I have to read your memoir. Hope that Amazon delivers it to Europe. If they do 
I will try to read it in the next vacation. -Jochen
-------- Original message --------From: Frank Wimberly <[email protected]> 
Date: 4/16/19  20:51  (GMT+01:00) To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity 
Coffee Group <[email protected]> Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Everything she knows... 
1.  Come to Santa Fe when you can.2.  La Mott says that writing, rather than 
being published, bestows the benefits.  I understand your struggles with the 
story of your parents' lives.  When I wrote my little memoir I made discoveries 
like "this couldn't have happened before that" that I had to straighten 
out.-----------------------------------Frank WimberlyPhone (505) 670-9918On 
Tue, Apr 16, 2019, 12:43 PM Jochen Fromm <[email protected]> wrote:About the 
last point 14, death: I believe the best way to fight against the destructive 
force of death is to be creative, to create something. It is what genes 
repeatedly do. They create bodies as survival vehicles for themselves, again 
and again. As Barack Obama said about Notre Dame "It’s in our nature to mourn 
when we see history lost – but it’s also in our nature to rebuild for tomorrow, 
as strong as we can" (Do you miss him in the White House as 
well?)https://twitter.com/BarackObama/status/1117886698568830976After my 
parents died a few years ago I'm trying to write a biography about their life, 
which is quite hard. The more you write, the harder it gets, because it becomes 
harder to fit everything together and your own text puts you down. And if you 
want it to be good, you have to proofread it over and over again until you 
can't see it anymore and then 10 times more. However I think I have finished it 
now and will publish it this year together with the other book. It is not 
perfect and will not bring them back to life but it is the best I could do. I'm 
thinking of Doug Roberts sometimes, who frequently wrote to this list and died 
too early as well. Honestly I don't know much about him, except that he had a 
parrot farm, and often wrote some funny or interesting stuff here. It would be 
wonderful if someone could write a book, ebook or something about the FRIAM 
group, the real one that meets in Santa Fe. I can't do that because I've never 
been there. As you know everything which is not recorded or written down gets 
lost in the course of time. -Jochen -------- Original message --------From: 
Frank Wimberly <[email protected]> Date: 4/15/19  04:06  (GMT+01:00) To: The 
Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <[email protected]> Subject: 
[FRIAM] Everything she knows... This is an essay by Anne La Mott that I came 
across 4 years ago.  It may seem that a late middle-aged non-scientist could 
not could contribute philosophical thoughts that are worthy of the heights of 
Friam but I find that it integrates the sublime and the ridiculous quite well.  
Kind of like Friam meetings.  The posts on the List are a little more 
coherent.I was ten years old when she was born.  She is a successful novelist, 
essayist, and short-story writer.  "I am going to be 61 years old in 48 hours.  
Wow.  I thought i was only forty-seven, but looking over the paperwork, I see 
that I was born in 1954.  My inside self does not have an age, although can't 
help mentioning as an aside that it might have been useful had I not followed 
the Skin Care rules of the sixties, ie to get as much sun as possible, while 
slathered in baby oil.  (My sober friend Paul O said, at eighty, that he felt 
like a young man who had something wrong with him.). Anyway, I thought I might 
take the opportunity to write down every single thing I know, as of today.    
1.  All truth is a paradox. Life is a precious unfathomably beautiful gift; and 
it is impossible here, on the incarnational side of things.  It has been a very 
bad match for those of us who were born extremely sensitive.  It is so hard and 
weird that we wonder if we are being punked.  And it filled with heartbreaking 
sweetness and beauty, floods and babies and acne and Mozart, all swirled 
together.      2.  Almost everything will work again if you unplug it for a few 
minutes, including you.    3.  There is almost nothing outside of you that will 
help in any kind of last way, unless you are waiting for an organ.  You can't 
buy, achieve, or date it.  This is the most horrible truth.    4.  Everyone is 
screwed up, broken, clingy, and scared, even the people who seem to have it 
more or less together.  They are much more like you than you would believe.  So 
try not to compare your insides to their outsides. Also, you can't save, fix or 
rescue any of them, or get any of them sober.  But radical self-care is 
quantum, and radiates out into the atmosphere, like a little fresh air.  It is 
a huge gift to the world.  When people respond by saying, "Well, isn't she full 
of herself," smile obliquely, like Mona Lisa, and make both of you a nice cup 
of tea.     5.  Chocolate with 70% cacao is not actually a food. It's best use 
is as bait in snake traps.     6.  Writing: shitty first drafts.  Butt in 
chair. Just do it. You own everything that happened to you.  You are going to 
feel like hell if you never write the stuff that is tugging on the sleeves in 
your heart--your stories, visions, memories, songs: your truth, your version of 
things, in your voice.  That is really all you have to offer us, and it's why 
you were born    7.  Publication and temporary creative successes are something 
you have to recover from.  They kill as many people as not.  They will hurt, 
damage and change you in ways you cannot imagine. The most degraded and 
sometimes nearly-evil men I have known were all writers who'd had bestsellers.  
