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an everyday life

Tag Archives: Everyday Life

Wholly Listening

04 Thursday Feb 2010

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

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Tags

Everyday Life, Soul Care, Spiritual Direction, Writing

Regret closes in.

What door did I just close?  What would have happened had I not been so quick on the tongue-trigger?  What might have been said had I waited in silence?

Of course, conversations happen fast.  The words of another don’t quite sink in before the moment is gone.  It’s only later that the loss is felt, only later that regret fills in the hole of what might have been.  And as much as we’d like to retrace our words back to the time of impending revelation, the opening we glimpsed too late  is gone.

It’s funny — in an ironic, sad sort of way —  that it was just last night when I was talking to my husband about when, in my writing, I most sense the presence of the Holy.  Inevitably, it comes through telling stories of  times when life catches us by surprise, when we forget ourselves enough that we simply react, without fully processing what it is we should do.  Or what it is we should say.

For a moment, we are immersed by whole truth.   Unbridled hurt or anger flares up and life shakes lose a tear.  We feel naked and exposed.  Or sometimes we’re just so darn giddy that if we don’t embarrass ourselves by our victory jigs (after we’ve come to our good senses), then we have surely embarrassed friends or family or complete strangers with our demonstrations of foolish and unabridged joy.

Sacred moments catch us by surprise, and often, I realize only later that I may have closed a door on something important.  It happens more often than I would like and perhaps, more often than I know.  Last night it happened with my brother’s unexpected call.

Jon never calls on Wednesday and never so close to bedtime.  Looking back on it, I guess he was in the midst of  a whole-truth moment, where he simply had to tell me something, in spite of the fact that he was calling at the wrong hour or on the wrong evening.

I can’t recall Jon’s exact words but he called to thank me for bringing a holy listener into his life.  Jon wanted to tell me about  their first meeting and how much he had enjoyed being with Jim.  On some level, I sensed the weight of  unprocessed longing in the words expressed and the words that may have come next.  But I’ll never know since I jumped into the silence with words that should have waited on the weightier words of my brother.

Silence is indeed golden.  It helps us be better listeners.  It gives us time to absorb.  It gives the one speaking time to clarify and expand.  If truth is resting on the tip of a tongue, silences invites the truth to slip out in the open.

With silence, our listening can become whole.  And in the  listening, when the speaker loses all track of  time and forgets about the listener and for a moment, even forget about himself, the listening become something else.  Holy.

In the Name of Love

03 Wednesday Feb 2010

Posted by Janell in Life at Home

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Tags

Birthdays, Everyday Life, Romance, U2

Christi....Jon... Me

It’s rare for me to be together with both siblings at once.

But yesterday, we did it.  My brother and I made an extra stop on our way to Dad’s to take Christi to lunch for her birthday.  We were a day early and an hour late — the latter is not so unusual where I’m concerned, though for the record, yesterday’s lateness had less to do with me than with factors beyond Jon’s dentist’s control.

When we called with the news of our delay, my sister decided she’d rather eat late with us than go on time with others.  I’m glad she did.  The three of us always laugh when we’re together.  I often wonder – after we’ve parted ways — why we don’t get together more often.  Perhaps this year we will — if the other two are willing.

Gifts are always a challenge for my kid sister who once ran a gift store.  Not just any gift will do.  During my Texas years, her gift usually consisted of potted bulbs and money.  But being closer to home these last four years, I’ve tried to up the ante.

One year I surprised her with her favorite pink sugar cookies from the elementary school we both attended.  It took a little while to convince the school to hand over their prize recipe, but I’m persistent when chasing after a good recipe.  Two years ago, the year after Mom died, I took us both on a spa date and then after, I went back to Dad’s and Christi’s to prepare Mom’s favorite fried chicken dinner for all of us to share.   We even invited Mom’s siblings.  Last year I hit the birthday gift jackpot when I surprised Christi with a Tempur-Pedic mattress pad and new bedding.  Her sleep was so good that first evening, she didn’t want the night to end.  Sounds like some romantic date, doesn’t it?

