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an everyday life

an everyday life

Category Archives: Prayer

Holy New Year

01 Saturday Jan 2011

Posted by Janell in Life at Home, Prayer, Soul Care, The Great Outdoors

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

Everyday Life, Holiness, Soul Care

Ringing in a new year with the phrase “Happy New Year” feels backward.

Because happiness is effect rather than cause, a symptom rather than source.  It is fleeting and easily  imitated; I can paste a smile on my face, laugh in all the right places and fool most into believing I’m happy.

Holiness, however, is another thing all together.  As the source of happiness and love, goodness and truth, who could hope to pretend holiness?  And if they did, what would it look like?

To be holy is not the same as being religious.  Pray save me from religion — which at best is symptomatic and at worst, best not to say.  Nor is holiness found by reading the Bible (or praying or whatever) but by being found in reading the Bible (or praying or whatever.)  And I really do mean whatever.

To be holy is to become more whole — closer to that precious one-of-a-kind being I was created to be and become.  To be holy is to be ‘set apart’– to love myself and others and God in a way that only I can and no one else is able.  In that order.  We only work up to loving God, by practicing on ourselves first and others second.  And if we did just this, we’d be loving God too.

So my new year’s blessing for you today is, “Holy New Year.” I invite you to clear space in your mind and heart and life to practice those things which make you feel most at home in your own skin  — so much so — that you forget yourself and get lost in something bigger.

Unlike happiness, the tracks of holiness are everywhere;  this gorgeous sunset on a lonely stretch of  Oklahoma highway found me yesterday.

Watershed Wonders

25 Saturday Dec 2010

Posted by Janell in Life at Home, Prayer, Soul Care

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Christmas Letters, Entertaining, Everyday Life, Iowa Summer Writing Festival, Prayer, Soul Care, Writing

“Say after me:  It’s no better to be safe than sorry.”  –  a-ha

________________________________________________________________________________________________

Watershed years defy tidy summary.  But as a nod to Dad and his passion for movies, I’ll begin by calling ours, “Two Funerals and a Wedding,” but then focus on these other in-between moments: Two college graduations; a wedding announcement by Bryan and Amy; and soon — anytime now — the birth of a new grandchild, Kara and Joe’s first.  Next year’s sequel waits to answer our family cliffhanger: Is it a girl or boy?

Amid these transitions, Don’s travel schedule was lighter than usual, with just a few short trips to Houston and overseas.  And while his annual backpacking trip fell by the wayside, we headed off into the western sunset together to enjoy the beauty growing wild in Alaska. It was our first taste of life on the retiree’s travel circuit – and while we may not have made the cut, we didn’t leave the ship without booking next year’s trip.

Closer to home, our family enjoyed a different sort of travel as we again took turns hosting a monthly moveable feast.  Most months we kept it simple by gathering at a local restaurant, where we played our assigned roles.  Don’s regular part is the manager who keeps us anchored in reality while moving clockwise, Kyle and Kara are our two creative souls, who talk someday of writing a children’s book together.  Then Kara’s husband Joe is the consummate sports fan, who is always strategically positioned to watch whatever sport happens to be airing on television.  Next are resident lovebirds Amy and Bryan — just glad to be together again, with Amy having just returned from a month-long family visit.  Finally there’s Glen and Kate, who keep us in stitches with their repartee — with Kate rolling her eyes, Glen’s been talking about how he knows how to fix their broken toilet — but that he’s just not worked up to it yet.

And then there’s me — the one who could write the book on not yet working up to doing “this” or “that.”  So how fitting it was for my watershed moments to pry me out of my contemplative comfort zone:  From leading my father’s funeral service in April to spending ten days at the Iowa Writer’s Workshop in July, you may be surprised to learn I’ve continued to set aside my introverted nature to make cold calls on Dad’s family back East.  While the calls began with hope of picking up the missing and puzzling pieces of Dad’s sad childhood story, my restored family connections have evolved into something more – especially my regular visits with Aunt Carol, Dad’s only sister – but exactly what the ‘more’ is I’m not ready to name.  Yet I can report how downright comical it’s been to listen to my own introductory spiel — telling unknown cousins how we really are related — before they hang up the phone, thinking I’m some sort of strange solicitation call.

