Friday, December 27, 2013

When you are wondering if you really should eat that second piece of cake....



For all the O'Brien kin who dare to eat at my house on Christmas...and for nieces and nephews who bring me much joy...

 So if the crumbs mean anything, my cake was a success or maybe everyone was just being polite or the wine was that good and that it makes everything else seem that good.  The wine was gone too, but then wine always is.  Is there really bad wine?  I personally have never turned down a glass or thrown one out on the lawn. Most folks won’t turn down a plate of butter and brown sugar either.  My family is especially gracious in the fact that they allowed me to take over the blessing.  And they seem to love to participate in whatever I come up with.  One year, I had each child read the one of the O Antiphons.  (This would have made more sense to them had we not been a mixture of third generation Methodist and Moravian).  One year, we sang all the verses of O Come, O Come Emanuel.  My very musically gifted family members (of which I am not ONE), informed me that was an incredibly hard carol to sing and could we change.  I was slightly devastated because it just happens to be one of my faves. One year, we sang Joy to the World.  I seem to recall my nephew played his trumpet to accompany us, in my very small living room and to my ears it sounded glorious.  I could actually have an entire brass quintet and just might do that next year.  One year we read parts of Isaiah antiphonally.  This year I had them bring all of their used Love feast candles, I ended up with about 21 and some had purple wrapping instead of red- that means they were incredibly old-we O’Briens never throw anything and I mean anything away.  This would include flower vases from florist shops as well as liquor that as best we could tell was made in 1936.  I wouldn't open it. We could make a couple of episodes for hording reality shows.  Seriously.  This year I deciced we would light used Moravian candles and sing the third verse of “O Come All Ye Faithful,” which interestingly is different in every denominational hymnal.  Who knew?  (Not only do I collect prayer books, I collect hymnals and save odes from Love feast, apparently for the sole purpose of finding a random verse). My nephew had us sing the Methodist version of the third verse. We practiced and everything and were even given the pitch to sing in, which I am sure was perfect given the giftedness of my kinfolk. O’Briens love to perform, but sometimes I think they cooperate with my various blessing strategies, not because they love to sing and perform, but because beef tenderloin is in the oven. 

All of that to say, I love to host Christmas dinner, and though I am not entirely convinced my family loves cramming 17 people into my house, if you feed them they will come.   This of course can be traced back to a childhood trauma/drama. 

 I have two younger brothers who also happen to be bigger than me and for a while we entertained this very large hound name Princess who pretended to hunt and be our family dog.  I am sure I am embellishing slightly here, but to the best of my recollection Princess weighed 50 lbs. at least.  One would think the size would not have bothered me given the fact that my cat, Sami weighs in a just a tad under 25 lbs.  Which according to my students is not a cat at all, but rather a small mountain lion.  She is kind of large.

We owned a blue Oldsmobile.  One year, an artic front was passing through which was caused temperatures to hover around 8 degrees in the sunlight.  The trip to my grandparents was about 2 ½ hours across the mountains between here and southwestern Virginia.  For as long as I can remember we left every Christmas morning to go over the woods and dashing through the snow to grandmother’s house.  On this particular Christmas, the trek was especially painful, since we had to take Princess with us and she sat in the back seat.  The heater in our car was not functioning.  The backseat of an Oldsmobile is just not big enough for three kids and a large dog.  This was the age before mini vans and to be honest, a Suburban would not have been large enough that day.  And despite the 14 blankets, the toboggans, the mittens and a dog sitting on top of me, we were still cold.  My mother used to drug us with Benadryl for the trip so we would sleep and not fight.  This rarely worked though and this particular Christmas, I seem to recall the dog sitting on my lap, my middle brother getting the rest of the back seat and my youngest brother laying in the floorboard and I was not allowed to put my feet down.  I also remember my dad stopping every 15 minutes or so to scrape the ice off the windows.  I think I neglected to mention the snow and sleet that was falling, making the driving conditions a tad hazardous, especially without a working defroster.  The point of these trips of course is to increase family bonding, but it was more a scene out of The Christmas Story or Christmas Vacation.  I seem to recall, after the dog rearranging herself on top of me, and complaining to my mother, that Bobby was “hogging” the backseat and her giving me that look that says, “Don’t make me make your father stop this car….”, and blowing the icy snot out of my nose, that I made the vow.  It went something like this, “No matter what, I will never make my children leave their house on Christmas Day and I will never visit family that lives farther than 10 minutes away and I will be a dog owner.  And I will own very, very large cars.” 

As childhood vows usually go, we rarely keep them, especially those involving the things we will never to do to our unborn children.  The only part of that vow I have ever kept is the fact that I have always been a cat owner and for a large part of Davis’ childhood we have hosted Christmas dinner. Oh, I forgot to mention, Davis is an only child, hence not needing really big cars.

I was reflecting during dinner, (wine will do that you know), that maybe my family might dread my house like my car rides on Christmas day or maybe they really do enjoy all the chaos and mayhem and Joseph really is the star of the Christmas story.   Wine makes one very philosophical.  Beer makes you truthful.  Water just has bacteria.  Something to ponder the next time you drink a glass.  Any who, I was wondering if they thought it was too crowded, (which is was), was the beef overdone, (maybe a tad on the ends), did I have enough plates set, was my niece’s friend about to jump off my roof and/or go running out the back door never to return, (he’s a trooper and the kids loved him), should I make more tea, and even though they are not my blood, they are kin.  And isn’t funny, that when they are kinfolk, there just isn’t a whole lot you aren’t willing to do.  From having 17 people in your house, to attending your girlfriend’s family function, to bringing all your old ove feast candles at a moments notice, to singing random verses of carols, sitting really, really close, eating all the food and saying it is good and taking photos to post on Facebook and Instagram.  You also are willing to make a fool of yourself playing the latest game app called Heads Up.

Which brings me to Joseph.  Who, in my opinion doesn’t get enough press.  He’s really the hero in all this.  Mary’s role as the mother of God just doesn’t impress me as much as Joseph and those wisemen and then of course John the Baptist. (Now there’s a story.) I sort don’t imagine she had much of choice.  She was a pregnant, unwed teenager in first century Palestine and for some reason, not entirely clear to me, thought of as poor.  Not sure she was going to get out of the whole birth thing.  It also seems that by the time Gabriel let her in on the little surprise, she was already pregnant.  Also, given the fact that Jesus was male and I have son, I know raising him was no picnic and pretty much she did what she had to do.  I can just hear her saying, “Jesus-I really don’t care who your dad is, clean your room or I am going to pull your ears off.”  Or at that whole temple incident, “Jesus- do you have any clue how worried I have been.  Messiah thing or not, you will not leave my side until we get back to Nazareth. Is that clear?  Now march to the front of that line and don’t step out.”  Or at the Cana wedding, “Really- you think you are going to embarrass my girlfriend by not getting more wine?  Let me know how that works out for you.”  “You are so busted right now and the saving the world gig is going to have to wait because I told you to take those dirty, filthy sandals and put them out back days ago.  This is not a manger and you do not live in a barn, might have been born in one, but I will not allow filth and vermin in my house.”  “Look, son, I am really concerned about your choice of friends- James and John- not only is their mother a hot mess, they carry knives and I am thinking they are gangsters.  Perhaps we need to reconsider our choices.”  So, I am not sure she was so much obedient as doing what mommas do and that is raise children – theirs, ours and yours.  And for the incarnation to have any meaning to be me at all, it is realizing that Jesus grew up.  This includes hormone rages, adolescent crushes, acne, selective hearing, thrill seeking and boundary testing.  Remember the desert.  Talk about testing boundaries and thrill seeking.  And Mary was the mom in all of this.  I think most moms will tell you that we are genetically hardwired to raise children and there is not a lot of choice in the matter.  And pretty much we will step in and raise anybody’s child. 

Men on the other hand, seem to have choices about fatherhood.  And this is why I love Joseph.  He stuck it out.  Fathers have choice and back in first century Palestine, Joseph had a lot of choice.  He knew this kid was going to different.  This kid was not his own.  There would be no long talks in the wood shop, no skipping rocks across the river Jordan, no son to take over the family business, no son to look after the kids and Mary when Joseph died.  Not to mention, apparently Jesus could out talk anyone at the synagogue, and maybe Joseph’s friends lacked appreciation for Jesus’ intellect.  I suspect they too gossiped about Joseph not being able to control his kid.  He even moved to all places- Egypt, just to keep Jesus out of danger. 

