Showing posts with label inspiration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label inspiration. Show all posts

Monday, June 25, 2018

"every little bit of it..."


"There it is,
just below,

 the surface of things;
in a flash of blue
and the turning of wings..."

It's Sunday night. I am sitting here in the near-dark reviewing the sweetness of a week filled with simple and profound moments.  Moments of love, trust, and courage lived. Carrie Newcomer's "Every Little Bit of It,"is a perfect benediction song.  I hope you will take a moment and listen to it.

The other day I was sitting at my desk hungry for something I could not put my finger on. It wasn't just a want, it was a need. I needed to feel the presence of divine Love guiding my prayers.

I closed my eyes and bowed my head. I let every self-directed thought slip through the fingers of human insight and reasoning. I was suspended in the silence when something touched the periphery - like the darting of a hummingbird.

I stayed very still. I waited. It came again. First a glimpse of light. Then more focus. I barely breathed. It wasn't words. It was a feeling. It hovered and then it landed -- just long enough for me to see into the eyes of its undeniable truth.

I didn't think. I didn't move. I held on to the feeling of its brief brush against my heart. I let it rest.  I felt it sink deeper. I let it become what it was for me -- a moment of Truth. A moment when I knew the face of God.

I had been feeling undeserving. I'd been yearning for His mercy and grace. I'd been reaching through the darkness for a glimmer of light. When it came, it's touch was so tender. It's message so clear. It's Source so undeniable. That in a moment's sharp intake of recognition, I felt the actual presence of these four words from a much-loved hymn by John Goss:


"ransomed,
healed,
restored,
 forgiven...”


The message was so simple. So simple that I still don't have words for what I felt. Perhaps someday. But for now, it was enough to feel its flutter against my heart. To feel the whir of its heartbeat throughout my being. The promise of His mercy in its grace.

I didn't need to see a changed human situation. What I needed was to feel the undeniable presence of divine Love. In Pulpit and Press, Mary Baker Eddy defines "proof of healing" as:


"a sweet and certain sense
that God is Love...”

And that is exactly what I felt. It was more than enough.

offered with Love,




Kate








Thursday, September 20, 2012

"Moonshadow, moonshadow..."


"Oh I'm being followed by a moonshadow,
 moonshadow, moonshadow.
Leapin' and hoppin' on a moonshadow, 
moonshadow, moonshadow..."


It was 1971.   Cat Stevens' "Teaser and the Firecat" album played on the living room turntable so often, that our dad threatened to break it into a million little pieces if he had to hear "Moonshadow" again.  We didn't believe him...the album did not survive.  So, we saved our pennies and bought another one.  This time we were smarter.  We didn't subject dad to lyrics he thought were mind-numbingly inane, but which we considered absolutely transcendental. 


I still love this album, and moonshadows...


I love the way moonbeams play a path of light across the sea.  I could sit and watch their soft glow till dawn.  There is something almost hypnotic, and deeply poetic, in their gentleness.  The shadows cast by moonlight seem to have kinder edges.  Nothing seems sharp, bright or harsh in the presence of the moon. 


But I've started to notice something about my love for all things mooncast.  Something that reaches down towards a place of deeper spiritual self-awareness.  I have long-lived by "borrowed light."  And moonlight is, for all its beauty,  borrowed light.  

The moon has no luminance of its own.  The moon only shines by the light it reflects from the sun.   There is no energy, no warmth, no inner radiance coming off the moon.  The moon is actually cold and dark. 


Lovely to look at.  But still, no light of its own. 

The sun, on the other hand is not easy to look at.  

The sun, however, is a direct source of light, energy, warmth.  It has the power to urge cell growth, photosynthesis, produce energy, define the seasons, insist evaporation, and through phototropism encourage the direction of plant growth.  

Direct light rocks the universe.  

Yes, the moon's borrowed light is lovely, inspiring, poetic.  But it's only power is a tidal ebbing and flowing...what the ancients referred to as lunacy.   The tidal pushing and pulling of emotions, societies, bio-systems.     

You may wonder where all this is coming from, where it is leading, and why it has...literally...has me stopped in my tracks.  I think it is because I've spent most of my life living by borrowed light, and thinking it would make me grow.  

Analogously, my expectations for moonlight were not fair to the moon.  The moon, itself, wasn't promising me anything more than a lovely glow.  But, I've been looking to the moon for something it could never give me...sunlight to grow by. 

I've read thousands of books, prolifically quoted the world's great thought-leaders, explored the philosophies, doctrines, and theories of inspired teachers, sages, and scientists...but is this what I'm seeking.   Not really.  What I really want, is to be transformed by "the renewing of the mind," as Paul encourages.   And, for me at least, that can only be done through a direct relationship with the source of all light, inspiration, true knowing...Mind, God. 

As inspired, beautiful, lovely, evocative as all those books, quotes, ideas, and insights have been...they are not my life-transforming truth.  They are the truths that have come to other seekers,  in their moments of communion with God.   

Now, I know how hard it is to not want to share insights and inspiration that have been life-altering to you....I'm doing it here.  And I soooo enjoy watching the colors, textures, and poetry of what, are for me, beautiful thought-paintings...images flowing onto the waiting page -- or, in this case, screen.  

But there is a difference between pouring out (or soaking in) the inspired beauty and glow of borrowed light, and being transformed by direct light.  

If I am reading someone else's inspiration, I might find it amazing, inspiring, astounding...but it will not transform me, or cause me to grow, change, transform. 

 Just as moonbeams...no matter how bright and beautiful they are...will not cause your tomatoes to grow, your trees to photosynthesize, or water to evaporate and re-cycle.  Indirect inspiration can only, at its best, inspire me to seek the Source of that light myself.   And often, it does.  But it can never replace going to the Source myself.

Moonbeams inspire me to write poetry, ponder the heavens, sing lullabies, and bask in the touch of the sea at my ankles...back and forth, back and forth...against the beach.  And I love, love, love these examples of reflected light.  

But when it comes to growing, I need the sun.  I need direct light.  

I've been wrestling with this for months now.  Do I continue to share quotes?  Do I persist in writing these stories? 

The quotes, not so much right now.  The stories, I think for a while yet, with this disclaimer...they are not direct light.  They are the natural effect of turning one's face towards the Sun. 

