Wednesday 29 December 2021

Pistis wonders and ponders 'who's looking at you?' (weekending December 25th 2021)

 

istis wonders and ponders * ‘who’s looking at you’? (weekending December 25th 2021)

So, the James Webb Space Telescope (1) is set to launch and istis, contemplating the prospect of ‘seeing’ both across vast distance and back in time, wonders in utter, utter amazement as we are told (2):

‽  ‘the observatory will travel to an orbit about one million miles away from Earth and undergo six months of commissioning in space—unfolding its mirrors, sunshield, and other smaller systems; cooling down; aligning; and calibrating’  

‽  its ‘revolutionary technology will study every phase of cosmic history—from within our solar system to the most distant observable galaxies in the early universe’

‽ it will ‘directly observe a part of space and time never seen before. Webb will gaze into the epoch when the very first stars and galaxies formed, over 13.5 billion years’ ago’ 

‽istis wonders what questions we might be asking and what answers we might in search of in the conceiving, planning, funding, building and deploying this (soon to be) out-of-this-world piece of equipment?*

What might you want to know and why?*

And ‽istis feels utterly mind-boggled*. 

But then, out of the reverie and reverence, and perhaps through a 'Total Vortex Perspective' (3), ‽istis suddenly has an image of potential ‘other life’ looking back down the telescope at us, or even looking through their/its telescope at us‽ 

Memories of adverts for Smash instant potato come back (4)... and ‽istis wonders if laughter at discovering what ‘the earth people’ eat and how they prepare it (5)  is accompanied by utter horror and overwhelming pity that such wondrousness - us, our world and all that is on it - seems to be held in such little regard: killing each other and spending billions on ways to potentially and actually do it; allowing some to live in gross excess and some to live in extreme impoverishment; killing ourselves; mass slaughter and exploitation of anything and everything else that lives; the use of never-to-be replaced fossil fuels which at the same time choke the miraculous eco-system that sustains us...  on and on...

Think on these things*, please, please, please - and add, from here and there, from then and now, your own thoughts!

And perhaps, possibly, maybe those who interpret the data that the James Webb Telescope sends back will hear one resounding cosmic message:

“Look at yourselves.

Pathetic, utterly pathetic.

Do better before it is too late.

Please. Please. Please.”   

© Pistis                                                                                                                    

NB: further reflections and comments linked to this week’s theme and past blog

entries to be found on Twitter: replies, retweets (which don’t necessarily indicate approval, sometimes the very opposite!) and ‘likes’: @Pistis_wonders. ‘Follows’ and respectful comment and dialogue welcome...  


*..pausing for considerable thought 

  1. https://www.jwst.nasa.gov/ (what looks to be an amazing array of resources and links are available)

  2. https://www.jwst.nasa.gov/content/webbLaunch/assets/documents/WebbFactSheet.pdf 

  3. Thank you Douglas Adams, for this and so very much: 'The Total Perspective Vortex was a machine built with the intention of showing beings the infinity of creation, which became used as a method of torture. It first appeared in the Secondary Phase of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy radio series, when Zaphod Beeblebrox was subjected to the vortex and became the first person to survive it.’ https://hitchhikers.fandom.com/wiki/Total_Perspective_Vortex 

  4. https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=smash+adverts+1970s  (and the taste from ‘expedition’ walks as a young member of the Scouting movement https://www.scouts.org.uk/ )

  5. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U4MTgjNkfyI 

Sunday 19 December 2021

PIstis wonders at the missing news (weekending December 18th 2021)

 

istis wonders at the missing news (weekending December 18th 2021)

This week in the UK:

‽ as ‘omnishambles’ (1) seems to be a phrase ripe for reclamation

‽ as a by-election perhaps provides a reminder that change is possible; that a mechanism and voting strategy can work; and, if there - where else?

‽ as possible party throwers and goers are potentially investigated by possible party throwers and goers

‽ as the governing Conservative and Unionist Party may be gearing up to do one of the things that it seems to do best; or as a PM begins to plan pre-emptively to spend more time with his family and maybe with a better salary

 ‽ as the virus seems to carry on doing its pre-determined mutating thing leaving havoc and wreckage: in lives and families; in health systems, businesses and livelihoods - acutely or chronically; across the established, and perhaps imposed and power-imbalanced-sustained geo-political-socio-economic old world order (2) once again like a barium meal that perhaps reveals legacy-inequity, impoverishment and exploitation and possibly highlights a vulnerability and inadequacy of individualistic and nationalistic ideologies - maybe makes plain a desperate need for a radical new approach, a transformative intervention...  

...then ‽istis wonders about the view from off the radar, the seemingly now missing, forgotten, shunted-off or moved-on news:

  • the situation for children, young people, adults and families in Afghanistan

  • the situation for children, young people, adults and families in Syria

  • the situation for children, young people, adults and families on the Belarus border or looking across the Strait of Dover 

  • the situation for Rohingya or Uyghur children, young people, adults and families - representing minoritised individuals, groups and communities everywhere

  • the situation for children and young people in the UK behind closed doors, online, on the streets - actually and potentially missed by the people and organisations set up to provide a protective safety net

  • the June G7 commitments, the November COP26 pledges

  • ...and on and on... and you might care to add your own 'missing news' wherever you are...