Jesus wasn’t his kin.  He took him in anyhow.  He fed him, took care of him, raised him, and loved him.  He didn’t have to.  He adopted him as his own.  Which is kind of what God does when you think about it.  And honestly, I think this is the message of Christmas.  At the end of the day, human relationship is worth the risk and the trouble.  Having relationships with other humans is quite dangerous.  More often than not we refuse to take the risk.  We don’t like messy.  We don’t like noisy.  We don’t like endings we can’t control or see and we certainly don’t like people different from us, much less people who can’t love us back the way we would choose.  We are a fairly self-centered lot actually, and if someone doesn’t fit our mold or measure up or love us back the way we want to be loved, we pretty much quit them. 

It is pretty easy to say we believe in the Christmas story but much harder to live it out.  It is easy to love our neighbor and to take care of the invited guests- but love the guy who votes different than you or watches a different news channel or has a different haircut and maybe, maybe even looks at the Christmas story a little different – now that’s a challenge. God showed up and took a risk to become fully human.  Joseph embodies that somehow for me.  He lived out his convictions, he lived out his beliefs, he manifested his identity and integrity to the world by choosing to love another human who was radically different from him.

We are never told what happened to Joseph and this makes me kind of sad.   I like to think he sung lullabies over the sleeping Jesus.  And I suspect his fatherly advice may have went something like this:

Go on and go to sleep.  Rest.  You have a long road ahead.  I think he probably prayed for God to guard his heart so he could sleep.  I think Joseph probably told him to go and chase his dreams, saving the world could wait till another day.  But mostly Joseph just did what we all should do and cared for the ones standing right in front of him.  Joseph chose to be human and in doing so ended up touching the divine.  Joseph risked everything just so Jesus could sleep for a while.


‘God’s incarnation in Jesus… God’s word become flesh. If the incarnation – the mystery of being both human and divine – means anything, it means that the “mind of Christ” is a mind that mortals can take on. The scandal of the Christian profession is that God took on mortality in order that mortals could take on God’s life’ – Parker Palmer

All is grace,

On the first day of Christmas:

Grateful for:

Wine
Tabletalk
Nephews who love to sing and know random verses of carols
Moravian candles especially the old ones
Butter
Brown sugar
Small living rooms
Twice baked potatoes
Instagram
Apps for games
Charades with a twist
Loud laughter
Tissue paper
Guests
Skin
Cows
12 days instead of one
Realizing perfection is really over rated

Monday, December 23, 2013

Let me know how that works out for you




To be perfectly honest, I don’t believe there was another way to get our attention. The Incarnation.  We would have never paid attention otherwise. God had to put on skin. Humans are complicated and complex and I think that is what God loves about us. We are not simple and rarely do we make things easy.  I kind of like to think that is why God invests so much in us.  God loves a good challenge and humans are challenging at best, even on our absolute best days: like Christmas eve, eve, perhaps. And I am willing to bet that today God was putting on his best Dr. Phil voice and saying, "Let me know how that works out for you."

I am prone to making my life far more complicated than it need be.  Take this afternoon for instance.  About once a year, I become delusional and fancy myself an accomplished baker.  Usually this coincides with some major holiday that revolves around 17 or so people coming to eat at my house. I can cook and I can bake but it is probably not in my best interest or those of my guests to try out new recipes.  I should probably stick to things I know how to bake.  Like: chocolate chip cookies or pound cake or pumpkin pie. 

I love the seven caramel layer cake.  Decided I would make one for Christmas dinner. How hard could it be?  I would like to add, unless you have attended cooking school, don’t try this at home. While, the cake itself (if you don’t mind baking seven layers), is easy peasy to make, that frosting is wicked.  It is a boiled frosting and for those of you that don’t know, think Julia Childs on her worst manic day, with that psychotic cat running around her kitchen, jumping on everything and Julia drinking her second bottle of wine and speaking that fake French and she left out the part about: it must be buttermilk.  Not cream, not whole, not half and half, not evaporated, not 2%.  Only buttermilk.  This frosting officially has taken me 27 hours to make.  The recipe boasts that it can be made in less than 30 minutes and that would be a lie.  And if you think you can substitute any other milk product in this recipe, think again. 

And this of course, led me to the Food Lion incident and thinking about Joseph and the prophet Isaiah and Mary and how much I miss my friend Sarah at this time of year.  I am standing in the corner (did I mention corner?) of the aisle staring at the seven different kinds of buttermilk, trying to decide which one I need.  And to be honest, had I just gone ahead and texted my friend Sarah instead of feeling sorry for myself, none of this would have happened.  I had no intention of making a repeat trip and clearly from my previous attempts, perfection was required.  I guess it is remotely possible; that I was taking too long to make up my mind, and I guess it is possible I should have noticed the woman waiting (who waits for buttermilk anyway?) to get her buttermilk and offered to move. But then she screamed at me and told me I was in her way and to hurry up and then I sort of went postal, if the stares of others mean anything.  I shouted, (just like the prophet Isaiah, I might add), “Really, are you kidding me? I hope the love of Christmas finds your heart.”

Of course, everyone was staring at me, and then I felt the need to defend myself, “She started it.” 

Fuming, I stormed to the check out line with buttermilk in hand. The gentleman behind me says, “Are you ready for Christmas?”  At least I turned around at looked at him.  I may have smiled, I hope I did and I hope I sounded as least hopeful as I said, “I think so.”  And then I did manage to get out of my own narcissistic spiral and ask, “How about you?”  He said with tears running down his face, “This year I will be alone.”  He went on to tell me about his wife of 59 years, who had died four weeks earlier.  And how many good memories he had and how blessed he had been to love her and how much he missed her but he knew that in the end love trumps death.  He went on to say that many people never know a love like that and that his being sad just reinforced how much he loved her.  He also went on to say that life is brief and fragile and we should just all be grateful and love each other.

After, I choked back tears, paid for my buttermilk and gave him a big hug, suddenly I wasn’t so mad anymore and suddenly as if an angel of the Lord appeared before me:  "Peace, Goodwill."

I thought about the words of Isaiah and Joseph and Mary. 

“The people who have walked in darkness have seen a great light; those who have lived in the land of deep darkness- on them a light a has shined…For a child has been born for us…his name is …Prince of Peace…” (Isaiah 9:2,6)


Those are perhaps the most gorgeous words for what we celebrate this time of the year.   That text was written 700 years before the birth of Christ and we can forget it can stand on its own without interpreting them through the eyes of Christmas.  These words don’t take on meaning solely by the message of Christmas.  Isaiah’s words offer powerful hope for those in darkness in any time, any place.  Even in the aisle of Food Lion.  And I suspect my new friend already knows about this kind of peace.  He would not have gotten out of bed today otherwise. He would not find hope in love and he would not see hope beyond death if he didn't know.
 
God took a chance that night long ago.  God decided the only way to get our attention was to take on skin.  It has often been called the great mystery.  The Incarnation.  I am not so sure it matters much how it happened as much as us deciding to do something with it.   Sometimes I think that in my less than holy moments, it is only then that God shows up.  More often than not, I suspect I don’t see him, but today I think I did.  In both encounters.  How frustrating it must be for God to wait on us to see what is sitting right in front of us like seven different kinds of buttermilk and yet when God shows up in chance encounters and love is spilling all over the aisle at Food Lion, we lie on a backs like shepherds watching the night sky in awestruck. 

And maybe the stars will shine brighter tonight, and maybe the skies won't be as dark as before and maybe tonight love is raining down on all the world tonight, it is what we all are praying for.

God is for us, God is with us, God is in us.  Emmanuel.
 
All is grace,
Kathleen

Sunday, October 20, 2013

The Answer. (Well, sort of. Otherwise known as the Trisagion)



I love a good story.  I have been trying to tell the story of the process of breathing and cellular respiration for the past week now.  I am afraid my students may have fallen asleep and woke back up just in time for the selected out takes, if their quiz grades are any indication.  I am not offended, because truthfully cellular respiration doesn’t have the makings of an epic. It is kind of sitting through a really bad sermon or reading James Joyce aloud.  PAINFUL. So I wish I could tell them this story, but it has nothing to do with cellular respiration.

I love words.  Maybe that is why I am drawn to teaching, or maybe that is why I love sermons so, or why some books I consider as friends. 

