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"If
you want faith, you have to work for it."
-- Flannery O’Connor
Leanord
Byram, my grandfather, died at home at the age of 93, on April 30th,
1995. He was surrounded by family members who maintained a 24-
hour-vigil over him for weeks. His life will never be chronicled in
a history book. His was an ordinary life, lived by an extraordinary
man. He resided in the same small town for over 60 years. He worked
as a logger and woodsman on the rivers and streams of New Brunswick
and Maine. Later, he became an auto mechanic, then a carpenter, and
eventually purchased property and farmed his land. He lived in a
small, modest three-bedroom ranch during the years that I knew him.
Still nestled into the corner of the living room sits the desk that
he spent hours at every day.
In retrospect, he was perhaps my greatest role
model. He was deeply involved in the pursuit of "the
truth", with a devotion few have ever surpassed. For more years
than I've been alive, he studied the Bible and other religious works
with vigor, and frequently corresponded with others on spiritual
matters. His life, while not easy, was rich and abundant; filled
with family, fellow seekers, and above all - faith. Each day carried
for him the promise of an opportunity to grow closer to his God. And
though I know he experienced confusion and frustration regarding
earthly matters, once he found his faith, there wasn't a day in his
life that he walked without it.
While my grandfather placed absolute trust in
a God who resided outside of him, I'm still learning to trust the
inherent wisdom that exists within me. He sought the heavenly
spirit, while my search became earth-bound. He found what he was
seeking; I'm still looking. Still, while I seek, I, too have found.
I've learned to trust my body's instinctual way of knowing what it
needs in order to most effectively house my spirit. I'm also
learning to trust that I'm connected in some inextricable way to the
vast wisdom of the universe. The more my awareness grows of this
connection, the more in touch I become with the meaning and purpose
of my own life.
I'm learning to trust that while life is
unpredictable and can hurt very deeply, I'm no more alone in the
darkness of my despair than I am in the light of my joy. While I've
suffered and will continue to suffer, I've healed and will heal
again.
It was easy to believe in Santa Claus and the
tooth fairy as a child; mine was a simple faith evolving from a
trusting heart. I never saw the North Pole, but I believed. As I
grow older and have lost much of my ability to believe in what I
can't see, my life experiences have served to renew my faith. I
can't conceive that the absolute beauty that I've enjoyed in the
natural world is little more than an act of random. I can't grasp
that the intricate and enormously complex web of life is ultimately
coincidental. I'm able to speak from my heart when I tell a
companion who's despairing to hold on; that the pain will surely
fade. I know this through my own experiences. I have seen, and thus
I believe. The agony that has tampered with my faith has ultimately
led me to trust in deliverance. I hurt and I heal. I am a natural
being participating in an ongoing and natural cycle. Day follows
night; the warmth of summer returns each year once the winter has
claimed its season, and I will surely always find my way to a new
beginning. Endings and beginnings are always intermingled.
While dealing with the after-shocks of my
quake, I've come finally to understand the meaning of faith. It
doesn't require faith to acknowledge that which we can see and touch
and measure. Faith is born of mystery, of promise, and of hope. The
guarantee for which it stands isn't written or legally binding. It
exists only within the human heart and is seldom easily acquired
beyond childhood. And like so much which follows this precious age,
it requires care. At this time in my life, I'm in the process of
planting and weeding, as I strive towards the cultivation of faith.
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Birthquakes excerpts: foreward
| virginia's journey
| faith
doug's discovery | calling
forth the soul | at
close range
personality and
illness | for
everything there is a season
finding spirit
in the doing | order
birthquakes
home | birthquake
| about me | sageplace
vision | words of wisdom
chief seattle | life
letters | psychotherapy | essays
| thoughts | interviews
where have the frogs
gone | chat schedule | books
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