Friday, July 18, 2008

Aloha!


As you may know, I’ve been writing several blogs in different topic areas.

http://lava-to-lilikoi.blogspot.com - about my “homesteading” efforts here in Hawai’i

http://talkstory-lucy.blogspot.com - inspirational posts taken from retreats and seminars I’ve given

http://lothlorien-lucy.blogspot.com - memoir-type material about living on my boat and more

I’ve also been posting to two blogs established by my brother at www.inkwatu.com.

http://cooking4only1or2.blogspot.com - ideas for quick and easy cooking when you are a single or double

http://siblingbooks.blogspot.com - reviews from the two of us on books we’ve read

In an effort to combine readers as well as my thoughts, I am taking a brief hiatus from this particular blog. I plan to merge several blogs into one in order to focus more and present you with a better product. Anything new I write will be on http://lava-to-lilikoi.blogspot.com from now on. Please check it out and subscribe! I don’t want to lose my readers.

Thanks for stopping by!

Aloha,

Lucy

Tuesday, July 1, 2008

The Little Battles


On this July Fourth, the 232nd birthday of our country, do we pause to think about what we really celebrate?

Usually, July 4 becomes a day to party. We grill too many burgers or steaks (unless you’re a vegetarian), or drink too much beer (if you’re a drinker), or eat too much watermelon and ice cream (that would be me). Then we look for a good place to watch the excitement in the sky.

I love the fireworks, even though they are a remembrance of a war. Our National Anthem glorifies the bombs that burst in the air and the rockets’ giving off a red glare. At least it was a war that won freedom for our country.

Our view of war is that of Major Battles, usually taking place "out there" somewhere. Sometimes we have those "in here" as well. You know what they are for you! It’s the Little Battles that consume most of our time and energy.

War makes victims of us all, whether they be big or little. The "battles" in our life are not an honorable pursuit and we fail to understand Shalom.

How we handle differences, diversity and conflicts (the Little Battles) has everything to do with our attitudes about war. We can say we are for peace, but not live in it! When my daily actions are made up of anger, my larger attitude will embrace war. When I constantly view my life in terms of winning or losing, as a victor or a victim, I will always have war.

On this Fourth of July, as we all eat our All-American hot dogs, potato salad and home-made ice cream, may we laugh with our neighbors, make new friends, and take life a little less seriously. And as we all watch the fireworks, perhaps we can think of each display as Stars of Peace.


What little battles do you and I overcome?


Would sacrificing our little battles enable us to gain the Freedom we celebrate on this day?

Sunday, June 1, 2008

Summer Journey


In early spring of 1989 I made my first trip to the lands we call “Holy.” I traveled there again about 3 years later, and not again since. There were safety concerns on that first trip. We risked hi-jacks, bombs, crashes. Fear of terrorism makes travel more difficult still today.

We cannot escape risk. It is part of life, part of travel. Yet things we assume are safe are often the most risky, simply because they are part of our everyday life. Look at auto accidents, for example. And I live on an island with an active volcano! Just this past month we had sulfur dioxide levels high enough to put my village on evacuation warning!

A brochure designed to give comfort was offered on that first trip to Israel. It stated that 1 out of 75,000 bicyclists die, 1 out of 68,000 choke on food, 1 of 20,000 swimmers drown, 1 out of 600,000 die in air crashes, and one out of every two women will experience domestic violence in their lifetime.

On a mile for mile basis, we are 100 times more likely to crash in a car than in a plane. We were told how few fatal accidents take place in over 135 million air hours (or 1 per 978,000 hours in the air). We received letters of reassurance from those traveling Holy Lands at the time. It seemed safer than the streets of Los Angeles. I wasn’t worried.

The brochure added that we would have a better life expectancy if we lost 10 pounds – and I agree!

Now, almost twenty years later, things still are not resolved in the Middle East! I wonder if they ever will be?

I began both trips with prayerful contemplation, for they would be more than just a physical journey. I wanted them to be journeys of Spiritual Growth. I wanted my mind challenged, wanted to spend time in reflection, in self evaluation, in reassessing my life.

