Showing posts with label Sarah McLaughlin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sarah McLaughlin. Show all posts

Thursday, April 2, 2015

"take these broken wings…"



"take these
broken wings
and learn to fly…"



This is my favorite song. This is my favorite version of my favorite song. Sarah McLaughlin's cover  of "Blackbird," from the "I Am Sam" soundtrack speaks to something in me that is deeper than bone.

This post is all about innocence. It is about purity. It is about sorrow. It is about resurrection and redemption. It is about a spiritual path to reclaiming what seems forever lost.

When most people think about lost innocence, they think of choice. We are led to believe that staying a virgin -- staying pure -- is something that a girl/woman chooses to do. If she has lost her virginity -- her innocence -- it must have been her choice. 


But for some it is not a choice, and the losing of it happens long before they even know it is something that they have.  Long before they learn it is something to be cherished, protected, or shared.


These are the little girls who have been violated without consent. They are the children without a childhood.  The ones who mourn a ghost self.

They are the girls who weep in secret, the girls who cut to feel, and starve themselves to prove they have some modicum of control in their lives. These are the women who read about lost innocence and wonder how it must have felt -- to have ever even glimpsed something so precious in themselves. They are the women who ache when they read about abstinence contracts, chastity pledges, and purity rings.  These are the girls who feel disconnected from themselves.

These are girls who dream of what they never knew. And for them, it isn't about a moral line crossed or a physical boundary broken. It is about a deep desire to know one's self as sweet and pure. To feel full of hope and promise and innocence.

For most of their lives, many of these girls feel like that blackbird who sings with a broken wing. Yes, they have learned how to act childlike -- but to truly know and feel childlikeness, is another matter altogether. You see, when a grown man begins violating a girl before she even enters puberty, it doesn't really feel as if something has been irrevocably lost -- just never known.

She wanders through the landscape of childhood -- one that should be filled with learning, and play, and imagination -- with a cloud of dark knowing, brooding over her at all times. She feels like a liar, a pretender, a fake in the vast pink kingdom of fairy princesses and happily ever after.

Her heart doesn't leap at songs like "If you're happy and you know it clap your hands." Her heart rips open - like a raw wound - with the first strains of "Blackbird singing in the dead of night…"

These girls discover that there is rarely somewhere safe to turn. Often, when she "tells," she is not mended, but broken further. When her tears spill over onto another's pillow, she is accused of darkening their path with the underbelly of society's horror story. 


Some women report that they wonder how to protect their loved ones from the pain and distrust that seems to come out of nowhere -- the confusion and anger that percolates just below the surface. For them, disassociation, divorce, death can often feel like the only way to save those they love from the sharp shards of their own shattered hearts.  

There are countless stories of brokenness - here and abroad.  Not all are dramatic and shocking.  Not all make us turn away in hopelessness and helplessness -- or even disgust.  But these girls with broken wings live among us. And their stories need to be redeemed -- and can be redeemed.  Mine was.  The particulars of my story are not important -- only that for many years I believed it defined me as someone who was irrevocably lost.

But this was where Love, divine Love -- God, found me. This is where the story of a crucified savior and a woman who had been saved -- saved me. 


I know that there is much academic speculation about whether Mary Magdalene was actually the same woman who washed Jesus' feet at the Pharisee's house. But this scholarship doesn't matter to me.  What matters -- and what mattered then -- is what her story meant to my heart decades ago on a cloudy spring day.  A day when I had lost all hope of every being worthy of love. 

You see, I needed to believe that a weeping girl of questionable reputation and broken innocence, washing the Savior's feet, was the same woman who kept vigil at the foot of the cross, and waited at the door of the sepulcher. Her story gave me hope. It saved me.

In my secret heart, I knew that I was just like that broken girl. But I also sensed -- in that moment -- that I could be just as courageous as that expectant, grateful woman.

Throughout my girlhood, an undaunted hope had lived just beneath the surface of my secret self-loathing. I'd prayed that I could find an innocent child buried within the rubble of my broken-ness.  I'd search "before" photos for a glimmer of her childlikeness.  I thought if I could find innocence in her eyes it would be familiar and I'd be able to remember how it felt and connect with those feeling.  But I never could.  I had all but given up hope of ever really knowing what it felt like to be a child.    


