Josiah holds his skinny teddy bear, named Toothpick, under his arm like a football. He sits in his high chair wearing his snoopy Christmas pajamas in July, eating a bowl of cheerios, scooping them out of his rubber bib with a spoon, while Vivaldi's Magnificat plays in the background, echoing around our nearly empty house as we prepare to move. I'm reminded of the grandeur of the passing moment, the profundity of the details of our lives, the sacredness of life, the gift of breath, the consequences of getting milk in Toothpick's furry ear. It's been said that one secret of great art is the use of contrasts. It's been said that God the Creator is the ultimate artist. And Oh, how He uses contrasts! I study the movement of our lives from state to state, from house to house. I study the movement of Josiah's spoon from bowl to mouth, from bib to bear. I study the tapestry and allow myself to be wrapped up in it, enwreathed by its mystery, resting in its music. I study the rhythm of Josiah's sleeping habits, the rhythm of my temper, the movement of the seasons' change, the ebullient flow of mood and thought. I expand with the swelling of the tempo of the Magnificat and hold tight to Antonio's passion, the passion of man, the passion of Mary. I rise and I rest and I live on these words: My soul doth magnify the Lord.
Wednesday, July 28, 2021
What I Didn't Mean
i did not mean
to damage the good leaves
when i pinched off blossoms of yesterday
to tear un-gently at the life-source stems
to be cold-hearted, to be rushed and hurried
to hurt the plant i love, to jostle and shake
the leaves still flavorful, still good.
But rather meant to un-inhibit life growth
to make space and room for abundance
to be a good gardener, to be grateful
to steward well, to do only the very most right thing.
Friday, September 20, 2019
Clock Reflections
"He did not want the seasons to change,"
I reflected as I fingered the marigold dead heads, crushing their brown and roasted calendula scent. I could understand, then, as I felt the life-giving sun beat against my forearms, warming my numb-cold sedentary spirit.
I could understand as I felt the atrophied muscles of memory give way to the overflowing generosity of crepe myrtle blossoms and the garden of basil and flowers, and flowering, licorice-scented basil.
(My life had gone to seed, scattered in places I didn't look for, scattered about like lost time.)
But I knew, too, as I watched June’s border collie figure fighting a battle against fleas, that the seasons must change. We must accept the loss of the trees’ verdure with open arms to the next thing, and only the very next thing. We must embrace it until it is taken away again. We must learn this letting go practice, this taking on of something new and frightening, this releasing control of a universe we were never meant to manipulate.
I released the little clocks into the wind. I scattered the soil of time into the air, but took some with me as a token, into my skin, into my wanderer spirit.
I am the recipient of good things.
I am the endurer of hard things.
I am Pilgrim; I am Adventurer.
The Lord giveth, and the Lord taketh away. Blessed be the name of the Lord.
I reflected as I fingered the marigold dead heads, crushing their brown and roasted calendula scent. I could understand, then, as I felt the life-giving sun beat against my forearms, warming my numb-cold sedentary spirit.
I could understand as I felt the atrophied muscles of memory give way to the overflowing generosity of crepe myrtle blossoms and the garden of basil and flowers, and flowering, licorice-scented basil.
(My life had gone to seed, scattered in places I didn't look for, scattered about like lost time.)
But I knew, too, as I watched June’s border collie figure fighting a battle against fleas, that the seasons must change. We must accept the loss of the trees’ verdure with open arms to the next thing, and only the very next thing. We must embrace it until it is taken away again. We must learn this letting go practice, this taking on of something new and frightening, this releasing control of a universe we were never meant to manipulate.
I released the little clocks into the wind. I scattered the soil of time into the air, but took some with me as a token, into my skin, into my wanderer spirit.
I am the recipient of good things.
I am the endurer of hard things.
I am Pilgrim; I am Adventurer.
The Lord giveth, and the Lord taketh away. Blessed be the name of the Lord.
Thursday, September 12, 2019
Dark Going
there now is only this dissipating, this retreating...
silently fingering old footholds,
toe-deep, yet somehow grounding;
repeating once forgotten rhythms,
now remembered.
But still there must be dancing
to the old steps (and trembling)
at the mercy of the familiarity of grief.
I pluck at the same string
to find I’ve still retained the melody:
the one I never wanted, but couldn’t live without;
the notes of unity, a song of empathy
that takes me back,
("back, baby"), back away from the world,
away from normalcy, and into the cloaking shadows.