Once there, I walked where Jesus walked, followed him from the shores of Galilee to the Garden of Gethsemane - and beyond! When Jesus made the journey to Jerusalem, it was a journey toward death. He, too, faced risks even greater than mine in travel.

At thirty years of age, he left his father’s craft shop in Nazareth and went away by himself to be alone with God. For forty days in a mountain desert he had wild beasts for company while he discovered God’s purpose for his life.

Normally, we set aside the same forty days to pray and think during the season of Lent. But what do we do the rest of the year??

Today I’d like to look at Summer as another appropriate time for prayer and reflection. Summer is a season of vacation travel and movement. It also is a time of growth, not only of plants, but growth within.

There are many opportunities for growth, and we don’t always see them. In Summer, we can take time to see them more clearly, to see a new vision of what the world could be, to see our place in making that vision come true.

In the days of Summer, we can take time to look at life seriously, not with despair, but a sense of commitment to new priorities, and New Life!

What are your plans for Summer? Take time to plan your own spiritual journey to Jerusalem. Don’t just shove more activities into the same time slots. The goal is growth, not frustration. Let your Summer include sources of nourishment.

Take time to meditate on the meaning of family, the meaning of friendships, on the meaning of a Christ-like life. The spiritual journey for each of us is unique. It’s not a smooth journey, yet we can discover new meanings in life.

Let your Summer journey be one of being on a rich and beautiful road of Oneness. Let this Summer be for you a season of movement, of spiritual travel. As you study and meditate, you will learn more about God’s will for your life.

Begin this journey by thinking of the goal you want to reach. It may be a goal of renewal of your faith, or maybe of deeper love, of new commitment.

This Spiritual Journey requires forty days. Mark it on your calendar and plan how you can spend those days. Tolkien says “Not all who wander are lost.” The goal of our Pilgrimage is to be transformed from within, not to think of ourselves as lost!


So let Summer begin. Start your journey!

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

The Stones Cry Out!


Stones – or rocks – have an interesting background. Many myths talk about the petra genetrix, or the Motherstone, that births heroes and saviors. The stony deserts of the Middle East have been called the "Gardens of Allah.”

On a recent trip through the Cotswold region of England, I was impressed with the mythology (and longevity) of the Rollright Stones. The picture above shows a circle of knights with their king. For some of the mythology, read http://www.cotswolds.info/blogs/rollright-stones.shtml.

Stones often stand for those things in our life that are barren or are obstacles, and yet those “stones” are transformed into sources of our rebirth, our strength and stability. There is an immense potential and power for good that is unleashed from what most would discard.

I am reminded of scripture that talks about the stone the builders rejected becoming the cornerstone of something greater. There is a basic thread throughout ancient manuscripts saying that which is considered worthless, is actually valuable.

My home in Hawai`i is on an acre of a particular type of lava rock known as a’a, a lumpy, rocky substance that blew out of the depths of our volcano. I have no problem calling my “pile of rocks” (in which very little grows) a "garden." (I wrote about gardening in this pile of rocks in April http://talkstory-lucy.blogspot.com/2008/04/gardener-within.html). But there are many nutrients in the seemingly useless lava that somehow nourishes my plants.

One weighty scripture says that if we are kept quiet, if we are not allowed to speak, even the stones will cry out! Women are being persecuted, minimalized, and stoned in other parts of the world when they do what I take for granted!

It is time for us to cry out for basic human rights. The rocks in my garden were tossed out by Madam Pele, our Volcano Goddess. I like to think she demonstrated outrage.

When we feel the least valuable, when we feel our voice is not heard, when others cannot speak for themselves, we must become transformed, reclaim our strengths, and cry out!

Thursday, May 1, 2008

Winds of Life


I spent five years living on my 37’ sloop and learned a lot about tides, currents, winds. For more about my life as a "live-aboard," see my other blog (http://lothlorien-lucy.blogspot.com/). But you don't have to be an ocean-going sailor to recognize the various winds that blow through your life.

