Lessons in Gratitude Day 322

As time chalks off another year and adds it to the past
Let us take a moment now to look at memories that last.

I am grateful this evening for memories–those that last, and those that don’t seem to stick. Memories are funny things; they grow increasingly fuzzy over time. If one were to graph our ability to remember things, putting time in years on the X axis and things we remember clearly on the Y, as time increases toward the right, the line stretching from the Y axis gradually goes down before dropping precipitously off after a period of some seven or eight decades depending on one’s general state of health and mental capacity. There seems to be an inverse reaction in which as time increases the line representing the number of things we remember goes down and the number of things we outright forget goes up. Of course I am relying on my own memory of charts and graphs and statistics, recognizing that way back in the olden days when I was taking math we mostly only talked about X and Y axes…it was only later on when they added Z and a whole bunch of other letters. That was long after I had taken my last math class; it amazes and frightens me to know how much I’ve forgotten or never learned in the first place.

Anyway, the kind of memories I’m talking about are not those things like do you remember how to do line graphs or the what the capital of each state is or how to get from here to there (like anyone knows how to do that without a GPS device these days.) They are memories of people, of family events, of cultural and familial traditions. I was talking to one of my siblings today about our family history. We were recalling some family stories of who was who, tidbits we’d heard from our grandfather or father or read in a document somewhere. I bet you if I sat down with all five of my siblings and we began to talk about what we “knew” and remembered, our knowings would differ a great deal from one another.

I can remember talking to my father about various things to do with his side of the family. Some of his stories were a bit incredible and I found myself wishing I’d had the benefit of talking with both my dad and his younger brother at the same time. I can remember having conversations and correspondences with my Uncle Al over the years in which he contradicted some of the things my father remembered about their early days, about my grandfather, and about many of the events that occurred over the course of their growing up days. Now my father and all of his siblings are gone, except for a half-brother whom I have never met. Families can be such odd units.

At one point I had fancied myself the chronicler of family history. I had pestered my grandfather for years to tell me stories of our family and to write down what he could remember of our family history. Eventually he did sit down and write out some information about three of our family lines. Now the only people who can verify some of the information he wrote and some of what my father and his brothers might have written about are those of us of my generation–my siblings and my two first cousins on my father’s side of the family. The more I learn about who some of these ancestors were, the more I want to know about them. I still haven’t given up my dream of writing a family history that brings them all to live for me, my siblings, and all of our children (and their children.) Part of that process will actually include sitting down with my siblings and asking them to recall what stories they heard from my father, mother, and other relatives about who the people in our family stories and old photographs really were. No doubt it will make for a thoroughly enjoyable time. Any time spent with all my siblings together has the potential to be thoroughly enjoyable. I look forward to making time  to do just that.

This has probably been an odd gratitude blog this evening. I suppose I am in a contemplative mood; thinking about who I am in relation to my ancestors. I am grateful to have the memories I do have, as fuzzy as they may be. As I wrote the other night, I think about my mother and although I’ve lived 17 years without her being part of my active life, there are things I remember distinctly, and things (like the sound of her laugh) that I can no longer reproduce from memory. But her essence is still with me and still part of my every day life. So too with my father: there are things I remember distinctly and things I have forgotten. I am grateful for my memories, no matter what forms they take.

Posted in Gratitude, Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Lessons in Gratitude Day 321

Today has been a pretty good day, start to finish. When I woke this morning I had one of those moments that are pretty rare for me: one of absolute calm and lightness. As I began stirring this morning, before the usual rush of thoughts and end-of-the-month worries that often flood in on me before I am even good and awake, I had a moment of what I described in my morning journal as “okayness.”

