October 2007

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I often think of the themes in my life as acting like boomerangs. Something may happen to me–a great pain or loss–that sends out the very best of me scatted against the wind, but eventually they all return to their rightful home within me. This last year has been full of this kind of scattering, and if you have ever read my blog, you know what I am talking about. A year of more challenges and stress than my body, mind or spirit could handle, and a heart so broken I thought it was beyond repair for most of this year.

Now there is just something about a list that I dearly love. Lists organize my life! I have running lists for the things I need, the things I want to accomplish (like having more sex in the coming year–twice in 12 months is just not enough!!!), lists of places I want to experience, lists of problems I am facing, and, well, the list goes on and on and on… This blog has been full of some great lists:

So in honor of my little list making fetish, I offer up on my one-year anniversary since this unbelievable year began with my emergency root canal the following list of all my gratitude for what this last year gave me–in no particular order:

  1. My Ordination. This day was full of more love than I could have ever imagined, and I have drawn deeply from those waters this year.
  2. Surviving This Year! If you read “Posting My Big Secret” and “Shift Change” you know that this is an ACCOMPLISHMENT all by itself! Not only do I feel I survived, but I feel stronger, happier and more at peace with who I am than at any other point in my life.
  3. EMMA! Gotta love Miss Puppy Girl. She is my joy. We have really fallen in love these last few months, especially after her mean cousin Morgan left! Morgan, my niece, is part of the Puppy Gestapo. Her departure turned on the “My Mommie is not a meanine.” light over Emma’s head. Plus, she is FINALLY growing up…a little bit. She still has to wear a leash in the house–all the better to catch her and take my stolen bra out of her mouth with!!

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  4. Paparazzo. I have said it before, and I will say it again: I do not know how I would have made it through without him. I tease him that he is always “pulling my pigtails,” i.e. driving me nuts just because he can. Yesterday morning while doing crunches on the living room floor, Emma bit my ponytail and pulled hard. The more I would go to stop her the more she would pull. I ended up in a pool of tears and laughter! No wonder the two of them love each other so much–they are cut from the same cloth!
  5. Casa Derby. I lived for 2.5 years without my own belongings, so coming home in February filled my heart in ways I cannot even describe. I missed my Red Turkey Rug! I missed my books, music, bed, sofa and enough dishes to host a party for an army. How sweet it is to be home again. Moving home also brought new friends and neighbours. They met me mid Apocalypse and adopted me straight away. I needed the affirmation of new friends, and so I am grateful the latest incarnation of Casa Derby came with some.
  6. My Mama and My Sista. These two continue to show me love, love, love, even when I am only full of fear and despair.
  7. My Work and Team. I get unbelievable joy knowing I am doing the kind of work that crosses the religious divide and finds people right where they are and ministers to their hurting hearts in that place. My patients and their families are my teachers, and I value their lessons. Ministering to my atheist patient this year, and the work in general, has given me my inspiration as I apply to Vanderbilt’s PhD program. I also have a wonderful team to work with, but especially my manager, my social worker, my secretary, and my nurses Wendy and Lisa. They all make each day a worthy sacrifice. (Trust me! At what I make, the word “sacrifice” is perfect.)
  8. My Bereavement Group. If I ever have a friend go through a crushing break-up, I will immediately buy them Alan Wolfelt’s book Understanding Your Grief: Ten Essential Touchstones for Finding Hope and Healing Your Heart . Working through this book with my group, and the group’s grieving processes in general, helped me to identify that what happened to me was just the normal grief one experiences when someone you love dies. I suddenly no longer felt so isolated in my grieving, and listening to them give voice to their mourning, gave me an opportunity to accept my own. Once I got that the person I knew and loved did in fact die–metaphorically and literally, in as much as that person was no longer real or real in my life–I could finally find the courage to accept the past as it was, accept the me that I truly am, and move on towards my own best future.
  9. My Bike. My Bike. My Bike. I love my shitty bike, and I am accepting cash donations (through PayPal of course) towards my next ride. It may just be one of the crappiest bikes on the planet for someone to ride 50-70 miles a week on, but she keeps on going strong. I love waving to the guys mowing my golf course at 6:30 in the morning with their headlights shining out in the dark. I love riding with Emma! I just love riding her period. Giant, Specialized and Cannondale may get quite a bit of my internet window shopping, but she gets my attention day-in-and-day-out. I would have gained a TON of weight without the bike given my knee, so I am so appreciative to have this bike even if it is not all that good of one or all that cool. She does what she is supposed to do–for the most part–and I am grateful.
  10. My Blogs. Writing has given voice to my despair and to my hope, both of whom are constant partners in my dance of life. The affirmation of my faithful readers and the new friends I have made as a result, gave wings to the fact that I did in fact have a meaningful future without the one I had loved. He and I began a conversation–an important one for me personally and one of importance for the world in which we live–and when it ended abruptly I feared the conversation died too. In working on this blog and Don’t Be A Christian (which will be more fully operational January 2008), I found new partners in that conversation, found I could do it on my own (dammit!!!!), and the impetus to be bold enough to go after a PhD. I was once sent an email from someone wondering if this blog was the beginning of something else because she could sense something brewing in me from my writing. The truth is the blog began as a way to show photos of my new puppy! What it has become astounds me, but I also know it has been central to my healing and to my reaffirmation that indeed my middle name is hope.

