Tag Archives: beauty

Death Is Beautiful

Death is beautiful. City streets and sidewalks are papered in it. Trees shout it with blazing reds and yellows—a rare season when the glow of sunset settles onto every country road and city block. And the individual deaths are as beautiful as the collective. If I dare use the worn-out snowflake analogy, each leaf is one-of-a-kind—the blend of colors, the shape and length of the stem, edges pointy or rounded, symmetry perfect or lopsided. Even the way it rides air currents to the ground is singular.

In the Celtic spiritual tradition, the phrase “thin places” describes those times when the veil thins between the now and the eternal, the ordinary and the extraordinary, and we see what is usually hidden. Death is one of those thin places.

Months before autumn, I walked a fog-covered beach on the Pacific Ocean, and death everywhere arrested me, stunned me, captivated me with its patterns and beauty. The oval-shaped outside of a small chiton shell—previously home to a creature that might have been the child of a limpet and a sea slug—was mossy green. But inside, surrounded by a wrinkly cream-colored girdle, an almost-neon aqua blue lit up the connected shell plates, and I stared in wonder. The shell of an urchin, now spineless, was covered with perfect rows of raised dots in muted tones of pink and green. The purple inside of a crab shell had patterns like light shining through water. Round jellyfish, symmetric from their thin edges to the white motif near their fat centers, lay stranded on the sand. A dead dragonfly, wings spread as if on display, had the bluest body, a peaceful gray-blue, but nothing dull about it.

My daughter picked up a crab shell which had been home to a couple dozen barnacles, and I imagined it in its heyday, scuttling through tide pools, unknowingly feeding the barnacles on its back, as well as itself. Uprooted seaweed formed circles and figure-eights. My daughters and I stomped on the seaweed air floats, trying to outdo each other with satisfying pops. One already-cracked float looked like Pac-Man, and another like a pelican’s head and neck. Shells, once symmetric, had broken into fragments and been polished smooth by the sand—pinks mottled like granite, colored ovals reminiscent of planetary rings, layered blues, and swaths of pearly iridescence. An art museum at my fingertips. 

As I contemplate the beauty of death, I can’t help but wonder what it will be like when someone I love dies. Will I feel the thinness between earth and heaven? Will there be beauty? Or will it be clinical, disturbing, exhausting, or—worst of all—sudden and too soon? I’ve never been with a person at death. I am curious—will there be a glimpse of what I have not seen before?

There is room for magic in morbidity. Although the leaves will turn brown, rot in the rain, and return to the soil, their week of splendor remains undiminished. Although every empty crab shell represents a death, and the waves and crunching feet will not leave them whole, they are no less exquisite. Although I will die, my passage from this life will squeeze the mortal and the immortal together for just a moment, creating a beautiful, painful, thin place.

On My Drive Today

I saw a tractor throwing dark earth, and
A field of cosmos—pink, purple, white.
I saw a hedge, large and tall and perfectly green, notched at the top like a castle,
And a grave with balloons on it.
I saw a small, black travel bus with the words “my party bus”
In chunky white letters across one end.

Rows of perfectly spaced deciduous trees at a nursery wore fall colors, and
Weeds decorated the aisles between.
Neon-green skeletons perched on a wire fence,
And a navy-blue Tesla followed me for miles.
I crossed a mirror-still river,
And passed under two branches, touching
Like outstretched fingertips above me.

I saw tractor-crossing signs, deer-crossing signs, political signs, and
Line after line of baby trees and shrubs, only a foot tall,
Every shadow in perfect formation across groomed dirt rows.
I saw horses swishing their tails,
And clouds, dressed for a slumber party.

I saw metal buildings, colored by rust, and
Old, wooden farm buildings painted rust-red.
I saw a stream in an overgrown meadow,
Water profuse with delicate, floating plants.
I saw pumpkins combed into rows—no vines, just orange fruit for acres,
And the long shadows of a fall afternoon.

