Writing, Spirituality, and Social Justice

When I first became serious about my commitment to social justice and to spiritual growth, I had difficulty determining whether or how the two connected. I felt as if I were on two parallel but unconnected paths. It was through reading and writing, my first loves, that the connections became clear. I will explore these connections in this blog, drawing on my own experiences and work by other writers.

Name: Argie
Location: Minnesota, United States

I am a mother to a teenage girl adopted out of foster care. I teach and coordinate the service-learning program at a small, liberal arts college in a small town. I am a reader, writer, spiritual seeker, and activist--and this blog is about bringing all of these identities together and making sense of them, day by day.

Sunday, August 10, 2008

Camping (and Joseph, and the Coat of Many Colors)

S. and I went on a mini-camping trip this weekend. Before we left, I was feeling at the end of my rope again. S's adoption ceremony and party were magnificent, but the aftermath was colored by family drama, exhaustion, and the looming end of summer. For the first hour at our campsite, I was outright cruel to S., snapping commands at her, blaming her for a mistake in our attempt to put together the tent, forcing her to go on a hike she didn't want to take.

As she begrudgingly followed me into the woods, though, I suddenly realized how awful I was being. I turned to her, picked up the dog and rubbed his head. "I'm being a total bitch," I said. "I haven't gotten enough exercise or sleep lately, and I'm frustrated by how fast the summer is going. I'm so sorry. I'm going to try to do better."

"You _were_ being a bitch," she answered. "But it's OK." I put the dog down then, and we hiked for awhile longer in silence, and I felt this desperate sadness in my heart for all the difficulties of the last few weeks. I'd made a decision, after several years, to be honest with a loved one about how I felt, and I am not sure what will come of it. I had writing projects I'd hoped to finish this summer that I hadn't even touched. There were things I was going to do with S.--more camping, more outings, but also more teaching and learning of some basic life skills at home, more work on her diet and exercise plan--and those things had fallen by the wayside during our busy July as well. I'd elected to teach two classes, convincing myself this was the best thing for me financially and professionally, so there were two weeks in particular when I was working 12-hour days, and the rest of the time, I was working more than 20 hours/week, and still not getting everything done. One teaching experience was phenomenal, the other not so great--and the decision turned out not to be particularly good financially, as I pay a caretaker to be with S. whenever I'm gone. I'm so grateful to have found an amazing college student who has turned out to be perfect for the job, and other students who have served as back-up when she couldn't work all the hours I needed--but ultimately, I wish I'd stuck with my half-time contract and not taken on extra jobs. In short, the summer has been challenging for us, and I was feeling guilty.

As I was stewing on these things, we turned around and headed back to camp. We went swimming then, which is what she'd wanted to do all along. The water was warmer than it had been the last time we'd visited this park, but the little beach was also more crowded, making S. and our little dog nervous. We finally relaxed and threw each other around in the water, made sand castles. We headed back to camp, started the fire, had supper. I could feel my body relaxing. I could feel myself letting go of what was unresolved and settling into being present, fully present, in the moment.

Still, some of the guilt was lingering. As we were making our s'mores, I said, "I'm really sorry this is only our second camping trip this summer."

"It's really OK, Mom," S. said, and then I watched her getting the marshmallows on her stick, pushing her glasses against her face to get a closer look, her body leaning slightly to the left, one foot slightly in front of the other, I had this strange sensation. I couldn't believe she was my child--and also couldn't believe I'd ever lived without her--both at the same time. Earlier in the week I'd been walking toward the horse barn after dark to meet her and her caretaker. I'd seen them walking toward my car, but hadn't recognized them--S. looked so incredibly confident, like a college student, actually, talking casually to a friend of hers. It was strange to think about how far she'd come in such a short time--and also strangely sad. I suppose it is always like this with our children, no matter when we got them, that just as we feel we are getting to know them, really know them, they slip into new selves, new phases in their lives, and we begin again.

That night we hiked up to the highest point in the park and watched the sun set. As we walked back to camp, S. asked me to sing; according to her, I have a terrible singing voice except when I'm singing in Greek, so I sang old love songs and folk songs and church hymns until we were close to camp. "Why did you want me to sing?" I asked her.

"To scare the animals away," she said. I cracked up, but she added, "I wasn't being funny. I had a teacher once who told me that wild animals are afraid of the human voice when it is singing." Later, I would think about this as we read about Joseph's brothers staining his cloak with animal blood, and feel strangely terrified. I know I can't protect this child from everything, so even her unrealistic fears--there weren't really any dangerous wild animals where we were--seem large to me.

We walked the last few yards in silence, and then she said, "Let's get up before sunrise and hike up there again and have sunrise worship, just the two of us."

It sounded like a terrible idea to me--I was tired, wanted to sleep in--but I said, "Well, let's see if we get up," mainly because I didn't want to shut her down after how poorly I'd been treating her earlier.