Last night I found myself thinking about what the word holy actually meant.  As it turns out, there is quite a debate among scholars or at least that is what Google told me. The idea of holy can be traced back to the ancients.  To the Hebrews, it was the chief word used to describe the character of God. The Hebrew word is “qadosh”. Etymologists have traced "holy" back to an Old Norse word for good health and wholeness, "heilagr", through German "heil" (meaning "health, happiness and good luck") to Old English "hal" (related to hallow). According to the Online Etymology Dictionary, the pre-Christian meaning was probably "that which must be preserved whole or intact, that cannot be transgressed or violated.”

Almost 700 years before the birth of Christ, the prophet Isaiah wrote a vivid description of a vision that was beyond description…he declared it…Holy, holy, holy.  800 years later while on the island of Patmos, St. John saw a vision also beyond words and beyond description and he declared it holy, holy, holy. The Trisagion.

Holy God
Holy mighty
Holy immortal
Have mercy on us

It appeared in the Church liturgy around the fourth century and is still in use today.  Among my many loves of the Anglican liturgy is perhaps its universality.  It reminds me of the timelessness and richness and diverseness of the Church. This ancient hymn is found in almost all of the Eastern Catholic and Orthodox liturgies. There are hundreds of variations on the melody to which it is chanted or sung. 

Those of you who believe in God, well, we can never be sure of what (holiness) means exactly.  If God can show up in a stable or be a ram in the thicket or in an earthquake or in fire, or on a mountain with Moses, or in Isaiah’s dreams or as a carpenter from Nazareth or hanging dying on a cross, well then God can show up anywhere and looks like anything and maybe that is the point.   Frederick Buechner writes: 
 
“Once they have seen him in a stable, they can never be sure where he will appear or to what lengths he will go or to what ludicrous depths of self-humiliation he will descend in his wild pursuit of humankind.
If holiness and the awful power and majesty of God were present in this least auspicious of all events, this birth of a peasant’s child, then there is no place or time so lowly and earthbound but that holiness can be present there too.”

I have come to believe that holiness is more about wholeness than anything else. And by singing the Trisagion, we invite that wholeness in. And since I am one of those characters always in need of saving again and again, I probably would do well to pray the Trisagion Thrice a tri-zillion time over. I am of the belief that salvation is not so much a moment in time as an ongoing experience that happens over a lifetime.  I used to only get “born again” about once a year.  Like at a revival meeting or church camp.  So if you are still young enough to go to church camp keeping getting born again yearly because by the time you get to college you are going to be doing that about twice a year and by the time you are about 30, once a quarter and in your 40’s and 50’s about four times a day.  Given that I am about a 12 months away from 50, I am in the much latter category.

It was after it was sung that I began to think that maybe we are not as safe as we would like to think and perhaps this is holiness.  "There is no place where his power won’t break and re-create the human heart." It is probably just when God seems the most helpless, when it seems as if God’s hands are tied, and just where we least expect him that God shows up. 

To me it was the most beautiful version of that simple, ancient prayer I have ever heard. And it was words last night, very simple words or perhaps it was The Word that reminded me that I need reminding again and again and again why the gospel matters.  It matters because it makes us whole.  And I need reminding of that again and again and again…and to tell the truth I will always pray more “I don’t know, I am not sure if and life can be unbelievably cruel and beautiful at the same time…” than

Holy God
Holy mighty
Holy immortal
Have mercy on us


But I am also one of those foolish people who still believes the answer lies somewhere in the mystery of the holiness of God. Maybe the mercy of God is really where we find the answer to every tear we cry and it is in that holiness three times over that we are held even when it feels as if nothing is holding us.  And maybe the mystery of the Trisagion is that it binds our broken hearts to God’s broken heart.  And maybe that is the answer, sort of.

Holy God
Holy mighty
Holy immortal
Have mercy on us,

Kathleen


The link to perhaps at least to my ears the most beautiful version of this ancient prayer:

Tuesday, October 1, 2013

What we really can't live without


 


At church Saturday night one of my many rambling thoughts included “Jesus, we believe the weirdest stuff.”  I will let you decide if I meant a proper noun, an adverb or a verb.  I think Jesus would like us perhaps to think all three but eventually circle back to the first choice.  I had forgotten what Rite I of the BCP sounded smelled and looked like and why I love it so and hope it never goes out of vogue.  According to people who observe such things, there is a large movement of the postmodern generation of church goers who are leaving their low protestant roots and more hip styles of worship and flocking to the more orthodox style of worship.  

The last time I had been in that church was for a funeral.   She was my very first hospice patient and I loved her.  Somehow, I think she might have sat down next to me Saturday and whispered in my ear, “Child, would you please settle down.”  She always called me that.  Child.  She also promised to always watch my back from heaven and to always pray over Davis.  I believe she does.  She would have loved my Prada shoes that I found for 35 dollars and my new cream colored silk ruffled blouse.   She would have told me however, that I probably should keep my wrap on since it was sleeveless and I was after all in God’s house.  I forgot.  She also would have approved that I walked up the aisle bare-footed to receive communion.   She would have thought I did that because I knew I was walking on holy ground, but in truth, I forgot to slip them back on.  Not kidding.  I hope the priest didn’t mind.  And I can promise you she would have made Davis tuck his shirt in and wear socks.  She like I, were raised in the buckle of the Bible belt south and you always dressed for church.  To be honest, I kind of miss that.  Dressing for church. 

So, if you think you can’t live without food, water and shelter, you might just be in the minority.

Time magazine reports that out of 5000 people surveyed:

84% said they could not live without their cell phone for a single day.

1 in 5 said they check their cell phones every 10 minutes.

72% of adults use social networking websites.

73% of all American smartphone owners said they would feel panicked if they lost their device.

 When British respondents were surveyed on things they couldn’t live without:

Facebook came in at No. 5 and flushing toilets at No. 9.  And thank God we fought that war.

32% of all college students said that the Internet is just as important to them as food, water, shelter.

49% said it was not as important BUT PRETTY CLOSE.

High speed internet is the one technology that they couldn’t live without.

30% of all Americans check their phones while having dinner with someone.

40% of all Americans check their phones while on the toilet.

1 in 4 Americans have sent a sexually provocative image to their partners via their cell phones.

97% of consumers use the web to do local shopping and 72% of internet users have sought health care information online in the past 12 months.

91% of teens have posted a picture of themselves on Facebook and Instagram.

46% of adult Americans use Facebook to post videos they have created.

So if you think you can live without your phone, Facebook profile and internet…turns out maybe not.

But it occurred to me Saturday night that I can’t live without smells and bells.  The liturgy helps us live out a story in a story deprived generation.  We are characters in a divine drama that helps us realize we are part of something larger than ourselves. 
 Originally, the use of incense in worship was to mask the smell of the sacrifices, later in the medieval church it was used to mask the scent of the animals kept close to the church and the body odor of the worshippers.  Incense invokes a blessing.   The Gospels are blessed with it, the altar, the congregation, the priest, the bread, the wine.   
The practical use of the big bells at the belfry is to call the attention of the faithful before the celebration of the Holy Eucharist and other sacraments. It is also used in times of fire, storms and any other disasters to warn the people. Generally, important liturgical celebrations of the Catholic Church are heralded by the sound of the bells. St. Paulinus, Bishop of Nola, introduced the bells as a means to summon monks to prayer in the fifth century. Another practical use of the altar bells may have originated in the very architecture of the old Church. Before, there was a certain degree of physical separation between the faithful and presider in the sanctuary. There were even communion rails before the Second Vatican Council. In some cases, the altar was totally concealed from the faithful and only the sound of the bells could give a hint that the priest has reached consecration.

The processional used in Anglican worship is stunningly beautiful:  from the crucifer to the gospeller to the thruibers to the priest to the deacon.   Watching them process allows me for a moment to forget about my shoes.  Practicing genuflecting allows me to forget me.  And Jesus really does know I need that.  The icons remind me of the beauty of our world and no one really knows what Jesus looked like and this is good because Jesus looks like all of us.  The color of the vestments remind what time it really is and to remember the measure of all of our days.   Smelling the incense reminds me to stop… and breathe….just breathe.  The bells remind me that angels are all around us and sometimes we know their names and there really is a great cloud of witnesses watching over us all.  The altar facing East reminds of times far more ancient than my own and this good…people before me and after me have watched this ancient rite of the Church and stood in awe and wonder.  The blessing and standing for the reading of the Gospel reminds me how good the story really is.  And my story is part of The Story. The Nicene Creed written in the year 325 still is relevant….We  believe  in God…the maker of all things visible and invisible…Jesus…God from God…light from light…begotten not made.   We believe in the resurrection…forgiveness and life everlasting.  Repeating the prayers, the creeds, and the collects reminds of the power of the word that is The Word.   The kneeling reminds me to be humble and to remember that we are standing on holy ground.  The breaking of bread and blessing of the wine still speaks to me of mysteries that I will never understand.   Every single element of the worship service is laden with mystery and meaning from the number of candles to the number of times the bells are rung to the colors to the bowing to the words to wine to the bread to the hymns and psalms.  Mystery and meaning that transcend time and eternity.
I really do pray, “Jesus we really do believe the weirdest stuff.” And usually, hopefully, prayer after prayer and after experiencing perhaps a year praying with the Church year after year…the whole liturgical year…I am reminded of as we pray…we believe.   And I really do pray if I was polled and asked to name the one thing I can’t live without…that I hopefully I might say…The Anglican Mass…Rite I. 

