Snapshots & Whatnot: #EarthDay2020

Faithful readers of this blog know that Virginia is a tree groupie, a waterfall groupie, and an avid groupie of mountains, beaches, forests, lakes, birds, oceans and flowers…

Majestic trees @ Banff National Park (Canada)

A tree AND an ocean (Pemba, Tanzania)

The grandeur of creation continually astounds my heart and spirit with awe.

Niagara Falls

As we continue to work to protect the environment and precious natural resources, here are a few suggestions for what we can do on Earth Day’s 50th Anniversary.

Let’s give thanks for our truly amazing planet and consider all that needs doing to protect it from imploding.

Getting involved can be overwhelming…

Today our planet faces huge climate change challenges, environmental degradation of natural resources, pollution, lack of safe water access in many communities, deforestation …and the list is, sadly, way too long.

The challenges can be so overwhelming we end up stymied, maybe just mouthing off sentiments once a year when Earth Day comes around.

“It’s all the fault of big corporations and apathetic governments.”

Hey, you (and me) the point of Earth Day (and every day) is #1 – to be grateful for this amazing planet and appreciate the beauty of creation all around us. What a gift!

And, #2 – to do our part to take better care of what’s around us.

Blue heron (Chincoteague National Wildlife Reserve)

Getting involved in advocacy campaigns is admirable (check out the Earth Day website to take digital action.) We can also have a positive impact on the environment around us by our daily choices.

At a women’s conference a few years ago, my sister and I attended an environmental advocacy workshop. Taking furious notes on the stack of handouts of many things that needed changing, I felt a bit overwhelmed.

Our workshop leader challenged us: instead of trying to change everything (which most often leads to not changing anything), choose ONE THING to change.

And make that change.

I had already switched to natural bath soap, made by a local artisan, and we recycle our glass, tin and plastic items. So, I decided to switch to environmentally safe laundry detergent. Doesn’t seem like such a huge thing, but five years later I am still using ECOS detergent.

The next year I switched to environmentally safe dish detergent… and still going.

Small steps, small choices, but one by one can make a difference.

Maybe you can ride a bike a few days to work vs. always driving a car. Maybe that next car purchase can be a hybrid or an electric car. (They seem pretty amazing.) Or you can support locally grown initiatives, farm-to-table restaurants, and farmer’s markets. (Local produce always tastes so much fresher.) Or get involved in community gardens or plant your own. My brother has grown many different vegetables in pots on our deck, with herbs overflowing all around the backyard.

There’s so much to do, but we can pick ONE THING – and do it. Then, after that’s a habit, choose another, taking small steps on the path towards a greener, healthier planet.

“This me, like all of creation, lives in a glorious dance of communion with all the universe. In isolation we die; in interdependence we live.”  Madeleine L’Engle

grace, peace & interdependent earth groupies

Virginia : )

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Cloudy Day Courage

“At once Jesus reached out his hand and caught him, saying, “You of little faith! What made you lose your nerve like that?” (Matthew 14:31)

“O daughter of little faith, I also repeat with the divine Master, why are you afraid? No, do not fear; you are walking on the sea amid the wind and waves, but be sure you are with Jesus. What is there to fear?” Padre Pio (Saint Pio of Pietrelcina)

“My past, O Lord, to Your mercy; my present, to Your love; my future to Your providence.” Padre Pio

grace, peace & cloudy day courage

Virginia : )

Photos: BC Ferry (Victoria to Vancouver, CANADA)

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A Fair Vision: Palatial Garden Blooms

“A fair vision welcomed him in this land of disease.”  J.R.R. Tolkien

Governor’s Palace Gardens (Williamsburg, VA)

Here in the State of Virginia we are under ‘stay-at-home’ orders, but we can go out to take exercise and for groceries (maintaining our social distances.) Last week Colonial Williamsburg opened up the Governor’s Palace gardens for a few hours each day, so Virginia went walking there on Friday.

The Governor’s Palace (front lawn view)

Usually tickets are required to enter the Palace gardens, something most locals do when visitors come to town. Since our family visitors usually come for Christmas or in the summer, it was a treat to see spring flowers in bloom.

The Governor’s Palace (backyard garden)

The Palace gardens are beautifully organized with all kinds of plants, flowers and budding trees. Friday’s blooms included a plethora of dogwood.

Dogwood, (Virginia’s State flower)

Beauty lurked around circuitous corners (aMazing!)