I don’t know where the changes will lead.  But I know mine began during Lent, listening every morning to this ‘song-bite’ – “Say after me:  It’s no better to be safe than sorry” – performed by a band fittingly named a-ha. In a year punctuated by my father’s and aunt’s deaths – as well as the upcoming marriage of my brother Jon – I can’t help but wonder how lives would differ if we were to live everyday believing this song-bite true.  And on this dangling question I’ll close – for in this Season born of watershed wonders and professions of faith, who could want a tidy ending?  Like some movies, tidiness can be overrated.

Prayers in Progress

11 Saturday Dec 2010

Posted by Janell in Life at Home, Prayer

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Everyday Life, Home Restoration, Prayer, True Self

My son stomps around the second floor to ready for work while my husband sits quietly with his morning paper at the kitchen counter.  Meanwhile, I write away the hour, sitting near a window, in my lovely new PJ’s, robe and slippers my sister and aunt brought yesterday.

But it won’t be long before I head to Kara’s to finish up that last bit of painting — so that she and her husband can have their ‘home sweet home’ all to themselves — until the baby arrives anyway.

It’s been a year defined by sharing my Purdy paintbrushes with others — six months at Sis’s followed by a month now at Kara’s.  My painting skills  may be overrated but my price is right — it’s hard to beat free.  But next week I’ll use them at home, to paint my dining room for the Nth time — at the risk of husband-teasing that I’m reducing our square footage with every stroke.

If  one is inclined toward accounting, this dining room rendezvous with a paintbrush will make four times in four and a half years — if one doesn’t consider the six coats of my last go-around, in that all-out effort to get my white ‘just right.’

I have a hankering for a cinnamon-tinted dining room.  Or cumin-colored perhaps.  Something warm and brown for winter — yet dark and cool for summer.  And then there is this:  I always pray best with a paintbrush in my hand.  And there’s much to pray for these days — the new baby  that’s coming — Kyle’s new book on the eve of being published — my mother-in-law who’s trying a different cocktail of chemotherapy — my sister-in-law now back in AA who’s asked for prayers — my brother who will soon be marrying a woman with the same first and middle name as Mom — and the scary news for one diagnosed yesterday with breast cancer.

I fear my praying is no better than my painting:  I fear it too is overrated.  I do not have a hot-line to God.  No more than anyone else.  But when I’m asked, I do my best.  Sometimes I’m bold in my petitions — specific at laying out to God exactly what my wishes and hopes are in a particular matter.  But most of the time I just think the person’s name and imagine their face in my mind and let God fill in the blanks with my love and His.  Where a word is involved my favorite is ‘peace’  — I pray sweet, blessed peace and good sleep so that fears and worries don’t pick people apart to make them less than who they are.

And this is, at heart, what prayer is for me: Prayer is less about hopes and wishes and dreams — and more about being who we are.   So my favorite definition of prayer is this by Thomas N. Hart, which I stumbled upon in his book, The Art of Christian Listening:  “Prayer is being yourself before God.”

In a year where I’ve been so preoccupied with understanding what it means to be true self, this definition of prayer becomes  poignant.   How appropriate that answers came this week while painting — with a stroke of a brush as I gazed beyond the light dividers of the window to the naked shivering trees — that being true self has less to do with occupation and more to do with love  — stark naked love.

When I paint for love alone, I am my true self and I am in prayer.  When I garden for self or others out of love (rather than obligation), I am my true self AND I am in prayer.  No matter what I am doing — whether cooking or housekeeping or writing — if out of love, I am in communion with God and, therefore, in prayer.

There is much need for prayer.  There is much need for us to be our true and simple selves — to express our love into the world however and whenever and wherever we can — even clumsily and even with over-rated skills.  Because love and our need for it cannot be overrated.

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© Janell A West and An Everyday Life, January 2009 to Current Date. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this blog’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given.

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