Drizzle

It has been a series of drippy, dreary days in Minnesota. The rain has at times been powerful and torrential and other times just drizzly, like a fine mist. Throughout it all the sun has been absent, the skies gray and gloomy. People are nearing the end of their collective ropes. Yesterday I was privy to the conversational comments of a few mothers of young children who had, much too soon, lost their lust for the summer vacation. Having been trapped inside for too long, their creative juices were stopping up.

While I am now a fair distance from those days of trying to entertain children on rainy days or, even more importantly trying to help them entertain themselves, I listened with a certain melancholy longing. A favorite video of our children was a quirky, little piece called “Drizzle and the Rainy Day.” We actually rented this video when trapped inside a grandparent’s house on several consecutive rainy days. It featured an odd, hairy puppet whose true gift was helping kids pass the time and have fun on rainy days. The trick with Drizzle was that everything he used to do this were things already available in your house. I don’t remember too many of the details except that things like empty toilet paper and paper towel rolls, straws and toothpicks became quite exciting creations. A little string, a marble, a Hotwheels car and you had a racetrack or maze that wound its way from the living room couch, under the chair by way of the paper roll tunnels, through the dining room, out onto the kitchen floor where it picked up speed and crashed into the dishwasher. The amount of time, energy,design and redesign that went into these creations not only led to exercising imagination but hopefully, to higher physics scores in high school.

I remember the Drizzle Days with great fondness. The sweet, simple joys of taking what was at hand for creativity and being entertained and challenged fill my heart, not only for the boys now turned men, but for the lazy days of making something out of nothing. Of course, this gift is available to us at all times but sometimes needs the imposition of rainy days to bear fruit. I have to admit that these gray, wet days have my mind turning to acts of creation much like a good, old fashioned Minnesota blizzard. I am certain it doesn’t work this way for everyone but it does for me.

What weather brings out your creative spirit? What manner of sky can send you to paint a picture or write a poem or sing a song? What weather pattern can form around your days that leads you into that right brained place that spins out new ideas faster than you can write them down? It is a good thing to understand your creative meteorology. When you know what fuels your creative spirit it becomes easier to see the inspiration as it begins to arrive. Yarn and needles call to be twisted and turned. Crayons and paper beckon from the closet where they have rested too long. The piano, silently sitting alone in the other room, begs to be played. That recipe you’ve wanted to try but took too long or need too many ingredients, shouts: “Now! Now!”

The rain is supposed to lift and move on sometime tomorrow. So, those of us who have been trained in the Drizzle School need to get busy. Those of you guided by the Sunshine Way of creative thought, get plenty of rest tonight. Tomorrow the sun is reported to be moving in and next week the temperatures will rise as the skies clear.

There is much to be done……rain or shine!

Holy Day

“We seldom notice how each day is a holy place
Where the eucharist of the ordinary happens,
Transforming our broken fragments
Into an eternal continuity that keeps us.”
~ John O’Donohue

Sometime last week I read with interest a posting on a clergy friend’s Facebook page which outlined what she had done that day. Its purpose was to answer an often asked question:” So, what do ministers do all day, anyway?” There are many folks, I’m sure, who think that a few hours a week in preparation for Sunday sermons is the extent of what might be on any clergy calendar. My friend’s daily diary was impressive indeed as she listed the meetings, Bible study led, visits made, conversations had, more meetings, a stop in on the young children in the preschool, worship preparation,a lunch meeting and on and on into the evening. It was a whirlwind of purposeful, soulful activity. I smiled thinking of her moving through that most holy of days.

If we are awake and aware, each day is a holy day. And not just for religious “professionals.” Each day holds the gift of communion, transformation, enlightenment, epiphany, even redemption. When I think about the day I have just lived, it held all this and so much more.

I began the morning having coffee with a friend and colleague. It had been my plan to simply catch up on her life and also check in on some worship details for a service she leads. But our conversation turned to challenging subject matter in which there was anger, disappointment, confession, absolution and eventually deep understanding and love. This had certainly not been on my to do list, had not been a part of my plan, but our time together became a gift of transformation that brought about an eventual feeling of freedom.

