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an everyday life

an everyday life

Category Archives: Soul Care

Fasting on Crumbs

04 Wednesday Nov 2009

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

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

A Tree Full of Angels, Common Book of Prayer, Daily Office, Everyday God, Everyday Life, Macrina Wiederkehr, Our Town, Prayer, Soul Care

During a sleepless night last week, I gathered up The Book of Common Prayer and headed toward my favorite chair.  For as long as this book and I have lived together, we’ve been nothing more than a bit of window dressing in each other’s lives.  Now was the time to undress the window, to see what layed beneath our mutual coverings.  I wiped away the fine coating of dust resting on its gold edges, then sat down to peruse its unfamiliar interior.  It’s examination of me will come later, as we begin to keep regular hours.

For a few weeks now, I’ve been thinking of praying the Daily Office.  And that evening, with the answer literally at my fingertips, I wondered how best to keep the Office’s divine appointments.  The recommendation is to divide the three daily readings into a morning and evening prayer practice; alternatively, the editors suggest a feast of all three readings in one sitting.

But desiring a bit more structure — no, needing some semblance of prayer rhythm in my life — I ignored both recommendations for my own three course meal plan, which was to pray at first light, after lunch and before retiring to bed.   But what seemed do-able in the dark quiet of the night has not been so in the light of busy full days.  In a week’s passage of time, I’ve yet to keep my second and third Office appointments.  

It’s the same with all my life.  Rather than feast on bread, I fast on crumbs.  Or maybe, as I wrote to a good friend yesterday, I scatter time here and there — a few crumbs toward gardening, a few toward spiritual direction matters, a few on the contemplative prayer class that I facilitate, and more than a few here in this web log.  Then there’s everyday life — the cooking, laundry, housekeeping; the butcher, the baker, the candlestick maker — and with no intention to do so, I find myself burning the proverbial candle at both ends.  And I wonder why it’s hard to sleep.

But sometimes, in spite of my fast crumbled lifestyle, I sit down to  a ‘just right’ bite of spiritual nourishment.  Macrina Widerkehr’s A Tree Full of Angels offered that perfect sustenance for yesterday, given a backwards glance at my last few posts.  In a chapter titled, Gather Up the Crumbs, Sister Macrina writes:  

“Why aren’t we saints?… I want to suggest a common cause.  The reason we live life so dimly and with such divided hearts is that we have never really learned how to be present with quality to God, to self, to others, to experiences and events, to all created things.  We have never learned to gather up the crumbs of whatever appears in our path at every moment.  We meet all these lovely gifts only half there.”

Sister Macrina goes on to counsel that EVERYTHING in our lives can be “a stepping-stone to holiness” if only we allow ourselves to be nourished on the crumbs of life, the experiences of what life has to offer us in the now.   That I call my contemplative prayer group Everyday God makes me wonder if maybe it shouldn’t be called EveryTHING God.  Would a name change open my eyes wider to see a bit of  God-splendor in all my everyday crumbs?     

As I read Sister Macrina’s words, my mind drifts back to the recent story of my uprooted Civil War Daffodil and I realize that Cosmo’s unearthed treasure became my own grace-filled crumb.  Such it can be with all of life, whether I plant myself three times a day in front of The Common Book of Prayer or not.  As with Hansel & Gretel, crumbs are all I need to lead me toward home and God, as long as I don’t allow the hungry hands of clock gobble up my attention. 

So why does it now hit me square between blind eyes that these thoughts about crumbs, accompanied by the rhythm of my daily crumbs, also respond to my haunting question of the week.  This question is the sort to leave behind crumbs hard to shake off; one appropriately given life by the ghost of Emily, the heroine of Thornton Wilder’s Pulitzer Prize winning play, Our Town.

The question is posed in that famous final scene of the third act, where a heartbroken ghostly Emily decides to run away from her visit to the living, in favor of re-joining the rest of the dearly departed at the Grover’s Corners graveyard.  Beseechingly, Emily looks for a crumb of  hope as she asks the Stage Manager about the blindness of humanity.   

“Do any human beings ever realize life while they live it? — every, every minute?”

“No”.  Then after a thoughtful pause, “The saints and poets, maybe — they do some.”

All Saints Day

01 Sunday Nov 2009

Posted by Janell in Life at Home, Soul Care

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Death, Everyday Life, May Sarton, Parents, Plant Dreaming Deep, Soul Care

In the quiet of a Sunday morning, after reading a few selections of the Daily Office, I settled into the pages of May Sarton’s book, Plant Dreaming Deep.  This particular book records the personal story of how, at age 46, Sarton came to own her first home in Nelson, New Hampshire.   I open to chapter one then glance at the title:  “The Ancestor Comes Home”.  It is a hint of grace that this chapter should set the table for All Saints Day so perfectly.

All Saints -- Granddad, Granny, Mom, Dad, Papa & Papageorge

I love May Sarton’s writing — her prose is beautiful, her memories hold power, and her angst over indecision is eerily familiar.  But as I enter Sarton’s world, I find I have more in common with Sarton than a shared angst over decisions.  She unwinds a few frames from the days of her life to tell  how she lost both parents by the time she had reached middle age, one in a lingering death and one in the space of hours.   My parents seem destined for this same divide and conquer method themselves; Mom is already gone, felled like Sarton’s great oak father, while Dad is withering on the vine like Sarton’s mother.

