Sunday Quote

Each friend represents a world in us,

a world possibly not born until they arrive.

Anais Nin

It’s quite simple really

I spoke to my mother on the phone this afternoon. I had missed her call earlier in the week when she had hoped to persuade me to come home for a visit. And when she expressed that wish today I had to decline,  due to a busy schedule in the next weeks. She was disappointed and so I listened,  as best I could, providing a presence across the phone.  She spoke of the things of her day and the up’s and down’s of her week. Mainly simple things, a way of masking greater concerns. My job was to be silent. No greater work for those moments.

Ironically this week I had thought of helping in a bigger way. Sometimes I can think that life and support means grand gestures, a greater endeavour. And I spend my time planning for that in the future, to reach out more. However, what I realize this weekend is that the bigger picture can easily distract and become a way of avoiding. Even something as simple as kindness can take on  proportions that are not human. It misses the real family member who needs us. And then it is no longer love but rather our own day dreams pulling us away.

Real love encourages us to embrace the ordinariness of life. Whatever so distracts us from seeing and loving the familiar of the daily has the potential to be unhealthy. These distractions can appear in all shapes and sizes, many of them wholesome aspirations. However, they put our hopes for life elsewhere – on some shelf we may never reach – and pull us away from what is under our noses.

What is love? It is such a deep need of the human heart. Can it be as simple as being present to one another as fully as we can? I remember speaking to an old monk in Ireland once, who told me that life was quite straightforward really. It consisted of loving, he said, to the best of our ability, those whom we encountered each day. The people who were in our life at that moment.  Most of our days offer these simple encounters, little things –  dropping people off at the airport, making lunch and telling each other that things will work out. Maybe that is the essence of this life that I love – we are here,  we have each other, and do the best we can with what little time we are given. No dramatic gestures, no spectacular love, just ordinary stuff like partners, friends, mothers, sisters, phone calls and listening in silence.

Trusting in goodness

Everything has to do with loving and not loving. Rumi

Sometimes we know things better when we get some moments of calm. We can sense things easier. We see that there is something profound in people, something that yearns. It is sometimes covered up by fear and defences. It can get hassled and rushed. But it is there. We do not necessarily know what to call it.  But that “something” is good.

You sense it on a quiet morning, sitting with a coffee, when thoughts about the meaning of this life come easy. And after thoughts the memories  come…… warm memories, about the goodness of people, their smile and the love that has been given to you in your life.

And you can trust. You sense that, somewhere,  beneath the daily routine, beyond the constant planning you engage in, goodness is slowly coming into being. Your sitting may be nothing more than getting out of the way and allowing that happen. You see that kindness and love is what you seek, and it is never far away.  You see this clearer as you get older.  It has been constant all your life. It is the same in those you love. And it comes closer and closer.

Sunday Quote

The one guardian of life is love,

but to be loved you must love.

Marsilio Ficino


The Sun Never Says

Even after all this time
The sun never says to the earth,

“You owe Me.”

Look what happens
With a love like that,

It lights the
Whole Sky.

Hafiz

When someone is ill

The word “compassion” literally means “to suffer with”. It seems quite unlikely that suffering with another person would bring joy. Yet being with a person in pain, offering simple presence to someone in despair, sharing with a friend times of confusion and uncertainty. . . such experience can bring us deep joy. Not happiness, not excitement, not great satisfaction, but the quiet joy of being there for someone else and living in deep solidarity with our brothers and sisters in this human family.  Often this is a solidarity in weakness, in brokenness, in woundedness, but it leads us to the center of joy, which is sharing our humanity with others.

Henri Nouwen