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an everyday life

an everyday life

Tag Archives: Friends

Where Are Your People?

08 Tuesday Dec 2009

Posted by Janell in Life at Home, Soul Care

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Everyday Life, Friends, Mary and Elizabeth, Soul Care

Annie with Mom's People

As I continue to write this week’s prayer practice, I’ve been wondering about other Mary-Elizabeth relationships that have existed through time.

My wondering grew personal during a retreat one year, when I was invited to reflect on a Mary from my own life.   I had no lack of Marys and  I sense that if we take time to think on it, we might  each find that we’ve had at least one Mary in our own lives who dropped everything to be by our side in our Elizabethan time of need.

Our Mary may have left loose ends swinging in the wind as she swished out her door so that she could rush into ours to help us pick up the loose ends and pieces of our lives.  She’s the person that made sure our physical needs were met without forgetting we needed emotional support as well.  She’s the one that gave us hope that all would be well as soon as we received word that she was on her way.  And  though we tried not to let our mind go there, we knew she’d be the one we could count on until the dreary end, if life didn’t match up to our best hopes.  Through her mere presence, our Mary carried the Divine into our lives, just as the Virgin Mary did for Elizabeth all those years ago.

I’ve been thinking of the times I’ve tried to play the part of Mary.  And I’ve been thinking of the times when I was forced to play the role of Elizabeth, waiting for help and hope to arrive.  Mom mostly played the part of my Mary;  and when the time came  in her own life, Mom had no shortage of Marys.  I was one of them.  My sister and her sisters were others.

But two of these were not just Mary’s, they were my mother’s people.  Christi and Jane were anointed this title by my niece Annie, back when Annie was not much beyond the first or second grade.

It happened when Annie walked into Mom’s house one day to find Mom working alone in the kitchen.  Normally, Annie would arrive to find Aunt Jane and my sister Christi working by Mom’s side.  But on that particular day, for whatever reason, Jane and Christi hadn’t yet arrived.

Looking around, Annie asked Mom, “Where are your people?

“My people?”  “Oh, do you mean your Aunt Jane and Aunt Christi?”  Yes, that was exactly who Annie meant.

“Yes.  Where are your people?”

“Oh, they’re not here yet.  But they’ll be here soon.”

I think it was then and there that Annie learned the names of Mom’s people.  And though she calls them by their proper names now, I think  Mary might do in a pinch.

The Inside That Counts

14 Saturday Nov 2009

Posted by Janell in Good Reads, Life at Home, Soul Care

≈ 9 Comments

Tags

Blue Turtle Crossing, Everyday Life, Five Rules - Writing Life, Friends, Journaling, Letters To A Young Poet, Marilynne Robinson, Rainer Maria Rilke, Soul Care, Writing

Blog_09_1114_01I keep a journal near at all times.  It’s nothing fancy, just a common composition book sold by most discount department stores.

To be sure, beautiful journals are a treasure though I find them a bit intimidating.  I pick one up and feel I’ve nothing worth recording on its gilt-edged pages; but give me a humble notebook to mumble through, and I can write about anything and everything without a care of what it looks like or how it sounds.   At best, it’s a rough diamond that may someday be taken out and polished for a wider audience.  At worse, it’s just a bit of writing practice. 

Whether its people or journals, it’s what inside that counts; isn’t that how the old expression goes? 

My journal is my camera for the world, my way to capture and collect memories, pieces of life that I don’t want to forget.  I tote it around to record life and as I do, it gives me life; where once I had little to say beyond my small introvert world, my filled pages grant me voice, a way to interact with my larger world. 

In a similar way, my gal-pal Colleen always has her camera handy.  To observe Colleen record life with her camera is art itself.  Instinctively, almost effortlessly, Colleen positions her camera in front of her eye and as natural as breathing, she captures a series of photos.  Years of practice have refined Colleen’s eye; even after countless photos, my friend cannot resist a beautiful sunset.  Colleen’s careful discerning eye sees each one as unique.  And why resist the call to create and share beauty?  Colleen doesn’t.  Every time she publishes her work at Blue Turtle Crossing, she pays homage to God and humbly invites us into her light-washed world. 