There are certain songs that have supported me too, but especially the words to two Bjork songs: The whole of “All is Full of Love.” I keep reminding myself that I am full of love to both give and receive, and although it may not come from the places I expected, it is always right there within me and for me. The other song is “It’s Not Up To You.” The lyrics are amazing. She sings, “I wake up and the day feels broken. I tilt my head. I’m trying to get an angle…if you wake up and the day feels broken, just lean into the crack…notice how it sparkles.” This has been a year of leaning into the crack, and much to my surprise it has sparkled in ways unimaginable last year. Me too. I still sparkle.

With gratitude for the 525,600 minutes of this last unbelievable year,

Rev. Jacqueline Hope Derby

Photo Credit: PAPARAZZO

This week is National Pastoral Care Week, and our theme for this year is “Healing Faith.”  Working with hospice patients daily requires me to think about healing in a different way than “just getting restored to the way one was prior to the illness.”  Death is healing for my patients, and the only way they find it from a physical sense.  I find it amazing how easily we seem to equate healing with “going back.” Why don’t we possess an imagination that a healing would imply more than being “OK,” but instead would mean we are being re-created into a new fullness, being different, and flourishing in that difference?

Being a lover of rationality and logic, and also a girl with a vivid imagination, I must admit that I look for the scientific meaning behind so-called “miracles,”  while open to the amazing web of life that does not always go according to logic.  I am a skeptic…a faith-filled skeptic, but one none the less.  Mostly I am skeptical of any theology that speaks for how God does or does not act in a physical sense in our world.  I have seen the ravages of a theology that emphasizes a God who meddles with the laws of physics born out on suffering families who just cannot understand why that same God won’t meddle for them.   They often say to me while facing head-on the eventual death of their loved one, “We still have hope.”

I trouble these waters because I insist on planting seeds that might grow into a tree.  This tree then can be cut down and a bridge made through their theological quagmire.  Maybe.  I just heard on Monday from a Muslim family these very words, “We still have hope.”  One of the matriarchs of the family is dying from breast cancer, a cancer that has spread all over her body and is literally eating her alive.  Cancer that cannot be treated.  Cancer for which there is no mortal cure.  In the face of this cancer they still have hope, but hope in what?  Her daughter said, “Hope in her being healed.  Hope that she will recover.  Hope.  [She] will not give up on [her mother].”

How sad I am when I hear those I care for speak of anti-hope as being “giving up” on their loved one.  I imagine the patient in a terrible race where all of their supporters leave the sidelines and stop cheering, certain of their defeat.  But is that really what it means to “give up” hope?  No!  It cannot be!  For what they are really saying is that they are so in-love with this person that they cannot even imagine one moment without them present, so they do not even imagine it.  (And would I please stop even mentioning it too!?)  The center of this storm is the reality that at some moment they will indeed need to let go of their fantasy where their loved one is physically healed and restored to the fullness of life they experienced prior to their illness.  But this letting go is not giving up on hope or healing.