That hope was was kindled into an enlightened faith with the Magdalene's story. I realized that I not only could be saved from self-destruction, but that I actually had value beyond simple self-preservation.  I glimpsed that the resurrection of my own innocence could serve Christ's timeless mission of healing and salvation.

In reading her story, I glimpsed that this woman "out of whom Jesus had cast seven devils"  actually served as a reliable, vital, and unshakeable witness to the immortality of Life -- of innocence. She must have been unwavering in her certainty that what had been resurrected from the ashes of her own deadened life, was only a glimpse of what was true for Jesus. 


 It must have been absolutely unthinkable to her that Christ's life could be destroyed by hate. The resurrection of her own crucified purity had prepared her heart.  She was able to hold watch at the cross and an unwavering vigil at the sepulcher, while she waited for the inevitability of his resurrected life.

Her once-broken wings gave flight to humanity's hopes   -- and they were lifting mine two thousand years later.

Realizing that Mary Baker Eddy launches her chapter on "Christian Science Practice," -- or metaphysical healing -- with this woman's transformation, I have clung to her story  as scriptural precedence for a life redeemed -- and purposeful.  She has taught me how to serve Christ. She has unfolded for me a well-trod path towards reclaimed innocence, purity, our individual and collective intactness as daughters of God.

So, what does this Easter story mean to me -- it means we are all innocent. It means that her resurrection, was part and parcel to his resurrection. And that his resurrection was the promise of our resurrection -- each and every one of us.  We are all untouched by evil.  Inviolable in grace. We are children of God. Just think of it -- you are a child of God.  I am a child of God. I am an innocent, a babe, a pure sweet girl in the eyes of my Father who has given me wings to fly.

In a hymn written by William MacKenzie are the words:


"she knew the Christ,
undimmed by dying..."
 

I know this Christ.  It is alive in me -- undimmed by dying, unsilenced by hate, unstoppable in Love. This Christ is the resurrected, ever-alive innocence in all of us.  It is the untouched purity, the inviolable hope which assures us that we are never lost, never broken, never entombed in the past.  For me, this is the Easter story that lives each day.

offered with Love,


Kate

Thursday, June 2, 2011

"it will come to you..."

"look for the bare necessities
the simple bare necessities
forget about your worry
and your strife...

have I given you a clue...
the bare necessities of Life
will come to you..."

In the comments section following the Youtube video clip of Mowgli and Balloo singing "Bare Necessities" from Disney's The Jungle Book, a viewer asked this question: 

"remember how you felt when you heard this song for the first time
and how you slowly fell in love with it."
 

It was such a sweet sentiment, and full of a parent's backward-looking melancholy...a feeling I could relate to all too easily. 

I thought about the first time I remembered seeing this film, and hearing this song.  Images of my toddler-age daughter washed over me.  Of course, it was 1992...right?  But, wanting to get the year of its release right before writing about it, I went to Wikipedia, and to my shock, I discovered that"The Jungle Book" had been released in 1967.  1967?  Really?  I couldn't remember ever seeing that movie, or hearing any of its songs, until I was a mom, and I was watching it with my own children. 

That got me to thinking.  I have a pretty good memory.  And  I am sure that with 7 younger brothers and sisters, I must have been exposed to the movie, and heard the songs.   But, for some reason, they just didn't "reach" me.  Perhaps it was because by 1967, I was a teenager, and no longer really interested in animated films, but to have no recollection of the movie at all...I'm baffled.  

But that said, fast forward to 1992.  As the mother of a toddler, I was not only interested in Disney movies, I was watching them...or listening to  the songs...over, and over, again.   And not only was I watching them, the content of their messages were suddenly very important to me.  I was asking myself:   How would their messages resonate with my young daughter?  Did it have a deeper meaning, that I could build upon?  Were the characters good role models?  What were they encourging my child to think about?

