Tag Archives: Spirituality

Inheriting home by Tara Owens

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Filed under A Beautiful Mess, Growth in Change

Tara Owens is a beloved granddaughter, daughter, wife, step-mom and soon-to-be grandmother and aunt. A spiritual director who speaks, writes and leads retreats, she’s learning to live into enough and out of productivity and perfectionism. She loves good poetry, the Colorado rockies, watching her husband cook and her rescue dog Baloo. She’s at work on an upcoming book in InterVarsity Press’s Formatio line on spirituality and the body.

Inheritance, obsolescence, growth, change—these ideas have been haunting me over the past few weeks. This haunting—and the slow but difficult revelations that have come with that haunting—started when I was sick with the stomach flu. While struggling to feel even remotely human, I got a phone call from my sister telling me that my maternal grandmother had been found unresponsive in her home. She was in tears and on her way to the hospital, her husband at the wheel. I couldn’t be there, couldn’t even think about being there, and it tore me to pieces. As I lay helpless and wondering if I’d ever hear my grandmother’s voice again, ever feel her hand press against mind or see her smile as she repeated the story of The Two of Us and The Plasticine, I began thinking about the gifts she has given me. My inheritance.

And there it was. Inheritance. It’s not a word that we think about much in modern contexts. No longer obsessed by lineage and taxed deeply on property that moves from one generation to the next, society actively discourages us from passing things on. We’re obsessed by things that don’t last, rather than by things that do. (iPad HD, anyone?) We get our hands on the “latest” technology only long enough for it to become obsolete, and we don’t think about what this is doing to us.

I’m a self-professed technogeek. I’ve always been on the edge of what’s current in communication and its tools. Heck, I was BBSing back in high school, which, for those of you who don’t know, was blogging before blogs existed, Facebook before Zuckerburg imagined it. Raised in an international immigrant family, I’ve never been afraid to get up and move, to try something new, to took toward the horizon.

And move, I have. Southern Ontario, North Carolina, the Greater Toronto area, Washington, DC, Northern Virginia and now Colorado are all places I’ve called home at one point or another. Each has marked me in specific and indelible ways, shaping me. I can’t say that each place engendered growth in me, but I was changed.

To this day, I’ve never lived in one location for more than six years. I like to think that I come by this ability to uproot myself regularly and still survive the transplant honestly. My Granny has lived in more than 10 countries, having given birth in five of them. Uganda, Seychelles, South Africa, England, Tanzania—her list shocked my rooted husband who, until his visit to Canada to meet my family, had never left the United States.

I like the fact that I’ve taken lived out Granny’s inheritance well. I am a woman willing to take risks, to change, to make a place for myself even when one isn’t readily offered to me.

What haunts me now is perhaps what is haunting my entire generation. I don’t have a good grasp on how to grow without change.

When my sister arrived at the hospital, she wasn’t allowed to see Granny. She had to wait, as I did thousands of miles away, until they had figured out what had happened. It was hours before they announced that my vibrant, cheeky 88-year old grandmother suffered a massive stroke. Moyra Eleanor went from living independently, visiting sick members of her congregation in nursing homes to immobility in a hospital bed, unable to communicate or move her left side. As nearby family—all five of her grown children—rushed to her side, I realized I’d only lived half of her legacy, only allowed her to give me half of what I stood to gain from the riches that she so freely lived.

I realized that I’d taken my inheritance and run for a foreign country (both literally and figuratively). It’s a country steeped in fast living, things to which I could easily prostitute my soul. I haven’t been living with the pigs, but I’ve been darn close.

I’ve never thought of myself as the prodigal, although I’m sure my immediate family would disagree. My tendency toward a life of change wasn’t something that I consciously chose, nor is it something that I see as necessarily detrimental. But being unable to talk to or offer anything to grandmother as she (and my family) live into her new, limited reality brought me up short.

Over the past ten years, my whole extended family has been quietly living a life of stability. While I wandered, they put down roots. While I sought change, they experienced growth.

I don’t deny that my years since college have been beneficial. I’ve learned incredible lessons, been given amazing gifts. It wasn’t until after college that I became a Christian, stumbling my way first to a renegade church then to seminary then to a practice as a spiritual director. But, until my marriage three years ago, I’ve been on move.

