Monday, December 28, 2020

You are what you are, and You ain't what you ain't -

Several weeks ago, my sweet baby girl (always will be), after spending a few days with her family and her brother's family at their dad's and other mother's second home in warmer southern Utah, said, 

"Why don't you retire and do what Dad and K are doing? You and Pops deserve to rest, quilt, bike, hike." 

And a knife went through my heart. Although, I've worked through this all, talked with daughter, know it wasn't meant to hurt, it has me thinking. 


Scott and I will never be wealthy - as in second homes, pools, early retirement for me. And I have absolutely no worries about this. Yet I felt like I needed to justify, mostly to myself, that the life Scott and I have is the life I/we want. 

I'm full-filled. Serving others gives me immense joy. I'm not really one to wander; I need a purpose, and this career, this one that I've been working toward most of my adult life, is exactly what I want. 

As well, financially - being able to take care of my family, Scott and me, is what I want. I like seeing my retirement grow; I like watching MY paycheck being deposited; I like being able to have insurance and co-pays and HSA's. I like having paid vacations, even though I have to parse them out and factor in any future vacations. 

My life may look limited - I can't drop and run to tend grandkids - oh wait, they're in school; I can't run to lunch with friends - but I can schedule that; I can't be super-spontaneous, yet all my life I've enjoyed having a schedule, which then allows me the comfort of knowing when I am free to go and do and be whatever whenever. 

So I live in a little house, without room for extended family dinners. Well, that thought gives me tons of anxiety anyway! And there are always work-arounds, including summer swim parties, family dinners at their homes, and one-on-one dinners - which is really what I prefer. 

I don't go to quilting workshops, take painting classes, go on girls' trips. Not my thing anyway. Yet if you want a deep conversation, a walking friend, someone to cook meals to freeze, or a shoulder to cry on - I'm yours. 

I will rest, quilt, bike, hike, if and when the need/desire arises. I may be clunky, awkward, introverted, plain Jane, simple. This is my life. I am what I am, and I ain't what I ain't. 

Wednesday, December 23, 2020

Happy Holidays, Merry Christmas -

I love these 2020 Christmas cards. And for the first time in several years, I'm not sending anything out. I really don't have anything to say, and I have no sweet photos of this year's travels (well, I do, Hawaii with Jenna and kids was amazing, and difficult, and expensive, and memorable - that was 1 week pre-CoVid, which seems like a lifetime ago) - although Driggs, ID and the Grand Tetons are always stunning, Mt. Rushmore was nice, and Durango, CO, was beautiful, while Zion was too hot and too busy to even attempt. 

However, if I had sent out a card it would say, 

We made it - from head to toe (truly)! And while we met our out-of-pocket deductible way back in July and our HSA is empty, and we're facing a few more procedures in January, our health is good, our marriage is great, and our home is beautiful. We have healthy children and grandchildren; CoVid has affected us all in too many ways to count, yet our bounce-forward buttons still work. 

We've lost loved ones. We've been frustrated with the medical and political world, yet we've chosen to put what we can change as our priority, and what we can't change, well, we're learning to let it go. 

We missed our international trip to Portugal this spring, but we've put a few miles on our cars getting to know the world that's within a day's drive. We're planning next year's trip, and although it is state-side, we're grateful for extra vacation days, extra miles, and the opportunity to see what we've neglected to see, and Scott's doing a great job of gathering family history information to make this trip every bit as adventurous as an international one. 

We've enjoyed CoVid drive-bys to our children's homes - dropping off goodies that have some sort of  laughable CoVid message. We were able to be with a grand-daughter who was married and have an honored role in her ceremony.

We had the pleasure of hosting Ihor, from the Ukraine, stuck here in Utah for work because of CoVid, for several months, and this fall we've had Zach, from So Dakota, here attending BYU (but not wanting to socialize because of the virus); he'll be coming back in January. So even when we can't venture too far from home, the world has come to our doorstep, thank you Airbnb and the friendships we've made because of being hosts (although we're ending our tenure with them, there's always a spare bedroom - well, will be in May). 

We've learned to negotiate lawnmower noise with Webex home-office meetings, and I've gained a deeper appreciation for not only my work-space, but for the caregivers who put their lives on the line every single day. I'm grateful to have been able to be a small support to them, as well as for Scott's support of me. 

My 2020 motto, Be The Change, has hung on our front porch as our public statement, although I've learned that being this change comes from within and then outward to my home, my world. 

We've laughed, we've loved, we've argued, we've yelled, we've painted and played, and restored a 1962 Grand Prix - the life we have far surpasses our dreams - guess this year has been just fine after-all!  

Merry Christmas to all - Ronda & Scott














Friday, December 18, 2020

Diamonds and Stones -

On Monday I had a feeling to check in on a patient I hadn't talked with in a couple of months. I went to her chart to get her phone number. A big red box, marked "deceased" popped up before I could even get to her number. She passed away in September, and I just learned. 

As well, a patient in the hospital, who has been at death's doorstep for a week, was finally allowed, by his family, to pass. 

Tuesday I received a call from a hospital asking for some support for caregivers as they had a traumatic death in their emergency department the previous evening. And they needed to vent. 