Lunchtime found me surrounded by some of our church’s true saints. Every Wednesday two groups of worker bees gather at church. One threads needles and creates quilts for the crisis nursery and others who need the warmth of lovingly created comfort. The others pick up paint brushes and hammers and fix anything that needs to be fixed around the building. We, literally, would be a mess without them! I had been asked to offer the grace for their noontime picnic. As we ate our summer meal of hotdogs, brats and potato salad, stories were shared of all the hours they have worked over nearly two decades together. Savoring my meal, I looked around the table and also noted who was no longer present, whose hands no longer painted or repaired. I had the sense that I was not the only one aware that while we were sharing a simple lunch we were also sharing a Meal of Memory.

A large portion of my afternoon was spent with our District Superintendent as we looked back over the past year at goals I had set and what this year’s work had been. O.K. It was a kind of yearly job review. But in the course of our time together we shared our hopes and our frustrations with what it means to be this body called church. Having the opportunity to spew out all the good, the bad and the ugly of a year in one’s life can be a humbling experience. Today I was privileged to eat the feast of humility and drink the cup of mercy.

These three events in my day were sandwiched in between phone calls and emails much like most working people. Also, like most people, I carried the brokenness and longing of my life into every word formed, every phone call answered, every conversation. It is holy work, this living. It is somehow made even holier when we take the time to notice the sacred threads that bind each moment together into a whole.

John O’Donohue ends this poem called ‘The Inner History of the Day’:

“So, at the end of the day, we give thanks
For being betrothed to the unknown
And for the secret work
Through which the mind of the day
And the wisdom of the soul become one.”

We give thanks and look forward to the living of yet another holy day.

Getting Wet

“Most of what we do in our worldly life is geared toward our staying dry, looking good, not going under. But in baptism, in lakes and rain and tanks and fonts, you agree to do something that’s a little sloppy because at the same time it’s also holy, and absurd. It’s about surrender, giving in to all those things we can’t control; it’s a willingness to let go of balance and decorum and get drenched.”
~ Anne Lamott, Traveling Mercies: Some Thoughts on Faith

We began our worship yesterday with these words. We laughed. It is vey good now and then to begin worship with laughter. We do it so seldom. We laughed because most us, the adults anyway, knew the truth of these words. Like most humans who can be open to knowing that the joke-finger is pointed in their direction, we joined forces in common laughter and a certain humility. Yes, each of us had spent considerable energy trying to ‘stay dry’ in life.

But baptism was the central movement of our worship together. We were there to celebrate one of our little ones whose birth we had anticipated and then celebrated, whose personality we have been blessed to watch evolve. We have walked with her parents through these early months of her life and stand looking forward to watching her as she becomes. As we gathered to lay hands on her and to bless her with water combined from many sources, we all knew we were engaged in something holy and perhaps absurd. After all, who can understand it really? And yet, as humans, we try to cobble together the words that tell her and her parents that we are with them in this journey. Most importantly we all affirm once again that we believe the Holy travels with us. Even when we do not know it or understand what it means. Even when we don’t feel as if we are worthy, or together enough, or even much of a ‘believer.’ Even when we don’t get it or understand what it all might means. Even when our primary aim is to stay dry.

I know that throughout my life I have certainly spent a considerable amount of time and energy trying to stay dry and look good. I have probably also spent even more effort trying not to go under, not to send myself spiraling into a hole I feared I’d never crawl out of. I’ve twisted my self into shapes and knots only a contortionist should be able to do in order to keep control. Any of this sound familiar to you?

And yet, as Anne Lamott reminds us, this life we have been given is really mostly about surrender. The more we surrender to the surprises and unknowns, the more we allow ourselves to free fall into the Mystery that holds us. It is the dress rehearsal for the ultimate surrender we each reach at life’s end. A daily practice of surrender can bring more than any of us could ever imagine and promises to keep our daily walk spicy and even exciting.

Baptism means many things to many people. But as I see it, this act we in the Christian household call a sacrament, is something visible to us of something that dwells within, whose ingredients are pure grace. Its action binds strangers and friends, guests and enemies, young and old, those who agree and those who argue, into a common, messy life together using that element of which we are all made and through which we are all sustained: water. Swimming through it all is the Creator whose image is imprinted on each of us.

Yesterday as we greeted this one so new to this messy, wonderful world, we did so with water and hope and love. “Come on in! The water is fine!”, we said.

And so it is. And so it is.

Initial Impulse

No doubt most people have favorite buildings. These are structures that connect us with a memory or an experience from childhood. A house. A barn. A cabin. They can be buildings where important events happened for us. Where we met our first love. Where we went to school. Where we had some life transforming moment from which we were changed forever. Just driving by such a building can stir in us physical reactions that can catapult us to another time. Our cheeks can turn hot or our palms can sweat. We can smile or find our stomach beginning to church.

