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Showing posts with label B&B. Show all posts
Showing posts with label B&B. Show all posts

Tuesday, 1 August 2017

Dirty Linen



‘Excuse me,’ called one of our B&B guests, interrupting me. I was finishing my quiet time and asking God what I might write in my blog today! I confess I was a little irritated by the interruption.

‘I see here that you will do a wash for us.’ I smiled. I really don’t mind. She returned a few minutes later with a very small bundle of shirts and so on.

‘I can’t bear to have the dirty laundry squashed in beside the clean clothes when travelling for three weeks,’ she explained. 

In the chaos of living out of a suitcase, dirty knickers can become confused with clean ones. There can be some question of which shirt has been worn once or twice and which is still unused. The socks are usually more obvious...

Life is a journey. It’s easy to squash down the dirty laundry – angry outbursts or critical thoughts or judgmental actions – and keep it right beside the clean linen gathered from those quiet times. But it just doesn’t do. The smell, the dirt: they can taint what is clean. 

‘OK, Lord,’ I call out, hoping I’m not interrupting Him. ‘I see here you will do a wash for me.’

Wednesday, 30 March 2016

Telemetry



Our B&B guest explained his job. ‘I put telemetry in reservoirs so their volume can be remotely monitored. Most reservoirs are away from mains electricity, so the telemetric units are powered by solar panels.’

He went on to explain that the only problems he ever gets is when the operators, excited by the free electricity provided by the solar panels, decide to connect something else – like an electric fence – to them. The power supply is insufficient to meet the extra load.

There’s a spiritual message in here somewhere I’m sure! Power coming from the Son...measuring the reservoir of life-giving water within us... Sometimes we overload and that’s when our spiritual reservoir of peace and joy runs dry, and we may not recognise what the problem is. Time to go back and bask in the Son a bit longer.

Friday, 13 March 2015

Stop and Stare



Gazing from the kitchen window at the colourful collection of birds pecking at the bread strewn on the ground, the peanuts and seeds and fat balls, is therapeutic I’m sure. As I stood this morning, watching a wee bird (blue tit?) checking out one of our bird houses for nesting possibilities, I was reminded of a poem our daughter printed out beautifully for us as a gift several years ago. It’s a famous one, about having the time to stop and stare.

I do take the time to stop and stare. When I’m praying. When I’m waiting for the bacon to cook or the eggs to fry for a B&B guest. When I’m trying to fashion the next sentence in my writing. 

But I suddenly realised that poor bird couldn’t afford such a luxury. He plunged his head into the hole of the nesting box, then pulled it out quickly. His head darted right, left, up, down, as he checked for predators and then he once more plunged it into the box. I’d have thought it safer to just jump right in, check it out, and then emerge without putting oneself at risk of surprise attack from behind or above. But then, I’m not a bird, and I don’t have their instincts.

It struck me that having the time to stop and stare is a privilege afforded those who dwell in relative safety. The stopping and staring of people under threat from invasion or attack is a desperate scanning of the horizon for any sign of the enemy. The stopping and staring of those hunkered down in refugee camps is an empty look which may not register anything – a look focused more on the empty canvas of despair. The stopping and staring of the elderly sitting side by side in old folks’ homes is the sad scanning of the landscape of memory, pulling up random moments of joy and sorrow, often in a muddle of recollection.

Jesus instructed his disciples not to be anxious about anything but instead to trust the heavenly Father, who tenderly loves the birds but even moreso, tenderly loves individuals. That is challenging enough when I’m standing secure in my warm kitchen gazing out at the birds in springtime; my prayers are with those whose challenges are vicious and brutal, whose losses are staggering, and whose memories are flickering like an old time 16MM movie. 

Good to know that Jesus’ prayers are with them, too.