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Lost in the Woods

The question that has kept me searching my whole life is not, “Does G-d exist?” I seem to have been born with the belief that I have a Maker. I have never doubted this Great Mystery we try to name. Whether you want to call this God, or Hashem, Or Allah, or The Shechinah, I believe whatever It is, just is. 

The question that has plagued me throughout my life is: “Who am I to this Universal Spirit?” “Does ‘Whoever Runs this Place’ even know who I am? Much less care about me, guide me, protect me?

I really wanted religion to be the answer to this question.

My search began in Sunday School at First Presbyterian Church in downtown Wilmington when I was a little girl. We would walk the 7 blocks with my mom in our smocked dresses and Mary Jane’s. 

When I was in high school, we moved and started going to a small country Baptist church. My friends all went there, so it was more socializing than searching.  While Reverend Groover shouted about hell and damnation from the pulpit, we whispered the latest gossip in the backrow. Maybe there was not a lot of searching going on there.

In college I tried out all the churches. Methodist, Episcopal, Lutheran, Catholic. I kept wanting to feel something, see something, hear something. I wanted to feel a sense of belonging, but it never happened. Everyone else looked like they had it figured out, what was wrong with me? I still believed God was there, I was just not sure if He was there for me.

When I met my husband in graduate school, he was the first Jewish person I had ever met. He refused to date me unless I could promise I would raise our children as Jews. Wow. That was a first. I just wanted to go to the movies, and he was down the road of having children. Yet, I was drawn to this. Finally! Someone with an answer. Maybe it was THE answer. I decided he was my answer. Without knowing what I was signing up for, I jumped in headfirst.

I was looking for a formula. I wanted to take that Big Mystery and solve it so it wasn’t a mystery anymore. 

Turns out Richard didn’t have any answers, just bigger questions. So we searched together…at first. That took us to Chicago. We put our children into Jewish Day schools, and began to learn alongside them. I converted, we kashered our kitchen, joined a synagogue and began to build a friendship, faith community. As often happens when someone learns just enough to be dangerous, my ego got a little inflated. I might have been a bit smug. I finally had it all figured out! 

So much so, that we figured, if a little bit of religion was good, then more would be better.

So we moved to an orthodox neighborhood and became more religious. We went through a more rigorous Jewish conversion. This time as a family. We began observing an orthodox religious life. Unfortunately, for some people more is not always better. 

That is a wild tale for another time, but suffice it to say, we hit a big fat dead end, and it was the beginning of our entire world falling apart. We had followed religion as far as we could, thinking it was our answer and found ourselves lost and adrift. It is a painful lesson that no matter where you go… there you are. My husband dealt with it his way, and I dealt with it mine. 

One lovely example of this happened on Shabbat. Actually most of the lessons I painfully learned happened on Shabbat or one of the Jewish holidays. We biked with the kids to Michigan Lake near our house to play at the beach. As they were running around doing cartwheels and burying each other up to their necks, Richard told me he had slept with a woman at work. 

I actually laughed when he told me. Looking back, I don’t know why. It just came out, surprising even me.  The next surprise was a feeling of envy. I thought, “Who has time to have an affair?” With 4 children, keeping a Jewish home, and trying to go back to work part-time, I was lucky to have time to use the bathroom by myself. Richard and I often fought for the tiny scraps of free time in our busy life.

Somebody had a few more scraps than I realized! We talked about it a little bit. My body seemed to disconnect from my head. I asked questions as if from a distance. I did not throw things or yell or scream or even cry. Instead, as the day wore on and we biked back, I began to shut down into silent shock. By the time we made it home from the beach, I got into bed and didn’t get out… for 3 days. This scared everyone. I could not speak, or cry, or move, or eat, or even feel anything. I was completely numb. 

Finally on the 3rd day I arose, and put on my running clothes. I decided I was in danger of dissolving into the mattress and disappearing into the dark fog I could feel lurking and looming. I went out into the woods to make myself run until something happened. I was going to run until I could feel something, anything. I was going to run until I cried, or laughed, or screamed or passed out. If I was going to disappear into anything it was going to be my beloved woods.

So I started running. At first nothing happened. I kept running. I ran and ran and while I ran, I realized there was no one I could turn to. Not my family, not a friend, not my husband, no one. I was too filled with shame. The depth of my loneliness rose up in my chest and finally broke me. To suffer is human, to suffer alone is unbearable. The very person I should be able to go to with my pain, was the very person inflicting the pain. I began to cry. It gets a little tricky to run and cry at the same time. The tricky part is breathing. There is a lot of snot. But I kept crying and running and snotting and trying to breathe. I believed I was the loneliest person in the entire world. 