One of my favorite building is the Carondolet Center on the grounds of the College of St.Catherine. It is an old building, the former residence of the Sisters of St. Joseph. While a few of the sisters may still live there or nearby, it is now filled with several different offices of various organizations. However, unlike many office settings, these still carry the grandeur and beauty of a by-gone day. The hallways and all the rooms are furnished with an attention to beauty and hospitality. The walls are decorated with lovely art, the furniture is arranged in cozy groupings just right for quiet conversation. Climbing the polished stone stairs between the floors, I am always aware of the grooves in each step that have been worn away by years of faithful women going to and from prayer. In little nooks and crannies, there is often a glimpse of a vase with fresh flowers or a single candle burning.

One day this week I was in this lovely building for a couple of meetings. Going from one floor one floor to the next, I reached out for the door handle that led into an enclosed hallway. Just as I was reaching on one side someone was obviously pushing from the other. The door came open quite fast, startling both of us on each side of the threshold. “Welcome!” said the sister with whom I was now face-to-face. “Thank you.” I said without thinking. She smiled and stepped aside and I made my way on through the door.

What struck me in this encounter was how quickly the words were on this sister’s lips. “Welcome.” Most people in this situation would have said “Excuse me.” or “Sorry.” Or even “Oops!” But her initial reaction was “Welcome.” The invitation, even blessing, was full and genuine.

Oh, how I long to be one of those people whose first reaction in any situation is to be welcoming. To be a person who is ready to open a door without fear or anxiety or even hope and to simply say “welcome” to whatever, or whomever, is on the other side. And to do so without forethought because it is my way walking in the world. I think it is the kind of welcome we all hope for, long for, when we cross any doorstep. It is the welcome people especially hope for when they enter our places of worship. Sometimes it is what they receive but often their presence is invisible to those who have forgotten how to see. What a sad thought and a missed opportunity.

Emerson once wrote: “Never lose an opportunity of seeing anything that is beautiful; for beauty is God’s handwriting – a wayside sacrament. Welcome it in every fair face, in every fair sky, in every fair flower, and thank God for it as a cup of blessing.”

The invitation is this: As we go about this summer weekend, may ‘welcome’ be ready on our lips as a sacrament. May it be our initial impulse at the opening of each door, the greeting of each stranger, the rising of each day.

Blessed be.

Morning Harp

I began my morning with the music of the harp. What a privileged and blessed person I am! To be in the presence of someone playing the harp is a profoundly deep experience. The physical beauty of the instrument itself is, for one thing, a sight to behold. So many curves and turns. So many strings. Sitting in chapel as I allowed this intricate and yet simple sound wash over me, it was quite clear to me why many pieces of art show angels playing the harp. What other creature in all Creation might be more suited for the job?

Most cultures have some form of the harp. There are small hand harps from places in Africa. There are shapely harps strummed by musicians across South and Central America. The harp that comes from the Celtic people across Great Britain and Ireland creates music so sweet and tender, it makes me cry. And then there are the various classical harps in numerous sizes that often grow as the harpist grows in both stature and skill. Perhaps it is the desire across cultures to make this music of the angels.

The Psalmists speak of praising God with the harp:
Praise God!
Praise God with trumpet sound;
Praise God with lute and harp !
And in the first book of Chronicles, David is said to have ‘commanded the chiefs of the Levites to appoint their kindred as the singers to play on musical instruments, on harps and lyres and cymbals, to raise loud sounds of joy.’ And in one of the great psalms of lament, Psalm 137, the people were in such despair that’ there we sat down and wept when we remembered Zion. On the willows there we hung up our harps.’ Their hearts were so broken even music could not save them.

The harp is indeed a powerful instrument that can inspire and bring about great emotion. It can also create a calm and peace that is palpable. Which is what I experienced this morning and what caused me to consider the idea of how the world might be different if everyone had the blessing of harp music to begin their morning. I thought of our elected officials at the Minnesota Capitol right now pulling out one another’s hair and slinging vile and angry words at one another. What if their morning began with them being told to “Please sit down and listen to the harpist before we begin our work together.”? What about our world leaders who find it impossible to understand our shared humanity and often resort to war and conflict? I can imagine them all gathered around their conference tables, eyes cast down to the important papers before them. A harpist moves to their instrument and begins one of those flowing, mind-bending arpeggios up and down the strings until the thought of arguing and bickering drifts right out the window.