Last night at 3:40am, I made the mistake of checking my phone. My sister had sent me a text earlier in the night about a friend dying. The friend was my patient. 

When I woke for real, I had a group text from a client's brother stating that his sister's tumor was cancerous, yet she was healing well from her surgery. 

Just a few minutes ago I received notification that another patient had passed away, yesterday morning. 

And that's just a few of the deaths and imminent deaths I've been a part of this week. 

Some days are diamonds, some are stones. 

What a week, what a damn f'ing week. 

Thursday, December 10, 2020

The Need for Chaplains -

 I love my job/career/life-choice as a chaplain. I cannot imagine doing anything else. I love serving my patients, their families, and the caregivers who are dedicated and committed to giving the best care they can to those they likewise serve. 

It's been a busy several months - caregivers were on adrenalin highs for several months, as was the world, with a multitude of initiatives and ways of showing support. And yet as caregivers tire, so does the public, and now we're dragging, exhausted, without evening applauses and caregiver parades, no healthcare provider discounts (and I tell you, they made a differences), and we still go home to families who are likewise burnt-out and dragging. I have cried more than once in the past month - who chaplains the chaplains? 

I spend as much time with caregivers as I do patients and their families. This is a fundamental part of my job. In fact, not only do I serve at my facility, I also am doing my best to support caregivers system-wide, particularly at the site where many of our toughest CoVid cases go. 

Enough said, and yet there are still institutions (people) who think chaplains are not necessary, that in this day when religion is waning, there is no need for religious rituals and conversations. However, when someone is in a health crisis, they are likewise in a spiritual crisis (not religion, although people rely on the beliefs, or non, of their religious and spiritual perspectives). "Oh God" can be a curse or a prayer, and I've seen this over and over again, and a listening ear, a quiet moment, a nod, permission to share, is so very very necessary.

This article, from one of the organizations I have my certification through shares a perspective examining the words stating there is no need, yet likewise validates the need, for healthcare chaplains, now more than ever. 


Count chaplains in, not out!

Now more than ever, chaplains are needed on healthcare teams 

 

_____

 

"Our role is to care for anyone -- patient, family member or professional and clinical colleague -- who is suffering, feeling overwhelmed, hopeless, and alone."

-- Eric J. Hall

_____

As the leader of a national chaplaincy organization, I am baffled by the opinion that chaplains are becoming irrelevant. This statement during this pandemic when chaplains have become more necessary than ever is simply a cover to remove chaplains from employment.

 

A discussion I had with an administrator indicated that because people are not going to "church" there is a diminished need for chaplains. It's true that many churches across the country were growing empty even before COVID-19 caused them to close their doors. But the flight from organized religion does not mean people are throwing the baby out with the bathwater. Many faith communities doing online worship and tracking their viewers are seeing significant number of "attendees" who they can tell are not members of their community. Thus, lots of people who have not participated in worship before now are seeking it out. We saw the same phenomenon post 9/11. Large numbers of people turned to faith and religious practice in the time of uncertainty to find connectedness and meaning. So where do these people find that connection and community today? Chaplains fill that role for many.

 

As chaplains working in emergency, trauma and other healthcare settings across the country can attest in this time of COVID, people in existential crisis long to make sense of what's happening to them and their loved ones whether they have God or a religious tradition to guide them or not.

 

I want to address the misconception that chaplaincy is only a valid ministry in the context of faith, and that as organized religion declines in importance, chaplains become less relevant to healthcare systems and therefore a resource that can be eliminated from the budget. This is not the time to count chaplains out. Now more than ever, leaders in healthcare should count them in!

 

If they have learned anything from the experience of our hospital systems overburdened by suffering and death, health care leaders must surely see the value of treatment protocols such as palliative care and hospice when curative care is deemed futile. Dr. Diane Meier, director of the Center to Advance Palliative Care, makes this point when she says, "Our first and foremost job is to identify and relieve sources of suffering. And particularly in the COVID-19 environment, where all available treatments are experimental and variably accessible, our first obligation is to provide psychological, existential, and spiritual support to people who are understandably terrified."

 

I direct the Healthcare Chaplaincy Network. For us, professional chaplaincy is about "caring for the human spirit." Our chaplains work alongside first responders and EMTs, integrated in hospice and palliative care teams, and collaborating with doctors, nurses and other medical professionals in ICUs across the country. Our role is to care for anyone -- patient, family member or professional and clinical colleague -- who is suffering, feeling overwhelmed, hopeless, and alone. When the human spirit is assailed by too much sickness, too much misery, and too much death, our chaplains are there to offer comfort through presence, listening, and support, sometimes joining in with our prayers and often with our tears. We are trained to wade into the midst of human suffering, to recognize spiritual distress in our fellow human beings, to promote healing even when there is no cure, and to affirm the value of life even in the face of certain death. This is what we mean by "caring for the human spirit." And this is why, now more than ever, chaplains are needed on healthcare teams that are providing curative care, palliative care, or end of life care. Chaplains should be counted in, not out!

 

For administrators wanting to cut the costs of doing business, I say do not cut your chaplains! Take a lesson from hospice, in which spiritual care for the dying is federally mandated, or from palliative care in which it is a best practice the world over. If you are looking for ways to increase emotional support for your frontline clinical staff or seeking to address burnout among your physicians, hire more chaplains! We are trained to do this work. Many of us have indeed been preparing our entire professional lives to rise to the challenge of such a moment in time as the one we are facing right now.