And since I was also trying to navigate being a mom while navigating my own spiritual practice of spiritual exploration, self-discovery and healing, those messages easily entered my world as metaphors for life's lessons in understanding God's presence, and power, in the world around me.  The overarching struggle for the supremacy of good woven through each story, seemed to just jump off the screen. 

So when a friend, after reading a recent piece on the poetry blog, called, "your one necessity..." (copied below), sent me the link to "
Bare Necessities," I totaly "got it."  I love the spiritual message in Balloo's encouragement to Mowgli:

"...don't spend your life looking around
for something you want, that can't be found.

When you find out you can live without it,
and go along not thinking about it...
the bare necessities of life will come to you..."

The very inspiration, insight, awakening to a deeper sense of life purpose we often think is hidden and obscure, is actually not hidden at all.  And it is not something "out there" to seek.  It is already "within you."   And like the ubiquitous Brood XIX cicadas that have reached the acme of their 13 year cycle, when our hearts are ready...to give birth to whatever it is we are awakening to be, next...we can't stop it.  It not only comes to us, but, it comes from deep within us. 

It is always percolating up from the depth of our spiritual wholeness...in fresh, new, marvelous ways.  It's always been there, just like "The Jungle Book" had been in my life since 1967, but I wasn't ready for its message until "just the right moment" and then, every song, every bit of dialogue, every sequence, seemed to sing like the cicadas.  So loudly, it couldn't be ignored.   The subtle Kaa's hypnotic lullaby.  Shir Khan's confident alertness.  The mind-numbing group thinking of the vulture band....all of it, a feast of inspiration, when I was most hungry.

And like the cicadas, I believe that our spiritually evolving sense of vision, and purpose, emerges gently, at just the exact moment we are ready, perfectly poised,  to take the next step.  And then, we shed our old worn-out shell, and start to sing a new song in unison with the universe...a song we'd been humming, deep beneath the earth, for as long as it took for our "
moment to arise..." I totally "got it." ... 

Sigh...this is a lovely universe...

Here is the post (and poem) that prompted my friend to send me the link:

"I think it would be well, and proper,
and obedient, and pure,
to grasp your one necessity and not let it go,
to dangle from it limp wherever it takes you."

— Annie Dillard

"how will I know
what is my one
necessity..."
i ask the wiser Voice within

It smiles back,
"it will be that thing
you once thought you might have lost,
and in the space of your
awakening
realized you could not
bear to live without..."

it will be what waits within the
emptiness carved out by the
sorrow of dreaming
it was nearly gone,
only to wake and
discover that,
you were
just asleep to your own promise....

it will be the thing
your tears have watered
back into life,
called back into beauty,
and brought back
from blight...

it will be all 
you once thought
you could, possibly
do without,
surrender,
dismiss,
give up,
and then discovered there
was no "you"
without its
hot heartbeat
just below
your evenness and
calm regret...

what is your
one necessity...

what is it
that sits like
hope...patiently singing
the song without words...

what is
the shaken reed,
the shattered ice,
the shell that opens to reveal
the pulsing,
aching,
hunger for what
could never,
ever,
have beeen
lost to begin with....

it is you,
knowing Me...


with Love...


Kate

Thursday, August 26, 2010

"in the arms of the angel..."

"You are pulled from the wreckage
of your silent reverie...
In the arms of the angel,
may you find some comfort here..."

- Sarah Maclachlan

I know I've used Sarah's "Angel" as the keynote for another post...but I can't argue with my own angels when they suggest a song in connection with a recalled spirtual experience. 

Mary Baker Eddy defines "angels" in
Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures as:

ANGELS.  God's thoughts passing to man; spiritual intuitions, pure and perfect;  the inspiration of goodness, purity, and immortality, counteracting all evil, sensuality, and mortality.

So, here's another angel-based true story, exactly the right companion for this very special song.

It was a perfectly cloudless, early autumn Colorado day.  Standing ankle-deep in soft September grass, just under the shadow of the Collegiates, I was awash in wonder.  The voice of the Arkansas River...whispering her song through the air with a sweetness that swirled and pooled around me like a diaphanous, silken scarf...was so close I could almost feel the spray gathering, like dewdrops along a blade of grass, on each strand of hair.   