I think of all the children around the world who could be soothed and nurtured by a few choruses of ‘All Through the Night’ played gently on the harp. Or the parent who is worried about so many things……rent, the next meal, a job, the health of their child…..being surrounded by the strong chords of ‘You’ll Never Walk Alone’ played confidently on the harp strings.

These are only flights of fancy, I know. But they flow out of my sacred experience of being blessed by music that has carried me throughout the day. And for this I offer my gratitude to both the harpist and the Universe that could imagine such an instrument, such a sound.

 

 

 

Carols in Summer

O Come, O Come Emmanuel
And ransom captive Israel
that mourns in lonely exile here
until the Son of God appear.
Rejoice! Rejoice! Emmanuel
Shall come to thee, O Israel.

This day began by singing this traditional Advent hymn. In the workshop I am in this week, there is opening worship designed to travel through the seasons of the church year. So on this rainy, almost summer morning, I found myself singing an Advent hymn. It was a wonderful surprise and set a tone for the day. From then on everything felt a little out of season, a little ‘off’, not a bad thing for a week dedicated to creativity.

The invitation to sing this Advent tune came with the spoken words ‘this is one we all know.’ Clearly, many around the circle did not know this hymn. I heard my own voice and the man next to me spit out the words. But I heard the majority of the other voices carrying the tune and doing that “watermelon” thing people do with their mouths when they do no really know the words but don’t want to let on. I realized then that knowing hymns by heart is probably a dying art. In fact memorization of any kind is probably something that is quickly falling by the wayside.

This realization led me to think of one of my friends who is also a minister. He talks about how he requires his confirmation class to memorize Psalm 23 and the Apostle’s Creed. He tells them this will be good when they find themselves in jail. “And make no mistake about it”, he says, “at some point of your life, you will be in jail.” I can just imagine those adolescent faces staring at him in total a disbelief spiced with a dose of fear. What does he know that they don’t?

Of course, my friend was speaking mostly metaphorically. At some time in nearly everyone’s life, we have the experience of feeling as if we are held captive by something. Fear. Despair. Failure. Success. Disappointment. So many ways in which the bars can create a cell out of which we feel we will never escape. In those moments, what are the phrases that can bring comfort or at least distraction? What have we committed to memory that will entertain us when we cannot flip a switch or press a button to ease the pain? Any Shakespeare in our brains? How about Thoreau or Whitman? At least one good line of Mary Oliver?

It is a good thing to consider the words we want to stay with us when others have flitted off or can’t be found no matter how hard we try. I think of the poems I would like to be able to pull out in the dark of night when all manner of shadows threaten. Or the songs I want to be able to continue to sing as I pass from this world into eternity. Perhaps then it is an equally good thing to begin to memorize these lines that will be companions. The poetry. The songs. The scripture. A little of each.

What are the words you would like to have in your personal memory library? Summer, at one point, was a time to read the books there was never time for during the school year. Maybe this is the summer for reviving the forgotten art of memorization.

Anyone know the words to ‘O Come, O Come, Emmanuel’?

Two Shoes

“When you realize how perfect everything is you will tilt your head back and laugh at the sky”.
~The Buddha

This morning I began a writing class at the seminary from which I graduated. The class I am taking is nestled among others on the theme of spirituality and the arts. My sense is that it is going to be a lovely week of not only writing but also having the opportunity to hear the fine words of many of the writers I already love and few that are new to me. It is a gift to be able to spend these early summer mornings in this way.

Halfway through one of the morning’s writing exercises, my eyes wandered to the floor in front of me. I noticed that one of the people I had met earlier was wearing two different shoes. They were both the rubbery, comfy clogs known as ‘Crocs’. One was red and one was orange. My observation had already been that she was a friendly, free spirit and as I saw her shoes, the deal was sealed. I liked her a lot!

The Croc-wearer made me think of a North Carolina friend who always wears two different socks. Why, you ask? So every time he looks down at his feet he is reminded not to take himself too seriously. I smile just thinking of him and this fashion statement turned personality check. Perhaps there is a similar reason for the woman with different shoes.

