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- The Orlando INDICATOR
- excerpts from issue 69, Spring 1988
-
- NOTE: The Orlando Indicator was a radical newsletter published in
- Central Florida from 1976 to 1988. Some of the Indicator's
- observations seem worthy of preservation, so Tangerine Network
- has made them available in this public domain ASCII file.
-
- ---
- INTRODUCTION TO TAOISM
- by Rick Harrison
-
- A friend of mine once told me that he sometimes changes
- his plans in response to the flow of events. For example, if he
- is driving toward a particular destination and he encounters a
- long series of red lights, he might turn back and postpone the
- journey. Or, if he is working at a particular job and the stream
- of events becomes turbulent and polluted with conflict, he looks
- for another job. My friend calls himself a Baptist Republican
- but in this respect he behaves more like a Taoist.
- The Tao was "discovered" by Chinese philosophers about
- 2500 years ago. Since there is no [Tao ideogram] on American
- typewriters, we change it to "Tao" and pronounce it "Dow." One
- afternoon I heard a newscaster say "the Dow took a nosedive
- today" and it took me a moment to realize she was talking about
- the Dow, not the Tao.
- Taoism is something between a religion and a philosophy.
- It has a lot to do with the "flow" of events. At times it seems
- the universe is merely a series of pseudo-random numbers. I call
- it pseudo-random (a precise mathematical term) because there _is_
- a pattern, although it is not easy to perceive unless you know
- the algorithm being used to generate the series of numbers.
- Pseudo-random also implies that the most unlikely coincidences
- will happen more often than the laws of probability would
- indicate. The evolution of life, the chance meetings of good
- friends and bitter enemies, the person who is haunted by a
- "streak of bad luck" are examples of these outrageously unlikely
- coincidences that happen all the time. They're just manifestations
- of the Tao. So, in some ways, being alive is like playing the
- "one-armed bandits" in Las Vegas, waiting to see what kind of
- pattern comes up on the slot machine.
- The main "scripture" of Taoism is the _Tao Te Ching_ by
- Lao-Tzu, although some historians doubt that Lao Tzu actually
- existed (just as some historians doubt that Jesus Christ
- actually existed). Ancient Chinese was a poetic but sometimes
- ambiguous language, which explains why over 70 different
- translations of this book have been published...
- Perhaps the Tao can be described as a pathway which is
- bounded on one side by external events and on the other side
- by your true inner nature. If you try to follow any other path
- through life - if you try to suppress your true inner nature,
- or if you work against the natural processes of the world - your
- journey will be much more difficult than the journey of one who
- follows the Tao.
- In his final book, scholar Alan Watts wrote, "The Tao
- is the course, the flow, the drift, or the process of nature,
- and I call it the Watercourse Way because both Lao-Tzu and
- Chuang-Tzu use the flow of water as its principal metaphor...
- The prinicple is that if everything is allowed to go its own
- way, the harmony of the universe will be established... The
- political analogy is Kropotkin's anarchism - the theory that if
- people are left alone to do as they please, to follow their
- nature and discover what truly please them, a social order will
- emerge of itself.
- "The order of nature is not a forced order; it is not
- the result of laws and commandments which beings are compelled
- to obey by external violence, for in the Taoist view there
- really is no obdurately external world. My inside arises mutually
- with my outside, and though the two may differ they cannot be
- separated."
- Taoists generally do not believe the world was created
- by a boss-God who sits above the natural universe and issues
- orders to be followed by His underlings (or else!). Lao-Tzu
- wrote, "All things depend upon the Tao to exist, and it does
- not abandon them. It lays no claim to its accomplishments. It
- loves and nourishes all things, but does not rule over them."
- Also consider this quotation, which was probably designed to be
- irritating to those who have rigid minds: "The Tao does nothing,
- yet it leaves nothing undone."
- ...One of the best-known proponents of Taoism was a
- fictitious character: Kwai Chang "Grasshopper" Caine in the
- TV series _Kung Fu_ (1972-74). Caine was a Buddhist/Taoist/
- Shintoist priest who drifted through the Old West having
- flashbacks and saying profound things (often at the most
- inappropriate moments). When someone would swing a fist at
- Caine, he would (more often than not) dive out of the way and
- let their fist smash into a wall or into another attacker's
- face. At the end of most episodes, Caine stood in the middle
- of whatever road or field he happened to be in, looked around
- to "see" which way the Tao was flowing, and started walking
- toward his next adventure. Could this be an admirable way
- to conduct one's affairs?
- In closing, I will leave you with three Taoist
- phrases that have been widely incorporated into the American
- language:
- Hang loose.
- Take it easy.
- Go with the flow.
-
- ---
- EXCLUSIVE ORLANDO INDICATOR COVERAGE
- OF A TWINS' SPRING TRAINING GAME
- by Anonymous
-
- March 15 - As I cycled down Wastemoreland Boulevard
- toward Sinker Field, I pondered the ways in which people can be
- manipulated by mere symbols. Pavlov rang a bell at mealtime and
- pretty soon his hounds would salivate at the sound even if there
- was no Purina Dog Chow in the house. Restaurants in malls allow
- a whiff of frying onions to escape from the kitchen in order to
- awaken potential customers' slumbering hungers. Poets, preachers,
- politicians and other perverts use verbal, visual and auditory
- symbols to produce the desired emotions in their audiences' brains.
- Wave a flag, flash come cash, rev the engine of a Camaro, wear a
- suit and tie or a T-shirt and jeans. No one is immune from being
- manipulated by symbols.
- It was unseasonably, unreasonably cold; I was shivering
- upon my arrival at the timeworn stadium. In the foul smelling
- restroom with its hellish odors of sulphur and ammonia, I
- remembered an incident from the future in which religious
- fanatics will gather at the adjacent Tangerine Bowl and cause
- it to vanish into another dimension. But then again, our
- premonitions about the past are always 20/20, aren't they?
- I got a bleacher seat near thirst base and prepared
- to watch this spring draining game between the Minnesota
- Twinkies and the Houston Assholes. I was rooting through, I mean
- for, the Houston team but who knows why.
- How do boys select their favorite athletes? What deep
- dark undercurrents run through the arena of sports? Consider
- some of the terminology. Hot rookies, hotdogs, big sticks,
- ribbies, rubbers, homeruns, in a position to score, good
- penetration, a high fly, and most noteworthy of all, switch
- hitters. In some semantic senses, "fans"="blowers" and the
- power source is AC/DC. The avid baseball fan who knows Glenn
- Davis' height and weight or talks about Don Mattingly having
- the "sweetest swing in baseball" definitely has something
- cooking on his back burner.
- The catcher, firmly strapped into his gear, puts a
- hand in his crotch to manipulate the pitcher with a symbolic
- programming language. A hard-hurled ball smacks into the
- squeaky tight receptacle of the leather glove and sends a
- slight shiver of sting up the catcher's arm. The next pitch
- is hit and a pop-up fly disappears into the bluish-white
- glare of clear sky and never comes down.
- Telepathically zooming into the outfielder's brain,
- all we can perceive is the white noise static of synapses
- snapping on and off, an un-interpretable stream of ones and
- zeros. Meanwhile my own synapses decide that hazardous
- hypothermia is setting in, so I depart at the bottom of the
- second, wondering why I came and why I will return.
-
- ---
- The hardcopy version of Indicator #69 contained four more
- articles and some illustrations. If you'd like a reprint of it,
- send $2 to Rick Harrison, Box 547014, Orlando FL 32854.
- [EOF]
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