oh, the places we’ve come . . .
by bam
winter, i’ve always sensed, is the curling-in time, the season of unseen stirring, and in an octave of dawns, dusks, and nightfalls, winter will be upon us.
but even now, it’s a season for quieting, for simmering thoughts as well as saucepots of cinnamon stick, star anise, and clove. my simmering for the last nineteen years picks up the pace as the page turns on another year of pulling up chairs to this imaginary old maple table, one where the indentations of long-ago math homework are pressed into the grain, where so many coffees and juices have been poured and sipped and spilled and sopped up with sponges. over the course of these nearly two decades, it seems i’ve developed a knack for simmering while tapping away at the rows of alphabet keys—some 1,255 simmers and counting, all under the name “pull up a chair,” now tapped, posted, and filed away.
only a handful of the very first chairs—bless them, those stalwart humans—still pull up a chair, at least every once in a while. but along the way, so many chairs have been added, and multiplied. and our polestar has never shifted: to carve out a sacred space where questions are asked, and stories are told, where hearts are bared, and above all where gentle, gentle kindness is the metronome by which we set all our rhythms. once in a while, over all the bumps and bruises encountered along the way, we’ve been known to bow our heads and pour out our hearts in holy, holy please God, pray for us.
on the twelfth of december, 2006, our firstborn had just been bar mitzvahed, and our then so-called “little one” was but a kindergartener, not yet reading or writing but melting my heart by the minute and filling our notebooks with his stories and antics and an encyclopedia of unforgettable “teddyisms.” (some kept alive to this day; for the sheer pure joy of it). the firstborn, now law professor, insisted at the dawn of the self-published blogging age that i, his little old mother, could figure out how to “blog,” a verb that’s always sounded to me like a crude guttural effusion, a burp perhaps. and back in the day, he gave me his hand-me-down laptop to do it. to prove i could blog, that is. (as has so often been the case, he even then was wiser than me…)
back then, the question that had captured my attention was the simplest of notions: i believed, after a few years of keenly observing, tagging along with, and writing long newspaper stories of families in the thick of life transitions as a reporter for the chicago tribune, that life’s biggest questions aren’t reserved for colloquia and global summits, nor do they wait for podiums and percussive applause. they are the stuff of the everyday. and if we watch closely, pay keen attention, we can lift those universal, deeply-human questions and struggles from the quotidian stream, hold them to the light for closer consideration, and reap their wisdoms and epiphanies in real time. now, before the moments pass us by and we come to the saddest realization of all: that it’s too late, and our chance at most wakeful living has slipped into the distance.
all these years later, life certainly has galloped along here at the table. this ol’ chair has seen the growings up of two boys, buried parents beloved, moved another from her home of sixty years. taken a tour of cambridge, mass., and a second helping of college. trekked across the pond, set our sights on war zones, and been rolled into surgical suites and recovery rooms. we’ve feared for our country, for humanity, for civility, and plain old decency. and we’ve refused to surrender to the crude and cruel ways wielded by those who seize power. we’ve kept our minds opened, and tried—oh, we’ve tried—to emphasize the imperative of objective, double-sourced truth, and the slaying of hearsay and heresy. we’ve laid out worries here, and plenty of joys; we’ve marveled and wondered and been gobsmacked aplenty. i’ve pondered cancer and the physics of time, and the holy shimmering presence i know as God.
lately i seem to have taken to gathering up wisdoms far greater than mine will ever be. i am, as a beloved friend of the chair once put it, something of a magpie. a magpie mostly attuned to seeking the sacred amid the plainstuff of living. the idea of the commonplace book is one i heartily embrace: bring on the poets and sages and prophets, and let me invite you into their brilliant notebooks and minds and unfurl for you their passages and poetics that take away our collective breath and find a way of percolating for hours to come.
this ol’ chair has given me a place to keep on tapping away at the keys. i realized long ago that i untangle the knots of my life by stringing out sentences. and trying on thoughts. thank you for indulging me, those of you who choose to read along. thank you for pondering the questions at the end of each post, in the quiet of your own soul, or by leaving a note at the table.
you are, collectively and individually, humans who restore and buck up my faith in the inherent majesty and wonder of the shimmering undying spirit that populates this earth with more than a modicum of heaven’s best offerings.
bless you, bless you, a thousand times thousand, bless you.
this week i am bringing a little birthday bouquet of beauties that struck me across the week, all of them tied together by the beautiful idea that the birthing of holiness is a sacramental act of which we must partake. it’s one that entails unlocking our hearts, making room in the manger within, and allowing the Holy and Sacred to form within, and to birth it with our words and our love in the act. it’s quite the trinity here: a benedictine monk who practices and teaches meditation in the french countryside at a monastery known as bonnevaux; st. john of the cross, the great mystic, as translated by the poet daniel ladinsky; and the late, great luci shaw, a beloved british-american poet and essayist who died at 96 on december first.
first up, the idea of birthing God within us from the benedictine monk, laurence freeman, whom i’ve been learning from for years…
In the 14th century, Meister Eckhart enjoyed waking people up in his sermons by expounding some uncomfortably new perspectives about their standardised faith. He must have stirred a few dozy parishioners when he asked: “What good is it to me if this eternal birth of the divine Son takes place unceasingly, but does not take place within myself? And, that it should take place within myself, is really what matters.”