And yet, and yet - perhaps the latest fish and chip wrappers of yesterday’s news are blown down the street by a wind (3) that could perhaps, possibly, maybe also bring fresh answers from new voices, if only we could hear them.

Maybe this Christmas time we might at least seek, listen, imagine and hope.   

© Pistis                                                                                                                    

NB: further reflections and comments linked to this week’s theme and past blog

entries to be found on Twitter: replies, retweets (which don’t necessarily indicate approval, sometimes the very opposite!) and ‘likes’: @Pistis_wonders. ‘Follows’ and respectful comment and dialogue welcome...  

 

  1. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Omnishambles 

  2. …and as hyphenated word combinations perhaps prove pretentious and irksome!

  3. With thanks to R.Dylan for, at the very least, asking the questions...

Thursday 9 December 2021

Pistis claims and reclaims: discoveries (weekending December 11th 2021)

 

istis wonders and reclaims: discoveries (weekending December 11th 2021)

Amid

  • climate turmoil and storms leaving some in the UK without electricity and everything that it empowers

  • political turmoil and storms leaving positions untenable or shaken, leaving many (the ‘us’ of ‘one rule for’) deeply saddened, angry but perhaps not surprised - and possibly leaving the clothes of Emperors (the ‘them’ of ‘another rule for’) (1) behind, but not at a party which may or may not have happened

  • increasing information about the potential impact of a virus’ variation and apparent necessary measures to protect...

....‽istis managed to find a haven in firstly an unexpected delight of a discovery and, secondly, a rediscovery for ponderance.

The discovery - came from a chance listen to the radio last Sunday (2), hearing about a poem that became a song interpreted by many and perhaps finding a most recent audience in the version by Rose Betts in the film ‘Justice League’, the Zack Snyder cut. (3)  And ‽istis was captivated, nourished and encouraged to listen to many, many versions but is left wondering just how this song had passed by until now. If this could be missed, then what else may lie undiscovered? So, thank you Larry Beckett, Tim Buckley, ‘This Mortal Coil’, many others and now Rose Betts - for ‘Song to the Siren’.   

Some of the words seemed to resonate with layers of current meaning and pause for thought:

‘Were you here when I was forced out? Now my foolish boat is leaning, broken lovelorn on your rocks’ - and images of children and young people and families on and in the Channel came to mind... 

‘Sail to me, let me enfold you. Here I am, here I am, waiting to hold you’ - perhaps a statement and offer and pledge and promise of hope and compassion for anyone in distress or despair, echoing across time and place... 

The rediscovery - came when sorting through papers kept and left by a proud parent. Another poem, penned very close to home; almost forgotten but now, here, offered humbly for ponderance during what some mark as the season of Advent, as they and even we wait in the hope that just perhaps, possible, maybe things could yet be different:

Massacred Innocence - A King of Kings’ Ransom - Too High a Price

‘I hold you again, my child

Not to wish and promise and bless and marvel

But to staunch and stem and retch and rail

At death, at despair, at desecration.


A thousand stars canopied your birth

Ox and cattle, wise men and shepherds

Passed by that night - that glorious night

And we rejoiced!


The blooded swaddling drips...

Your screaming ceased

Peace be with you


We have heard the tales across the years

Of sight restored and ‘wined-up’ water

Of mountain talks and tables turned

And of a criminal’s death.


The Son of God? Perhaps... 

Caring little or less

A tear of shuttered memory returns

To when I held you, my child

So, so desperate that you might be saved


The blooded swaddling drips... 

Your screaming ceased

Peace be with you

© Pistis                                                                                                                    

NB: further reflections and comments linked to this week’s theme and past blog

entries to be found on Twitter: replies, retweets (which don’t necessarily indicate approval, sometimes the very opposite!) and ‘likes’: @Pistis_wonders. ‘Follows’ and respectful comment and dialogue welcome...  

 

  1. For example: https://www.liverpoolecho.co.uk/news/liverpool-news/one-rule-one-rule-us-22401256 

  2. BBC Radio 4 'Soul Music' 4.12.2021 https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m00127bz

  3. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JQZ5_3s4ltU

Tuesday 7 December 2021

Pistis wonders - influences (weekending December 4th 2021)

‽istis reclaims influences (weekending December 4th 2021)

This week ‽istis sought to facilitate an exercise and discussion with a social care professionals’ group:‘why do we do what we do in the way that we do it?’

At the same time, the newspapers, television and radio stations were no doubt preparing the headlines; presenting the terrible, terrible detail; bringing greater or lesser depth of analysis following the conviction of a father and his partner for manslaughter and murder respectively (1) of a particular little boy, perhaps not much seen at the end, now in full view, too late...

The exercise included encouragement to the practitioners to reflect on many potential influences on their work including:

The wishes and feelings of a child, young person, adult service user

The views of others: parents and carers, family, friends, neighbours

The views of others: professionals and volunteers who might be part of a formal or informal ‘team around’ a child or young person or adult service user

Personal ‘stuff’: experience, values, beliefs, presumptions, residual messages retained, prejudices, ‘positionality’ (2) etc., how I am at the moment, other preoccupations, priorities, demands, distractions, commitments, determination, assertion, etc, etc.

