Beyond the Plush Toy
I’m 67 years old and I still have a stuffed animal on my
bed, this cool red soft Monterey Bay Aquarium plush octopus.
As a guide at the Aquarium, every week I see little kids
lovingly holding plush toy sea otters, penguins, orcas, bought that day or
brought in as a fellow visitor. I bet
they hold these toys as they go to sleep.
Do stuffed animals help us connect more deeply to God’s diverse
creation?
The Aquarium teaches us guides to encourage folks to relate
to “iconic animals.”
“charismatic animals,” otters, penguins, white sharks, orcas, octopus, animals we seem to have a special deep connection with, we can love, respect, fear, wonder about, work to conserve.
“charismatic animals,” otters, penguins, white sharks, orcas, octopus, animals we seem to have a special deep connection with, we can love, respect, fear, wonder about, work to conserve.
I’ve been studying St. Francis and will be on retreat in
Assisi later this month. He surely loved
animals, preached to the birds, negotiated with a wolf, hosted the first live animal
nativity scene. We call him the saint
of ecology, and he remarkably called all living beings his brothers and sisters.
But I know for sure he did not own a single plush toy stuffed
animal.
The fabulous Franciscan Richard Rohr offers an online class about
Francis (I highly recommend) called “Beyond the Bird Bath.” Francis calls us to live a life of faith
that’s more than a warm fuzzy soft of birdbath faith. The first Francis birdbath only first appeared
in the gardens of privileged Connecticut homes and the pages of Architectural
Digest in the 1950’s. We love this guy, let’s
sculpt him and keep him in our garden with the birds.
Francis’ ministry and his community are as much about
poverty, freedom from things and trust in God, as about ecology. His message was simplicity. Not plush toys or birdbaths.
The most iconic and charismatic creature I know – that would
be Jesus. Also Francis, Clare. They did not live plush lives.
I love my plush octopus, but I know that God calls me to be
real and to honor all creation in its realness.
Octopus actually aren’t soft and cuddly, otters, penguins are not soft
plush toys, but struggling wild creatures, sharp teeth, sharp claws. They work hard just to stay alive and get
enough to eat. My plush octopus makes me
happy. But it also teaches me about real
animals, that all animals hunger every day and need homes. Francis reminds me that
real life is on the edge, a little hungry, more rough than soft.
I’ll keep my plush octopus, but I will try, like Jesus and
Francis, to be wild and real. And to trust in God.
----------------
I’ve been writing for the past few weeks about Francis as I
prepare to go on retreat in Assisi for two weeks to study him and his colleague
Clare. I’ll be back writing my weekly
blogs in November. Please check out bluetheology.com to consider a visit to our
Pacific Grove ministry connecting faith issues and ocean concerns. Love God, and love animals, both the live ones
and the plush ones.
Nice post.
ReplyDeletehttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feeder_shrimp
Such a lovely post. It is true that plush toys are everyone's favourite. There is no age limitation to have plush toys. I am a 30-year-old and I too have a Octopus Plush Toy. In fact, cute soft toys attract everyone irrespective of age group. Keep sharing.
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