 

Count chaplains in, not out. And then count on us to work side by side with the other professionals on your teams, providing care for every needy human spirit we encounter. If you would like help finding professionally trained and certified chaplains to join your teams, email me at EJHall@SpiritualCareAssociation.org and I will put the resources of the HealthCare Chaplaincy Network and the Spiritual Care Association to work for you. The needs are critical and the solution is at hand.

 

--Eric Hall

Reverend Eric J. Hall, DTh, APBCC, is President and Chief Executive Officer of HealthCare Chaplaincy Network, Inc. and the Spiritual Care Association. He is also Chancellor of the SCA University of Theology and Spirituality. Hall also serves as pastor of the Eastchester Presbyterian Church and the Lincoln Academy for early childhood learning. Formerly, he was the founder, President and CEO of the Alzheimer's Foundation of America. He can be reached at EJHall@SpiritualCareAssociation.org.

 

* See https://www.pewforum.org/2019/10/17/in-u-s-decline-of-christianity-continues-at-rapid-pace

 

** See https://acphospitalist.org/weekly/archives/2020/04/08/3.htm


Thursday, December 3, 2020

Anxiety - 'Tis the Season!

 

I had simple sinus surgery a year ago, and it didn’t work! So after more than 2 months of dealing with a sinus infection (and trying every feasible remedy), I had full-blown sinus surgery 2.5 weeks ago.

These past few months have been tough knowing I would need to face this reality, and I will admit, being sick, not sleeping, and anticipatory anxiety has gotten the most of me. Not sleeping, over/under-eating, easily irritated and equally irritable, difficulty concentrating, and continually asking “why me” and thinking about how defective I am, and searching “sinus surgery” on Google.

Please tell me that you have done similarly when avoiding the inevitable! And Google is the worst education tool when anxiety is involved!

Well, surgery it was, and while it was really horrible, I’m 2.5 weeks out, and healing! Imagine that! And all those things I worried about – I can’t even remember them, and yet all those behaviors I adopted – now I need to break those habits!

The  below thoughts have helped me step out of my emotional self and rationally think through what I’m anxious about rather than letting the anxiety control me. I hope, particularly this season, these will be of benefit to you.

“We don’t fear the unknow, we fear the thought of the unknown.”

“The worst bullies you will ever encounter in your life are your own thoughts.”

“Is there something I can do now to relieve my concerns for tomorrow?”

“Filling my mind with good thoughts means there is no room for bad thoughts.”

“The doctor knows what he’s doing.”

“What if things work out?”

“Ommmmm.”

“You are bigger than what is making you anxious.”

“Worrying doesn’t empty tomorrow, it empties today.”

“I give myself permission to be anxious, and then I give myself permission to move forward.”

“Nothing is permanent, not even our troubles.”

And lastly – “Just breathe.”

More tomorrow - 

 

Tuesday, November 24, 2020

Many Reasons to Give Thanks -

 Ecclesiastes 3 always comes to my mind this time of  year. I stitched this version into a wall-hanging that is on the wall in my office:

 There is a time for every season and every purpose under heaven.

A time for family and friends,

A time for happy memories and thankful hearts.

A time for traditions kept and blessings shared.


We have many reasons to give thanks.


And of course, this version, written by Pete Seeger and sung by The Byrds imprinted Ecclesiastes 3 in my mind:



Tuesday, November 17, 2020

Photo Triggers - Shame -

 My brother's birthday is today. He's 58 years old. As is custom with the Walker siblings, we'll post photos of us and the birthday person through the years. As I was looking for something to share, I found these. And the memories came flooding back - and not all associated with these pics, this situation, is good. 

I was born in Jan, my sister, 18 months later in July, and Brett came a couple of months before I turned 4. My father was getting a son! My mother had given birth to Sheri and me in the Maternity Home in Rigby, and Brett followed suit (interestingly, 2 other cousins were born at that same time, and they all made the local news). 

I'm pretty sure he was born in the morning, and if I remember correctly, I was sleeping in my parents bed, with my Jensen grandparents, when the call came that we had a baby brother, and Sheri and I jumped up and down on that bed, we were giddy with little girl anticipation. 

My father was so excited! He wanted to make the "pick-up" for Brett and Mom extra special, so with Mom's encouragement, Dad took us to Idaho Falls to buy winter coats for 2 little girls. I would imagine that my mother asked Dad to get us something warm, something that would fit us all season, and coats that were practical. 

Well, my father seldom did anything practical first - pretty first, practical second. And we ended up with these lovely "fur" coats, that were cream colored with brown highlights. So warm, fuzzy, pretty; Grandpa said we looked like 2 little Eskimo's.  


And here is my memory - 

Being so proud of that new coat, so proud of Dad for picking matching coats for us, and feeling so fancy standing in the sunlight getting our pictures taken. 

Meeting my baby brother for the first time, just being taken in by the beauty of this new being, and at nearly 4, feeling a sense of time. 

My mother - so upset with my dad for not buying practical coats. Didn't he know these would get dirty so fast, that they wouldn't be valuable playing in the snow, and for sure they'd wear out before the season was over. 