The day couldn't have been more wonderful.  Long-held hopes were on the verge of being realized, our children were all happily engaged in activities and interests they loved, and each challenge faced only turned us more quickly to that inward "kingdom of heaven," where the only peace worth pursuing was imminently, and infinitely, available every moment. 

I turned my face upwards to soak the long, hot rays of the sunlight into the depths of my being.  This was a good day...a very, very good day. 

With that thought, my cell phone started ringing and I excused myself from the company of a guide I was exploring new mountain terrain with.  We didn't know eachother well, but in the course of our conversations, I'd already explained that in my work, I provided spiritual support to people who were in need. And, that if a call came in I would need to step aside and take it...no matter where we were, in conversation or in navigating the landscape.

She was gracious in moving, well out of hearing range, as soon as she heard the phone begin to ring, and after taking the call I returned to where she was standing.  She could tell immediately that the call had not been the kind I'd expected.  I was on the verge of tears.  The call had been about a loved one in crisis. And rather than being the one to offer support, I was the one who longed for a strong spiritual "shoring up."

She asked me if I needed anything, and I blurted out, "I
need to pray..."   Her response was instant.  She asked me if I would like for her to pray with me.  I said, "yes."  And before I could even take in another deeply drawn breath, this "angel," whose religious-affiliation, philosophy of life, and/or take on the relationship between Jesus and God were completely unbeknownst, and unimportant to me, took my hands in hers and began to pray aloud.  I was immediately comforted, grateful, and humbled. 

She didn't ask about my religious leanings, whether I loved Jesus, or if I wanted her to pray silently or audibly...she just prayed.  There was no priestliness, or hierarchy in her response.  It was clear, in her heart we were both obedient children, humble servants of a loving God.   Her words were filled with innocence and grace, and they flowed as effortlessly, and as purely, as the waters of the Arkansas River.

Her courage, in offering to pray with me, was full of the kind of primitive spiritual fellowship I longed for in my sense of community.  I was deeply touched.  I wanted to know this woman...forever.   I hope I will.

The urgency of the caller's situation was quickly down-graded.  But this story isn't about that.  It is about the courage of an angel who didn't hesitate...for one second...in offering to meet me where I was and walk me out of a dark moment into the light of Love.

I pray each day for this kind of boldness in Christ.  Thank you, dear "stranger" for your fellowship and compassion...for binding up my wounds and pouring in the oil of your gentleness, your consecration to what you know and believe, and your charity towards a fellow traveler.

with Love, 

Kate
Kate Robertson, CS

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

"In the arms of the angel..."

"…In the arms of the angel
fly away from here
from this dark cold hotel room
and the endlessness that you feel
you are pulled from the wreckage
of your silent reverie
you're in the arms of the angel
may you find some comfort here…"

-
     Sarah McLaughlin

This song always makes me feel like there is Someone out there who is awake with me in the middle of the night when thoughts of "what if" and "how could I have" haunt my every effort to twist and turn away from the sleeplessness of self-examination and reformation.

It is in these moments of "silent reverie", when the body-of-the-past feels like a dark, cold hotel room…not a well-loved farmhouse where the homefires burn…that I am really
most certain that there is a God.

I recently had a couple of those nights.  Having been invited to facilitate a series of workshops for teens and adults at a conference, I lay awake in the dark asking God to show me what I could possibly have to give, in light of my own fathomless
hunger for His hand in my life and my choices. 

And His angels, over and over again, swooped in with messages of grace. Mary Baker Eddy defines Angels as: "God's thoughts passing to man, spiritual intuitions pure and perfect..."  

One of these angel messages came, in height of summer,  from a traditional Christmas song, that  I love and have written about, on this blog,
"In the Bleak Midwinter" (my favorite version of this song is by James Tayor, but since there is no Youtube performance of it I am including this link to Corinne May's performance...the words are a bit different, but I think you will get the poignancy of this song):

"What then can I give him
empty as I am
If I were a shepherd
I would bring a lamb
If I were a wise man
I would know my part
What then can I give him
I must give my heart…"

It was enough to give me peace…and the tools to walk with His hand in mine, into those workshops the first day.  I could and would give my heart.  I would give my love for those dear teens and I would bring my own experiences of God's merciful kindness, His ever-present care, His unflagging guidance and direction.

