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A Short (Thanksgiving) Story: Count Ten Birds

Steve · November 25, 2021 · 8 Comments

Although a little longer than some of my recent “(Very) Short Stories,” I offer you on this Thanksgiving Day a story of awareness, gratitude and friendship. Take some time today to look around, to count your blessings, and so say thank you to the Giver of all.

Adam was up early again on a cool, Thanksgiving morning, just after the sun, and although it was just a few days shy of December, the morning was still more like autumn than winter, crisp and damp, in the 50s. He grabbed a coffee and his favorite, well-worn, corduroy short to slip over his t-shirt and walked out the back door and settled into a chair on the porch overlooking his garden. This was his place of solitude and pondering, a sacred spot for considering both the problems of the world and whatever was going on inside himself. He often thought that sitting here was as much chapel, sacrament and liturgy as was his parish church just down the road. 

Adam was up early again on a cool, Thanksgiving morning, just after the sun, and although it was just a few days shy of December, the morning was still more like autumn than winter, crisp and damp, in the 50s. He grabbed a coffee and his favorite, well-worn, corduroy short to slip over his t-shirt and walked out the back door and settled into a chair on the porch overlooking his garden. This was his place of solitude and pondering, a sacred spot for considering both the problems of the world and whatever was going on inside himself. He often thought that sitting here was as much chapel, sacrament and liturgy as was his parish church just down the road. 

The question he’d been wrestling with for the past few days was a familiar one for him: How to best spend his time, these waning years post-career, post-kids, post so many of the things that once brought him life and energy and passion. He wasn’t unhappy, he thought, he just wondered where the time went, where it might be going and how much of it was left. Just that “little question,” he thought, raising his eyebrows. 

He went to a workshop once when he was approaching retirement from the engineering firm where he had worked for nearly his entire career, during which a too-wise-for-her-youth facilitator had asked: “If we only have so much time here on earth — and we do — how should we spend it?” It was a question that, as he begrudgingly plodded his way into his seventh decade, both intrigued and haunted him. It seemed to be both a blessing (Oh, the length of our days, the promise of each new day!) and a dire warning (It could all end tomorrow). 

He sipped from his coffee mug, a gift from his grandkids (Pop, we love you a latte!) and gazed out into the yard beyond the screened porch. The deep greens of summer had faded to browns, reds and yellows, and the trees had lost their leaves so that he could now clearly see the once-hidden grounds of the monastery beyond the back fence where his neighbor and good friend Ethan lived. A pair of fire-red cardinals flitted from feeder to feeder, cautiously looking around between pecks, aware of both the bounty and the danger of life. 

Without much warning, Adam’s mind moved from the birds to his own worries, to all that was and could and might just possibly go wrong. The house needed a new coat of paint. The furnace could use a tune up. What if the market crashed again and their savings dried up? What if that cough his wife had turned into something else? What if, what if, what if, he thought, sounding inside his head like nothing less that one of these birds with their repetitive, questioning songs. 

He set down his coffee again and wrapped his shirt around him tighter as the wind blew through the maples. “I think too much,” he said to himself.  He shut his eyes and prayed his morning prayers, a mental collection of words and silences in which he found some peace on most days. He ran through the list, prayed for all those he had promised to pray for, and ended with just the easy in and out of his breath and the word that connected his life and his prayer and his breath: Spiritu. Spiritu. Spiritu. He sat in silence; he had no idea for how long, only that word — that name — resounding in him like yet another bird song. On most days, it was enough. He glanced at his watch. It was about time. 

“Morning, Adam,” Ethan’s voice called out quietly from beyond the trees, gently breaking his silence. He pushed himself out of his chair and walked out into the backyard. His daily trek to the back fence to talk with Ethan was as much a part of his daily ritual as the prayers. They seemed to go hand in hand, the silence of his prayer, his awareness of his breath, and the quiet conversation across the fence. 

“My turn today,” the monk said as Adam approached the fence. “How’s it between you and the Creator today?” They took turns at this daily check-in, an examination of each other’s awareness of the movement of God in their lives. They had been doing it so long they couldn’t remember how it started, this conversation so organic and natural it seemed a part of the garden.

“Been thinking about the birds,” Adam said, lifting his hands and his eyes to the huge sycamore that stood on his side of the fence but offered shade to them both during the summer months. “These birds don’t think about much. They don’t worry. They just do what they need to do to survive, responding to some urge and call deep within them to keep going — to find or build a home, to eat and provide for and protect their young, as well as they can for as long as they need to. Then they let go. Easy. Natural. Repeat and repeat. Along the way, they sing.”

“And?” Ethan nudged.

