IMG_2645   It is a ritual of childbirth. Shortly after we enter this world a nurse takes our left foot, inks it & presses it onto a sheet of paper. Thus the loops, ridges & whorls that become part of our body's signature etch their first marks into the landscape of this world. 

   At high noon on Sunday, October 31, 1943, as bullets & bombs screamed death in Europe & Asia, Lassie came home on the silver screen & The Little Prince skipped into the world, my mother & I met for the first time.

   Both of us cried. Then the image of my left foot was duly recorded. 

   At age one, I rose to walk on that foot matching its stride with its partner. Since then, my feet have taken millions of steps. A band on my left wrist tells me I average more than 8000 per day (about four miles) down from the 20,000 or so I took when I was a high school distance runner.

   If you walked just one mile every day you will have circumnavigated the globe by age seventy-one. 

   You have taken millions of steps. Some caregivers journey down hospital hallways into the chambers of people who would be grateful for a single precious stride unaided.

    For the rest of us, the number of our steps counts for little. What matters is where your spiritual feet have taken you on your outward odyssey & inward expedition. How has your heart changed since the nurse first pressed your foot on paper & how has your presence affected the lives of others?

   "Every step, even a tentative one, counts," Anne Morrow Lindberg wrote in Gift From The Sea. "For we are, actually, pioneers trying to find a new path through the maze of tradition, convention and dogma."

   What footprints have you left behind? Where will love lead you in the balance of your years?

 -Erie Chapman 

4 responses to “Days 11-15 – Footprints & Other Signs of Presence”

  1. ~liz Wessel Avatar

    Erie, I thoroughly enjoyed the unfolding of your moving expression today. You have a remarkable writing style that captures the heart as well as one’s imagination. Looking at your precious foot and hand print as you paint the stage for what was happening in the world during the time of your birth left an indelible print on me. I appreciate how you remind us of how the span of a life is a sacred journey. Your description of when, ” my mother & I met for the first time. Both of us cried.” is a striking image of the powerful bond that forms between mother and baby. Your inclusion of Lindberg’s quote “Every step, even a tentative one, counts,” as well as your closing inquiry encourge contemplation. Thank you for today’s beautiful gift!

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  2. Jolyon Avatar
    Jolyon

    Sometimes just being there at the time of need is the footprint that endures. I just read a story about a someone who became a nurse because of the care that was given to her as a child. Now, some 25 years later, their roles have reversed. The caregiver is now the one needing care and the child is now her nurse. One never knows what paths others may choose because of your path, but a touch of kindness goes a long way…
    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/nurse-assigned-to-woman-who-cared-for-her-in-hospital-as-a-toddler_56955cdbe4b09dbb4bacdc29?utm_hp_ref=good-news

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

    Erie: God has given us feet to tread and this we are thankful. He had given me many opportunities to travel around the world and work in different parts of the continents. I have enjoyed my profession of providing Radical Loving Care as well as bringing the gospel to the individuals and their family members so they are comforted as well. Today my “happy feet” do not tred so much but nevertheless I provide help and advise to others when the opportunities arises in my local community.

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  4. Terry Avatar
    Terry

    Beautiful piece of writing Erie! Years ago I traveled back to Mercy Hospital in Urbana, Illinois where I was born in 1940. The small facility was still in operation but part of a much larger health complex. When I identified myself at admissions, I got a welcoming large smile for he clerk who found a nursing assistant who then gave me a tour of my “first home”. The entire experience gave new meaning to my life as I imagined my mother and father’s joy at my arrival. Hopefully I can share that joy in my life. Footprints make up our life’s journey and leave a definite mark on all the pathways we walk on in one lifetime!

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