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an everyday life

an everyday life

Tag Archives: Spiritual Direction

MAGIcal thinKING

26 Tuesday Jan 2010

Posted by Janell in Good Reads, Soul Care, Writing

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Arthur Andersen, Everyday Life, Joan Didion, Soul Care, Spiritual Direction, Writing

Last night in class, I was asked the question that always makes me squeamish: “Are you a writer?“

When I get this, I hedge with words like ‘wannabe’ or ‘trying to be’ or ‘someday, I hope’.  But before I could grow my hedge, my questioner — a perceptive and articulate soon-to-be-spiritual director — went on to explain her reason for asking; members of the church she pastors suggested she begin writing the stories she tells so well.  But it was what came next, said with a nervous chuckle — maybe not these exact words, but something akin to them — that caught my attention:  “Who am I to think that I can write?”

Well, okay then.  My friend and I share common ground, since members of the Texas church I use to attend did the same thing to me.  And once it started, it didn’t stop.  It wasn’t the same people as much as it was a similar message  that I heard over and over, like a baton handed from one runner to the next.  And then, that same haunting question I once volleyed back — “Who am I…?”

So last night, I did my friend a favor by cutting to the chase.  “Yes.”  “I write… but not for money.”

I told her how writing came to be part of who I am.  I told her it began with a work stint in St. Charles, Illinois, when I was twenty-something  and young in my tax consulting career, that I wrote training curriculum for the now defunct international accounting firm, Arthur Andersen & Co.  And after this, I wrote position papers to help defend  cross-border tax strategies for a publicly traded multi-national company that employed me.  And that now, many years later, I write for the pure magic and fun of it  — sometimes a gardening article, or a prayer meditation for a class I lead   — but most of all, I told her about writing my life in this year-old blog.

People began filing into class, so we never finished our conversation.  But had there been time, I wish I had told my friend this:

“If you ask about writing, try to answer through writing.  Just write. Just write to an answer; don’t waste precious time (like I did) thinking about writing or wondering if you should.  Begin a blog.  Or record your life in a paper journal.  Or maybe both — because paper journals are less confining than words that draw public breath.”

This, for starters, is what I wish I had said.

And then for the main course, I would promise to send her a copy of Marilynne Robinson’s five rules on writing, because they inspire with their truth.  And then I would invite her to ponder Ranier Maria Rilke’s Letters to a Young Poet.  And perhaps I would share other  ‘how-to-write’ books, like Annie Dillard’s “The Writing Life.”

Then, if willing to be bold (or foolish), this layperson might put tongue-in-cheek or foot-in-mouth and ask her pastor friend if there wasn’t some old fart in the Bible that hadn’t dared to ask the same question of God, in the opening chapters of Exodus — which, when I think on it, is rather ironic, given that our next move, upon asking this question, is often to turn around and run.

“Who am I…?” —  Moses dared to ask God at the burning bush.  You may recall where that question led Moses —  stuck in the desert with a huge mass of whining distant relatives for forty biblical years without ever stepping foot in the promised land.  And then like a Baptist preacher, I would say…, “Friend, I beg you — don’t miss out on the promised land.  Just write.“

And then for dessert, if she were still listening, I would offer my friend evidence of a great writer, — a really, really great writer  —  who at times, asked the same Moses identity question of herself.  In black and white, I hold her admission of doubt in my lap; it’s tucked in her memoir on grief, written soon after the death of her author-husband  John Gregory Dunne.  In her own words,

“I remember one last present from John.  It was my birthday, December 5, 2003.  Snow had begun falling in New York around ten that morning and by evening seven inches had accumulated, with another six due.  I remember snow avalanching off the slate roof at St. James’ church across the street.  A plan to meet Quintana and Gerry at a restaurant was canceled.  Before dinner John sat by the fire in the living room and read to me out loud.  The book from which he read was a novel of my own, A Book of Common Prayer, which he happened to have in the living room because he was rereading it to see how something worked technically.  … The sequence is complicated (this was in fact the sequence John had meant to reread to see how it worked technically), broken by other action and requiring the reader to pick up the undertext in what Leonard Douglas and Grace Strasser-Mendana say to each other.  “Goddamn,” John said to me when he closed the book.  “Don’t ever tell me again you can’t write.  That’s my birthday present to you.”

If Joan Didion experienced doubts about her call to write, then surely all writers do so at one time or another.   And like Joan, even when our writing is nothing like Joan’s, we answer the question the only way we can.  Just write.

