Thursday, November 11, 2021

The Prayer of a Sixty-one Year Old

 Dear Father,

Thank you for every single one of
my sixty-one years.

I hope for more time on this earth
because I truly love seeking the things not of this earth. 
A spiritual paradox.

Faith, family, and friendships grow stronger 
as relationships grow deeper, roots intertwining.
Thank you for the people in my life
(and for those I have yet to meet).
May I listen to their stories with gentleness and compassion.

Life is different at sixty-one. 
I notice reverence has become a more constant companion.
Everything is holy and sacred when you remember to notice.
Be still. And know.
I try.

Even though it startles me at times,
I thank you for my gray hair and wrinkly skin,
reminders that I have lived.
That I am alive.

This place in my life finally allows me to recognize
it is the questions I love discovering.
Having the answers is not so important.
Adopting a posture and an attitude of seeking.
Counting on your promise that when we do that
you will be found.

My perspective and my capacity for understanding 
change with time but you remain constant.
For that I am so very grateful.
Learning to lean into your love. Again and again.
And then again.
Releasing and receiving, both.

I think about the plans you had for me
when my mother first held me in her arms,
and I wonder how many times I have resisted those plans. 
How many wrong turns taken.
Missed opportunities.

And still, 
you motion for me to come into your arms
in a loving embrace that I will never outgrow.

Now I begin each day
trying to be more careful and intentional.
Trying to notice you at the center.

Trying not to waste the moments.

Sixty-one years.
The world has changed.  And so have I. 

But not you.
Thank God.
















Saturday, June 19, 2021

One person

I don't know how to help
and that is paralyzing,
creating fear so great
it threatens to snuff out hope.

(Yes, you feel that too?)

The pandemic is tightening
its grip in so many places
while here we are happy
to be able to finally return to normal
and do our best to forget about it
because we are "so over it."

(Except for the people who lost
loved ones, lost businesses and jobs, 
lost their health... it is not a mere 
shifting of attitude for them.

And don't forget the people who live 
where vaccines are not available.
Where are their choices?)

We are not taking care of the Earth
and the repercussions are
being felt in so many ways.

What possible difference
can one person make in a crisis so big?
How do I move from reverence to action?

(You ask that too?)

People are starving,
while so much of our country struggles with
the ill effects of too much.
Of just about everything.

White privilege is something
that makes me uncomfortable
in my own skin, 
but I can't seem to find my role
in the effort to end systemic racism.

(Do you share the same questions?)

Children die every day 
from illnesses that can easily be treated.
Every child lost has a name
and a family who mourns their passing.

People show up on our nation's doorstep
fleeing violence and poverty
and we can't figure out how to 
put hope into their future.

(I see it breaks your heart too.)

Yes, it's such a long list and
this is only the beginning.
The answers are so very complicated.

I am one person 
living in a small town in America.
The only thing I know for certain is that
I am not doing enough.

Please, tell me what you do.
Show me how to help.
It can be the smallest of things,
just please help me see.

And in doing so, 
you will be giving me hope
so that I might pass it along.








Tuesday, May 25, 2021

The Brave One


I watch my daughter climb up into
the large faded-red truck, her water tender, 
to drive over the mountains,
carrying the responsibility of burn boss
along with drip torches, tools for a prescribed burn.
Pouring down rain here at home,
unseasonably dry on the other side.
"Be safe" you call out,
as she heads out the driveway,
knowing she can't hear you over the noise of the engine.

Not ready to fully consider
another daughter's desire to rappel
from a helicopter to gain access to a wildfire.
An experience that must be earned.
"Don't give me the details until the season is over,"
you say at the end of a long hug,
even though you have already stoked your
imagination with YouTube clips of shoulder taps
signaling the next rappeler's exit 

Not being even remotely prepared
to have more than two years go by without seeing 
your grown up little girl who calls Uganda her home.
One trip after another 
pushed back by the pandemic.
Grandchildren growing up before your eyes,
pixelated on the computer screen.
"I miss you," implies the hope of a reunion,
and the emptiness of the miles between.

Not thinking too closely
about our oldest who finds joy
in being lifted off high places by the wind 
paragliding on the thermals.
"Have fun," you say, wondering what 
it must feel like soaring so high, 
knowing you eventually need to come down, 
but not thinking about that part now.

When you think too closely 
about any of this,
you begin to see all the shadows
where the worries like to hide.

And so you pull your chair
into a patch of sun, close your eyes
and feel the warmth on your face.

Letting go
as best as you can.

Maybe that makes you the brave one.






                        

Thursday, April 22, 2021

BirthEarthDay

She shares her special day
with the Earth -
April 22nd.

Fittingly, her totem, a mama bear,
known for the fierceness 
of her love.
So powerful. So protective.

Look closer,
a gentle compassion woven in.
Strength made stronger
through humility,
the authentic kind.

Always paying attention
to how she can take care of others.
Never seeking the credit.

She walks carefully on this Earth,
and still she leaves marks of her existence,
footprints barely visible
unless you are careful to look.

See those trees over there?
She planted those with her father.

There, that stream?
The focus of her current work.

That milkweed plant
growing tall in the middle of her yard?
Oh, for the butterflies, 
yes of course.

See her sitting in the chair
with two grown girls
piled on her lap?
So very confident they are loved.

I hear her in harmony,
in laughter, 
in words which are chosen carefully.
(She doesn't like to use her claws.)

Offering an arm to her mom,
who is always teaching us
the love of family.

She never thinks she 
does enough. 
But to those who know her,
she has made all the difference.

Happy Earth Day, sister-friend.
I am so glad you were born.












Friday, April 2, 2021

Good Friday


When shouts of praise are drowned out 

by voices of hate

becoming the only thing we can hear.

Leaving the "Hosanna" trapped within,

a half-finished thought, 

lacking the courage to become a voice.


Who was this man?

Beaten, mocked, spit on.

How did such love become

the object of consuming hate?

Fed by our need for being right?

Our misguided notion of religion?

Our incomplete understanding of God?


When the light of the world

was blown out,

with a collective breath,

leaving a curl of smoke in the darkness,

it must have felt

like the end. 


And still, the same darkness

lingers in our souls, 

but only if we let it.

Hate sometimes speaks the loudest,

but only if we listen to it.


Ask yourself, in the silence

and the darkness,

is it “Hosanna" I am shouting?

Ask yourself,

have I learned the giving

and receiving of forgiveness?


Good Friday.

A whispering of the hope

to come.