Wednesday, September 06, 2006


you bring


sandalwood and cedar
oak, ash and holly

amber jewels for my piercings
sunlight and birdsong

reds and golds
the scent of sweet leaves
burning throughout the soft dark.

4 comments:

QUASAR9 said...

Lovely Poem Sherry

QUASAR9 said...

PS - where's the David from.

Reminds me of one in wood someone made in Cambridge some years back, except I think he 'copied' the original David, I think

QUASAR9 said...

Here's something I found in my travels. I think you look like a Zoroastrian, so enjoy!


Good thoughts, good words, good deeds
How to build a religion (and then watch it fade).

The New York Times has a piece today about Zoroastrians. The religion is fading, almost certainly to extinction. After more than 3,000 years, one of the most important monotheistic religions is going to go away.

We can learn an important lesson about ideaviruses from religions, because they are in many ways the original (and longest-lasting) examples of the genre.

If you want to build a religion that spreads, here are some things to build into it:

Bias for evangelism
Sharp distinction between insiders and outsiders
Presumption that insiders are 'right' or 'blessed' or 'advantaged'
Proscription against intermarriage without conversion
Forbid one gender to work outside the home
Central hierarchy that maintains the faith and settles disputes
Offer significant (very) long-term benefits to believers
Very few organizations have the ability to deliver on all of these opportunities, but in the secular world, many brands do most of them. This works for Harley-Davidson (and certainly the Hells Angels). It works for the latest teenage trends. It works for some politicians. It even works for some computer operating systems and languages.

According to the Times, the Zoroastrians are fading away because they believe being good is just about enough and didn't build enough of the elements of an ideavirus into their culture.

As they traveled the world, their attitude and hard work rewarded them with success and the ability to mix with other cultures.

As a result, they were successful as a people but a failure as a long-term growing religion. It's a fascinating choice, isn't it?

Sherry Pasquarello said...

don't know why blogger ate my response, but thanks q, i got the pic from a free picture site and wrote the poem to fit, i hope! ; )