When I worked in Trauma, I would often accompany the physicians as they informed families that “there is no more hope.”  Oh the anger of these families being told to stop hoping!   They might has well have been told to stop breathing!  What the doctors wanted to convey was that they had no more medical expertise to offer the injuries and effect the healing.  They would support the body as best they could, and let the body evolve with its injuries as it would.  I would sit with the families and re-frame what hope meant for them at their crossroads of medical reality and faith.  I would tell them of how praying for healing was still a worthy prayer, and that of course they wanted their loved one to be healed and restored to them.  I also told them that healing might not look that way, but instead healing might just be surviving the worst, having their own heart continue to beat, or finding ways to invest in life and love even without this particular person being physically present.  I like to trouble the waters.

When my own father died, I can remember thinking that Jesus stopped loving me because he did not make him well.  It would take me years to come to a place of genuine reconciliation about my own beliefs about who God is and how God acts in order to accept God’s love and Daddy’s death as being co-inhabitants in my reality.   In other words, it took me a long time–and in some ways I continue on this journey–to heal my disappointment in God not being or acting how I thought God would act…or how I think a loving God should act.

Healing disappointment–a common theme for all of us–requires embracing the pain of things not going as we want, or as we need.  Many of us live with not having the most basic of needs, including life itself, met.  It is not fair for the young father to die, the little child, or the constant friend,  but unfair happens frequently.  When I work with my patients and families now, I work with them to heal–and have hope, or an imagination that healing is possible–all of the places the “unfair” has threatened their investment in life, in their spiritual and emotional health, and in their loved ones.  I often hear myself saying, “Although you cannot be healed of your disease, you can–if you intend to–work towards healing your brokenheartedness over all the dis-ease your illness has brought.”

I begin almost every week with my current Bereavement Group in the same manner. “Come and let us intend to heal together.”  Our lives must be totally re-ordered when they become shattered from the loss of someone we love.  We can never expect them to be the same.  If our life was a beautiful and colourful ceramic vase prior to the loss, the loss shattered that vase into a million pieces.  Healing is that work we do where we create a new mosaic with the pieces of the past, mixed into the mortar of our own rock solid existence, and with new aspects and colours we never would have imagined as our old “whole.”  When I think of “Hope in Healing,” it is this place of imagination where the new mosaic is created, where I see God as our greatest encourager in our healing.

God is excellent at creating something amazing out of dust, so I figure I will “seek striving” and “be still” and listen to the voice of the Holy One within my heart whisper direction, comfort, peace, and love into my ear as I watch my own hands create healing in my life.

I am a part of this parade of life.

How about you?

I’m feeling a bit out of breath.
I have been running–you see
trying to find my little band of brothers and sisters
in the crowded throng.
Last night—I could hardly sleep—
the anticipation beat in my chest
like the flurry of a hummingbird’s wings.
Rest eluded me. Frivolous giggles did not.
And so I have come upon you,
my dear sisters and brothers
(for we are all God’s chosen ones)
and with you I wait.

(How long must we wait? Where is our help? Is there someone somewhere who might save us? Who might save us from ourselves? Come quickly, for the whole of the earth groans in waiting. Give birth now to peace and reconciliation before we destroy our gift in greed and fear.)

Oh!

I see the merry band of travelers just up ahead. Let me run to greet them with a holy kiss. May forgiveness, kindness and love pour gently and easily from my heart.

Listen.

We speak both in a hushed and rapid way;
wanting to quickly get in every word of affection and hope,
but also we do not want to miss a single second
of the pageantry unfolding before our very eyes.

We see the divine in each other. We hear the voice of an angel in the one whose lips brush our ear with sweet words of welcome and celebration.

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“Join us my sister. Life is blooming all around us. Love is everywhere and in everyone.”

