the sound of solitude

I’ve been reading a lot lately.  And when I read (no matter the title,) you will often find me high-lighting, underlining, or note taking along the way!  I always find a word, a line, a phrase, or even a chapter that seems to speak to my soul.  Which can be exhausting at times since it would appear ‘my soul-self’ has a lot to learn!!

Recently, a common theme keeps popping up.  A challenging theme which has lead me to delve into a self-examination of myself unexpectantly, (yet delightfully just the same!)

I love this sort of surprise!  Challenging…but fruitful!  Like when I first discovered Kayaking!

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I thought I enjoyed kayaking because it was a form of exercise I could manage & that I enjoyed; however, at a deeper unexpected level it challenged/helped/taught me…how to conquer a life-long fear of being in deep waters!  (The life-jacket may have helped too!)

As I said earlier…this reoccurring theme, (within my reading that mysteriously keeps popping up,) forced me to take on the challenge of discovering what (new) life-lesson I am (really) about to be taught.  (Please Lord, may there be another floatation devise involved!!)

Prayers being said, I’ve taken all my scribble-scrabble notes of impactful reading moments and laid them out on the mental table; in an effort to settle the distracted muddy-watered thoughts, (hoping) to discover what this reoccurring theme is paddling me toward.

Besides an array of very decorative chicken-scratch, an important question did eventually emerge.                                                       *This post will be a miss-mash of my chicken-doodle (no noodles) notes!

“What am I longing for?”

A quick response (most days) would be SOLITUDE!  IMG_6179

Always drawn to contemplative life, even as a young child, I fantasized about joining our local Carmelite Order.  I use to tell my mother I was going for a bike ride “just through the neighborhood;” but would sometimes sneak along a dirt pathway I’d discovered, which led to the Monastery and spend quiet time in the Chapel looking for the peace the women behind those walls were courageous enough to discover!

IMG_6192Solitude has always felt romantic to me. An intimate moment with self and God.  Ironically, most of us crave solitude.  As our lives grow more pressured, as we grow more tired, and as we begin to talk more about the day we’ve just been sucked through we imagine solitude as a peaceful, quiet opportunity, where we are walking by a lake, watching a sunset, or rocking contently on our front porch.

But even here, many times we make solitude yet another activity, something we do!  

Solitude, however, is a form of awareness.  It’s a way of being present and perceptive within all of life.  It’s having a dimension of reflectiveness in our daily lives that brings with it a sense of gratitude, appreciation, peacefulness, enjoyment, and prayer.  It’s the sense, within ordinary life, that life is precious, sacred, and…enough.”

Wowwwww!

Life is enough!  

Henri Nouwen once said that by touching the center of our solitude, we sense that we have been touched by loving hands.  Deep inside each of us, like a brand, there is a place where God has touched, caressed, and kissed us.  When our ear is pressed to God’s heart – to the breast of all that is good, true, and beautiful – we hear a certain heartbeat and we remember, remember in some rudimentary place, at a level beyond thought, that we were once gently kissed by God.

“Archetypally this is what’s deepest within us.  There is an ancient legend that holds that when an infant is created, God kisses its soul and sings to it.  As its guardian angel carries the soul to earth to join its body, she also sings to it.  The legend says God’s kiss and his song, as well as the song of the angel, remain in that soul forever – to be called up, cherished, shared, and to become the basis of all of our songs.”

To feel that kiss, to hear that song, requires awareness brought forth from paddling out into the deep water of solitude, perceptive and in awe of the sacredness which swirls all around us, no matter the calm or turbulent waters our life may currently be traversing through.

This is the solitude I have longed for, that I sought courage to claimbecause my life is enough for me.

(And somewhere in the chaos and pain of life I’d lost that.)

The sound of God’s heartbeat is audible only in this certain solitude and in the gentleness it brings.  The gentleness of  ‘the present moment,’ of acceptance in ‘what is,’ and the trust in ‘what will be.’

John of the Cross once defined solitude as “bringing the mild into harmony with the mild.”  That was his way of saying that we will begin to remember the primordial touch of God when, through solitude, we empty our hearts of all that is not mild, (pain, sorrow, distrust, pride & bitterness.) When we become mild, we will remember that we have been touched by loving hands and, like the Beloved Disciple, we then will have our ear to the heartbeat of Christ.

Inside each of us there is a church, a place of worship, a sanctuary not made by human hands.  And it is a gentle place, a virgin place, a holy place, a place where there is no sense of being harmed,  no need for confusion, or to distrust, and no need to be restless.  It is a soft place; that can remain inviolate, sacred, and untouched, even when abused and violated.

It is in that place, entered into through solitude and gentleness of spirit, that we have a privileged access to God, because that is the place where God has already touched us and where we, however dimly, remember that. We were once touched by hands far gentler and more loving than our own.  The memory of that touch is like sinking into deep waters:  warm, dark, gentle.  To enter this memory is to lean on the breast of Christ, just as the Beloved Disciple did at the Last Supper.  From that place, with our ear on Christ’s heart, we have the truest perspective on what we long for.

My own very private muddy-waters of confusion regarding: ‘being a gentle-minded person,’ have not always been in harmony with ‘being a gentle-minded soul.’  For too long now my soul has been touched by heart-ache and pain and I know, (I trust,) my God is touching me with his loving hand while singing into my ear…”at last empty your heart of all that is no longer mild and rest here upon my breast.”

And in the deep waters (of all that this lesson has taught me)…I am floating.  