I felt shame. Shame because I was happy in my new coat, and yet I knew that what we had and what Mom wanted were not the same, and sorrow for my father who didn't follow Mom's directions, and sorrow for Mom who couldn't see the pride in my father's eyes as he showed us, and baby brother, off. 

And I remember then knowing I had to make a choice between protecting my mother or protecting my father, feeling the angst in my belly, and knowing I would always have to choose between practical/Mom and pretty/Dad. And wondering if I would ever be able to make either happy. If a pretty fluffy coat and a brand new baby boy, couldn't do, what would? 

Mom's "pretty" typically sat on a shelf or behind closet doors, only to come out for a special occasion, if at all. Hoarded, almost, because, in her words, "I seldom had anything nice." Practical, frugal, careful, cautious, scared - all words that come to mind when I think of choices and my mother. 

Dad's "pretty" was always on display, and he was often chastened for spending too much money or time on nice, or having something out that may be broken or be seen as prideful. Adventuresome, creative, risk-taker, considerate - all words that come to mind when I think of choices and my father. 

As I've been cleaning and sorting at Mother's house this past month, this has been reinforced over and over. The closets and shelves still speak this same story - Dad's on display; Mom's behind closed doors. 

Yet the trigger - the story - the beautiful coats - the sense of pride and pretty and shine - deflated that day, with shame and guilt and inadequacy taking the place of delight and beauty and self. And to this day I dance in both worlds, and often feel the emotions of that little girl, over and over and over again. 


Sheri and I were so different in personalities, that just the fact we are in these photos in our coats, with the same dresses on, pants on, shoes on, is a miracle. 
And aren't those little corsages with Christmas ornaments and bells just darling?! 

Tuesday, November 10, 2020

Sinus Surgery - Again -

 I've had sinus infections for most of my adult life, and prior to that I blamed it all on allergies. My first memory of a really bad infection was as a newly-wed with an infection that would not go away. It was fall, and so bad, that my in-law's volunteered to pay for an x-ray and treatment. 

Over the years I've blamed the infections, particularly because they hit either in September or January, on students - public school, college, or even my students as I taught for so many years. My sinuses began aching about the time all other students began getting the sniffles - I figured they were worn down, sharing germs, getting used to the environment, and I was the recipient of their "not staying home when sick" gifts. 

Sadly, over the years my infections have continually gotten worse and lasted longer. They vary from sneezes, to blowing, to gagging, to coughing and coughing and coughing, to crazy headaches. I've tried all types of antibiotics, natural remedies, even chiropractic manipulation to get rid of these. Nothing has helped. 

Last year I finally reached out to an ENT, Kirt Beus, for his perspective. I've seen an ENT before, but really hadn't had much different info from my regular doc. Beus, however, was aggressive - from an in-office CT scan showing highly inflamed, swollen, and damaged sinuses, and offering every non-surgical remedy available. 

And when they didn't work, he suggested balloon sinuplasty, not as invasive as full-blown surgery. In-office, shorter recovery time, and a 90% success rate. 

Sadly, the surgery worked, but the surgery was painful (only local anesthesia), and recovery was horrid, thanks to steroids, which I now know make me go crazy - literally. 

And I've been fine, great even, until Sept. 5. And boy, I was slammed, and I haven't been able to get all the way back up. I can talk over-the-counter meds, best cough syrups/remedies, cough drops, hot or cold humidity, antobiotics, and the benefits (ha) of sleeping on 2 pillows for 2 months! 

I'm tired of snot! Particularly post-nasal drip. Not my favorite!! 

So back to Dr. Beus I went, and now, 4 weeks later, I am scheduled for sinus surgery - via scope, for this Friday, November 13 (thankfully, Fri. 13's are my lucky days). 

This is a 2 hour surgery, with a lengthy recovery time (2-4 weeks), and I've heard, pain on pain on pain. 

Thankfully, working from home in the days of CoVid are possible; I'm not going anywhere; we're not doing anything for Thanksgiving, and with Gov Herbert's mandate, our social distancing begins tonight and ends on Nov. 23 with my 10 day doctor's appt. to remove packing and . . . . 

I'm a little/quite concerned; I'm not happy, nor am I extraordinarily healthy after having my health compromised for so long. Yet I'm hopeful. 

And away I go - to take my 3rd CoVid test since Sept. 7. Yuck yuck yuck. 




Monday, November 9, 2020

November and Shawn Achor and Gratitude -

 November! And with that comes the obligatory, but blessed, opportunity to count blessings. Shawn Achor, a psychologist who has focused his career on happiness, is my favorite researcher and presenter on this topic. Please take a moment to watch this 12 minute video:



Be prepared to rewatch, just because you’ll be laughing so hard you’ll miss a few things the first time around.

 And then, because you’ll have been inspired to rethink how you look at life events, consider trying his

21-Day Challenge,” in which you pick one of five researched habits and try it out for 21 days in a row to create a positive habit. Doing so actually rewires — or trains — your brain to be more positive. 

Here are Achor’s five habits:

1.       Three Gratitudes: Pause to take note of three new things each day that you are grateful for. Doing so will help your brain start to retrain its pattern of scanning the world, looking not just for the negative inputs but for the positive ones.

