Signature of Light, 17th Day of Midsommar, 526 M.E. (Aldebaran): I've previously spoken here about Saint Willis of Carrier, the patron saint of the American South - the man who invented air conditioning, without which life here in Georgia would be, if not impossible, at least very uncomfortable.
We're most aware of Saint Willis when his invention is absent, as in yesterday afternoon when I realized my AC was just blowing warm air, and the temperature was slowly rising in the house. I called the service company and they scheduled a technician to come fix it today, which he did.
This happens every year. Since 2021, I've had a maintenance contract on my HVAC, and every year they come here, usually in March or April, for annual maintenance. No charge - it's a part of the annual service fee. But every year, after their annual maintenance and the weather begins to warm up, I have to call them and make a second appointment because the air won't start, and then after that it works fine for the rest of the summer.
This happens every year. Every year. There's no cost for the second visit either, so it doesn't seem to be some sort of scam.
In any event, after a warm but not too uncomfortable 24 hours, I can once again feel the spirit of Saint Willis in my house.
It's Aldebaran, a sitting day, and a year ago, almost to the date, I missed my alternating-day sit waiting for the technician for the second maintenance appointment of 2025. I made sure that didn't happen again this year and after I settled down following the tech's departure, I did my sitting. I noticed the incense burned faster in the moving air from the overhead AC vent. Instead of a stately column of smoke trailing straight up from the stick, and smoke eddied and swirled in the chaotic air currents, and a stick that normally lasts well over an hour had already burned out by 60 minutes.
I'm still working on my cross-legged posture. I was able to sit through the first half hour cross-legged, but I started fidgeting during the second half hour. The trouble with fidgeting is that once you adjust the body to alleviate some ache or pain, you've told your mind that you can control the physical sensations and then the adjustments don't stop. Moving this leg out a little relieves the tightness in the calf, but now the left heel is digging into the right shin. Fix that and then the lower back starts calling for some attention. Then the neck. Et cet., et cet. Halfway through the second half hour, I quit with the criss-cross bullshit and went back to seiza.
It was about the same for the third and final half hour, although I think I made it well past halfway and certainly longer than the second period before I abandoned cross-legged sitting and returned again to the kneeling posture.
The body is like clay - stiff clay to be sure, but with time and patience I believe it can be molded and stretched as desired, even for old men. But believing is one thing and seeing another, and I'll believe it when I see it as I keep working toward my ideal posture.







.png)
.png)
.png)
.png)
.png)