You may enjoy these stories, but I do not believe that you will grow spiritually (or in any other way) by reading them.  I can only reflect what I am seeing....sometimes funny, often beautiful, and, occasionally, insightful.   I share them with you, as I would share my appreciation for the dance of moonlight on water.   


I can point out the old man's face in the surface of the moon,  the sun's illumination distant craters, my interpretation of what I think it symbolizes for me.  You, in turn, may be led to share, with me, insights from what you are seeing through the moon's softer light.  

And perhaps in our mutual sharing, we'll each be more interested in discovering the Truth about where all that glowingly lovely light is actually coming from....to seek the Source.  But we aren't going to grow in moonlight.   

The Light that causes growth...well, you've gotta go to the Source.  

Jesus replies, when asked where to find the kingdom of heaven, 

"Neither lo here, or lo there, 
behold, the kingdom of heaven 
is within you." 

God is your only Mind, your only direct source of inspiration...right now.  And God is Truth.  So, the only place you are going to find your Truth, is to go within....to listen deeply for that still small voice that has always been there.  It is quietly urging you to let Love lead you, to listen to your heart, and act with courage.  

If you want to bask in the soft glow of indirect light...that's fine.  It's even beautiful and sweet, companionable and comforting.  

But, if you want to grow, you have to go to the Source. You need to have a direct, immediate relationship with the Divine. 


It may not be as soft, gentle or easy to look into, as indirect light...the sun rarely is.  But it will awaken the day in you, invigorate your purpose, inspire transformation, grow you "in grace," give you new courage, and resurrect hope. 

shared with Love, 

Kate

Even though I will always have a soft spot in my heart for Cat Steven's version, I've grown to love this Mandy Moore recording of "Moonshadow" too...  

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

"Waiting outside the lines..."

"Stuck in the same position,
you deserve so much more.
There's a whole world around us,
just waiting to be explored.
I'm Waiting, waiting,
just waiting outside the lines "

If you haven't heard of Grayson Chance yet, you will.  A pre-teen who sings like someone who knows what it means to no longer be "Waiting Outside the Lines," of any  limited expectations that may have been drawn for him by others. 

But this isn't a story about Grayson Chance, it's a story about a teacher who needed to learn...a lot from her little sister, and her young daughter.

I'd been a special needs teacher, I was Montessori trained, I taught kindergarten through high school, I taught at the college level, and I was a school administrator.  You'd have thought I knew alot about creativity, learning, and self-expression.  But when my daughter was in preschool, I was still, without giving it any thought, encouraging her to color inside the lines. 

I didn't even realize it.  I would sit next to her...at her little pastel pink table and chairs...and together we would choose our favorite Crayola colors, and carefully fill the spaces within the bold black outlined pictures of a puppy, a cupcake, or a princess with cornflower, peach, rose, and maize strokes of magic.  Rough paper, with just the right amount of tooth to hold the color, came alive.

She would watch as I would first, carefully re-outline the section I was working on with a firmer hand, and then carefully fill it in with a smoother, lighter touch.

I was actually quite proud of of my coloring technique.  I loved coloring books, crayons, and  actually the process of coloring.  Why would anyone want to do it any differently...it made such a pretty picture.

Then our daughter started taking art lessons from my sister, Lila.  Lila introduced her to art history, technique, interpretation, and exploration, through the lens of her right to "color outside the lines." 

Suddenly, my daughter was teaching me about the expansiveness of creative freedom.  She was inviting me to draw squiggles, turn Bambi's spots into flowers, put a rainbow in a picture that didn't have one already drawn in.

I remember a day when the kindergarten teacher down "graded" an alphabet worksheet that the children had completed because they had colored the big "Q" in the middle of the page, then decorated it with stars and moons that went waaayyy outside the lines.  My sweet sister marched into that classroom and defended our children's right to color a "Q" worksheet however the pleased.  She was fearless. 

Coloring outside the lines leads to that kind of boldness and courage. 

Try it.  Go out and buy a big fat coloring book filled with outlines of ponies, or firetrucks, or Disney princesses.  Then color it however you wish.  Even if your first impulse is to give Cinderella yellow hair...force yourself to try something bolder...lime green or fuschia.  Maybe even give her red rubber wellies to wear with her ballgown, instead of glass slippers.  Tell a different story.  You might just find yourself willing to not only color outside the lines, but walk outside the old outlines of how you've always thought of yourself.

Pearls with jeans, volunteering at a homeless shelter, mentoring a teen, making a career shift, skydiving, taking ballet lessons, or a cross country road trip - solo...trusting God more radically than ever before. 

I think this practice of letting go and trying new, God-inspired, Love-impelled, Principle-governed, Soul-informed ways of coloring our lives is what Mary Baker Eddy is referring to when she writes at the beginning of her Miscellaneous Writings, 1883 - 1896:

Humility is the stepping-stone to a higher recognition of Deity.  The mounting sense gathers fresh forms and strange fire from the ashes of dissolving self, and drops the world.  Meekness heightens immortal attributes only by removing the dust that dims them. "

It takes humility to try something new.  Dust only gathers on things that stay in the same spot and are never moved or used.  Humility and meekness allow us the freedom to look ridiculous if we try something that doesn't fit inside the lines of what others have always expected of us...or how we have always, and only, allowed ourselves be seen. 

I believe this echoes Eddy's statement:

"At present mortals progress slowly for fear of being thought ridiculous. They are slaves to fashion, pride, and sense. Sometime we shall learn how Spirit, the great architect, has created men and women in Science. We ought to weary of the fleeting and false and to cherish nothing which hinders our highest selfhood."

People are often more comfortable with things that never change...with furniture that is always in the same place, with the same brand of ketchup, the same traditions, routines, orders.  But that doesn't mean that you can't "stir it up" a bit. 

When you're ready to dip your toe into something refreshing and new, maybe we could meet at a coffeehouse with our coloring books and take that first step...64 colors are only the beginning...and be sure to wear your wellies with your ballgown...a tiara with your apron!!

I'll be waiting to walk outside the lines with you...

Thanks Lila...I love you.

your sister...and student,


Kate
Kate Robertson, CS

Thursday, April 17, 2008

"God bless the broken road..."