“See there our brother Jesus. See his hands, his feet, his side. All for love. See there our brother Buddha. Hear his wisdom of compassion. All for love. See our sister Peace Pilgrim. Feel her arms of love wrap around you. All for love. See. Taste. Feel. Walk. Drink deep the living waters.”

Despair has no place here. Imagination and hope abound.

Ahh…Listen…

“Let go of the wrongs done to you, and forgive yourself for not being even your own best vision of who you can be. Choose to be, and you will.”

Ahh…Listen…

“May your vision be healed so that you are no longer blind to all those around you. Let hate not be the lens through which you see your life. Let not the fear of ‘us’ or ‘them’ guide your steps. Walk the way of peace, even as you see your duplicitous reflection in the mirror. (Remember we hate that which most closely resembles our own failings.)”

Ahh…Listen…

“May the lies on your lips cease, and the destructive ones in your heart vanish. Look in the eyes of your Mother, your Father and speak with the wisdom of the ages. Have integrity in all you do. Be the change you desire most deeply to see in this fragile world.”

Ahh…Listen…

“Who were you created to be when the happy accident of your birth happened? Tell us your gifts. Show them off! Invest them in our prosperity. We have enough, for look around there is only abundance when we share. Won’t you share your portion with us too so that none of us will starve?”

Ahh…Listen…

What is it that we hear?

Let the Mother say, “God’s steadfast love endures forever.”
Let the Father say, “God’s steadfast love endures forever.”
Let my sister say, “God’s steadfast love endures forever.”
Let my brother say, “God’s steadfast love endures forever.”
Let all God’s children say, “God’s steadfast love endures forever.”

Let the love in my heart say, “Love endures forever.”

Amen.

I wrote this little ditty in honor of my Team Manager Mary Lou for “Bosses Day.” I feel she is the best boss I have ever had in my profession. I can count on her to back me up and kick my rear in gear when needed. This is a necessary and delicate balance! Since I am not writing as much at the moment, with the GRE looming and my Vandy application due in less than two months, I am posting this to keep you plugged into my blog and life. A poet, I am not, but this is heartfelt and that counts in a world of disconnect.

 

 

It’s a man’s world,
or so they say.
Where killing, lying, stealing
seem to be the only way.

Want to get ahead?
Want to win the race?
Be willing to trip your neighbour
to save a little face.

 

Lambs don’t lie down
with hungry lions at the gate.
Always on guard–
even the lambs seem to hate.

 

Get up in the morning,
try to find your bliss.
Work, give, and work some more.
Some things sure do seem amiss.

 

Unreal expectations–
the working woman’s plight.
She spends her days dreaming,
wanting them to take flight.

 

Is there a teacher?
A beacon or a guide?
Another woman walking tall
against the raging tide?

 

Mightier than a goddess,
an Amazon of grace.
Be careful not to cross her,
she’ll put you in your place.

 

Her hand will rock your cradle.
Her voice rocks your heart.
Listen to her sage words,
her wisdom to impart.

 

She is Mother, daughter
sister, friend.
When you are with her
you never have to pretend.

 

She will tend to you;
helping you to grow.
And sees your success
cheering, “Go! Go! Go!”

 

It may be a man’s world
but it is a woman’s strength
that nurtures the very best in us
and goes to any length.

 

So raise your voice,
your cup, your heart,
for it is honor
we have come to impart.

 

The time has come to celebrate
one trustworthy, steadfast, and true.
Let us praise our friend,
our boss, our own Mary Lou.

This is a blog about life, love, relationships, death, dying, pastoral care, atheism, faith, forgiveness, laughter, grace, mercy and mostly, hope.

Check out my pages below for information on my family (In-Laws & Out-Laws), my friends (Friendly Fires), all the boys I have dated (The Dating Game), and of course, my puppy Emma!

Feel free to post comments or send me an email through my contact tab. I love getting feedback and hearing how our lives are more similar than not.

I hope you enjoy reading about my life and loves!
Jacqueline

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