This is the invitation. Come with me on a sacred pilgrimage, one that starts on an airplane, crosses over continents and ends in the heart.
If you would like to join me in countries like Japan, China, Taiwan for the journey of a lifetime, you can purchase one or all of the stories I will write from the road, each created to share the unfolding of Grace and Love that belongs to all of us. I will be creating a total of twelve stories--one for each month I will be away. You can purchase one, the story of where my journey begins; four, one for each season; or all twelve, one each month for a year. The first story will come as soon as my first month abroad is complete.
Another option is to offer a donation in any amount that works for you.
To view a sample of my work, see the blog archive section on the right-hand side of this page and click on the title, "I am thankful for the luna moth with her trilling wing."
To purchase a story….
Click here to purchase 1 "Chance to Fly" Story for $50
Click here to purchase 4 "Chance to Fly" Stories, one for each season, for $100
Click here to purchase 12 "Chance to Fly" Stories, one for each month, for $250
To make a donation at any level that feels right to you,
Click here to make a donation in the amount of your choice
Monday, July 5, 2010
I am thankful for the luna moth with her trilling wing
“The luna moth, who lives but a few days, sometimes only a few hours, has a pale green wing whose rim is like a musical notation. Have you noticed?”
~Mary Oliver, “Musical Notation: I”
Luna. The half-full moon cradles light in her body like a secret that cools and burns. We walk the dirt roads together, maybe 10 or 12 of us, drenched in her light. There are no street lights here, and the night is bright-cold. From any one point we see horizon and mountains stretched against the canvas of a cloudless sky.
“Nothing real is ever lost or missing.” These are the words of Jesus from Glenda Green’s Love Without End, and they ring in my ears now. It’s over a year now since since the accident. For such a long time, I have eaten grief. I have wandered in a dry desert edged with thorns. I have called out for help, and no one came. I have dreamed myself alone.
Yet here I am now, walking through a desert at night—and it’s made of stars, it’s made of glittering velvet. The desert is brimming with moonlight and the faces of the people that I love. I had made a cage for myself out of a story--that no one was there for me in the aftermath of the accident, that no one would ever be there. That I would always be this in pain and this alone. Yet here we are now together, and I see: I see how much I love them. And I see that my experience of anything is what I have created it to be.
We just finished eating together, a plate-piled Thanksgiving dinner. I realized we never stopped and said what we’re thankful for—but then, I guess we didn’t have to. Isn’t it obvious?
I’m thankful for the luna moth and her trilling wing.
I’m grateful for the faces of the people around me—people as thirsty as I am, willing to go even to the ends of the earth in search of water.
It is my job to collect the fallen feather as it lays across the dewy grass. My work to pick up reddening leaves, to notice the trees that they came from and see if I can name them, and then call to them from my heart in a secret language, as my brothers and sisters. There is music in the smallest things, and I am bound to notice it.
“Blessed are those that mourn, for they shall be comforted.”
Now is when I abandon death and dreams for the magic of what is given to me.
~Mary Oliver, “Musical Notation: I”
Luna. The half-full moon cradles light in her body like a secret that cools and burns. We walk the dirt roads together, maybe 10 or 12 of us, drenched in her light. There are no street lights here, and the night is bright-cold. From any one point we see horizon and mountains stretched against the canvas of a cloudless sky.
“Nothing real is ever lost or missing.” These are the words of Jesus from Glenda Green’s Love Without End, and they ring in my ears now. It’s over a year now since since the accident. For such a long time, I have eaten grief. I have wandered in a dry desert edged with thorns. I have called out for help, and no one came. I have dreamed myself alone.
Yet here I am now, walking through a desert at night—and it’s made of stars, it’s made of glittering velvet. The desert is brimming with moonlight and the faces of the people that I love. I had made a cage for myself out of a story--that no one was there for me in the aftermath of the accident, that no one would ever be there. That I would always be this in pain and this alone. Yet here we are now together, and I see: I see how much I love them. And I see that my experience of anything is what I have created it to be.
We just finished eating together, a plate-piled Thanksgiving dinner. I realized we never stopped and said what we’re thankful for—but then, I guess we didn’t have to. Isn’t it obvious?
I’m thankful for the luna moth and her trilling wing.
I’m grateful for the faces of the people around me—people as thirsty as I am, willing to go even to the ends of the earth in search of water.
It is my job to collect the fallen feather as it lays across the dewy grass. My work to pick up reddening leaves, to notice the trees that they came from and see if I can name them, and then call to them from my heart in a secret language, as my brothers and sisters. There is music in the smallest things, and I am bound to notice it.
“Blessed are those that mourn, for they shall be comforted.”
Now is when I abandon death and dreams for the magic of what is given to me.
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