God was puttering around outside my window in the translucent glow of sunrise, looking pleased and peaceful. The sun and similar stars and cosmic wonderments are working out more or less as planned, which is a great comfort to the creator. Other ideas seem to be working out less well.
I put on my boots and stomp out to visit, but God waves me away. I understand. Sometimes, we get a little too much of each other.
To tell the truth, most of the time, I don’t actually adore God. By human standards, God’s a freak. Too big, too little, gargantuan, minuscule, too packaged and narrowly defined, but then expansive beyond the expanses—so utterly Alpha-Omega that it blows any honest mind to smithereens. A glimpse of God is far worse for the average brain than serial concussions on the football field.
But God, embodied in our evolution as a species, is my only hope. At times, this feels feeble indeed. But the great forgiver hangs in there with me, within me, around me, through me, and I hang in with her, even though for the life of me, I don’t get why it has to be this crazy. The planet lumbers along, at risk of becoming another rock orbiting the lovely sun, our species cavorts perilously close to extinction for no good reason, and she suffers along with us instead of zapping the motherfuckers responsible for this mess.
Since I’m dressed for the cold anyway, I fall backwards in the snow and flap my arms and legs in an effort to leave a mark on this transitory day. A gesture of defiance. A plea.
Sky above falls open, snow rolls up like carpet, and the filmy veil between time and eternity melts. A strong wind blows the seasons by, and in an act of pure mercy, God kneels to gather my whitened bones.
“Thank you,” I whisper. She nods. Something vastly beyond adoration breaks my heart, and I see all the people that ever were glowing golden in the backlit dawn, not one of us worthy of a goddamn thing. Not one.
“Take a picture,” she says. “This will be hard to remember.” I slug her in the arm as hard as I dare and get to my feet, shaky but ready. It’s time to go back in, fry some eggs, and mumble my usual incoherent prayers.
I hope that you will publish these meditations as a book someday…something that I can share with future generations.
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Molly, I had the exact same thought. If I ever have to face challenges that test me as much as Rita has been tested, I will need these essays along with Goddess to persevere. Thank you, Rita
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Ah, thanks Nadine…!! I actually don’t feel like I’ve had a very tough life, but of course, we all get a chance to face a challenge or two.
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Ah, Rita the mystic. Something about Montana skies….
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…yes. Montana skies. They are, indeed, big. Inviting. Engulfing. Forgiving.
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Hi Molly, and thanks! I do have vision of such a book, but the publishing world is an unwieldy well-fed beast that both intimidates and bites :).
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