But there we were, at 5 a.m., hiking up to the lookout point again. When we got there, the sky was a dull white-blue, the light tangible but not visible exactly. I prayed the Greek Orthodox morning prayers out loud, S. joining me for the parts she knew. Then I read the Old Testament reading, which happened to be the story of Joseph and the Coat of Many Colors. I didn't remember it, so we went on reading way past the day's verses to get the whole thing. It's a story about brothers who are pulled apart by competing loyalties, by jealousy, by a willingness to be outright cruel to each other, to play with each other's minds. It's a story about a man wronged over and over who has the chance to "rub it in" when he meets again, under very different circumstances, the men who caused him the most pain in his life, his brothers. But it's also a story about forgiveness, and that is the big surprise at the end. Joseph could have ruined his brothers for good, but instead he saves their lives.

In light of the challenges in my family relationships these days--and the challenges S's brothers are facing--I'm just not sure how to read this story, how to understand it. I am still pondering. But what I do know is that, by the end of the story, the rolling hills in front of us were alive with wind and pools of yellow-green light, and the sky was gold-yellow-orange, with an angel-wing cloud, thin and feathery, reaching across it. It was breathtaking. We read the Gospel, the story of Jesus walking on water, and remembered how we'd walked on the frozen lake during S's first visit, then heard the same passage in church. We stared at the scene for awhile, then walked back in silence. Sometimes we do our own prayers at the end when we worship together, but this time, it didn't seem necessary. On our way down, we saw a doe leap across the path and then disappear into the tall grass, only her ears and a tiny black mark on the back of her neck visible with each leap.

"That was breathtaking," S. said, and for some reason, I smiled at the use of such a big word, and at the drama in her voice. But she was right: it was.

We had breakfast, napped, then took a longer hike, during which S. called me a bitch because I wouldn't let her take something out of a small box of toys we found hidden in the woods. She apologized right away and asked for the consequences "right now, so we can get it over with," so we sat down and thought silently about what we could do differently next time, then talked about it.

"I'm going to focus on other things I want, better things than those toys, then give back to the world when I get them," she said.

I was a little less ambitious. "I'm going to make sure I get enough sleep and enough exercise so I can stay balanced and won't blow up at you," I said.

"Me, too," she said. "But I need you to help me take care of myself. You know, I'm 15, but in some ways I'm just a little kid."

"I know," I said.

Then we walked on, out of the woods and into the open prairie, lightly touching the yellow wildflowers growing around us. Our dog slowed down, sniffed everything in sight, making us laugh.

"I already miss summer," S. said. "I miss J. (her caretaker) already and I already miss you."

"We'll have J. over once in awhile; you'll still get to see her. And I'm not going anywhere. We just need to make sure we make time for things like this when school starts." I touched her on the head and repeated, "I'm not going anywhere."

"I know that now," S. said, and it was such a simple thing, and yet so profound--the first time, really, she's said out loud, and directly, that she trusts that I'm in this for the long haul, no matter how long it all takes.

I thought of Joseph's brothers selling him into slavery. I thought of the false accusations, the years in prison, the final moments during which he could have proclaimed victory but instead acted in love. I still don't know what this story has to tell me, but somehow it seems relevant, important, in ways I can't explain.

I have been both the brother sold and the brother doing the selling. I have been the one wronged and the one who has dong wrong. I have both turned away the people who hurt me and forgiven them, sometimes in the same action. That much I know. I also know how important it is to forgive, but not always how to do it. But I feel like my daughter pushes me further into these mysteries, because with her in my life, I have to be honest with others about what I need, who I am. I don't have time for lies or omissions.

"Look, Mom, I'm walking on water," S. joked nonsensically (the nearest lake was a mile away, and she wasn't doing anything except pretending to glide over the winding path mown into the prairie), and I laughed even though it didn't make sense, and our dog let out a yelp and started running suddenly, and S. ran, too, until she was out of breath, and laughing. And I had that feeling again, of having known her forever and also not knowing her at all, not believing she was mine. Except there was no fear or grief mixed in with the feeling this time--just joy, and gratitude.

Friday, August 01, 2008

Ritual

S. and I had a wonderful adoption party this past weekend. The adoption isn't final, but we didn't want to wait. The party included visits from one of S's horse friends (and she rode the horse in her fancy pink dress!), about 90 people who came to wish us well, and lots of delicious food. But most importantly, it included a family blessing ritual, part of which we wrote ourselves, and part of which was written by S's chosen godparents, P and J. Enjoy!

WELCOME

ARGIE (says something like): Welcome to our celebration. This is a ritual to bless our new family. We are going to start with one of S’s favorite bible verses, Psalm 23. We would like you to recite it with us if you know it. We are reciting the old-fashioned version (King James).

COMMUNAL READING/OPENING PRAYER:

The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want.
He maketh me to lie down in the green pastures.
He leadeth me beside the still waters.
He restoreth my soul, he guideth me
in the paths of righteousness for his name’s sake.
Lo, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death,
I shall fear no evil, for thou art with me,
thy rod and thy staff, they comfort me.
You prepareth a table before me in the presence of my enemies.
You anointeth my head with oil; my cup runneth over.
Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life,
and I shall dwell in the house of the Lord forever.

ARGIE and/or S say something about why we chose this verse:

--This is one of the few verses that we both know by heart.