"…Every long lost dream
led me to where you are
Others who broke my heart
they were like northern stars
Pointing me on my way
into your loving arms
This much I know is true
That God blessed the broken road
That led me straight to you…"

I was sitting in the car this morning after driving the girls to school and I realized it was Thursday.  "Hmmm," I thought, "I don't remember waking up with a song playing through my head this morning, or if there had been one playing, I didn't take the time to hear it."  The phone started ringing before dawn and before long it was time to wake the girls for school.  "So," I thought, "since God is All-in-all, every song I hear must have a God-inspired message in it, just for me.  Even those songs with "questionable lyrics" are only there to remind me of what I need to be praying about in support of our community on any given day."  So I decided to stay in the car and wait for the time, weather, and traffic reports to conclude.  I would listen to the next song that came on and I would be ready to find a message in it, from God...to me. 

"8:47…partly cloudy with a high of 73 degrees by afternoon…breakdown in the far right lane of westbound 270 near St. Charles Rock Road…" then a few bars of station identification before Rascal Flatts'
Broken Road came on with:

"…I set out on a narrow way many years ago
Hoping I would find true love along the broken road
But I got lost a time or two
Wiped my brow and kept pushing through
I couldn't see how every sign pointed straight to you…"

Now it would have been so easy to hear this as a love song…to think of my husband…or my daughters.  But I can honestly say that this morning I heard it differently.  I heard a message from my heart to Jesus Christ.  It was a love song to him, and a song of gratitude for his story of forgiveness, mercy, compassion, humility, and love.

It wasn't as much of a stretch as you may think.  I had been thinking of him all night and early this morning as I prayed.  I'd had the privilege of conducting our midweek church services last night.  This included putting together inspirational readings from the
Bible and Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures.  I had known weeks ahead of time that I would need to select the citations, but every time I sat down to do it, something would come up and I would have to come back to it later.  Well, by 6:00 last night most of the selections had not been…well, selected.

At the last minute yesterday afternoon I had to fill in to pick up our daughters from school. By the time we arrived home and I made dinner, got them in showers and cleaned up, it was 6:00 and we had to leave for church at 7:00. 

I sat down at my desk and the thought came, "just tell them about me."  I knew right away that it was Jesus whose life and message I wanted to tell my church friends and visitors about.  I wanted them to know him the way I did.  I wanted them to understand what he had given me in those times when I felt most alone, blameworthy, or forsaken.  I wanted them to
feel the depth of his mercy, see the results of his compassion, hear the joy of knowing his forgiveness, and experience the healing power of his love in their hearts…the way I had…so many times.  I longed for each person sitting in our warm circle of worship…with children stretched out on the floor and our church mascot "Goldie" in the middle of the rug…to feel the "aspiration, humility, gratitude, and love" which come from knowing his story, of taking it into one's life, of letting it comfort, guide, and yes, rebuke you. 

This was a message I would love to share.  The selections came so effortlessly.  I knew his story...better than my own.   We were in the car and on our way by 7:00.  Reading to our friends, our children...and Goldie...about his life's mission of humble service to humanity was a sacred hour for me.  I left feeling closer to him -- and his message -- than ever before.

So this morning God sent me a love song to sing to His son.  A song that redeems each long lost dream, every missed signpost, all the shattered hopes and broken hearts along the broken road that led me straight to him, his message of love…his example of humility.  Following Jesus' footsteps I
will find my way, time and again, to the door of our Father's home.  His road leads to the kingdom of heaven, the consciousness of Love right here within my own heart. 

"Every long lost dream
led me to where you are
Others who broke my heart
they were like northern stars
Pointing me on my way
into your loving arms
This much I know is true
That God blessed the broken road
That led me straight to you

I think about the years I spent
just passing through
I'd like to have the time I lost
and give it back to you
But you just smile and take my hand
You've been there…you understand
That it's all part of a grander plan
that is coming true

Every long lost dream
led me to where you are
Others who broke my heart
they were like northern stars
Pointing me on my way
into your loving arms
This much I know is true
That God blessed the broken road
That led me straight to you…"
-Hummon/Boyd/Hanna

Thank you God for this broken road that led me to your son, his example of humility and compassion…and yes, home to You,
Kate

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

"Sing, sing a song..."

"Sing, sing a song
Sing out loud
Sing out strong
Sing of good things, not bad
Sing of happy, not sad

Sing, sing a song
Make it simple to last
Your whole life long
Don't worry that it's not
Good enough for anyone
Else to hear
Just sing, sing a song

La la la la la
La la la la la la..."

Okay, it's time to fess up.  Yes, I love Joni, Dan, James, Jackson, Carly, Bob, Jim…all things folk.  But in high school I was a closet Carpenters fan.  Karen Carpenter and I shared the same vocal range.  Low.  Only she had range…I just had low.  So, I sang her songs constantly while I was walking alone in the woods, mucking out a horse stall, or hanging baskets and baskets of near frozen laundry on the clothesline in the bitterly cold January snow and wind.  Might I sense some personal trauma over having ten people in our family and no clothes dryer??? Not to worry, today I actually miss the scent of stiffly frozen towels in my arms after a long day of drying in the winter sun.

Anyway…once I started teaching elementary school and having children of my own, I learned that the above "Sing a Song" could be called up the moment a fifth grade boy decided to describe some disgusting thing in order to gross out the teacher, me…and any other girl with a weak stomach.  It became a joke in the classroom.  If I jumped to the end of the chorus and started singing "La la la la la…la la la la la la…" at a louder volume than the offending student was talking, it was a cue that I didn't want to hear it.  Or that I would be making a bee-line for the girls' room.

Now I have twin fifth-grade daughters who take great delight in describing yucky, disgusting stuff.  And "La la la la la…la la la la la…" still works when I don't want to hear what Billy Joe Bob did with his peas and carrots in the school dining room. 

It's also good for interrupting any endless loop of thinking that gets a foothold in my thought and won't let go. 

Last week my Bible study was focused on a number of scriptural reminders to "sing a new song."  This intrigued me.  How often do I let an old song play over and over again in my head.  Sometimes it is a
seemingly harmless "old song" that I find myself chanting almost mindlessly. A little ditty like, "Why get a headstart on that project…you've always done your best work under the pressure of a deadline" or "of course you're obsessed with getting it right, you're the oldest child in your family."  But sometimes it is not as easy to recognize these songs as particularly negative. The old song…is just old.  It's a perfectly good song, but it's one that has become so comfortable and familiar in my head that I am no longer thinking about what I am singing. Often these are songs that were once prayers, but have become more like a well-worn blankie I curl up with rather than a refreshing new perspective on life, love, purpose…being.