2.       Journaling: Similar to the gratitude practice, but in this case, detail — in writing — one positive experience each day. This will help you find meaning in the activities of the day, rather than just noticing the task itself.

3.       Exercise: Exercising for 10 minutes a day not only brings physical benefits, but it also teaches your brain to believe your behavior matters, which then carries (positively) into other activities throughout the day.

4.       Meditation: Take just two minutes per day to simply breathe and focus on your breath going in and out. Doing so will train your mind to focus, reduce stress, and help you be more present in this moment.

5.       Random Acts of Kindness: This can be something simple, and Shawn suggests writing one positive email to praise or thank someone each day. Not only does it benefit the recipient, but it also increases your feeling of social support.

Tuesday, November 3, 2020

A Call - Mitch Albom and Richard Rohr -

 These men are quite a bit different from each other, and yet their words yesterday and today are similar. A call for "Stop it." 

I'm a pacifist - and I am broken, torn, shredded, sorrowful, and afraid. Although, I hate being told what to do - so I'm also a fighter - stubborn, loyal, defending, torn, and afraid. 

The daily pain I see tears at these two me's - I am conflicted, and I have heartburn, sleepless nights, anxiety, doubt, faith, and hope. 

Albom says: 

"I know this: If the winners gloat and the losers threaten, we won’t be any better than we’ve been the last six months. And does anyone really want the country of the last six months to be the country of the next four years?"

While Rohr writes, 

"Of all the tensions we must hold in personal and political life, perhaps the most fundamental and most challenging is standing and acting with hope in the 'tragic gap.'"


And, "These letters are addressed to those of you who are sincerely and devotedly trying to camp elsewhere than in any political party or religious denomination and outside the world of strongly held opinions. We know full well that we must now avoid the temptation to become our own defended camp."


Lastly, 





Monday, October 26, 2020

Letting the Silt Settle - Sarah Bessey -

 I have been feeling like I just need to calm down and wait . . .  Wait for what? For whom? And in some ways, this entire year has been about waiting - and maybe it really is about waiting for the dust to settle, whether that's CoVid, election, health, Mom; and the list goes on. 

So when I was trying to figure out how to write this, I began and stopped and started again several times. I see this big dust pile under my feet, not a cloud over my head, but whenever I take a step, I disturb the fine grained dust - already so vulnerable and tramped on, and I can't side-step it; I can't avoid the dust. And I can't find the words, only a picture. 

Until this - enjoy.

On restlessness, a recovery weekend, and letting the silt settle

An essay for Field Notes; Sarah Bessey

Hi friends,

I am very much in a burn-it-all-down mood lately.

I could sell my house - while we’re at it, let’s sell every stick of furniture in it. We could move home to Alberta. I could have a ranch in the foothills. Forget that, I could move to Prince Edward Island. Did you know that this Inn was owned by L.M. Montgomery’s grandfather? I think I will buy it and run an inn within sight of the sea. Or maybe an urban life in Calgary next door to my sister?

Okay, fine I’ll simply move up to the Sunshine Coast and live at the edge of the Pacific Ocean. We’ll get a dog, a goat, a sheep, none of the above, all of the above, maybe a farm? Let’s homeschool the kids! Wait, no, I have a job. Okay, fine, Brian, YOU homeschool the kids. (He also has a job.) I think I’m going off grid. At the very least, I’ll delete Netflix. But wait, The Crown is coming back on in a few weeks so maybe I’ll do that later. I think I quit writing, I quit Evolving Faith, I quit Twitter, I definitely quit Facebook, I quit everything and I think I’ll be a florist, that sounds lovely. (Florists, do not disabuse me of my romantic notion of your vocation.) I think I’ll write a novel. A poem. I think I’ll upend everything, maybe that will fix it.

Just me?

The world feels unsettled and scary, overwhelming and tragic. I don’t know what it is that makes me think that if we upend our lives, somehow that will make the uncertainty and big things dominating the headlines seem less true. I’ve been restless - wanting to do something new and different - and yet every time we talk about it, we end up more confused than before we began. Clarity hasn’t been forthcoming.

Last weekend, my husband Brian and I went away for what we called our Recovery Weekend. We knew we would need a weekend to rest and recover from what has been a big push for both of us this year - work for both of us, health challenges, quarantine, four kids, family, global pandemic, all of the things. We set this Recovery Weekend on the calendar after Evolving Faith as a finish line of sorts and, after dropping the kids off at my parents’ home, we drove up to the Whistler area for two days. (Granted, we’re in western Canada where coronavirus cases, while rising, are being managed well and because we stayed somewhere very committed to maintaining safety protocols and we abided by social distance and mask guidelines so we did feel safe to keep our weekend plans.)

The purpose of Recovery Weekend is not “do the things.” It is the exact opposite. The purpose is to recover from the doing of all the things. So we slept in. We read novels. We ordered room service instead of going out to restaurants. We went for long walks in beautiful open places. We watched the snowfall while we drank coffee. We sat in front of the fire and talked. We did NOT check email and we did exactly zero productive things. It was marvellous. Being in the mountains nourishes both of us; we need some bite in the air to feel like we can take a deep breath.

