Thursday, June 4, 2026

Pause and Reflect: Allegiance to the Lake

 It's been a while. And it is time to pause and reflect, to remember my moorings.

I'm taking a cue from Irene Latham and pledging allegiance to a lake. A lake vacation is planned for later in the summer, and I'm already champing at the bit. I can hear the water lapping... the loons calling. I can feel myself unwinding at the very thought. Ahhh...





I PLEDGE ALLEGIANCE

to the lake

to the soothing lap of water

to the wild and ancient call of the loons, to their elegant black and white evening wear, to ruby eyes, to sleek silhouettes riding low in the waves, to the intimate conversation of a mated pair, to fuzzy gray chicks riding piggyback, to raucous loon parties lasting far into the night, to deep dives

to eerie woodland stirrings, heard but never seen

to tiny orange salamanders, crawling in the duff

to kingfishers in white neckerchiefs and spiky caps as they skim the water, perch on a limb, project a presence twice their size

to waterlilies - white or yellow- and their shiny round pads

to tiny darting fishes, and big ones lurking in the shadowy deep

to lichens, gray-green, rust, black, ash, golden, splashed on rocks and trees with abandon

to the hootings of owls, to their lushly striped feathers and silent flight

to the evening gatherings of bats, gnat hunting in the twilight

to my hopes for a spacious screened porch with chairs, couch, blanket

to the canoe which waits and floats and conveys quietly

to many possibilities: beaver, otter, fox, martin, bear

to the myriad creatures hiding along the shores

to the burbling stream that feeds the lake

to the blush of sunset on glittering water

to the dip of paddles

to pencil and pad

to gratitude

to peace

  

--Karen Eastlund, 2026


And while I'm at it, I'll pledge allegiance to the USA and it's 250th. The semiquincentennial. 

I remember and celebrate our freedoms. May they long endure.


Ecclesiastes tells us there is a time for everything, and the next couple of months will be very busy. May I have enough energy!  And yes, I look forward to my time at the lake. It beckons.



Many thanks to Carol Varsalona for hosting this month. She suggested "Pause and Reflect" as our prompt. You can find her blog post and links to the rest of the group HERE.

 






Thursday, March 5, 2026

Strengthen Us...

 Hello everyone. Welcome to Spiritual Journey Thursday. Leigh Anne Eck is hosting today, and suggested we blog about strength in our spiritual life. I thought it was a good topic.


I'm working my way through Lent by reading from my favorite prayer book: 

Celtic Daily Prayer: Prayers and Readings From the Northumbria Community


Each daily reading offers a short reading, three scriptures, and sometimes a poem. Last night's reading noted that many prayerful people find that the biggest battles are the ones inside us... the "fightings and fears, within, without." I find it so easy to fall into this kind of darkness. 

Here's part of the prayer:

Come swiftly, O Lord, to the dark moments when we are lost. Make us aware of Thy presence. Strengthen us to resist the urges and pulls to deeper darkness.

I love the prayer poems in this section, they repeat this first phrase:

I bind unto myself today
the power of God to hold and lead,
His eye to watch, His might to stay,
His ear to hearken to my need,
the wisdom of my God to teach,
His hand to guide, His shield to ward;
the word of God to give me speech,
His heavenly host to be my guard.



Easter is just a month away. May we find strength to keep the faith, to turn away from darkness toward God's light, and to remember that God is our strong leader, protector, advocate and guide. 

Thanks to Leigh Anne for hosting today. You can find her post and links to others in the group HERE.


Wednesday, February 4, 2026

One Little Word: 2026 plus an Attitude Adjustment

 

Welcome to Spiritual Journey Thursday. We are a group of poets and writers who gather once a month to write about our spiritual journeys. This month is hosted by Bob Hamera, who suggests we write about attitude. Since I missed last month, I'm combining his prompt with my One Little Word. I have chosen REMEMBER to guide me throughout 2026.

Thanks to Margaret Simon for this beauty!

I missed writing last month because my brother Erwin died two days prior. Although Erwin was 95, I was not expecting such news. I knew he had not been able to call me for several years but he was doing well in a nursing care. I knew his sense of humor was intact when I heard that one of the caregivers thought he was adorable. I imagined him rolling his eyes and smiling his most charming smile. I had a good laugh over that.

Erwin, known as Ervin at home, Sam at work

Of my six brothers, perhaps I spent less time with Ervin than most others. (We called him Ervin, though that wasn't his proper name. His wife called him Erv.) He was grown and out of the house by the time my memory kicked in. I saw him on special occasions. Still, I remember him laughing. He was always ready with a joke, a smile, a timely remark.

 Ervin loved cars and worked his way up to Superintendent of Fisher Body plants in Janesville and Detroit. At work he was "Sam." Co-workers said Sam was a fair boss, and I'm proud of that. Like Jay Leno, he knew everything you needed to know about cars. He was also generous and handy at fixing our various scrapes and dents.

A favorite family story took place at my parents' home in Omaha. It was the summer my father had a leg amputated and Ervin had come to help ease the shock. The mood at home was subdued, the neighborhood quiet. Daddy had been moved to the screen porch to get some fresh air.

 Neighbors across the street, a German grandmother, mother, and daughter Diane, had bought a car now that Diane was old enough to drive. Neither mom nor grandma drove. Diane and I were close in age, but she was a sheltered only child and I was Number Nine. When we were 6 or 7 and got clunky metal roller skates, she was only allowed one at a time. You may laugh, but I'm not kidding. Coordination wasn't her strength. And now she had a car. How would it go?

Learning to drive was challenge enough, but mom and grandma would give advice even though they had no experience. It seems we heard them say "Turn the back wheels!" That may be fantasy, but you get the idea. 

On this particular day all three women got in the car. Diane had to back the car out of her garage and turn it around in order to drive forward into the street. I imagine her maneuvering back and forth, this way and that, trying to get pointed in the right direction while mom and grandma urged one thing and another. No doubt Diane got flustered or put her foot on the wrong pedal, but in any event she suddenly plowed across the alley and into the neighbor's garage. CRASH!!!

All three sat in the car, motionless. Stunned. The storm windows that had been stored in the rafters of that garage fell on their car, and the walls of the garage buckled around them. 

My family ran to the windows, then stepped outdoors to see what had happened. Probably they all sucked in their breath when they saw the garage crumpled around Diane's car. But Ervin went over, undaunted. He had seen plenty of accidents on the factory floor. He would deal with it. He looked into the car, heard no moaning, saw no blood, so he opened the door as if a chauffeur, and asked most politely, "Would you ladies like to get out?" 

Daddy went outdoors for the first time since his operation. What he saw struck him funny. Nobody was hurt, and the comedy with Ervin was too much. He couldn't get the smile off his face if he wanted to. For him, the garage demolition became a total attitude adjustment!

I'm a little sad to say that I was at camp when all this happened, but the story lives in my mind's eye nevertheless. What a spectacle it must have been. I wish I could have seen their faces. For years you couldn't tell this story at our house without everyone doubling over with laughter. 

The story didn't end, of course. Before the summer was over Diane had plowed down a long section of her grandma's cyclone fence as well. I missed that too.

But most of all, Ervin, I will miss you. I already do. And I will remember!

Will the circle be unbrokenBy and by Lord, by and byThere's a better home awaitingIn the sky Lord, in the sky.

Thanks for reading, and thanks to Bob for hosting today. You can find his post HERE. Look for links to others in the group on Bob's page.