Even these perfectly wonderful old songs sometimes need to be replaced with a "new song."   A  song that wakes you up to who you are today…rather than offering you a look back through the softly filtered lens of the past. Perhaps even back to a time when those old songs came alive…perhaps during a long siege – a health, financial, or personal crisis that was eventually healed…and they were fresh and new and brought needed peace, comfort, hope, and comraderie.  And as wonderful as I felt when I first discovered that version of a song, or learned those particular chords, what I need today is the demand of learning and discovering a something new about myself and my relationship to the laws of  music through a new song.

So today I am trying to remember to really
listen to what is "playing" in my head…and in my heart.  To be conscious of what I am singing along with as I go about my day.  Am I replacing the endless loops of "old songs" in my head--some of which may indeed look, sound, and feel like beloved old inspiration…well-worn insights, prayers, or perspectives--with a new song?  I want to learn new words.  And when a loved old song starts to play, I hope I can at least find a new way to sing it.  I am looking forward to fresh inspiration about what the lyrics are trying to say today…instead of congratulating myself on already knowing all the words.

"…Don't worry that it's not
Good enough for anyone
Else to hear
Just sing, sing a song…"

Kate

Thursday, January 10, 2008

"Across the Universe..."

"Words are flowing out
Like endless rain into a paper cup,
They slither while they pass,
They slip away across the universe.
Pools of sorrow, waves of joy
Are drifting through my opened mind,
Possessing and caressing me.

- John Lennon

I thought today that I might post, with permission, the substance of an email I received from a dear friend who was a camper at Adventure Unlimited for a number years before becoming a C.I.T. (Counselor-in-Training) last summer, Cassidy.  Cassidy is…well, Cassidy!  There is no one and nothing like her in my experience.  She is an original.  She loves…period.

Although she has yet to graduate from high school, I never find myself thinking of Cassidy in terms of being a teenager, a child, or woman…I think of Cassidy as my friend, a trusted colleague, a wonderful co-conspirator, someone whose thoughts I value.  Cassidy has taught me much about personal integrity…being true to oneself with unflinching courage.  She is creative, kind, refreshing, quirky, strong, flexible, deep, funny, inspiring, and beautiful.  I wouldn't mind being like Cassidy when I grow up...someone authentic and true to who God has made me to be.

Here are the words that flowed out from her heart "like rain into a paper cup" recently.  She has graciously…and generously…given me permission to post it here.  I think her thoughts stand alone,  so I will copy them below without comment:

"I was reading Eat, Pray, Love [Elizabeth Gilbert] like it was my only breathing apparatus in the vacuum of what was my Christmas vacation. It is so refreshing to read or hear about spirituality and the ideas, dwellings and experiences of those who have nothing to do with Christian Science.

This author writes volumes on meditation and fervent prayer. Meditation is a form of quieting the self and not exuding anything but your ability to stick a funnel in your forehead and say to God 'I'm here, You're here too', and listen and let it come to you.

I believe that Cap Andrews (the founder of Adventure Unlimited) had these meditations in that submarine, and what better place to find quiet than three miles underwater?  I believe that Christian Science is a grand mixture of the best parts of all religions. Except maybe the Davidians and other radical rituals like cannibalism and the like.

Prayer is always healing. Self-realization -- at all times, at every time knowing who and where you are in the huge fabric of this quilt we all make up…down to the stitches inside you -- is essential.

I feel so oriented now, Kate. I want to make Christian Science, Prayer, so accessible and natural that falling into the absolute mantra of perfection is the all, the only…Our timekeeper, our mentor, our friend, our lover, our teacher, our bridges our mountains!

To Love, to See Completeness, to Know Completeness, to Heal. I am in Love with this concept! I am in Love with Love! Hooray! YES!

Thank you!
I Love You!!
Cassidy"


Thanks Cassidy…I love you too…
Kate

Tuesday, March 6, 2007

"He talked of life..."

“I knew a man Bojangles and he'd dance for you
In worn out shoes
He looked to me to be the eyes of age
as he spoke right out
He talked of life, talked of life,
he laughed, clicked his heels and stepped
Mr. Bojangles, Mr. Bojangles
Mr. Bojangles, dance”
-Jerry Jeff Walker

I am realizing, more each year, what a pivotal role the summer of 1969 played in my spiritual chronology.  That was the year my parents decided to move our family 2,000 miles across the United States so that we could be nearer the grandmothers, aunts, uncles and cousins we had rarely seen while living in “the wild west”.


After the going away parties, the last…well, everything…day at the pool, the walk to the 7-Eleven, the bike ride to the local movie theatre, and finally the last sleepover at Becky’s, we were on our way.  Mom, dad and six of their eventually eight children packed tightly into dad’s pride and joy…our “new Sequoia green 1969 Chevrolet Brockwood 9-passenger station wagon” (can’t you just hear the Price is Right’s  Jon Pardo).

With a U-haul in tow and the roof rack loaded with camping gear and bikes, we took to the highway like a band of gypsies.  We set up the tent in roadside campgrounds along the old Route 66 and ate endless peanut butter and jelly sandwiches--or on special occasions velveeta cheese and Miracle Whip--on Wonder bread at weathered picnic tables while we saw “the USA in our Chevrolet.”

By the time we reached rural New Jersey I was tired of “the way back”… you know, that horrible backward facing seat that must have been designed by a sadist.  I had read every Nancy Drew mystery I owned…more than twice…and I couldn’t wait to find some statistics on sibling torture.  I was sure I had a lawsuit against my parents for the cruel and unusual punishment I had endured.

But within 24 hours of arriving at my cousin’s house in bucolic Basking Ridge, New Jersey, I was grateful for every horrifying mile of cornfields and road signs from West to East.  I loved my cousins, I loved my aunts and uncles, I loved playing tennis at the nearby courts, I loved the yellow and white striped wallpaper in my cousins bedroom that she didn’t have to share…with anyone…I loved picking blackberries to make pie…

And…I loved the Beyers. 

