Surrender

TAKE, LORD, and receive all my liberty, my memory, my understanding, and my entire will — all that I have and call my own. You have given it all to me, Lord, I return it. Everything is yours; do with it what you will. Give me only your love and your grace. This is enough for me.

- Norman Shawchuck and Rueben P. Job
A Guide to Prayer for All Who Seek God

“Heaven and earth will pass away, but my words will never pass away.”
- Luke 21:33, NIV

Happy Anniversary Liz & Dave

This one goes out to Liz & Dave

Sunset on Fort George Island

We sit on the porch alone together at twilight.
“Soon,” I whisper, “the sun will set and our sky will change.
The show will begin.”
“The eye of God will come and all His glory will perform just for us.”

We are like children filled and overflowing with anticipation,
as if running down the stairs on Christmas morning
to see what new shinnies the man in red has left behind.

Spellbound, first we see a soft blue, we point and say,
“Oh, that’s the color we should paint our bedroom.”

Then, with each inch the sun retreats below our marsh:
the pink, warm golds, deep blue – crimsons and orange.
We just gaze, almost a strange glare in silence engulfed and flooded
by the presence of God.

I don’t think either one of us is breathing….?

For a moment I remember back to the time when He and I started this journey together.
We had nothing – we were both children – both alone.
We had held each other and declared,
“We can do this!”

Yes, we are breathing.

Here we are now, engulfed and submerged in this Shangri-La.
We feel hidden as if we have been sitting here alone together for centuries,
taking in all knowledge of what we see.
In the silence of our shambhala
we become conscious of great noise filling our lull.

Can there be soft noise?

In our stillness we now see the other world,
we hear the other world also along with us at the closing of our day, their day.
They are lifting their voices, their essence, to their God, our God.

First a song from the wren, soft and sweet, calling earnestly.
Crickets using drums to communicate, a familiar cry of the marsh hen
and off to the left frogs begin to harmonize.
There is life all around us giving praise.

Not wanting to be left out,
the tall cedars begin to sway, dancing with the music from the breezes.
We close our eyes and feel their soft touch on our up turned faces
as they ask us to join them in their evening dance.

With one last gift to be given us on this memorable evening – just off to the northeast, slightly into our right ears,
we hear the peacocks offering up roaring cries, their last prayers for this night,
from high atop the massive oaks where they retreat and retire for protection.

Now He and I join hands as black silhouettes against a sea of color
slowly slipping away to become our night sky.
Our breath is good.
Our breathing in time.
“We are happy.”

He looks at me, deep, intensely – into all I am – we smile –
Is this what Paul meant when he said, “to be in constant prayer”?
I think so!

The phone rings.
My thoughts are yielded.
It’s Kammy.
I laugh out loud!

- Elizabeth Slover 2006

Liz & Dave celebrate 40 years of marriage on November 23, 2009

St. George Tailgate

The 2nd annual St. George Jaguars Tailgate Event was great. We had about 26 people–more than last year. The food was great as everyone contributed and the Mimosas were wonderful. Thanks to Bob Hays at Florida Rock–we had a nice private place for our ‘little party’. See the picture on the front of the St. George Website. Go JAGS!

St. George Halloween Party

We had a great time at our Halloween party on November 1st. There were a variety of costumes that night. We had a princess, two Darth Vaders, Pippi Longstocking, Dorothy from The Wizard of Oz and many more. We bowled with pumpkins, had a mummy wrapping costume and told our own scary story. A big thanks to Kate and Hope for the wonderful food. We had Mummy dogs, Jac-O-Lantern Pizza and floating hands in our punch.

Another crowd pleaser was bobbing for apples. The youth were slow to participate so I told them I would bob for an apple if they all got an apple, (thinking they wouldn’t all get one) and they all did. So I plunged my head into the water and got my own apple. The kids sure make it look easier than it really is.

Here are few pictures of the bobbing for apples!


Paddling Journal

As a fairly novice kayaker, I was happy to stumble upon this on-line resource published weekly by Kevin McCharen. I had mentioned to Hope one day that I was headed out kayaking, and she motioned me into the church office where she pulled up Kevin’s site on the internet and showed me some of his amazing pictures. They had recently encountered a Bald Eagle and were lucky enough to observe him up close and personal for an exclusive photo shoot of about half an hour. Once introduced to the site, I really enjoyed going through and reading Kevin’s accounts of his (and Hope’s) exploits on their kayaks. Kevin is a great, descriptive writer and I can almost picture being alongside when reading some of the journals. He gets great pictures as well. Also, the site is very helpful with tide information, weather forecasts, camping tips and other useful stuff for kayakers. Best of all is Kevin’s obvious passion for nature as he paddles his way around the local waters documenting his journeys in a way that makes you wish you could be out there too. Thanks to Kevin for allowing me to share his journal on our site as I know we have many nature lovers and kayakers out there! For more stuff, visit Kevin’s site (see link below) or better yet, sign up for your own personal copy of his weekly e-newsletter. Enjoy :-)

http://paddlethetimucuan.net

 