One afternoon, we drove down a very bumpy service road to Lillooet Lake. I’ve always wanted to go to this particular lake and it’s just a bit too far from our place in Abbotsford for a day trip with the kids so we took advantage of it. It was a snowy day and so the clouds were very low and the air was chilly which meant we had the shore covered in driftwood to ourselves.

Lillooet Lake used to be a bright turquoise colour, much like other mountain lakes up north here. That uniquely azure colour is courtesy of the light reflecting off the rock flour from glaciers which feed the lakes. But back in 2010, the largest landslide in modern Canadian history hit just up the river from Lillooet Lake. It went from being a clear bright blue to a muddy shade of brown overnight.

Ten years later, the silt from the landslide is only just now beginning to settle and, especially in seasons like right now when the currents are slow, you can just begin to see the colour returning to the lake again. On the day we were there, it was clear at the shoreline and it reflected the grey sky, almost looking silvery as it stretched out before us. We took our time on the shore, breathing deep in the silence of the wilderness.


As we bounced away from the lake (seriously, that road), I turned to the familiar conversation of the past few months and began musing afresh about making a major change in our life. I get restless when I live in one spot more than five years and the state of the world right now makes a major life change seem utterly reasonable response. See my first paragraph.

Brian was silent and then he said, “We have had a landslide these past few years.”

I knew where he was going right away. And he’s not wrong. Particularly since my car accident a few years ago, there have been multiple landslides into the lake of our personal life. Losing my friend Rachel last year was devastating. There was my diagnoses with chronic illness stemming from the accident. Work has been a landslide lately as I’ve found myself in a vocation and role that feels very ill-fitting and challenging at times.

I’d argue that 2020 is a particular landslide for all of us - a global pandemic, uncertainty, political upheaval, exploding racial tensions, rise of Christian nationalism, the powers and principalities of this world all rising. The landslides aren’t over for many of us. We have been buried under the landslides of our times and our days - some of you have told me of your divorce, your own diagnosis, your job loss, your loved ones falling prey to conspiracy theories, your own devastations. And we wonder why nothing feels clear, why everything feels murky and uncertain and muddy. We’re living in the aftermath of the landslide and it simply takes time for the dust to settle.

You’re saying that we need to let the silt settle in order to have full clarity of what - if anything - is next,” I said slowly.

As we drove, we did what we always do - we talked. We are equally earnest and so well matched for a conversation about the metaphor in our rear view mirror. We have felt unsure about “what’s next” for a while now and that has been its own particular tumult.

“If the clarity isn’t there,” I said, “perhaps the invitation is simply to hold fast. And wait until we know what we know under all the turmoil.”

As we drove home the next day, every once in a while one of us would start the familiar refrains: “What about moving…” or “what about quitting my job…” and the other would say, “We’re letting the silt settle.” We agreed that the aftermath of a landslide or four isn’t usually the ideal time for major life decisions.

Maybe now isn’t the time for upending everything. Maybe now is the time to simply let the silt settle until things are more clear.

Maybe this is the time to hold fast to what we know is true. Clarity will come when it’s time. There is no urgency of missing it in the Kingdom of God. If things aren’t clear, they cannot be forced to resolve until the appointed time.

I think sometimes when we’re used to being in crisis mode, running from fire to fire, we forget how to settle into our lives and simply live as disciples of Jesus on a daily basis. This reminds me of a line in Madeleine L’Engle’s novel A Swiftly Tilting Planet“The world has been abnormal for so long that we’ve forgotten what it’s like to live in a peaceful and reasonable climate. If there is to be any peace or reason, we have to create it in our own hearts and homes.” We live in a time when the absence of peace and reason feels both chronic and acute - both inside and outside of our homes - so now what?

The world will be abnormal for a while longer. That’s just true. We will want to burn it all down and start over. Our collective culture is dealing with a landslide of apocalyptic proportions; within that are all of our little lives, swirling in the dust, too. And it’s true, the crisis may not pass for a while. The rock and the mud is still sliding. We will think we can manage our way out of the murkiness. We will think that because we have been in crisis for so long that crisis is all that’s left to us.

And so we can either be swept away in it or we can hold fast, creating the peace and reason we crave everywhere we can until the silt settles and the water is clear again. Hold tightly to the vision of the Kingdom of God we yearn for, hold tightly to the high road, hold fast to love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control. Or as the writer of Hebrews said, “Let us hold fast to the confession of our hope without wavering, for he who has promised is faithful.”

Faithful, faithful, faithful.

I’m home now and I find myself thinking of the lake often. I love the image of that lake out in the mountains letting the days pass, the silt slowly settling, the currents ebb and flow, and the slow, steady accumulation of clarity being restored again. I love that it can’t be rushed and it can’t be avoided. The process both inside of time and outside of it. Slowly, slowly, faithfully, faithfully, the water does the work it is meant to do. And when you can see the sky in the water again, it seems to me that you’ll know everything you need to know by then and not a minute sooner. And isn’t that faithfulness, too?

Love S.


Monday, October 12, 2020

Published! This is the Plate: Utah Food Traditions -

Several years in the making and a huge project for the editors, and this book is published! We folklorists are a rogue bunch of people, who do original research, on their own time (in addition to their careers - which may or may not be as folklorists). We were invited to submit articles for a variety of topics, and this book is amazing! It will be a delightful look at Utah and a perfect coffee table addition. A great Christmas gift.

