Rosanne Bostonian

September 7, 2022

Impatience

frozen tv dinnerIf there is a downside to technology, it is justifying impatience. “I want it and I want it NOW!” The idea that some things take time feels like a violation to many of us. It all started with the TV dinner and microwaves! (No official validation of that, just my opinion.)

Competition seems to bring the best and worst out of us. The best, digging deep for our talents and the desire to manifest the best. The worst, cheating, inability to compromise and yes, impatience.

This is another pandemic (next to our friend Covid 19). In politics it leads to character assassination and polarization. The biased news programs are revolting and give me (more) anxiety. As the midterm elections approach, the heated exchange between our major parties is escalating into transparent self-interest at the expense of the Great Experiment which is our floundering USA. Most of us are distracted by our micro-lives and may not see that the attitudes filter down to our experiences of life.

There has been a reactive swing in our culture toward meditation and a search for inner peace. Nature goes on despite our blind foolishness, so many seek solace in the depth of green forests, the rhythms of the ocean or the peaks that mirror an overview of life.

As we run headlong into the next thing, the passionless voices of on-line “helpers” such as Alexa and Siri, remind me of HAL in 2001 Space Odyssey. I that movie, the computer goes rogue during space travel and the humans on board lose control of their mission. Let us not lose control of OUR mission in a frenzy of impatience.

With love,

Rosanne

Related Posts

walking barefoot in the grass

Contact with Earth

By Rosanne Bostonian | November 29, 2022

Since I’ve been doing Reiki practice, I have much more appreciation for feet. My now famous dog, Toby, looks in puzzlement as I try to negotiate slippery stairs and sidewalks on two feet. He cocks his head wondering why in Heaven’s name I am a biped. I can empathize with his puzzlement. It seems to…

young worman sitting outside with her eyes closed

Thinking

By Rosanne Bostonian | November 12, 2022

There is a lot of mischief in thinking. The mind spins to solve problems so it must have problems to solve. This means that events must be interpreted as problems or potential problems. Is there any wonder that the lines at CVS are out the door? Everything is a problem, so we’re heightened and ready…

opening the door

Our Stories

By Rosanne Bostonian | October 5, 2022

  Also known as our “stories,” our beliefs about ourselves can become indelible tattoos of limitation. Burdened by our conditioning and childhood vulnerabilities many of us live entire lives never flying free…never truly becoming the transparency, the portal through which Grace can shine through us into our Earthly stint as material beings. What a challenge…

shoveling snow

Minor Annoyances, Major Effects

By Rosanne Bostonian | January 18, 2022

There is a balancing act between our coping abilities and our stressors. We have external stress, like traffic, demands from family and work. We also have internal stress, like negative thinking and physical pain. When these stressors outweigh our ability to cope, the result is “distress.” Distress is a chronic state of not enough; not…

scraps of paper and eventually an origami bird

A Life of Transformation

By Rosanne Bostonian | December 23, 2021

Our species started out as roamers. Our ancient ancestors moved with the seasons, finding fertile areas to hunt and gather. Later, we evolved into agrarians, planting crops, tending them, and harvesting the fruits of our labor. Bred into our ancient DNA is the need to process, rest and go within. The rhythms were natural, and…

flowers in the sunshine

The Light Green Crayon

By Rosanne Bostonian | November 16, 2020

When I was little, Spring meant I’d color with the light green crayon from the Crayola box. The darker green was reserved for Summer when the leaves matured. The seasons change faster now and the Spring colors evoke nostalgia. In Spring the forsythias and crocuses give way to the azaleas. Their vivid explosion speaks with…

Adjusting to Rapid Change

By Rosanne Bostonian | January 17, 2020

How do you keep up? We all like to “know that we know!” When change is happening rapidly, we confront what we don’t know on a daily basis. This means accepting the “I Don’t Know Zone” as a part of daily living and accommodating to the learning necessary to move with the times. For me,…

Bias Reporting

By Rosanne Bostonian | December 17, 2019

Subjective Truth Since most of us operate under the rule of “confirmational bias,” i.e., selective confirmation for what we already believe, the notion of objectivity in the press has become a relic of the past. The competition for viewership, listenership and readership has polarized the media into warring camps. Bias Reporting? I wonder if the…