“Whatever one might call it, it was good…A glimpse of what it feels like to wake up feeling okay. Like what you might feel like waking up the morning or two after winning the lottery–not a megamillions, maybe not even one million, bit a nice sum like $10,000 or something smaller that offers a bit of breathing space. So perhaps that’s it–I had of feeling what it will feel like to have a bit of breathing space in my life: unhurried, unworried, content, okay. I do not need to be riotously happy; I want to be content (or is it contented). Perhaps contentment is what riotously happy settles into, what it matures into, what it deepens into…yeah, that sounds good. So I’m not sure what that moment was this morning, and I’m not going to grasp after it, or reproduce it, or try to make it bigger–as if I could. Perhaps it was simply my Spirit’s way of letting me know what’s ahead of me as I move forward with gratitude, generosity and The Four Immeasurables…”

I must say I thoroughly enjoyed my moment of okayness this morning, as the segment of my journal entry indicated. For some people okayness is ho-hum, perhaps it is their normal state. For me, okayness is probably close to what other folks might describe as bliss. As one who has struggled with depression for the better part of my life, waking up feeling okay can be a really lovely thing. This has been particularly true over the past several months when I often awaken with a sense of anxiety about all of the challenges and unresolved situations in my life. Back to my journal:

Perhaps this is what Rumi meant when he said “Awake at dawn with a winged heart and give thanks for another day of loving.” This might be what a winged heart feels like. (I later remembered that it hadn’t been Rumi who’d said that, but Khalil Gibran. Hey, at 7 in the morning writing in longhand in my journal it’s not like I could look it up…)

I am grateful for that moment this morning. The positive feeling of overall wellbeing gently persisted throughout most of the day, during my volunteering time at the Berkeley Food Pantry all the way through to the writing of this evening’s blog. Start to finish it has been a pretty good day. And no matter how I wake up feeling tomorrow morning, for today life is good.

© M. T. Chamblee, 2012

Posted in Gratitude | Leave a comment

Lessons in Gratitude Day 320

I am grateful tonight for having had a good day. I must confess that it started off a little rocky and there were a few bumpy parts throughout the day. But by and large it’s been a pretty good day.

I want to start by acknowledging that this is the 17th anniversary of the death of my mother, Dorothy Jones Chamblee. I’m not sure if I have a single day when I don’t think of her at least once, and certainly the five-month period from December through May when she was diagnosed and ultimately died  are always a bit blue for me. The acuteness of the grief has diminished after all these years, of course, but my body always seems to remember the grief long before the cause of the sadness creeps its way into my consciousness. The dates and memories of those five brief months are etched into my DNA and seem to go through a period of dormancy before triggered to begin waking up around Christmas time. As I said, it’s much less acute as it was during the first few years, but it’s still there hovering at the periphery of my consciousness.

Tonight I am grateful and celebrate the many ways in which my mother is still present in my life. Of course, I see her in the faces and mannerisms of my siblings and at times my own children, and am often surprised to see her face when I glance at my own reflection in the mirror. The older I get, the more like her I appear. I see that as a good thing. Mommy smiled a lot more than I do; but I am actively working on that, as I noted yesterday. And a radiant smile it was too. But more than the physical characteristics, my mother is reflected in so many of the ways I and my siblings have lived our lives, have raised our children, express our creativity, serve our communities. And in spite of the fact that she physically left this plane of existence 17 years ago, I still periodically say to myself, “I wonder what Mommy would think about this?”

I’m not sure if there’s a heaven or God or all of that stuff the faith I was raised with (in which my mother was a fervent believer), but if there is such a place, my mother is undoubtedly there and I hope watching over me in some way. In periods of distress, such as some of the times I’ve experienced more recently, I talk to her and ask for her guidance and briefly wish for her physical presence so I can lay my head on her lap, have her stroke my hair, and tell me everything is going to be alright. The funny part is, I can’t remember if I ever did that when she was alive! (though part of me believes I probably did.) Even if it’s only in my imagination, it works for me nonetheless.

I wrote about my mother in my blog post on Mother’s day a few weeks ago, so I won’t repeat myself. I simply want to reiterate my gratitude to her for who she was to me and how much a part of me she still is. And as the song I wrote for her (using her own words) says, “I’ll always thank God in his kindness for giving me someone like [her].”

Dorothy J. Chamblee, 1944

Posted in Family, Gratitude | Leave a comment

Lessons in Gratitude Day 319

This morning I woke having dreamt about my father. I guess I had been thinking about him as Memorial Day approached, and of course there’s the matter that I have two photographs of him staring at me from the bookshelf in my bedroom. One is of him as a young man (early 20s) in the uniform of a second lieutenant in the United States army, and the other as a much older man (early 80s) looking into the camera and saluting. The bookshelf sits right across the room from my bed, no more than ten feet from me. Many days I salute him back, a silent acknowledgment that, even when things are difficult, Chamblees soldier on.

