Laurie Klein, Scribe

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Listening to You Breathe

by Laurie Klein 26 Chiming In

“Found a dog . . . on Craigslist,” Dreamer said. “But the ad’s a month old.”

A month ago, I couldn’t imagine initiating a rescue.

But things changed with Dreamer’s diagnosis.

Might a loyal, eloquent-if-non-speaking, waggery companion shadowing our steps help us face the future?

We emailed the owners, somehow won their hearts, then drove to Rosalia, Idaho, for the hand-off.

Within the first minute, “Vinnie” licked Dreamer’s face. Think power wash.

Then, tail thumping, he leapt into our car, and he snuggled my beloved all the way home.

Vinnie is a tawny, 4-year-old Husky/Rottweiler. He’s sweet-tempered, patient, and well-trained. After a worrisome three-day hunger strike—despite our elderly charm campaign and wheedling dog-dish charades (plus a dear friend’s prayers)—hunger won out.

The Vinster consented to eat.

Consent denotes willingness to embrace change: You seem nice; sure, I’ll sleep by your bed—while also maintaining a measure of control—Kibbles? I can snarf ‘em or leave ‘em. Watch me.

Consent, even canine, can be withheld. Given. Withdrawn.

Assent, on the other hand, cedes power differently. Factual circumstances may not change—in our case, despite fervent pleading with God.

Like Vinnie, re-homed, Dreamer and I can’t change where we find ourselves now. But God’s grace can change us in profound, unforeseen ways.

Moment by lurching moment, we are learning to say yes to this new chapter unfolding before us.

“Be it unto me according to your word,” Mary told the angel Gabriel. Her willing, wholehearted assent embraced a life radically reshaped, from that moment, forward.

Author Sarah Clarkson writes, “You don’t have to assent or agree with what is before you, and often you ought not to; but if you do, [your assent] is something offered, a yielding to a story you perhaps didn’t choose and don’t yet fully understand.”

Which sounds really spiritual.

Yet often, we’re sad and scared. Or mercifully distracted. There are also moments we struggle to breathe through the sneaker wave of desolation.

Some nights, I distract myself with a crossword puzzle. Other nights, it’s enough to simply listen to Dreamer breathing beside me. Still here.

As well as the random snurffle from Vinnie, snoozing beside our bed.

Our days fill with prayers and research and learning the ways of our new companion. We are a threesome now. With a dog who just barfed, twice. Once on the carpet.

Didn’t see that coming.

Post-cleanup, barricaded in the kitchen, Vinnie somehow Houdini-es through one corner of the canvas folding screen. Turns out Velcro tabs do not deter 70 pounds of lonesome, panting, disoriented mind, muscle, and heart.

He misses his old life. As we miss ours.

Dementia can be erratic, unbearably cruel. Our Healer-Redeemer never sleeps, is ever-present, unchanging, compassionate. It is to God’s unending love we say yes, not to the disease—trusting that what tears us open is already, by grace, deeply at work within us, and will continue, ultimately forging a healing path forward.

“. . . Jesus is going ahead of you,” the angel at the tomb tells the women gathered there in sorrow, fear, and confusion.

Talk about a lifeline.

Perhaps you’re enduring events likely to unravel your heart or ravage the life of someone you love. Friends, let’s pray for each other, seeking the grace to surrender to God all we are and have and will one day be.

P.S.

Here’s a “5 – 5 – 8” breathwork stress-buster we find calming, a small, real-time rescue when panic looms:

  • five-count inhale
  • hold breath for five counts
  • exhale audibly for eight counts

I’ve added words and motion, which help dispel late-night anxiety spikes):

  • (inhale for 5) As if playing a keyboard, palms down, moving left pinky first, sequentially tap each finger, praying: “We trust you, Jesus.” (Or: “We love you, Jesus.”)
  • (hold breath for 5) Right thumb to pinky, sequentially tap each finger, praying: “Have mercy on us.”
  • (exhale for 8) Left pinky to right middle finger, one tap each: “All that we have and are is yours.”

