Bread and Honey
Friday, February 20, 2026
Bran Muffins and Listening to Lent
Tuesday, February 17, 2026
Push and Pull
Monday, February 16, 2026
Family Day Feels
I'll just say to begin, that I have long thought we needed a stat holiday between Christmas and Easter to help break up the winter. Well, in Ontario (and also BC, Alberta, Saskatchewan and New Brunswick at least), here we are! And how great is it that things have turned a little milder so that we might dare to venture outside for a bit.
But beyond the seasonal pick me up a holiday Monday affords, what a great idea to have a day set aside to celebrate Family.
There's a caveat, of course. "Family" can be defined in so many ways, which I think is good and proper. For some, families of origin hold things that often we do not care to celebrate, but rather have had to overcome. For others, a sense of blood/DNA connection is lacking due to a wide variety of circumstances, some for which we are responsible, and some for which we are not.
We humans, being the creatures that we are, often find ourselves at odds somehow with our deepest desires to be heard, known and loved in a place of safety and unconditional positive regard. Relationships are complicated, and, well, it's just hard to get along sometimes. Unfortunately, some 'differences' end up being alienating, or even of the toxic sort requiring decisive measures if we are to survive.
So yes, "Family" can conjure up less that all the warm feelings we might hope it would.
And.
I have observed in my own life, and in the lives of many I have had the joy to journey with, that we are often gifted with community in ways that become 'Family' far beyond what life might otherwise have tried to rob us of. It's as if a God of redemptive arch stories knows that we do indeed need to be heard, known and loved, and also to hear, know and love the other.
Psalm 68:6 has this uplifting phrase, "God sets the lonely in families."
Love that.
And so, on this Family Day 2026, that's both the testimony I bear for my own complex and family-rich story, and also my hope for all of you. And however else you may be marking this mid-winter stat holiday, I trust you will be able to fully embrace, reach out, be welcomed into all that is Family for you.
Saturday, February 14, 2026
Both Sides of the Sun - A Valentine's Story
Friday, February 13, 2026
When Fri-Yay Fizzles a Bit
Fair warning, I'm going to gripe a tad here this morning. Because, well, it's just not been that great of a week.
First week back from any trip has some challenges, so there's that. Jet lag has been for me particularly gnarly this time out. Not sure why, but sometimes I manage better than other times.
And I'm used to coming back from 'perfect' weather to winter, but this year? Wow, that's a cold blast in the face! I know, all of you who have been living through all of January in this, I feel you. I think I'm just here complaining about the contrast.
And then there's the layers. Not of clothing, but yes that too. But in the physicality of it. Jet lag, layered on the cold, layered on a medical test that required three days of prep, and then proved to be more uncomfortable than a colonoscopy. True. I'd take a colonoscopy (I've had two in my life now) over what was done to me yesterday, any day.
And then, there's the news out of Tumbler Ridge. Weighs heavy. And that's all I will say about that.
Another contrast - and I've talked about this before, and I'll say up front we all need the humility - is what's called 'status inconsistency.' That's a term missiologists use when considering the missionary life of Paul, and the wide range of status he either enjoyed or endured, depending on the circumstances and cultures in which he was serving. Everything from being taken out and being stoned and left for dead by the highly religious folks, to being venerated and mistaken for a god by some pagan but decidedly more generous folks.
And while nobody, but nobody ever has mistaken me for a god, anywhere on the planet and certainly not in Thailand, and I would never, ever want such a thing, there is an unmistakable comparison between the respect-based Asian way of life, and what feels like a free-for-all sport of criticizing our leaders in Western culture. I got me some of that this week. Still sorting it out, trying to discern how much was constructive criticism which I welcome and can learn from, and how much was just unnecessary, the process of which requires emotional energy in itself.
So I get to this Friday sleep disturbed with an unsettled gut and a slightly discouraged ego, trying to pace out what will be two demanding weekends in a row.
Well, yay.
Why tell you any of this? I guess because I want to be real. And yes, I'm going to end this on the positive spin, because I believe that's essential in nurturing good mental heath. But first, just, yeah, I've not had the best week. I acknowledge that.
And now, the gratitudes.
Because...there really are so many.
Friday, February 6, 2026
Back on this Side of the Far Side
I used to find it distressing. But by now, having done this back and forth thing so many times I've literally lost count, I am more at ease in this gentle fog, and less likely to expect much more from myself than a slow unpacking, and not just of the suitcases.
Monday, February 2, 2026
True Stories and Soft Ironies
I told the story again the other night.
The story of being challenged by a missionary speaker from Southeast Asia who came to our church when I was only eleven years old. In that part of the story, the missionary said that in Southeast Asia it was so hot and then it got hotter and then it just got rainy and hotter together. He said the food was so spicy you could hardly eat it. He said there were spiders and snakes that could kill you or eat you or both. He said the language was incredibly difficult to learn with tones and so many ways you could say something really, really wrong. And then he asked, "Who wants to come?"
And I heard in my head what I believed to be the voice of God saying, "You. I want you to go."
We walked to the front of the church in those days, when we wanted to make something certain in our hearts. And I did that, that night. And from then on, when folks asked what I wanted to be when I grew up, I said, "a missionary to Southeast Asia." How exotic. But really, I was convinced I was just following the direction of God for my life.
And it was all fine and good for a few years, until I met a boy. And suddenly some realities kicked in. Choosing a missionary life could very well mean choosing a single life. And even though this boy and I had just started to hang out, I kind of liked hanging out, and kind of liked the idea that one day I'd hang out kind of permanently with someone. And that poked a hole in my romantic notion of being a missionary in some exotic place. And pressed up in painful ways against what I had thought had been so clear.
So I told my pastor, and he was amazing. He said that I should just let God know how I was feeling about the whole deal and see what happened. Which is what I did. For the next six months straight I poured all my teenage angst into seriously angsty prayers. Back then we called it 'wrestling with God in my spirit.' which is totally what it felt like. And the whole time it was crickets from heaven. Nothing. Nada. No words in my head at all. No writing on the wall, which would have freaked me out to be honest, but would have been better than being ignored.
Well fine, then, be like that. All clear and directive when the missionary was there, but only stony silence now, me just pouring out my soul on my bed every night.
And finally I'd had enough. And I just said, "Okay God. I'll go where you want me to go. No matter what." And I meant it. I did. And in that moment of release, what I thought I heard was, "Okay. Now just wait."
We can't really go into it all right now because that would literally be the whole story of my whole life. how it all unfolded in due time. Forty years to be precise, before I actually got to Southeast Asia.
But here's the thing that dawned on me as I was telling the story again to the kids the other night.
Ken, who was that boyfriend if you didn't know, was with me in the room, here in Southeast Asia, as I'm telling this story. See what God did there? Ken is here. In the end, I didn't have to leave behind what I was so afraid to give up. In fact, he's here and every bit part of this missionary work as I am.
To be clear, this living for Jesus thing does indeed require sacrifice. It's kind of what Jesus is all about when it comes down to it; love and sacrifice. So I'm not saying that there's some kind of magic in surrendering everything, and now God has to do the "psyche!" thing and give you what you were willing to give up. Sometimes you just give something up and that's it. And there's been a lot of that in my story as well.
But as I'm telling the story, I glance over at Ken, and the softness of the irony hits me.
Who knew?
Well, yes, God. God knew.
Have I mentioned how much I love it when it works out for Ken to come along to Thailand with me?
Only three days left. It's been a fabulous time.