Archives

1. Three Lessons

By Robert Magrisso / November 18, 2020 / Comments Off on 1. Three Lessons

I came back to the hospital after office hours just to tell Seana the operative findings. As her general internist, I knew there was no real need for me to tell her, as she would be just coming out of general anesthesia and was, technically, on the surgery service. But I felt that I should. This would be her fourth major surgery to try and defeat the inexorably metastasizing colon cancer.

2. Continuity

By Robert Magrisso / November 17, 2020 / Comments Off on 2. Continuity

She’d been preoccupied with death for several years now; but one aspect had never before crossed her mind: dying, you don’t get to see how it all turns out. Questions you have asked will go unanswered forever. Will this one of my children settle down? Will that one learn to be happier? Will I ever discover what was meant…

3. The God of Spinoza

By Robert Magrisso / November 16, 2020 / Comments Off on 3. The God of Spinoza

“We can survive death to the extent that we have already let go of our singular solitary selves… Immortality, for Spinoza, is impersonal. I survive my necessary death to the extent that I have ceased identifying with the mere thing that I am, and identify with the whole intricate web I have assimilated into knowing…” I…

4. Mystical Death, Divine Union and Deconstruction of the Self

By Robert Magrisso / November 13, 2020 / Comments Off on 4. Mystical Death, Divine Union and Deconstruction of the Self

If I look objectively at my body, I see that it is made of cells, which are made of atoms. These atoms have been elsewhere before they were me. They were part of the food I ate, the water I drank, the air I breathed. Of course, what I call “food” were once (mostly) living…

6. Reverie At Antelope Ruins, Canyon De Chelly

By Robert Magrisso / November 11, 2020 / Comments Off on 6. Reverie At Antelope Ruins, Canyon De Chelly

Sitting on the rock mantle, moon up ahead, vast canyon below, bottom layer 250 million years old: We are little bursts of life in the well of space-timeformed by our pebble in the cosmos and our nuclear furnace-star/sun. Human history is the history of small mammals with extraordinary potential. Is there a Divine Hand in…

7. (mostly) Space

By Robert Magrisso / November 10, 2020 / Comments Off on 7. (mostly) Space

“When a relaxed spirit meditates and dreams… the mind sees and continues to see objects, while the spirit finds the nest of immensity in the object.” If we were to look with finer detail into that which perceive as “matter”, we would see it to be mostly space. Atomic physicists long ago learned that the…

8. The Big Bang, Science, Death, and the Unknown

By Robert Magrisso / November 9, 2020 / Comments Off on 8. The Big Bang, Science, Death, and the Unknown

Suddenly, Einstein lifted his head, looked upward at the clear skies and said: “We know nothing about it all. All our knowledge is but the knowledge of school children.” “Do you think we shall ever probe the secret?” “Possibly we shall know a little more than we now know, but…”

9. Inpatient Hospice Rounds

By Robert Magrisso / November 8, 2020 / Comments Off on 9. Inpatient Hospice Rounds

This has been my first weekend covering the inpatient hospice unit. I suppose that I secretly hoped for a place of ecstatic mystical death, but this has been more like death–row than St. Theresa of Avila.

10. Model Making in Science and Daily Life

By Robert Magrisso / November 1, 2020 / Comments Off on 10. Model Making in Science and Daily Life

“The search for truth is more precious than its possession.” — Albert Einstein Introduction The process of science is one my inspirations for spiritual life. The expansion of consciousness brought to humanity by science is something from which I have tried to learn. The open-ended nature of science, always seeking a greater approximation to truth,…

11. Discernment: Improving the Signal to Noise Ratio

By Robert Magrisso / October 31, 2020 / Comments Off on 11. Discernment: Improving the Signal to Noise Ratio

Discernment is a word that we do not use lightly. It is often defined as that of being able to grasp or comprehend that which is obscure. In the Christian tradition, it refers to discovering God’s will for one’s life, that is, one’s spiritual vocation.