Friday, June 24, 2016

ANGELS WHISPERING "GROW!" "GROW!"

They say the shortest distance between 2 points is a straight line.  However, when does life take us from one point to another in a straight line?  Rather, my path seems to resemble something more similar to



And yet, every time I set out with expectations that I will be traveling like this:

. Point A________________________________________________ .Point B
. Exercise_______________________________________________ .Lose 20 lbs.
. Meet a friend___________________________________________  .Life-long friendship
. Get a job______________________________________________  .Retirement
. Pray__________________________________________________ .Faith without doubt
. Born into family__________________________________________.Close throughout life
. Wherever I am at ________________________________________ .Where I want to be
                                                                                                                 NOW!! 
.Straight line from Point A (start) to Point B (finish) without variation on hoped for outcome

When the road gets long we tend to ask why, question ourselves, blame others, complain, get angry, and find many other ways to basically say we want the straight line, the shortest distance, the path of least resistance.

Life – in all it’s mystery – responds with detours, valleys, curves, plateaus and luckily mountain top experiences too.  With each long round about route we take, we stretch and grow becoming more of the person God intends us to be.

In the Talmud we read that “Each blade of grass has an angel that bends over it and whispers, “grow.” 

Our angels are with us on our circuitous journeys as well whispering to us ..."grow!  grow!"


Jeremiah 29:11-14  For I know the plans I have for you, says the Lord.  Plans for a future and a hope...

Thank you for reading this week.

Thursday, June 16, 2016

IN MY FATHER'S EYES

Many years ago I read a good book called The Blessing by John Trent and Gary Smalley.  The gest of it was how children need their parent’s unconditional love and approval in order to form healthy relationships as they grow into adults.  Integral to this approval are elements of the blessing that need to occur in the young life of every child with the parent offering significant words and actions that communicate to the child their worth.  I was fortunate to have received a blessing from my father however I am well aware that many have not and each year find themselves reluctantly heading into another Father’s Day with ambivalent feelings.   

So to daughters and sons and fathers of all types, I offer two reflections.  The first is what I am calling My Dad-My Hero and the focus is on what I have seen as qualities in a man that rocket them from ordinary father to being the type of dad every kid wants.  The second I am calling My Dad-My Work in Process.  This speaks about our need, and that includes every one of us, to be blessed by our father.  If we have been lucky enough to have been blessed, we been lucky enough.  If not, Father Ron Rolheiser’s article has a wonderful suggestion on what we can now do to begin the healing of that wound. 

MY DAD – MY HERO
I have had the pleasure of watching my husband be a father for 28 years.  In those years, there have been many activities that would qualify him for the “Dad of the Year” award.  However I want to highlight a few of the characteristics that have been consistent throughout the raising of our two children which I believe have launched him into hero status.

Priorities:
Tom’s priorities have always been #1 God  #2 Wife and family  #3 Work.  Although he has owned and run his own business most of his life, he doesn’t confuse these priorities.  He takes time each day to pray and to ask God to make him the man, husband, father and employer God wants him to be.  There is no doubt in his mind or in mine or others who are around us that Tom loves and supports me and his family.  It is said that the best thing a husband can do for his children is to love their mother.  Tom lives this day in and day out.  

Faith-filled:
We have a prayer in our church that parents pray for their children at the Sacrament of Baptism.  https://www.dropbox.com/sh/ji6jrl9u7o44m90/AABbV83NuakXlCBq7ckurUVIa?dl=0When both Matt and Kaitie (our children) were baptized, Tom listened to these words as they were proclaimed for us and he took the words to heart.  He desires to fulfil his sacred duty to pass on the faith to our children.  He never misses Sunday Mass.  They both have seen Tom pray daily either in his favorite living room chair, at his desk, at the kitchen table, with me and/or with them.  By word and example he has tried to lead them in the ways of wisdom.   Tom commends our children to God regularly knowing that although we often talk about our kids as “ours” in truth, they are God’s and pure gift to us.

Friend:
When we were young parents, we attended a class put on by Charlie Langdon of Children’s Home Society.  One of the gems that he taught us that has stayed with us for over 25 years is to always remember when disciplining that our children will only be kids for less than 1/3 of our relationship with them.  He said to be sure to treat them in such a way as to protect the more than 2/3 of the time we will be interacting adult to adult.  Tom not only remembered that when disciplining; he has had that in the forefront of this mind when he has chosen to enjoy time playing with them over making one more sales call or when he took up snowboarding and wake boarding just because that was what they were involved with.  Sometimes it is tricky to know when to be a parent and when to be a friend.  Holding the balance is hero’s work. 

Humility:
Our children watch us at our best and when we trip up.  Tom has been consistent not only in voicing the value of humility but consistently living both humbly and compassionately.  In his own words written many years ago, “A humble and compassionate person is a good person to be around.  People aren’t usually hurt by humble and compassionate people.  I like to hang out with people with these qualities.  I like to work with them and I like to live with them.” 

Fathers who are heros don’t just happen.  They strive to be humble, strike the balance between being a parent and a friend, are faith-filled and they have their priorities in order.  They may not have these all together all the time but the man that aims for these is definitely a hero and his children will rise up and call him blessed.