The year after I moved into our humble house in Colorado Springs, we built raised beds and planted a vegetable garden. I’d always professed to black thumbs, but I found that this new stability brought with it a little bit more patience and self-awareness. I was able to see that I watered a little too often, and then disappeared a little too long thinking that I’d done enough. I learned that uprooting things, even to move them to another area of the garden, leaves them weak and vulnerable to disease. I began to see that change isn’t always the thing that produces growth—sometimes it’s the very thing that stunts it.

The irony of this journey is that I’m beginning to root here, away from the family whose lessons I could have learned so much more quickly had I been willing to stay rather than go my own way. I’ve watched the tree outside my office window for three years now, and I am beginning to see how slow, stable growth produces change. After a lifetime of learning the lessons of change that forced me into growth—learning to make new friends quickly and with candor, choosing for self-confidence in new situations rather than self-doubt, recognizing and making room for the truth that change is first experienced as loss and making a companion my own grief—I’m beginning, oh so tentatively, to accept that there are lessons of growth that will produce change in me. And that’s harder to trust than I would like to think.

In two weeks, I’ll make the journey back to Canada. I hope and pray that I’ll get the opportunity to hold my Granny’s hand one more time. Without words, I’ll tell her that I’m ready to receive, to begin to receive the other part of my inheritance from her. I’ll tell her that I’m learning to settle, to grow where I am planted, even if it is far away from blood family. I’ll tell her that I’m beginning to see that what she’s given me is more than just an adventurous spirit, but a heart in need of the lessons of stability and belovedness. I’ll tell her—slowly, slowly—I’m coming home.

 

Celebrating Change by Meghan Jackson

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Filed under A Beautiful Mess, Growth in Change, Home.Food.Garden

Meghan Jackson is a pediatric nurse and a radical homemaker. This past year has certainly brought change – she got married, celebrated her husband’s graduation from dental school, and has decreased her hours at work to spend more time working in their home. She enjoys reading books out loud with her hubby, coffee dates, concocting good food, and losing all sense of time in her vegetable garden. When the mood strikes her, she blogs here.


 

 

If you know me, you know I love to garden. It all started my senior year of college with some snapdragons and potting soil bought at the Target garden center. I lovingly planted my little babies in brand-new pots and placed them in various well thought out spots around our apartment.  You know, the end tables, the bathroom, my night stand. Needless to say, all of them died…but they did not take with them my passion for nurturing. I graduated. I researched. I learned that most plants do better outdoors. And now I grow vegetables.

My husband and I dug a long-awaited veggie patch into our backyard last summer. We planted the seeds, and from October onward it has been a part of my general routine to wake up, put on my bathrobe and slippers, and pad outside to check on the plants. It has been a delightful journey, observing this first season of our garden’s growth. I’ve watched the seedlings come up, their first leaves drop off as their mature ones grew stronger. I’ve seen the radishes swell and the pea pods slowly fatten and the arugula bolt into flowers, attracting bees. I’ve found myself engrossed in the activities of worms, grub, and roly-poly as they break down our kitchen scraps and yard waste into wonderful, dynamic dirt.

Our garden is literally different every single day, and it never ceases to amaze me that all of this change happens more or less without me. Granted, I water the plants and feed them fresh compost, and likewise feed the compost with our leftover plants, but 99% of the change that occurs in our garden is not of my own doing. It’s like magic.

It dawned on me about a month ago that almost daily, I have been exercising a practice in celebrating change. I’ll venture to say that for all of us, change can be scary. And I think all of us can name a time when that fear kept us from making or accepting a change.  So when I realized that I had happened upon a way to celebrate change, I rejoiced! That’s probably a healthy practice to have!

I encourage you all to consider a way in which you can practice celebrating change. Maybe it is in really noticing the growth of your children, or that of a relationship, or a way you have matured in the last year. Maybe you can wake up early, and watch the dawn unfold and the light change around you as the day begins. Or savor a sunset. Or notice the subtle changes that occur in the yards and on the porches of the homes as you walk a familiar stretch of your neighborhood.

Maybe you will plant a seed, and watch the miracle of change and growth unfold out of the dirt. It really is magical, and it really is worth celebrating.