In  deepest gratitude for the congregation at Christ Church for sharing the power of liturgy with those of us who forget and struggle with the weirdest stuff.

Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Holding hands in the dark

I woke up in a bleak place Saturday. A very bleak place. It wasn’t the place of utter desolation, like the morning after 9/11, but I could not find comfort anywhere. It was raining for like the seventy fifth day in a row. I suffer from seasonal affective disorder, refuse to recover from my need for sun bathing, would commit suicide if I lived in Seattle or London, and at times I think I could convert to worshiping Ra, the sun god. I only recall one time in my life when I actually complained about the heat- it was 104 in the shade that day and I was sitting on astro turf. The news couldn’t be worse- North Korea has a ICBM pointed at the west coast, a murder suicide on the mother baby unit at a local hospital, 30% of Irag-Afghanistan war veterans have thought about suicide, the ever looming health care crisis and gas prices are going to rise again. Two of my friends had terrible diseases. One of my friends buried a spouse. Another very dear friend is lost and can’t find herself. And is it just me or is there a new sexual abuse scandal every other day? And A-Rod may get a lifetime suspension from baseball. I am not an A-Rod fan and he should be banned for life along with every other user, I am just frustrated over the sports industry’s apparent inability to get a handle on PEDs. A zero-tolerance policy might be a start. I had just decided to go to nursing school for the third time. After I sat through orientation last week, it occurred to me I just thought round one was tough. When I introduced myself to the three young (young being the operative word) women on my track- they were only 4 years old in 1986. I graduated from nursing school the first time in 1986. One actually remarked that I didn’t look all that old and did we really have to wear caps back then? True story. I didn’t do the math but I think that means I could be their mother. And had I had the good sense to go to grad school years ago, I would have taught them in nursing school. They were lamenting that the night before their hospital had lost power and the back up to back up generator didn’t come on. They didn’t know how to pass meds or chart the old school way much less take a temp and BP without a machine. None of them had ever mixed an IV in their careers or charted on paper or had even seen a four-colored ballpoint pen. And I had a very, very tough interview with an ethics review board coming up. I guess I should pause to say that I am the complainant lest any rumors start flying around. 49 can be tough: my friend Rosemary said to approach my forty ninth year like a frozen gym membership, where I am taking a break. So far, I have not jumped out a window, which during rough patches passes for grace right now in my life. This falls short of heaven, but some days will just have to do. So in the face of all of this, I did the most amazing thing. I got out of bed. I could still walk. I still had most of my mental faculties. A more mature person would say, Thank you Jesus. But I thought, dear God in heaven, my back hurts, my head hurts, my fingers are stiff, where are my damn glasses, I am getting old. Then I ate a bowl of blackberries and blueberries, six Oreo cookies and drank a café mocha breve to level the playing field. Then I picked up the BCP. And it was not good. The readings were long and boring. It wasn’t a feast day. There wasn’t a saint to commemorate and I didn’t know who William Hunnington was. My mind kept wandering and the hymn sucked. I kept looking at the time and checking my face book page for what I don’t know. I Googled William Hunnington. I Googled the Lambeth quadrilateral. I changed chairs four times. I lit a candle. I played Gregorian chants and then gave up and played U2, which is very spiritual BTW. I gave up. I decided that this spiritual discipline was worthless and I was going to close the BCP and never open it again. If I currently had a spiritual director, he or she would say something like “What do you think God was saying to you during that time?” To which I would want respond “Well, gee I don’t know that is why I here, don’t you know?” But instead, I would put on my best good girl smile and say, “Be still???” To which the spiritual director is probably muttering to him or herself, “What new fresh hell is this?” Truth be told, I doubt that good girl smile has fooled very many, ok…maybe one or two. And I have been known to fake an answer or two with a spiritual director. I am fairly certain that lying to spiritual director defeats the purpose of going to see one, but I am also overly confident that the Holy Spirit can compensate for any of my character flaws. Then something amazing happened. I would call it grace, but then I am very easy. It was like when you clean your glasses and put them back on or a deep breath or a cool breeze on a hot day. I suddenly remembered reading in a favorite author’s book on grace, the best spiritual directive she ever got: Don’t be an asshole, make sure everybody eats. And a pastor once said: “I am only a beggar, showing other beggars where the bread is.” There are many kinds of food besides meat, dairy, grains and fruit. There is kindness, compassion, friendship, prayer (if I could ever quiet my mind), joy, and peace. And finally I had given up just enough to realize I was going to get through this disappointing moment in prayer and anyway you have to be somewhere: better here at prayer than say at the dentist office getting a root canal, stuck in traffic or at the IRS. And it is good to practice prayer because it forces you to see yourself and to act slightly more gracefully and it improves your thoughts and thus the world. After I finished reading the psalms, the gospel, the Old Testament reading, saying the Apostle’s Creed, and praying the Lord’s Prayer, I no longer felt like throwing the BCP away and giving up on prayer. So, I was shocked when I spoke to her later that day and she said she loved my smile and how I looked really happy. I am not sure she wanted any secrets to happiness and I am not sure she wanted to hear any of my worthless wisdom, but it occurred to me that perhaps when we are at our worst, when we are frightened, depressed, panicky, anxious, angry, disillusioned, exhausted, lost, hopeless, or just in a bad mood…perhaps that is when God does his best work. Perhaps when we are honest and real and actually stop flailing around inside our heads…God shows up. God can’t clean house while we are still in it. I am not sure she expected the answer I gave her, but I told her honestly I am a wreck and honestly I don’t feel happy but I hope that doesn’t keep me from enjoying whatever moment of joy I find myself. I told her my head is a pretty scary place right now and I feel lost all the time and I don’t know what the next half of my life is going to look like. I think you just have to show up to the life before you…the good, the bad, the ugly, the scary, and the beautiful. Somewhere in all that mess, there are breaths of grace. Sometimes you just have to get out of bed and start. Even if it requires six Oreo cookies, a mocha breve, U2, and Goggle to make it happen. And perhaps the best spiritual directive I could give her on joy: “Let’s just hold hands in the dark and we will find our way from here.” I woke up in a bleak place Saturday. A very bleak place. It wasn’t the place of utter desolation, like the morning after 9/11, but I could not find comfort anywhere. It was raining for like the seventy fifth day in a row. I suffer from seasonal affective disorder, refuse to recover from my need for sun bathing, would commit suicide if I lived in Seattle or London, and at times I think I could convert to worshiping Ra, the sun god. I only recall one time in my life when I actually complained about the heat- it was 104 in the shade that day and I was sitting on astro turf. The news couldn’t be worse- North Korea has a ICBM pointed at the west coast, a murder suicide on the mother baby unit at a local hospital, 30% of Irag-Afghanistan war veterans have thought about suicide, the ever looming health care crisis and gas prices are going to rise again. Two of my friends had terrible diseases. One of my friends buried a spouse. Another very dear friend is lost and can’t find herself. And is it just me or is there a new sexual abuse scandal every other day? And A-Rod may get a lifetime suspension from baseball. I am not an A-Rod fan and he should be banned for life along with every other user, I am just frustrated over the sports industry’s apparent inability to get a handle on PEDs. A zero-tolerance policy might be a start. I had just decided to go to nursing school for the third time. After I sat through orientation last week, it occurred to me I just thought round one was tough. When I introduced myself to the three young (young being the operative word) women on my track- they were only 4 years old in 1986. I graduated from nursing school the first time in 1986. One actually remarked that I didn’t look all that old and did we really have to wear caps back then? True story. I didn’t do the math but I think that means I could be their mother. And had I had the good sense to go to grad school years ago, I would have taught them in nursing school. They were lamenting that the night before their hospital had lost power and the back up to back up generator didn’t come on. They didn’t know how to pass meds or chart the old school way much less take a temp and BP without a machine. None of them had ever mixed an IV in their careers or charted on paper or had even seen a four-colored ballpoint pen. And I had a very, very tough interview with an ethics review board coming up. I guess I should pause to say that I am the complainant lest any rumors start flying around. 