Tag Archives: Spirituality

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

Tomorrow’s Sunset by Melissa Mills

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Filed under A Beautiful Mess, Finding Hope

Melissa Mills is a dear friend and one of the most passionate people I know.  She works tirelessly for justice and speaks the truth in living authentically in her community.  I’m proud to share her essay as the first installment of our “Finding Hope” prompt for this Winter. You can find her personal blog here.

How do I find hope when life is full of disappointment?

“I’m going to walk away now,” I said, my voice cracking.  I turned around and reluctantly, did just that. I hoped he wouldn’t see the tears that burst from my eyes, blurring my vision.  He didn’t. Instead, he got into his car.

And. Drove. Away.  

I was left having to say goodbye yet again to a guy I really liked and all that I could hope was that somehow this year…this hard, awful, amazing, crazy year would be worth it. But I had to choose that hope. It didn’t come naturally.

****

“Come awake from sleep, arise. You were dead but come alive. Wake up, wake up, open your eyes. Climb from your brain into delight.”David Crowder Band , “Come Awake.”

Sometimes after work last year, where I was on the edge of breaking into either tears or song, I would find myself driving west on the 210 when I was supposed to be driving east. Somehow after an hour I would end up at the beach journaling and totally free to just be. These moments would come upon me like flashes of lightning. I would just know it was going to be an amazing sunset and then would drive as fast as I could without getting pulled over: the 210 to the 118 to the 405 where I always held my breath knowing that the traffic could turn on me at any second.  I always ended up in Santa Monica. It wasn’t that it was my favorite beach, it just had the most of my history and in those moments, I needed to be known, even if it was by a place.  Read More »

RELAUNCHING A BEAUTIFUL MESS!!

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Filed under A Beautiful Mess, Art Journaling, Home.Food.Garden, Poems and Blessings, Spiritual Direction

Well the site never got “turned off.”

This may have been providential in the midst of shifting my focus to my new site kristinritzau.com (which still exists).  As I have been doing some vision planning for 2012, something became quite clear… TOGETHER WE ARE BETTER. Through the workshops, events, and open mic nights, this has been so evident and so refreshing.  As I thought about it, this is what ABM was birthed out of – a safe space to be yourself, authentic and true.  Why not have a blog where we can continue this community?  Where others can join when they want to and contribute.  Where we can find our voices and share our gifts as well as honor and respect other people in the space.

So here we are in 2012, with a website that never got shut down, and a philosophy to support it.  So why the heck not?  I am over the moon about this idea so here it goes: Each week, at least to start with, a different voice will be featured sharing an original essay, photo, collage, art piece, or poem.  These ideas will revolve around a seasonal prompt which will change every four months.  So for example, if the prompt for this winter is “Finding Hope,” then you would use that to create something to share with this community and your own of course.  It could be just a short poem to a picture that inspires that prompt in you to a story to a painting (which you would take a picture of)… hopefully it will make sense as it begins.

I have contacted a handful of people to initiate the blog which will start next week, but as we get the ball rolling if you feel like you want to contribute something, send me a message and I will send you the prompt for this season.  And remember TOGETHER WE ARE BETTER! Happy New Year everyone.

The Cost of Busyness – an ode to my 80 year old self.

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Filed under A Beautiful Mess, Home.Food.Garden, Spiritual Direction

I feel like a cranky grandma right now.  The other morning I found myself in my garden getting mad at insects and waving at drivers to slow down on my street.

I can’t be serious? Who am I?! I become a faculty member and suddenly I’m 80? (I might be in this pic)

I am starting to understand why my grandpa watched golf all day.  It was his meditation and escape.  His dream life on screen and his naptime all wrapped up with the lullaby of shushed applause and the melodic “ooohs and awwws” cooing away all that is wrong in the world. Even the speeding cars.

There is the occasional, “What the crap kind of ball is that?” But then it would switch to another player and life would go on.  It is like a person having a bad dream, only to roll over and drift off again.

My grandparents weren’t busy.  They read the paper, drank coffee and golfed. A lot.

Today I can’t escape busyness.  Even in the past two weeks, where work has slowed and the normal 9 to 5 ceases, I still have classes to plan and meetings to attend.  However, there are these times of lull.  Times where I am tempted to turn on the TV or watch the free episodes of Barefoot Contessa on Hulu.  Times where I want to check out.  I look at a picture on Facebook and suddenly an hour has gone by.  It’s not that I never do those things, but I’m just not sure how so much time is gone by doing them.

