to benefit from a weaker currency. It’s not the first time Trump has boasted about profiting off a weak economy.

“If the pound goes down, more people are coming to Turnberry, frankly,” he said at a press conference. “For traveling and for other things, I think it very well could turn out to be positive.”

Spoken like a true statesman.

Editor’s note: Donald Trump regularly incites political violence and is a serial liarrampant xenophoberacistmisogynist and birther who has repeatedly pledged to ban all Muslims — 1.6 billion members of an entire religion — from entering the U.S.

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

New 30-Min Film Takes You Face to Face with Slavery

By Maurice Middleberg
Executive Director | Free the Slaves

Today we are thrilled to release a poignant new film that features the work of Free the Slaves around the world. Two extraordinary volunteers journeyed to the front lines of slavery to meet survivors and activists. Their film uncovers the brutality of hidden slavery in Nepal, India, Ghana and the Congo. It bears witness to the remarkable grassroots movement that is bringing thousands of people from slavery to freedom.

Face to Face With Slavery is 30 minutes long, and it’s a great conversation starter for church groups, neighborhood meetings, community salons, brown-bag lunches at work, classroom discussions or fundraising house parties. Here’s the two-minute trailer:

In the film, you’ll meet slavery survivors like Kamala in Nepal, who was tricked into slavery by her own aunt. “You don’t really know who you can trust,” she warns. “They’d chew meat and spit it on my face,” she recalls of her days in bondage, “they would beat me up.”

You’ll also meet Sanjafi in India, who was captured by slave raiders who burned the homes of people who had fallen into debt. “They threw my things into the fire,” she says. “One laborer in our group died from being beaten so badly.”

Both women are now free, thanks to the courageous work of Free the Slaves activists and our front-line partner organizations. The women lead fulfilling lives and are helping others stand up for their rights to escape or avoid slavery.

I hope you’ll take the time to watch Face to Face with Slavery. It shows in intimate detail how Free the Slaves is changing lives in trafficking hot spots worldwide. I’m confident that the deeply personal profiles of triumph over slavery depicted in this exceptional film will touch your heart.

Our deepest thanks to Cassie and Jordan Timpy of Agape Visuals, who spent months producing short videos from the front-lines for Free the Slaves and who have now created this compelling film. “Now that you and I have come face-to-face to with slavery,” Cassie tells viewers as she concludes her film, “we need to work together to end this problem.”

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

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Chrome OS is finally getting a storage manager

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PizzaDome Makes Roughing it Less Rough

I like to camp, but in Texas we have only two seasons- hot and August. In August, ole Beelzebub won’t come to Texas. Considering it was roughly 197-degrees yesterday, camping is out, but if you live somewhere that you can actually play outdoors without bursting into flames or stroking out, you can now eat pizza while you camp.

The PizzaDome is an accessory for the cool BaseCamp wood-fired stove. This thing not only gives you a place to cook food, but it also has a fancy gadget on the side that turns the heat made while cooking into power that can charge your gadgets. The PizzaDome accessory includes a lid for the BaseCamp stove, a ceramic cooking stone, and a holder for said stone.

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You can toss your favorite pizza on the stone and cook it up nice and crispy, you can also make flatbreads and other items on the stone as well. It takes about 10 to 15 minutes to heat up, and baking a pizza takes less than 10 minutes.

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The PizzaDome accessory is $69.95(USD) and you can get a special $299.95 bundle deal through 6/28 that includes the BaseCamp stove if you don’t have one already.

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