My visual interpretation of the yearly rhythm using liturgical colors of the seasons.
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Thursday, March 6, 2014
Reorienting to Rhythm
It seems having babies grounds and centers me. I didn't always see that as a good thing. It took a few babies for that lesson to begin to sink in, to see the 40 days the church gives us to rest as a time to draw in and settle, to see the the first years as a time to be home, to allow that new little one to be a reason to let go of some burdens of responsibility that lie outside the home and family. Those who know me will never say that I do that to the degree that I should. But I try. After Dimples was born, I think we found a rhythm of life that seemed to suit us well. We lived that path for a few years, and they were beautiful years. Then some things entered into my life that began to demand intense amounts of time. I let those things pull at me, because they are good things. But I lost our rhythm. The bare bones were still there, but too many things stretched me out. Now, a new little one demands that we pull in, that I find my center once again; that I might not be pulled to pieces, not find myself living in Zerrissenheit. The cold winter days are such a good time to contemplate new (old) patterns, and the past weeks of icy cold have been a time of thought and evaluation. Seeking inspiration, I found a lovely little online course, Living Curriculum: Celebrate the Rhythm, that caught my attention, so I took a chance and enrolled for March. Some of it is just a reminder of things I have forgotten or laid aside, some of it is new insight, some of it we do on a daily basis and all of it is an encouragement to me - a friend holding my hand for a few weeks to bring me back. The yearly rhythm is perhaps the one I kept hold of the best, so I will work from my strength, and move in to find a new pattern to the weekly and the daily.
I love that when we get frantic and off track in life the rhythm of the Liturgical seasons pulls us back...a lovely little wheel, I make a little chart each year when I do my school planning but I like the visual approach.
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