 Floating On solitude,

On my life being enough.

hugs n’ blessings in these deep waters I share with you!

psalm 62:5

a visit to my interior castle. (in search of the) Divine Mercy in my soul.

my guide: st. faustina.

791  Hide me, Jesus, in the depths of Your mercy, and then let my neighbor judge me as he pleases.

792  I must never speak of my own experiences.  In suffering, I must seek relief in prayer.  In doubts, even the smallest, I must seek only the advice of my confessor.   I must always have a heart which is open to receive the sufferings of others, and drown my own sufferings in the Divine Heart so that they would not be noticed on the outside, in so far as possible.  I must always strive for equanimity, no matter how stormy the circumstances might be.  I must not allow anything to disturb my interior calm and silence.  Nothing can compare with peace of soul.  When I am wrongfully accused of something, I will not explain myself; if the superior wants to know (195) the truth, whether I was in the right or not, let her find out from others rather than from me.  My concern is to accept everything with a humble inner disposition.

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(unshakable) hugs n’ blessings!

Inner Silence

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St. Faustina’s Diary, which Jesus Christ ordered her to keep during the last four years of her life, is a kind of journal in which the author recorded current or retrospective events related primarily to the “encounters” of her soul with God.

Fr. Seraphim Michalenko served for 20 years as vice postulator for the Saint’s canonization cause & he also prepared the first edition of the Diary of St. Faustina from the original Polish manuscript, working on both the English and Spanish translations.  Since the Polish Diary is the official text, there has been every effort made to be truly faithful to it, and to retain the various shades of meaning implied in the theological and spiritual terms used by (Saint) Faustina.

In the course of reading (Saint) Faustina’s Diary, 5 entries a day through the duration of a year, I have learned many things.  Some entries more impactful & life-giving than others.  One of these especially.

In the Year 1937, Saint Faustina wrote a particular “examen” to aide her with being united with the merciful Christ.  She wrote this entry on January 1st.  With it she vowed the practice of inner silence, along with the strict observance of external silence; especially in times of being wronged or persecuted by others.  As a result of this she was guided to create a chart of “internal control of the soul.”  Each month she was given an “examen” to meditate upon, along with an exclamatory prayer.  Faustina took these “examens,” or practices, so seriously that she recorded monthly the victories & falls she experienced personally; within her attempts to adhere to each practice.

Inspired by this great act of love & my own desire to live united with Christ, through an internal control of the soul, I dedicated myself to returning back monthly to this particular entry (162) & memorizing each (monthly) practice.  My hope was that in this memorization & monthly meditation upon the prescribed practice I could  give my best attempt of living out the practice in my own daily life.

Not only was the exposure to these practices a great gift to me but they came during a time of my life of personal difficulty.

Having been a hospice volunteer worker for the past several years I have discovered a lot regarding suffering.  I understand that there is so much to be grateful for and that too often life is dramatized as “suffering,” without the slightest realization of what it truly means to experience great pain or loss.  I have witnessed so many courageous individuals maintain a great love for life despite the tremendous struggle or sorrow they must face. Love & support are two crucial components in aiding these courageous people during these moments and St. Faustina, through her simply written Diary entries, offered the love & support I needed at a low moment of my life.

It is not easy to be Christ like while being persecuted by others. (Saint) Faustina understood this and she wrote of this beautifully.  These monthly “examens” helped to assure her ( in her own moments of doubt,) that she would maintain this desire to glorify God despite her human struggles.

163 (78)”as many times as I breathe, as many times as my heart beats, as many times as my blood pulsates through my body, so many thousand times do I want to glorify Your mercy.”

I do not believe I was fully prepared when the monthly examen for January pierced my soul.

162 But Jesus remained silent.

How desperately had I desired to cry out against those who brought me (and those whom I love) pain.  How frightened had I become that others would believe the slander being spun. How lost did I feel to witness the inhumanity of man.  Yet, there was my God showing me the way.  Bringing me to St. Faustina, who would be my gentle guide.

162 But Jesus remained silent.

Who knew greater how to suffer through persecution unjustly than my God? Who knew more about being mocked and judged than He? And yet…He remained silent. He carried a cross silently, which led to our salvation, so that I would know what to do to remain saved.   

And that was how my heart was pierced and forever changed.  No longer a desire to speak about the injustices.  No longer a panic to prove mine (or those whom I love) innocence.  I meditated upon those who trusted in Christ, (when all others turned away,) because they knew who He was, they knew His heart. I laid it all at the foot of His cross and have walked on silently ever since.

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And with that abandoned trust I have experienced great personal victory. (Thank you, Lord.)  And I have discovered those who know our hearts.  (Thank you, Jesus.)

After being guided by The Conscience (monthly) Faustina concluded with a beautiful prayer.  I offer a piece of that in my own conclusion of what it has meant for me to learn how to “Remain Silent.” 

163 (78)  I want to be completely transformed into Your mercy and to be Your living reflection, O Lord.  May the greatest of all divine attributes, that of Your unfathomable mercy, pass through my heart and soul to my neighbor.

Help me, O Lord, that my heart may be merciful so that I myself may feel all the sufferings of my neighbor.  I will refuse my heart to no one.  I will be sincere even with those who, I know, will abuse my kindness.  And I will lock myself up in the most merciful Heart of Jesus.  I will bear my own suffering in silence.  May Your mercy, O Lord, rest upon me.”

hugs n’ blessings!