This morning’s dream was about honoring those who had served in the military during war time, and those who had fallen. My father didn’t fall during the war (otherwise I wouldn’t be here writing this) but he did serve honorably in World War II. He was awarded a Purple Heart for injuries suffered in an explosion at Normandy (he was an engineer helping to detonate land mines after the initial invasion.) He was just 22 years old–younger than my son is now–when he fought and was injured serving his country. He was hurt in 1944 but didn’t receive the decoration until nearly two years later when he returned from England. He would come home to a country where many of his fellow Americans still considered him a second-class citizen. And although he had been raised in Chicago, he returned to the segregated south to finish college and go to medical school in Nashville, Tennessee. How challenging that must have been for him: to have seen and experienced the terrors of war only to come “home” to a place that didn’t really welcome him. My father’s military service might have ended in 1946, but he was a soldier his whole life. Most of it he spent fighting against racial and social injustice, as well as serving as a physician/healer and public servant.

Roland W. Chamblee, Sr. Second Lieutenant, United States Army

I am grateful to my father for many things, but mostly for the example he set in the way he served the community. As the fifth of his six children I have to say that I didn’t know my father very well. He was so active in the civil rights movement when I was a child, as well as doctoring hundreds of patients in over 55 years of service as a family practice physician that he wasn’t around much. Simply put, he was too busy giving of his time as a man of the community that he didn’t really have as much time to spend with his family as he perhaps might have liked. I didn’t always understand that, and at times I resented the nameless “community” that demanded so much of my father’s attention. But in spite of those bouts of resentment, I also learned about the importance of service and giving oneself to causes you believe in.

I never served in the military; I never even considered it, and I doubt my father would have thought it a particularly good idea. He and my mother strongly encouraged each of their children to pursue higher education. My brother closest to me in age is the only one of the six of us to follow in Dad’s footsteps and become a soldier; Alan joined the Marines. In the few short years he served, he showed exemplary discipline and dedication, finishing at the top of his basic training class and ultimately achieving the rank of Sergeant. I am proud of him and his service to the country, and am grateful that he was never called upon to fight in a war. Like my father, he has carried the discipline and lessons learned during his military service into other areas of his life. He too has been an example to me of what it means to “soldier on.”

I am not a big believer in war, in fact I have major issues with most of the wars (or so-called “conflicts”) the U.S. engaged in in various places around the world over my lifetime (Viet Nam, the first Gulf War, Iraq and Afghanistan and other military actions.) But I do honor the men and women who offer their lives in service to the country through the military. I honor their service, as well as the sacrifices made by their parents, spouses and partners, and children who watch them go and pray for their safe return. I am grateful for the legacy of soldiers like my father, veterans like my brother, and this current generation of young men and women. To all of you, I salute.

Posted in Gratitude | Leave a comment

Lessons in Gratitude Day 318

Tonight I have no idea what I’m grateful for, at least not right this minute. I am grateful for small things today–like sleeping in until almost 9 o’clock this morning. It’s the first time I can remember getting eight hours of sleep in a long while. I will not repeat that tomorrow morning–I really don’t like starting a morning as “late” as I did this morning–but for today it was luxurious. Of course that crunched the rest of my time today: I finished writing in my journal around 10 and didn’t eat “breakfast” until after 11. Then I took my son to work at 1 and my daughter clothes shopping for the rest of the afternoon. The day fairly flew by. I did some work on a contract project I’ve been working on for about a week and before I knew it, it was almost 8 o’clock. By and large, though, it’s been a pretty good day.

I’m grateful too for my new mini-action I’ve begun taking recently. I recently read an article about how making small changes or taking really tiny steps toward a goal often gets us ready to make more significant changes overall. “The number one mistake people make is not going tiny enough,” says B.J. Fogg, a researcher at Stanford University. “If you’re trying to ma a change in your life, you need to add something to your routine that is smaller than small, smaller than tiny, something that is minuscule, that takes almost no effort and als almost no time.” (You can read the article on the subject of making changes in your life at Oprah.com.) My mini-action is that I’ve started smiling on purpose, every day. Even when I feel emotionally atrocious, I break into a big, cheesy grin early and several times throughout the day. And, as ridiculous as it might feel at first, I can almost always feel an instantaneous change in my mood; sometimes it’s a larger shift than others, but it is always perceptible. So I make sure to smile every day. While I’m working my way up to laughing on purpose, for I’ll keep working on smiling. There’s all kinds of research about the health benefits of smiling and laughing. I for one am planning on experimenting with all of it as part of my pro-wellbeing regimen (I’m calling it that rather than my “anti-depression” plan. I’d rather be pro what I want than anti what I don’t want…a small but important distinction, I believe.)