“And they make it look easy,” Adam said. “I think too much. Worry too much. Even though I know that gets me nowhere…or at least not where I want to be.” 

“Closer to God or further away?”

“You know the answer to that.”

“Say it anyway.” 

“Further away. Like God’s left the building, or the garden.”

“God left or you did?”

Adam grinned. “Okay, very likely it’s me. God being the unchanging changer and all that.” 

“And all that. What else?” 

“What else what?” 

“What else have you been noticing about this creator and keeper of birds and old men like us?” the monk asked. 

Adam paused — a long, pondering pause that was comfortable to both of them. There was no hurry between these two friends who had shared a fence for more than 30 years. The longer the pause the better and deeper the response, they had found. He looked back toward his house, retracing his steps past the garden and around the barren plum tree. He thought briefly of all the years making that walk, all the weeds pulled, all the harvests of fruits and vegetables and flowers for his wife. 

“This creator and keeper of birds and old men like us is pretty constant,” Adam said. “Way more constant than I am. When I put myself in his presence — or even try to — he generally shows up. Or maybe is already there, waiting.”

“Hmm,” grunted Ethan. “What’s that tell you?”

“I guess I need to just keep showing up. And stop thinking so much.”

“The important thing is not to think much, but to love much; and so do that which best stirs you to love.”

“Who said that?” Adam asked. 

“I just did.”

“Yeah, but you’re not holy enough for thoughts like that. Who said it first?”

Ethan paused, trying to think of witty comeback. Finding none, he told the truth. “Teresa of Avila — mystic, Carmelite, all-round wise woman.”

“Ah. Knew it couldn’t be you. She might be on to something.”

“Thinking is over-rated.”

“So says the monk with a PhD in medieval theology or whatever,” said Adam, smiling at Ethan. 

“Yeah, well, that was a long time ago, and here I am now, trimming back bushes and dead-heading flowers with a former engineer who thinks and worries too much because he does, in fact, know how everything works,” the monk said. “I think the important thing is showing up, being aware of everything around us and somehow finding God in it all.”   

“That awareness thing can be tough. Sometimes I’m aware and sometimes I forget entirely. Weeks go by and I haven’t looked beyond my television or the book I’m reading.”

“Let me ask you a question,” Ethan began. “On your walk from your porch to this fence today, how many birds did you see?”

“No idea,” Adam laughed. “I wasn’t counting. A couple, I guess.”

“Do me a favor. Turn around and look back in your garden. Count ten birds.”

Adam turned around. At first he saw nothing. He rolled his eyes. This was going to take a while. Then a pair of Cardinals landed on his feeder hanging from the plum tree. A robin pulled up a worm from his garden near the expired tomato plants. Three sparrows rested on the fence. A starling landed on a branch near the fence line. He turned toward Ethan. Above his head over near the monastery, a red-tailed hawk flew by, a smaller, seemingly foolish bird flying in its wake. That’s nine, he thought. Then, as if showing off, a murmuration of starlings flew into his gaze, hundreds of birds flying in unison, twisting and turning like a school of fish. He turned to Ethan.

“Four hundred and ten,” he said, pointing to the starlings. 

“Elapsed time, 13 seconds,” Ethan said, pointing to his watch.

“Imagine that,” Adam said.

“Imagine that. And if you wouldn’t have looked? If you hadn’t counted? How many would you have seen?”

“Bupkis,” Adam said, in his best Yiddish accent. “Nada. Not a one.” 

“So, too, with God and his many appearances, all around us each and every day,” the monk said. “Most go unnoticed because we’re not looking for them.” 

“Well, here’s to showing up and paying attention,” Adam said, raising an imaginary glass to the sky, to the birds, to beyond them both. 

“And to loving much and doing what stirs us to love.”

“To that, too. Perhaps a conversation for tomorrow?”

“Same time, same place, same question,” Ethan said. “Somehow, the answers are different every day.” 

Adam nodded, reached across the fence to shake Ethan’s hand, and then turned to make the slow walk home, a little more aware now, a little more settled and at ease, a little less worried about the doing of life and more focused on the living of it. A little more grateful for the journey. 

Note from Steve: I wrote my first blog 12 years ago today on Thanksgiving 2009. In fact, I was so excited about starting the blog that I write two in one day. If you’d like to read them, click the links below.

Thanksgiving Day, November 25, 2009
Later Thanksgiving day, November 25, 2009

A (Very) Short Story: He Who Sings to Deer

Steve · November 14, 2021 · 8 Comments

At dusk, he walked the same paved path he walked just about every day through and around his suburban neighborhood. It was good for his health but boring. On most days he saw only the cookie cutter condos, the powerlines, and the comings and goings of the other neighbor-pilgrims who trod the same concrete. 

