Two halves of LifeNote: Reflection offered by Liz Sorensen Wessel.  Father Richard Rohr describes the first half of life as a time for building our identity, following career pursuits, gaining confidence in our skillfulness, accomplishing and striving for success, which are developmental steps for establishing ourselves in the world. 

Then one day we may awaken and wonder about the years flying by and how we've molded ourselves to the expectations of others and our culture to fit in and belong.

Along the way how far have we wandered away from our true nature?

Rohr states, β€œIn our formative years, we are so self-preoccupied that we are both overly defensive and overly offensive at the same time, with little time left for simply living, pure friendship, useless beauty, or moments of communion with nature or anything. Yet that kind of ego structuring is exactly what a young person partly needs.”

Whereas the second half of life is a time of rediscovery, of dismantling the persona that we so carefully crafted through the years to become vulnerable and open hearted again as we let go our shield of armor.

β€œIn the second half of life, all that you avoided for the sake of a manufactured ego ideal starts coming back as a true friend and teacher. Doers become thinkers, feelers become doers, thinkers become feelers, extroverts become introverts, visionaries become practical, and the practical ones long for vision. We all go toward the very places we avoided for the last forty years, and our friends are amazed. Now we begin to understand why Jesus is always welcoming the outsider, the foreigner, the sinner, the wounded one. He was a second-half-of-life man who has had the unenviable task of trying to teach and be understood by a largely first-half-of-life history, church, and culture.” Richard Rohr

And in the end, when all else falls away, all that we are is LOVE.

Liz Sorensen Wessel

Mandala by ~liz

 

6 responses to “Days 249-250 Welcoming the Wounded One”

  1. Maureen McDermott Avatar
    Maureen McDermott

    Richard once again has a message of hope and challenge. Thank you Liz for sharing Richard’s reflection. What captures my heart is the mandala, full of life, energy, delight and creativity as the shapes dance and intertwine. May we too be as bright and hope-filled as the mandala displays the ‘light in the darkness’ of our lives.

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  2. Terry Chapman Avatar
    Terry Chapman

    I see the first half of life in the lower, darker, portion of the mandala above. We are born; seek to emulate those around us; soak up all the love available; yet seldom grasp our true God-given gifts–those unique abilities and attributes that comprise our best opportunity to give back to God, what God has given us!
    The brighter, upper portion of the mandala, shines and encourages us to identify and use those gifts in ministries to help others, both like and unlike, ourselves!
    We do not “climb a ladder” toward a successful life: we live our life, one season at a time, always striving to grasp a little more of who we are and what we could be. Each of us can be bright lights in this darkening world. Shine; shine on; shine out; be yourself!

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  3. ~liz Wessel Avatar

    Thanks for your lovely observations, Maureen and I am glad that Rohr’s wisdom resonates with you as well.

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  4. ~liz Wessel Avatar

    What a beautiful reflection on this essay, Terry! You have enriched it through the eloquence of your expressions. Thank you so much!

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  5. erie chapman Avatar
    erie chapman

    Great work, Liz. And thank you for Richard Rohr. Your mandala offers fine symbolism in support of your piece – the two crescent moons, the swirling full disk in the middle, the environments of blue gold and purple.
    Your piece also gives us a fine chance to determine where we are in that dichotomy Rohr poses. This is such a great affirmation of the value of the Journal.

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  6. ~liz Wessel Avatar

    Thank you, Erie and I appreciate your affirmation of my offering. πŸ™‚

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