49 can be tough: my friend Rosemary said to approach my forty ninth year like a frozen gym membership, where I am taking a break. So far, I have not jumped out a window, which during rough patches passes for grace right now in my life. This falls short of heaven, but some days will just have to do. So in the face of all of this, I did the most amazing thing. I got out of bed. I could still walk. I still had most of my mental faculties. A more mature person would say, Thank you Jesus. But I thought, dear God in heaven, my back hurts, my head hurts, my fingers are stiff, where are my damn glasses, I am getting old. Then I ate a bowl of blackberries and blueberries, six Oreo cookies and drank a café mocha breve to level the playing field. Then I picked up the BCP. And it was not good. The readings were long and boring. It wasn’t a feast day. There wasn’t a saint to commemorate and I didn’t know who William Hunnington was. My mind kept wandering and the hymn sucked. I kept looking at the time and checking my face book page for what I don’t know. I Googled William Hunnington. I Googled the Lambeth quadrilateral. I changed chairs four times. I lit a candle. I played Gregorian chants and then gave up and played U2, which is very spiritual BTW. I gave up. I decided that this spiritual discipline was worthless and I was going to close the BCP and never open it again. If I currently had a spiritual director, he or she would say something like “What do you think God was saying to you during that time?” To which I would want respond “Well, gee I don’t know that is why I here, don’t you know?” But instead, I would put on my best good girl smile and say, “Be still???” To which the spiritual director is probably muttering to him or herself, “What new fresh hell is this?” Truth be told, I doubt that good girl smile has fooled very many, ok…maybe one or two. And I have been known to fake an answer or two with a spiritual director. I am fairly certain that lying to spiritual director defeats the purpose of going to see one, but I am also overly confident that the Holy Spirit can compensate for any of my character flaws. Then something amazing happened. I would call it grace, but then I am very easy. It was like when you clean your glasses and put them back on or a deep breath or a cool breeze on a hot day. I suddenly remembered reading in a favorite author’s book on grace, the best spiritual directive she ever got: Don’t be an asshole, make sure everybody eats. And a pastor once said: “I am only a beggar, showing other beggars where the bread is.” There are many kinds of food besides meat, dairy, grains and fruit. There is kindness, compassion, friendship, prayer (if I could ever quiet my mind), joy, and peace. And finally I had given up just enough to realize I was going to get through this disappointing moment in prayer and anyway you have to be somewhere: better here at prayer than say at the dentist office getting a root canal, stuck in traffic or at the IRS. And it is good to practice prayer because it forces you to see yourself and to act slightly more gracefully and it improves your thoughts and thus the world. After I finished reading the psalms, the gospel, the Old Testament reading, saying the Apostle’s Creed, and praying the Lord’s Prayer, I no longer felt like throwing the BCP away and giving up on prayer. So, I was shocked when I spoke to her later that day and she said she loved my smile and how I looked really happy. I am not sure she wanted any secrets to happiness and I am not sure she wanted to hear any of my worthless wisdom, but it occurred to me that perhaps when we are at our worst, when we are frightened, depressed, panicky, anxious, angry, disillusioned, exhausted, lost, hopeless, or just in a bad mood…perhaps that is when God does his best work. Perhaps when we are honest and real and actually stop flailing around inside our heads…God shows up. God can’t clean house while we are still in it. I am not sure she expected the answer I gave her, but I told her honestly I am a wreck and honestly I don’t feel happy but I hope that doesn’t keep me from enjoying whatever moment of joy I find myself. I told her my head is a pretty scary place right now and I feel lost all the time and I don’t know what the next half of my life is going to look like. I think you just have to show up to the life before you…the good, the bad, the ugly, the scary, and the beautiful. Somewhere in all that mess, there are breaths of grace. Sometimes you just have to get out of bed and start. Even if it requires six Oreo cookies, a mocha breve, U2, and Goggle to make it happen. And perhaps the best spiritual directive I could give her on joy: “Let’s just hold hands in the dark and we will find our way from here.” I woke up in a bleak place Saturday. A very bleak place. It wasn’t the place of utter desolation, like the morning after 9/11, but I could not find comfort anywhere. It was raining for like the seventy fifth day in a row. I suffer from seasonal affective disorder, refuse to recover from my need for sun bathing, would commit suicide if I lived in Seattle or London, and at times I think I could convert to worshiping Ra, the sun god. I only recall one time in my life when I actually complained about the heat- it was 104 in the shade that day and I was sitting on astro turf. The news couldn’t be worse- North Korea has a ICBM pointed at the west coast, a murder suicide on the mother baby unit at a local hospital, 30% of Irag-Afghanistan war veterans have thought about suicide, the ever looming health care crisis and gas prices are going to rise again. Two of my friends had terrible diseases. One of my friends buried a spouse. Another very dear friend is lost and can’t find herself. And is it just me or is there a new sexual abuse scandal every other day? And A-Rod may get a lifetime suspension from baseball. I am not an A-Rod fan and he should be banned for life along with every other user, I am just frustrated over the sports industry’s apparent inability to get a handle on PEDs. A zero-tolerance policy might be a start. I had just decided to go to nursing school for the third time. After I sat through orientation last week, it occurred to me I just thought round one was tough. When I introduced myself to the three young (young being the operative word) women on my track- they were only 4 years old in 1986. I graduated from nursing school the first time in 1986. One actually remarked that I didn’t look all that old and did we really have to wear caps back then? True story. I didn’t do the math but I think that means I could be their mother. And had I had the good sense to go to grad school years ago, I would have taught them in nursing school. They were lamenting that the night before their hospital had lost power and the back up to back up generator didn’t come on. They didn’t know how to pass meds or chart the old school way much less take a temp and BP without a machine. None of them had ever mixed an IV in their careers or charted on paper or had even seen a four-colored ballpoint pen. And I had a very, very tough interview with an ethics review board coming up. I guess I should pause to say that I am the complainant lest any rumors start flying around. 49 can be tough: my friend Rosemary said to approach my forty ninth year like a frozen gym membership, where I am taking a break. So far, I have not jumped out a window, which during rough patches passes for grace right now in my life. This falls short of heaven, but some days will just have to do. So in the face of all of this, I did the most amazing thing. I got out of bed. I could still walk. I still had most of my mental faculties. A more mature person would say, Thank you Jesus. But I thought, dear God in heaven, my back hurts, my head hurts, my fingers are stiff, where are my damn glasses, I am getting old. Then I ate a bowl of blackberries and blueberries, six Oreo cookies and drank a café mocha breve to level the playing field. Then I picked up the BCP. And it was not good. The readings were long and boring. It wasn’t a feast day. There wasn’t a saint to commemorate and I didn’t know who William Hunnington was. My mind kept wandering and the hymn sucked. I kept looking at the time and checking my face book page for what I don’t know. I Googled William Hunnington. I Googled the Lambeth quadrilateral. I changed chairs four times. I lit a candle. I played Gregorian chants and then gave up and played U2, which is very spiritual BTW. I gave up. I decided that this spiritual discipline was worthless and I was going to close the BCP and never open it again. If I currently had a spiritual director, he or she would say something like “What do you think God was saying to you during that time?” To which I would want respond “Well, gee I don’t know that is why I here, don’t you know?” But instead, I would put on my best good girl smile and say, “Be still???” To which the spiritual director is probably muttering to him or herself, “What new fresh hell is this?” Truth be told, I doubt that good girl smile has fooled very many, ok…maybe one or two. And I have been known to fake an answer or two with a spiritual director. I am fairly certain that lying to spiritual director defeats the purpose of going to see one, but I am also overly confident that the Holy Spirit can compensate for any of my character flaws. Then something amazing happened. I would call it grace, but then I am very easy. It was like when you clean your glasses and put them back on or a deep breath or a cool breeze on a hot day. I suddenly remembered reading in a favorite author’s book on grace, the best spiritual directive she ever got: Don’t be an asshole, make sure everybody eats. And a pastor once said: “I am only a beggar, showing other beggars where the bread is.” There are many kinds of food besides meat, dairy, grains and fruit. There is kindness, compassion, friendship, prayer (if I could ever quiet my mind), joy, and peace. And finally I had given up just enough to realize I was going to get through this disappointing moment in prayer and anyway you have to be somewhere: better here at prayer than say at the dentist office getting a root canal, stuck in traffic or at the IRS. And it is good to practice prayer because it forces you to see yourself and to act slightly more gracefully and it improves your thoughts and thus the world. After I finished