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Tuesday, December 29, 2020

Morning of Prayer: Poems of Joy – Savoring the Gifts of the Incarnation

Fr. Predmore is inviting you to a scheduled Zoom meeting. 

 Topic: Online Morning of Prayer: Poems of Joy – Savoring the Gifts of the Incarnation 

Time: Jan 2, 2021 09:30 AM to 12:00 noon Eastern Time (US and Canada) 

Join Zoom Meeting https://us02web.zoom.us/j/84726451248?pwd=cVRVWExPOWVFSW1STkdTMUpJOHM1QT09 

Meeting ID: 847 2645 1248 Passcode: Joy!

The Ocean and Me

After dinner, I decided to talk my usual evening walk, and yet I was debating with myself because it was 27 degrees in this early wintertime. I bundled up and stepped outside and noticed a rabbit scurrying to a safer place. The wind was gentle coming from the southwest and I was feeling cold. I could go back inside the building and get my steps with vigor in warmth, but as I walked, I quickened my steps. I crossed into the Harborview apartment complex and noticed that the wind was absent, which would make me stay outdoors longer than I intended. I noticed there were no cars and I hadn’t yet seen a pedestrian. I was almost to the ocean. My intent was to make some phone calls, but I realized it was too quiet to break the silence with a phone conversation. I simply walked. The ocean was still, the harbor endorsed serenity, the air no longer felt cold. The walk seemed like a present to me, like the stillness one enjoys on Christmas Eve, when everyone is nestled into their homes in coziness. I felt that coziness, and this seemed to be the Christmas Eve walk I typically take each year, except the rain kept me from doing so. A few more rabbits darted about and the ocean air was fresh while the ocean’s waves were not even lapping the shore. I enjoyed this moment. The night was all mine. I walked the boardwalk that led to the cupola and I breathed in the cold air. My chin was warm because I did not need the mask to cover my nose because I was the solitary figure at the beach. I choose my route to walk the length of the harbor that leads back to my residence, 3.5 miles in all. I crunched a few mounds of icy snow and continued on. Still, no wind, and I felt warm. The silence even extended into the ocean – no boats, no ships, not even the sound of a bird. I walked steadily, taking some stops along the way to marvel at the harbor. I passed by the presidential library and heard my first sound – the cables to the mast where the sailing flag was flown, but that sound soon dissipated and I was alone in silence again. I felt delight that I was experiencing this marvelous night. I passed no soul, not even the Brazilian fishermen. Not a soul. This was for my enjoyment, and I walked. I turned the corner of the harbor walk and was nearly half a mile from home when I heard overhead geese returning to our lawn. The wind picked up but remained steady. It was a night worth spending outdoors. Just me and the ocean. Five hundred yards from home, I saw the only car, and I passed by a few more rabbits, and I was home once again. Warm, and happy.

Wednesday, December 23, 2020

Sheila Lauzon



 I spray painted a wine bottle in a textured sand paint. Decorated it and used as a vase

Sunday, December 20, 2020

Ellen Fishman

I tried a new recipe today for peanut butter cookies with Hershey's kisses. One creative thing I did was to vary the recipe by using dark, rather than milk, chocolate.


 

Friday, December 18, 2020

Kay Dolezal



 

I've attached two converted yard signs that I made about a month ago. They really do consist only of things I had saved that were contributing to the clutter in my house. I was moved to make them because in my walks in the neighborhood I saw so many people decorating their houses and yards. I collaged them onto a Biden/Harris yard sign and another one about hatred that had broken.

Monday, November 23, 2020

"Snowflakes" by Robert Hsiung

am 
dreaming 
of snow on a 
bright autumn day -- 
sparkling star-shaped eight-pointed flakes 
dancing fluttering flying falling in the 
wind like autumn leaves, covering 
the dark earth underneath 
lifting me from the chilly recess of my 
fatigue and forgetfulness to the days when I 
was young and carefree skiing down steep snowy slopes in 
freezing cold and blinding speed, now in old 
age watching my two little grandsons 
in my backyard tumbling 
down sparkling white mounds. 
How transformative is the beauty 
that is not for me alone. How sublime is 
the sweet silence that 
rings in the 
heart 
for all !