No one likes to be called a quitter. Nasty word, quitter. I’ve never seen myself as a quitter, although I do have some dark memories of times I just gave up. But mostly I pushed through the darkness and found a way.
That’s changing as I age, and I
don’t like it. I would rather expand that be pulled back by limitations. But it
seems that knowing and accepting our limitations is the new name of this game
called growing older.
For some time now my body has been
telling me to slow down. Chronic dizziness and fatigue have made some of the
leadership roles I’ve loved seem more like burdens than joys. Recently I gave
up leadership in a Sunday class I love; serving in the capacity of class
coordinator was life-giving and I felt as though I were making a contribution.
But when something that once was light starts becoming heavy, you know it’s
time to let go and let other people step in. So I did. But not without a tinge
of grief.
And now I’m in the process of
finding someone else to edit the community journal I began some nine years ago.
It’s become a way for people in this retirement community to tell their stories
and I’ve loved being part of the group that puts this together once a quarter.
But, again, my spirit tells me it’s time to let go.
Our plot in the community garden,
my guitar and ambitions of becoming a classical guitarist (foolish, considering
I have no music gene in my DNA)—these are other things I’m giving up. It’s
time.
All of this makes me wonder if I’m
losing my voice, along with my active roles. Will I now just melt into the
background, become dimmer and dimmer until nobody even remembers my name?
Now that’s pathetic. It’s me at my
worse, and I don’t always grovel at that level. Actually, I get hints that
letting all this float up off my shoulders might in some way free my spirit to
focus on the things that matter most. I hope that’s true.
I had a strange dream the other
night. I still remember it, so that tells me to pay attention. In the dream Hal
died (the worse part of the dream) and the rest of the dream focused on how I
expressed my grief. In short, I went mute. I stopped talking. I lost language.
With family members or in groups of people, I made myself melt into the
background. In time, people seemed to accept it.
One night, still in my dream, I
was with a small group of close friends and people were sharing their prayer
requests. I sat and listened, mute as usual. But then as we went into a time of
prayer, my tongue was loosed. I began praying for my friends, out loud, with
wisdom and discernment. With compassion. It surprised everyone, myself
included.
Then I woke up.
As I’ve been processing the dream,
I’ve decided it was not prophetic. I’ve not been given a warning that Hal will
soon die, although I know we’ll both die someday. And it’s not telling me that
when all else fails, pray. No. I think it’s about facing loss and letting
myself grieve the losses, even if that means a time of silence to sit with the
absences. But there is something good on the other side, something I can do
well and that will give meaning in this time of life.
I believe that. In fact, I do want
to learn how to pray better and how to settle into more fruitful times of
worship and intercession. I want to learn how to do silence and contemplation
better (meaning more than five minutes at a stretch). I’m making time for this.
I now have more time for writing;
I’ve still got poems to write, stories to tell, memories to mine. And I’m
fulfilling my hope of refreshing my ability to read the New Testament in Greek.
I’ve lost a lot since my seminary days, but it’s coming back little by little.
And it’s lots of fun.
And then there’s people time, of
course. More time for long conversations, for reading books and talking about
them with other book-lovers, for just being with the people I love.
As often happens when I write this
blog, I’m processing my situation and coming to a place of hope. Journeying
from negative to positive. From grief to joy. I haven’t arrived yet, at least
not consistently, but I feel better about it all. I hope you also find yourself
encouraged.

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