reading the psalms, the gospel, the Old Testament reading, saying the Apostle’s Creed, and praying the Lord’s Prayer, I no longer felt like throwing the BCP away and giving up on prayer. So, I was shocked when I spoke to her later that day and she said she loved my smile and how I looked really happy. I am not sure she wanted any secrets to happiness and I am not sure she wanted to hear any of my worthless wisdom, but it occurred to me that perhaps when we are at our worst, when we are frightened, depressed, panicky, anxious, angry, disillusioned, exhausted, lost, hopeless, or just in a bad mood…perhaps that is when God does his best work. Perhaps when we are honest and real and actually stop flailing around inside our heads…God shows up. God can’t clean house while we are still in it. I am not sure she expected the answer I gave her, but I told her honestly I am a wreck and honestly I don’t feel happy but I hope that doesn’t keep me from enjoying whatever moment of joy I find myself. I told her my head is a pretty scary place right now and I feel lost all the time and I don’t know what the next half of my life is going to look like. I think you just have to show up to the life before you…the good, the bad, the ugly, the scary, and the beautiful. Somewhere in all that mess, there are breaths of grace. Sometimes you just have to get out of bed and start. Even if it requires six Oreo cookies, a mocha breve, U2, and Goggle to make it happen. And perhaps the best spiritual directive I could give her on joy: “Let’s just hold hands in the dark and we will find our way from here.” I woke up in a bleak place Saturday. A very bleak place. It wasn’t the place of utter desolation, like the morning after 9/11, but I could not find comfort anywhere. It was raining for like the seventy fifth day in a row. I suffer from seasonal affective disorder, refuse to recover from my need for sun bathing, would commit suicide if I lived in Seattle or London, and at times I think I could convert to worshiping Ra, the sun god. I only recall one time in my life when I actually complained about the heat- it was 104 in the shade that day and I was sitting on astro turf. The news couldn’t be worse- North Korea has a ICBM pointed at the west coast, a murder suicide on the mother baby unit at a local hospital, 30% of Irag-Afghanistan war veterans have thought about suicide, the ever looming health care crisis and gas prices are going to rise again. Two of my friends had terrible diseases. One of my friends buried a spouse. Another very dear friend is lost and can’t find herself. And is it just me or is there a new sexual abuse scandal every other day? And A-Rod may get a lifetime suspension from baseball. I am not an A-Rod fan and he should be banned for life along with every other user, I am just frustrated over the sports industry’s apparent inability to get a handle on PEDs. A zero-tolerance policy might be a start. I had just decided to go to nursing school for the third time. After I sat through orientation last week, it occurred to me I just thought round one was tough. When I introduced myself to the three young (young being the operative word) women on my track- they were only 4 years old in 1986. I graduated from nursing school the first time in 1986. One actually remarked that I didn’t look all that old and did we really have to wear caps back then? True story. I didn’t do the math but I think that means I could be their mother. And had I had the good sense to go to grad school years ago, I would have taught them in nursing school. They were lamenting that the night before their hospital had lost power and the back up to back up generator didn’t come on. They didn’t know how to pass meds or chart the old school way much less take a temp and BP without a machine. None of them had ever mixed an IV in their careers or charted on paper or had even seen a four-colored ballpoint pen. And I had a very, very tough interview with an ethics review board coming up. I guess I should pause to say that I am the complainant lest any rumors start flying around. 49 can be tough: my friend Rosemary said to approach my forty ninth year like a frozen gym membership, where I am taking a break. So far, I have not jumped out a window, which during rough patches passes for grace right now in my life. This falls short of heaven, but some days will just have to do. So in the face of all of this, I did the most amazing thing. I got out of bed. I could still walk. I still had most of my mental faculties. A more mature person would say, Thank you Jesus. But I thought, dear God in heaven, my back hurts, my head hurts, my fingers are stiff, where are my damn glasses, I am getting old. Then I ate a bowl of blackberries and blueberries, six Oreo cookies and drank a café mocha breve to level the playing field. Then I picked up the BCP. And it was not good. The readings were long and boring. It wasn’t a feast day. There wasn’t a saint to commemorate and I didn’t know who William Hunnington was. My mind kept wandering and the hymn sucked. I kept looking at the time and checking my face book page for what I don’t know. I Googled William Hunnington. I Googled the Lambeth quadrilateral. I changed chairs four times. I lit a candle. I played Gregorian chants and then gave up and played U2, which is very spiritual BTW. I gave up. I decided that this spiritual discipline was worthless and I was going to close the BCP and never open it again. If I currently had a spiritual director, he or she would say something like “What do you think God was saying to you during that time?” To which I would want respond “Well, gee I don’t know that is why I here, don’t you know?” But instead, I would put on my best good girl smile and say, “Be still???” To which the spiritual director is probably muttering to him or herself, “What new fresh hell is this?” Truth be told, I doubt that good girl smile has fooled very many, ok…maybe one or two. And I have been known to fake an answer or two with a spiritual director. I am fairly certain that lying to spiritual director defeats the purpose of going to see one, but I am also overly confident that the Holy Spirit can compensate for any of my character flaws. Then something amazing happened. I would call it grace, but then I am very easy. It was like when you clean your glasses and put them back on or a deep breath or a cool breeze on a hot day. I suddenly remembered reading in a favorite author’s book on grace, the best spiritual directive she ever got: Don’t be an asshole, make sure everybody eats. And a pastor once said: “I am only a beggar, showing other beggars where the bread is.” There are many kinds of food besides meat, dairy, grains and fruit. There is kindness, compassion, friendship, prayer (if I could ever quiet my mind), joy, and peace. And finally I had given up just enough to realize I was going to get through this disappointing moment in prayer and anyway you have to be somewhere: better here at prayer than say at the dentist office getting a root canal, stuck in traffic or at the IRS. And it is good to practice prayer because it forces you to see yourself and to act slightly more gracefully and it improves your thoughts and thus the world. After I finished reading the psalms, the gospel, the Old Testament reading, saying the Apostle’s Creed, and praying the Lord’s Prayer, I no longer felt like throwing the BCP away and giving up on prayer. So, I was shocked when I spoke to her later that day and she said she loved my smile and how I looked really happy. I am not sure she wanted any secrets to happiness and I am not sure she wanted to hear any of my worthless wisdom, but it occurred to me that perhaps when we are at our worst, when we are frightened, depressed, panicky, anxious, angry, disillusioned, exhausted, lost, hopeless, or just in a bad mood…perhaps that is when God does his best work. Perhaps when we are honest and real and actually stop flailing around inside our heads…God shows up. God can’t clean house while we are still in it. I am not sure she expected the answer I gave her, but I told her honestly I am a wreck and honestly I don’t feel happy but I hope that doesn’t keep me from enjoying whatever moment of joy I find myself. I told her my head is a pretty scary place right now and I feel lost all the time and I don’t know what the next half of my life is going to look like. I think you just have to show up to the life before you…the good, the bad, the ugly, the scary, and the beautiful. Somewhere in all that mess, there are breaths of grace. Sometimes you just have to get out of bed and start. Even if it requires six Oreo cookies, a mocha breve, U2, and Goggle to make it happen. And perhaps the best spiritual directive I could give her on joy: “Let’s just hold hands in the dark and we will find our way from here.” I woke up in a bleak place Saturday. A very bleak place. It wasn’t the place of utter desolation, like the morning after 9/11, but I could not find comfort anywhere. It was raining for like the seventy fifth day in a row. I suffer from seasonal affective disorder, refuse to recover from my need for sun bathing, would commit suicide if I lived in Seattle or London, and at times I think I could convert to worshiping Ra, the sun god. I only recall one time in my life when I actually complained about the heat- it was 104 in the shade that day and I was sitting on astro turf. The news couldn’t be worse- North Korea has a ICBM pointed at the west coast, a murder suicide on the mother baby unit at a local hospital, 30% of Irag-Afghanistan war veterans have thought about suicide, the ever looming health care crisis and gas prices are going to rise again. Two of my friends had terrible diseases. One of my friends buried a spouse. Another very dear friend is lost and can’t find herself. And is it just me or is there a new sexual abuse scandal every other day? And A-Rod may get a lifetime suspension from baseball. I am not an A-Rod fan and he should be banned for life along with every other user, I am just frustrated over the sports industry’s apparent inability to get a handle on PEDs. A zero-tolerance policy might be a start. I had just decided to go to nursing school for the third time. After I sat through orientation last week, it occurred to me I just thought round one was tough. When I introduced myself to the three young (young being the operative word) women on my track- they were only 4 years old in 1986. I graduated from nursing school the first time in 1986. One actually remarked that I didn’t look all that old and did we really have to wear caps back then? True story. I didn’t do the math but I think that means I could be their mother. And had I had the good sense to go to grad school years ago, I would have taught them in nursing school. They were lamenting that the night before their hospital had lost power and the back up to back up generator didn’t come on. They didn’t know how to pass meds or chart the old school way much less take a temp and BP without a machine. None of them had ever mixed an IV in their careers or charted on paper or had even seen a four-colored ballpoint pen. And I had a very, very tough interview with an ethics review board coming up. I guess I should pause to say that I am the complainant lest any rumors start flying around. 