
Photo Credit: Scott Wolff
Sometimes God could try to be a little nicer. More fully present. Sure, there are days when we get along fine, but other days God goes silent, and I feel like the world is all my fault. For-profit prisons. Liars worshipped. Migrants capsized. Socialism demonized. Women as chattel and baby machines. The earth abused for our comfort.
On these days, I stomp, kick, and scream. I don my self-righteous armor, mount my trusty steed, and aim my lance at the nearest dark-web, conspiracy-theory, Fox-watching neighbor. This only happens in my head, but even so, I’m surly and unpleasant. Which is ironic since it likely reduces God’s motivation to stop by.
Then I notice the birds. The spectacular seed-eating bug-eating preening singing chirping flocking soaring birds. They are so present, so varied, so temporary. I see God letting them hop on her chest, giggling because it tickles. I see God lining their nests with sacred down. I see God in the lift of their wings. I see God dangling from their beaks. Their blithe innocence is sleek and beautiful.
Even in my ragged unbelief, in my sad and porous bones, I know that no sparrow falls alone. The hairs on my head, the lilies and dandelions, the war-ravaged children, the unsheltered, unloved, unknown. The conscripted. The billions unwillingly born. We’ve all been absorbed in the ocean of Knownness. Swelling buds, the receding tide: illusions of the highest order. We are figments of God’s imagination, players in a dream dreamed by God. I often think I want to free myself, but it seems I have no wings.
Is this my fatal flaw? Is this why I get mired in unlove?
Would you love me more if I could fly? I fling the question into the void, expecting only an echo back, but the Void quickens, and laughter cascades down like lava, vivid orange and dangerous.
“Oh, little fool,” the Void says. “You know I love you as much as you’ll allow.”
I tear up. There is a long, pregnant pause. Then the Void whispers, “And baby, you may not remember, but you have always known how to fly.”
This should be good news, but it frightens me.
I consider the wings of the morning and the skeletal lightness of being while young robins jump around under the lilacs to gain the strength they need to fly. Malignant tendrils of greed give way to the released and rising outbreath of the dead. The Void is right. I have always known how to fly.
I truly loved this Rita. Thank you for posting it❤️
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Thank you, Lisa. You are most welcome :).
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Ah, yes. To allow ourselves to be loved. When feeling particularly unlovable or absolutely alone or in the depths of being overwhelmed by whatever it is we’re being overwhelmed by (there is SO MUCH).
And to realize that we have always known how to fly – with Love as the wind beneath our wings.
Thank-you, Rita, for another beautiful visit with God.
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Thanks so much, Teressa! Always good to see the words reflected back and to hear from you.
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Simply gorgeous and uplifting.
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As are you!! Thanks Sheryl.
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