Posts from the ‘Spirituality’ category

Heart Strings

Heart Strings

Sara left these Heart Strings for me. The card that came with says: “This whimsical string of beads and charms will bring peace, harmony and abundance into your life. Hang the string by a door so the movement in and out of your home will stir the bell and cause it to ring.

Heart Strings Each charm and bead has symbolism:

Donut – the continuity of life

Leaf – abundance and success

Bear – strength and courage

Hand – faith and sincerity

Heart – affection

The Bell – focus of the mind

I believe in the power of positive thinking – in having the vision of what we would like our lives and our everydays to be like. Vision can be a powerful tool. When we know what we want in our lives, we do a better job of making the choices that help get us there as well as saying no to those things that are not part of what we want.

I look at this Heart String and remember the giver as well as what each charm and bead symbolizes. It helps to remind me what is important – focus, affection, faith and sincerity, strength and courage. When those things are the focus, abundance and success are mine. The continuity of life – the circle of life – a reminder that this earthly life is not all there is.

My Heart Strings are hanging in my office across from my morning reading chair and by the sliding door to my back yard. I see it when I am quiet at the start of the day and think on those things it represents. The string is stirred by the movement through that door – a reminder during my work day. And – it is pretty on the wall – it brings to mind the friend who gave it – heart strings from one to another.

**note added…several have emailed me asking about where to purchase. These are made by Susan Walters, susan.walters@gmail.com . She will make custom strings as well.

to be good and happy today

“We know nothing of tomorrow; our business is to be good and happy today”. –Sydney Smith

I woke up this morning feeling overwhelmingly thankful…for everything – for the laughter, the joy, the beauty of my days as well as for the challenges, sorrows and disappointments – for everything!  It is all part of my life and I’m grateful for all of it. 

If life were one smooth, flat ride the view would be lousy – and boring!!  It takes a couple of trips to the valley floor to really appreciate the climb up and the beauty of the grand mountain view.  And it is on those tumbles down that we often learn who we are, what we are made of, our strengths and weaknesses – and what we don’t want or who we don’t want to be which helps to clarify what we DO want.

A favorite mystery series I read features Amelia Peabody Emerson, wife of a famous Egyptologist and no slouch herself in that department.  It is a fun romp of the Errol Flynn sort with the good guys always coming out on top.  Amelia’s catch line when things are on the challenging side is biblical:  the last line of Matthew  6:34: “Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof” (King James Version).  The more current translation is “Each day has enough trouble of it’s own”  – but the first lines are “Do not worry about tomorrow for tomorrow will worry about itself”.  Sometimes, when I find myself distracted by fretting about some future worry I picture Amelia and say the words and laugh – because, it is true and – “our business is to be good and happy today”!

And for today’s “illustration” – this photo is Karl on the right and Sparky, an 11 month old Border Collie belonging to Bob and Inez Love.  Bob logged my property this spring and Sparky was normally along.  Sparky and Karl bonded immediately and played, wrestled, chased and napped together.  I don’t claim to know what really goes on in their little doggie brains but it seems pretty clear that they do not worry about any tomorrows.

Sparky and Karl

In His Hand

I read a daily entry from Oswald Chambers’ “My Utmost for His Hightest” every morning with my first cup of coffee and most usually from my wingback chair….these days it is in the corner of my sunroom.  When I’m travelling, I read from the recliner in the motorhome.  It has been part of the start of my day for nearly 12 years now and is that time of quiet – of settling my mind and thoughts at the start of the day.  I use the reading to quiet my head to “Be Still” (Psalm 46:10) and know that God is present and with me.  It is a time of thanksgiving, of worship, of peace and reflection.  I have been through all of the entries 12 times and still there are many days when I read something as if I’ve never read it before.  It is astonishing to me in it’s revelation and wisdom!  And the timing – it is sometimes SO timely as to feel like an angelic hand has rewritten an entry specifically to me to correspond with what is happening at that precise moment in my life.  Last week, these words were in the reading:

God is not working towards a particular finish; His end is the process – that I see Him walking on the waves, no shore in sight, no success, no goal, just the absolute certainty that it is all right because I see Him walking on the sea.  It is the process, not the end which is glorifying to God.

God’s end is to enable me to see that He can walk on the chaos of my life just now.  If we have a further end in view, we do not pay sufficient attention to the immediate present: if we realize that obedience is the end, then each moment as it comes is precious.

The journey – not the destination…  The time of NOW not the future or the past.  NOW is the blessed time whether it is a joyous time or in the most difficult and painful of circumstances.

A beloved cat, Sam, who belongs to my folks has been very ill.  Sam is special to me as well as to them.  He was the inspiration for me adopting my first cat, Gus.  Gus was my “angel cat” – a fierce and dedicated hunter but also a neck hugger and lover – with me for 9 years.  When Gus was a year old we visited my mother and Sam – Sam, who never liked another cat, took Gus under wing and taught him to hunt.  It was an incredible bonding between 2 male cats.  I lost Gus nearly 2 years ago – as far as I know to another predator.  It is still an incredibly painful loss and to this day I would gladly sell everything but my soul to have him back.

 Sam is approximately 15 years old – senior for a cat, but still an active hunter – also an affectionate cat who loves to nap on my step-Dad’s lap and have his whiskers rubbed.  Now, some mysterious infection – but as of yesterday he was eating and regaining strength – hopefully on the mend.  And it is not just concern for Sam, but also for my folks who love him dearly and have shared his life.  They and I are all well aware of the life span of dogs and cats and of the greater cycle of life that we are all part of.   That knowledge does not make a loss or the endurance of pain any more endurable – it is always just hard and exhausting.  And for me, a reminder that loss is part of life and there will be more loss in my own life – times of despair and sadness.  What brings hope is the sure knowledge that “He can walk on the chaos of my life”…

Job 12: 7-10

But ask the animals and they will teach you or the birds of the air and they will tell you

Or speak to the earth and it will teach you or let the fish of the sea inform you.

Which of all these does not know that the hand of God has done this.

In His Hand is the life of every creature and the breath of all mankind.