And then it happened. 

I can’t say it was a voice speaking to me or anything. It was just a sense of knowing. One minute I felt forsaken and the next minute a phrase in my head: 

“You are not alone. You have never been alone.” 

I felt it more than I heard it. A deep calm and peace washed over me. My tears stopped. I stood there in the middle of the woods, looking all around me at the beautiful green forest around me. I was in a state of awe. I was not alone. I have never been alone. 

I went into the woods, lost and alone. God found me there and showed me the way back to myself. I was going to be ok. I got into my car and drove home.

The path since then has been a move away from religion (and my marriage) and towards the small still voice inside me. Father Richard Rohr, a franciscan priest, calls it “Falling Upward”. We must fall down to ascend. Every time I begin to doubt my way, someone shows up, or some coincidence happens and I see the signpost leading back to the path of love and away from the path of anger. It feels like a giant invisible hand gently leading me away from bitterness and judgement. My vision clears and I am able to choose the path of forgiveness and acceptance again. Funny how forgiving yourself is the hardest part. The work for me is learning to trust and have faith when the going gets tough. This Universal Intelligent Force of Love has more than earned my trust, but I continue to fall down and be human. 

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The gift of a

Breath

I learned a profound Jewish teaching from a Franciscan priest!  🙂
Father Richard Rohr learned it from a Jewish Rabbi and speaks about it often.  It gives me great comfort in my life.

In Judaism the true name of God is not spoken. All the names we use are nicknames. The true name of God consists of 4 Hebrew letters (יהוה) (yud, hey, vov, hey). When these 4 letters are put together there are no consonants.

Many believe that we don’t speak the true name of God because it is taboo or because of the commandment, ‘thou shalt not take the Lord’s name in vain’.  This is only partially true.

The real reason we do not speak God’s name is because it can not be spoken. The closest word is the sound you make when you inhale and exhale.

Just take a minute to think about this.

God’s true name is the sound of your breath.

Inhale.  Exhale.
Do it again.

You are breathing the name of your maker.

We are alive when we are able to breathe.

Gen 2:7  וייצר יהוה אלהים את־האדם עפר מן־האדמה ויפח באפיו נשמת חיים ויהי האדם לנפש חיה׃

“And the Lord God formed man of the dust of the ground and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life and man became a living soul”  http://biblehub.com/lexicon/genesis/2-7.htm

Breath is life.  Breath is The Spark of God within us.  It is also His name and our own personal prayer.

It is our first word uttered when we are born. It is the last thing we say when we die. We pray it all day everyday.   It is unique to each person and free to ALL.  It is our built in ‘fail safe’.  All the times we doubt ourselves and our worthiness, we are breathing our own affirmation.  God has it covered.  It is not required that we believe in it.  It will happen for us regardless.

When ever I am having a hard time.  When I am tired and overwhelmed.  All those times I am not sure I am doing ‘whatever’ right.

All I really have to do is remember to breathe.  It contains all that I need. It is prayer enough, it is life enough, and it is powerful enough to carry us through.  Trust your breath. When you feel especially lost or heartbroken. Just focus on your breath.

Father Rohr offers a beautiful meditation from Psalm 46:10 to lead you back to your breath:

“Be still and know that I am God
Be still and know that I am
Be still and know
Be still”
May your Breath be with you :))
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Remembering

The Forgotten Path

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Why do I get so much joy and satisfaction watching my children play in nature? It is something I have wondered about myself.  One of my favorite activities.  I like to play with them in nature, but honestly, I like sitting back and watching them even more.  I struggle here, to put it into words.

I use the term ‘my children’ loosely as I have taken on 18 other children each week out in the woods.   Watching children in deep play outdoors is something I love.  Why?

Freedom?  I know that when they are unencumbered, outside and unstructured they are free.  Maybe it is the sitting back that is so rewarding.   I move out of their way.  I step back from the telling and the teaching, and create a sacred space for their freedom to step forward.  I love watching where they take it.  There is a deep sense of peace that descends on a creek when children become engrossed in what they and the creek decide to do together.  Two puzzle pieces, the creek and the children, fitting together perfectly and suddenly it all makes sense.  Freedom is definitely an essential ingredient.  Yet…

Wild is the other.