They say you’re never the same.
But I wonder if we’d never changed...
how would we fly, then? How would we survive
the tumult of the seasons (always changing),
the melody’s unsung lines rearranging themselves
into the simplicity of needing human contact,
a best-and-most-human contract,
to come to the end of ourselves and leap in faith?
Monday, September 2, 2019
Pebble on a Beach
Even now, months later, my memories of sitting on the beach in Ft. Walton, Florida have a way of enchanting me, calming me. You see, I have been thinking a lot about moments.
What is it about that particular stretch of clean, crisp, white beach that beckons to my soul, even now? There is something soothing in it, healing, necessary, and soul-achingly honest about that particular environment, that particular moment.
For a long while, the moment was wrapped up in tear-filled anticipation, like an unopened gift. I envisioned it, hoped for it, planned on it, hungrily and desperately.
Then, finally, the moment was revealed in all its tender glory. There it was in its fluid fragility. The moment did not remain, did not slow. The moment did not wait for me to wrap my mind around it. The moment slipped on in that subtle and delicate way that moments tend to do. The moment was not mine to command, but rather was a gift. It was a gift from the sea, and more so from its Creator.
And now and forevermore the moment will be tucked neatly in my memory, shimmering and again fragile, sometimes crisp and sometimes as through a darkened glass.
Memories are made sacred by our processing of them, relating to them, remembering them again and again. This particular memory- this impression of being there on the beach which had beckoned to my spirit for sometime- brings with it waves of refreshment. It is, more than its accurate self, blossomed into a deeper and more honest self: an impression of stillness, an impression of letting God be Creator, an impression of rest and wonder and glory.
I find that I am most my child-self when sitting as a pebble on a long stretch of beach with whose creation I've had nothing to do. I have had no hand in the sculpting of the ocean in its vastness, its power and the respect it demands with each crashing wave upon the shore. I cannot command it. I cannot even begin to understand it. I can study it, glory in it, admire it, fear it. But I? I am just the pebble, a fellow creation who has been gifted with a moment. This gift is a passing, transient, but powerful, moment that continues to shape and cleanse and refresh with each new wave of the remembering.
I remember. I savor. I reconcile myself with the majesty of my Creator. I bask. I am still. Meanwhile the beach is still there, sovereign of my thinking, unconscious of my feelings. My Creator God continues to act, to speak, to breathe His will into being, and it is in this powerful knowledge that I find my deepest sense of rest, not merely in my memories, but in the present, here and now, and looking toward an inscrutable future.
Friday, May 10, 2019
New Dragons
I don’t feel that I am good at praying,
but nor do I feel good at getting out of bed,
nor pulling on the tendons, the muscles,
nor bending the arms, nor undressing and washing.
Even the simple, daily ablutions come with effort,
the spirit and body protesting
their tired chorus every step of the way,
the old self objecting to today’s new mercies.
But prayer comes with fiercer objections,
every fiber of my being erecting its pride,
its cynicism, suspicion, and doubt;
prayer comes with ever new dragons to slay,
ever new selfish ambition to lay
prostrate, unto death, unto bended praying knee.
but nor do I feel good at getting out of bed,
nor pulling on the tendons, the muscles,
nor bending the arms, nor undressing and washing.
Even the simple, daily ablutions come with effort,
the spirit and body protesting
their tired chorus every step of the way,
the old self objecting to today’s new mercies.
But prayer comes with fiercer objections,
every fiber of my being erecting its pride,
its cynicism, suspicion, and doubt;
prayer comes with ever new dragons to slay,
ever new selfish ambition to lay
prostrate, unto death, unto bended praying knee.
Monday, March 25, 2019
Slow Rise
Somebody once asked me, “What is
the eternal value of baking bread?”
Where is the longevity of the briefest moment?
What is the profit of a moving breath?
The flavors interwoven like delicate threads
Refreshing the air like white eyelet curtains
We close our eyes, we lift our heads.
Here, now,
Waving in the sun-bathed scent of tall grass
And the pastures murmuring with bovine contentment;
The hills clustered together and sprawling apart,
White puff clouds peeling back like a tea towel
To let in sun heat, letting our souls rise,
Slowly, pulling together the flavors of childhood,
Breathing in the aroma of dreams and hope
Here, now,
We sit together and break bread,
Pulling apart at the oneness, stretching out
Empty hands, and filling hungry spirit bellies
For a taste of salvation, a taste of new life again.
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