A Poem For the New Year

A Poem for the New Year

Guest Writer: Karen DuBert

Rocks, Stones, and Pebbles

Is it rocks in your pockets, a stone in your shoe, 

A cloud that envelops whatever you do?

It’s been a rough year for this tilted old world 

Witnessing horrors freshly unfurled.

Each of the pebbles we carried this year 

Is a slanted perspective from things that we hear

From sinister algorithms designed to cause dread; 

Like small, helpless creatures, we’re caught in the Web.

Children are starving and people are maimed 

By missiles and drones and long distance planes,

The heartache is more than our souls can fathom;

We feel so helpless with justice abandoned.

As we search for the Truth, let’s not click on the bait 

Created to make us blind creatures of hate.

Let’s stop for a second, shake the stone from our shoe

Toss the rocks from our pockets–-start this fresh year anew.

Karen DuBert

Joanna Seibert joannaseibert.com

 

Feet No Longer Wearing Bass Weejuns

Feet Without Bass Weejuns

“ but those who wait for the Lord shall renew their strength,
    they shall mount up with wings like eagles,
they shall run and not be weary,
    they shall walk and not faint.”—Isaiah 40:31.

A rainy Friday night on January 13, 1967. I am a junior in medical school in Memphis, on my way home in my Volkswagen Bug after my weekly indulgence of a hair appointment. It was an eventful day early on in my obstetrical rotation. I deliver stillborn twins. I do not remember showing any pastoral care to that mother. I am just here to learn how to deliver babies. My long-term goal is to be a pediatrician and care for babies, especially newborns.   

Suddenly, there is a loud noise, and my little red car abruptly stops. For a few seconds, it is darker than usual. I cannot find my brown Bass Weejun loafers. One knee is dislocated. My chin is bleeding. My ankles and feet hurt. I know I cannot walk. Later, I am told I was hit head-on by a drunk driver in a black Cadillac, making a left turn into a bar. My parents come to care for me. They are told I might not walk again. If I walk, I learn, I will never have Weejuns on my feet again, always special, supportive shoes!

I must leave medical school and join a lower class six months later. Over time, I begin an incredible lifelong career as a pediatric radiologist, deciding this specialty might be easier on my feet. Today, I still suffer from the injuries I endured in that crash more than fifty years later. Each step can sometimes be excruciating on my feet and ankles, even after multiple surgeries. I now walk with a quad cane and, more often, a walker.  

Twenty-four years ago, I became involved in a new ministry and am now an ordained deacon in the Episcopal Church. Today, I work with people in various types of recovery. I am also trained as a spiritual director, since this can be a “sitting down and listening ministry.”

Although I have retired from my medical practice, working in hospitals has taught me to be comfortable around the sick. I have also been trained as a pastoral care chaplain in the Community of Hope, and I still visit or call those in the hospital and those who are homebound every week.

I give thanks for the privilege of this journey. This year, I will celebrate the 25th anniversary of my ordination to the diaconate.

When I experience pain in my feet, especially on these visits, I remind myself about a balm as I walk down long hospital corridors. The ministries I have loved, which have brought joy to my life: my career in pediatric radiology, working in recovery, becoming a spiritual director, and being a pastoral caregiver—all have opened up to me as a direct result of my broken feet.

All my ministries developed from a response to injuries inflicted on my body. That which caused harm has become a path to healing for myself and perhaps for others.

There is one more balm. When I returned to a different medical class, I met my husband, whom I had been married to for 57 years. He has been a companion par excellence, and I am awed to realize that we would never have known each other except for the accident that crushed my feet and ankles. There would not be three adult children, their spouses, and six grandchildren who remind us of God’s goodness every day, even in difficult times. 

Every day, my painful, battle-scarred feet remind me of Easter breaking out of Good Friday.

Joanna Seibert, Feet,” Christian Century, February 26, 2020.

Joanna  https://www.joannaseibert.com/

Life tragedies will happen to all of us. Today, near the 59th anniversary of this accident, my epiphany is that we are all called to help each other find the resurrection from each of our life’s tragedies, a promise that will always be there.

 

 

Movements to Start the Day

Movements to Start the Day

“In the quiet of this morning, I recall the prayer and gestures of the deacon as they stand ready at the lectern before reading a gospel narrative each week. I make the sign of the cross on my forehead and say, ‘Dear God, may your Word be upon my mind;’ and then the gesture again on my mouth, ‘may your Word be upon my lips;’ and then across my chest, ‘may your Word be upon my heart.’

I add the sign of the cross on my belly, and I am aware of my feet on the earth. I pray that your Word be upon all my body and soul, grounding me in your Spirit and guiding my every step. I begin my day.”—Trish Stefanik in Overlook Retreat House at Dayspring from InwardOutward.org, Church of the Savior, Washington, D.C.

Trish Stefanik reminds us of the meaning of our gestures before reading the gospel. Making the sign of the cross during my almost twenty-five years as a deacon has become a habit. However, I usually gesture with my hands and fingers without thinking about what I am doing. I typically am more concerned about whether I will pronounce words correctly in the gospel.

How wonderful to be reminded of why we do things habitually. However, I often count on God to remember the meaning. I am moved when members of the congregation also make these movements before the deacon reads the gospel. They may also be unknowingly praying these same prayers silently for themselves. Perhaps they are also praying for the gospel reader.

Trish Stefanik also adds a fourth movement to her belly, grounding her feet to the earth. Our bodies, especially our feet, ground us to the present moment. God most often meets us in the present moment.

Finally, there is one more gift from the author. She recommends these prayers and gestures to begin our day.

Today’s reading is a rich blessing, reminding us that our liturgical gestures have an even deeper meaning. When we remember why we are doing them, we can enter into a deeper communion with God. The movements can be even more powerful if done in a community. The gestures and prayers can also wake us each day to connect to the God of our understanding, who has been there all along.

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