All this varied foot wear sent me on a time machine to a time when my Aunt Nell showed up at church one Sunday in her go-to-meetin’ best. Worship was held and adults and children alike attended Sunday school. Toward noon we all stood outside on the lawn and the church steps talking in that slow, meandering ways adults love and children hate. The children were hungry and tired of being held captive by our Sunday clothes. Sidling up to my Mother who stood in the circle of women talking, I heard my mom say, “Well, Nell. You have on two different shoes!” We all looked down and sure enough, there she stood with two different, black high heeled shoes. I remember being dumb founded by this. How was it possible to wear two shoes that weren’t mates, especially ones with heels? Didn’t she feel unbalanced all morning?

This is one of my clearer childhood memories. But as I pull it out from the deep recesses of my brain, what strikes me is that what I remember is the laughter. I remember being surrounded by the high pitched laughter of my mother and grandmother and the women of the church. And I remember Aunt Nell laughing at herself till she doubled over. These women who most often I had observed cooking, cleaning, teaching, and caring for children, were also capable of laughing like giddy school girls. Standing in the best clothes any of them owned, they laughed and laughed and somehow, through my gender and my close proximity to the shoe discovery, I became a part of their world. Thinking back now, I imagine them later in the day, after the Sunday dinner had been consumed and the dishes were done, sitting around telling the story of Aunt Nell’s mismatched shoes. Perhaps the whole family got a second helping of laughter out of it.

It doesn’t take much to bring a little joy into any day. Most of us(I am pointing a big finger at myself here.) take ourselves and life far too seriously. Maybe each of us could do with a little creative footwear. And a good laugh.

Cups of Hope

“Surely there is a future, and your hope will not be cut off.” Proverbs 23:18

In my early morning trek across the Mendota Bridge, I noticed a flash of red out of the corner of my eye. I turned quickly to see what it was. There, embedded in the chain link fence that joins the massive stone bridge structure, were bright, red plastic cups. The cups, normally used for holding picnic beverages, spelled out one, simple word: ‘HOPE’. Seeing this message, I felt a warmth wash over me that felt like a healing. As traffic rushed by on both sides, as bikers huffed and puffed across the windy, expanse of the bridge, someone had offered an urging, a blessing, for whatever the day might hold.

My mind was instantly filled with a thousand questions. Who created this message? Why the cups? Why in this particular place, on this specific stretch of highway? How did they know the cups would fit so perfectly? Why did they feel the need to offer this word to the world? Was the word used as a noun or as a verb, as command or comfort? So many questions continued to flood my mind as I journeyed on.

In many places of our world, hope is certainly in short supply. I think of all the places where war continues to rage with no end in sight and of all the lives that will be damaged by the fighting on just this day alone. I think of the many places that are a headline one day and forgotten the next. Places like Japan and Joplin. What kind of hope do the people in these places need to help them get up and face each day? I think of the people in MInnesota who struggle each day to make a life with few resources and no safety net. I am equally aware that the systems that have provided them with basic needs are in serious jeopardy as our elected officials seem incapable of working out any compromises for our state budget. These are just the big picture places where hope is waiting to be born. To say nothing of individual lives that long for little sips of hope as they go to work, out to play, off to school, out to lunch, to bed at night.

Seeing all those cups, I was reminded of one of the things those of us who serve communion often say as we offer the Lord’s Supper. Raising the chalice into the outstretched hand of another, we say “Cup of Hope.” As the offered Bread of Life is dipped into the cup, the receiver takes these simple elements and makes them a part of their own body. Eating and drinking these simple gifts are both symbol and reality.

Whoever took the time, perhaps in the dark of night, to spell out the word ‘Hope’ with red plastic cups must have known that there are times when just one cup will not do. Sometime we need multiple cups of hope. For those who are in this very place, longing to drink their fill of a hope that will quench a powerful thirst, I offer prayers. May you step up to a table…..or a bridge….which will bring all you need. And may your cup overflow.

Lessons Learned

This morning I watched as the children who board the school bus in front of our house got on for the last time this school year. I had already heard from one of them the many things she was looking forward to this week. The final week of school was to be filled with fun things…..water games, field sports, ice cream, many special outings to various parks and other amusements. The learning of this year is complete. They have, no doubt, cleaned out their desks and have a grocery bag of things to take home. Tests are finished. What was hoped to be accomplished is past, whether the goal was met or not.

As the kids got on the bus I noticed the changes in some of them. All are taller, their now longer legs attached to torsos that are beginning to lengthen or fill out in ways that point to the development to come. I watched as one of the moms took a picture of them boarding the bus, a hoped-for mirror of ‘before’ and ‘after’ which will fill the scrapbook of the first and last days of school. Only one will move on to middle school next year and he patiently stood as his mom snapped one more picture of his elementary school days. I dare say he will not stand for such a thing come fall. But she does not know that yet.