Another part of my pro-wellbeing plan is to spend a few moments playing with and patting my dog. She’s a sweet pup and it definitely benefits each of us for me to stroke her soft fur, smooth her ears, and rub her belly, as well as throw the ball for her, play tug with her favorite bone, and otherwise engage in a few minutes of play. I am grateful to have Honor. At times I have not wanted to be responsible for one more living being–taking care of myself and my two kids was quite enough. But I’m glad to have included two canines in the last 16 years or so–first Shiloh, who died five years ago at age 11, and now Honor, who we guess is somewhere around six years old. It is true that we humans can learn a lot about unconditional love from dogs. I appreciate having a canine friend in my life.

I started out this evening’s blog not at all sure what I was grateful for, and I’ve still managed to write about just a few things this evening. The list of things I’m grateful to have in my life, even when I don’t focus on these in a given night, always includes these things: my children, who are life and breath to me, my siblings who are likewise the most important blessings in my life, and my friends scattered around the country and world, are right at the top. There are many, many other things–many of which I have written about over these nearly 11 months of gratitude blogs. I will keep writing about them too, even at the risk of being repetitive at times. And my continued thanks to each of you who read this blog and journey with me as I walk the path. May you know happiness and the source of happiness. So may we all!

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Lessons in Gratitude Day 317

Today I recognized that I have left a few things behind over the past few months–things that have been important in my process of reclaiming my emotional health after the series of debilitating events that occurred at the beginning of 2011. In trying to juggle and balance various areas of responsibility in my life, I somehow managed to let them drop off and I now need to pick back up. One of the more important things was that I stopped walking 3 to 4 times a week at Cesar Chavez Park in Berkeley. At best I walk about half of my usual 1.5 miles around the park only once per week with my dog Honor. While that part’s been good for Honor, it hasn’t done much for me.

“When you were walking regularly you also expressed more gratitude about what you saw as you walked around the park,” my therapist explained patiently to me this morning.

It’s true, not to mention the well-documented facts about how exercise contributes to an overall sense of wellbeing and significant reduction in the effects of depression and stress. Okay, okay, so I need to add regular walking at the park back into my list of important must-do’s. Even though I have a treadmill parked in the dining room of my condo, I haven’t set foot on it since I moved it there last May. Part of the benefit of walking at the Park is that it’s situated outdoors and trails along a very beautiful portion of the San Francisco Bay. The breeze off the water, as well as the views of the Golden Gate Bridge, Mount Tamalpais, the city of San Francisco, The Bay bridge and other vistas, the glimpses of pelicans, egrets, and great blue herons are all part of the experience for me, the part that lifts my spirits. No, it’s definitely not just about the exercise, though that provides benefits. It’s about reconnecting with the natural world that my spirit has missed.

I have been in some uncertainty lately about where I might be living in the months ahead. I am keeping my eyes, ears, and heart open to see where I might be led. Recent doors have opened that might allow me to remain out here in the Bay area at least for a few more months. I do know that I need to continue finding ways to connect with nature and living things on a regular basis. Although I live in a relatively urban environment, there are places in the surrounding area where I can find that kind of connection. I simply have to make the effort and take the time to find them and spend time outdoors.

I am grateful to have spent some time this afternoon with my daughter walking and exploring a local park. It was our first time there, and though it didn’t have the qualities I most enjoy, being out in the beautiful weather enjoying the sun, the companionable presence of my daughter, and the relative quiet of the place was relaxing and restorative. Tomorrow (Sunday) is my day to take Honor to Chavez Park for our weekly trek. It’s good for her to go out and I can let her off the leash to frolic with other canines in the “leash-free zone.” It’ll be a good way to start the new week.