October 2011:

January 2012:

Controlling Growth by Melanie Dosen

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Filed under A Beautiful Mess, Growth in Change

Melanie, (and for some reason, I cannot upload picture of her today), is a people person.  If you were to see said picture(s) of her she would be surrounded by people – people who call her a dear friend, people she is laughing with, dancing with, chatting with.  What is evident is that she cares about these people and what you can’t see is how big her heart is – for the world and for her community.  She currently works giving care and attention to autistic children and will shortly be going back to school to get her Masters in Social Work so she can provide better care and education to herself and others. 

Melanie is starting us off with our new spring prompt GROWTH IN CHANGE.  She read this at the open mic night and I felt it needed be shared with more people.  Thank you Melanie!

 

I am not a patient person.

I find slowness absurd, expecting sufferable, and waiting intolerable. I must be moving, I must be doing, I must be accomplishing; I reject the notion that things might not, cannot, or will not happen, so I take it on myself to facilitate that “happening”.

I am not patient, I do not know how to just be; I do not know how to trust my muscles and joints to gravity and allow my body to gently sit, letting my mouth and nostrils expand and suck in this miraculously available oxygen.  To allow it to permeate my bloodstream, voyaging through my veins, delivering fuel and life to my organs, which all labor together symbiotically to ensure that I remain a healthy, functioning being.  I do not know how to be patient and let my body do what it innately does, what, in some sort of holy inspiration, it was designed to do.  Do, and do well, do absolutely perfectly (most of the time) completely without my assistance.

I am impatient, because I am terrified of things “not happening” when I am doing nothing to make them happen; despite of the fact that my body, my land, my world, everything manages to not just exist, but thrive without me.  My impatience induces a habit of creating needlessness: my unhealthy habits, my unnecessary exertion, my controlling mentalities, my impatience over the fact that things aren’t going my way, my capacity to criticize and ostracize, my ridiculous dependence on things.  Needlessness is my constant companion in this dark cavity in which I am comfortable to nestle, incapable—or, perhaps just refusing—to accept that this existence I’ve enjoyed is not contingent on myself.  Refusing to accept that I have no control.

The realization of this horrid reality instigates all sorts of different reactions: some find this emancipation from control quite comforting, embracing their relinquished responsibilities from life’s supposed burdens like a warm blanket, happy to dwell in the surrounding nothingness.  Others, however, find themselves in a panic, their wholly control-less nature an empty and suffocating void, an intolerable vacancy.

So, like me, they’ve fabricated a world where they do have control by making themselves dependant on needlessness. They, like me, refuse to believe that we have everything we need, and that we’ve already been given everything that matters, and that our bodies and our plants and our ecosystems know what they are doing.  Fancying ourselves to be the wisest, strongest, and cleverest, we instate dominion over the things of the earth that do not defend themselves against our impertinence, perhaps, because, unlike us, they are confident that they have nothing to prove.

These things are used to create more things to feed our needlessness, leaving places barren in our wake.  Our ethic is consumption, and we have been conditioned to earn livings to purchase lifestyles.  We perpetuate a cycle of acquisition and waste, removing from earth and our bodies the very elements that make them function and thrive. We exploit what’s good so that we can prove to our terrified selves that we are in control.

What if we were bold enough to return our illegitimate control?  What if we were confident enough to live as though we aren’t needed, but have in fact been given everything as a gift to enjoy?  What if we listened to our bodies and our earth, and vowed to only give it good things?  What if we made a covenant with ourselves and our land and our neighbors to re-learn how to be producers, rather than consumers?  By renouncing our control that we have illicitly usurped, we actually become the wisest, the strongest, and the cleverest; by acknowledging that we have very little to do with the perpetuation of existence, we become freer beings, unrestrained by a lifestyle of needlessness.  Instead, we become open to living a lifestyle that can meet real needs, a lifestyle centered on enacting justice, embracing mercy, and living in humble wonderment of to Whom we can attribute all of this beauty.  A lifestyle that honors life, rather than trembles in fear of death.

I want to be brave enough to relinquish my control and regain my patience.  I want to learn to lay down on the grass in peace, trusting my body and the earth that supports it.  I want to embrace the radical assumption that I don’t need the needlessness, because I am actually not needed, though deeply, deeply wanted.  Come, dive into this great warm abyss with me; let’s be courageous enough to surrender our control.

