"Attention Must Be Paid" by Rev. Thomas Schade
Memos from Rev. Barbara Merritt and Rev. Tom Schade
Firstumemo at firstunitarian.com
Wed Sep 13 13:23:16 CDT 2006
M I N I S T E R S M E M O
Attention Must Be Paid
I watched one of the worst television situation comedies I have ever seen
last night. I will not name names because I try to be considerate of the
feelings of others, even fictional characters.
I like TV sitcoms, because I need to take a break from the tragedies of
current events and baseball. And so, over the years I have been a regular
viewer of some of the best comedy series. (Still not naming names, because
I wouldnt want any of them to feel hurt if I leave off someone.)
I can still get pulled into an old episode of Golden Girls when flipping
through the channels. It is amazing to me how much younger and more
attractive Rose, Blanche and Dorothy are becoming over time.
The great series have interesting characters, witty writing, great ensemble
acting, clever dialogue. So, one can forget how depressing and irritating a
bad one is. And this one, the one I watched last night, was truly terrible,
full of stereotyped characters who insult and make fun of each other,
surrounding a lead actor who seemed to be trapped in his stand up comedy
routine, two or three plotlines jammed together without any rhyme or reason,
a laugh track too loud. Blech! It was an awful experience.
So why did I watch it?
Well, I didnt want to watch the ABC/Disney fictionalization of the supposed
errors of the Clinton administration: The Path to 9-11.
I had been warned that someone somewhere was trying to divert my attention.
The producers of the ABC show wanted me to think about what Bill Clinton
could have done, but didnt, rather than thinking about what George Bush
should not have done, but did.
So, instead of letting my attention be commandeered by political
manipulators, I lavished it on a stupid sitcom. Even though I was completely
aware of how brain-damagingly awful the show was, I was paying attention to
it, and not ABC. OK, I have to now tell you the name of the show: The War
at Home. Its just too ironic.
Your attention is the most valuable resource in the world. Everyone wants
it. Candidates and political parties want to attract your attention. The
entire advertising industry is dedicated to developing the means to reliably
get and hold your attention. The commercial entertainment industry is funded
by advertisers to create art in order to compete for your attention. There
is big money and power that can be won, if your attention can be gotten and
held.
And yet, as valuable as this resource of yours is, you and I have very
little control over what we pay attention to. It is the little lost lamb of
our faculties, always wandering off on its own, straying where it should not
go, running further away when we chase after it. Our wandering attention
makes every task we do take twice or three times longer than it could.
Sometimes, in its wandering, it does come back with something new, but most
of the time, we are not creative, just distracted. I get attracted by bad
situation comedies on TV.
Spiritual practices, like meditation, contemplation and prayer, are human
efforts to herd the lost sheep of our wandering attentions.
Congregational worship is one such spiritual practice, an hour or so per
week set aside to think about what really matters.
It is a time to reflect on how you are living your life.
* Are you embodying your best and highest values?
* Are you treating others in the way that you would wish to be
treated?
* Are you wasting your time and paying attention to trivial things?
* Are you expressing the love that you have for the important
people in your life in ways that they can feel?
* Are you trapped in self-pity, or paralyzed by shame?
It is true that congregational worship as a spiritual practice is led. The
worship leader directs your attention to certain questions and offers
particular insights for you to consider. It is not a completely
self-directed process, but this has a positive value. Just like a fitness
instructor in an aerobics class will push you to exercise muscles you
neglect, the worship leader lures you into thinking about areas of your life
that you might be ignoring. (There is another parallel between an aerobics
class and congregational worship: you get a much greater benefit if you make
it a habit.)
Where will you be paying attention this fall? The War in Iraq? Issues in
your family life? Health questions? The midterm elections? The predictably
tragic conclusion of the Red Sox season?
Why not make a habit of regular congregational worship? It might help keep
all of these things in a proper perspective. So come!
And remember, if you cant come, for whatever reason, we make a CD recording
of every service. Call the church office, if you would like one sent to you.
Tom
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://mail.firstunitarian.com/pipermail/firstumemo_firstunitarian.com/attachments/20060913/7415d16b/attachment-0002.html
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://mail.firstunitarian.com/pipermail/firstumemo_firstunitarian.com/attachments/20060913/7415d16b/attachment-0003.html
More information about the Firstumemo
mailing list