11/1/09
Put-In : Horseshoe Creek
Destination : Cedar Point Creek
Time : 8:00 am
Trip Length : 4 hrs (6.7 miles)
Temp : 55
Weather : clear, calm
Water : smooth
Tide : outgoing
Wildlife of Note : Great Blue Herons, Little Blue Herons, King Fishers, Northern Harriers, Ospreys, Peregrine Falcons, Wood Storks, Ibis, Tri-Colored Herons and White Pelicans

White Pelicans back in their winter home along the ICW

Early this morning, the clocks rolled back to standard time as the long awaited cold front blew through the area cooling things down considerably. After some debate, I decided to head to Horseshoe Creek and paddle south towards Cedar Point so that I could check on my Pelican Pals and confirm their arrival from their summer home.

Dolphin on the ICW

There was a chill in the air, but I opted to leave my fleece in the truck as I set out from the ramp just after peak high tide. I could see that it was another extremely high tide that is normal this time of the year, especially with the moon nearly full. I remembered the trip five years ago when the water was so high that I was able to actually paddle into the pool where my big white friends stay for the winter. Once I reached the waterway, I headed south as three or four Dolphins began surfacing nearby.

When I reached Cedar Point Creek, I pulled into the mudflat on the north side of the island that lies on the western bank of the ICW, just north of the Pelican Pool. I found that the water was indeed over the shell bank but not high enough to reach the pool so I paddled down to the south end of the island and started walking. I could see a mass of white to my left which confirmed what I already knew – the flock was back and the morning groom was well underway in the bright morning sun. Directly in front of me lay the smaller pool where the shorebirds usually hang out but I could also see the large, leathery heads of a dozen or so Wood Storks popping up above the grass.

Storks and Spoonbills

As I approached, I could also see, among the Storks, about five or six of their pink cousins, the straggler Spoonbills who have yet to pack their bags and head south for their winter homes. I walked slowly through the flooded grass as the Storks began to shift nervously and move slowly away from the near bank. The grass was thick and the water deeper than it usually is and it made my approach across the flats noisy and awkward. As a result, by the time I got close to the Pelican Pool, they were well aware of my presence and one by one they began to waddle into the water and swim slowly to the other side.

Wood Storks at Cedar Point

I took several photos and then walked back toward the waterway, pausing to shoot the Storks and Spoonies once again before getting back in my boat. As I did, I could see that the Pelicans had begun their slow, methodical departure from the pool – a dozen or so at a time as they circled and let the wind carry them to the southeast. The parade of Snowbirds (the hoomin variety) was well underway so I had to time my departure between passing of the huge yachts heading south for the winter. I decided to head into Cedar Point Creek and check out the island where I camped on that trip in 2004. I got out and looked around – pleased to find that it was relatively un-trashed but well used with several clearings to camp at.

I continued upstream against the strong outgoing current – crisscrossing the stream to stay out of the swiftest water. I could see Wood Storks perching in the trees on the south side of the point so I paddled into the little stream that runs along that part of the point. After shooting them, I let the current carry me back out to the waterway where I made my return to the put-in.

Keepers

Just thought I’d share this forwarded email, it has some good reminders at the end…

I grew up in the 50’s with practical parents. A mother, God love her, who washed aluminum foil after she cooked in it, then reused it. She was the original recycle queen, before they had a name for it… A father who was happier getting old shoes fixed than buying new ones. Their marriage was good, their dreams focused. Their best friends lived barely a wave away.  I can see them now, Dad in trousers, tee shirt and a hat and Mom in a house dress, lawn mower in one hand, and dish-towel in the other. It was the time for fixing things. A curtain rod, the kitchen radio, screen door, the oven door, the hem in a dress. Things we keep.  It was a way of life, and sometimes it made me crazy.. All that re-fixing, eating, renewing, I wanted just once to be wasteful. Waste meant affluence. Throwing things away meant you knew there’d always be more.  Sometimes, what we care about most gets all used up and goes away…never to return. So… while we have it… it’s best we love it…. and care for it… and fix it when it’s broken……… and heal it when it’s sick.  This is true for relationships ….. and old cars…. and children with bad report cards….. and dogs with bad hips…. and aging parents….. and grandparents.. We keep them because they are worth it, because we are worth it. Some things we keep. Like a best friend that moved away or a classmate we grew up with.  There are just some things that make life important, like people we know who are special……. and so, we keep them close!

I received this from someone who thinks I am a ‘keeper’, so I’ve sent it to the people I think of in the same way.. Now it’s your turn to send this to those people that are “keepers” in your life..  Good friends are like stars…. You don’t always see them, but you know they are always there.  Keep them close!