The Beyers were a family I had grown up hearing about from my mother.  She would refer to Fred Beyer with the same brotherly affection that she had for her own brothers Griff and Rich.  I had long since assumed that the children of Fred and Phyllis were like cousins.  But that summer the last thing in the world I wanted to believe was that the two oldest boys, Scott and Eric, were anything near “real” cousins. 

Eric was shy that summer and I was sure that if he were to "like" (or as my daughters would say, "you know mom, not like, but like like") my cousin.  So that left Scott.  And I didn’t care if Scott liked me.    I adored him….and he deserved it.  He was kind, gentle, altruistic and tolerant of an almost high school sophomore with stars in her eyes and her heart on her sleeve.  Scott was a senior. He was smart, funny, and he looked like Glenn Campbell in the True Grit days…or at least he did to me.  I really was smitten.   I communicated my tireless devotion by obsessively baking pies that my cousin and I used for luring “the boys” (and their attendant parents and siblings) over each summer evening that we could do so…without appearing desperate and silly….which of course we were… desperate and silly that is (or at least I was).

Scott, with his Beach Boys sun-drenched surfer-boy good looks was everything a teenage boy should have been in those days.  Respectful of his elders, a safe driver, and funny.  But it was the “something more,” the something that you couldn’t see at first glance that made him what I now realize was one of the greatest influences on my life.  And it wasn’t just because he was young and cute and hip.  I think it was because he was the first young person I had ever known who really cared more about making a difference in the life of others than he cared about “getting” the girl.  Scott and Eric, like a number of their friends, had spent the early part of that summer at a camp devoted to helping children and teens not only approach problem-solving and relationship building from a spiritual perspective, but encouraged selflessness and service to others.  This practical application of spiritual principles seemed to permeate everything they did. 

(actual friends of Scott and Eric's from Camp Owatonna - photo by G. Johnson)

I remember one night in early September later that year.  My family had moved into an old house in a wonderful small town almost an hour from my cousins and the Beyers.  My contact with Scott had waned and I felt pretty isolated from the wonderful Sunday School classes that I had enjoyed with him, his brother, my cousins and other teens from their area.  Our new Sunday School was another twenty minutes further away from their church and I was in class with my younger sister and a boy who thought we should just read out loud from the Bible for the entire hour.  I had pretty much given up on the me who had engaged in rigorous spiritual discourse during the summer.  I was certain that my spiritual life was over and I was destined to be just another cheerleader who spent her weekends doing household chores, babysitting her siblings, going to football games and enduring Sunday School.   But that September night, hope came crashing headlong through the phone lines with all the altruistic abandon of Scott Beyer’s will to make a difference. 

Scott was missing our discussions as much as the rest of us were and he had decided to take the matter into his own hands.  We were going to meet on Sunday evenings in his church’s Reading Room and we were going to talk about real things.  He even thought he could get some cool adults (mostly from the Adventure Unlimited chapter we all belonged to) to join us, and let us ask them questions.  He wanted to know if I would be interested. 

Hmmm…duh. 

But then it hit me like a tons of bricks.  I lived an hour away, my family had one car and my parents had five other children to get ready for the upcoming school week on Sunday nights.  My heart hit the floor with a thud. I really wanted those discussions…heck, I needed them…and I had no way to get there. 

I thanked Scott for the invitation, but begged off with some lame excuse about homework.  All week long I thought about the discussion that would be happening that next Sunday night in the Berkeley Heights Reading Room, and I felt sick. 

Sunday School came with a whimper and went out with a whine.  I was in the kitchen late that afternoon making a peach cobbler for our Sunday night dessert when in walked Scott with my mom trailing…barely.  He explained that the meeting wouldn’t be the same without me and he was going to either make arrangements for me to get to the discussions on Sunday night with another friend or he would come and pick me up himself.

“Let’s go” he said. 

I looked at my mom.  I knew that my parents were VERY strict about my being in a car with other teens driving.  I wasn’t sure that they would even allow me to go.  But there was my mother tipping her head in the direction of the front door with a big smile on her face.  Scott promised to get me home as soon after the meeting as possible and there was my own mother nodding and saying that he should drive safely and do the best he could, but not to rush.  Sometimes mothers are saints.

That Sunday I felt like the whole world had opened up in front of me.  Suddenly I was not the oldest of eight, I wasn’t a cute cheerleader, I wasn’t a sophomore, a bookworm, short, or perky.  I was a valued member of a spiritual community of thinkers and we had questions to ask each other…and anyone else who wanted to join us.

Through that Fall, Winter and Spring we could often be found dissecting the lyrics to popular songs by writers like Cat Stevens and Stephen Stills and Donovan and Dylan, reading the poetry of Rod McKuen, or questioning the wisdom of Kahlil Gibran's “The Prophet”. Over the course of Scott’s senior year of high school we met with some wonderful adults who were on the cutting edge of questioning their own spiritual practices and the validity of long established cultural paradigms and rituals.  One Sunday, Richard Bach, author of what was one of my generation’s modern quintessential spiritual allegories,
Jonathon Livingston Seagull, was the centerpiece for our feast of Soul-filled questioning.

We took up causes, to pray about and, to volunteer our time in support of.  We talked on the phone and made efforts to help one another think through choices and decisions we were all making throughout that year.

After one of our last Sunday Evening meetings, Scott and I drove to the Watchung Reservation tower on our way back to my parents house.  With black permanent magic markers we wrote the words to Mary Baker Eddy’s poem “Love” (verse below) in very small letters along the railing of the stairway, just above someone else’s writing of the lyrics to Mr. Bojangles.  We needed to say something to the universe...and we wanted to leave a record of what our hearts' had discovered about love...and life. 

Today, when I look at graffiti and the tagging done by urban artists on public spaces, I am horrified by my own once thoughtless marring of public property.  But I also understand the desire to say something when you feel voiceless in the world.

Beyond sharing one very sweet and innocent kiss that first summer, Scott and I were never more than friends.  I loved him for his mind, and for his heart.

I didn’t see him again for almost twenty years although our parents kept us informed of one another’s adventures and travails.  When I did see him next I was facing one of the most difficult times of my life. At the time "Uncle Fred" and I had worked for the same organization and I would often see him in passing.  After sharing a hug he would bring me up to date on what Scott, Eric, Drew and Geoff were up to.  This time he noted I was not myself.  I had lost an enormous amount of weight during a life-threatening illness.  I was deeply depressed and felt more unwanted and unloved than I thought was humanly possible...and still be walking upright. 

