Showing posts with label inspiration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label inspiration. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

Momma Too

I am still training for the bide ride in October, yes I am. And still working hard, riding harder and faster each time we get on the bike. Mr. Bryant has made me a list of things I need to buy, and he is riding in his target heart rate zone while I work and work and work and work to keep up.

Meanwhile, Amanda and Stephanie can ride 15 with no training (nice, right?). And so, we talk about it a lot at dinners, and the other week we talked to Momma. Now, Mrs. Hanson is about 20 years older than I am, ladies and gentlemen. And I am absolutely tickled to inform you that she is planning to ride with us. Now, how about that!


We are a bit at the mercy of the heat, as she needs cooler weather to train, but she has already started riding every day. I am proud of her willingness and determination - and she is inspiring me!

Monday, January 18, 2010

Clarity

Coming in to 2010 I think about how my one little word for 2009 actually inspired and helped me. I don’t know that I embodied the true meaning of serenity over the course of the year, but I do know that I never stopped thinking about the impact of a serene countenance, a serene approach. And just thinking about serenity gave me some peace when I needed it most and inspired me to work on being more patient and calm.

As I pondered on my new inspiration for this coming year, I went back to those sources that I referenced last year. The ladies at One Little Word ( see olw) have shut down their inspiring blog and moved on to other ventures, but there are still lots of good ideas and references to be found in the data, pictures, and stories that they shared over the course of time. I went back to Ali Edwards blog as well – you may recall that she said, "A single word can be a powerful thing. It can be the ripple in the pond that changes everything. It can sharp and biting or rich and soft and slow." She has chosen a word for 2010 that sounds like lots of fun – STORY. Now that would get you writing and sharing all year long, wouldn’t it?

I went back to the very inspiring "one little word" web site maintained by Pastor David J. Risendal , of Saint Peter's Lutheran Church in Greenwood Village, Colorado. Pastor Dave shares his musings and his sermons on this site, which – as you may recall - takes its inspiration and name from the third stanza of Martin Luther’s most well-known hymn, “A Mighty Fortress Is Our God.”

Though hoards of devils fill the land
All threat’ning to devour us,
We tremble not, unmoved we stand;
They cannot overpower us.
Let this world’s tyrant rage;
In battle we’ll engage!
His might is doomed to fail;
God’s judgment must prevail!
One little word subdues him.

Lutheran Book of Worship. (C)1978 Augsburg Fortress Publishing House (Minneapolis) and Board of Publication, LCA (Philadelphia),hymn #229


In a recent exchange of letters Pastor Dave shared the following thoughts about the One Little Word that Martin Luther may be referring to in his hymn –

“Luther wrote extensively about the word of God, and had a great confidence in its power. My personal favorite refers to his close friends Philip Melanchthon and Nicholas Von Amsdorf:
“All that I have done is to farther, preach and teach God’s Word; otherwise I have done nothing. So it happened that while I slept or while I drank a glass of Wittenberg beer with my friend Philip [Melanchthon] and with Amsdorf, the papacy was weakened as it never was before by the action of any prince or emperor. I have done nothing; the Word has done and accomplished everything.… I let the Word do its work!” (from a sermon on March 10, 1522, in “Luther’s works, vol. 44: The Christian in Society”)
We Lutherans continue to put great stock in the power of God’s word. We think of it in three ways: the living word (Christ), the written word (Scriptures), and the spoken word (preaching and teaching). I would suspect that Luther had all three of these in mind when he wrote “Mighty Fortress.””

I think that the word “serene” did some work on me in 2009, and so, as we start this new year, I have settled on another little word that I hope will have an impact on my approach, my thoughts, my life, and my art.


And so for 2009 my one little word is Clarity.


Clarity is a deceptively simple word. The definition in Webster’s New World Dictionary is only one brief line – “the quality or condition of being clear, clearness.” I like simple, focused, easy, eye on the prize kind of words. They are straightforward to grasp, undemanding to think about. I like clarity.


However, to be certain of the subtleties of meaning, I turned to the definition of clear. How often is it, I wonder, that the root of something simple, easy, and direct is something complex. The word clear is like that. Webster’s has a lot to say about clear. More than half a column in the dictionary is dedicated to describing the meaning(s) of clear. Perhaps that is why it is so challenging to find clarity! I will be able to work on refining my understanding of this root of clarity for some time.


