Bread and Honey
Friday, March 13, 2026
Guarding Above All Else
Wednesday, March 11, 2026
March Showers and Unplowed Ground
And oh, doesn't the sound of the rain make it all so cozy to stay in bed just a little longer this morning!
With the temperatures sitting at above zero these past few nights, I've cranked open the window for some fresh-air sleeping. Yes, I know some of you do this all winter long, but for me this is a significant sign of spring. And this morning it meant I woke up and lay in the lovely of it for a bit.
"March Showers" are admittedly a different deal than "April Showers." It's not supposed to be until May that we get to the flowers part of the rhyme. We'll have to wait until late April, early May to catch those fleeting Trilliums, resurrected from the earth in all their triune glory. But this morning I thought ahead to them, glad for this good soaking to get things started.
Rain seems appropriate for Lent then. A dark sky overhead to prepare for what's coming. But first, Hosea.
As prophets go, Hosea holds a fair bit of what we might call 'moral authority' given how he lived out in real time anything God asked him to say to the people. Knowing that this one text is actually in the middle of a fair scolding helps me see the call to 'break up your unplowed ground' as something of a challenge to identify places in my soul that might be resistant to God's redeeming work in me. Specifically, where am I being stubborn, narrow, unmoved?
I've mentioned before that I am attempting to 'give up productivity for Lent.' This has allowed for unassigned spaces where I encounter myself in different ways than when I am robustly occupied. It's been good for me, although somewhat squirmy. There is still unplowed ground in me. I shouldn't be surprised, and I'm not. Such is the ever-deepening process of spiritual formation.
Lent is a good opportunity to heed Hosea's admonition "for it's time to seek the LORD."
And a good opportunity for March rains to soften the earth a bit, and get ready for the Trillium resurrections.
Praying showers of goodness on you this wonder-filled Wednesday.
Tuesday, March 10, 2026
All of a Sudden After a Long Hold
Monday, March 9, 2026
A Song for Blunders
Poet Malcolm Guite has captured a fairly decent synopsis of what could be titled "Instructions for Life."
Every phrase of this chorus is packed for me, and I'm tempted to unpack it bit by bit. But that would end up reading more like a sermon, and I do that enough of the time already.
I'm reflecting in a particular way this morning on the one thought almost at the end.
Tend to the wounds of your blunders.
I'm drawn to it because in the midst of all the other positive admonitions that we all would cheerfully embrace, there's this gentle but pointed reminder that we blunder.... and we wound.
If I'm honest, I'd like to pretend that I am only ever on the being wounded end of things. And for sure, life, and let's be real, especially ministry, has it's generous share of dings. Some things can be shrugged off, worked out, easily forgiven and moved on from. Other wounds go deep. Some scars are permanent. Triggers are sensitive and terrible.
I know my own wounds well. I could recite then far too easily. The reminder here that comes to me this morning though, is that I've wounded. I've blundered. Both my ego and my heart wish it wasn't so, but it is. And there it is. The log in my own eye thing. Some of my blunders I am all too aware of. Others I may know nothing about. Such is the nature of bumping into one another in various iterations of relationship throughout a lifetime. Doing life in community, which I fully believe in and also enjoy many benefits of, is confoundingly complex.
So how do I tend to these wounds? It's a trickier business than it sounds, and requires a slow, careful approach. No quick apologies. No intruding upon past lives where more harm can only be the result of a self-centered approach to clearing my own conscience. No expectation of forgiveness easily, or ever, offered.
But when it is available to me, the opportunity to tend to those wounds, I can't help but hope I would provide what I myself would very much need from someone who has wounded me. Humility. Deep listening. Seeking to understand before being understood. Validating without excuse. Offering perspective and additional information where needed. Making amends when possible and when it causes no further harm. And ultimately, a change of attitude, approach and behaviour to limit the potential of further wounding.
Going back to the poem, I suppose if we all paid attention to the other things listed -- being a good friend, cherishing, extending reverence, and honouring God -- we'd have less wounding going on in the first place.
But the truth is in the humanity of it. We mess up. We do.
So the joyful lilt of this poem-set-to-music is still cheering. And inspiring. A good way to start off this fourth week of Lent reflections, as squirmy it has been to reflect upon. I'll likely sing the song now for most of the day. To remind me. To sober me. To keep me moving forward in the ways of growing.
I trust the time change hasn't messed with your resting this weekend, and you are headed into your Monday with purpose and joy.
Enjoy the warmer temperatures while they last.
Friday, March 6, 2026
The Fireplace Thing
Tuesday, March 3, 2026
Yellow Lights Are Flashing
There is also this large yellow button I can press. And when I do, those overhead lights start to flash, and an automated voice at a decent volume says, "Yellow lights are flashing" a few times over.
A few things can happen once all of that is going on. Specifically, cars may or may not come to a stop.
As a driver, I have to admit, I can sort of understand this. Now that I live in the area, I am ever so much more aware of these crossing places, and make sure as I approach that there are no pedestrians or bicycles approaching.
But before that, those flashing lights, to be honest, may have escaped my notice. The sound system in my vehicle is not connected to the animated voice (which would be a good trick). It's not like an intersection where you expect you might have to stop, and even when you do, it's not every time. If I'm not paying 100% attention, which you're supposed to do behind the wheel, I could easily miss it.
