The license plate ahead of me suggests on Easter morning, having just come from
a labyrinth walk at church where, as I circled the perimeter, holding space for the walkers,
I could not keep from smiling, watching the faces of pilgrims lighten in the light of a new morning,
even as they carried their cares and sorrows and joys with them along the path. As we all do.
The little license plate reminder embodies the generosity of spirit infusing this day of rebirth and hope,
walking under the reassuring rustle of new leaves whispering in their own language what sounds like peace.
(Top) Walking the Unitarian Universalist Society of Sacramento (UUSS) labyrinth on Easter morning. (Above) My assemblage in the center of the labyrinth. / Photos: Jan Haag
And in the pouring, somehow a blessing. And in the pounding of my heart, somehow a blessing. And in the gaps, somehow a blessing that gathers itself even now, that has been gathering itself for ages, that will never stop.
—Jan Richardson
•••
And to say it aloud, not asking or pleading but blessing, without needing a holy one to do so—
rather, recognizing the holy in you that gently nudges you to speak of the broken, of the lost, of the unrelenting sorrow.
Somehow a blessing stutters through your heart, makes its way through the gaps, winds around the suffering you have taken on, pushes itself between your lips, becoming breath,
as you praise and praise and praise, as you voice the anger and the ache, as you walk the path before you, letting what needs to pour from the overfull pitcher of you, the vessel,
I am going to listen for the water at the edge of things. —Anne Lamott (quoting a child at her church)
Listen. I know that walking my neighborhood, marveling at the show-offy flowers, spring springing, is a distraction.
I know how much awful we are in, that the world is in. But I also know that when it rains, as it did this week, gentle showers in my corner of the world,
as I walk, I am quiet enough to listen for the water at the edge of things. I love walking a labyrinth in rain, amid the patter of drops, hearing the spontaneous creek
burbling its way to the big river down the street—even under an umbrella, this is the blessing, the answered prayer, if not the answer I was hoping for.
Awful is still awful. But good is still good, too, and goodness and grace go on. Look at the splashy flowers, the canopy of trees, leaves popping out, growing each day.
Is this not reason enough for joy? Babies celebrating their first birthdays, Tongue-wagging dogs tugging at leashes, Smiles of strangers, who, if we stop
for just a moment, say hello and exchange some neighborly words, are on their way to becoming familiar. So close to family. So close to friend.
•••
(With thanks to Anne Lamott for the inspiration and a version of the line “goodness and grace go on.” And in honor of Rosie Mae Just Giel, whose first birthday our family is celebrating today.)
Ducks by the temporary stream in the rainy season, near the Unitarian Universalist Society of Sacramento (UUSS) labyrinth / Photo: Jan Haag
We chart a course through a vast sea of sprigs greening from small pots to which my friend the Master Gardener has brought me.
As we sail down aisles and ooh and ahh over the miracle of so many varieties of growing things, I am grateful for her navigation—without which I would be lost in this ocean of floribundance.
One needs a guide here, someone at the helm with a plan to choose the little sprouts that will, with luck, grow into bigger ones in my front yard.
Her giddiness with the profusion of it all soaks into me, she who launched me on this project of re-sculpting my front yard into a cottage garden wonderland.
Already—thanks to her good eye and the labor of men moving rocks and soil—passers-by comment as I water. “How pretty your yard looks,” strangers say, and I beam as if I had the vision for this little plot of earth that will soon become laden with more growing things.
And I think of friends like this one who have accompanied me on different parts of my voyage, beautifying spaces that are, for the moment, mine.
But I just smile to those strolling by and say, “Thank you,” hoping that those words reach the ears of the dear ones who have, over nearly 40 years, helped me make this old house a sweet home.
•••
(With thanks to my friend, Master Gardener Lindsey Holloway, for her visionary revisioning of my front yard and for the field trip to Curious Flora in Richmond, California, a true gardener’s paradise.)
Lindsey Holloway leading the way at Curious Flora, Richmond, California / Photo: Jan Haag