Actually, the great Augustine had asked the same question a thousand years before and added that if we are the children of God, we must become God’s mother as well. If, he said, this birth of the eternal word as Christ in the soul is to happen, our heart – the deepest centre of our being – must become the sacred manger. If we are filled with egocentric distraction there is ‘no room at the inn’ and so the heart must become that empty and open space where the birth takes place and through which he is welcomed into our world.
In today’s gospel, John the Baptist is usually and badly translated as saying ‘repent, for the reign of God is close at hand’. Basileia, the Greek word we think of as ‘kingdom’, is feminine and so could equally well translate it as ‘queendom’. It doesn’t mean a juridical area but the space in which the presence and grace of God is acknowledged and welcomed. The gospel word, badly translated as ‘repent’, is ‘metanoia’: a change of mind and heart. It is not about feeling sorry for past mistakes. It means spinning round 180 degrees and entirely changing your perspective on and approach to reality.
Living in the desert, wearing a garment of camel hair and eating locusts and wild honey, John seems to us a bit extremist. People who reduce waste and get back to essentials are often called crazy. But because of his spiritual sanity he drew the crowds who asked him ‘what shall we do?’ because, like us, they lived in confused, divided and dangerous times. He told them simply to live honestly and justly but that this lifestyle would prepare them for the imminent – and immanent – coming of the great transformer of all things.
Meditation is the great simplifier. It reduces the way we waste both time and life’s opportunities. In daily life it is the catalyst for ongoing metanoia. The medicine that loosens the grip of illusion. Usually, we start enthusiastically but before we get to the full 180 degrees we slow down and say, ‘this is quite good, let’s stop here’. Fortunately, if the birth process has already started, it will not allow us to arrest or deny it. We have to see it through until it breaks through into our world and we are happy and lucky if we do.
—Laurence Freeman
and from the sixteenth-century mystic St. John of the Cross there comes this interpretation/translation of what daniel ladinsky calls one of his “love poems”…
IF YOU WANT
If
you want
the Virgin will come walking down the road
pregnant with the holy,
and say,
“I need shelter for the night, please take me inside your heart,
my time is so close.”
Then, under the roof of your soul, you will witness the sublime
intimacy, the divine, the Christ
taking birth
forever,
as she grasps your hand for help, for each of us
is the midwife of God, each of us.
Yet there, under the dome of your being does creation
come into existence eternally, through your womb, dear pilgrim–
the sacred womb in your soul,
as God grasps our arms for help; for each of us is
His beloved servant
never far.
If you want, the Virgin will come walking
down the street pregnant
with Light and sing …
—St. John of the Cross, “If You Want” in Daniel Ladinsky, Love Poems from God: Twelve Sacred Voices from the East and West (New York: Penguin Group, 2002), 306-307.
and, in closing, here’s a classic from blessed, blessed luci, whose great contribution to the canon of Christian poetry would be her capacity for drawing big truths about God and human experience from viscerally pulsing fine-grained images and objects. she is the perfect voice to close out this nineteenth year of the chair….
Kenosis
By Luci Shaw
In sleep his infant mouth works in and out.
He is so new, his silk skin has not yet
been roughed by plane and wooden beam
nor, so far, has he had to deal with human doubt.
He is in a dream of nipple found,
of blue-white milk, of curving skin
and, pulsing in his ear, the inner throb
of a warm heart’s repeated sound.
His only memories float from fluid space.
So new he has not pounded nails, hung a door,
broken bread, felt rebuff, bent to the lash,
wept for the sad heart of the human race.
amen.
may this blessed week bring softening to the walls of your heart, and a widening within those chambers so that Holiness, however you name it, might be birthed there….love, b.



My word: Meister Eckhart, Daniel Ladinsky…rich words today! Light in this time of darkness. 19 is a prime number. 13 also, but alas, no candles here.

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it brings me such joy to gather these geniuses. i loved today how each echoed a singular idea, and each from her or his own angle…..
I remember the day so well (and the days leading up to it), when that first post landed nineteen years ago. You were so scared to take that leap, but, boy, you did and you’re still soaring. I’m so proud to have been seated in my chair when that symbolic candle was lit (see photo, above) and even more proud to call you my friend. The candle still burns bright. As I’ve said, and it bears repeating – you, dearest bam, are a wonder. Onward to twenty! xox
Ohhh sweet love! This is like be anointed with holy oil, finding you, Stalwart Human, here this morning!!! And our first anniversary gathering where the chairs tied their indelible, through-it-all bond! Much love to you in the high and mighty desert!!