The next night was harder.  Who was I to facilitate an adult workshop on "relating to teens and their issues"…hour after hour I worked to quiet self-doubt and silence the Garth-like "I am not worthy" that argued in the courtroom of my consciousness while darkness hovered like a pall and dawn threatened from the edges of the eastern horizon.  Finally the quieter voices of angels prevailed. 

Another song found it's way like a lullaby through the cacophony of demons:

"I do not need to see the distant scene
One step enough for me…"

- CS Hymnal #169

I was asked to facilitate this workshop.  Did I think that God had fallen asleep and that some over zealous, ill-informed-of my-failings-and-weaknesses Conference Director had intervened and mistakenly asked me to serve in this way.  No!  What an insult to God.  I had to trust that the Conference Director was praying through each invitation to speak, facilitate, chaperone and serve, as well as each "staff" assignment, and that God had directed her all along the way.  God was in charge here.  We were all well-equipped to answer His call with the wisdom, grace, humility and love necessary to do what we were being asked.

"Here am I, send me.." 

from Isaiah, became my mantra each step forward.  Here am I at the threshold of the conference, send me to say hello to someone who needs to feel appreciated and loved.  Here am I in the dining room, send me to ask help from someone who needs to feel needed.  Here am I on the lawn, send me to embrace someone who needs to feel that they are recognized and known.

And, oh yes, here am I in a circle of parents, teen mentors, and adult volunteers. Have You sent me to help them remember how well-equipped with experience, wisdom…and most importantly love…they already are to respond to the teens in their lives?  

What then could I bring? I could be honest about my experiences. I could be humble about my moments of wisdom…and not so wise moments. And I could share my love for teens…and for them. 

I hope it was enough. 

I am so grateful that in those dark wrestling moments of an endless, sleepless night I can trust that God will send His angels and turn what feels like a "dark cold hotel room" within me, into a warm, cozy home where my heart finds all that it needs to rest upon…and proceed from…Love.
Kate

Wednesday, December 27, 2006

Lessons from Sea Glass

" Blackbird singing in the dead of night
Take these broken wings and learn to fly
All your life
You were only waiting for this moment to arise.

Blackbird singing in the dead of night
Take these sunken eyes and learn to see
All your life
You were only waiting for this moment to be free.

Blackbird fly, Blackbird fly...

- Lennon/McCartney



The twins were born in April.  By late summer their dad, big sissy and I were exhausted.  Neither Emma nor Clara slept through the night...and rarely at the same time.  Both my mother and mother-in-law visited our home in Massachusetts on separate occasions to help care for the twins so that I would have time in the office each day to work with patients.  It was such a relief to have another pair of arms, legs, hands and a big warm heart nearby to walk, rock, coo and cuddle our infant daughters.

The days were filled with bathing, feeding, long walks in their double stroller to make them sleepy…and then more feeding, bathing and cuddling before heading into the long nights of one up, one down, both up, me down...for the count.

One August morning before dawn just as I had gotten Clara to sleep after a restless night, my mother-in-law, Nonie, tiptoed into our bedroom and gently shook my shoulder.  I looked up from an exhausted half-sleep wondering who was crying, when I realized it was silent.  Everyone in the room was sleeping...the girls, their dad and well, I
had been.  Nonie motioned for me to follow her into the adjacent kitchen of our modest carriage house on a large estate.  I followed, concerned that something had happened to one of the girls or Hannah while I had been dozing.  But Nonie’s eyes were alight with promise, not concern.

"Go get your things", she started, "everything you will need for a day away from the girls, the house, the office.  Take the car and drive somewhere and don't come back until you feel rested, inspired and refreshed."  I threw my arms around her neck and whispered a deeply felt "thank you" before slipping back into the bedroom to pull on a bathing suit, a loose linen shift dress and my flip-flops.  I pulled a large tote bag out from next to my desk and in it I threw a copy of
Science and Health and the Bible, a large sketch pad, my journal and pens, pencils, a water bottle, and a large batik scarf I could use as a sarong or as a throw for sleeping.  Nonie stood in the predawn-lit doorway.  With a last grateful glance back at her to say "thank you" again, I was in the Jeep.