My two articles are Compassionate Service Casserole, which looks at service and food, and Old-Time Foodways, discussing food memory and reproduction of those memories in commercial business. They were both a delight to research and write. 

Use Plate25 for a discount when ordering through the U of U's site


 This is the Plate: Utah Food Traditions Book Launch

 

Join editors Carol Edison, Eric Eliason, and Lynne McNeil with guests as they discuss the book This is the Plate: Utah Food Traditions.  

 

Friday, October 16, 2020

12:00 p.m. MDT

(11:00 a.m. PDT/2:00 p.m. EDT)

 

Click the link below to sign up for the FREE event (and info on how to save 25% off your purchase of the book!).

 

https://uofupress.lib.utah.edu/book-launch-this-is-the-plate/




Friday, October 9, 2020

Breast Cancer Journey and Chat -

 I led a Lifting Hearts Support Meeting yesterday. Here's the video, complete with pictures from my cancer journey. 



Thursday, October 1, 2020

Pinktober - Fingernails -

                                                     My nod to this month - 




                                                     Teeny Tiny Porny, or Mini-pinnie's? 

Wednesday, September 30, 2020

September Rundown - and Ode to Helen -

Let's see, my granddaughter got married on September 5th in Cedar City, I had the privilege of performing the wedding ceremony. What a gift. It was a beautiful simple ceremony, if I do say so myself. Nothing like knowing the bride and groom and talking to them, rather than preaching a sermon to folks who are there for a wedding, not a religious service. A great way to begin the month, especially because doing such is typically a patriarchal "duty." 

Scott and I headed to Zion for the Labor Day weekend, knowing it was going to be hot and crowded, but we hadn't been to Zion this year, so we went. And, I got sick that evening, and spent Sunday in bed, in the motel room! Gratefully, The Fast and The Furious movie-thon was on, so Scott wasn't too bored or bothered. 

Scott had been mild'ly sick with a head cold the week before; we both had covid-19 on Wednesday after the wedding, and we were both negative - what a crazy test!

The following weekend we tended Jenna kids, and we had a blast! We were both pretty tired and still not feeling well, and Tempest and Tom just wanted to play, so play they did, from dawn to dusk, and they had a great time, and I thoroughly enjoyed reading out on the deck and watching the kids be kids. Tom even said, "You and Grandpa have been so good. Thumb's up!" I'll take that rating! 

We came home on Sunday and on Monday afternoon Scott ended up in the hospital with pneumonia, for two nights, and I got worse, bronchitis! So we have just been trying to survive. We're both doing better, just giving our energy back. Interesting that with Scott's pneumonia, the thought was, "At least he doesn't have CoVid," when really, at his age, pneumonia can be scary enough. 

I've been going to the office a few days, working from home the other, and just trying to stay away from people. 

Our renter, a young man from South Dakota, Jewish, going to BYU, is staying with us because he doesn't want to be around college kids that spread co-vid. Sadly, that means that he's been doing mostly online classes for my basement. And with the high rate of college kids in Utah County with CoVid, it's probably a good thing. 

Work is going well, I love what I do. I have about five clients that I see at home. I have people knocking on my door, yet I'm limiting that practice to just two an evening. 

Kids are doing well, Jenna is helping with my mom which is great, and such a relief. Tyler is just busy keeping a business going and helping with five kids! 

Scott's old car is up and running. We've been on a couple of rides. He's so proud of that vehicle - having it to work on these past several months has been such a blessing - we're thinking about naming it CoVid, 19, or 2020! 

We went for a drive on Sunday, in the old car, stopping at TJ's for flowers. We took birthday flowers to Meili, a skeleton succulent to Jenna, then spur-of-the-moment decided to go to lunch at Joe's. On our way home I told Scott - "The perfect Sunday. Just the way a Sabbath should be spent." 

I began this last week of September with a quick visit to Instacare, just to check on my cough, making sure my lungs were clear, and they are. I did learn that bronchitis takes a while to run its course - guess that's all I have, all most of us have - time. 

Sadly, time has run out for many people - I have lost 2 dear dear patients to cancer this month; a friend from Alabama from CoVid; 3 other patients have death knocking at their door, and I am amazed they are keeping death at bay. And to end the month, Helen Reddy and Mac Davis, two musicians who were strong influences in my teen years - interesting that the woman whose songs catapulted me into my female and feminist identity book-ended this month. 

And with good-byes there's always a beginning . . . and a new month. 


And that outfit - oh, the memories! 





Wednesday, September 23, 2020

Muscular Dystrophy - and Carter -

I have a 16 year old grandson who has MD. He's a beautiful boy, and he is carrying a heavy load, as are his parents. To be "normal" is tough enough for anyone who wants to not stand out in a crowd, but to be "normal" when your body is not cooperating, is difficult. Defining self is hard hard hard, and accepting our life's journey - as "different" has to be difficult. 

His parents are amazing - he is just their son, yet they are fiercely protective as well as being advocates for his disability as well as his normalness. 

This blog post definitely puts a different perspective on dis-ability. Take a read. 

