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- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive
- Path: sparky!uunet!cs.utexas.edu!wupost!mont!pencil.cs.missouri.edu!rich
- From: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu (Rich Winkel)
- Subject: MEDITATION AND COUNTERING MALE POWER
- Message-ID: <1992Sep12.082307.11945@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
- Followup-To: alt.activism.d
- Originator: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Sender: news@mont.cs.missouri.edu
- Nntp-Posting-Host: pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Organization: PACH
- Date: Sat, 12 Sep 1992 08:23:07 GMT
- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Lines: 72
-
- The ACTivist, Volume 8 #9, September 1992.
-
- The ACTivist, Ontario's peace monthly, is published by ACT for
- Disarmament, 736 Bathurst St., Toronto, Ontario, Canada, M5S 2R4,
- phone 416-531-6154, fax 416-531-5850, e-mail web:act. Hard copy
- subscriptions are $10 for a year ($25 for institutions and funded
- agencies).
-
- Reprint freely, but please credit us (and send us a copy!)
-
- /** gen.newsletter: 138.16 **/
- ** Written 9:02 pm Aug 31, 1992 by web:act in cdp:gen.newsletter **
- MEDITATION AND COUNTERING MALE POWER
-
- By Greg deGroot-Maggetti
-
- This article is addressed to men. It has to do with justice in
- relationships with women. More specifically, it has to do with one
- aspect of such relationships: that of listening to and hearing women.
-
- I have experienced time and again, in meetings and conversation
- where men and women are together, the tendency of men to dominate.
-
- At the Student Christian Movement Conference in May this became
- a serious issue. For every comment by a woman during plenary sessions,
- five or six men spoke. Within an organization committed to justice, this
- is a problem. When men dominate, women's voices get drowned out.
-
- I have read, too, of studies showing that eighty per cent of
- conversational interruptions are men interrupting women. But I don't
- need studies to reveal this. I do it myself, all too often.
-
- The drive to talk and talk and the difficulty being silent and listening
- poses a problem for me personally as well. It creates a restlessness
- which distracts me and disrupts my powers of discernment.
-
- Lately, I have explored the discipline of meditation. Meditation is a
- practice found in many religions. It has deep roots within Christianity
- -- although the practice has suffered through disuse in the West in
- recent centuries.
-
- Meditation in the Christian tradition involves quieting oneself and
- opening oneself to the voice of God and the movement of the Spirit.
-
- When I started to practice meditation I found it difficult -- I still do.
- The way of doing meditation suggested to me through things I have
- read involves setting aside time at the beginning and end of the day
- to sit in silence and focus on a centring word. The aim is to release all
- busyness and distractions; to be still.
-
- Needless to say this involves foregoing TV or reading something that
- might seem very important. Meditation is a discipline. It requires the
- commitment to spend twenty minutes or so, two times a day, doing
- nothing. But it is only through discipline that one can develop the
- ability to be still.
-
- What I have noticed is that when I meditate regularly my restlessness
- ceases at other times as well. I am more able to be still throughout
- the day and don't feel the need to have a comment for everything. I
- am more open to the word of God spoken both when I meditate and
- in the voices of others and in many daily experiences.
-
- My experience leads me to wonder whether the practice of
- meditation could be a small part of the solution to male dominance.
-
- If meditating enables me to listen more attentively and hear women
- more clearly, could it enable other men to do the same?
-
-
-
- ** End of text from cdp:gen.newsletter **
-
-