Laurie Klein, Scribe

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Threshold Times—Yours, Mine—Crossing Safely

by Laurie Klein 24 Chiming In

A threshold awaits.

threshold: water and stone

Once Dreamer’s quintuple bypass surgery is scheduled, we spend an anxious week teetering on this sobering, irreversible borderline.

“Open heart surgery,” a former O.R. nurse tells us, “is a death experience.”

To mend his heart, they will stop his heart.

I’m facing my biggest fear: losing my husband of almost 44 years. A line we never imagined has been drawn. Will we cross over safely?

“We dodder through our days as if they [are] our surest belongings,” John O’Donohue writes. “No day belongs to us. Each day is a gift.”

Ready to drop

“A threshold,” O’Donohue continues, “is not an accidental line. It is an intense frontier . . . a dividing line between the past and the future.”

Crossing over, you’re changed.

As in: braving that new job. Surviving a church split. A move. Failure of projects, or friendships. Unwanted divorce.

Some thresholds are forced upon us. Some, we seek. Always, we choose.

I recently gave Dreamer this card, designed by Adrienne Hedger.

boy on the threshold

A threshold can be exciting, a gateway to a new destination. You lay plans, gather maps, pack yourself snacks.

A threshold can feel like a threat. Something must die, or be left behind.

“Courage and trust” help us cross over the “. . . shoreline of an unknown realm,” O’Donohue says.

To which I would add, the earnest prayers of others—like yourselves—which, pre-surgery, have helped us sleep at night, and reel in our dread, by day.

A threshold also acts as an invitation. A glimpse of fresh terrain: physical, emotional, intellectual, or spiritual.

beach threshold

As I write this, memory dredges up a watery scene from my youth:

“Your lake’s kinda small,” the popular, blue-eyed blond said.

Dismay rounded my pre-teen shoulders. I’d been hoping she’d stay the night.

My dad looked up from steering our boat. “Have you heard of shoreline stretcher?” he asked.

“Um . . . no-o-o-o,” she said. “How does it work?”

She had peaked his Gullibility Meter. Tongue-in-cheek, Dad described a coarse powder that homeowners sprinkled along the shore, at dusk.

“Wow! Can we take another boat ride tomorrow, Mr. B?”

Thus the Cool Girl decided to sleep over.

Next morning we went wading.

Beachcomber wading onshore

Not only was she a good sport about Dad’s practical joke, she became my good friend. A small threshold was crossed together, eased by laughter.

Now, post-surgery, our daily landscape looks different. There is pain. The walker. The siege of fatigue.

There’s also laughter. (see “Check Out Day”Caring Bridge.)

Having crossed our threshold safely, now as never before we know life is a gift. We are changed. Our shores have been stretched.

We want to live these days consciously, attuned to O’Donohue’s “undertow of possibility, always at work.”

Did I mention Dreamer is already planning our next trip?

water to air, the threshold of risk

“A life that continues to remain on the safe side of its own habits and repetitions, that never engages with the risk of its own possibility, remains an unlived life” (O’Donohue).

Are you facing a sea change? Friends, wherever you stand, however you proceed, may you cross over safely.

As for us, your ongoing prayers and presence, cards and donated meals, continue to guard, heal, and nourish our spirits. Providential. And practical.

Like a helmet. And a tiny shopping cart.

lauriekleinscribe logo

What threshold is presenting itself to you, or someone you love?

Filed Under: Immersions Tagged With: Gift, prayer, shoreline, threshold, undertow of possibility March 16, 2017

Waiting Grace, Hearts on Ice

by Laurie Klein 50 Chiming In

Spokane glitters, a city between storms. A City on Ice — as I am, waiting alone for the nurse’s update. Just down the hall, contrast dye seeps through my husband’s veins.

Shrugging off layers — jacket, scarf, vest — I pace; then feeling chilled, curl into the molded plastic chair, knees up, hugging myself.

Shrugging and hugging.

I’m trying, dying to sense God’s enveloping presence.

But waiting is hard

Ancient Celts created “encircling prayers” known as loricas (lo – RYE’ – kahs). They engraved them on Irish shields and breastplates before soldiers went into battle.

Considering Dreamer’s angiogram-in-progress, I wish I’d taken my Sharpie to his chest, made my wishes permanently known.

Christ be with me, Christ within me . . . This 8th-century lorica is attributed to St. Patrick. A sinking feeling within suggests that today I don’t quite believe it.

Only twenty minutes have passed. Nearly 44 years ago—roughly 26,426,400 minutes—Dreamer and I exchanged rings, two restless, love-struck idealists.

Dear God, let there be more years ahead.

Don’t we all wish this for those we love? Have we ever tallied the minutes of grace that have shielded and guided us?

