Category Archives: Soul Tending

There is Enough

I am so angry.
Tears well behind my eyes.
My heart feels heavy and broken.

Why do people need to abuse their power?
Why do they need to reduce the vibrant, powerful people among them
to less than who they are?
Why do they need to humiliate, disempower and intimidate?
Don’t they know?

There is enough for all of us.
There IS enough for all of us.
Together, we grow in strength.
Everyone is enriched by respecting the gifts of others.
All of us – even those with dissenting voices – are needed
to build strong organizations, institutions, and communities.

Why must those who speak truth be silenced?
Truth is so powerful.
It can destroy the fragile illusion of control.

My heart aches for the slow road we walk towards freedom.

Kare
5/12/11

The Great Amen

The Great Amen
Takes root in me.
Growing deep.
Shifting, changing
The landscape of my life.

As I let go of safe ground,
My insides quake.
The land beneath my feet
Rearranges itself,
Leaving me standing in
Uncharted territory.

Gingerly, I walk this new landscape,
Uncertain, uncomfortable with
the unfamiliar path ahead.

Deep and dark rumblings within me
Echo the Great Amen.

So be it.

-KARE
4/21/11

What ‘s Next?

Each year I spend part of my New Year’s at a Korean Women’s Spa. I spend my time soaking in mineral pools, resting in heated salt and sand rooms. and eating delicious and healthy Korean stir fry. The day culminates with receiving a skin scrub to get rid of the old and a skin moisturizing massage to bless the new.

This New Year’s Eve as I lived this treasured ritual, a sadness walked with me. I tried to breathe into it, but questions kept badgering me. What’s next? What was this trip all about?

This experience was such a big surprise and huge gift, I think I expected it to lead lead to something else big. I have this inner mantra that tells me that each life experience is a stepping stone to something else, so this huge experience must lead to some huge change in me or for me and my family. But it didn’t. We came home to the same lovely home, to the same loving community, to our same good work and this haunting question, What’s next?

After my scrub and moisturizing massage at the spa, I went to the salt room and curled up on the floor, soaking in the heat, breathing in the smell of herbs, and resting in the womb like darkness of the room. I prayed. I asked God, “What’s next? What am I supposed to do with this experience? What am I missing here?” What I heard back is this:

You are missing the gift. Just breath in the experience. You do not have to do anything with it, except accept the joy of it. You did not take Sam to the Beatles experience expecting him to come home and become a rock star. You gave him the experience because you knew he would love it and that you would love watching his delight. So it is with you. You were given this experience because I knew you would love every second of it and that I would love watching your delight. That is it. That is the gift. Relax now and enjoy the memory and let it take root in you however it will.

The sadness began to lift and my weariness subsided. I got up, got dressed and went home to enjoy my life and to welcome the New Year.

I Can Do This!

I’ve always been an odd duck in my family, so when I informed my siblings that I wanted to bathe my mom’s body and prepare her for burial, they just shook their heads and said, “That’s fine, just don’t expect us to be in the room.”

We discovered mom was dying after she fell the day after her birthday in 2005. She went to the hospital with 2 black eyes from where her glass frames smashed into her face as she hit the floor. She had no major injuries from the fall, but her examination and tests for what may have caused her to fall, led to an unexpected discovery that she had colon cancer which had metastasized to the liver. After 2 weeks of intense pain and high fevers, mom died.

After everyone left her room, I got a basin and filled it with soapy water. The hospice nurse joined me as I began to wash the body of the very woman who brought me life. I washed her face, her arms, her hands, her breasts, her belly, her genitals, her legs. The nurse gently lifted her up on her side and held her so that I could wash her backside. As I washed, my younger sister, Kari, walked into the room. Standing next to the nurse she held on to mom’s upper body, until I was finished. Then she and the nurse gently laid mom down. I lifted her from the other side, handed the cloth to Kari and asked her to wash mom from that side. She handed the cloth to the nurse and said, “I’ll help you hold her.” As she reached the foot of the bed, she stopped in her tracks and said “I Can Do This!” She then turned around and took the cloth from the nurse. Tenderly, she washed the body of our mom.

