Uncategorized, nostalgia, memories, The Holy

A dream

My dad loved life. He loved my mother, he loved us, and he loved his life. After having been diagnosed with colon cancer in the year after he retired from his work as a steelworker at age 65, he was always grateful for the life he was able to live during the 10 years after. He came to realize that he could live much as he had before the arrival of the cancer, and so he returned as much as possible to the life he’d had before the cancer diagnosis and the colonoscopy. He rode his bike all around his neighborhood in Milwaukee, and he and Mom drove clear across the country from Wisconsin to visit my mother’s brothers in California. Mom and Dad enjoyed every moment of that trip, my father at the wheel, my mother pointing out sites and reading from the AAA trip-tick that guided their trip. Both my parents – my father had an eighth grade education in a country one-room school house, my mother had received her GED when I was in college – were interested in life. As I remember them, I count the quality of having an interest in life as important, not only to them, but to me, as well. I’m grateful.

My dad loved life. He spent many weeks in a hospital bed at St. Joseph’s Hospital in Milwaukee, knowing he would not leave that room – ever. More than anything, he missed being able to ride his bike, especially now that spring was coming to the Midwest; it was April. He was 75; he would never make it to his 76th birthday. Now that I’m 76, I think of that fact – often.

Before I left his hospital room for the last time, before I traveled back to Pleasanton, California, where Jeff and I lived, I said to Dad: “Let me know you are all right.” I was clear: after he passed, I wanted a sign from him. As I said those words to Dad, he didn’t speak. He nodded. He understood.

The dream came some time later, months after Dad died in April of 1986. It was a simple dream, a clear dream. I saw my Dad, dressed in a suit, standing with a group of people, looking away from me. He had a humble look on his face as he stood with the others, his hands held together in a simple gesture, below his waist.

When I awoke, I knew immediately that Dad had kept his promise. He had come to me. And he had let me know that he was all right.

Uncle Johnny must be angry at Dad – he’s about to push him into the pool… They had fun together.
photo, circa 1983, San Jose, CA.

reflecting, The Holy, Uncategorized, wisdom

a few steps on a long journey

At my retirement gathering, to honor my retirement from active ministry, a woman I went to seminary with and who had retired several years before I retired, told me that after she retired, she felt as if she had lost God for a while.  I was surprised at her comment.  I didn’t think I would experience the same thing.  At the time, I “prayed at all times” by having an on-going conversation with Jesus.  

But I was wrong.  For a couple of years after I retired in 2014, I felt as if I was adrift in my spiritual life/journey.  As time has unfolded, I have returned to my relationship to the Holy, in a new/different way than before.  

Now, I have the sense of my being “in” God, as part of God, not separate.  I am immersed in God’s presence, as I am immersed in the air, say.  The relationship I have now – as I compare my “before” and “after” – is to be part of the Whole.  And ‘the Whole” is abundantly huge, “the Whole” is all that is.  “The Whole” is loving all of creation and all that is beyond within itself.  What that means, I can’t say/explain to myself.   I don’t try.  My time of prayer now is simply being with awareness, when I have that awareness.  Often, my time spent walking is a time for me to be in that presence – 

“You will wonder and in the depths of wonder
you will discover a simpler way:   
you will walk, feet planted firmly on the earth,
head up.
You will walk into that sighing Presence.”         – from the Collection, “Moments,”
Mary Elyn Bahlert, 2026.
                                                                                      

“You will walk into that sighing Presence…” – photo, Mary Elyn Bahlert, 1/2026