“All shall be well, and all shall be well and all manner of thing shall be well.” -Julian of Norwich

In this we surrender and trust.

Service

During Thanksgiving weekend we have the opportunity to pause amid the weaving's of our days to really notice, offer a generous presence and open to the fullness of experience.  

The frenetic energy of incessant thinking can distract us from what is here. It helps to pay attention to our patterned thoughts and our filters that alter our seeing. The stories we tell ourselves, in response to situations, are more a reflection of our internal world. If we let all the drama fall away we are left sitting with our emotions. Unpleasant emotions are the ones we prefer to deny or discard. A better choice is to acknowledge rather than reject, be curious rather than fearful, open up space for and meet with kindness.  If we are patient with our listening and in keeping company with, we come to understand the deepest truth of our being; yours and mine. All that remains is Love, an ocean of Love.

Personally, there are times when my clouded thinking can whirl up a storm. Yet, a simple pause to STOP, return to the present and ask, “What about right now in this moment?” As I gaze around, I begin notice; the cozy warmth and glow of fireplace embers,  peace in this quiet morning, birds cawing greetings while passing overhead, grandfather clock chiming the hour with no appointments to keep, sun streaming shimmering patterns on the wall, and a knowing that all is well.

Yesterday many of us gathered together in celebration of countless blessings. We remember and we send love to many who could not be together. Living in awareness of the precious, yet fleeting nature of life, we give up any complacency of taking for granted. Instead, we recognize the pleasure we receive in the little gifts of service we offer one another, wholeheartedly.

 

The Pleasure of Serving
by Gabriela Mistral

All of nature is a yearning for service:
The cloud serves, and the wind, and the furrow.

Where there is a tree to plant, you be the one.
Where there is a mistake to undo, let it be you.

You be the one to remove the rock from the field,
The hate from human hearts,
And the difficulties from the problem.

There is joy in being wise and just,
But above all there is the beautiful,
The immense happiness of serving.

How sad the world would be if all was already done.
If there was no rosebush to plant,
No enterprise to undertake.

Do not limit yourself to easy tasks.
It's so beautiful to do what others dodge.

But don't fall prey to the error that only
Great tasks done can be counted as accomplishments.
There are small acts of service that are good ones:
Decoratively setting a table,
Putting some books in order,
Combing a little girl's hair.
That one over there is the one that criticizes,
This other one is the one that destroys.
You be the one that serves.

Serving is not a labor just for inferior beings.
God, who gives fruit and light, serves.
His name could be rendered thus: He Who Serves.

And he has his eyes on our hands,
And he asks us at the close of day:
"Did you render service today? To whom?
To a tree, to your friend, to your mother?"

Chilean poet Gabriela Mistral won the 1945 Nobel Prize for Literature.

 

From my heart to yours  with gratitude,

Liz Sorensen Wessel

Mandala by ~liz

8 responses to “Days 328-329 Giver of Light”

  1. Terry Avatar
    Terry

    Very thoughtful post! Yesterday I attended a Boston Symphony concert in Boston and was held reverentially in awe as the musical tapestry unfolded before my eyes. The score was Tchaikovsky’s Winter Day Dreams, Symphony #l. The sonorous notes were gorgeous and I felt my entire being relax and appreciate my existence. Such beauty. Such creativity and all of this God given to me and to the assembled mass of human beings who sat there with me. We must try to build into our lives, at whatever level possible, these sacred moments of magic, of re-creation, and joy.

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  2. Julie Laverdiere Avatar
    Julie Laverdiere

    Hi Liz, thank you for remembering us to have gratitude always. Grace is all around us. We just have to notice.

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  3. sbeng@att.net Avatar
    sbeng@att.net

    Liz: thanks for reminding us that serving is a pleasure. There is more pleasure to give than to receive. The Giver of Life and Light dwells deep within us. To quote the writer Gabriel Mistrial “There is joy in being wise and just, But above all these there is the beautiful, the immense Happiness of serving.” To all caregivers including those in the nursing and medical profession may we be reminded that it is an honor to serve” that God who gives fruit and light serves. His could be rendered thus: He who serves”.

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  4. Jolyon Avatar
    Jolyon

    Thank you, Liz.
    Just started reading the works of James Allen and this was what I read today. I stopped to appreciate the words and thoughts.
    In the dark land of To-morrow
       I dwelt with pain and sorrow,
    And I sighed for joys and blessings that escaped me as I ran;
       And the darkness gathered round me,
       For the morrow ever found me
    Living in “What I ought to do,” and not in what I can.
       And I sought for loving-kindness
       In the dim, dark haunts of blindness ;
    In the lightless caves of self I searched for blessedness and rest;
       And I reached out hands appealing,
       Sadly groped for light and healing,
    Striving for ” what I want to have, ” not what is true and best.
       Then I found that selfish hoping,
       Darkly seeking, blindly groping
    In vain wishing and regretting chased life’s glory frommy brow;
       So I ceased from selfish fretting,
       Turned to Love, and, self-forgetting,
    Left ” what I hope to get and keep,” for what I will be now.
       So I fled from self and sorrow,
       Left the dark land of To-morrow,
    And thought of what kind deeds to do, what loving words to say;
       And the light of peace and gladness
       Chased away the clouds of sadness,
    For I lost the past and future in the bright world of To-day.

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  5. ~liz Wessel Avatar

    Thank you for sharing James Allen’s insight; one man’s journey and a poignant companioning of a souls miraculous journey.

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  6. ~liz Wessel Avatar

    Thank you, Suan. To give is to receive…

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  7. ~liz Wessel Avatar

    Hi Julie, so true and beautiful to contemplate, love is all around us!

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  8. ~liz Wessel Avatar

    Beautifully said, Terry. Your description is so vivid, your experience so fresh and your peak life experience one that you will always carry with you. Thanks for sharing it with us!

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