Tuesday, September 15, 2020

The New Man on the Team - Lessons -

Right before we moved to Alabama, from Utah, a friend gave me some fine words of wisdom: "Don't say, 'Where I come from we do it this way.' Listen first, watch second, talk last."

That advice came in handy as I watched Edie drop the watermelon onto the concrete patio rather than cut it into slices. It worked when I was asked to decorate for the annual Christmas Tree Festival, and when Pops brought over green tomatoes, rather than cringe, I asked him, "How do you use these?" Rather than wonder (outloud) why on earth he'd picked these big beautiful tomatoes before they turned red. 

Of course, this was more than 25 years ago, and lots of experiences since - and yet this phrase and lesson have always been in the forefront of my mind. I've tried to go into a conversation, a meeting, a new job, a group of people, with an open mind, throwing my agenda out the window and adopting a "teach me," outlook. 

This does also go along with the value of "Nobody care how much you know until they know how much you care," that I was taught by both parents - part of the hospitality "the customer is always right" mentality, yet also that "shut up and listen" attitude both of my parents were pros at. 

That doesn't mean I don't have an ego or that I can't jump into a conversation and quickly insert my foot, yet I've learned over the years that if I'm not teaching (not lecturing, but teaching) I need to check my ego at the door and walk into the situation open and teachable. 

One experience that really pushed my boundaries on the "watch first" attitude was when I went to work as the office manager for an automotive development firm. Quite the experience going into the staff meeting, three women among 25 men, and listen to them talk using computer acronyms an automotive terminology. So foreign to me! I wrote a note on my pad - "How on earth am I going to learn this language?" And then I did - by asking questions and listening. This was one place where, even if I'd had an agenda, it wouldn't have worked! 

And yet there have been plenty of times where I've known the language, but needed to listen to material presented before showing my own knowledge. And there have been plenty of times where I've been the one presenting material, the expert on "green tomatoes," and yet asked for input from others. 

The team I work with (not for) has grown from a tight-knit group of 5 to a larger group of 10, as well as several managers and several teams we collaborate with. We've had to do a delicate dance to not only hire, but acclimate the newbie to "our way," while also listening to their ideas and suggestions. It's a give and take - and until a couple of weeks ago, we've done this adjusting pretty well. Yet hiring someone who "knows" and isn't afraid to tell can be gut-wrenching to a team. 

I'm reminded of a student who came to my writing class the first day with half of his research done on a paper about Harley Davidson's, with an "I've got this" attitude, and only wanting to finish this paper for his A. And when he told me his way of doing things, and I listened, and then told him that he would need to learn my way, he was pretty upset. Because his way had worked just great - indeed, "I've written a lot, I just need to pass this class." He wasn't about to learn anything new, only to show that he already knew. And he lasted about 3 weeks, until the first preliminary research paper was due - which he couldn't/wouldn't write. 

And so - the new guy on the block knows everything, wants to make sure we all know he knows, and isn't afraid to corner any member of the team to tell us how he sees us fitting into his practice; with "This is how I did it here . . ." being his constant phrase. Ouch! Team work? And when I mildly called him on it yesterday - well, let's say, it didn't pertain to him - he knew that! 

And life goes on! Guess I'll see what I can learn from him! 

Monday, September 7, 2020

Gary Wayne Pettus - CoVid -

 Early March, I was in my office in a meeting with my Palliative Care team. One of our members said that he believed we all would be personally affected by the virus - we would know someone who would die from it. And when musician, John Prine, died I cried, and I thought, yup, that's it. And then Broadway actor, Nick Cordero, died, and I thought - too young, just too young. I've had patients pass, seeing their families and their caregivers hurt and ache from their deaths and the extreme loss of not being with their loved one. And then Gary died on Saturday. I cried until there were no more tears. I've prayed for him and his family for weeks, since learning about his hospitalization. I've prayed for his caregivers, knowing they would fall in love with this gentle giant and his loving family. I've prayed there would be a miracle, and even last week was hopeful one was arriving, that would bring him to his Alabama home. Yet no.

I am better because of Gary and his family - they opened their arms to us when we moved to Alabama - we had meals with them, picked ginormous blueberries at their home, had conversations on the porch, and after our move to Utah, we remained in contact through the years - mourning Vicki's death, watching his beautiful family grow, keeping in touch with Noble, Johanna, Amy, Marion, and loving Cheryl like a best friend (this was taken May 2019).
Whenever, which is often, I think of the Pettus family, I think of a poem Gary shared in a Sacrament meeting, shortly after we arrived in the South. I wish I could find it now, yet the most important line, shared with Gary's slow, deliberate, Southern accent, impacted me, taught me to accept others where they are and learn from them, and still does - "Hush your mouth, child, I am the South."
Gary - 'til we meet again.
CoVid - thank God for memories.


https://www.deseret.com/faith/2020/9/5/21424548/covid-19-birmingham-temple-president-mormon-latter-day-saint-pandemic?fbclid=IwAR1gHI50VKR--eWO-HiX597RxCzovA_aFxLCFPGZnc-RqiQIW4LdnMPaFKw

https://www.lorettomemorialchapel.com/obituary/gary-pettus?fbclid=IwAR1gHI50VKR--eWO-HiX597RxCzovA_aFxLCFPGZnc-RqiQIW4LdnMPaFKw