Category Archives: Faith
Healing Hugs
I hugged shame
I loved disgrace
I encouraged peace
To the weeping face
I heard confession
I felt mercy
I held his hand
Told him he’s worthy
Removed the prison
Of spoken word
Showed him value
By actions served
He sobbed for relief
From a god he doubted
Regret his badge
His sight; sin clouded
Visible pain
ached his soul
But his words dictated
Desperate control
Will he surrender?
Forgive his heart?
Remember his humanity,
That is tearing him apart?
I can’t fix him
Or make things better,
Just let him feel loved
Releasing the debtor
For Us All
When I say I pray,
I pray for us.
I take my knowing of your Spirit as it has met mine
Reminded that we are of one heart; one people
Faith turned inside out as a beacon of compassion;
kindness gifted a mortal coil
Our lives are bountiful with profound joy and excruciating sorrow
Both, in their own way, unspoiled sweetness like honey
Both archaic and newly birthed
My tears are as salty as yours,
my blood as red
Our grief shatters our hearts wide open
but so does the ecstasy of awareness
of abiding love; ever expanding
A welcomed blessing imprisoned in prosaic words
An offering of obedient relationship with one another;
with the interactive chaos of the world
Let us be a harbor for one another
in the turbulent, roiling depths of uncertainty
So when I say I pray,
I truly pray for us.
Who knew?
I have a client whom I’ve been with for over 8 months. I companion care he and his wife three times a week. He is extroverted, claims he hates people while socializing, laughs with his entire body, and is charmingly impish. She is quiet, speaks when spoken to, defers to her husband, but is sweet and expressive when she feels it.
I was doing a normal Thursday visit. He was in rare form. He declared himself indomitable then laughed when myself and his other visitor cheered his word choice. It was a grand celebration of friendship and excellent conversation.
The following morning I received a text that said things had taken a turn for the worse and he was in dire straits. Could I go visit? Absolutely.
Dire straits is an understatement. Although no fever, he was having a health crisis not experienced before. The secondary visitor of Thursday was informed of the situation and they also arrived. It was crushing to know that what we experienced the day before had done a 180. His stats were critically low, but being on hospice, comfort was key.
We prayed.
Okay, I confess, I thought prayer, like funerals, were for the comfort of the person attending to their love. Positive vibes and all that. I prayed to the Universe that peace would prevail, that the highest good would be met, and that his children would arrive in time to attend the final hours. He was put on several prayer chains, of which, I’ve also been skeptical.
For four days he knocked on death’s door. He wasn’t eating or drinking. He couldn’t swallow. He was doing a version of Cheyne-Stokes breathing (It’s kind of like a fish out of water. Because they can’t swallow, the mucus that normally goes down remains in the throat causing a “rattling” sound) He knocked hard, but…nobody was home?
Tuesday he was awake and aware of visitors; even speaking.
By Thursday he was sitting up in his chair, conversing, demanding, agitated that he couldn’t exercise “to stay fit.” He ate more than he had all week. He drank hot tea. He was cranky, but alert and responding to input.
Okay, so let me explain why this struck me as unusual. I honestly believed, as did the nursing staff, that he was going to die. His body showed all the signs of that coming up quickly. The children (my age and better), were told to prepare. But, what changed?
I’m sure there is a scientific reason for his sudden turn-around. I’ve seen and experienced people doing a “rally” (That’s when the dying person suddenly has a burst of energy that can make them seem competely “normal” again. They may want to eat their favorite foods, or drink, or talk with their loved ones. It happens surprisingly often.) Four days of awareness is unusual.
This particular set of events has really forced me to confront my views on prayer, on my own experience, and honestly, I feel like a bit of imposter. However, I’ll take the guidance of my fellow guest and roll with the grace that has been granted with this incredible occurance. I don’t think I’ve ever been so happy to be wrong, yet I want so badly to understand.
The next few days, other family members will be attending to him in conjunction with his children.
I will continue to pray. I am baffled, feel awkward in my Unitarian Universalist faith, curious as all get out, and willing to laugh at myself for thinking I knew enough. Do we ever?
Whatever The Face (VIDEO)
Whatever the Face
You don’t need permission to be angry with God
You’re not less of a human or any more flawed
It’s okay to yell, to scream, and to shake
To groan under your burden while your heart aches
To feel like you’re in it, totally alone
The weariness digging down deep in your bones
You don’t need permission to question your faith
To want something different than the cards that have played
You’re perfectly normal to deny what is true
The mistakes that were made that you can’t undo
Rejecting condolences because then “IT” is real
Bargaining, begging, willing to make deals
Wherever your God is, whatever the face
Know that you’re held in comfort and grace
The shoulders you cry on, the prayers that are offered
Are all given up to the ultimate Author
Altar Building (Video)
Watch for God (Video)
Be With What Was
I cling to his hand while he clings to life
His view is the woodland with death his midwife
His eyes see something I cannot comprehend
Each finished stage whispers goodbye
Wordlessly he measures towards his inevitable end
While sorrow bows my head, trying not to cry
Time spent together fills my thoughts undaunted
“Be with what was.” My spirit tells me quietly
Flooding me with memories, what I knew of him is wanted
I reject the wisdom I am given, holding on to him defiantly
His breathing rustles his lungs so deeply, erratic in its spurts
He’s giving in completely, “Oh Adonai, this hurts!”
Altar Building
Holy light ripples from one prayer to the next
Candle to candle
Continuous Hope lit liberally
From one heart to another
A sustainable support
To ease burdens
To celebrate joys
To guide one another
With wisdom and reverence
A catalyst towards Universal Love
Progress towards Justice
A beacon towards personal truth
A stable trust in sacred communion
Of torchbearing faith outwardly
Reflection of our own hearts
Rising like the morning mist in a meadow