After mom was bathed, we were preparing to wash her hair when my sister, Jill walked in. When she discovered that we were getting ready to wash mom’s hair, she said, “I used to do Mom’s hair every week. I can do that.” So with the help of the nurse and Kari, Jill washed Mom’s hair. Then she and Kari blow dried and curled mom’s hair. They put on her favorite lipstick and we dressed her in a pair of silk pajamas that Mom had been saving for a special occasion.

When we were finished, the rest of our brothers and sisters walked into the room and stood around Mom’s bed. Tears flowed as we gazed on this woman, who looked like herself for the first time in 2 weeks. This healing image of Mom replaced the images of her suffering. It is our final memory of our beloved mother.

As I reflect on this experience, I am struck by Kari’s courage. When Spirit beckons, the easiest response is to step back to a safe place. Our insides quake and we think we cannot possibly do this thing we are called to do. We run to a safe place… food, alcohol, facebook, computer games, television, anything that insulates us from the voice of our spirit calling us into life. The easy thing would have been for Kari to hold onto Mom. She didn’t. She stopped. She moved into her courage. And with a courageous, “I Can Do This”, she followed the voice of her Spirit.

My Child

Precious Child,
My deepest dream
is that you will know
that my love for you
is deep
and steady
and strong.

Though there are many things
your can say or do that
would cause my heart to ache with sadness,
my blood to boil with anger,
or my soul to grieve deeply,

There is nothing, my dear one,
Nothing
you can say
or do
to stop me from
loving you.

You are my precious,
my beloved
my dear child.
My love surrounds you
always.

Daddy Love

One cold November evening, my husband, Niko, our 5 year old son, Sam and I went to a birthday party in the old school building next to our church. As the evening wound down, Niko started to help with clean up and I decided to take Sam home to bed. Sam and I left out the side door and got into our car.

As we backed out of our parking space and started to move forward, I noticed to our left, up against the Church building, a man sleeping on the sidewalk.

As we turned the corner, I asked, “Did you see that, Sam?”
“What?” He asked.
Did you see that homeless man sleeping on the ground next to the church?”
“Go back, Mom. Go Back! I have got to see that!”

I stopped the car and slowly backed up just to the point where Sam could see around the corner, but not so far that our car lights would disturb the sleeping man. I paused for a moment and then proceeded forward.

“Did you see him, Sam?” I inquired.
“Yep.” He responded. Sam was silent for a long moment and then blurted out, “Finally! Finally, I got to see someone sleeping on the streets. I’ve always wanted to see someone sleeping on the streets.”

I was speechless. I had hoped that seeing this person would illicit a compassionate response from Sam. I was hoping it would instill in him a sense of gratitude for all we have. I was appalled that his response seemed so voyeuristic. Before I could challenge him, however, grace came over me.

Of course this would be his reaction. His whole life he had heard his parents talk about the homeless. He had watched us collect blankets for those who were sleeping on the streets. He had brought canned goods to Church each Sunday for those who were poor and many, many times he had heard the story of how my dad had lived on the streets for 3 years when I was just about his age. How could his 5 year old brain even begin to conceive of what it meant to sleep on the streets? All he had ever known of bedtime was snuggling with mom, being tucked in by dad and falling to sleep to the sound of their voices singing or reading to him.

As we continued to drive, I suddenly remembered that I had a wool blanket in my yoga pack in the back of the car. We did a u-turn and headed back to the old school. In protective momma mode, I decided it was better to ask Niko to help us, then to approach this stranger with our little boy at my side. We found Niko inside, mopping the floor. Together we told him about the man sleeping next to the church and asked if he would please bring the man our blanket. Niko looked at both of us deeply and said, “I’d love to.”