Fred didn’t say anything directly at the time, but a few days later my office phone rang.  It was Fred and he wondered if he could bring something up to me.  I was free so I said Yes.  Within a few moments I heard the hallway elevator doors open and before I knew it I had been swept into the arms of the most handsome man I had ever seen.

With one graceful movement he lifted me out of my chair, hugged me tightly and planted one very warm, kind, gentle…and dizzying… kiss on my lips. 

It was Scott. 

It was as if not a moment had passed between us in twenty years.  His eyes were as bright, his smile as warm and easy,  and his “hi, I love you…how the hell are you?” as genuine.  The three of us shared another few minutes before I had to go to a meeting.  They were pivotal in reminding me that I was a valued spiritual being.  They also proved the value of seizing the moment.

Not many weeks after, Scott’s dad called my office to tell me that Scott had been killed in a hang-gliding accident.  I remember being so strangely unmoved by such tragic news.  As I sat there at my desk observing my own almost unsettling spiritual peace, I realized that during the ensuing twenty years when I had never once seen him, he had nonetheless lived with such vitality and substance in my heart.  Absent from my view he continued to imprint my life and my sense of purpose with his example.  His desires to make a difference, to be good, to want to bring healing and peace to the world had become my own. 

Nothing had changed.  No report of his passing could alter the way his example of altruism and selflessness had impacted my life and the kind of person I wanted to be. 

Now, almost another 20 years have gone by and I see him today as he is, and always has been, in my heart… water-skiing, laughing, living in a VW bus, hang-gliding, eating lots of pie, and questioning
EVERYTHING wherever he is…and I am grateful for his example. 

Thanks Scott…you made a difference.


“Love”
Brood o'er us with Thy shelt'ring wing,
   'Neath which our spirits blend
Like brother birds, that soar and sing,
   And on the same branch bend.
The arrow that doth wound the dove
Darts not from those who watch and love.

If thou the bending reed wouldst break
   By thought or word unkind,
Pray that his spirit you partake,
   Who loved and healed mankind:
Seek holy thoughts and heavenly strain,
That make men one in love remain.

Learn, too, that wisdom's rod is given
   For faith to kiss, and know;
That greetings glorious from high heaven,
   Whence joys supernal flow,
Come from that Love, divinely near,
Which chastens pride and earth-born fear,

Through God, who gave that word of might
   Which swelled creation's lay:
"Let there be light, and there was light."
   What chased the clouds away?
'Twas Love whose finger traced aloud
A bow of promise on the cloud.

Thou to whose power our hope we give,
   Free us from human strife.
Fed by Thy love divine we live,
   For Love alone is Life;
And life most sweet, as heart to heart
Speaks kindly when we meet and part.
- Mary Baker Eddy


Kate

Thursday, March 1, 2007

"Deep enough...to face a storm"

"Deep enough to dream
in brilliant colors I have never seen..."

In his song "Deep Enough to Dream,"   Chris Rice hones in on  an essential element of the work we all when we approach life from a prayer-based perspective. He sings of a rich depth of vision, a peace that he finds in the sacred space of prayer. It reminds me of the feeling I had as a girl one summer at the lake, where my aunt and uncle had rented a house for the season. 

My brothers, sisters, cousins and I would arrive early in the day to set up "camp".  We'd lay down our towels, staking out territory according to age and gender.  The older girls in one section, surrounded by books, magazines, bottles of baby oil that had been laced with iodine, cans of TAB, journals or diaries to write in,  and ryecrisp crackers.  

The boys (all in late grade school) were as far from us as we could convince them to be.  Their world was full of peanut butter and plastic things that blew up and could be floated on.  The littlest kids...toddlers and babies...were all near the moms, they were loud and full of sand and jelly. 

When I grew tired of all the noisy splashing I  would swim out as far as I was permitted.  At first I held my breath while floating on the surface.  But eventually I felt the noise from the shoreline penetrate my silence.  So I'd let out my breath, releasing the air that had kept me buoyed.  I then allowed my own body weight to take me under.  I descended well below the surface to find a peace so deep and impenetrable that I could actually
feel the quiet. 

I did this over and over again.  Eventually I became so suffused with this deep peace that I could take it back to my towel on the beach.  Then I would actually
be that island of quiet for myself that I was searching for. It allowed me to read Jane Austen’s  “Pride and Prejudice” without even hearing the splashing and screeching of a dozen infant to thirteen year olds. 

I was able to inhabit a world of Cotswold cottages and cobbled lanes, garden teas and diaphanous lawn dresses with my toes dug into the sand and my cousin just inches away sighing over the latest issue of Tiger Beat magazine.   Even today when I pray, I...as Rice sings...am able to use my memories, of how it felt to descend into the quiet of the lake, to take me:

"...Deep enough to reach out and touch
The face of the One who made me
And oh, the love I feel…”

Rice goes on to talk about what one sees in this place of deep peace. 

For me this “seeing” is not about taking in images and translating them into information that can be interpreted as reality.  It is about
vision…about beholding…it is about seeing out from what God knows…and what I have the right to know as I reflect (think deeply about and ponder) Him, His nature, His All-in-allness as my life, in the universe... and as the only source of my reality.  (One of Webster’s definitions of reality that I cling to is “that which is actually occurring.”)

This beholding is often quite contrary to the images that are being presented as information to my “receptors”...eyes, ears…

But I have discovered that  a God-based, or spiritual sense of things is more about transmitting than reception.  I have the right to transmit or project this God-based
vision…about anything or anyone…rather than feel imposed upon by images that are presented to me as reality...whether it relate to non-profit projects and initiatives I may have been invited to contribute ideas for, or the minutiae of everyday living.

I believe that it is this sense of vision that Mary Baker Eddy talks about when she relates:

“Jesus beheld in Science the perfect man,
who appeared to him where sinning mortal man
appears to mortals. 
In this perfect man the Saviour saw God's own likeness,
and this correct view of man healed the sick.
Thus Jesus taught that the kingdom of God is intact,
universal, and that man is pure and holy.”

Whether we are seeing out from this God-based sense of reality about man, family, government, the environment, or the weather…it is this vision-based sense of reality that we can begin to experience not only in the most simple details of our day, but on a global level.