In the mean time, as I meditate on clarity itself, I find my mind moving to thoughts of priorities, simplicity, what really matters in this life. My poor little sick kitty gives me clarity every day as she demands more time and attention – relationships and time are priorities. My little puppy gives me clarity every day at dinner time – food is a priority! My body demands that I make health a priority. My job demands that I make quick decisions and good judgment a priority. And all of these things – are they competing ideas? What is the clear, shining, focused, exact, simple, transparent POINT?

Maybe it is just to move through each moment with clear vision. Maybe it is to live in the reality of every instance. Maybe it is something more – or less – and maybe it is different for each of us.

As I ponder on clarity in 2010 and consider how clarity can direct my footsteps, in daily life, at work and home, in my thoughts and in my art, I will be sure to share with you here.

Friday, October 30, 2009

Our Biggest Fear



Thank you to those that remind me of this regularly, and especially to Marianne Williamson for writing it down in the first place - this oft repeated quote is from her book A Return To Love: Reflections on the Principles of A Course in Miracles.

"Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate. Our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure. It is our light, not our darkness that most frightens us. We ask ourselves, Who am I to be brilliant, gorgeous, talented, fabulous?

Actually, who are you not to be? You are a child of God. Your playing small does not serve the world. There is nothing enlightened about shrinking so that other people won't feel insecure around you. We are all meant to shine, as children do.

We were born to make manifest the glory of God that is within us. It's not just in some of us; it's in everyone. And as we let our own light shine, we unconsciously give other people permission to do the same. As we are liberated from our own fear, our presence automatically liberates others."


So here, as I approach November and the overwhelming NaNoWriMo goal, and as we - all of us - approach every single day of our lives, let's remember what we are born to do and be. Let's remember that we each make our own lives, our own luck, our own destiny. Let's remind ourselves and each other that we are not Average. That we can each, in our own measure, make a difference in the world.

Go and be, loves. Be all that you and I both know you can be.

Be strong, intelligent, creative, talented, fabulous, and a gift to the world!

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

One Little Word for 2009

I have been reading about the various contests on the internet and in the blogosphere to encourage us to choose one little word for 2009 ( see olw). I did some more reading about the idea of choosing a word, and found this reference from Ali Edwards on her blog - "A single word can be a powerful thing. It can be the ripple in the pond that changes everything. It can sharp and biting or rich and soft and slow." I also found a reference to the idea that "one little word" is the place where God's word meets God's world. This blog takes its name from the third stanza of Martin Luther’s most well-known hymn, “A Mighty Fortress Is Our God.”

Though hoards of devils fill the land
All threat’ning to devour us,
We tremble not, unmoved we stand;
They cannot overpower us.
Let this world’s tyrant rage;
In battle we’ll engage!
His might is doomed to fail;
God’s judgment must prevail!

One little word subdues him.

Lutheran Book of Worship. (C)1978 Augsburg Fortress Publishing House (Minneapolis) and Board of Publication, LCA (Philadelphia),hymn #229

I had a rough time trying to condense all my various thoughts about the coming year into a single word, but the idea of finding one word that I could land on all year, that I could return to, pray on, meditate on, and use for inspiration was compelling. So I kept thinking and pondering, and opening my heart. And finally the word came.

My word for 2009 is Serenity.





The very sound of the word brings a slow calm to my thoughts. Fabulous! I would like to focus on maintaining and increasing serenity, whatever the coming year may bring. I think about the challenges I am already aware of and those that may come as a complete surprise. I think about being more serene as I consider Mr. Bryant's mother's illness. The aging of our parents. Our own physical challenges as we age. The challenges at work. The new calls for change and service from our nation. The financial challenges facing us all. My family and their own changes and challenges. My crafting work & this blog. Myself.

There is something very special about this word for me. It represents slowing down, simplifying, and pausing to find that peace, patience, and calmness within. It reminds me that the ever changing is grounded in the never changing. It calmly connects me to our history, and to the future, and gives me the freedom to focus on what is really important to me in my life (not just the next 365 days).

This word reminds me that the future is worth fighting for.

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