The deaths of Sarton’s parents set in motion the dismantling of her parent’s life.  And without any plan to do so, my thoughts immediately turn to my younger sister.  Christi has been living in the shadow of this reality for the last two months, as she has begun to take stock of my parent’s household and make plans for its destiny, whether it be landfill or another’s lucky home.  Sarton’s words about her death rendered event echo in the chambers of my own heart, just as they will soon echo in the vacant house that was my parent’s home.

“…I flew back through that long day to a house that was no longer home.  It was all sudden, violent, and terrible.  Within a week the house had been sold, and within two months dismantled, the books gone, everything torn apart of the fabric of my parents’ lives together.  I went through those months like a person in a dream, hardly conscious, making decisions because they had to be made.”

Christi too is “making decisions because they have to be made.”  However, I’m very grateful that my sister moves at a slower pace than Sarton, even as each passing day makes more clear that Daddy will never leave the nursing home to return to his home on the hill.  That’s our reality in a hard nutshell.  And of course the reality has always been there, keeping us company, nudging us toward recognition, in hopes that we might see IT for the truth it is and name it into existence.  I’ve never thought these thoughts before — that the hardest part of reality is its mere acceptance.

Last June, when Dad was a new and (so I then thought) temporary resident of the nursing home, I looked Daddy in the eye and told him he was a saint.  Daddy was surprised at my words.  Daddy knew he wasn’t perfect and even in his demented state, Daddy knew I knew this too.  So I went on.  “Daddy, you’re a saint not because your perfect.  You’re a saint because your real.”  And as soon as I spoke these words, I realized their truth, that they explained so much about who I am and what I hold most dear.

Dressing up in a Halloween costume of pretense and assumed identity is fun.  But it’s when the masks come off that the beauty and truth of a person is revealed.  For far too many, the masks stay on until death do it part.  But for others, it happens inch by inch.  We see these as the Mother Teresa’s of our world.    But whether alive or dead, we all become saints sooner or later.  We enter sainthood by owing — accepting the reality — of our own imperfect truth — our own imperfect humanity.  And when we no longer pretend to be other than who we really are — when our eyes open to our own beautiful brokeness —  we become just like Daddy.

Waiting with Mary

29 Thursday Oct 2009

Posted by Janell in Soul Care

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Everyday Life, Mary and Jesus, Soul Care, Waiting, Writing

A Place to Wait with Words

A Place to Wait with Words

Yesterday’s post proved cathartic.  I am now sitting at my cluttered writing desk.  And with fingers on keyboard, I ponder life  two thousand years ago, in the village of Nazareth, and wonder about the young Mary’s everyday life — before it was all shaken and stirred by that scary angel who dropped in without calling.

Mary is the one to ponder and treasure words in her heart.  St. Luke says this all the time about Mary in the gospel he wrote about Mary’s first-born son.  And like anyone the least bit connected with Jesus, and as mothers everywhere tend to be with any of their children at one time or another, Mary not only pondered, but she would come to wonder how the world was treating her child.

Like Mary, I tend to ponder and wonder at life.  I treasure words, like those written in The Luminous Word — a small Advent booklet that arrived in last week’s mail — where author Jan L. Richardson sees a different Mary than I, on that famous occasion where she entertained her unexpected angel.  Ms. Richardson writes: 

“She is reading when the angel appears.  Or so the medieval artists told it; in so many of the paintings of the Middle Ages, Mary holds a book as Gabriel greets her.  She is reading from the Hebrew Scriptures, sometimes, or, in a lovely turn of anachronism, from a Book of Hours.  This is a woman, the artists suggest, who is steeped in words.  Long before choosing to bear the Word, before agreeing to become the mother of God, Mary had been immersing herself in the ancient texts, letting the prayers and stories that had spiraled through the generations unwind in her.”

The author’s words paint a lovely vision.  But it doesn’t quite mesh with the picture I carry around of the young Mary’s life.   Like most Jewish girls of the time, Mary probably could not read; instead, I think Mary’s education would have been more practical, centered around the tasks of everyday life  —  making meals, tending and mending laundry, and keeping house.  It was neither glamorous nor romantic.

This was Mary’s lot and I don’t imagine she had time to sit and contemplate the deeper mysteries of life.  Until, that is, when mystery invaded her life, making the act of contemplation no longer an idle luxury.

Mary carried mystery in her womb, nurtured him at her breast and watched over  him until he was grown, when she did what all good mothers past and present are called to do:  She let her child go, to live his own life, however he saw fit.  

Then, out of sight, but never out of mind or heart, Mary waited.  She waited to hear a word from Jesus, while she went about her everyday tasks and waited on her children still at home.  The waiting was hard.  I imagine Mary’s waiting was far worse than waiting in the Wal-Mart checkout line. 

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“Do any human beings ever realize life while they live it? — every, every minute?”

-- Thornton Wilder, "Our Town"

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