Governor’s Palace Garden Maze

Bluebells, anchoring a corner

Then there were tulips…

…and more dazzling tulips everywhere!

grace, peace & fair visions (the blooming kind)

Virginia : )

“The world is indeed full of peril and in it there are many dark places. But still there is much that is fair. And though in all lands, love is now mingled with grief, it still grows, perhaps the greater.” J.R.R. Tolkien

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The Sense and Scents of Renewal

“You drown not by falling into a river, but by staying submerged in it.”  Paulo Coelho

It’s hard amidst a global pandemic to take a timeout for renewal. Our hearts are crushed by daily news of increasing COVID-19 death tolls. The economic quagmire of lost livelihoods and opportunities also increases our stress levels. The courage of front line workers who continue to serve tugs at our heartstrings to do more.

It’s a paradox quandary for most of us that the best way we can help is to maintain social distancing and stay at home.

That may not seem like much, but it is vital to flattening the curve. In our Peninsula health district there have been over 280 COVID-19 cases and a few deaths. But, in the nearby Richmond metropolitan area 42 people have died in one long-term care facility.

The Virginia State Department of Health tested everyone in the facility two weeks ago. Of the 90+ who tested positive for the coronavirus, 53 did not have any symptoms.

They were carriers of COVID-19 without even knowing it.

That’s why it’s still vitally important that we continue to follow guidelines that limit our social interaction and do our bit by staying home as much as possible.

Staying at home (surprising as it may seem) stress can pile up. Checking the news 12 times a day doesn’t help. (Virginia is trying to lower her news intake to 3 times per day.) Or, maybe you’re working flat-out in healthcare or a vital service industry with extra loads compounding your stress.

Whatever the case may be, it’s important to take timeouts for renewal. Having previously worked 80 hour weeks in conflict settings with 2 to 3 hours of sleep per night, Virginia values the importance of breaks. You become sluggishly less effective (adrenaline only goes so far) unless you do something to recharge your internal batteries.

Sleep is good. Renewal is even better.

So, today take a renewal timeout to recharge internal peace batteries and decompress stress. Take a look outside the window. Take a walk.

Notice beauty where it can be found (if we’re looking around.)

“Never lose an opportunity of seeing anything that is beautiful; for beauty is God’s handwriting – a wayside sacrament. Welcome it in every fair face, in every fair sky, in every fair flower, and thank God for it as a cup of blessing.”   Ralph Waldo Emerson

Take time out for prayer.

“The well of the Creator never fails; happy is he (and she) who dwells at the well.”  Charles H. Spurgeon

Let God renew our hearts with springs of water from the well of eternal Hope and Love. Don’t let stress mess with the gift of peace God gives you and me.

“What is the scent of water?” “Renewal. The goodness of God coming down like dew.”
Elizabeth Goudge

Let’s open our hearts to the sense and scents of renewal.

grace, peace & renewal scents

Virginia : )

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Time for a Nap!

It’s Easter Monday and Blogger Virginia feels like joining these sheep for a nap after making it through her post-a-day Lent gig.

Virginia has done a post-a-day Lent gig several times over the years, but this year was one of the hardest yet. Coming up with posts this go round mostly meant scrambling the night before for something to say. (At least that made me pray!)

Many thanks for the encouragement to keep on going. The comments, emails, texts, calls (and prayers) meant a great deal.

“You ask for what God wants you. Isn’t the primary answer that He wants you. We’re not told that the lost sheep was sought out for anything except itself. Of course, He may have a special job for you: and the certain job is that of becoming more and more His.” C.S. Lewis

Eastertide blessings to all!!

grace, peace & sheepy sheep

Virginia : )

Sheep spotted while walking in Colonial Williamsburg last Friday. (We are under stay-at-home orders here, but are allowed out for groceries and exercise.)

Virginia will now return to her normal blogging schedule of one or two posts per week…

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HaPpY HaPpY EASTER!!

From here @ Roses in the Rubble, Virginia wishes everyone an Easter blessed with extra doses of Jesus Christ’s love, joy, mercy, grace, peace and HOPE!

“Do not despair. We are Easter people and hallelujah is our song.”

St. Pope John Paul II

HaPpY HaPpY EASTER! HE IS RISEN!!

grace, peace & Easter Hallelujahs

Virginia : )

“Christ is risen, yes, He is risen indeed!”

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joy…JOY…joy…JOY…joy…JOY!

Virginia is putt-putting sluggishly to the finish line of her post-a-day Lent thru Easter gig. (The path to the finish line threw a few curves when today’s blog published itself last night as Virginia was working on it.)