YES! Wasn’t that the sweetest time! We truly gathered ’round the table and sealed our forever friendships. Proud to be a Chair Sister! Love back to you! xox
Thank you for the myriad ways you birth holiness on Fridays with all of us and on all the other days of the week as well! Xo
dearest, faithful reader, bless you MJ so so much. we all birth it together. that’s how it’s compounded….
that day was a great day! and this is a table like no other. welcoming and wise. a safe place. a thoughtful space. generously gathering folks and words and thoughts and feelings. living out loud, standing by, standing strong. learning and teaching and living as well as we can by being who we are. so much love to you! 💕💕💕
ah, sweet love! tis a beautiful thing to know that we are but an echo chamber between us and our words and thoughts and deeds echo off each other, for more years than there’s been a chair. that we can meet in the middle of the lane, and ponder the world swirling beneath and above us in real time, in real touch. what a blessing.
truly a blessing
Nineteen years-what an accomplishment! I look forward, every Friday, to see what you’ve written. And that poem by Luci Shaw-glorious!
isn’t that luci so glorious? i could picture the newborn suckling. to make the Divine so human, it stirs me like few other sacred text ever has…..the poets are our prophets and seers. thank you, dear M, for reading along. xoxo
Oh my stars! (And moon, of course!) 19 years! Congratulations, dear heart. Think of all the countless hearts and minds your words have touched here, in your nursing days, in your Tribune days … there is no counting them all. I hope you know how much joy, comfort, strength, love you bring to this table and to every space you touch. How blessed we are to love you!
stars and moons and all. tis an eternal wonder and mystery that the constellation at the table is as ever-shining as it is. it’s the loyal willingness to receive and click and read along that makes me marvel. the chairs are among the dearest souls nestled in my heart. you, sweet love, are forever.
I often feel lucky to have found the chairs, and the table, and especially all the wisdom and love that has been shared here over the years. Thank you, BAM, and everyone else, for being part of my Friday afternoons.
ah, dear alpaca/JACK, i don’t even know if i know how you found the chair, but i do love all the mysterious ways that chairs have found the table. the blessing is all mine, believe me! xoxox
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Thank you for bearing forth so much beauty and meaning, for so many years. Love Poems from God is one of the volumes I inherited from my beloved Caroline. I am always keen to experience her “Hi, Mom!” moments, and how precious that this one came through beautiful you!
And with the same inhale of delight and surprise, I find you here. In my next book, I am using a few lines from “Love Poems” and thus “got to” correspond with Daniel L; sublime. Welcome, welcome to the chair, friend who appears in all the holiest places. ❤️❤️
I have been much occupied and am late to join this celebration. Happy 19th, dear BAM! Thank you for all the beauty you have shared in this space across the years. You keep a chair ready for each of us: what a gift! Much love from Amy~ xoxo
sweet love, thank YOU for allllllll the love you dollop on me and the chair. giant hug from my side of Illinois to yours!! xoxoxox
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I’m late to the table this week so I send belated congratulations on the blog’s birthday! Thanks for being a daily blessing way back when and a weekly blessing now. Love to all gathered here. ♥️ xo, hh
we have gathered quite a marvelous menagerie over the years, haven’t we????? xoxoxox thank YOU for sticking around for plenty long. love, b
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Admittedly a new comer to this particular chair, but somehow a parallel traveler, my chair has been one in a private setting, where I tenderly, respectfully helped individuals, couples, and families hold up their sacred stories for witness and care. Every day, when I pulled the office door closed, and put my key in the lock on the door, walked down the steps (no elevator in my old building) and out to my car, the privilege of illuminating these honorable stories, filled me with a holy awe. You Barbara, are a mystic. Some say us everyday mystics are those who notice. And honor. Thank you for sharing your noticings and your love for it all!
Love, Janet
janetsterkhealingjourneys.com
ah, dear janet, THAT is a most sacred chair. the chairs of healing, deep healing. we gather here communally, weaving our threads, some sturdy, some fragile, into a whole. i love the picture reel you unspool in words, as i watch you at the end of a long day’s healing, settling back into your everyday. does the healing ever end? for those of us who’ve sat in those sacred chairs, the truth is the lines spoken there often resonant, boomerang, for years and years. enlightenment comes when it comes. if only we knew then all that seemed so beyond reach, and now, at last, is known. i read a beauty of a poem the other day, from jan richardson’s brand new “How the Stars Get In Your Bones,” a poem that asks if only we could write our narrative from end to beginning…..”If I could write this blessing / backward, / I would begin it / at the end. // I would start it / at that far place where / I could show you / every bright thing / that lies ahead for you, / radiant in its wholeness / and complete / in its own joy.” …
welcome to the chair, sweet love. please come back. we always have a chair for you…..
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Tonight, at my kitchen counter, familiar “holiday” melodies in the background and I think of your table, and my chair at the table, sitting beside you, reading Jan Richardson’s poem out loud…. together. Consider it so. And happy birthday to the chair! what a joy, what a story.