--We both feel comforted in the natural world that God gave us and this is one thing we enjoy together.

--S had a lot of suffering in her life, and Psalm 23 is about coming out of that suffering and living a life of goodness and mercy.

ARGIE and/or S invites Argie’s sister to come forward to do the first reading. We explain that she is representing Argie’s family, including some members who were able to come for the celebration.

The first reading is from Matthew chapter18 verses 10-14, THE PARABLE OF THE LOST SHEEP.

In this parable, Jesus is speaking to his disciples:

See that you do not look down on one of these little ones, for I tell you that their angels in heaven always see the face of my Father in heaven. What do you think? If a man owns a hundred sheep and one of them wanders away, will he not leave the 99 on the hills and go look for the one that wandered off? And if he finds it, I tell you the truth, he is happier about that one sheep than about the 99 that did not wander off. In the same way your Father in heaven is not willing that any of these little ones should be lost.

ARGIE and/or S says something about why we chose this verse:

--S was lost for a long time when she was being abused, and Argie felt less direction in her life until S came into it. We think this verse relates to the two of us finding each other.

ARGIE invites J and S to read the next reading and explains the important role they have played in S’s life as “big sisters/college buddies” to S.

SECOND READING:

Lines from “edges of emptiness” by Marge Piercy

Those who truly inhabit our lives

whose faces, whose gestures

like fine choreography align the air,

whose voices enter the ghostly inner ear

so that we shall hear them ten years

later in an empty room at dusk,

never can their presence be replaced.

The creatures for whom the hollow

places of our solitude are opened wide

to shimmer with the lighted lamps of love,

we shape ourselves to hold them.

We have been configured to a use,

a habitation. We are the chambered shell

of a nautilus, the high steep coil

of a conch…those winding galleries of pearl

…await the one whose need

and pleasure they hardened around.

In love we weave ourselves together,

Persian carpets with the colors

Of each friendship knotted fine and tight,

The pattern as visible on the reverse.

ARGIE explains that the poem speaks to the calling she had to adopt S, and also to the importance of community to herself and S, and expresses gratitude for the community into which S has come and which has sustained them both.

THIRD READING: K

ARGIE invites K, S’s horse teacher/college buddy, to come forward and do the next reading and explains the important role she’s played in S’s life. She also introduces the poem as one inspired by S’s first lesson with Honey.

Girl and Horse


If you saw her with a horse, you’d understand

she is larger than all the fear or grief her body holds,

and like the huge, slow animal that starts to move

at the click, click, click of her first command,

you have the capacity

to love everything about her,

even her worst memory circling over and over

like the animal circling her now

with its small puffs of nostril-smoke,

its smell of hay and winter. Maybe

you don’t believe it now,

that spring will come,

that a girl can lead a horse

with sounds in her throat,

that she will live among us

gifted and pained in her perfect way,

but if you saw her

with a horse, you’d believe

anything can happen,

that a girl hurt over and over

can still turn out gentle
and in love with this world,

that whatever occurs after the stables,

when we launch our lives into the spaces

between horses,

you’d believe, if you saw her with a horse,

that two people who knew nothing

of each other just two months before

can come to the center of a field
and settle into that small horse-syllable—Ho!—

which means stop, which means stay.

GODPARENT AND NAMING CEREMONY


ARGIE (says something like): S asked soon after moving here if my dear friends P and J could be her godparents. I was very moved by this because P and J are the most spiritual people I know. They truly live their faith, which is based on the concepts of love, community, gratitude, and generosity. In this ceremony, which has some elements from the baptismal ceremony in the tradition in which I was raised, P and J will give S her new name, which is a combination of the names from her past and names that mark her journey to this new family. P and J will also bless S and I with holy water from Greece. We will then do the same for them. You are all also a part of this ritual; in the act of anointing, imagine that all of us are being anointed by each other as a large family.

P and J’s Prayer:

It has been said that there are no accidents.

It has also been said that life itself is an accident.

Is our fate written for us?

Or do we write our own fates.

Somewhere between those two views, we each find what is true in our own lives

Everyone has parts of their lives that they did not ask for and did not write

It does not happen often, but sometimes we get hints or nudges from the universe

about new possibilities .

And we are given the opportunity to write for ourselves the next few chapters of our lives

When we get one of those nudges or hints, we have choices over how to respond

Argie was given one of those nudges

And she chose to go to great lengths

In pursuit of a goal which was a mystery to her

S was given an opportunity

To choose a new beginning for her life

She took that chance

And has found her home

And now both of you will write the next few chapters of your lives

As mother and daughter

Let us pray. Loving God

Lord of the Universe

Thank you for those timely accidents

Those hints and nudges

Which help us find our way

Thank you for giving us the freedom to choose our response

When we get those hints

Thank you for courageous people like Argie and S

Guide them and Bless them as mother and daughter

AMEN

---------------------------------------------------------------

Closing words:

We would like to thank each and every one of you for the blessing of your presence

at this special joyous occasion.

Let us all now welcome - Argie and her daughter (new name here) to our community.