I knew exactly where I would go.  My heart was on autopilot.  I needed this day....I had needed it for months and there was only one place calling to me.  Singing Beach in Manchester-by-the-Sea.  I pointed the nose of the Jeep north then east up Route 128 and onto Route 127, through the canopied rural back roads in the tranquil violet light of dawn to reach my favorite New England village and beach.   I stopped along the way only long enough to pick up a loaf of crusty bread from a bakery, and then on to the parking lot at the head of the beach.  With parking reserved primarily for town residents, I was grateful to be there early enough to get one of the handful of nearby parking spaces.  Before the sun broke the horizon, I was scuffing my way--the narrow webbing of my flop flops woven between my fingers--through the cool sand towards the large boulders at the far nothern end of this crescent-shaped piece of heaven on earth. 

Gulls swooped and called as I walked along the narrow wet strip at the water's edge deckled with foam where the soft lowtide ebb and flow brought in the treasures of the day....small pieces of shell and crab for the gulls, and "jewels" for me.  Sea glass....

I staked out my sarong-delineated square of paradise on the flat of a large boulder and surrounded myself with bread, water, journal, pencils, books and sky to watch the sun rise in the east.  Slowly she crested the edge of the earth.  I lay back on my scarf of soft blues and aquas mirroring the sky and sea...like a small cotton tide pool set in stone... and watched sea birds dip and soar above me.  

The sun rose in the east that morning as I read from my inspirational materials, drinking in spiritual truths that refreshed my resolve and reminded me that I was not alone in the new demands that were being placed on me.   But it was a gift from the sea that restored that piece of my heart I had long given up on.

I dozed, read and sketched through the sun’s journey across the sky.  It was late morning when I finally felt the need to stretch my legs with a good walk along the beach that was now scattered with children, sand castles and parents with blankets and beach chairs.  As I walked, I searched the sand for my favorite substances on earth....perfectly smooth stone spheres, eggs of alabaster, smoky sea glass in any shade of blue, aqua, lavender, white, brown, and worn shards of pottery washed up on the beach after years of being turned and tossed, roiled and churned by salt, water and sand.  Before long I had a small skirt full of treasures.  Good thing because at my height it is always a small skirt.  I took them back to my homesteaded square on the boulder to sort through.  Cloudy pieces of old coke bottles the color of my babies’ eyes or a robin's egg.  A piece or two of glass--the cobalt blue of an old Noxema jar...the kind my mother used when I was a girl—with sharp edges softened by years of being thrown down into the sand by the sea’s relentless demanding.  An old piece of pottery, perhaps the broken rim of a plate from a turn of the century ocean liner, with a thin line of dark green glaze barely visible along one curved edge.

I held each piece in my hand and stared out into the sea letting them tell me their stories.  And suddenly ...and I know this sounds "borderline"...I was a piece of beach glass with a story of my own... 

Yes, in my reverie I was a lovely bottle of champagne taken onto the deck of a gleaming brass-fitted, wooden-hulled yacht during an afternoon excursion in 1924.  I could hear the canvas sails slapping as the captain called, "coming about!" A  young woman with a girlish voice leaned against the rail while her beau poured from my neck the sparkling pale liquid with which I had been entrusted for years.  They were celebrating their engagement.  When the champagne was gone, he wrote a note proclaiming his fidelity and love for her.  He stuffed his promise in my neck, put a cork back in, and threw me overboard to bob and rise in the sea. 