Seeing God

Seeing God

Blessed are You,
Lord our God,
King of the Universe,
for dragonfly wings
and broken things,
fire and wind,
storms and dewdrops.

Blessed are You
in brimming eyes,
sparkling eyes,
vacant eyes;
in friend and foe;
in the mirror.

Blessed are You
for revealing Yourself
in ancient words,
or present vision,
a thousand ways,
ten thousand places.

Blessed are You,
Lord our God,
King of the Universe,
for seeing us,
and for letting us
see You.

Awe-full Gratitude

I am over-aware that gratitude is a good idea. I’ve read books, heard the research, and mentored others toward gratitude, but I cannot find my own way to it. This leaves me feeling guilty and incompetent. But when I come out of shame, sometimes I see underlying issues feeding my tendency to be a pessimist, a cynic, a realist. One of these issues is survivor guilt. Every person alive today is susceptible to survivor guilt—a condition of persistent mental and emotional stress experienced by someone who has survived an incident in which others died.1 Our world is an incident in which others die. When I consider my life in comparison to most of the world population, saying I’m grateful somehow comes off as superior. Survival guilt leaves me just shy of getting the words “thank you” out of my mouth.

One morning I ponder this while watching birds out my window—hopping on the neighbor’s roof, sitting on telephone wires, strutting in the street, always fluttering here and there. And God whispers, everyone has the birds.

So then I suppose most everyone has sunrises and sunsets, trees and berry bushes, flowers, animals, stars. Even friendship, love, and the miracle of life. The lines of “lucky” and “unlucky” are not drawn between first-world and third-world countries. In all parts of the world we find sex slaves and starvation, abuse and death. There are Americans in solitary confinement, shut off from most blessings, and Americans confined by busyness, who for years haven’t stopped long enough to see a bird or a sunset. Loss or lack of freedom occurs on so many levels in so many places.

I know a subversive God, who “makes His sun rise on the evil and on the good, and sends rain on the just and on the unjust.” (Matthew 5:45) Not only that, “When He died, He died once to break the power of sin for all.” (Romans 6:10, emphasis added)

If God is not selectively blessing and saving people, I wonder why the world looks like it does. Could it be that starvation, loneliness, and slavery are human constructs? If they are constructed by humans, can they be deconstructed by humans? Perhaps I have an incredible opportunity to participate in their reversal. If these tragedies—which distort or destroy the good things God has provided—came at the hands of broken humans, then as a healing human I may participate in restoration.

So where does this leave me?

There are no easy answers.

It seems that God provides for all. My greatest gifts are gifts God has given to everyone, not just to me or those like me. I may feel gratitude in the sacred moments when I notice the sky, see a friend’s deepest heart, or awake to the sound of singing birds, knowing that these pleasures are gifts to all.

At the same time, I may grieve for those who do not experience these blessings, who are locked away physically, mentally, emotionally, or spiritually—which is all of us, some of the time; and some of us, all the time. For this I cry, and so does God—God whose dream for us is a life characterized by love, friendship, and beauty.

This corporate sense of gratitude and grief gently moves me from cynicism to awe. I am in awe both at the beauty and the pain of the world. I am called to work for the good of the just and the unjust. I am invited to stare in wonder at the sun setting, and stare in wonder at a starving child, and allow both to wreck me. And for this I am grateful.

Endnotes:
1New Oxford American Dictionary

What If?

I’m reading a book that is speaking beautifully to what God is doing in my life right now. It is resonating deeply with me. It seems every chapter is putting words to something I have experienced, and at the same time inviting me to know more. I found out the author is a pastor in Portland. We live in the Pacific Northwest and sometimes visit Portland, so… maybe sometime on a trip we could go to his church and meet him. I have just a bit of nervous excitement, considering this possibility. I imagine I would have a great conversation with him, because I feel like he already understands me, and I him.

