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Saturday, August 27, 2011

Portraits of Grief

As we approach the 10 year anniversary of September 11, 2001,
a few things came to mind:
  • We have become more aware of our everyday surroundings, especially during travel and probably a little more judgmental of our fellow humans.
  • We know all too well how real terrorism is in the world.
  • We have mixed reactions to the long, extended search for and eventual death of Osama bin Laden.
  • What we may not know...The life details of the victims
The NY Times ran a series called "Portraits of Grief" shortly thereafter the events of 9/11 and have updated their version.  The stories of these men and women are moving.

May it help us prepare to commemorate this day in American history.

Sunday, August 21, 2011

Venture Forward

"It is this belief in a power larger than myself and other than myself, 
which allows me to venture into the unknown and even the unknowable."
~ Maya Angelou 
West African symbol of life transformation meaning:
"change or transform your character"
Change is always among us.  That's what makes humanity so fascinating; decisions, actions, behaviors, etc. are always on the move, leaving us in a constant state of asking...what will happen next?  And the tough part for many of us is learning to feel "ok" in the presence of such unpredictability. 

I begin a new job on September 1st. It's familiar enough territory for me, seeing as I'm not changing companies, just positions into a field I formerly worked. But the process of deciding TO change was hard enough when I felt like so much had changed in my life recently.  What did I do to make the decision?  I weighed two very important questions my sister posed to me early in the process:

1. Do you WANT to make the change?
2. Will this change elicit happiness?

Such simple questions- and while reminiscent of Michael Himes' questions about discerning vocation (check out Doing the Truth in Love for his take)- it took me a long time to answer them honestly, recognizing that not everyone important in my life would agree with my decision.  

My "change" happened when I took a step back and trusted that sense of relief in my body and heart and that said, "Yes, this is needed, and YOU will be happy."  I knew it was my God whispering to trust and venture into that unknown, even if it means I am anxious and scared at times.  I am human after all.

~ submitted by D.M.F. (to submit your thoughts to thread, email mdsacredthreads@gmail.com)


Friday, August 12, 2011

"Sending My Daughter to War" by Ann Marie Mahoney

My daughter is a thrill junkie.  She was a shy child and a reserved teenager with a dry sense of humor like her father.  Although thoughtful and deliberate as an adult, she inherited her father’s calm ability to dance on the edge of danger.  She is a distance runner, a baker, a problem solver, and a military police officer in the United States Army.  My daughter is a warrior.  This tall, lanky young woman of thirty, who lives by the principals of duty, honor and country, would rather hump 60 pounds of gear around Afghanistan than be “bored”  guarding an American Army training post.  Thus, after a brief leave at home I did the “good-bye” trip to Logan Airport, again, to send her onto her third deployment to the Middle East. 
            How does a mother send her daughter to war?  I picture her in a smocked dress and patent leather shoes, dragging her stuffed friend, “Doggie” behind her.  It is startling to see photos of her in ACUs (camouflage uniform) and desert combat boots, toting an M-4 rifle.  We raise our daughters to be independent and self-sufficient.  We encourage them to pursue their dreams, to become doctors and business owners, pilots and scientists but we never imagine they will choose a life of rushing into harm’s way.
            My daughter has sacrificed much to pursue a career as a soldier.  She has missed attending the weddings of her best friends, joining classmates at reunions, celebrating holidays with her family, even dressing up and going out on a Saturday night.  Instead, she has worked with the Iraqi police in Baghdad and insured the safety of churches in Mosul.  Saturday night is just another stretch of military police action in a foreign land.
            I have not mastered the role of mother of a soldier in a time of war but I have come to rely on several virtues to manage the stress.  I have learned to be patient with those who don’t understand that political views have nothing to do with supporting a child in a war zone.  I have learned to quietly persevere through the constant worry that grinds me down.  I have learned to cherish hope for her safe return that is buoyed by her infrequent calls and e-mails.  I have learned to find joy in baking cookies and shipping them to her week after week.
            I hang the blue star banner on my front door – the same one my mother-in-law hung when my husband went to Vietnam- in recognition of her combat service.  I light the candle in the upstairs window that will burn continuously as the outward sign of my silent but anxious vigil.  I wear a small blue star pin on my lapel to honor her faithfulness to duty.  Mary worried about Jesus on his mission but willingly took each day as it came, even when it meant helplessly watching her beloved son die.  I, too, will treasure all the things my daughter is in my heart (Luke 2:51b).
            The only thrill for me, however, will be meeting my daughter at Logan Airport a year from now.

*Special thanks to Ann Marie Mahoney for her submission, her courage and her continued hope. To submit an entry, please email mdsacredthreads@gmail.com

Monday, August 8, 2011

Poetic Reflection by Meg Turner

The End of My Marriages

My long loveless marriage ended this month.
January weather fits its civil dissolution
White, cold, unquestionably dormant
No sweetness.

Did you know that in 1995 Mother Theresa
Appeared in a cinnamon roll
To a coffee shop customer in Nashville?

This did not astonish me.
I already knew the power of pastry.
My affair with sugary pleasures
Was my marriage’s twin.

If that saintly nun could be embodied in a roll
Surely I could find affection in a confectionary.
Confusing  warm saccharine stickiness with loving sex

This affair is much harder to end than my marriage
Rather than a court of law
I need a court of caring.
Where I will judge myself

Worthy of the restraint needed
To know the difference between real love
And an apparition in a bun

(*special thanks to Meg Turner for sharing her poetry and creative wisdom. To submit an entry, please email to mdsacredthreads@gmail.com)