Repeat, as needed.

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assent appears first in the eyes

You might also enjoy “Catch Your Breath Here” (from the archives.)

I highly recommend Sarah Clarkson’s book, Reclaiming Quiet.

Photo of Sleeper by Annie Spratt on Unsplash

 

Filed Under: Immersions Tagged With: assent, breathwork, consent, dementia, dog, grace, lifeline, rescue, Vinnie February 19, 2025

Black Sheep: Between Noels, Part IV

by Laurie Klein 6 Chiming In

Black sheep? Moi? Oh yes. Sometimes.

During childhood I cradled my stuffed counterpart, complete with music box.

Amid adolescence I perched it atop the desk handed down from my mother.

Seven decades later, it sits near my keyboard, flop ears and button eyes cocked my way.

Black sheep

Twist the oval brass ring in its belly and the song still plays, almost as if, once again, Mom croons the lullaby words of Brahms. One night, an insecure new mama myself, I asked to hear it again, her voice by then crackly with age.

Sleepyhead, close your eyes.
Mother’s right here beside you.

Do we ever outgrow the childlike longing to be held? Rescued?

Re-wind with me . . .

to a distant, long-ago night. A swaddled infant’s gaze locks on his mother’s brimming eyes.

Perhaps Mary sings:

Guardian angels are near,
So sleep on, with no fear.

From starlit Bethlehem, slip further back in time. A month will do. Picture slopes and valleys partially blanketed in wool, as if fallen clouds rest on the earth. These sheep are specifically raised for temple sacrifice.

firstborn donkey substitute

And King David’s descendants keep watch.

Farther afield, a grizzled shepherd bows over a feed trough. He swaddles a flailing newborn lamb. The birth rags will protect spindly new legs from harm. Little eyes close, the damp body nestled in warmth.

Does the shepherd pipe a tune?

I’ll protect you from harm,
You will wake in my arms.

What of this motherless lamb? And that bleating ewe, over yonder, grieving a stillborn body?

How gently the shepherd nudges the bereaved aside. How painstakingly he bathes the orphan in the dead lamb’s placental blood.

And then, how wondrous, the milk of recognition, the miracle of adoption!

From these hills we can look toward Bethlehem or, five miles north, toward Jerusalem; from incarnation to eventual crucifixion.

Among these grasslands hundreds and hundreds of lambs — black sheep, white sheep — were once raised for twice-daily sacrifices in the temple.

Black sheep

Thousands more of them met the priestly blade at Passover. BUT . . .

. . . before that feast of remembrance, each household brought their best lamb into their home for several days. Hand-fed it. Treated it as family. Maybe the children named it.

and, metaphorically, for a black sheep, a perfect lamb

Everyone knew that when they presented their gift to the priest, he would ask them one question: “Do you love this lamb?”

Spotless, tenderly cherished lambs led to the temple.

My threadbare black sheep on my desk.

Heaven’s Lamb — who loves us.

Now and forever NOEL, noel, noel . . .

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Black sheep, white sheep: Photo by Megan Johnston on Unsplash

Close-up, white sheep Photo by Sam Carter on Unsplash

Lamb: Photo by Bill Fairs on Unsplash

Brahms Lullaby, Celine Dion

Lullaby lyrics

 

https://video.search.yahoo.com/yhs/search?fr=yhs-trp-001&ei=UTF-8&hsimp=yhs-001&hspart=trp&p=celine+dion+brahms+lullaby&type=Y235_F163_217427_042622#id=1&vid=150f47cd4fb7c8d9305ca40e9f5ccbe2&action=click

 

Filed Under: Immersions Tagged With: adoption, angels, black sheep, Heaven's lamb, lamb, love, lullaby, miracle, rescue, sacrifice, shepherd December 21, 2024

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