Proverbs 3 “Crop of Hope” by Christin Taylor

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Filed under A Beautiful Mess, Finding Hope, Poems and Blessings

Christin Taylor lives in a college dorm (in an apartment) in Bellingham, Washington with her two children and husband Dwayne.  It is there that she writes prolific essays and teaches online writing workshops as well as mentors many students who seek out her wisdom. She has currently just solidified her first book contract for Shipwrecked in Los Angeles, her creative memoir filled with insightful direction and beautiful words.  She is a great teacher (take her workshop!) and wonderful human being.  Christin is our last writer for this season’s FINDING HOPE prompt and she closes us out of this season with a lovely take on Proverbs 3. 

 

 

What I’m about to tell you

Will lengthen the line of your days

Will harvest a crop of hope:

“In all your ways”

in every road where you put foot to path

in every street where you pass lights and lives

admit that there is one bigger than you, truer than you,

more real than the very breath you are now taking

 

“and He will make your ways”

straighter than the truth that has pierced your heart.

He will walk the trail you are now treading

And wear in every curve of confusion, every angle of apprehension.

 

“Don’t be wise in your own eyes”

be wise in the eyes of one who peers into your soul,

who sees what is not, and what cannot

be fathomed by those such as us,

dust as we are,

fading from one temporary moment to the next.

 

“Blessed is the man who finds wisdom”

it will be like he found a small child by the road

sat with her and heard the thoughts of God

held in the mind of one so innocent.

Those thoughts are deeper than Time

Simpler than a single note.

 

Beautiful are the traits of wisdom

“Nothing you desire can compare with her”

because nothing you desire brings peace

nothing you desire brings life

nothing you desire brings honor

But wisdom has laid these out like a laurel wreath

Ready for us to take with both hands.

 

That’s how God laid the foundations, placed the heavens, split the depths

That’s how he formed each one of us -

With sound judgment and good sense.

Cherish wisdom and know this:

 

The One, whose beginning and end meet on the other side of existence,

“He will be your confidence”

Though you fall, stumble, blunder, trip

He will keep you from breaking beyond repair.

Finding Hope by Nicola Gayle

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Filed under A Beautiful Mess, Finding Hope

Hello My name is Nicola Marguerite Gayle….aka Nikki …. I was born and raised in Brooklyn New York by Jamaican Parents who as young adults  moved to England where they met and got married, then moved to New York where life began for both me (Nikki Gayle) and my older sister. Then when I was 6 we moved to California.

I currently live in Pasadena, California. My hobbies and interests have changed throughout the years but, what I found that has stayed consistent has been my love for the arts……especially dance.  I love traveling, eating/ snacking and cannot resist a good dessert!!

Writing is a tool that gets me to communicate more clearly with others but, I would never consider myself much of a writer………this blog entry is an experiment of my continued journey and adventure…..

Now I am rejoining self… reaching out for another thing that will or has fallen through or been rejected or even another  “failed” attempt …… but one thing I have discovered… I am still alive breathing and more alive than I have been in years. In the past, things were definite, for sure, consistent, constant, moving, shaking happening legit and “alive”. Things “made sense” (or so it seemed at the time) but inside I was dead, dying and scared… scared that I would do the “wrong thing” or that I would be “found out” and dead because I was not living up to whom I was and who I needed to be. The real me was beaten out by doing what “looks good” and won’t get me seen or heard or better yet “in trouble” because me and my individual thoughts, ideas, dreams, mistakes did not matter… (Mistakes were not allowed) or not accepted or I just did not know how to manage or accept or realize how to funnel it to a place of growth. I lacked a place and time for discovery because I filled it with others. Others dreams, others expectations, others hopes and others demands. That put me in a place where I did not have room for me.  No place to feel, escape experiment or just choose… I was constantly in a place of being told “ this is not you” and when I choose to speak it would come out “wrong“ or did not fit into a category that others would not/ could not understand or it was just not the space and time for me. I felt like I was suffocating. I made myself a victim and I didn’t realize it or even care.

A friend summed it up perfectly by saying to me once, “Nikki, people love/ like you but they just don’t know what to do with you”… ahh yes…. And that is where I began…. Or just started to begin. Beginning to understand the meaning of just being to truly understand me or just being/ my human existence, place and purpose in this world. Others may not have a place for you but you need to feel a place with ones self… what does that have to do with hope? Well hope believes in something greater/bigger than you. Well that’s my theory/ belief at least…that’s what keeps me going…  keeps me “on track”, keeps me from dying mentally, emotionally and spiritually.