First, there are harsh, storm winds that blow through our lives from time to time. We might lose someone close to us, or we might be faced with feeding the five thousand. Unless we isolate ourselves from the rest of the world, we will always be involved with a wide spectrum of humanity - of many personalities. Our individuals families, our work situations, our schools and churches, are all microcosms of that macrocosm we call LIFE - a miniature of the larger universe.

There will always be the stormy winds. It's learning how to reef the sails, how to angle across the huge swells that could cause disaster if not handled with expertise. And it is the stormy wind that will ultimately carry you in the direction of your goals.

Then there are the soft, gentle winds that soothe our souls, nurture our wounds, bring moments of peace to reassure us during the storms. Those are the winds we long for. It’s my own favorite kind of wind, just sauntering across the water. But those are not always the winds that carry us forward quickly. We need to be more than a "fair weather sailor" to stay afloat. We need the commitment that sticks with us, especially when the storms hit and threaten our existence.

The changing winds - the winds of change, are the ones that seem to be the most threatening, the most risky. I'm the kind of sailor who would much rather sail with steady winds I can count on. That's one reason I prefer ocean sailing to lake sailing. That hard stuff around the edges of a lake make fluky winds.

Years ago, I went sailing with a friend in her smaller boat, on Lake Pleasant outside of Phoenix. We ended up going in a complete circle just trying to keep the wind in our sails (an interesting metaphor in itself)! It was frustrating beyond belief!

But changing winds also keep us on our toes, keep us from being too complacent, allow us to use our skills and talents to push toward the goal.

No sailing metaphor would be complete without speaking of the doldrums -- those times when the winds simply seem to stop! All of us have experienced those times of life when the wind has gone out of our sails completely! Nothing we do seems to get us going again. In fact, sometimes we don't even want to get going! So what do we do?

We get angry, we look for reasons why the wind isn't blowing, we blame God for no wind, we blame someone else for the lack of wind, or we blame ourselves that we can't get moving again. One of the most difficult things for me to remember when I get into the doldrums, is that they don't last forever! So I allow that to become the time when I can catch up on neglected tasks on board.

And of course, there is the wind of the Holy Spirit. That Holy Wind playfully lifts our kites of hope and carries the seeds of creativity. That is the wind that refreshes us with spring rain, that twirls the windmills we fight, that sings to us and delights us with sea-spray!

It is this invisible messenger of God that allows us to be open to the future, to be open to God's surprises, that overlooks our journey - and carries us forward.

Tuesday, April 1, 2008

The Gardener Within


Remember the old saying: “April showers bring May flowers?” It takes more than just showers to have beautiful flowers in May. It also takes digging and planting, nurturing and patience, faith and prayer.

My maternal grandfather was a strong typical “type A” personality, but when he worked in his garden, he was calm, happy and peaceful. His special joy was in finding many varieties of iris. He would drive all over Southern Illinois in search of new iris plants. Studies have shown that in a similar way, Alzheimer’s patients who are placed in a garden all day are no longer violent.

Even when I lived on my sailboat for five years, I had hanging baskets of cherry tomatoes and pots of aloe plants for sunburn and wounds. I needed that bit of plant material to make me feel like I had a garden. Various cultures around the world have special tales about the healing power of plants on all levels.

Some of my favorite times as a small girl were spent in a special cherry tree in the back yard of a parsonage. We only lived there a couple years, but as long as we did, I would climb up onto a high limb and read. As a lonely child, it was my way to escape. Many of us have had spiritual experiences with trees but we don’t discuss them for fear of sounding silly. We rarely talk about the spiritual aspects of gardening, until someone of like mind brings up the subject.

Maybe I’m a little strange, but I talk to my plants. I haven’t really heard them talk back, although they do respond by growing and producing. I used to think people who talked to their animal pets were weird, too!

Today, I live on an acre of a’a in Hawai`i. A`a is lumpy, rocky lava that blew out of the depths of our volcano. The only way to plant something is to move aside the rocks and dump in a bag of soil, which filters down after a rain or watering and I need to add more soil. Still, there are nutrients in the greedy porous lava. Plants do grow, with a lot of prayer and patience.