It was a long way from the land his ancestors had walked, he thought. He was Osage, somewhere deep in his bones and blood, but that was all gone, had all been given up or taken away or forced out of them over centuries. Ah well, he thought, it’s just a walk. Keep moving.

He was singing along to the old hymn that was playing in his headphones: Just a closer walk with thee. He sang loud in his supposed solitude and so startled a small trio of does that were feeding on a landscaped mound of flowers. He opened his eyes and saw them about the same time they saw him. He kept singing. They didn’t budge as he came within 10 feet of them. They tilted their heads at him and at his song and gave him a pass, sensing he was of no danger. 

He stopped walking but kept singing. He became lost in this moment of found communion, and the houses and powerlines disappeared, replaced by trees and rocks and clouds and the rise and fall of the land that had been there all the time. He was no longer a retired factory worker but, rather, “He Who Sings to Deer,” connected for a brief moment to something bigger and older and more real than anything he had experienced in many years. 

Nothing had changed, of course, except his perception, his awareness of what was happening around him. He sang more and the deer devoured the flowers. He smiled and nodded. He said thank you to the giver of it all, to the Father Creator he had known for so many years. To the One who made all things and who continues to make all things new.

Ask yourself in silence:

  • Where and when do you feel most connected to the Creator?

A related note: Thomas Merton remarked in his journal on Feb. 13, 1968 about the crows around his monastery in Kentucky: “Two sat high in an oak beyond my gate as I walked on the brow of the hill at sunrise saying the Little Hours. They listened without protest to my singing of the antiphons. We are part of a menage, a liturgy, a fellowship of sorts.” 

Remembering Elders and Mentors

Steve · July 31, 2021 · 1 Comment

Tomorrow I leave to give a weeklong retreat to retired Marianist brothers and priests in a care facility in Dayton, Ohio, my first retreat since the pandemic began. This community of men, who will be joined at the retreat by some younger Marianists who live in the area, have been hit hard in the past 18 months, losing more than 20 members due to COVID-19 and other health issues. I have a deep feeling that I will learn more from them than they will from me. 

One of my talks will be about remembering and honoring those elders and mentors who have helped shape our lives – those who mentored us when we were young, who guided us on our path by their words and their deeds, by their successes and their failures. Sometimes we sought them out or maybe had them given to us. Sometimes they just appeared, as that old saying from Tao Te Ching says: “When the student is ready the teacher will appear.” And the second part of that famous quote is equally telling: “When the student is truly ready…the teacher will disappear.” For very often our mentors are only with us for a little while. 

In Parker Palmer’s book, “On the Brink of Everything: Grace, Gravity and getting Old,” he wrote this about his mentors: “My mentors saw more in me than I saw myself. They evoked that “more” in many ways — challenging me, cheering for me, helping me understand that failure is part of the deal. Then my mentors opened doors for me, or at least pointed me toward them. 

When I was willing to walk through those doors, I found purpose and meaning. My mentors changed my life.”

Mentoring and being mentored is not a one-way street, as anyone who has been on either the giving or receiving end of it will tell you. Rather, it is a “gift exchange, where we get as much as we give,” Palmer says. This mutual sharing evokes the potential in each other. The theologian, professor, feminist activist, and civil rights leader Nelle Morton called this, “hearing one another into speech.” I often think of this as a spiritual director and as a person who receives spiritual direction…so very often I don’t really know what I’m thinking or maybe even what I am feeling or believing until I say it out loud to another person.  

  • Mentoring gives us a chance to welcome each other into a relationship that honors our vulnerability and our need for each other. 
  • Mentoring allows us to learn from each other’s creative failures, from their “falling down and getting back up.” 

As Palmer describes, “mentors and apprentices are partners in an ancient human dance, and one of teaching and mentoring’s great rewards is the daily chance it gives us to get back the dance floor. It is the dance of the spiraling generations, in which the old empower the young with their experience and the young empower the old with new life, reweaving the fabric of the human community as they touch and turn.”

So we have these people plopped down in our lives somehow. Saints and sinners who fall down and get up and live to tell us about it and show us the way. They are gifts that never leave us, even if we go for years without thinking of the giver. 

So today, ask yourself in this silence:

  • Who have been my mentors and guides? 
  • Who believed in me when I was young?
  • Who changed me?
  • Whose words and life struck me somewhere deep and set me on this road?
  • Have I thanked them and thanked God for them?