He took the blanket from my arms and headed towards the door. Sam followed close behind him until I stopped him at the exit and said we would wait inside for daddy to return. He looked at me with such disappointment and confusion.

“Please, Mom, please let me watch,” he cried.
“No, Sam. We are staying in here. This man deserves to be treated with dignity and respect. He is sleeping. He deserves privacy.”
“Please, Mom. I promise to be quiet. Please can I watch Dad?

I hesitated feeling very conflicted inside. Finally, I said, “OK, Sam we will go outside and watch Daddy, but we will stay far away and we will be very, very quiet. If you make any sound or do anything to disturb this man, we will come right back in.” He agreed and we quietly walked outside and stood about 20 feet away as Niko approached the stranger.

What we witnessed was a moment of pure grace. The man was lying on his right side facing the church building. Niko walked up to him. He knelt down on one knee, gently put his hand on the man’s left shoulder and asked. “Would you like a blanket?” We heard only murmurings in response. Then we watched as Niko slowly, tenderly wrapped this man in the heavy wool blanket. He started at his shoulders tucking the blanket in under his chin and moving downward towards his feet. When he got to his feet, he wrapped the excess material around and under them creating a cushion between his feet and the cold concrete underneath. Then he put one hand on the man’s hip, and another on his shoulder and tenderly wished him a good night.

I watched in wonder. It was as if it were his beloved son, my husband was tucking in and not some stranger he had never seen before. Tears streamed down my face and a prayer whispered in my heart that this moment would forever be imprinted on Sam’s soul. I prayed that he would know that this, this is what it means to be a man in our world: To go out in to the darkness and to face the unknown bearing the gifts of light, compassion, warmth and protection. In his tenderness his daddy had never been so strong.

I Wish You a Mary Christmas


Last week our host daughter, Mary, came downstairs clutching a pink hat to her chest. Mary is a vibrant young woman from Lesotho, Africa here with the Menonite Central Committee for the next year. She came into my office with her dark eyes smiling and asked, “Is this for me?”
“Where did you find it?” I replied.
“Under my pillow.”
“It must be from the Advent Fairy”, I said.
Stretching out her arms, cradling the pink hat in her hands, and with her face radiant with joy, Mary exclaimed, “I think I like this!” Into the bathroom she went. Standing before the mirror, Mary put on her new hat. Admiring herself this way and then that way, hands framing her face, Mary admired herself in her new hat. “I am a pretty lady…I love myself in my new hat…I am so beautiful…oh I like myself in this hat.” On and on she went. Joy streaming out of herself, love for herself and for her own beauty overflowing, Mary admired herself in the mirror for many minutes. Throughout the day Mary went back to the mirror several times to sneak another peak of herself. I watched in awe and wondered, “How did we white women of America lose the ability to fully appreciate and love ourselves in our bodies? My prayer for you and for me, this Christmas, is that we will sneak a peek in our mirrors and without criticism or shame proclaim our beauty and our deep joy in our own reflections. May you have a Mary Christmas.

Alone

A chorus of raindrops
Sing to Me
Come Home.
Come Home
Alone,
Come Home.

Through the valley of lonliness
And the dark wood of fear,
Come home.
Alone,
Come home.

Leave behind your harem of expectations,
Projections,
and judgements.
Shed your mantel of lonliness,
And rinse away your fear.

For you
Alone
Belong here.

You alone
Are the one
You seek.

Attunement

My full “Yes!”
Bellows from my Soul.
Attune my Astral Body.
Raise my vibration so that
I may live life
More Fully,
More Authentically,
More Powerfully,
Myself.

Sing in me a new Song,
So beautiful and true,
That the old, slow tune
Of my past existence,
No longer resonates in
This new place of myself.

Breathe into me the
Story of my life path
With such force that it
Takes my breath away
And I gulp…
I gulp in this new reality
Of ME,
Fully Lived.