Searching for a subject for this week's
column, I pick up Music of Silence, a thin volume written by
Benedictine monk David Steindl-Rast. With a quick prayer for a
fitting passage, I open the book to find this: "The very word
crisis comes from a root that means sifting out." This is
new to me but, sure enough, my dictionary gives the word's origin as
krei-, meaning to sieve or discriminate. I read on.
Brother David describes crisis as “a
sifting out of that which is viable and can go on from that which is
dead and has to be left behind.” As we know, such a process is
rarely easy. Often, it is excruciating. Letting go of a loved one,
for example, might shatter the heart. And leaving a job that no
longer serves us can be unnerving as we cast off into an unknown
future.
But no matter the particulars, crises
usually signal a time of wrenching reorientation. At these moments,
Brother David urges us to ask for guidance. The guidance he speaks of
is not for the purpose of escaping what has come to be. Rather, it is
a request for help in meeting it with humility and an open heart. And,
he assures us, an answer will appear.
It may, he says, arrive
unexpectedly, indirectly, or through a “serendipitous event,”
though it might also be “completely internal: a dream, an unbidden
insight,” or a more subtle change of awareness. However, such answers don't often
arrive as quickly as we'd like. In fact, it seems we humans are most
often ready to be done with our crises long before they're ready to
be done with us.
So we must wait. Yet how do we wait? In
trust, writes Brother David, “and trustful waiting is a truly
fervent way of praying.”
A trustful waiting, a fervent way to
pray. Beautiful words that are exceedingly difficult to live when
we're in turmoil. At those times, we are more likely to rail against
what has come to pass, protect ourselves through a busy but numbing
avoidance, or rush headlong into action in an effort to force things
to be as we want. Yet for a crisis to be successfully met, we must
find a willingness to accept the sifting out that is occurring. And
often, a trustful waiting is the best we can do.
Life is never static, even when we feel
stuck in distress and our
waiting seems interminable. Things will shift. It is the way of life.
So when crisis hits, we pause to recognize life working its way through us. We ask for guidance with a posture of acceptance. We listen with great care. And we wait. If we can find it in us to wait in trust, things will go so much easier for us. And a trustful waiting is, indeed, a fervent prayer.
So when crisis hits, we pause to recognize life working its way through us. We ask for guidance with a posture of acceptance. We listen with great care. And we wait. If we can find it in us to wait in trust, things will go so much easier for us. And a trustful waiting is, indeed, a fervent prayer.
May we use our crises wisely, greet them with trusting hearts, and allow ourselves to be reoriented toward a greater love.
Namaste!
Leia Marie
4 comments:
Trust is hard when in the midst of crisis. Thanks for an easier answer or hope for an end to a crisis.
Ah, yes, we always want those crises to end. Yet, sometimes they seem to go on and on and on and on. Often the best we can do is wait 'em out, and our greatest lessons may come in HOW we wait. Thanks for reading and for writing!
You opened another door! I realize “waiting” is what has been fervent and at times even frenzied for me. Certainly my prayers are fervent…..but I have carried that over! I must step back and trust in my waiting. I don’t always see the “shift” when it occurs. In reflection my frenzy blocks my ability to see. I often need outside assistance to help me wait with awareness and confidence.
I pledge to listen more attentively and be trustful in my waiting, seeking guidance from God, but also those I trust to help intervene!
"…trust in my waiting…" That is so very hard, isn't it? And I think you're right. When we're frenzied, we cannot see clearly. And it absolutely is part of being human that we need to lean on others at difficult junctures. I think we have been led to believe that mature or healthy people don't need support. Wrong! So we develop our skills in many areas, including trustful waiting and accepting, even asking for, help. Thanks for reading, Sherry, and for writing!
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