I thought of the year that has gone by for these students. They have learned many important new skills, valuable information, and have overcome obstacles that are a part of moving from childhood to adolescence. Many have also made new friends and come to love teachers they weren’t too sure of in September. Some have learned to deal with words that have hurt them, ways they have been ridiculed by those who make it their business to make certain children’s lives miserable. My prayer is that they have acquired ways to heal those wounds so they do not carry them into the next school year or into the rest of their lives. Some have been so inspired and moved by something they have learned that it has planted a seed that will carry them toward their life’s work. Others have continued to struggle to understand what the subjects they study have to do with their real life. All this and so much more happens in any given school year.

Those of us who are no longer in the school year mode often forget this rhythm, this nine month attempt to grow in new ways. But if we allow ourselves to reflect on these past school year months, we will all come to see that we, too, have learned new skills, gained some information that has shaped who we have become now that summer is here. Some of us have made new friends and lost very dear ones. Many of us have found new teachers we never thought we’d find. Like those elementary school kids, many have also had to use deflective armor to ward of hurtful words and rise to our highest selves to not be taken down by some real life playground bully. If we are blessed, we may also have learned something that planted a seed for the ‘what next’ in our lives, something we never thought we would have the opportunity to experience, something that may move us down our life’s path in an adventure we only dreamed about in September.

September to June doesn’t seem like a very long time. But when measured by all the lessons, tests, friendships, teachers, we might experience, it can be an amazing nine months. As adults, we have most likely not grown taller. Many of simply hope to not grow shorter! But hopefully we have grown in ways that have made us healthier and stronger. No one captured our entry into the journey in September and no one came to snap our photo as we headed out into this particular morning. But make no mistake about it, we each have changed in ways that are visible and invisible.

May God add a blessing to this school year for the children and for all of us.

Sidewalk Prophet

In an effort to get a jump on the heat that was to arrive yesterday, I headed out early for my morning exercise. Making my way through my neighborhood and along the bluffs of the Mississippi River, I encountered many other runners, walkers and bikers who were doing the same. We were all out early trying to get in some cardio before the heat and humidity could make the process unbearable.

Along this particular stretch of sidewalk I frequent are poems printed directly into the concrete. They were printed there last year as a part of a project by the city. I love coming upon these words, now permanent, in the concrete I so often pound with my running shoes. I always take a moment to reread the lines that were, I imagine, labored over by poets as they sought to make beauty, humor, wisdom out a few, spare words.

But yesterday brought an added surprise. As the humidity began to rise, I made my way up the shaded side of the street. There, in yellow and blue sidewalk chalk were the words:“The world is a hologram. Make it your adventure.” What a great gift for a soon-to-be hot day! This invitation to adventure began to open up before me. Suddenly my day began to have more possibility that it had had just a few minutes ago. I wondered at the person who had printed this message with such intention. Were they hiding behind the curtained windows nearby to see who stopped to read their message?

Moving on down the block, I found another message: “Life can be fun….if you are on the right path.” Now they had my attention. Yes, life can be fun, is fun, but I so often take myself too seriously to remember. Does that ever happen to you?  I am not sure what the writer meant by ‘right’ path but I am going to assume it is the one that connects with that ‘adventure’ message. If we see life as an adventure, fun must be in it someplace.

Not too much farther along the sidewalk were just two simple words: “Be curious.” Ahhh, yes. Curiosity. The gift and playground of all creative people….artists, inventors, teachers, parents, and especially children. So the message of this sidewalk prophet was to embrace the adventure, to have fun and to be curious. My day was being seeded for something I hadn’t planned, that did not exist on any to do list I had made earlier.

And finally one last message: “Life is good.” Indeed, it is. And my life was made better by one person who took the time to grab a piece of chalk and head out to the sidewalk. Leaving a message in the spirit of a child this person gave shape to my day and lifted my spirits in ways they will never know. It was a gift. It was fun. It was an adventure.

The sidewalk prophet’s words were not permanent in concrete like the poets’. A rain or a lawn sprinkler could erase them at any moment. But nothing the heat of the day could conjure up could dampen my lifted spirits after reading their words.

And so I give thanks for this person who had an idea and followed through. Blessings on you, dear one. You made more of an impact than you might ever know.