I think I lost hope for a while…. Hope in trusting my self and others. I have my moments where I need to regain my hope but I know that hope /faith (whatever) that maybe keeps me going. So whether it is in keeping myself sane by going for an indulgent little treat or trying for the new job or new (or old) hobby or a new place to pray/journal/ explore it’s the little things that I enjoy that keeps me going… I can only do that if I know that I have hope in something bigger than me…. Hope gives me a break from trying to make up for things or keep trying for things that don’t really matter or are just a plain waste of time…. Hope is the help that gives you “wings” (Cheesy right) to keep flying so to speak…. Hope can look like a lot of things…

Like the scripture says we are made in his image…  and that’s a pretty big image… so guess what, there is a lot of room for all us and we all have and are all made up of unique pieces of him that add up to the big picture…. that to me, that image is my bench mark of hope…. and when I am rejecting myself, denying myself, ignoring myself… I am denying the very thing that I am created to be. No wonder…. when one is ignoring oneself you seem to disappear and parts of the big picture are missing…. That can leave you empty, lonely helpless, angry, frustrated, not at peace (the list goes on)… that makes a bit of sense to me because in my case when I am trying to be or copy something or someone that already exists (that’s not really who I am or what I am about) I am denying my place and purpose because a piece of the big picture that I am ceases to exist and what a tragic thing for oneself and for the entire picture or even the world for that matter.

Finding hope…for me is truly being me or searching for what makes me tick and when I am focusing on my true meaning… whatever that may be… I am filled and strengthened to pour out to others so they too can find their place in the big picture. What a tragedy, what a bore if all of our lives, dreams, talents, quirks, strengths and weaknesses all looked the same…. No wonder people loose hope when there is no variety.

So I leave you with this (you know I am speaking to myself when I say this)….freedom lies in feeling hope… hope that you have a purpose that is unique only to you. That YOU can contribute to this world… you are here for a reason for your particular ways, gifts, quirks, desires and dreams.  Leave room for yourself and others to explore…..

Stop comparing yourself to others…. Once you are living your life intended  (no matter how big and or small you may think it is that doesn’t matter) YOU have a purpose, YOU matter and in this life that is only unique to you and that can bring hope not only to you but also, to those around you……

Blossoms of hope by Staci Kennelly

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Filed under A Beautiful Mess, Finding Hope
Staci Kennelly is mom, teacher, mentor and housemaid to three wonderful and amazing girls.  In her spare time she enjoys playing hooky with her husband and children, cooking yummy food, exploring new cities, collecting vintage cameras and photographing all of it. 
My Japanese Magnolia tree is one of my favorite plants in our yard.  It is a big beautiful tree that is green all of spring and summer.  Come autumn, all of it’s leaves slowly loose their color and fall.  Then the tree sits there for weeks, bare.  The whole thing is this great gray stick. Each year, this is when my heart seems to fall in love with my tree more. Not because of what it is, but because I know what is coming.  You see, in the middle of winter, when all of my garden is sleeping and waiting for spring, my Japanese Magnolia blooms.  It doesn’t have a single leaf on it…  only pretty pink flowers.  This giant gray stick is suddenly a bursting with life!
©2012 Staci Kennelly
The first year we lived in this home, I thought I had killed it.  It was just so bare.  But now, I know that when it is bare and seems to have nothing else, that is when I am to be reminded of the years past.  That is when I reach back and remember the Januarys filled with pink flowers.
©2012 Staci Kennelly
Hope is like that.  We do not need to be reminded of hope when our soul is in a spring season.  Spring is  full of new life.  Summer is filled with freedom and warmth.  We seem to carry summer’s warmth into autumn.  But when winter comes, sometimes, its cold reaches so deep into our soul that we forget what  warmth and freedom felt like.    This is when we need to remind ourselves of years past.  We can remind ourselves of our own beauty and our own strength.  We can remind ourselves of the times we fell, only to rise up again.  Winter seasons in my life no longer hold fear or worry.  They are a time of great hope.  For I know, right there in the middle of winter, I will bloom.
©2012 Staci Kennelly