TEN THINGS GOD WON’T ASK ON THAT DAY:

1….. God won’t ask what kind of car you drove. He’ll ask how many people you drove who didn’t have transportation.

2… God won’t ask the square footage of your house, He’ll ask how many people you welcomed into your home.

3….. God won’t ask about the clothes you had in your closet, He’ll ask how many you helped to clothe.

4… God won’t ask what your highest salary was. He’ll ask if you compromised your character to obtain it.

5… God won’t ask what your job title was. He’ll ask if you performed your job to the best of your ability.

6…. God won’t ask how many friends you had. He’ll ask how many people to whom you were a friend.

7… God won’t ask in what neighborhood you lived, He’ll ask how you treated your neighbors.

8… God won’t ask about the color of your skin, He’ll ask about the content of your character.

9… God won’t ask why it took you so long to seek Salvation. He’ll lovingly take you to your mansion in heaven, and not to the gates of Hell.

10… God won’t have to ask how many people you forwarded this to, He already knows your decision.

Have a great and blessed day :-)

Companions On The Way

Sunday’s Reflection

THE EMMAUS ROAD story teaches what accompaniment means: walking together, sharing in conversation about what really matters, extending hospitality to strangers, breaking bread together. Companions trust that Christ joins us on the journey, reveals God’s love for us in the Word and Table fellowship, and fills us with good courage to go forth in his name. We serve others most profoundly not by giving them things or by doing things for them but by accompanying them on their way.

- Don C. Richter
Mission Trips That Matter: Embodied Faith for the Sake of the World

From p. 97 of Mission Trips That Matter: Embodied Faith for the Sake of the World by Don C. Richter. Copyright © 2008 by the author. All Rights Reserved. Used with permission.http://www.upperroom.org/bookstore/Learn more about or purchase this book.

Today’s Question

How are you accompanying others on the way? How are you being accompanied? Visit the comments area and share your thoughts.

Today’s Scripture Reading

All the others gave what they’ll never miss; she gave extravagantly what she couldn’t afford–she gave her all.

- Mark 12:44, THE MESSAGE

This Week …

Special Need:
This Week: Pray for caregivers. Add your prayer to the Prayer Wall.
Tips for Your Spirit:
Looking for clarity? Learn the Quaker way of the Clearness Committee to help with making tough decisions. Try it out.
Saints, Inc.:
This week we remember Antoinette Brown Blackwell (November 5).
Lectionary Readings:

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Companions on the Way is a post from: Upper Room Daily Reflections

The 333 Ways to Get Kicked Out of Wal-Mart

1. Take someone’s shopping cart and switch the items with stuff from the person next to them’s cart
2. Walk up to complete strangers and say, “Hi! I haven’t seen you in so long!…” etc. See if they play along to avoid embarrassment
3. Smash the person in front of you on the head with a ham
4. Go up to some old geezer & say “Grandpa!!! You’re ALIVE!!! It’s a MIRACLE!!! etc.”
5. Take something from someone else’s cart, when they say “hey, that’s mine! ” call the security and say that the other person was trying to take your (more…)

Post-Halloween Treat

j0175561Are you pondering how to save your kids from eating too much of all that Halloween candy?  Here’s an idea.  Treat yourself to a little with just the right wine.  Gary Vaynerchuk, author of Crush It, recommends the following pairing but of course states that it is all about personal taste:

For chocolate (Reese’s cups, candy bars)….try  a Cabernet or a Zinfindel

For sugar candies (Starburst, Skittles, etc.)…try a Reisling (sugar X 2)

For mixtures–sugar and chocolate (i.e. M&Ms)…try a Grenache.

Salute!

The New Spark of Life

I have recently enrolled in the American Red Cross’s Nurse Assitant Training class.  It is a 7 week course that teaches me everything that I need to know in order to pass the State Board Examination to become a Certified Nurse’s Assistant.  I was guided into this by a friend of mine who told me the test was easy.  I found that I could get certified quickly, and with my recent trials in Resume submissions, I needed to make a decision that would effect the course of my future.  I went to the first class with some preconceived notions of what a CNA does.  I figured that the low man on the totem pole would get all the glorious jobs pertaining to human body wastes…and that part is true.
It turns out that there is so much more to this station.  It was explained that I will be the life blood of the day to day functions of the facility that chooses me.  I am the one who gets to interact with the patient/client/resident the most.  I will be the one that can be the most helpful to their spiritual condition!!!  It was after I left that night that I felt the regeneration of my personal spark.  It is an exciting feeling to know that I am not only choosing a new feild to work in, but also a profession that will need me.  I feel this energy of enthusiasm that is pouring out of me.  I am glad that I have this opportunity and am hopeful that in a setting where the patient who checks in will be on a diminishing road, I may be the one who can make their stay have the best ending.

–Trisha