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an everyday life

an everyday life

Tag Archives: Spiritual Direction

Play It Again, Sam

11 Wednesday Nov 2009

Posted by Janell in Life at Home, Soul Care

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Anne Morrow Lindberg, Everyday Life, Gift from the Sea, Soul Care, Spiritual Direction, Spiritual Director, Writing

“Lightness of touch and living in the moment are intertwined…”  

 — Anne Morrow Lindberg

Monday I sat down at my writing desk, this time not to write, but to review my most recent month of journal entries.  It’s a practice I do each month, a sort of unwinding of the string of days in order to rewind and watch them all again, this time with a hope of gaining a different perspective on what, if anything, is going on in my life.

I look for consistent themes:  What keeps popping up in life to end up as keystroke symbols on a page?  It helps to take another look at the events of the recent past, to take note of what I found significant enough to write about.  It amazes me how quickly the passage of time lessens the power of events; how events once important enough to spend time with are so quickly buried and forgotten in the depths of memory.

This practice of recycling old news  before I set it out on the curb is how I prepare to sit with my spiritual director.  The label “spiritual director” is a misnomer and either word on its own has the power to make one wary.   The title does a poor job of describing Curt’s role in my life; Curt does very little directing;  instead he mostly listens.  Together we sift through whatever I bring to talk about — both the ordinary and extraodinary events of the moment — and our tall task is to discern what God (my real spiritual director) MIGHT  be up to in my everday run-of-the-mill life. 

This month I chose to talk of Sunday night’s close call, where we barely escaped being hurt in an auto collision.  And I also talked about the spiritual themes I’ve been wrestling with of late, that were brought together so beautifully in yesterday’s morning devotion, that now sits on top of this digital page.

Lindberg wrote these words the year I was born, during a month of solitude, at a simple beach house on Captiva Island off the west coast of Florida.   Times were different for women when she penned her Gift from the Sea  — the Civil Rights and Women’s Liberation movements had yet to be — but her words continue to breathe truth in spite of the paradigm shifts that time has marked.  Truth marches on and invades spirits across generations willy nilly, as if it has life of its own.   Maybe it does.

So I continue to circle around these related themes of sainthood… letting go of my best dreams in order to welcome whatever will come… along with the nagging desire of treasuring the beauty that is embedded in everyday life.

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

“No.” ………….”The saints and poets, maybe  –  they do some.”

I circle around these themes, not like a record stuck in a groove, but one that brings me closer and closer to the center with each new rotation.  What sits in the middle of the dark deep middle?  I don’t yet know.   So, bear with me as I continue to draw circles.  The circles have to end eventually.  But until they do, perhaps you can play the part of Ingrid Bergman to my Humphrey Bogart, with these old familiar words:  

“Play it Sam.  Play ‘As Time Goes By’.”  

Peek-A-Boo

06 Sunday Sep 2009

Posted by Janell in In the Garden, Life at Home, Soul Care

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Aging, Everyday Life, Parents, Soul Care, Spiritual Direction

blog_DSC01731_resize

Mystery Guest under the Roses

A few weeks ago I ran across a mystery plant hiding beneath an antique rose bush.  This pretty little plant bearing purple tinged foilage was growing where I’d sown no seed.  What was it?  And where did it come from?  

Days later, in another part of my garden, I found my answer.  Through a quick match of garden gin rummy, I learned it was the Peek-A-Boo plant.  Living up to its name —  with its small ‘eyeball’ blooms peeking out from  some sweet potato vines  —  the Peek-A-Boo wore the same purple tinged leaves as my mystery plant. 

blog_DSC01730_resize

PEEK-A-BOOS - Spilanthes, Acmelia oleracea

Once named, other answers soon fell into place.  I recalled that it was growing there because I had planted the Peek-A-Boos in both garden locations.  In April under the rose bush;  and then in May, when the plants appeared to languish, I transplanted them elsewhere in the garden.  Or so I thought.  Now, almost four months later, I see  my late spring transplanting left behind roots — and once the environment became friendly, up grew more Peek-A-Boos. 

Outside the garden gate, playing peek-a-boo and rummy match games are not just for babies and toddlers.  I am learning just how often I hide my own real feelings, by either ignoring them outright (hoping or pretending them away) or by not calling them by their proper name.

I do this without even noticing.  Just recently I’ve talked to friends about how my father is no longer interested in my visits.  But rather than talk about the hurt from rejection, I pretend it’s not there and instead focus on this fallout from Dad’s dementia.  It’s easier to face reasons that feelings, even with myself.  Quick.  Cover it up.  Don’t speak about the hurt.  After all,  Daddy can’t help it because Daddy isn’t Daddy anymore. 

Most of my friends or family give me a free pass on such inconsistencies — on those times when my emotions don’t quite match or fit the circumstances.  But not my trusty spiritual director.  Instead he said something like, wow, that must have hurt.  And in response, my eyes uncontrollably teared up.  The feeling, with its deep roots hiding just beneath the surface of life leaked into reality.  Once the feelings found a friendly environment to live, no longer could they stay under wraps beneath their big beautiful bow of understanding forgiveness.   

Why do I play these games?  Am I afraid people will laugh?  Or worse, not care?  

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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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