And that's exactly what I'm thinking about as a pedestrian. Those cars coming down the way? I'm just going to wait here a second beside the big yellow button and see if they stop. And when they do, I smile and wave thank you and demonstrate just a little pick up in my step to be a grateful, courteous pedestrian.
And off we go, driver and pedestrian, on our merry little ways into our respective lives.
Seems to me I have been both in my interactions with folks. Both the driver with all the damaging potential of a vehicle, and the pedestrian all vulnerable and at-risk. In some settings, at certain times of my life, I come into a situation with a degree of authority and confidence perhaps oblivious to the more delicate or even wounded state of someone else in the room. And in other settings, at certain times of my life, I'm the delicate, wounded one in danger of being knocked over.
Maybe I wish there were flashing lights and an automated voice for every potentially damaging encounter. You'd go into a meeting, or a conversation, or even a family dinner and everyone could hear it; "Yellow lights are flashing." Be careful here, lest you do damage or be damaged.
The thing is, like the random crossings, it's not every time. It can take you by surprise. Sometimes you see the pedestrian and you can stop a ways back and let them know they are safe and seen, and sometimes you don't. Sometimes you remember to wait for all the cars to stop so you can cross safely, and sometimes you don't.
So what to do?
Maybe two things. And Paul can help us here.
One, be kind and compassionate. Slow down, take a breath, read the room. Ask questions and really listen. If you are the one with any advantage in the relationship or situation whatsoever, be mindful of power imbalances, choice of words, even the volume or tone of your voice. "Seek first to understand rather than be understood," as Steven Covey would remind us. Submit your strength to the other. Stop way back of the line and let others know you are safe.
Two, forgive. Assume the best not the worst of those who fail to stop and notice your vulnerability. Realize that not every demonstration of power is intentionally meant to hold you back or harm you. Forgive when stronger people blunder, because they will, and so will you. Additionally, wait at the curb until you sense you have the safe space to cross into the conversation. Push the yellow button and advocate for what you need. But exercise the grace that was given you. Remember the times when you're the one behind the wheel.
Caveat: Some damage is severe, I know. That is a different conversation.
But I wonder, as I am out on my walk, as I live out an ordinary day....as I move through my relationships,....just applying this to myself...what can happen if I understand myself as both?
Monday, March 2, 2026
Sunshine and Sidewalks and Being Self-Aware
It's been such a good thing to get more traction these days, with the sidewalks melting down and drying up. While I travel for most of my walk on a city-tended trail, to get there I still need to navigate past residences with sidewalks out the front.
Some are clearer than others during the snowiest days of the winter. But by now, most are free of ice and snow, and I can really pick up the pace. Except when I can't.
Every once in a while, especially as snowbanks melt, there's a patch that's wet and, if it's in the shadow of a tree or structure of some sort, it's still frozen or refrozen. Just a thin, thin layer that looks identical to the merely damp piece of concrete I just had my foot on.
It may or may not be black in colour, but that's what we call it; black ice.
I've had to catch myself a few times this past week. So tricky! In an instant I could have my feet out from under me and end up on the pavement with who knows what injuries. It happened to a friend of mine already this winter.
And it strikes me, as I awkwardly rebalance myself and do a quick check for any wrenched muscles, that the treachery of it all is that the icy parts seems at first to be hidden in plain sight. Well, almost. In reality, however, what I'm seeing is that the dangerous places are found where it's just a little darker, in the shadows.
Because this is Lent, and Lent is in part a time for self reflection, I am drawn to a comparison.
It seems this may also be true of the human soul. That things hidden pose the highest threat to love and connection, and the essential trust required for people to live together, work together, serve together. Things hidden can be the most stubborn hurdles in personal growth. They can topple grand endeavors, derail important adventures to manifest destinations, ruin reputations, ripping the feet right out from under us. We land hard. Sometimes broken. Happens all the time.
The problem is human nature is very skilled at keeping things hidden, either by intention or simply by being blind to our own faults. We can, if we're not careful, live a carelessly unexamined life, completely oblivious. In the shadows the treacherous step is unseen.
The psalmist knew it.
Even the philosopher agreed.
So what to do?
Privately, it doesn't hurt to spend a moment at the end of the day to sit quietly and ask God to do that search the psalmist was talking about. Ignatian Spirituality might show us the way here.
Publicly, it doesn't hurt to gather an 'us' about us, a community, a small council of trusted friends, to speak into our lives and 'test' our ways, like the prophet talked about. Here the Quaker tradition of a Clearness Committee might be helpful.
Because in the end, what we want is to live a life worth living, don't we? Like Socrates says? And simply for a little extra reading I leave this here.
[Note: Links are just for more information purposes only, and do not necessarily constitute an endorsement of the authors or content. Just sayin'.]
Our secrets hurt those around us, most often and most deeply the ones we love. And most of us don't wake up one day and decide to do that. We don't.
So here's to longer days and more confident strides when we're out walking.
Here's to warmer temperatures of the season and of the soul.
Here's to searching and examining and letting that be part of a journey that takes us more and more towards bright and beautiful ways to be.