49 can be tough: my friend Rosemary said to approach my forty ninth year like a frozen gym membership, where I am taking a break. So far, I have not jumped out a window, which during rough patches passes for grace right now in my life. This falls short of heaven, but some days will just have to do. So in the face of all of this, I did the most amazing thing. I got out of bed. I could still walk. I still had most of my mental faculties. A more mature person would say, Thank you Jesus. But I thought, dear God in heaven, my back hurts, my head hurts, my fingers are stiff, where are my damn glasses, I am getting old. Then I ate a bowl of blackberries and blueberries, six Oreo cookies and drank a café mocha breve to level the playing field. Then I picked up the BCP. And it was not good. The readings were long and boring. It wasn’t a feast day. There wasn’t a saint to commemorate and I didn’t know who William Hunnington was. My mind kept wandering and the hymn sucked. I kept looking at the time and checking my face book page for what I don’t know. I Googled William Hunnington. I Googled the Lambeth quadrilateral. I changed chairs four times. I lit a candle. I played Gregorian chants and then gave up and played U2, which is very spiritual BTW. I gave up. I decided that this spiritual discipline was worthless and I was going to close the BCP and never open it again. If I currently had a spiritual director, he or she would say something like “What do you think God was saying to you during that time?” To which I would want respond “Well, gee I don’t know that is why I here, don’t you know?” But instead, I would put on my best good girl smile and say, “Be still???” To which the spiritual director is probably muttering to him or herself, “What new fresh hell is this?” Truth be told, I doubt that good girl smile has fooled very many, ok…maybe one or two. And I have been known to fake an answer or two with a spiritual director. I am fairly certain that lying to spiritual director defeats the purpose of going to see one, but I am also overly confident that the Holy Spirit can compensate for any of my character flaws. Then something amazing happened. I would call it grace, but then I am very easy. It was like when you clean your glasses and put them back on or a deep breath or a cool breeze on a hot day. I suddenly remembered reading in a favorite author’s book on grace, the best spiritual directive she ever got: Don’t be an asshole, make sure everybody eats. And a pastor once said: “I am only a beggar, showing other beggars where the bread is.” There are many kinds of food besides meat, dairy, grains and fruit. There is kindness, compassion, friendship, prayer (if I could ever quiet my mind), joy, and peace. And finally I had given up just enough to realize I was going to get through this disappointing moment in prayer and anyway you have to be somewhere: better here at prayer than say at the dentist office getting a root canal, stuck in traffic or at the IRS. And it is good to practice prayer because it forces you to see yourself and to act slightly more gracefully and it improves your thoughts and thus the world. After I finished reading the psalms, the gospel, the Old Testament reading, saying the Apostle’s Creed, and praying the Lord’s Prayer, I no longer felt like throwing the BCP away and giving up on prayer. So, I was shocked when I spoke to her later that day and she said she loved my smile and how I looked really happy. I am not sure she wanted any secrets to happiness and I am not sure she wanted to hear any of my worthless wisdom, but it occurred to me that perhaps when we are at our worst, when we are frightened, depressed, panicky, anxious, angry, disillusioned, exhausted, lost, hopeless, or just in a bad mood…perhaps that is when God does his best work. Perhaps when we are honest and real and actually stop flailing around inside our heads…God shows up. God can’t clean house while we are still in it. I am not sure she expected the answer I gave her, but I told her honestly I am a wreck and honestly I don’t feel happy but I hope that doesn’t keep me from enjoying whatever moment of joy I find myself. I told her my head is a pretty scary place right now and I feel lost all the time and I don’t know what the next half of my life is going to look like. I think you just have to show up to the life before you…the good, the bad, the ugly, the scary, and the beautiful. Somewhere in all that mess, there are breaths of grace. Sometimes you just have to get out of bed and start. Even if it requires six Oreo cookies, a mocha breve, U2, and Goggle to make it happen. And perhaps the best spiritual directive I could give her on joy: “Let’s just hold hands in the dark and we will find our way from here.” I woke up in a bleak place Saturday. A very bleak place. It wasn’t the place of utter desolation, like the morning after 9/11, but I could not find comfort anywhere. It was raining for like the seventy fifth day in a row. I suffer from seasonal affective disorder, refuse to recover from my need for sun bathing, would commit suicide if I lived in Seattle or London, and at times I think I could convert to worshiping Ra, the sun god. I only recall one time in my life when I actually complained about the heat- it was 104 in the shade that day and I was sitting on astro turf. The news couldn’t be worse- North Korea has a ICBM pointed at the west coast, a murder suicide on the mother baby unit at a local hospital, 30% of Irag-Afghanistan war veterans have thought about suicide, the ever looming health care crisis and gas prices are going to rise again. Two of my friends had terrible diseases. One of my friends buried a spouse. Another very dear friend is lost and can’t find herself. And is it just me or is there a new sexual abuse scandal every other day? And A-Rod may get a lifetime suspension from baseball. I am not an A-Rod fan and he should be banned for life along with every other user, I am just frustrated over the sports industry’s apparent inability to get a handle on PEDs. A zero-tolerance policy might be a start. I had just decided to go to nursing school for the third time. After I sat through orientation last week, it occurred to me I just thought round one was tough. When I introduced myself to the three young (young being the operative word) women on my track- they were only 4 years old in 1986. I graduated from nursing school the first time in 1986. One actually remarked that I didn’t look all that old and did we really have to wear caps back then? True story. I didn’t do the math but I think that means I could be their mother. And had I had the good sense to go to grad school years ago, I would have taught them in nursing school. They were lamenting that the night before their hospital had lost power and the back up to back up generator didn’t come on. They didn’t know how to pass meds or chart the old school way much less take a temp and BP without a machine. None of them had ever mixed an IV in their careers or charted on paper or had even seen a four-colored ballpoint pen. And I had a very, very tough interview with an ethics review board coming up. I guess I should pause to say that I am the complainant lest any rumors start flying around. 49 can be tough: my friend Rosemary said to approach my forty ninth year like a frozen gym membership, where I am taking a break. So far, I have not jumped out a window, which during rough patches passes for grace right now in my life. This falls short of heaven, but some days will just have to do. So in the face of all of this, I did the most amazing thing. I got out of bed. I could still walk. I still had most of my mental faculties. A more mature person would say, Thank you Jesus. But I thought, dear God in heaven, my back hurts, my head hurts, my fingers are stiff, where are my damn glasses, I am getting old. Then I ate a bowl of blackberries and blueberries, six Oreo cookies and drank a café mocha breve to level the playing field. Then I picked up the BCP. And it was not good. The readings were long and boring. It wasn’t a feast day. There wasn’t a saint to commemorate and I didn’t know who William Hunnington was. My mind kept wandering and the hymn sucked. I kept looking at the time and checking my face book page for what I don’t know. I Googled William Hunnington. I Googled the Lambeth quadrilateral. I changed chairs four times. I lit a candle. I played Gregorian chants and then gave up and played U2, which is very spiritual BTW. I gave up. I decided that this spiritual discipline was worthless and I was going to close the BCP and never open it again. If I currently had a spiritual director, he or she would say something like “What do you think God was saying to you during that time?” To which I would want respond “Well, gee I don’t know that is why I here, don’t you know?” But instead, I would put on my best good girl smile and say, “Be still???” To which the spiritual director is probably muttering to him or herself, “What new fresh hell is this?” Truth be told, I doubt that good