A Hurricane, A Stroke, And The Church

A Hurricane, a Stroke, and the Church

Guest Writer: Alan Schlesinger

A week before Hurricane Helene hit our community in Western North Carolina, my wife Paula and I flew to Brooklyn to meet our first grandchild. Less than twenty-four hours after we arrived, we got a call that Paula’s 94-year-old mother had suffered a devastating stroke. We returned on the next flight. Although she received immediate state-of-the-art care, including emergent thrombectomy and anti-coagulation, she failed to improve, and the doctors, Paula, and her brother had to make difficult decisions regarding whether to pursue aggressive rehabilitation or hospice care. 

Before enough time had elapsed to make a final decision, one week after the stroke, Hurricane Helene devastated Western North Carolina, including our community in Asheville. Our neighborhood is heavily wooded and was particularly hard hit with literally thousands of trees blown down. We had at least 40 trees down on our own property, including one that landed on our house (thankfully with minor damage). We had no power, internet, or cell service, so we couldn’t reach our family and friends. 

For more than a day, we could not reach the end of the driveway, let alone our street. After the fire department and many residents cleared a narrow lane to leave the neighborhood, we could not reach the hospital (only 5 miles from our house) due to flooding. We had to drive nearly an hour, use precious gasoline when no gas stations were open, and take a circuitous route to reach the hospital. 

I dropped Paula and her brother off at the hospital to check on her mother, then used cell service to contact our children and friends, who I knew must be worried. I was given many tips by people I encountered: try Pack Square in the center of town, try the sidewalks outside certain hotels, etc. I went from place to place but could not get service. 

Ready to give up and drive home, I felt a need to check on our downtown church, a few blocks away—First Presbyterian Church, Asheville. To my surprise, when I walked into the church, I was greeted by our associate pastor and found a half dozen church members on cell phones, tablets, and laptops. There was power and internet connectivity. Using WiFi-enabled calling, I could talk to my children and friends and let them know, after more than 24 hours without contact, that we were safe. I told our associate pastor how I had first tried to get cell service, chasing tips and rumors without success. Still, I eventually inexplicably found myself drawn to the church, where I found everything I needed. Half-joking, I told him he could indeed see a sermon in that story. 

There has been unfathomable devastation here in Western North Carolina, and I was amazed daily by the grit of our community as people worked tirelessly to help one another. People with chainsaws cut downed trees. Others, including children, stacked logs and carried away debris. People shared precious food and water. Despite being stressed and stretched thin, the doctors, nurses, and other healthcare workers helped Paula and her brother decide to place their mother in Hospice care, where she is now comfortable. I will always appreciate how everyone banded together to help one another, but I certainly will never forget how I was drawn to our church on that overwhelming first day, and how I found everything I needed in that place. 

If you want to help Asheville, the River Arts District was heavily hit. There is a River Arts District Artist Foundation (RADA):

https://riverartsdistrict.com/donate/

Also, the Red Cross at  https://www.redcross.org

 

Alan

Joanna  joannaseibert.com https://www.joannaseibert.com/

 

Right Vs. Left Brain

Right vs. Left Brain

Guest Writer: Lara Patriquin

Our brilliant minds have evolved over millennia, allowing us to tackle increasingly complex tasks in our modern world. From booking flights on our phones to filing taxes, the left brain, responsible for logic, language, and critical thinking, has developed exponentially since our ancestors roamed caves. It enables us to analyze data, create to-do lists, perform intricate calculations, and operate advanced technology.

But while our left brain hungers for logic and analysis, the right brain holds the key to creativity, intuition, and holistic thinking. Success in life isn’t just about being left-brain “smart.” Anyone leading a company or practicing medicine knows that intuition, big-picture thinking, and creativity—right-brain functions—are equally essential. Often, it is our “secret sauce.” 

The left brain may help us achieve success, but does living solely in that space make life fun

Awe, inspiration, joy, and love all flow from the right brain. You can live a “successful” life by external standards, but the magic of the right brain truly makes life worth living.

So, take time today to nourish your right brain. You can strengthen it through activities like:

  • Creative Arts: Painting, drawing, sculpting, and other forms of visual expression.

  • Music and Rhythm: Playing instruments, composing, singing, and dancing.

  • Imagination-Based Tasks: Creative writing, storytelling, and visualization exercises.

  • Emotional Expression: Understanding and expressing emotions through art, music, or dance.

  • Spatial Awareness: Engaging in puzzles or designs that require spatial reasoning.

  • Holistic Thinking: Recognizing patterns and connecting seemingly unrelated ideas.

  • Intuition: Trusting gut feelings and making decisions based on instinct.

Soooo....get off your computers and phones and play a game, walk in the woods, watch a movie, listen to music, or just hang out. 

You will feel more like yourself, more creative, and connected. 

With plenty of right-brain love,

Lara Patriquin

Joanna Seibert joannaseibert.com https://www.joannaseibert.com/

 

God Moments as We Live in the Present Moment

Finding God in the Present Moment

Living in the Present Moment of Langley’s First Christmas

“I search for the Spirit as I take out the trash. The sacred is revealed in brilliant light only rarely, in the flash of some great unexpected insight, but much more than this, the holy is to be discovered in our daily lives when we are simply being ourselves. Putting the kids to bed, working in the garden, sitting on the porch in the evening: the beauty of eternity is that it hides in plain sight all around us. We are all prophets of the predictable pattern, witnesses to the wonder of the average day.”—Bishop Steven Charleston, Daily Facebook Page.

 The God of my understanding uses every bit of our lives to call us to God’s love. I remember walking around my block one morning when I noticed all the trash bins in front of houses. On this walk, I realized that many of the spiritual disciplines we practice are simply to clear our minds—literally taking out the trash so we can hear God speak to our lives.

Bishop Charleston reminds us again of Brother Lawrence’s experience in The Practice of the Presence of God, seeking and seeing God in every aspect of our lives. He tells us we don’t have to live in a monastery to find and live this kind of life. He believes we can know God’s presence more in our daily routine than in some St. Paul-like, blinding, falling-off-our-horse, spectacular event.

Bishop Charleston also practices the family system’s axiom of being the less anxious presence in the world around him. He is looking around with awe at the ever-changing beauty of God’s immanence in the vastness of nature, and he is transformed by what he sees. He actively seeks Christ in every place and every person he encounters. This is the spiritual discipline of living in the present moment.

Joanna     https://www.joannaseibert.com/