Summer is disappearing and I am letting it.  I’m beginning to think this of life too.  I was raised in a family that thought, “Once you’re old enough, you’ll understand.”  Somehow though, I am always 12.  I’m almost 2 decades older than that, but I got lodged in my father and older brothers’ memories as a struggling adolescent, and I’m wedged there between their 80’s mullets and my dad’s memorable but awkward mustache.  They have moved on (and shaved), but somehow I did not in their minds. Read More »

Savoring Summer

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Filed under A Beautiful Mess, Art Journaling, Home.Food.Garden, Workshops/Retreats

Summer is here.

The corn reminds me every morning by growing inches each day, just soaking up the heat. Likewise, the tomato garden on the other side of the yard is not complaining.

That’s a good thing because we are about to leave for a week of contemplative prayer and no technology – therefore, no blogging.  A week of slowing down, savoring life as only one can when disconnected from all things savvy.

So I wanted to show pictures of the garden before we leave so I can see how much it grows while were gone.  And to update you on its progress since I posted not too long ago about the adventure of homesteading we embarked on a couple of years ago.  It has been great hearing about what all of you are growing and getting encouragement too.

I hope to come back from this retreat rejuvenated for this new season with lots of inspiration, love and energy for what is ahead.  I am working on quite a bit of new material and (drum roll) … a new design for the website that will be amazing!  I can’t wait to share it with you. So it’s a good time for a break and I hope you are getting some vitamin d too.

I also wanted to invite you to the homestead for another Beautiful Mess Workshop event.  July 30th I will be hosting another creative day here where we’ll explore what it looks like to discover our true voices and find safe space with other women.  It promises to be a memorable day that many women have connected with over the past couple years. I hope you can make it! And if you have come to one in the past, it would be great to have you back too as new explorations always emerge.  Please click here for more information.

See you soon! Happy Homesteading.

A New Path…

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Filed under A Beautiful Mess, Thoughts on life

I’m sitting at work, at my desk… my empty desk.  The day has been spent going through paperwork and memory-filled-cards and mementoes from the past five years.   I have sorted through my professional life and what is left to this point sits in an assortment of boxes on my office floor.

I am leaving my job this week. Pandora keeps reminding me with song titles like, Let Go, Opportunity to Cry, Be OK, and Only Hope.  This has been a job I have loved and one that has loved me.  I have worked in student life at Azusa Pacific University for five years.  Five years. In my short life, that is a large amount of time.  The opportunity to work here has launched my career, taught me more lessons than I can count and shaped me into the person I am today.

Amazing Staff

This has been a year of discernment and asking big questions.  Since the book came out in September, I have had small inklings of, “Okay, what’s next?”  My activator/achiever (yes, I have both on the strengths-finder) was kicking in, not quite kicking wildly, but starting to get a little restless.

I had no expectations for the book when it came out except that people who need it would be able to find it. And slowly, that has been happening.  As I said, I began to ask myself what this meant: to be a writer.  I looked around at others in my new field and scratched my head a bit.  The one-year phenomena I wrote about a few days ago perplexed me and I didn’t like the idea of “A Beautiful Mess for Cat Lovers” or matching mugs and calendars.  I wasn’t a fan of quick selling self-help guides or books designed to pay the publisher a pretty penny while I did all of the work.  Being just a “writer” seemed like a murky path at this juncture of my life.

So I paced.  I paced a lot in my mind, in my office, in my yard, in my dreams.  I asked myself a lot of questions about what I wanted my life to be about.  I held a lot in my prayers and meditations – but namely everything I held was about asking for a door to open, a window to crack.  I hastily made up my mind to choose what I had always known because I didn’t hear an answer. However, one of my newer friends, whose soul I feel like I have known forever, said, “I think you’re being called out of what is comfortable.”  I was amazed at her clarity in that moment.  She was being, what I define as, a good friend. The best. It wasn’t an answer, but it was what I needed to hear.

She pushed me forward and gave me contacts… she said I needed to teach.  Teach?  Really?  I went into student life to be out of the classroom.  But as I started to converse with a few trusted advisors in my life, my other friend said, “Kristin, what you love is academia. You will never be outside of that.  It makes perfect sense that you would pursue your doctorate.”  A PhD? But I’m young, I’m inexperienced… and I’m running out of excuses.  The truth is I do have experience and I am qualified.  It is funny how hard that is to say sometimes. Read More »