When children set out on their own adventure into wilderness, they are seeking a relationship.  They are looking for connection with each other and me.  But deeper than that, they are seeking connection with the wild.  They know on some soul level that when they find that tadpole and hold it in their hands, it was created in just that way, at just that moment, just for them.  When they are mining for gold in the creek and they find a ‘crystal’, they believe that rock was put there at that moment in time, just for them.   When they sit in their secret hide out, hidden from the rest of us, they are not alone.  They know that this secret spot was created around them, for them.   They don’t seek connection with the man made bridge, as much as, they are drawn to what is flowing and growing and swimming and winding beneath it.  The wild.

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Two weeks ago when a pouring rain just happened to find us outside looking for adventure, they embraced it as the gift it was.  How could this not have been created just for them?  The joy as they received this gift however they chose, was something I will never forget. Standing back and watching them dance with the wild was my joy.

They went home high.

The next day I heard reports of “the best day ever”.  One child told his special grownup that it was “the best day of his life”.  Then he changed his mind.  “It is the second best day of my life.  The best day was the day I was born.”

I watch this and I remember.  I remember what I was born knowing and then forgot. I remember my own freedom dancing with the wild.  I seek relationship with What created the wild.  I catch a glimmer of conversation with my Creator.

The Forgotten Path.  Children are born into the world knowing this path.  It is not forgotten for them.  By protecting space for them to play on their own path, I remember.  They are my guides.  They teach me how to recall all that I know.  It is as much for me as for them.

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A spiritual journey

Exodus 2013

God seems to like making my Sunday school lessons real and experiential.  I am not complaining, don’t get me wrong.  Just laughing at myself, that I still never expect it.  Why would this Passover be any different from the others?

Our family had an exciting week leading up to Passover.  Richard was supposed to leave Monday night for Atlanta, but after a long night in the airport waiting out tornadoes in the south,  had to cancel his trip and come home.  I had the ominous feeling something was brewing.

It was.  Tuesday I was sick with what seemed like the flu and could not get out of bed.  This snowballed quickly by Wednesday into a fever, to a doctor’s visit, to a chest x-ray, to an emergency cat scan, to the ER, to being admitted to the hospital with a severe case of pneumonia.  Although, thankfully, I never felt as ill as I actually was, it still took quite a toll on us all.

I couldn’t help feeling God’s hand in the timing of having our priorities made clear for us.  I think of Passover as the time to take a good look at what we are enslaved to in our lives and make an attempt to set ourselves free from those things.  Our family had a very hands on education about the things we need to let go of, and the things we have to hold tightly to.  It is still always surprising to me, how many things I get tricked into thinking are important along the way.  Things that really don’t matter when the chips are down.

I think Moshe comes to each one of us in some form at Passover and invites us to follow him out of our slavery into the desert to freedom.  The Midrash reports that many Jews did not follow Moshe and actually chose to stay in Egypt in bondage.  I wonder if sometimes it is so hard to recognize that we are enslaved.  When Moshe comes knocking we just don’t recognize the call for what it is.

Pneumonia is not what I would have considered a way out of slavery.  But it in fact turned out to be just that.

As I came home from the hospital and looked at all the chores to be done to prepare for Passover, I felt a sense of despair come over me.  It was just days away and I could not fathom how we would get from the pile of laundry and housework in front of me to the great Passover Seder we were blessed to have.
Yet, I could not lift a finger.  I was forced to let it go and sit down on the couch with my kids and soak them in.  When I did, a deep sense of peace and thankfulness washed over me.  Thankfulness for all the blessings that are right in front of my face, but I am many times too busy to stop and drink them in.
Richard made the comment that God doesn’t fix IT for you but instead fixes YOU for it.  I needed fixing for Passover.  The stress filled idea I had in my head was overwhelming.  Once I surrendered to my reality something much better took its place.
God also seems to send you the help you need.  I was humbled by the help he sent to our family.  From the tornadoes that kept Richard home, to the Dr. who had a “gut instinct” and followed it, to the families that completely wrapped themselves around our kids during the crisis, to the amazing cooking and pitching in that so many people so unassumingly did.
Now a month later, I am still trying to get back to “pre-pneumonia” status.  It is a slower more frustrating process than I anticipated.  I have not been able to run as many miles, keep up with as much laundry, or even stay up as late as I could before.  But I am still benefiting from the lesson.  Maybe this year will be a year of creating balance.  Stopping to rest more and appreciate the wonderful blessings that are completely undeserved, yet right in front of me.
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