 Yet, it is also a miracle to get your work published (see #1.). Just try to 
bust yourself gently of the fantasy that publication will heal you, will fill 
the Swiss cheesey holes.  It won't, it can't.  But writing can. So can singing. 
      8.  Families;  hard, hard, hard, no matter how cherished and astonishing 
they may also be. (See #1 again.)  At family gatherings where you suddenly feel 
homicidal or suicidal, remember that in half of all cases, it's a miracle that 
this annoying person even lived.  Earth is Forgiveness School.  You might as 
well start at the dinner table.  That way, you can do this work in comfortable 
pants.  When Blake said that we are here to learn to endure the beams of love, 
he knew that your family would be an intimate part of this, even as you want to 
run screaming for your cute little life.  But that you are up to it. You can do 
it, Cinderellie.  You will be amazed.     9.  Food; try to do a little better.  
   10.  Grace: Spiritual WD-40. Water wings.  The mystery of grace is that God 
loves Dick Cheney and me exactly as much as He or She loves your grandchild.  
Go figure. The movement of grace is what changes us, heals us and our world.  
To summon grace, say, "Help!"  And then buckle up.  Grace won't look like 
Casper the Friendly Ghost; but the phone will ring, or the mail will come, and 
then against all odds, you will get your sense of humor about yourself  back.  
Laughter really is carbonated holiness, even if you are sick of me saying it.   
    11.  God; Goodnesss, Love energy, the Divine, a loving animating 
intelligence, the Cosmic Muffin. You will worship and serve something, so like 
St. Bob said, you gotta choose.  You can play on our side, or Bill Maher's and 
Franklin Graham's.  Emerson said that the happiest person on earth is the one 
who learns from nature the lessons of worship. So go outside a lot, and look 
up.  My pastor says you can trap bees on the floor of a Mason jar without a 
lid, because they don't look up.  If they did, they could fly to freedom.     
11.  Faith: Paul Tillich said the opposite of faith is not doubt, but 
certainty.  If I could say one thing to our little Tea Party friends, it would 
be this.  Fundamentalism, in all its forms, is 90% of the reason the world is 
so terrifying.  3% is the existence of snakes.  The love of our incredible dogs 
and cats is the closest most of us will come, on this side of eternity, to 
knowing the direct love of God; although cats can be so bitter, which is not 
the god part: the crazy Love is.  Also,  "Figure it out" is not a good slogan.  
   12.  Jesus; Jesus would have even loved horrible, mealy-mouth self-obsessed 
you, as if you were the only person on earth.  But He would hope that you would 
perhaps pull yourself together just the tiniest, tiniest bit--maybe have a 
little something to eat, and a nap.       13.  Exercise: If you want to have a 
good life after you have grown a little less young, you must walk almost every 
day. There is no way around this.  If you are in a wheelchair, you must do 
chair exercises.  Every single doctor on earth will tell you this, so don't go 
by what I say.     14.  Death; wow.  So f-ing hard to bear, when the few people 
you cannot live without die.  You will never get over these losses, and are not 
supposed to.  We Christians like to think death is a major change of address, 
but in any case, the person will live fully again in your heart, at some point, 
and make you smile at the MOST inappropriate times.  But their absence will 
also be a lifelong nightmare of homesickness for you.  All truth is a paradox.  
 Grief, friends, time and tears will heal you.  Tears will bathe and baptize 
and hydrate you and the ground on which you walk.  The first thing God says to 
Moses is, "Take off your shoes."  We are on holy ground.  Hard to believe, but 
the truest thing I know.     I think that's it, everything I know.  I wish I 
had shoe-horned in what E.L. Doctorow said about writing: "It's like driving at 
night with the headlights on.  You can only see a little aways ahead of you, 
but you can make the whole journey that way."  I love that, because it's teue 
about everything we tey.  I wish I had slipped in what Ram Das said, that when 
all is said and done, we're just all walking each other home.  Oh, well, 
another time.  God bless you all good."-----------------------------------Frank 
WimberlyMy memoir:https://www.amazon.com/author/frankwimberlyMy scientific 
publications:https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Frank_Wimberly2Phone (505) 
670-9918
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============================================================
FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
to unsubscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com
archives back to 2003: http://friam.471366.n2.nabble.com/
FRIAM-COMIC http://friam-comic.blogspot.com/ by Dr. Strangelove

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