My
friend Sonya came to visit for a few days the other week.
Her
daughter and son-in-law gave her a Kindle for Christmas, and while she was here
she got onto my computer and logged into one of her library accounts to
download a book.
When
she was done, she got up and walked away from my computer, leaving her library
card on the computer desk. Some time later I came in and saw it there and
thought, oh, I’ll give that to Sonya.
So
I picked it up and took it into her bedroom and left it on the table next to
her bed.
Or
so I thought.
The
next day Sonya asked me if I had seen her library card. Of course I had – and
went to the table next to the bed, where the card was conspicuously absent.
There
followed a search – on the bed table, on the computer desk, on the kitchen
table, in the living room, on the floors of all the rooms through which I had
walked. Everywhere I could think it might be. Nada.
Finally
I took a deep breath and said, “Okay, I’m going to leave it to coffee and
prayer.”
I
made my morning cup of coffee, carried my mug to the kitchen table and sat
down. I took a calming breath and prayed, God, help me find that library card,
then said, “Come, holy spirit,” and sat there quietly.
In
a couple of minutes it came to me: the washing machine.
Got
up and went there, and sure enough, there was Sonya’s library card. It was on
the dryer, actually.
I
had stopped to move a load of laundry from the washer to the dryer, and set the
card down, and by the time I cleaned the lint screen and got the dryer going, I
had forgotten all about the card.
This
sort of forgetfulness is sometimes attributed to aging but I’ve been losing and
forgetting things all my life. Some of us don’t even need to move. We have
something in our hands, set it down, and it is gone.
I’m
finally learning that what frenzied searching won’t do, calm reflection and
prayer sometimes will. The coffee is something to enjoy regardless. And maybe a
cookie.
Now,
for you constant readers, I said in my last column that I was praying for a
dear one who was going through a rough patch. To catch you up a little, things
are better now. When I posted that essay on my blog, I added this:
“Post Script: the rough patch has passed, and
my dear one is doing better. Not that I'll stop praying. Don't believe in
praying? Just think of it as deeply and faithfully and constantly wishing all
the best for someone you love, with all your heart and mind and soul. I believe
this sort of thing tips the balance of the universe.”
Yeah.
I do believe that. Looking at that paragraph now, I think perhaps I should have
mentioned that even though you pray and think and wish and hope, you cannot
control any outcomes. So don’t expect that.
I
know. It’s a bitch. On the other hand, it works in our favor when someone is
praying that God would smite us.
Coffee,
prayer, and calm breathing are getting me through a lot of rough patches these
days, both in my personal life and in my feelings about what is going on in the
world. So much has stopped making sense.
I
am still watching or listening to the news on Canadian television and radio
frequently. It’s good to hear the news of the United States from the point of
view of another country. You also realize that the USA is not the only country
with problems.
Recently
a group of Canadian politicians in their Parliament broke into singing,
“Barrett’s Privateers,” a rousing Stan Rogers song/sea chanty, and it made the
CBC news. They sang it badly, but still. When have you ever heard any of our
legislators spontaneously break into a sea chanty?
Canadian
politics became dear to me years ago. I was listening to CBC news, and they had
a story about a bill that parliament had fought over. When it came time to vote,
one side was certain the other side did not have enough members present to win
and they were congratulating each other on what they were sure would be a
victory.
Then,
at the last minute, a gaggle of opposition voters jumped out from behind the
drapes and voted and won.
American
politicians never do anything fun like that.
Maybe
I’ll pray for singing in our Congress when I have my coffee tomorrow morning.
Singing, and prayer, and calm breathing.
Coffee
is a personal choice.
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