I have had many opportunities to apply this kind of vision-based “beholding” over the last two decades, but I am reminded of one particularly clear example when I hear references in songs, poems or essays, to seeing or beholding “the face of God” as Rice does in his "Deep Enough to Dream".

In her biography of spiritual thought-leader and healer, Mary Baker Eddy, titled,
Christian Healer, my good friend, Yvonne von Fettweiss, relates an experience shared in the memoirs of Adelaide Still,  one of the workers in Eddy’s household.  The account was profoundly helpful to me one summer afternoon some years ago.

I was the Christian Science practitioner on duty at a camp for teenagers who wanted to approach the adventure experience from a spiritual perspective.  One element of their two-week curriculum was a three-day outcamp trip. Some of the patrols were rafting the Arkansas River all day and sleeping under the stars on shore at night.  Other patrols were peaking 14,000-foot mountains or riding horses high into the canyons.  Each patrol would set up camp in the early evening, cook dinner, and then sleep in tents or under tarps. 

While these groups were out of camp I was often the only person on site.  My job was to spiritually support the harmony and safety of their trips and stay available should prayer-based care be needed for any of the counselors or campers during the trips. 

It was late afternoon on the day of trip departures and everyone was finally on their way.  The last patrol of horses and riders had clip-clopped their way past my cabin waving their goodbyes as they ascended a nearby trail.  I had eased myself into the Adirondack rocker on my front porch and let the quiet of an empty camp seep into my heart.  I looked to the east where I could see beyond Valerie Lake towards the Sleeping Indian range and miles of Colorado sky stretched before me like a canvas waiting for the paint of evening colors….pink, lavender and finally a deep velvety midnight blue…to wash across it. 

I was entranced with watching clouds drift into my view when suddenly I realized that those clouds were no longer puffy and white, or even heavy and gray.  They were black…black, angry thunderheads filled with rain and pierced every few moments from the far south with lightning. 

I was horrified that I had just let myself sit there and be mesmerized by the dramatic beauty of it all.  I didn’t have the luxury of watching a pretty mountain storm from the dry safety of my cabin perch.  I had campers out on the river, in the canyons and hiking through scree fields above treeline.  I was there for a purpose and it wasn’t to enjoy the scene being played out in front of me in Technicolor. 

For a split second I let my sense of guilt give me a good shaking.  Then I walked into my cabin and reached for something to give focus to my prayer.  The first thing I saw was Yvonne’s book.  My daughter had been assigned it as a summer Sunday School reading project and I had decided I would read it again with her, so had taken my copy to camp with me.  I knew that it was indexed, in part, according to healings witnessed.  I had remembered that there were among other things a reference or two that addressed storms.  I quickly came upon one of the references “Storm Dispelled” and went back onto the porch to read:

Adelaide Still reminisces:

“On several occasions I saw Mrs. Eddy dispel a storm; the first time was on August 3, 1907, in the late afternoon.  The sky was overcast and it was very dark.  Mrs. Eddy sat in her chair in the tower corner of her study, watching the clouds with a smile and a rapt expression on her face.  She seemed to be seeing something beyond her present surroundings, and I do not think that she was conscious of my presence.  In a few moments the clouds broke and flecked, and the storm was dissolved into its native nothingness.  About have an hour later I took her supper tray to her, and she said to me, “Ada, did you see the sky?”  I replied, “Yes, Mrs. Eddy.”  The she said, “It (meaning the cloud) never was;  God’s face was never clouded.”  This agrees with what another student has recorded as having been said by Mrs. Eddy, namely, “When I wanted to dispel a storm.  I did not say, ‘there is no thunder, and no lightning.’ But I said, ‘God’s face is there, and I do see it.’”

I decided that since spiritual laws are not personally or historically defined as true, but universally applicable…"if it was good enough for her…it was good enough for me".

I used my memories of exhaling and letting myself go deep beneath the surface at the lake…or as Eddy says in her how-to book on spiritual healing,
Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures:

“We must look deep into realism
instead of accepting only
the outward sense of things.”

I looked into the sky focusing on a tiny patch of blue that seemed to be in the process of being swallowed up by hostile black storm clouds.  I allowed myself to see this as the “face of God” expressed as clarity, light, and…vision.

I maintained that focus, and these focused prayers seemed to serve as a paintbrush washing beautifully colored thoughts about God as Mind...the only Mind... across the canvas of sky before me.  God was expressing Himself as clarity, light and wisdom...in the guidance that counselors were finding as they sought direction in leading campers on new trails...or as a whispered thought that calmed the horses who, through their silent gentleness, were themselves helping  novice campers find a sense of secure peace on their strong backs.  Mind was washing away any sense of disturbance with broad spiritual brushstrokes of peace and calm.  I had almost forgotten the storm when I realized that the sun was shining brightly onto the meadow in the foreground of my periphery. 

I was almost stunned.  I sat there with tears of realization running down my face.  I
had seen the “face of God” and I felt as if “he was pleased with me”.

I will never forget the feeling of sitting on that porch for the rest of the evening...long after the last of the storm clouds had flecked and dissolved... and watching the sky go from blue to pink to salmon to lavender to a blanket of deep midnight blue velvet covered with diamonds.  Through each of those brilliant colors I was still seeing the face of God.

I love the sense of vision Chris Rice further brings to his lyrics:

"...'cause peace is pouring over my soul
See the lambs and the lions playin'
I join in and I drink the music
Holiness is the air I'm breathin'
My faithful heroes break the bread
And answer all of my questions
Not to mention what the streets are made of
My heart's held hostage by this love

And these brilliant colors I have never seen
I join a billion people for a wedding feast
And I reach out and touch the face of the One who made me
And oh, the love I feel, and oh the peace
Do I ever have to wake up?..."

I ask myself “Do I really ever have to wake up to a reality that isn’t God-based?”

No…I think I’ll stay out here in the middle of the lake looking up through the water to see the sun, God’s face, reaching through to touch me with light.

The water’s perfect…come on in…

Here is a video clip of Chris' song "Deep Enough to Dream"   it wasn't available when I first posted this piece...but now it is.  I hope you enjoy it.

with great love,

Kate
Kate Robertson, CS

Thursday, January 25, 2007

"It matters to this one..."