My sister does enjoy a good romance, as long as the romance is in a book or a movie or connected to some other person’s life.  One year, remembering how my sister had brought together my husband and me, I began to think it would be only fair that I do unto her as she had done for me.  So I decided to play matchmaker between my sister and my husband’s boss George.  Neither was really looking for a steady romantic interest but I ask, what does that have to do with the price of tea in China?  I thought these two would be perfect together — and for the record, I still do —  but the time just wasn’t right, for reasons known and unknown.

Just one of the many mistakes I’ve made in the name of love.  This year her gift was a crock.  Salt-glazed with a cobalt blue interior.

Happy birthday, sis.

Cut-Outs & Outtakes

02 Tuesday Feb 2010

Posted by Janell in Life at Home

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Tags

Addiction, Childhood Memories, Everyday Life, Groundhog Day, Nursing Home Life

Red cardboard hearts and cupids dance softly on strings tacked to the ceiling.  Underneath, a string of shuffling feet go up and down the hallway aided by walkers and wheelchairs.  Even in the nursing home, where life moves in slow-motion, not many take notice of the symbols of the season.

Nursing home life reminds me of elementary school, where each passing holiday and season is celebrated with cardboard cut-outs — orange  pumpkins turn into brown turkeys which turn into white snowmen which are now red hearts and cupids.  Perhaps the changing colors and shapes break-up time and keep the days from homogenizing into white skim milk.  Or an experience of deja vu.

Of course, today’s holiday — Groundhog’s Day —  is a cut below those which merit cardboard decorations.  During my days at school, there were no parties thrown in honor of the event, nor were they any special lessons that I can recall.  That a groundhog seeing his shadow on February 2nd meant six more weeks of winter, was a legend I learned from Mother rather than school teachers.  Yet, even from this much reliable source, the tale of the charming fair-weather forecaster seemed a bit far-fetched for even this former first grader to swallow.

Just as far-fetched was the Groundhog Day movie I grew up to like more than the legend itself.  Watching Bill Murray stuck in a February 2nd time loop while he slowly changed from a self-centered ego maniac to become everyone’s best friend  was a story right up my alley.  The grace in receiving as many ‘do-overs’ as one needs to get life ‘right’ is truly the stuff of fairy tales.  Isn’t it?

Every day as Bill wakes up to February 2nd and goes to bed on February 2nd — and every time Bill turns out his bedside lamp, it is easy to imagine  some off-camera director yelling, “Cut; one more take, Bill.  One more take for you to get life right.”

As I thought about this movie today, I thought of  my brother’s fight to shake off shadows lurking in his own life loop. I’ve lost track of the number of times Jon has been in the drug — detox — rehab — right living — loop.  Just recently I learned that shame lies in the shadow of every addiction cycle — that shame is the starter and the fuel to keep an addiction loop going.

I once imagined that I could help Jon break out of this loop — if only I could direct Jon action’s, like a director gives an actor direction.  In my dreams, when things would appear to be going south for Jon, I saw myself yelling, “Cut.  One more take, Jon.  Give it your all this time, Jon.  No more outtakes, please.’

Legends and movies make even the far-fetched seem do-able.  But  I’ve learned that breaking the drug-addiction loop is so very, very difficult by watching the same story unfold  —  over and over and off an on —  since the early eighties.  Enough turns around the loop has finally taught me that no one but God can be Jon’s director — and nothing but grace can cut Jon loose from the outtake looping.

The part I’ve been given is small — a small but supporting role of cheering Jon on in his effort to become the hero of his own story.  And just like I pulled for Bill Murray, I’m pulling for our hero Jon to break out of his Groundhog  Day loop.

But here’s praying that if our hero Jon sees any shadows, he’ll make like a groundhog and take cover.  No shame in that, since the rest of world won’t take notice of what’s fluttering in the background of their own lives… at least, until cymbals go crashing in around them.

Yet, even now, I sense the lucky promise of green shamrocks waiting in the wings.

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