All of life is connected and intertwined with threads so delicate that it may take a bit of sunlight to see them.



Bird Droppings February 24, 2026
All of life is connected and intertwined
with threads so delicate that it may take a bit of sunlight to see them.

“In all likelihood, one is in the past while in the present. The present is then veiled; the past is manifest and apparent. However, so transparently present that is veiled., and one assumes oneself to be in the present when one is not. To ascertain where one is when one is, one must locate the past. Locating means identification, which means bracketing the past. Locating means looking at what is not ordinarily seen, at what is taken for granted, hence loosening oneself from it. As the past becomes, the present is revealed. So, we aim at freedom from the past and freedom in the present. Such objections require entrance into the past as a first step.” William Pinar, Autobiography, Politics and Sexuality, 1992

As I wrote my dissertation in Curriculum Theory, it wasn’t easy to escape the works of William Pinar. The past and present are intertwined, and we need to embrace our past without letting it overwhelm the present. As I thought about the Sydney J. Harris passage below, I recall a walk last Saturday morning to a quiet spot where I occasionally meditate. Something hit me as I faced east towards the rising sun: the gossamer threads of life were interconnected with everything. They were iridescent and softly moving with the wind. Occasionally, one thread would disconnect and float effortlessly upwards, sparkling and dancing as it went ever so slowly. Each twig, plant, and branch seemed to be connected. A tiny thread was weaving through the entire visage before me, each rock and branch.

Most people would read this and scoff, yet in the early morning, as the sun rises and begins to move across the sky, spiders have been at work all night, moving between plants and rocks, trees and leaves, leaving threads of silk. If you were standing in the midst of them, they would be invisible, yet with the sun behind, sparkling in the light, a beautiful scene. Occasionally, one thread disconnects and floats off, sparkling along the way as I sat pondering an older man looking towards the east in the early morning many years ago, and coming in to tell his grandchildren as I started the passage. On the back of my T-shirt, it reads all things are connected, and rightly so, by a thin gossamer strand of silk.

“Our task is to make our children disciples of the good life by our actions toward them and toward other people. This is the only effective discipline in the long run. But it is more arduous and takes longer than simply “laying down the law.” Before a child (or a nation) can accept the law, it has to learn why the law has been created for its own welfare.” Sydney J. Harris

Today, I am faced with how to accomplish everything that needs to be finished over the next few weeks. There is a house to clean, goodwill run, groceries, papers to write, and so much more. In special education, we often use the term’s manifestation.’ Is it a manifestation of their disability, or are they choosing to do whatever got them in trouble? I find myself needing a manifestation. Am I lazy, or is my back keeping me from getting my yard work done?

“What it lies in our power to do, it lies in our power not to do.” Aristotle

“Self-command is the main discipline.” Ralph Waldo Emerson

I spent six months involved in counseling on a psychiatric unit in a state mental facility many years ago. There was never a question about why something happened, being that they were considered combative psychotic adolescents, which was the term used to describe the unit. When someone got upset, solitary confinement and rather large doses of drugs were employed, and a few strait jackets. Little was occurring to change the behavior, rationalize it, or find out why it had occurred; simply dealing with the moment.

“Anybody who gets away with something will come back to get away with a little bit more.” Harold Schoenberg

“Better to be pruned to grow than cut up to burn.” John Trapp

Often, when I find a quote, the person behind those words has more to offer, as in the case of Schoenberg, a scholar of music. He is also a very prolific writer about great musicians and their music. John Trapp was a Bible scholar with several biblical commentaries to his credit. Both men were writers who were very self-disciplined.

“THE STUDY OF WORDS is useless unless it leads to the study of the ideas that the words stand for. When I am concerned about the proper use of words, it is not because of snobbism or superiority but because their improper use leads to poor ways of thinking. Take the word ‘discipline’ that we hear so much about nowadays in connection with the rearing of children. I know something about word derivations; you know that ‘discipline’ and ‘disciple’ come from the same Latin root discipulus, which means ‘to learn, to follow.’” Sydney J. Harris, Strictly speaking

Sitting here looking up references and quotes related to discipline and ending up with the example, learning and following this is semantics as we go. To operate a public school, we need standards, so we have rules. From a behaviorist standpoint, it is easy to say ABC: Antecedent, Behavior, and Consequence. First, you have an antecedent that stimulates the behavior. Then there’s the behavior, which is the event or action we see, feel, or hear about. Finally, we have consequences, which can be what we do in response or what the students or the person who elicited the behavior receives for eliciting it.

“What is the appropriate behavior for a man or a woman in the midst of this world, where each person is clinging to his piece of debris? What’s the proper salutation between people as they pass each other in this flood?” Leonard Cohen

“Act the way you’d like to be, and soon you’ll be the way you act.” George W. Crane

“To know what people really think, pay regard to what they do, rather than what they say.” Rene Descartes

It is always about what we do. Over the past few days, I have been discussing perception, that is, how we see events and happenings, with several teachers and friends. One of the categories in writing a behavioral plan for a student is planning to ignore, which is often simply tuning out a behavior. Often, with no stimulus to keep it going, a specific behavior will disappear. So often, getting attention is the desired consequence.

“People don’t change their behavior unless it makes a difference for them to do so.” Fran Tarkenton

“Physics does not change the nature of the world it studies, and no science of behavior can change the essential nature of man, even though both sciences yield technologies with a vast power to manipulate the subject matters.” B. F. Skinner

These lines from a football Hall of Fame quarterback and the father of behaviorism are intriguing. These two men are from distinctly different arenas yet have come to remarkably similar conclusions. Tarkenton has built an internationally known management consulting firm based on his thoughts. It has to make a difference to the person for them to change. Skinners see that we can manipulate the subject matter to offer alternative consequences and change the behaviors to ones we can accept. A Sydney J. Harris line caught my attention this morning as I began thinking about discipline as I prepared for several IEPs later this week, some related to behavior.

“…by our own actions toward them and toward other people.” Sydney J. Harris

So often, it is not the consequences that deter or change a behavior but our actions toward the person and those around us. It is the example we set, not what we say, that matters. Please, today, as we venture out, keep all in harm’s way on your mind and your heart, and always give thanks, namaste.

My family and friends, I do not say this lightly,

Mitakuye Oyasin

(We are all related)

docbird


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