Sometimes things don’t turn out how we expect them to. This Lent is a case in point. We started out here @ Roses in the Rubble with the expectation of giving up a few things (chocolate, wine, games on Virginia’s iPad…)

Not realizing we would have to give up GOING TO CHURCH.

Celebrating Easter by internet @ home is not what we expected when Lent started. The high death tolls around the world to a deadly virus have made this a heart-rending season.

But, no matter how much despair and disappointment seek to crush us, the joy of Jesus is with us even in the darkest places (as Virginia has written before.)

Alone in our homes tomorrow, we can celebrate Easter with the JOY OF JESUS.

“Without joy we Christians cannot become free, we become slaves to our sorrows. You cannot advance the Gospel with sad hopeless Christians. You cannot.” Pope Francis

grace, peace & JOY

Virginia : )

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Betwixt and Between HOPE!

“May the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing, so that by the power of the Holy Spirit you may abound in hope.” Romans 15:13

At the end of Good Friday’s crucifixion Jesus is laid to rest in a tomb. Imagine what it must have been like for Mary and His followers who stood at the cross and those, like Peter, who failed Jesus and fled.

Although Jesus told them about the Resurrection, they didn’t get it. All they saw was His suffering and death – an executed exhibition of rejection.

It’s hard to stand betwixt and between our hopes and dreams when we don’t understand what’s going on around us. When crosses of suffering in our lives are too much to bear we may ask, “Where are you, God?”

We may lose hope.

We might stumble and fail as we follow Jesus along the Via Dolorosa. Imagine the anguish Peter must have felt denying Christ not just once, but three times.

Not just dashed hopes, but deep doldrums of despairing failure.

Yet in those places betwixt and between when everything is dark — there is hope.

Jesus didn’t stay in the grave, He rose.

That’s what Easter is about: Resurrected Love, Resurrection Joy and Hope.

Hope that is a gift of God. Hope packaged with grace to keep us standing like Mary at the foot of the cross. Hope wrapped with mercy and forgiveness, since on the cross Jesus atoned for our transgressions, failures, stumbles and falls. Hope that lifted Peter who failed Jesus miserably, yet forgiven became the rock upon which Jesus built the church.

Whenever we are betwixt and between, Christ is with us. If we believe and accept the gift God has given us, we can hope in Christ and let His sacrificial love lift the despairing bits of our hearts and lives.

EASTER IS COMING!

Brilliant day lillies Norfolk Bot Garden 2

grace, peace & betwixt & between Hope

Virginia : )

“Hope is not some vague belief that ‘all will work out well,’ but biblical hope is the certainty that things finally have a victorious meaning no matter how they turn out. We learn that from Jesus, which gives us the courage to live our lives forward.”   Fr. Richard Rohr, OFM

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A Picture of Good Friday Love

Years ago while visiting South Africa I found a picture of the Crucifixion that touched my heart, instantly. With pride of place it now hangs on my wall here where I see it every day. Created by South African artist Portchie, he wrote this about it: “I believe that the Crucifixion is the most important happening in history and also in my own personal life. Therefore I thought to comment on it.”

“Look at the Cross and you will see Jesus’ head bent to kiss you, His arms extended to embrace you, His heart opened to receive you, to enclose you within His love.” Saint Teresa of Calcutta

grace, peace & Good Friday Love

Virginia

“I’ve seen hatred and I have seen love. And Love is more powerful.” Immaculée Ilibagiza

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Holy Thursday Healing Love

It’s Holy Thursday. Today we are challenged by Christ’s example to join the “Order of the Towel” washing the feet of others literally and figuratively in the ways we are led.

But something struck me today. Flash back to the beginning of Lent opening our hearts to be embraced by Christ. Today, before Jesus challenges the disciples in the upper room to wash each others’ feet, He washes their feet.

Peter persisted, “You’re not going to wash my feet—ever!”  Jesus said, “If I don’t wash you, you can’t be part of what I’m doing.” (John 13:8-9)

Are we letting Jesus have a go at our feet?

Our weary, worn out, smudged and dirty feet?

Are we letting Him have a go at the weary, worn out bits and pieces of our hearts?

Are we opening our hearts to the healing embrace of His love that washes smudged hurts and scarred dirt away?

The fountain of His everlasting love that never runs dry?

The hug of His love that takes our fears away?

grace, peace & healing Love

Virginia  : )

“There is no cross, big or small, in our lives which the Lord does not share with us.” Pope Francis

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