Has this ever happened to you? Maybe you have a favorite musical artist you would love to meet, because their music has touched you or been the soundtrack to significant seasons or events in your life. Or maybe, like me, you’ve read a book and felt connected so much to the message or story that you wanted to meet the author. Maybe there’s an actor who has played a role that resonated with you, and it would be a dream come true to meet him/her. Perhaps there’s someone in history that you long to meet. Maybe you admire someone who has changed their corner of the world with loving service to the poor or by championing social justice, and you would be honored just to get the chance to shake their hand.

Admiration often leads to a desire to connect. We see something, feel something, hear something that resonates with our selves and we feel seen and known. Sometimes we breath a sigh of relief that we are not alone. And sometimes we think how lovely it would be to meet the person who wrote/created/did that thing we connected with. When we feel seen and known – or when someone opens a portal for us to see and know something we were previously blind to – we automatically respond with an open-hearted desire for connection.

What if I could see God’s creating and doing and acting with these same eyes of admiration? How awe-inspiring it is to watch a sunrise or see dolphins playing in the ocean. I think about the incredible transformation of metamorphosis – a squishy grub becoming a beautiful winged insect. I think about trees that look dead in winter and every spring burst forth in fat buds of leaves and flowers. I think about the peace of a lake in the forest, or the power of a roaring waterfall. I think about all the selfless acts around the world – among my friends, on the news, and in books about times past. I think about all the heroes who have put others’ lives before their own.

And I think, what if I could meet that Guy – the very one who paints thousands of breathtaking sunsets. The one who made the dolphins, the birds, and all the beautiful, curious, strong, smart, playful creatures. He must be an incredible Guy! What if there is one Person behind every act of kindness, sacrifice, and love the world over, and I could meet him?! Talk about a celebrity of celebrities!

What if this Person could bear the full weight of my admiration: I would never find out he changed his mind about loving, or had an affair, or embezzled money, or alienated his children, or went bankrupt, or stopped telling the truth. Rather, the more I learned about him the more I witnessed his integrity. What if this desire I have to shake hands with someone I admire, or to have an intimate dinner with someone famous whose talents inspire me, or to connect with someone who has connected with me – whose words or music or life has entered the sacred spaces in my heart and comforted me or changed me or simply been my inner companion – what if all that desire is realized in Jesus? What if all the admiration and inspiration – the moments of connection and feeling known – were actually moments with Jesus?

What if the most incredible Personality ever to walk the earth knows who I am? And what if he wants to not only shake hands with me and have an intimate dinner with me, but also to be my best friend? To be seen with me and know that I am being seen with him. What if I found out those sunsets and songs were messages he was hoping would find their way to me? What if he is as excited to meet me as I am to meet him; and he is as excited to be my friend as I am to be his? What if he is so humble that I never feel less-than in his presence, yet so powerful and dynamic that I am infused with zest for life just being around him?

What if all the people I have admired, all the sunsets that have quieted my soul, all the words and music that have held me or inspired me or challenged me or made me feel seen – what if the Man behind all that doesn’t live in Portland, but right here? What if I could meet him right now? And what if, when I meet him – full of nervous anticipation, admiration, and self-consciousness-trying-to-be-calm – he says he wants to stay with me for a while (well, actually forever): to have intimate dinners every day, to write music together, to have me sit beside him as he paints the sky? What if all I have admired and all that has inspired me are the work of one Person who is as deeply interested in me as I am in him? What if every day he wants to see me and know me?

What if I start to become like him? What if I make more beautiful things? What if I commit more selfless acts? What if I do things that invite others to be seen and known?

And what if this friendship is not just for life, but for the afterlife? Not only does he want to live with me at my house, but he’s making a room for me in his opulent mansion. There’s a room with my name carved on the door. And there is music and celebration and acts of love and intimate dinners every day. Finally my heart is full. My admiration has met its object and I am overcome by a sense of completeness and wholeness I know I was always looking for. Hope has been fulfilled. My heart is at rest.

Unforgettable in every way
And forever more, that’s how you’ll stay
That’s why, darling, it’s incredible
That someone so unforgettable
Thinks that I am unforgettable too

– “Unforgettable” by Gordon Irving