girl smile has fooled very many, ok…maybe one or two. And I have been known to fake an answer or two with a spiritual director. I am fairly certain that lying to spiritual director defeats the purpose of going to see one, but I am also overly confident that the Holy Spirit can compensate for any of my character flaws. Then something amazing happened. I would call it grace, but then I am very easy. It was like when you clean your glasses and put them back on or a deep breath or a cool breeze on a hot day. I suddenly remembered reading in a favorite author’s book on grace, the best spiritual directive she ever got: Don’t be an asshole, make sure everybody eats. And a pastor once said: “I am only a beggar, showing other beggars where the bread is.” There are many kinds of food besides meat, dairy, grains and fruit. There is kindness, compassion, friendship, prayer (if I could ever quiet my mind), joy, and peace. And finally I had given up just enough to realize I was going to get through this disappointing moment in prayer and anyway you have to be somewhere: better here at prayer than say at the dentist office getting a root canal, stuck in traffic or at the IRS. And it is good to practice prayer because it forces you to see yourself and to act slightly more gracefully and it improves your thoughts and thus the world. After I finished reading the psalms, the gospel, the Old Testament reading, saying the Apostle’s Creed, and praying the Lord’s Prayer, I no longer felt like throwing the BCP away and giving up on prayer. So, I was shocked when I spoke to her later that day and she said she loved my smile and how I looked really happy. I am not sure she wanted any secrets to happiness and I am not sure she wanted to hear any of my worthless wisdom, but it occurred to me that perhaps when we are at our worst, when we are frightened, depressed, panicky, anxious, angry, disillusioned, exhausted, lost, hopeless, or just in a bad mood…perhaps that is when God does his best work. Perhaps when we are honest and real and actually stop flailing around inside our heads…God shows up. God can’t clean house while we are still in it. I am not sure she expected the answer I gave her, but I told her honestly I am a wreck and honestly I don’t feel happy but I hope that doesn’t keep me from enjoying whatever moment of joy I find myself. I told her my head is a pretty scary place right now and I feel lost all the time and I don’t know what the next half of my life is going to look like. I think you just have to show up to the life before you…the good, the bad, the ugly, the scary, and the beautiful. Somewhere in all that mess, there are breaths of grace. Sometimes you just have to get out of bed and start. Even if it requires six Oreo cookies, a mocha breve, U2, and Goggle to make it happen. And perhaps the best spiritual directive I could give her on joy: “Let’s just hold hands in the dark and we will find our way from here.” I woke up in a bleak place Saturday. A very bleak place. It wasn’t the place of utter desolation, like the morning after 9/11, but I could not find comfort anywhere. It was raining for like the seventy fifth day in a row. I suffer from seasonal affective disorder, refuse to recover from my need for sun bathing, would commit suicide if I lived in Seattle or London, and at times I think I could convert to worshiping Ra, the sun god. I only recall one time in my life when I actually complained about the heat- it was 104 in the shade that day and I was sitting on astro turf. The news couldn’t be worse- North Korea has a ICBM pointed at the west coast, a murder suicide on the mother baby unit at a local hospital, 30% of Irag-Afghanistan war veterans have thought about suicide, the ever looming health care crisis and gas prices are going to rise again. Two of my friends had terrible diseases. One of my friends buried a spouse. Another very dear friend is lost and can’t find herself. And is it just me or is there a new sexual abuse scandal every other day? And A-Rod may get a lifetime suspension from baseball. I am not an A-Rod fan and he should be banned for life along with every other user, I am just frustrated over the sports industry’s apparent inability to get a handle on PEDs. A zero-tolerance policy might be a start. I had just decided to go to nursing school for the third time. After I sat through orientation last week, it occurred to me I just thought round one was tough. When I introduced myself to the three young (young being the operative word) women on my track- they were only 4 years old in 1986. I graduated from nursing school the first time in 1986. One actually remarked that I didn’t look all that old and did we really have to wear caps back then? True story. I didn’t do the math but I think that means I could be their mother. And had I had the good sense to go to grad school years ago, I would have taught them in nursing school. They were lamenting that the night before their hospital had lost power and the back up to back up generator didn’t come on. They didn’t know how to pass meds or chart the old school way much less take a temp and BP without a machine. None of them had ever mixed an IV in their careers or charted on paper or had even seen a four-colored ballpoint pen. And I had a very, very tough interview with an ethics review board coming up. I guess I should pause to say that I am the complainant lest any rumors start flying around. 49 can be tough: my friend Rosemary said to approach my forty ninth year like a frozen gym membership, where I am taking a break. So far, I have not jumped out a window, which during rough patches passes for grace right now in my life. This falls short of heaven, but some days will just have to do. So in the face of all of this, I did the most amazing thing. I got out of bed. I could still walk. I still had most of my mental faculties. A more mature person would say, Thank you Jesus. But I thought, dear God in heaven, my back hurts, my head hurts, my fingers are stiff, where are my damn glasses, I am getting old. Then I ate a bowl of blackberries and blueberries, six Oreo cookies and drank a café mocha breve to level the playing field. Then I picked up the BCP. And it was not good. The readings were long and boring. It wasn’t a feast day. There wasn’t a saint to commemorate and I didn’t know who William Hunnington was. My mind kept wandering and the hymn sucked. I kept looking at the time and checking my face book page for what I don’t know. I Googled William Hunnington. I Googled the Lambeth quadrilateral. I changed chairs four times. I lit a candle. I played Gregorian chants and then gave up and played U2, which is very spiritual BTW. I gave up. I decided that this spiritual discipline was worthless and I was going to close the BCP and never open it again. If I currently had a spiritual director, he or she would say something like “What do you think God was saying to you during that time?” To which I would want respond “Well, gee I don’t know that is why I here, don’t you know?” But instead, I would put on my best good girl smile and say, “Be still???” To which the spiritual director is probably muttering to him or herself, “What new fresh hell is this?” Truth be told, I doubt that good girl smile has fooled very many, ok…maybe one or two. And I have been known to fake an answer or two with a spiritual director. I am fairly certain that lying to spiritual director defeats the purpose of going to see one, but I am also overly confident that the Holy Spirit can compensate for any of my character flaws. Then something amazing happened. I would call it grace, but then I am very easy. It was like when you clean your glasses and put them back on or a deep breath or a cool breeze on a hot day. I suddenly remembered reading in a favorite author’s book on grace, the best spiritual directive she ever got: Don’t be an asshole, make sure everybody eats. And a pastor once said: “I am only a beggar, showing other beggars where the bread is.” There are many kinds of food besides meat, dairy, grains and fruit. There is kindness, compassion, friendship, prayer (if I could ever quiet my mind), joy, and peace. And finally I had given up just enough to realize I was going to get through this disappointing moment in prayer and anyway you have to be somewhere: better here at prayer than say at the dentist office getting a root canal, stuck in traffic or at the IRS. And it is good to practice prayer because it forces you to see yourself and to act slightly more gracefully and it improves your thoughts and thus the world. After I finished reading the psalms, the gospel, the Old Testament reading, saying the Apostle’s Creed, and praying the Lord’s Prayer, I no longer felt like throwing the BCP away and giving up on prayer. So, I was shocked when I spoke to her later that day and she said she loved my smile and how I looked really happy. I am not sure she wanted any secrets to happiness and I am not sure she wanted to hear any of my worthless wisdom, but it occurred to me that perhaps when we are at our worst, when we are frightened, depressed, panicky, anxious, angry, disillusioned, exhausted, lost, hopeless, or just in a bad mood…perhaps that is when God does his best work. Perhaps when we are honest and real and actually stop flailing around inside our heads…God shows up. God can’t clean house while we are still in it. I am not sure she expected the answer I gave her, but I told her honestly I am a wreck and honestly I don’t feel happy but I hope that doesn’t keep me from enjoying whatever moment of joy I find myself. I told her my head is a pretty scary place right now and I feel lost all the time and I don’t know what the next half of my life is going to look like. I think you just have to show up to the life before you…the good, the bad, the ugly, the scary, and the beautiful. Somewhere in all that mess, there are breaths of grace. Sometimes you just have to get out of bed and start. Even if it requires six Oreo cookies, a mocha breve, U2, and Goggle to make it happen. And perhaps the best spiritual directive I could give her on joy: “Let’s just hold hands in the dark and we will find our way from here.”