“He presents me with what is always an acceptable gift
who brings me news of a great thought before unknown”

-Bovee

I am a collector of quotes…and I like to collect them just as I first discovered them.  These fragments of wisdom come into my life in many ways…tiny pieces of newsprint from The Christian Science Monitor with a great idea captured in its blue shaded box from the Home Forum page (I have so many of these I'm afraid they will find solidarity and hold a prison break), a statement heard on NPR while driving to camp scribbled into the blank space that represents the Great Plains on a map of Nebraska, lyrics torn from the liner notes of a CD, a quote on the photocopied page of a good book and highlighted in neon yellow, a line from the Poet Laureate found in the magazine section of the LA Times in 1994.  As I read, listen, scour, and scan they hop in their seat with their hand raised begging me with their “Oooh, ooh…I know, I know…” to choose them like a second grader who wants to write the answer on the blackboard.  I pull them close and secret them away for future holding the way a collector of stamps can be found surrounded by his treasures, tenderly smoothing his finger across their faces with rapt joy.

These scraps of paper and ink travel with me in all their individuality and charm wherever I go, stuffed into a pendaflex file with pleated gussets.  They are my treasures.  They are ideas and I can’t get enough of a good idea.  More valuable than gold to me are wise, inspired ideas.  And ideas on yellowing pieces of newsprint or vellum, in Times Roman or Palatino, are more treasured than platinum or diamonds.

On sunny Sunday afternoons I love to sit cross-legged on the warm golden pine of our sunroom floor and take them out, one by one, and read them.  I think about how they once fit nicely into the talk I gave to a group of college students in Colorado, or how they might work their way into an article on the Vietnam war…how I could share them with my daughters…or with you.

Earlier in the week I felt a smattering of loneliness and melancholy…whether it was the gray sky or a missed call from a friend…I was blue.  I pulled out my bulging file of quotations, unwrapped the elastic band that keeps the envelope-like flap in place and my treasures from escaping, and gingerly reached in for the tattered friends I go to when human comfort seems too…well, human. 

I needed a thought to hold on to…a wisdom to share on my walk around the park with my husband that day. 

The first fragile slip of paper my fingers came across included a great story about a little girl on a beach. An old man found her throwing stranded starfish, one by one, back into the ocean so they could survive.  The old man was bewildered and he questioned her as to why she even bothered since there were thousands of them and she would never be able to help them all, so what did it matter.  She replied that it mattered to the one that she was holding…and that was enough.  I held the scrap of paper this story was written on, a well-loved and handled page from one of my favorite sources--an annual spring collection of “the best of college graduation speeches”--and smiled.

“Ahhh”, my heart sang out as I remembered the look on a young camper’s face when I told this story in front of the fireplace one summer evening just before a group of Conquerors headed out on a four-day camping trip.  She had been sullen and angry through the first few days following arrival, unable to find her rhythm with her fellow bunkmates, and disappointed that she had not been able to get into the major of her choice that session.  With two weeks of rafting no longer available she had consented to joining a group of Conquerors…the elite mountaineering program at our camp.  Having looked forward to days in her swimsuit and Tevas riding the rapids in a raft and returning home at the end of the session with sun-kissed shoulders, she was not thrilled at the prospect of what she imagined were long hikes with swollen blistered feet in too tight hiking boots and coming off the mountain with a farmer’s tan on her calves.

She had come to talk with me in my capacity as the on-site Christian Science practitioner, at the suggestion of one of her counselors who hoped that I might be able to help her find joy in a higher purpose for being at camp than a great high-altitude tan.  I had spent time each day with her on the porch of my cabin/office trying to reach her heart, but that afternoon she had shared with me that she thought she should just go home if she couldn’t raft. 

I had talked with her about her motives for being at camp, sharing with her inspirational ideas on selfless giving and service to others. But it was this little starfish story that changed her outlook on her sense of purpose about the long hike she would be making up Mt. Yale and across a series of 14,000-foot peaks over the next four days.  I could see it the minute the moral of the story reached her heart. 
She could make a difference in the life of one other person.  There was a hidden altruist just waiting to burst from her heart, but all the pain, sorrow and suffering that she saw in the world each day had always left her feeling hopeless... and helpless to make a difference.  To suddenly think that she only had to help one person at a time was empowering…and she accepted that mantle of servant leadership with joy and wore it with honor as she headed out of camp the next morning.   She was like a young crusader with a divine sense of mission.  I could see it in the sparkle of her eyes and the lightness of her steps as she waved from beneath a heavy backpack filled with her sleeping bag and gear.

"What if the little rain should say,
'So small a drop as I
Can ne'er refresh a drooping earth,
I'll tarry in the sky.'"
Each of Christ's little ones reflects the infinite One, and therefore
is the seer's declaration true, that "one on God's side is a majority."
  A single drop of water may help to hide the stars, or crown the tree with blossoms.
- Mary Baker Eddy

When she returned on the fourth day, she had been “made new”.  Her hair style, which on arrival at camp earlier that week could only have been achieved with the help of  “product” and electrical appliances, was now a mess…and she was oblivious to its complete and utter state of dirty disarray.  She was completely free of the self-absorption that had held her focus before. She couldn’t wait for the evening testimony meeting where her story of helping, and being helped by, fellow Conquerors practically exploded from her heart.  The next morning she was the first one to offer to help in the dishroom so that the counselors in training (CIT’s) could leave early for a planned day trip.  She returned the next year for her own CIT summer and went on to be a model bunkhouse and program counselor often cited by the camp directors for her selflessness and joy.

As I smoothed the wrinkles in the soft newsprint and let the story re-sink into my own heart, I found my own renewed sense of mission…to make a difference for just one “starfish” at a time.

I collect scraps of paper on which some journalist, writer, artist, cartoonist, poet, or daughter has scribbled, typed, written, drawn, engraved or posted a string of words that have touched my heart…a sentence, lyric, phrase or paragraph that I have discovered, picked up on this adventure ….these textual tidbits are my photographs from this journey.  I take them out and remember the exact moment when they first found me.  My thought is flooded with the images of those moments …the faces of campers, the color of the sky, the sounds in an airport waiting area, the way the sun felt on my shoulders, the feel of her hand in mine…I remember and I am so grateful for this collection of words on scraps of paper…a lifetime of ideas to ponder and to share.

Kate