Days went by until I fell upon misfortune and broke into a hundred pieces on a rock and the boy's note of love was lost.  I was tired, sharp, and cutting...angry that I had not been cherished, protected and cared for.  Hadn't I fulfilled my role as Bottle with honor and dignity...not a single drop of champagne had leaked out in all the years I was responsible for my cargo?  I had done nothing to deserve this shattering.  But here I was broken and sharp.  Year after year the sea would toss a sharp-edged piece of me onto a white beach in Cornwall or against a granite sea ledge in Norway,  on a sandy nook along the Mediterranean or the pink coral reefs of Belize.  But each time, a mother or a nanny would take me, with a soft, "Tsk, tsk," from the soft palms of a child.  Or pick me up from the foam and throw me as hard as she could back out to sea to be pounded into the ocean floor again and again. 

One day, just when I thought I couldn't take another moment, I was deposited onto a quiet crescent-shaped beach filled with mothers and children.  Lovers walked hand in hand and lonely pensive widows searched for memories.  I had long gven up hope that I would ever be deserving and ready..but I looked forward to these brief respites from the poiunding of the sea.  I knew that this peace wouldn't last for long, but I would enjoy the warmth of the sunshine for as long as I could.  I would let the softness of a child's touch remind me how it felt to be tenderly held by that new young bridegroom as he poured champagne for his beloved.  I was ready to have yet one more mother take me from her child's fingers and toss me as far out to sea as her strength would allow.

But this time was different.

A woman came by with long white hair, and eyes as blue as the sea.  She picked me up and rubbed me between her soft fingers.  She put me to her lips to drink the warmth of the sun from my touch.  And she put me in her pocket.  She was not afraid of the sharp edges that were no longer there.  She brought me to her grandchild and placed me in the little girl’s hand with such tenderness and awe that I felt beautiful again.   I would go on to live the rest of my time as a treasure, a jewel, a beloved gift.  I was no longer a dangerous, angry, sharp "something" to be tossed away....I was to be kept on a summer's altar of treasures.

"The gem cannot be polished without friction
nor man without trials."
-
Confucius

With a gentle start, I was aware of feeling myself breathing again.  I was back on my scarf of blues and looking out to sea.  The sun was much further west in the sky.  The beach was quieter somehow.  I knew that my life's journey had been revealed, unveiled to me in new ways.  I no longer saw myself as the oldest child of eight who had struggled, made mistakes, had her heart broken, lost a child, and was shattered and sharp from those experiences.  I was a piece of sea glass...a treasure in the making.  Life would continue to throw me back into the roiling of the sea for softening until I, too, was the precious, softened, subdued, delighted-in woman of compassion and grace I was always intended to be.

"Trials are proofs of God's care."
-Mary Baker Eddy

I wrote, and wrote, and wrote....long after the sun lost its warmth...long after my loaf of bread was eaten and I was drawing my sarong around my shoulders to stave off the first whispers of late summer evening chill...I continued to write.  When I finally placed sketchbook, journal, sarong and books in my tote bag, I knew I was going back to my daughters and my life with a sense of purpose.  Life may still have had years of tossing me into the surf and beating me against the sand in store.  But if I could just treasure each brief moment when I found myself in the sun or being held by a child, I would eventually become a treasure meant for holding and keeping. 

As I drove home through the soft cobalt night air, taking back roads with the windows down and the sunroof open, I thought about my mother-in-law and the amazing gift she had given me of a day to be quiet and listen for my heart's story.  I thought about how she was like that grandma strolling on the beach who, finding me, knew that although I was still a bit sharp and needed to be tossed back to sea,  there would be a day when I would be a treasure she could give to her beloved grandchild. 

As I see 2006 draw to a close, I am grateful for her wisdom and her kindness.  There have been many years of tossing, roiling and churning...and I am starting to feel some softness.  From within the view is now a bit softer, and I wonder if I sometimes need these reading glasses because my surface is becoming cloudy...more ready for being treasured.  I hope so.

May the pounding surfs of 2006 be for you a journey towards realizing yourself as a treasure....hard surfaces softened with new compassion, sharp opinions ground away by experience, and any edginess that would cut away at your peace honed by love..

All my hopes and love go out to each of you as you glean the gifts of this past year....from the shores of your own heart…


"Divine Love is our hope, strength, and shield.
We have nothing to fear
when Love is at the helm of thought,
but everything to enjoy on earth and in heaven. "

-Mary Baker Eddy




Kate