Christ behind us, Christ before us . . . Changing the pronoun from “me” to “us” helps. A little. But returning jitters propel me upright. We wait — as well as walk — by faith, not by feelings, I tell myself. And we are never abandoned, no matter what.

Christ beside us, Christ to win us,
Christ to comfort and restore us.

I picture the ancient words pulsing within and around me, encompassing Dreamer, the nurses and cardiologist.

waiting, encircled

Christ beneath us, Christ above us . . .

Outside, light transforms high-rise windows to mirrors. Sunshine’s been scarce. Oh, for the snug comfort of my mother’s embrace.

“Coffee?” the kindly prep nurse asks. “How about toast?”

I smile, shake my head, as if stillness might somehow appease Fate. Unlucky genes. Lifestyle choices.

Christ in quiet . . .

waiting grace

Silence cushions me the way a box lined in red-purple velvet cradles a ring. I feel held.

There’s a knock at the door; test results in hand, Dr. P. enters.

“He’s resting now, slowly coming around. I didn’t do any stents today.”

I start to rise, the grin shooting up from my insoles, through my chest. Even the roots of my hair feel springy.

“Unfortunately,” he adds gently (Christ in danger . . .), “stents won’t help your husband. He has multiple blockages.”

Somehow, I keep breathing. Someone, somewhere, must be praying, lifting us before God even as I sink back into the cold, hard chair. Christ in hearts of all that love us . . .

Dreamer needs five (5!) bypasses.

Questions crowd my mind, my throat.

Dr. P. is calm, kindly, waiting for me to find my words. “He’s healthy otherwise, and still young,” the doctor concludes. “He’ll come through fine.”

Christ in voice of friend and stranger.

I wrote this post a few days ago. Today, having met the surgeon, we’re still on ice, waiting now for open-heart surgery: February 28th, 7:15 a.m.

And we’re shrugging off fear whenever we can, hugging each other often.

Friends, we’re all facing battles within ourselves, or on behalf of those we love. Could we pray Saint Patrick’s Breastplate lorica together, right now, in solidarity? I’ve paired the words with simple hand movements. Click the link below and let’s lift our prayers together . . .

https://youtu.be/ZvCNHhquxBc

“The Lord your God is with you, he is mighty to save. He will take great delight in you, he will quiet you with his love, he will rejoice over you with singing.”  Zephaniah 3:17

Oh, and about Dreamer? I’ll keep you “posted.”

Follow our journey here:

Site Link: www.caringbridge.org/visit/openheart2
Site Name: openheart2

Filed Under: Immersions Tagged With: breastplate, encircling prayer, grace, lorica February 21, 2017

Island Centerpiece, Soul Download

by Laurie Klein 40 Chiming In

Centerpiece:

A landing place for the jaded gaze

scary orchid
A scenic interruption of the mundane

Stroller as Centerpiece on the edge of the world
A visual invitation

Cruising through coral

For 10 glorious days Maui offered us multiple, exotic cameos (and a perfect getaway despite coming home pale as ever, 3 pounds heavier).

A centerpiece can surprise or transport us, like these top-lit, dream-state jellyfish.

centerpiece: jellyfish cluster

A centerpiece can appear anywhere, at any time, arresting our attention, like these patterns formed by loosening plastic film on window panes.

centerpiece: magic window

For me, creating a centerpiece feels like making an altar. It awakens the senses. Lifts the spirit. Mom taught me this.

A “found” centerpiece, like these photos, offers unique spontaneous pleasures—no work involved.

Best of all, we don’t need a tropical island to create an island of calm in our day.

What’s in a name?

Centerpiece — imagination toys with the spelling:

Scenter piece
Sent her peace
Centaur peas

I grin, yet feel a small ache. Could this be code for something worth naming?

For centuries spiritual seekers have zeroed in on a word or phrase they long to deeply experience.

A verbal centerpiece.

I’m describing a shirt-tail cousin to Lectio Divina, the monastic practice of daily reflecting on a word or phrase gleaned from scripture or other spiritual texts.

Dwelling for a day beneath a word like a banner feels bracing. A mental upgrade.

Annually, I choose a word or phrase for the coming year. Not because I’m hyper-spiritual.

No. Call me The Distraction Magnet. My soundest intentions are easily foiled. Plus I’m forgetful. I need Cliffs Notes for more aware living — preferably the haiku version. Abridged.

Words with variable interpretations nurture, guide, and challenge me.

If they pull double duty as noun and verb, all the better.

Centerpiece Word for the Year: Delight
My 2015 word

To keep things fresh, I sometimes substitute new words. Write them on jaunty place cards and sticky notes, then affix them to dashboards and mirrors. Handlebars. Calendars. Closet shelves. Cupboard doors.

I fold them into wallets and tuck them inside books I’m reading.

Like cheeky cartoon captions, well-chosen words re-focus me, streamline my thoughts. Refresh my intention.

