Saturday, November 15, 2014


Afternoon Matinee

 
Shadows grow longer
as I gaze from work's upper story windows
down onto the coiffed grounds
where a silhouetted,
more quiet, bronze-orange afternoon
takes the place of the earlier
energetic, effervescent morning.
 
The days are shorter
even with the same hours always given;
yet light is more quickly upstaged
by the dusk-to-dark act.

 
Lingering and looking
At the matinee performance of light and shadows
I am wistful and full of memories. . . .
 
 
 
While the warmth of the western sunshine
pours through my picturesque porthole to the outside,
I ponder, worship,
and feel grateful for a moment more.
 
 
Then moving on to all that awaits me the rest of my day
I pick up the pace
before darkness falls.
 


 

Monday, November 10, 2014

Unburdened


The unanswers, anxieties,
and clamor of things
that need plans laid
and  decisions made took a back seat as I walked
from my car to work's door this morning.


Startled from my self-absorption, I noticed
color had arrived in the many trees
dotting the campus.
Reds, oranges, and yellows amid the fading green--
all against a backdrop of sky blue.
The morning breeze scurried leaves
in swirls on the ground,
and the morning sun poured
through the colander of trees
creating shadows and shafts of dancing light.

I looked and saw,
tasted and knew
God is good.

This  masterpiece morning reminded me that
the Master Artist, the ever-present I AM
knows, sees, and acts
in this world,
in the pain,
in the present,
in my life.

With morning and all its color, light, and gust
giving my face a last caress
before I entered a day's worth of insideness,
I smiled grateful for hope anew.

 


by ckh --  experienced at Baptist Health-North Little Rock 11/10/14

Saturday, November 8, 2014

Softening the Less


 No child
nor spouse
nor mother
nor father
do I hold in my arms.

So when
I pick you up
and bury my face in your fur
smelling the scent of chimney smoke
from your night air jaunt,
I smile.

A little joy and lots of love
fill up the vacancy in my heart--
softening the less,
giving me more
just because you
nudge your head
against my lips for one more kiss
on the tip of your ear.

You will not always be.
But for now you keep
the cold of lonely away,
at least for one more day.

(. . . regarding ztc)

Monday, March 17, 2014

Topped Off




Exhausted, I went in search of coffee. That's when I saw her.


Maybe my age, maybe younger.


She pushed a walker and haltingly stepped . . . stepped . . . stepped
While sporting her stylish boots, fleece-trimmed jacket, and dyed auburn-red hair.


Feeling so fat-producingly fatigued and washed out, I bee-lined for the cafeteria’s coffee machine


Only to find one machine out of order and the other out of coffee.


BIG sigh.


Is the cappuccino working?” the stylish walker-lady asked me.


She had finally made it into the cafeteria only to find no rewards for her effort.
No I said. Nothing is working.


Oh.” She seemed tired . . . like me. And disappointed.


Follow me, I said. I’m going upstairs to the Atrium where there’s coffee in the afternoon, I said.


We rode the elevator to three. She talked about her tumor on her spine, about her never-ending pain, about the many doctors, about the mountain of medicine.


While waiting on our coffees being prepared by the Atrium’s good-natured and beautifully smiling workers, the walker-lady told me her age--six years younger than me.


I immediately recognized my survivor’s guilt and pushed it back.


She told about her home being broken into twice, about now having to move into another home with a new person, about children who don’t talk to her, about ten grandchildren.


I saw the grey at her part in her hair. I saw the gold sparkle in her long nails. I saw the tears welling up and spilling over.


I just wish they would take the tumor out. One doctor said maybe instead they will take a disk out and fuse my neck. Another doctor said just take the Oxycontin. I don’t like taking it. Makes me feel bad.”


How long have you been sick I asked.


Ten years.”


Tears ran down her hollow cheeks. I gave her a napkin from the dispenser next to the cream and sugar.


Our coffees came. She looked at my badge. “So you are a pastor? Would you pray with me?”


Before she asked I sensed our “chance” encounter had The One Who Sees’ hand on it and on us.


We sat down with our coffees. I told her a story about another woman who had been sick for twelve years, spent her savings and something like the home mortgage on doctors, and still grew sicker by the day. Told her about the sick woman reaching for Jesus, about Jesus stopping and healing the woman, about the  woman's life being transformed as well as healed.


Then the walker-lady stretched her sparkly gold fingernailed hands past her coffee and grasped my hands.


I prayed for physical and spiritual healing for us both. God knew the ways we needed his healing, needed him.


She took the elevator and slowly walked out the front door in her stylish boots, fleece-trimmed jacket, and auburn-red dyed hair.

I walked down the three flights of stairs back to my office to drink the coffee. I was still tired yet gently refreshed.
But He told me. . . ‘My power is strongest when you are weak. . . .’” –2 Corinthians 12:9


Sunday, March 16, 2014

SLEEP WATCHING

You just sit there on the bed
And stare out the window.
It’s dark. What can you possibly see?
You fight sleep.
Constantly.
Your eyes widen then droop
Then you blink slowly,
Your head nodding.
The next second you are asleep sitting up.
Then the next second
You startle awake and fight sleepiness to keep watch.
What could be all that interesting?
What are you looking for?

In the middle of the night sometimes I ask myself those same questions.