Break the rules!
Forgive quickly!
Love truly!
Laugh uncontrollably!
And never regret anything that made you smile.
Life is not a destination. Life is a road we travel. I am grateful to be on this imperfect spiritual journey. From a sailor's sea bag comes experience, strength and hope, along with some flotsam and jetsam.
Perhaps the piece of advice I remember most often is "Start where you are." I first really heard it in reference to the spiritual journey, but it's pretty good advice for most any intention in life. It seems so commonsense, so obvious, that it could almost go without saying. But at a deeper level, its simplicity is not so easy. And that's where acceptance comes in. In order to start where I am, I have to accept where I am-give up my delusions and pretensions about how far I am along the path.
Whatever my resolve-learning a new piece of music, cultivating a more focused prayer life, taking more care in my thoughts and speech-when I start the journey, I'll be taking baby steps or, more likely, going one step forward and two steps back. And I will get to start over, and over, and over again. In fact, the process will be as much about coming back to openhearted acceptance as it will about "progressing" toward my intention.
The opportunity is to accept compassionately my failings and successes and -- through that experience of my own intertwined aspirations and imperfections -- to accept compassionately the failings and successes of others as well.
SUSAN M. S. BROWN is an Episcopalian laywoman and a freelance editor who lives near Boston, Massachusetts.
Emptiness and fullness at first seem complete opposites. But in the spiritual life they are not. In the spiritual life we find the fulfillment of our deepest desires by becoming empty for God.
We must empty the cups of our lives completely to be able to receive the fullness of life from God.
-- Henri Nouwen
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The breezes at dawn have secrets to tell you. Don't go back to sleep.