But maybe I wouldn’t have said any of these things to my friend.  Who am I, after all?  I’ve no wise words like the MAGI nor can I issue the  commands of a KING.  I’m just a writer who is braver in writing then I am in person.

But there’s no harm in writing her to come check out WordPress.com, is there?   Nor, I think, is there a problem with inviting her to put on her magic thinking cap and just…

Surprised Eyes

18 Monday Jan 2010

Posted by Janell in Life at Home, Soul Care

≈ 9 Comments

Tags

Addiction & Grace, Everyday Life, Gerald May, Soul Care, Spiritual Direction, Truth

“Miracles are nothing other than God’s ordinary truth seen with surprised eyes.” — Gerald May, Addiction and Grace

I read a few ‘teaching’ books related to my coursework in spiritual direction.  Once I’ve finished with a book, I try to sum up the gifts received.  But Addiction and Grace did not really lend itself to this particular exercise.  Instead I was left with a few questions, like, what has this book made of me?  Am I an addict?

It’s not easy to think of  myself as “addict”, though I do acknowledge that I once suffered from a work addiction, a very long time ago.  Over lunch yesterday — when I was telling my family about what I was learning in this book — my husband surprised me by saying that I still have a work addiction — that the only thing that has changed is the work itself.  I’m still trying to make sense of his words, wondering if I’m blind to the truth that my husband so apparently sees.

What I do know is that I didn’t share my thoughts about the book at this evening’s group discussion;  instead, I listened or sometimes nodded my head when someone said something that felt true to my experience.  Had I shared, I would likely have confessed that the book has left me sad and edgy — that it made me recall — more than one —  that favorite T.S. Eliot quote of mine:   “humankind cannot bear very much reality.”

I have returned to all those underlined words that ‘hit home’ as I read them.  Quotes that assert that we all suffer from addiction and that we are never totally free of our addictions.  May asserts that if we become free of one — and by free, May talks about the addiction as if it is in remission rather than cured — another swings into the open parking spot to take its place.  Addiction is defined broadly:

“The same processes that are responsible for addiction to alcohol and narcotics are also responsible for addiction to ideas, work, relationships, power, moods, fantasies, and an endless variety of other things.”

Of course, as I’m reading these words, and many more like them, part of my mind is engaged in coming up with a list of my own ‘addictions’.   That chocolate pudding I was craving last week, perhaps?  The books that I must buy and not check-out from the library?  God forbid — this  blog?

It’s ironic that my reasons for purchasing and reading this book have turned out to be only ancillary after it’s all said and read.   It was not to primarily help others that I read this book, though I believe the lessons learned will allow me to do so, in a very indirect supportive way.  Rather, this book invites me to name my own addictions so that, with God’s help, I can become “free” of their power  in my life.  And who but God knows what miracles of ordinary truth this may mean to my surprised eyes.


Memory Keepers

02 Saturday Jan 2010

Posted by Janell in Life at Home, Soul Care

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Books, Dostoevsky, Everyday Life, Listening, Memory, Spiritual Direction, Writing

Old Friends and New -- People Come to Life

“You must know that there is nothing higher and stronger and more wholesome and good for life in the future than some good memory.” Fyodor Dostoevsky

Today opened up when Jon and I granted ourselves a little breathing room.

Jon needed time to sort through old memories and collect his thoughts; he’s the main speaker for his Alcoholics Anonymous group this evening.  And I wanted time to sort and collect items for a simple birthday party-to-go; we’re making new memories tomorrow, as we gather family at my mother-in-law’s to celebrate her 75th.

Memories are life, are they not?    So I wonder what happens to memories that are lost  — these pieces of life — do they get lost in our minds like a set of lost keys?  Or are memories like keys themselves, in that they unlock truth about our own lives?  And what happens to memories that are never recovered — do we lose important pieces of ourselves?

I lost memories with Mom’s death.  The memories Mom kept of me before I could form my own are dead with Mom.  Gone too are half of the memories we made together.  It is the latter that has proved the more noticeable loss, since I’m now left to carry around half-memories like a sock that’s lost its mate.  Like any lost sock, the half-memory is no longer aired in public.

Personal stories are sacred.  It doesn’t matter whether the story is told in an AA meeting or in a spiritual direction session or in a cozy chat with a friend or in writing memoir — or even a piece of fiction that reads like memoir.  I lose myself in other people’s stories.   And because truth is truth, I also find part of my own story within another’s.

Personal stories need to be told and they need to be heard.  And with a little more breathing room, we could memory keep a whole lot better.

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