Encounters with Jesus: Three Changed Men

Steve · July 4, 2021 · 2 Comments

Written below (and in the video at bottom…keep scrolling) are three short monologues written from the perspectives of three men whose encounters with Jesus surely changed their lives, or at least I imagine they did, for sometimes scripture tells us a part of the story and leaves the rest to our imaginations.

In Matthew 7:31-37, we find a deaf and mute man whose intimate encounter with Jesus heals him and opens up a new world of sound and communication. In John 2:1-12, we meet the nameless waiter at the wedding feast at Cana who unknowingly plays a role in Jesus’ first recorded miracle. And in Luke 19:1-10, we meet the diminutive Zacchaeus, who climbs a tree just to get a glimpse of Jesus but receives so much more in return for his small act of faith.

As you read, listen and reflect on these stories, ask yourself these questions: What have been my encounters with Jesus? Through which people, circumstances or sacred moments have I experienced even a glimpse of him?

Feel free to leave some comments on my blog of your own experiences.

[Artwork above by Steve Tadrick.]

Three Changed Men

[Three men enter and face the audience, each speaking in turn, as if giving testimony.]

Man 1: 

He led me away from the crowd
unable, as I was, to speak or hear 
motioned me close
wet fingers suddenly on my face, in my ears, on my tongue.
I pulled back, but he pulled me closer
his glance upward
his groan and that word tumbling out – “Eph-pha-tha!”
and I was suddenly opened 
the sounds around me as much music 
as the cantor’s voice 
I had only imagined.

Man 2: 

I failed, forgot the obvious 
a waiter at a feast without enough wine
threw up my hands
nowhere to turn at that late hour.
In the corner of my eye I saw
a quiet conversation between mother and son
couldn’t hear but the gestures were clear:
“Help them,” she implored. He nodded, reluctantly.
She approached me, saying: “Do whatever he asks.”
His command simple: “Fill the jars with water.”
I scoffed but did.
“Now draw some out,” he said, almost instantly. 
I dipped in and brought the cup to my lips
ready to spit out the lukewarm nothingness of water 
but instead received the very finest 
saved until the end when it was needed most 
the beginning of faith revealed in a sudden unexpected taste. 

Man 3: 

I am just a wee little man
so even the children pointed and laughed
as I scampered up the sycamore.
I just wanted a glimpse
recognition that I was
hoping for a wave or a nod.  
My expectations were quickly exceeded 
he saw me
sought me out
invited me down and to table (my own)
even as the crowd sneered.
But I am changed, have no choice but to change
have gained a companion
was lost, now found
unseen, seen. 

Chorus (the three, all together):

In the short distance between us.
He whispered: I see you.
All we really wanted 
was to be seen.

Man 1: Opened. 

Man 2: Astounded. 

Man 3: Invited. 

All: Changed. 

Even Wind and Sea Obey

Steve · June 20, 2021 · 6 Comments

This morning, up early and sitting on my porch, I am watching my little piece of the world recover and dry out from a beating of rain and wind and lightning last night. We needed the rain, to be sure, but the wind, thunder and lightning were there for what effect? To remind us of our smallness in the face of it all? Maybe so. A parable embedded in a storm. 

It’s peaceful now, the birds and squirrels noisy in their gathering around the feeders and searching the saturated ground for what can be found from and on the earth. A young doe wanders through the yard, paying no attention to the man on the porch with the moving, tapping fingers, and I wonder where she hid away last night in the face of such a destructive (and yet life-bringing) display of the power of creation and Creator.

And then I open the Word to see what it has for us today and discover Jesus and the disciples in a night crossing in a small boat being tossed by a storm, the disciples fearful and confused by their teacher, asleep on a cushion, as secure and restful as a young doe in high grass, knowing that this, too, will pass…  

Leaving the crowds, well into the crossing 
the storm overcame, spilled over the sides
turning boat into bowl 
fishermen into hasty bailers
and there you slept, at rest on a cushion. 

Finally, unable to wait any longer, we woke you
wondering if you knew or feared our peril.
You blinked yourself awake, took in our fearful faces 
smiled a crooked little smile, held up your hand
as if waving to someone on shore.
“Quiet, be still,” you said, speaking, 
it seems now, to both us and sea. 

And a great calm spread over both  
the sea ceased its roiling anger
and in us
terror and lack of faith
subsided. 

We looked at you, looking at us 
and saw for maybe the first time
you who even the wind and sea obey. 

 – from Mark 4:35-41

Photo credit

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Steve Givens is a retreat and spiritual director and a widely published writer on issues of faith and spirituality. He is also a musician, composer and singer who lives in St. Louis, Mo., with his wife, Sue. They have two grown and married children and five grandchildren.

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