MY DAD-OUR WORK IN PROCESS
We are responsible for our own health and happiness.  We can choose to travel with baggage or not.  Have you ever noticed people at the airport with a heavy bag hanging from one shoulder and dragging an over-stuffed suitcase with the other hand?  It’s difficult for them to walk as opposed to the person with a light carry all that is walking with ease.  Journeying through life baggage-free is the way to go!  Perhaps your relationship with your father and/or child hasn’t been ideal.  That brings pain, to be sure.  No one is disputing that.  But your choice to stay in the place of blame, anger, feelings of victimization, hurt, or longing is yours.  You can begin to work on your unfinished business even if the other party doesn’t choose to participate.  You owe it to yourself to do this work until you can put closure on the relationship and either enter it more fully or walk away from it in peace.  Father Ron Rolheiser’s article is a fine place to begin.  My prayers are with you.

Keane, creator of the Family Circus cartoon strip, tells of a time when he was penciling one of his cartoons and his son, Jeffy said, “Daddy, how do you know what to draw?”  I said, “God tells me.”  Jeffy said, “Then why do you keep erasing parts of it?” 

I conclude with this story because I believe we all have a father story worthy of honor.  It has helped form us into the people we are today.  I urge us to resist the tendency to do any erasing.  In fact, my hope is that this Father’s Day will be one in which we can be grateful for the lessens we have learned, hard though some of them certainly are, from the men in our lives.  May it be so.    

Thursday, June 9, 2016

PRAYER STARTER # 2

Please reflect on this photograph and let it lead you into prayer.  May you find that imagination and creativity walk alongside you as you hold the image.  

Each month I hope to share with you 1 or 2 of the reflections that my photograph inspired. 

IF YOU WOULD LIKE TO SUBMIT A PRAYER, POEM or REFLECTION 
(and I hope you do) 
PLEASE EMAIL IT TO ME at Lori.Carmody@outlook.com


PRAYER STARTER # 1 

This is a selection from what was submitted in response to the Prayer Starter # 1 (below).  


Lord, I see a unique and challenging bridge before me.  I do trust the people who made this bridge and so I walk across it just as I trust my life to you and walk daily with you.  Jesus, I trust you! 
Amen.

Anonymous,  Issaquah


Note:  A special thanks to the people to submitted prayers for my 1st Prayer Starter.  I neglected to say that you may submit them and request that your name not be used just as this person has asked.  I can use your name, initials, or anonymous...whatever you are comfortable with.  Again, thank you!

Saturday, June 4, 2016

MOMENTS OF OUR LIVES

By Lori Carmody

Over the years I have been fortunate to be invited into people’s lives to create rituals at important moments:
  • Graduations
  • Children turning various ages (5, 13, 16, 18, 21)
  • Birthdays (40, 50, 75)
  • With grieving parents who have experienced a miscarried
  • Ritualizing two families coming together at a second marriage

I have found it to be a sacred honor to share moments such as these with people who wish to bring prayer and the presence of God into the changes that are occurring for them.  Inviting God into their circle of family and friends binds hearts and hands together in openness and grace. 

Since graduation season is upon us, I share with you parts of the ritual that I have used with families who wish to acknowledge and honor an achievement of a friend or family member.  May all who are looking forward to a new beginning turn to God with a grateful heart in remembrance for blessings received and look to both the good Lord and to their community for support and advice as they spread their wings and take flight.
Along with the advice received from those close by, I add the following as sound words of wisdom not just for the newly graduating but for all of us who continue to create a space for the sacred to take root and grow us into the people we are destined to become. 

  • Dear Lord, today I thought of the words of Vincent van Gogh, “It is true that there is an ebb and flow, but the sea remains the sea.  “You are the sea.  Although I may experience many ups and downs in my emotions and often feel great shifts in my inner life, you remain the same …..There are days of sadness and days of joy; there are feelings of guilt and feelings of gratitude; there are moments of failure and moments of success; but all of them are embraced by your unwavering love.  My only real temptation is to doubt your love …..to remove myself from the healing radiance of your love.  To do these things is to move into the darkness of despair.  O Lord, sea of love and goodness, let me not fear too much the storms and winds of my daily life, and let me know that there is ebb and flow…..but that the sea remains the sea.  Amen.    ~ Henri J. M. Nouwen, The Sea Remains The Sea
  • Love God, love yourself, love others, and be humbled by the privilege.    ~ Author unknown
  • God puts mentors in your path.  They may not look like you, or be what you expect.  But they always know more than you, and that’s the whole point.  Use them.  Keep your eyes open.  Mentors transmit the lessons you need to learn.     ~ Father Phil Wallace
  • Be in the PRESENT when you want to be happier and more successful.  Focus on what is right now.  Respond to what is important now.  Learn from the PAST when you want to make the present better than the past.  Look at what happened in the past.  Learn something valuable from it.  Do things differently in the present.  Plan for the FUTURE when you want to make the future better than the present.  See what a wonderful future would look like.  Make plans to help it happen.  Put your plan into action in the present.     ~ Spencer Johnson, MD
  • “Do not hide your faith and your belief under a bushel basket, especially in this world that seems to have gone mad with political correctness.  These small lessons become the unplanned syllabus for becoming a good citizen and your efforts to live them will help to form the fabric of a civil society and free and prosperous nation where inherent equality and liberty are invaluable.”   ~ Justice Clarence Thomas
  • People will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel.   ~ Maya Angelou
  • The first duty of love is to listen.   ~ Paul Tillich
  • The greatest man is he who does not lose his child’s heart.    ~ Mencius