February 7, 2009

Website undergoing changes.

Posted on Friday, February 6, 2009 at 10:08AM by Registered CommenterRoisin Moriarty | CommentsPost a Comment

December 12, 2008

OK, so maybe I overreacted. It's my first time to be plagiarized! I realize with a big site like squarespace it's just not possible to prevent moron's from stealing other people's work, but the fact the work is posted creates a record for any legal challenge.  My incident is minor compared to some. I contacted the little twit who did it and told her off. Nary a word from her, but a writer friend of mine showed me how to send a disclaimer to everyone who received her email. This I did!  Situation closed. Chalk it up to experience!

 

Posted on Friday, December 12, 2008 at 01:57PM by Registered CommenterRoisin Moriarty | CommentsPost a Comment | References3 References

December 4, 2008

My short  story "String Theory" has received quite a number of hits, as did Halloween Baby. I will be posting another Sean and Roisin story shortly. Incidentally, a visitor to my site boldly plagiarized "String Theory" and has been sending it around as an email entitled "Nine Words Women Use". Part of it is my short story verbatim.  The nerve! I tracked the email back to its source and emailed her sarcastically thanking her for obtaining my permission to use my work. Resounding silence!  

Posted on Thursday, December 4, 2008 at 08:36AM by Registered CommenterRoisin Moriarty | CommentsPost a Comment

February 27, 2007

I've been pondering what makes one human being kill another in the Name of God.  It's nothing new.  Christians killed non-Christians in the name of God for hundreds of years.  Then they turned on each other with Catholics killing Protestants who, as soon as they got the chance, returned the compliment.  Then Protestant turned on Protestant over variations in belief and methods of worship.   Of course, Hindus and Muslims have been going at it for centuries.

Although the Romans, with collaboration from the Scribes and Pharisees, horribly persecuted the early Christians, this was a political persecution, based on fear on the part of both the Roman and Jewish leaders of loss of power and control to the new, intensely passionate followers of Jesus Christ.  This is the same fear that has fuelled political persecution of the religious throughout history, right up to present day China.

So, while fear of loss of power and control explains the persecution of the religious by political leaders, what explains an identical kind of persecution called for by religious leaders?

Now, I'm sure psychologists would come up with a variety of compelling arguments for why people kill one another in the Name of God; distortions of perception, damaged egos, hopelessness, rage, a deep sense of injustice and persecution, alienation.  I wouldn't argue with this reasoning.  Ego and psychology, in all their complexity, play a large part in the decisions we make about how we conduct our lives and relate to other human beings.

We know how to dress up our actions in justifications and rationalizations, no matter how bizarre the costumes, but we also know these justifications and rationalizations are nothing more than our ego explaining/excusing our behavior to ourselves and others.  Our real motivations lie much deeper, buried in a tangle of family and social experiences, religious influences or lack thereof, gender, place in family and history, even where we live.  Beneath the tangle, however, lie two basic elements that energize the whole mess, two sides of the same coin as it were; on the one side fear of losing power and control, on the other a furious determination to get hold of them.  This is the connection, so to speak, between the individual and the group.               

            I’d like to introduce a third thread and suggest there exists among us human beings who are driven by neither fear of losing power and control nor a furious determination to get hold of them, a make of human being who is energized by something quite different.  I refer to those who have given their life to God, Christian or otherwise.  The truly religious do not proselytize.  They seek to influence by example.  They do not seek power in order to force others to believe and worship as they themselves believe and worship.  They lead through acts of kindness and generosity.  They do not behave like avenging angels with flaming swords whose holy task it is to force the light of Truth on the world.   They speak, instead, of their own profound joy and inner peace at their liberation from ego and psychology, at their freedom from concerns over power and control.  They speak of their human weaknesses and failings, their doubts and mistaken attitudes, of how they keep reaching for the Hand of God to pick them up and set them on their spiritual feet again.  They say we are all Children of God.  Most of all, they emphasize how the concept of taking the life of another human being in the Name of God is beyond their ability to comprehend, let alone carry out.

(I understand the disconnect between religious dogma and spirituality, but for the purpose of this blog, I leave that path to others to pursue.)

If, as I suggest, persecution comes from the fear of one group of people to losing power and control to another, or a furious determination to get hold of them after long being denied, what are we to make of those who demand the destruction or violent suppression of other human beings in the Name of God?  What are we to make of their followers?   They claim they’re after the spiritual redemption of the world.  However, to follow my line of speculation, if the root cause of persecution of others is fear of losing power and control or a furious determination to get hold of them after long being denied, and if power and control belong to the realm of the ego and not to the realm of the soul, logic suggests that what these religious leaders seek is, in fact, not spiritual redemption at all but political power.   

If that’s the case, and I believe it is, we run into another problem.  Aside from the fact you can’t force spiritual redemption on anyone, all power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely.  Simply put, the more power a human being gets hold of, the more they seek to enhance it and, worse, the more they fear losing it.  History is littered with the bitter consequences of human beings who, through justification and rationalization, persuaded their followers to grant them unchecked power.  Whether political or religious, the outcome was equally terrible. 

These are dangerous times.  The world is full of leaders demanding their followers grant them unchecked power.  We mustn’t confuse religious certainty with a bid for political power because, if we do, we will all surely be destroyed.

I realize this is a troubling topic.  I put this out to invite debate.  I welcome your thoughts and comments.

Posted on Tuesday, February 27, 2007 at 03:45PM by Registered CommenterRoisin Moriarty | Comments1 Comment

February 17, 2007

Feeling pretty good about Willow Tree.  Completed another sweep through for redundant phrases, long-winded sentences, pesky little words like 'always', 'just', 'some', etc.  The original finished version stood at 149,000+ words and 504 pages.  This one stands at 135,700 words and 473 pages.  Cut, cut, cut, without taking out anything vital.  Think I've done it.  Need to go slash and burn the synopsis.  I've got a four-pager and a one-pager but nothing in between.  Synopsis is the hardest part of this whole project.  Hope to post some of my "Love Talk" pieces in the next week and another poem.  Need to get back to reviewing some of the fascinating writers on thenextbigwriter.com.   Not enough hours in the day but, who cares, when you're doing what you love and all the ones you love are happy!!  God bless.  Roisin

Posted on Saturday, February 17, 2007 at 04:09PM by Registered CommenterRoisin Moriarty | Comments1 Comment
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