I hadn't expected my infusions to be a big deal. I've been doing them every six months for the past 2 years. With time, they have figured out better how to lessen side effects and maximize effectiveness. I can't begin to say how grateful I am for the doctors and nurses who spent the time and care to figure these things out.
Rûach Awakening
Thursday, March 26, 2026
Day 37: For people with bodies who annoy them
I hadn't expected my infusions to be a big deal. I've been doing them every six months for the past 2 years. With time, they have figured out better how to lessen side effects and maximize effectiveness. I can't begin to say how grateful I am for the doctors and nurses who spent the time and care to figure these things out.
Wednesday, March 25, 2026
Day 36: The stories we tell
Tuesday, March 24, 2026
Day 35: Discernment painting
I told the boys I was having a playdate with a friend from church.
I set out some activities for Zander so we would have bandwidth to talk.
She arrived and Zander choose watercolor art the table on a giant pad of paper. I grabbed water for him. She pulled up a chair next to him and we started talking while he painted a washed out rainbow across the page.
We're both in the middle season of life. She's slightly ahead of me and grappling with the changes that come with an empty nest. I'm still working on making sure my nest ends up empty someday. But life in all seasons comes with questions of purpose and big decisions that shape the journey ahead.
Zander painted a vibrant blue across the page. It was striking and both of us paused and looked at it.
"There's a freedom in painting at that age that we don't often get as adults. " She noted.
Simultaneously, we both grabbed brushes. I slid the paper over and we started painting like Zander. Wild colors in wild ways.
Our conversation continued. We were both very present in the painting, very present in the conversation and lost in our own thoughts all at the same time. It was a comfortable togetherness. A space to ponder and the painting confirmed it was a safe space to go off script and wrestle with life.
Zander grabbed neon markers and started filling in any white space.
Time passed too quickly. She had an appointment to get to. We didn't have any answers about life but we made art and shared a beautiful hour together.
Monday, March 23, 2026
Day 34: Impatient
Lent is growing long.
I am growing weary.
So here is a brief lament:
I feel impatient that my body hasn't fully bounced back and I wake up to the feeling of nausea.
I feel impatient about the uncertainty about the future of the church and what the call of the faithful should be in this historical moment.
I feel impatient about uncertainty my own ministry and vocation in this moment and in the season to come.
I feel impatient with the process of determining the next right decision for each of my boys. I know the process works and God provides. But I am impatient.
I'm impatient with lent and the daily reflection for this blog and choosing to do things the hard way every day, waiting for Easter.
Weariness and lament are part of this season.
Jesus wept even when he knew resurrection was around the corner.
He prayed with sweat and blood and tears as he stared down the road ahead.
This season is a space to search for God and to pick up spiritual practices. It is a time for wilderness and wondering. For hope and ache and longing.
I feel my impatience and weariness as a heavy blanket and yet, closed in my fist is the tiny light of hope. Easter is coming.
Sunday, March 22, 2026
Day 33: Fearless
He spoke with the power of Jesus himself.
The memory is fuzzy in my mind, so distant I have a hard time believing it to be true.
I was 19 or 20. I had gotten an old retired bus donated from the local district. I loaded it with donations and drove it to Miami. I arrived at the port and had it loaded on a ship to Haiti.
I flew to Haiti and went with the pastor of the church I worked with to the Port to collect the bus from the ship.
I was exhausted and sleeping in the back wedged between some sacks of pinto beans. The bus came to a stop and an armed man stood at the door. Things seemed tense.
I stayed still half asleep, half highly alert.
The pastor's voice was calm.
"This bus belongs to God. I would not be responsible if you stole it from him. "
The men left. It felt like Obi-Wan using the force.
We never spoke a word of the incident.
I sometimes wonder if the memory is real. I never much shared it and as I've said, he and I never talked about it.
But it was ordinary for him. He experienced things like this. His brother was murdered in a similar situation.
Haiti can be dangerous.
This small, gentle pastor has a largeness and a power that reminded me of Jesus. His faith gave him an unwavering ability to choose the right thing, even when the right thing was dangerous. He died march 20, 2005 of meningitis.
There are times when faith asks us to risk something. Our reputation, our finances, our careers. When I face a moment of risk in faith, I remember his eyes. Serious and knowledgeable of the risks he faced and yet kind and soft with a conviction that would must certainly move mountains.
Today I've been thinking about the church and I feel the church is called to risk. To go out in faith with a trust that God will lead and God will provide -- people, money, opportunity. And i imagine this Haitian pastor -- and I think-- I need a bit of his courage. Maybe we all do.
Saturday, March 21, 2026
Day 32: But I don't want to
I keep weekends open intentionally.
Saturdays are an open book to get school projects done, do a fun outing, catch up on house work or just veg and recover.
This is a good arrangement for my family. They need a slower pace and more down time. However, Saturday morning comes and NO ONE knows what to do. I have to figure out priorities and come up with a plan. I go around and gather input. Do you have homework? Do you have anything you want to do this weekend? Non commital grunts. What does that mean?
Eventually, I make everyone pull out laptops and go subject by subject -- is there homework? I make a list of essential chores. Nice to have chores. A few options for activities based on weather and the general vibe. By the time I've done this everyone in the house has found some lazy activity -- one's curled up on the couch with a book, two in the sandbox, someone else is building something out of cardboard and the last on its just laying on the floor staring at the ceiling. My husband has vanished and the kitchen is a mess from the breakfast rush.
Since things are calm, I clean the kitchen and mentally organize the day given the inertia I now need to overcome. I keep my eye on everyone looking for my break. There's a moment when someone is ready to switch activities and if I get something going at just the right time, in just the right way, sometimes I can get us on track without too much issue.
But more often than not I can't find a break and the morning turns to lunch and the day hasn't even started and I have to reconsider and focus on only top priorities.
What gets me is that they drag their heels even on fun days.
"Let's go swimming..."
Naaaaaaa
I have to twist their arms and say, we'll just go for 5 minutes and you don't have to get in the pool.
And we arrive and they are in the water having the time of their life. And I'm exhausted because it took every bit of energy I had just to get them there.
I wonder if I'm like this with God.
I'm happy in my simple life not seeing the big picture of eternity and God calls me into something new, that I will totally love and thrive in -- and yet -- I dig my heels in refusing to listen.
May I find an openness to things that don't fit in with my plans. May I be willing to do things that aren't comfortable. May I find the ability to look up from my minutia long enough to recognize when God is inviting me on an adventure. And may I have humilty to remember that my perspective is limited and generally self centered.
Sometimes we get to go swimming. Sometimes we have to clean the back yard. Sometimes we just need to rest.
Good parents know what the family needs and spend a great deal of effort balancing those needs and ensuring everyone is cared for.
May I trust God as the good parent who knows what I need and what all my siblings need and have a heart to participate in what's needed.
Friday, March 20, 2026
Day 31: Waiting
On one hand, Fridays have a more relaxed schedule. On the other, there are always things I need to try to cram into the limited space.






