Now is the time to strip down to the basics, to call out from the deepest part
of our soul, to go barefoot on the thirsty land, to listen to the night owls call
over the distance of hunger. Now is the time to send up our wild prayers
while there is still time, while there is just enough time to remember who we
are and what we have come here to do.
Our prayers are born within the dark times. We offer prayers for the species
gone extinct, praise for the rivers run dry, prayers as we plant seeds in the
ground, kneeling to the mystery of life until we want to dance, throw off our
name, forget the heavy burdens of shame and self-doubt.
We pray for the hungry, the homeless, for the reckless and lost, for the ones
who pass by nameless. We set out food and invite them all to feast.
We pray that the benefit from the food we eat be shared with all who hunger,
and despite a small voice that says what good does that do? we persist.
We pray for forgiveness: from others for the times we withheld our
love from a sense of lack, and from ourselves for the times we hung back in
the shadows for fear of shining.
We pray to continue practicing patience, to think before we speak, to speak
from a place of kindness.
Because against all odds we have chosen kindness over war, care over
speed, enough over more, we have taken the other, the stranger, the dark
eyed one deep into our hearts where we grieve together over orchards gone
up in flames, homes destroyed, and the children, the children passed from
this earth as angels pass – quickly, a light gone out in the winds of war.
We sit with the dying, console the living, apply the medicine of deep
listening. Because we carry a piece of their story everywhere we go, because now
we belong to each other, we scatter their ashes mixed with seeds that
grow into trees bearing pomegranates, trees that scatter their holy offerings
onto the ground to grow more trees so that the stories of the ancestors are
passed down in the very food we eat, through the juices from the ripe fruits
we savor.
Because the odds seem stacked against us, the ancestors come in the night
and whisper the names of my children’s children’s children and show me
that they are thriving, have made it across the abyss from this dark ending
into a new beginning with just a pocketful of seeds and the song of the raven
who sing here, plant here, who sing all will be well, all will be well.
Prayer by prayer we whisper our love songs into the baby bird mouths of the
warriors who, may it be so, will grow weary of blood and the cry of
vengeance and want only to lie under the willow and hear the old stories as
they pass down through the soft mouths of women.
We pray for a download of mercy for us all. May we banish all doubt that
we are gifted, that what we say and do matters, that we are loved by Spirit
beyond our understanding.
It is safe, it is time, to pledge ourselves to live fully during this time of brutal
endings and to the new beginning which is just visible now on the horizon as
more of us awaken with new prayers for peace on our lips, with a new word
to revive and revitalize the hope for peace. And always the one word we
pray in any language, the only word, the final word is love. Just love.
_______________________________________________________
Read more stories like this in my book The Ripening: Essays on Love, Loss,
Marriage and Aging available on Amazon.

Beautiful and sad and hopeful. Guess all that’s left to say is a prayer and Happy New Year. 🥰
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the same back to you, dear friend. xoxoxox
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This is so beautiful and poetic, as well as being heartbreakingly true. Thank you Nancy for month after month bearing witness to the human condition, for daring to write, for showing up, for being the voice of love.
Richard Welker
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thank you for reading month after month, and for modeling love in action, always. xoxo
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Dear Nancy, so sweet a love of surrender to the true heart. ♥️
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so much sweet love back to you. xoxo
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