Prescribed Meditations

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Blue Lobelia in Cobalt Blue

Ever so often I stumble upon truth.

I’m surprised when it happens.  Even when it comes during my normally prescribed meeting time with God.

Oh, don’t get me wrong.  I always expect truth when something of God is let loose in my life.  But it’s when truth comes veiled as a ready response to questions I’ve just posed that I grow still with shock, as if I’ve just been caught with my hand in the cookie jar.

Just a few days ago, I wrote of my tendency to focus more of questions of doing.  Not being.   For “no matter how much time we devote toward self-knowledge, for now, we must be content to scratch the surface…”

What I didn’t know then, was that an answer I wasn’t looking for would come bounding into my world this morning, set loose long ago by Frederick Buechner’s pen, as it scratched out these few words on paper:

“…I believe that in sibilants life is trying to tell us something.  The trees, ghosts, dreams, faces, the waking up and eating and working of life, are trying to tell us something, to take us somewhere.  If this is above all a Christ-making universe, then the place where we are being taken is the place where the silk purse in finally made out of the sow’s ear, and the word that life is trying to speak to us is that little by little, squealing and snuffling all the way, a pig either starts turning into at least the first primal porcine version of a hero, or else is put out of his piggish misery.  At the heart of reality — who would have guessed it?– there is room for dying and being born again.”

It was Buechner’s use of the phrases “sow’s ear “and “silk purses” that first snagged my attention.  For as I acknowledged a few days ago, taking on sow’s ear projects with the hope of turning them into a proverbial silk purse has always been part of who I am.

Buechner scratchings invited me to scratch the surface of my own truth, to see that my doings, my deepest desires, reflect what I most long to become myself.  It’s not just the untended gardens or untended houses that I wish to make silk purses.  Underneath all the doings, it’s me that wishes  to become the silk purse.  I want the sow’s ear part of me to die.  And like the renewal that comes with Spring and Easter, I wish to be born again as a silk purse.

It’s ironic that today’s prescribed med, from Buechner’s Listen to Your Life, was appropriately titled:  Trying to Tell Us Something.

For the time doing

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Some questions come up every Spring.

They grow out of  desire for renewal, from seeds planted deep within my soul.   However, the changes I wish to cultivate are not usually ones to myself.  These are too difficult.  These require too much energy.  These would require me to really know myself.

I stumble for answers when I come up against questions of identity.  At best, I’ve learned that I can only get at knowing myself — that through spiritual direction and contemplation and even writing and other acts of doing, I  am able to uncover layers of my buried identity.  But in the end, I know that I can never fully know myself.  I am mystery.  I am mystery to myself and I am mystery to others.

It’s the same for all of us.  We are all mystery.  We are mystery to ourselves and a mystery to others.  No matter how much time we devote toward self-knowledge, for now, we must be content to scratch the surface, to know only bits and pieces of our personal truth, as “we see through a glass, darkly.”

So outside of Lent, I let go of those harder questions of “who” and unite with Spring by concentrating on my doings.  I involve myself in some new creative undertaking, like my sister’s home remodel.  Or I attempt to develop some new skill or improve old ones, as with my online writing class at Shewrites.com.

But the desire for change responds not only to the questions of ‘who I am” or “what I’m doing.”  Always, always the desire infects the question of  “where I am.”  Each Spring the question arises, with respect to whatever place I currently call ‘home,’ — Do I stay or do I go?

I love living in this old house in Mesta Park.  I really do.  But in the restless Springtime, I began thinking about new old houses to live in, I begin looking at home ads, the local MLS and even that wonderful website called Zillow.com.

I don’t know whether the desire to pull up roots and transplant myself is just a natural outgrowth of the renewal that comes with Spring — a sort of keeping up with the Jones’ — the Jones’ being the Daffodils and Creeping Phlox that decorate my Springtime garden like painted Easter eggs.  Or whether my desire for a new dwelling springs from my deeper most being — to turn a sow’s ear of a house in desperate need of tending, into the proverbial silk purse —  that somehow, has always been part of who I am.

But wherever the desire springs from, I know that it will lead my husband and I to drive around other historic neighborhoods in search of a better fit — as it leads me, for the same reason, to look more closely at other houses in our own neighborhood while on our evening walks.  And it will lead us to attend ‘open houses’.  And it will lead us to closely regard the homes featured on various historic home tours.

Of late, of Lent, I’m wondering whether the focus on “the wheres” and “the whats” of life are mere subterfuges for the deeper questions of identity, a sort of fleeing from the harder work of uncovering true self.  Or whether the desire for change is, underneath, a longing for a home that is not here but out there in the great unknown that waits beyond death.  These two questions are too difficult to answer.  Who but God can say?

What I can say is that I’ve never found a home I’ve liked better, in the last four Springs of looking.  And what I know is that this place I call home soothes my spirit the minute I walk in the backdoor, after being gone all day, as I was this past Saturday, when I went to work on my sister’s remodel.

And this too,  I can tell:  On Easter  morning, with coffee cup in hand, I looked out my kitchen window onto my lovely Springtime garden.  And I turned to my husband and said, “How could I ever think of leaving my garden?  How could I ever think of leaving a place so perfect for our needs?

So in two easy questions, it looks like I’m home.  For the time doing.

Sleeping In Between

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Sleeping  in between seasons isn’t easy.

Like now.  When our forced air system stays balanced at seventy degrees.  When it’s too cool for the air-conditioner.  When it’s too warm for the heater.  When even turning up the overhead fan to the highest setting —  what my husband affectionately terms ‘hurricane force winds’ — offers no relief.

As lovely as it is outside right now, inside it’s anything but.  Mild temperate evenings is a surefire recipe for staying sleepless on a stuffy second floor.

After three nights of tossing and turning earlier this week, I finally woke up to the fact that this house is blessed with forty windows!  Twenty of them upstairs.  I know since I stripped and painted every one of  these windows, the first winter we lived here.  And though most are closed off with a fixed storm window, enough can be opened to create a nice cross-breeze.

Old houses were designed to invite in every bit of wind that is within its general vicinity.  And like most old houses in the area, our master bedroom was designed off of the pattern of an old sleeping porch, with our bed nestled between three sides having two windows each.

Last night, with one window open on either side of our bed, sleeping in between became suddenly easy.