Laurie Klein, Scribe

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Tangle, Crane

by Laurie Klein 17 Chiming In

What a TANGLE! One night a cold wind rattled our trellis, blew down the abandoned bird’s nest. When I picked it up, twigs snapped, a little dried grass drifted over my shoe.

Picture the inner cup of dried mud, smoothed by a bird’s downy breast. A mother’s instinctive care creates sanctuary.

“Blessed are those who dwell in your house,” Psalm 84 says. “Even the sparrow has found a home, and the swallow a nest for herself . . . a place near your altar.”

Lucky birds.

I, however, ache to feel God’s nearness. NOT this scruffy nest, with its hairline crack. Somehow still holding together, fragile, earthen, it seems a brittle, metaphorical portrait—exposing what?

Do I want to know?

Ah. No wonder the deserted, once-lively nest pains me. Not that long ago we emptied our home for thorough mold remediation. I shelve the nest in the garage, power down the big door.

Displaced, disheartened, shaken—oh, how I miss the familiar.

Then along comes my turn to lead devotions for a women’s group. What to share? The battered nest comes to mind. Perhaps I could hand the participants small pieces of paper, invite them to write down what’s making their hearts ache.

I hatch a few plans. But I keep forgetting to bring the nest indoors.

When the day finally arrives, I tuck the loving, avian tangle into a clear container. Some of the women eye it curiously when I arrive. I pass out blue sticky notes and ask everyone to write down one of their woes.

“Now, crumple or roll your paper into an egg,” I say. “We’ll tuck each one into the nest. Then let’s pray over the needs represented, holding in mind an egg’s potential for life.”

I’m hoping for reverent stillness. Startled, the woman beside me exclaims, “A leaf!”

Bright green, small as the head of a straight pin, the leaf was not there earlier. Now, amid salvaged fibers of dead vegetation, a spindly, translucent stem, one tender green sprig.

I swallow back tears, feeling seen, loved, and re-heartened, by the Creator.

The God who loves to surprise us meets us wherever we are.

“. . . from the dry and deserted . . . a freshness multiplied by love?” Poet Pablo Neruda once asked.

Silently, the women pass the nest, each adding their paper egg.

Afterward, I notice a blue, intricately folded shape. The size of a thumbnail, it perches on the rim. Someone with nimble fingers made an origami crane, Japanese symbol of peace, longevity, and healing hope.

And that tiny sprig we saw? Gone.

Today, I keep the nest near my desk: a reminder to watch for surprises. Might another seed nestle within?

Small things hold immense power: an atom, a cell, a seed, a spore. A word in due season.

Amid the clamor and chaos rocking the globe, where will the next sprig of hope emerge?

At our house, recent test results show Dreamer’s insides are a toxic tangle of infinitesimal mold spores—five types. Truly daunting, hopefully, fixable. Detox could take a year, or longer.

How do we live without becoming chronically bitter or fearful, hopeless or numb?

We keep watch for the next green sprig . . .

. . . we remind ourselves to show up for each other throughout the day, however imperfectly.

We remember the body is a temple for God’s loving presence, ever-at-work within.

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Friends, how do you welcome the hidden? Is something unlikely already stirring within you?

“Everything becomes a lesson in living,
growth
through hardship and sweetness
… divine hands shape.”

—Pablo Neruda

tangle, crane

P.S. The above story occurred a few months ago, but Dreamer’s diagnosis is new. The little sprig is still teaching me . . .

Welcome, new subscribers! If you’re curious about our story, please check out the last few blog posts.

Quotes, in order of appearance: “Alstromeria” and “Ode to Angèl Cruchaga,” by Pablo Neruda, All the odes

You might enjoy this from the archive: How hope answers

empty nest Photo by Annie Lang on Unsplash

Filed Under: Immersions Tagged With: crane, displacement, leaf, nest, origami, Pablo Neruda, ps. 84, remediation, small things, sprig, sticky notes, tangle January 21, 2026

Playdate: Deep Breaths, Double Takes, Daydreams

by Laurie Klein 20 Chiming In

Playdate? What planet is Klein on now?

“Playdate,” by definition, may be a toddler gig, but experiencing one enlivens and reorients us—at any age.

For instance:

  • Daydreaming: Has it been awhile?
  • Double takes: Remember, they’re quasi-athletic.
  • Jaunts: Why not enjoy risk and exhilaration?

You might feel overwhelmed, over-digitized, overcome by a restless heart (or, restless mate/kids/grandkids) . . .

Troubled by global violence and civil unrest . . .

Weary of weeds and dust, arthritis, estrangement, too many guests . . .

Could it be you’re running low on respite, and short on play?

How about an Armchair Staydate, right here, right now? Preferably one that involves leaves (since I have pictures of them).

Let this amateur gallery jaunt evoke a few deep breaths. Double takes. Daydreams.

Taking if leaf by leaf

Is this one a mirror? Sometimes we mortals lurch around, flattened by life, emotionally spent, spiritually threadbare.

leaf

Lord knows, we’re trying to launch the project, get back in shape, meet the monster deadline.

We may be pushing through envy. Anger. Inhospitable circumstances.

leaf unfurling through stone

One green sprig muscling through roadway re-frames hardship as possibility.

Oh, this dear earth! An ancient arrangement ensures leaves absorb our toxic carbon dioxide; we absorb their oxygen. I forget this. Remembering alters my view—altars my view.

Deep breath.

Where can I share a little life today?

. . .

Notice these flowers growing between a hard place and its shadow.

Playdate: Horticulturally Thumbing a Nose at Rough Terrain

They don’t settle for blah. Or worse, bleak. They don’t forgo blooming until better conditions appear.

Deep breath.

Where will I inject fizz, or a dash of color today? A softening touch?

. . .

Leaf through the Book

We’re each like a tree planted by water, the psalmist tells us, “whose leaves do not wither.”

Sure as Hosta leaves steadily breathe out water vapor (thereby drawing up more moisture through roots and stems), we can exhale, pause, watch for what may transpire.

Hosta, la vista

Deep breath.

In what way will I offer someone (including myself) a cup of cool water today?

. . .

No matter how we feel, we are not stranded, beached and alone beneath starless skies.

Sure as the moon with her silver pulleys hauls out the sea, the tide will change.

Might as well watch for surprise bouquets at our feet.

seaweed on shore

Deep breath.

Where will God surprise me today?

. . .

Sure as our brain’s firing neurons numerically compare to billions and squillions of stars in the Milky Way, light eventually reaches us—wherever we are.

Polka Dot Playdate: Begonias Have All the Best Dirt

Deep breath.

When did I last stargaze?

What new constellation of grace is emerging in those I love, and how do I call out shine?

. . .

“Never say there is nothing beautiful in the world anymore.
There is always something to make you wonder
in the shape of a tree,
the trembling of a leaf.”

—Albert Schweitzer

Life is precarious. Let’s take a page from The Leaf Playbook:

  • Book a playdate (or staydate)
  • Cultivate double takes
  • Exha-a-a-a–le . . . and see what transpires
  • Court surprise
  • Wait for the Light

What’s your favorite playdate/staydate? I’d love some fresh ideas . . .

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More daydreaming here: http://bigthink.com/21st-century-spirituality/creativity-and-distraction
More about double-takes here
More about jaunts here
For more ideas, dip into this wonder-full book: Playdates with God, by Laura Boggess

Filed Under: Immersions Tagged With: daydreaming, deep breath, double-take, jaunt, leaf, playdate, re-center August 6, 2017

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Hi, I’m Laurie.

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