Peter and Eileen Caddy were founders of the Findhorn Community in Scotland. They moved to a barren plot on the northernmost tip of Scotland, a place where nothing should have grown. Yet they made it work, through meditation and conversations with the nature spirits and “devas” - the angels of each plant. They claimed to receive gardening advice from those beings. No matter what we may believe about it, the results were incredible. I hope for the same results in my lava.

I believe that if you are open to it, the process of gardening will tell you everything you need to know about life. There is a definite spirit of cooperation and communication between plants and humans. It is easy to see how we cultivate ourselves when we cultivate a garden. The idea is to relate to all living things as if they can understand, because they can! It is a living prayer.

St. Fiacre is the patron saint of gardens and gardeners. He carries a shovel in one hand and a book in the other. He gave up his life as a prince of Ireland to live as a monk on the edge of a forest in France. Many people came to him for his healing through herbs and flowers. His reputation grew and ultimately, he built his own monastery that featured his healing plants.

Being There with Peter Sellars is a wonderful old movie. It is the story of a man who started out as sort of an idiot child who learned to garden, and could speak of nothing but gardening. Through a minor accident, he was brought into a home where he gradually worked his way up to international significance with only his gardening remarks. Everyone thought that his words were profound, and they became metaphors for everything from politics to world finance to love.

Please leave a comment and tell me what you love about gardening. What spiritual experiences have you had with plants?

Tuesday, March 4, 2008

A Touch of White


Mardi Gras (French for Fat Tuesday) recently ushered us into a season of reflection that lasts forty days (not counting Sundays). The point of the original celebration was to have fun for the last time before the sacrificial, solemn period the church calls “Lent.” It was a time to use up all the fats in the house before Lent began. The traditional way to do that was to have a Pancake Supper on Mardi Gras evening, even though many had no idea why they were doing it.

Then on Ash Wednesday, people would receive a dab of soot on their foreheads to represent this time. I always forgot what it was all about and would say to a friend, “You didn’t wash your face!”

One other celebration came out of the early church and into the 16th century: “The Feast of Fools.” It was a time to make fun of church rituals and wear bizarre costumes. It was a license to be bawdy and crude.

I like using the image of a CLOWN, which comes from the Anglo Saxon word for “clod,” a meaningless clump of dirt, the “lowliest of the low.” So the clown became a fool to lift up someone else – to give power to the other. The clown would do something to make the other person look like a fool, and follow that up with something to raise the person up even higher.

There are other words that give us permission to be clowns. For example, the original meaning of the word “silly” was “holy.” So to be silly was to be holy. The next time you think you’re being silly, substitute the word “holy.”

And don’t forget that the root word for “human” is “humor!” We were created to have humor (when we are not being so humorous that God laughs at us)! Laughter keeps us from taking ourselves too seriously.

Too often, we miss the humor in life. Being the “clown” allows us to laugh at ourselves, in spite of what else is going on. When I can remember, I try to see the humor in all situations – even those I think require me to be too serious.

On top of the white death mask, the clown paints the colorful symbols of life, showing how the clown brings new life to everyone. Many rodeo clowns are paramedics or fire fighters. They literally “give new life” by distracting the bull from the bull fighter, or the high-wire acrobats. They are not there merely to give us all a laugh.

The clown also is mute, requiring that we watch rather than merely listen, in order to understand the message we are to receive.

When we are the clown, we transform everything and everyone into a new and more meaningful future. We take whatever is simple and ordinary in life and lift it into something exquisitely beautiful.

The same word for clown also could mean “servant.” We are asked to be “servant leaders” if we would truly serve others and bring peace to the world, lift up the nations. Look up any scripture and wherever you see the word “servant,” substitute the word “clown,” and see how the meaning can deepen.

So in this month of March, lift up others, be a servant leader, do what others are not willing to do, and LAUGH!

Rather than ashes on your forehead, I invite you to dab white clown paint or powder on some noticeable part of your body. Let that touch of white remind you to be the “fool,” the “servant,” the “clown.”