Of course, no matter how practiced we become with our tools of creation, we can never quite capture the memory we are trying to preserve.  The act of preservation shrinks the memory into manageable portions.  It may be a gorgeous photo or a lovely line of words, but it’s just a small bite of the life we’ve experienced. Yet, somehow it doesn’t matter.  We are drawn to express the inexpressible,whether our expression is in words that cast images or in images that speak words.  We know no other way.

I had the opportunity to hear Marilynne Robinson — the Pulitzer Prize winning author of Gilead   —  lecture on the practice of writing.  In my journal, under the date October  5, 2007, are these five rules for a writing life that I scribbled down as Ms. Robinson was speaking:

1.  Write the book you want to read.
2.  Trust and respect the reader.
3.  Descend into self to write — discover your primary self – the beautiful, the true; it’s preparation for writing words worth saying.
4.  We know what we are by what we do.
5.  Fiction is true.  

I don’t know whether I will ever write a novel.  I don’t feel a novel ‘in me’ at the moment.  But I do my best to observe Rule #2; and Rule #3 is a work in process, what my life has been about for the last 15 months.  Robinson’s last two rules require no commentary.

Ultimately, while writing begins from within, the outside counts too, of course.  Take care of the tree — make it good –and good fruit will naturally follow.  Or to quote the Master Teacher himself, “every good tree bears good fruit, but the bad tree bears bad fruit.”  One way I try to care for my self is to surround myself with beautiful words.

This morning, while responding to a comment left by one who writes beautiful words herself, I found myself thinking of Rainer Maria Rilke’s Letters To A Young Poet.  A gift from my spiritual director when I was stymied in my writing, I found this book of letters — now more than a century old — incredibly helpful.  In his first letter to the young poet, Rilke wastes no time in getting to the heart of the writing life:

“Go into yourself.  Search for the reason that bids you write, find out whether it is spreading out its roots in the deepest places of your heart, acknowledge to yourself whether you should have to die if it were denied you to write.  This above all — ask yourself in the stillest hour of your night:  must I write?”  Delve into yourself for a deep answer.  And if it should be affirmative, if you may meet this earnest question with a strong and simple “I must”, then build your life according to this necessity; your life even into its most indifferent and slightest hour must be a sign of this urge and a testimony to it.”

I keep my journal near because I must.  The cheap cardboard outside cradles my inner lines to life itself.  At times, it may even produce an occasional good fruit.

The Word Detective

20 Sunday Sep 2009

Posted by Janell in Soul Care

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

Everyday Life, Friends, Soul Care

Whenever I hear an interesting string of words, I pull out my journal and take notes just like a detective.  This morning my friend Joni found words on the foil seal of a carton of Daisy Sour Cream  —  “The most precious thing one can make is a friend.” — and she thought I might like to record them, as I’ve done with other words off and on all weekend.

Twice yesterday I pulled my journal out; once while touring a thoroughbred horse farm and again when touring the Woodford Reserve Bourbon Distillery.   When the tour guide at the horse farm spoke of  how dangerous it can be when a horse becomes spooked at the starting gate, I wrote down her phrase ”one thousand pounds of freaking.’  And later, after driving back to Joni’s from touring the distillery, my friend Donna used this expression — “as serious as a heart attack” — about whatever she was talking about.  Perhaps it’s a fairly common expression to some.  But to my ears, it was uncommon and worth notation.

But this morning, I was not moved to write down the Daisy lid saying because I found it troubling.   On the heels of a wonderful weekend with my four gal pals, the words ‘make’ and ‘friend’ just didn’t seem to belong together.  These words were not friends.  At the same time, I am untroubled by using the word ‘make’ in connection with either bourbon whiskey or thoroughbred race horses.  I’ve learned that the making of race horses and bourbon whiskey requires time and passion and even a bit of science in the following of defined and results-proven processes, in addition to having good genes and good ingredients.

As I think about these four friends of mine and how different we are, I marvel that we should even be friends.  We did not choose one another out of desire or will.  Instead, our friendship seems so happenstance.  And this happenstance nature makes me question whether friends like us can truly be made.  And if not, are they instead begotten by God?

It will take more time to sort out my thoughts before I’m able to draw a conclusion.

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