The briefest soul download . . . in a single glance.

Sometimes they affect my Yays and Nays. They help me:

organize possibilities
curate opportunities
cull old nemeses

Centerpiece living vs feature creep

During childhood my brother craved those fluffy corner pieces on bakery cakes, inch-deep in piped ridges and clustered roses.

I preferred middle pieces, choir-girl modest beneath a skim of white icing.

Too much of anything jangles me, be it whipped lard-and-sugar, caffeine, or excess input—including Costco and media touting myriad products, ever-breaking news and images.

Give me the gist. The essence. The heart of the matter, where I can briefly rest.

And catch those small messages hidden in plain sight.

centerpiece gecko

Today I want to sense the crux of things . . .

in decor and diet
personal study
conversations, letters, emails
prayers, poems, and blog posts
events and interactions

And tonight, recount each centerpiece of the day—those created, and those found.

“It’s simple,” Mom said. “Just do this, often”:

street centerpiece

Any “found centerpieces” in your day so far? I’d love to hear about them.

Why not create one for your desk or table? Or your screen saver?

Laurie Klein, Scribe

Filed Under: Immersions Tagged With: attention, centerpiece, invitation, Lectio divina, soul download February 8, 2017

Longing: What It Wants, Where It Points

by Laurie Klein 28 Chiming In

Longing: What does it want from me? This insistent ache, at night, weighting the chest like an X-ray apron.

This unfocused energy, jangling as a florescent tube on the fritz.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Immersions Tagged With: grace, longing, regret, waiting, wellspring January 16, 2017

Epiphany and the Epic Icicle

by Laurie Klein 42 Chiming In

Rowdy wind rocks our trees. It strums our Corinthian wind chimes (Tuned to a C chord, they’re gorgeous).

I raise Dreamer’s cell phone (mine’s not as smart). With a click, I’m recording the chimes.

Flash Forward. By midnight, this list will describe my day:

Mop up dog barf
Accidentally break favorite bowl
Shovel snow
Make a nice lunch for Dreamer (which makes him sick)
Struggle with blog post
Struggle with “chimes video” (which won’t upload)
Mutter bad words
Bite tongue
Accidentally shatter the “Peace” (Marquee falls off mantel)
shatter the peace
Get car stuck in driveway

And that would be the really long driveway I already spent several days clearing, shovelful by shovelful. (Did I mention our plow’s on the fritz?)

Snow’s still coming down. And I will shovel again. Very soon.

Earlier today, with ice-flurries biting like buckshot, no let-up in sight and my stamina gone, can you picture me slumping over my shovel? Never mind I grew up in Wisconsin.

Now imagine an icicle. Measured against me, it’s taller (also gradually thickening), and it weeps a little, into a drift: A Kleincicle, stout as a thigh bone.

Seems the Epic Icicle is taxing the eaves. Posing a threat to anyone walking nearby—not unlike envy, frustration, an urge for revenge—sadly, my latest temptations.

Must I really knock it down?

Better to first stamp a row of holes in the snow, little burial spots. (Sometimes I need a visual.) In goes envy. Then angst. Meanness. Hurt.

The flakes fall faster now. I fill in each void with a confession, a boot scuff: the lug sole of gratitude.

Ahhh, newness, white as snow.

Then I wield the shovel. Crack! Chunk by knobbly chunk, down she goes, the once-proud column in ruins.

Back indoors, that image of ruin stays with me.

Epiphany

In The Broken Way, Ann Voskamp writes: “Let love break into you and mess with you and loosen you up and make you laugh and cry and give and hurt because this is the only way to really live. . . . Don’t waste a minute on anything less . . .”

In other words: Kiss the curmudgeon! Serve up those Tums on a silver dish. Cut loose with a Bigfoot ballet and a sweeping bow. Squirrel away dish shards: make a mosaic later.

I don’t know about your day, or your past year, but I hit some rough terrain: cold, hard, heartsore places that blurred my outlook. Froze my hopes.

Epiphany, heart of ice

So lately, I’m leaning into a personal epiphany via this thought from Ann Voskamp (my paraphrase):

Every morning we get to rise (“get to?” . . . I get to rise).

God believes in us (now I’m speechless),

believes in His stories being written through us . . .

Epiphany, traditionally

The Magi followed a chunk of ice screwed into the sky. A blinking Marquee bulb, proclaiming “Peace”—despite how often we’d break it.

Did those who searched the heavens for signs ever sense that Heaven believed in them, was writing the Story through them?

And after they knelt before their new God, beside those famous three gifts, I wonder what else they left behind.

What will you leave behind in this New Year?

What chosen word or phrase will guide you?

click to hear the Klein wind chimes

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Filed Under: Immersions Tagged With: Amplectamur diem, Carpe diem, epic icicle, epiphany, new, squeeze the day, star January 4, 2017

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