Tuesday, March 14, 2006

Bring back my Alan to me

I'm happy to foster up a friendship- the friendship with my holy spirit. I will call him "Alan".

I'm a little weird these few days. I feel unloved & strained. I made up my mind to love myself more & be gentle to myself... God answers my prayer. HE turns the picture. HE schedules my time table. HE sets my priority list. HE changes my heart. I spent hours reading books in library & to re-collect my pieces of broken heart both mentally, physically and spiritually.

I weeped & even cried when reading two of the stories from the Chicken Soup series. May I share one of them with you -- Christmas joy by Phyllis Volkens?

Phyllis was deeply submerged in her pits of sorrow & tears for her mother & her sister had been killed in a tragic car accident before Christmas. She wished that she could wipe out the so-called "Christmas" from the calendar. But... she couldn't, her kids were anticipating festive time to come... Jungle bells.... jungle all the way... She was terrribly despeate & all her self-pity overwhelmed her. On 23rd December, she took a walk in her neighbourhood to alleviate her deep sorrow. As she walked & passed by different households nearby, she recalled there were different sorts of misfortune or suffering the families were facing. She was not the one who was suffering. There was hardly a family that didn't have sorrow or tragedy. Didn't everyone bear their own burdens & cry their own tears?

When she was back to her home, she decided to muster up herself & celebrated the festival with her family- her husband and her children (one 5 and the other 1). Moving the extra mile, she packed a lot of toys & gifts & wrapped them up. Empathy began to awaken her & even unlocked her grief by the act of giving. She started preparing, wrapping different presents for her worse-off neighbouring especially to a little girl whose father had just passed away. It would be the first Christmas that that family without a father. On Christmas eve, Phyllis and her elder daughter secretly piled up all the gifts by the doorstep of that unfortunate family. They pressed the bell & when the girl opened the door and saw that pile of presents. She burst in laughter and screamed with joy. She shouted to her mom, "Christmas is coming."

I was really moved by this story... it is a transformation. Agreed with Phyllis: this sort of warmth, though does not extinguish sorrow... it makes sorrow more bearable.

It should be this passion in life -- mine or others that I must grasp once more not by myself, but with Alan, my spiritual soul, my holy spirit. In reaching out, we heal ourselves; in giving happiness, we gain our peace & in overriding sorrow, we grasp our joy!

John 15 "The Vine & the Branches" teaches me a fruitful lesson "JOURNEY to JOY".


Amen.

1 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

I am so glad that you liked the story by my Mother, the late Phyllis Volkens.

That moment has continued to be one of the Christmas memories that I will cherish above all the rest.

If I may, however, correct one thing: the daughters mentioned were in fact ages 10 and 5 and it is I, her youngest, who went with her that night to deliver Christmas to the family one of which as at school with me. The 10 year old, Audrey, was severely handicapped and could not navigate the snow and cold.

Again, I am very pleased that my Mom's words continue to inspire and comfort!

Heather Smirnoff, dau. of Phyllis I. Volkens

5:47 PM  

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