Knowledge: relevant research and theory that potentially helps first to understand and make sense – and then to form a reasoned, reasonable, evidence-informed response

Legislation, statutory guidance, regulations, policies, procedures and protocol: what must we do, what could we do, what should we do, and how... 

Custom and practice: the perhaps unquestioned ‘we do it like this because we do it like this, because we do it like this, because we do it like this; is there any other way…?')

Systems, structures, processes and procedures: including those assisted by information technology and ‘data’ management

Supervision, direction and guidance

What potential influences - on why you do what you do in the way that you do it - would be on your list?

‽istis can claim to know a bit about the world spotlit so starkly and brightly this week (having been very close at times, in other places and in relation to other children and young people)... a world where children can suffer and die so awfully through acts of commission and complicity at the hands of those very people with primary responsibility to love and care and nurture; but perhaps also not protected - maybe through acts of omission by practitioners, teams, services and organisations empowered, sanctioned, required to protect...

And ‽istis ponders personal lessons learned (a phrase so often used) and wonders whether the following might be helpful:

to explain is perhaps not the same as to excuse (with echoes from last week’s blog still reverberating), but that we must surely strive to understand, recognising and not shying away from complexity and messiness and the sometime chaos of practice

perhaps naming what we may be trying to sustain as 'unsustainable' can be necessary but difficult; we might do well to be clear when ‘enough is enough’ for a child but also in relation to organisational, systemic and structural matters: when there is just not enough - a deficit of resources (money, primary preventative services, the apparent impact of austerity etc.), of deficit of competence, of time, of support, of training, of guidance, of supervision, of direction, of leadership etc.

many situations may seem to be alright until suddenly and catastrophically they are all too obviously not

low probability events can nevertheless sometimes occur; that the holes in a many-layered ‘Swiss Cheese’ model of risk assessment may yet line up however improbable it seems; that there may be gaps in the tightest of safety nets woven with the most robust warped and wefted threads; that there yet may be an unblocked pathway from a potential child killer to a murdered child

persistent high risk without incident may perhaps lower the guard and lead to baselines, tolerances and thresholds shifting

we might do well to never forget that the worst can and does happen for far too many children and young people; to not assume that this is, or is not, the case for any individual child but to assess, see the child or young person, 'listen' to them (voice - signed, supported or augmented; behaviour) and all those who might know them; check out, corroborate, triangulate, be curious, challenge, evidence safety and strengths but evidence danger and hazards especially; have a policy and procedure, and for goodness' sake follow the procedure  

primary prevention (universal help and support for all), secondary prevention (early and focused help and support for some), clear and decisive reaction (when necessary for a small number) are perhaps three indivisible parts of an holistic and effective safeguarding strategy; removing or reducing public services in some policy or ideological ‘Jenga’ game may lead to collapse  

understandably necessary ‘systems’ and IT processes can perhaps potentially turn children, young people and their circumstances into units of data – depersonalised, coursing round a complex system, coming up against algorithms and the occasional human/professional view at gateway decision moments (move on, stay here, move out of the system) – yet individuals are fallible and algorithms and systems are perhaps only as good as their design

overwork, sickness, staff vacancies, lack of support or value may exacerbate

any analysis of ‘what went wrong’ or ‘missed opportunities’ might understandably focus on individuals (training, confidence, competence, health and well-being, support) but also must surely focus on teams and organisations and their systems (intra-organisational matters), and also focus on the interaction between all multi-professional/discipline parties, their organisations and systems (inter-organisational matters) and also focus on resources and funding, quality assurance and governance and also set all this in a social and political and economic context, considering that if we wish to say that it takes a whole village to raise a child (3) then it is difficult to deny that it may also take a whole village to let a child down.

So, why do we do what we do in the way that we do it...? Many, many potential influences. Recognising, naming, pondering and wondering about them individually and dynamically together may perhaps just help us to understand better, which may possibly then just help us to be and do better, not least for those who depend, rely on and desperately need us to do what we do in the way that we do it - better...  

© Pistis                                                                                                                        

NB: further reflections and comments linked to this week’s theme and past blog

entries to be found on Twitter: replies, retweets (which don’t necessarily indicate approval, sometimes the very opposite!) and ‘likes’: @Pistis_wonders  

1) https://www.theguardian.com/society/2021/dec/03/arthur-labinjo-hughes-timeline-of-events-that-ended-in-his & https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/crime/arthur-labinjo-hughes-video-emma-tustin-b1969786.html for example

2) ‘Positionality’ – the way someone is/sees/interprets things, perhaps linked to ‘position’, experience, situation etc. – class, status, age, identity/identities etc, etc.

3) https://www.england.nhs.uk/blog/it-takes-a-village-to-raise-a-child/ 


‽istis ponders volunteering, expertise and tapping (weekending April 27th 2024)

  ‽istis ponders volunteering, expertise and knowing where and how to tap (weekending April 27 th  2024) Various themes this weekending; m...