So I have to reclaim some things this week. I don’t even know what all of them are, but if I’ve been neglecting them, I’ll start missing them soon enough. Tonight, as I listen to a lone bird singing a beautiful evensong just outside my window, and the turkeys gobble and call to one another as they prepare to roost for the night, I realize that I am blessed and my heart is filled with gratitude. This is a good way to end another week.

Posted in Gratitude | Leave a comment

Lessons in Gratitude Day 316

Tonight’s post will be very brief. Not because I am not grateful for many things; but because at this the end of a busy, tiring week I am not sure I have the energy to recount them and expound on the many reasons why I am grateful today. My daughter teased me gently that writing this shouldn’t be that complicated: “I’m grateful for this, I’m grateful for that, the end.” I snootily replied that anyone could write a gratitude list, but a blog required a great deal more thought and, because other people are reading it one cannot simply throw together a string of sentences beginning with the phrase, “I am grateful for…”

Nevertheless, having said that, tonight I might have to resort to a string of sentences thrown together that begin with the phrase “I am grateful.” Worse yet, I might even resort to a bulleted list. Yes, I think I shall.

Tonight I am grateful for the following…

  • Foster’s Freeze soft serve ice cream parlor that’s a three-minute drive from my house. Tonight I took myself there and indulged in a medium (no, not a small) strawberry sundae with whipped cream and peanuts. I skipped the maraschino cherry.
  • And speaking of cherries….I am grateful for the fact that it is finally cherry season: that short-lived period of about a month to six weeks during which one can find cherries in abundance at roadside stands and farmer’s markets across the Bay area. I have yet to purchase my first basket of the sweet, delectable fruits. If there is anything I overeat pretty seriously, it’s cherries. Sometimes with digestive consequences…nuff said.
  • Audiobooks. Back when I had a seven-minute commute from home to work, I listened to my audiobooks primarily when I was working on a garden construction project in my back yard. Now that I have no back yard and therefore no gardening projects, and I have a 23.5 mile (one way) commute that takes anywhere from 30 to 60 or 70 minutes to complete, I am able to dig deeply into my audiobooks. The longer, the better, and if they are parts of series–trilogies and such–that’s even better. I’ve come to enjoy the voices of various narrators and think I’d like to do that someday when I retire (ha, ha).

These are but a few more lighthearted things I am grateful for this evening. I can’t always construct deep meaning and develop themes on the subject of gratitude every day. Sometimes it’s going to be lighthearted and simple. Today is one of those days.

I can say that I am grateful for the faithful followers of this blog. I continue to hope that reading this blog somehow helps you think more about the things that you’re grateful for in your lives. Thank you for taking this journey with me. Oh the places we’ll go!

Posted in Gratitude | Leave a comment

Lessons in Gratitude Day 315

I just returned from a lovely dinner with my kids. I’m glad to have gone–I thought I didn’t have the energy to go, but my daughter wanted us to have “family time,” so we went. I am grateful to her for pushing the matter, though I was quite tired and didn’t much feel like going out, particularly to a sit-down restaurant. I would’ve been content with delivery or carry out of some variety or other. In the end, after her begging, cajoling, sulking and other not-so-subtle methods of manipulation, I agreed to go to a sushi restaurant–again, not high on my list of places I felt like going. “You need to be more adventurous,” my son chimed in, though he wasn’t deeply invested in whether we went out or not. I ultimately capitulated, as I often do for my children. For better or worse, for most of their lives I’ve tended toward doing things I didn’t really want to do but they did: gone to eat at places they wanted to eat, saw movies I didn’t particularly want to see, and in myriad ways twisted and shaped my life around their needs and interests.

As I reflect on it now, tonight’s dinner was a very small price to pay for the pleasure of time in their company knowing that in a few months such times will be rare. As each of them move their lives forward in different directions and likely different geographic locations from me and from one another, the opportunities to have “family time” will be few and far between. Such times are precious and to be savored, and so I did.

One of the things I am looking forward to in the not-too-distant future is settling down somewhere. I want to be able to create a home for my children to come “back” to on those occasions when they have breaks from school, etc. I feel like I’ve been in transition for a long time–not just in the last year, but perhaps for much of the time I’ve been in California. I have not really created a space for them here that replicated the “home” we had in Michigan–a house with a yard to play in, a garden, trees, etc. set on a half acre of property. Although I have found things I appreciate about living in the East Bay section of the greater San Francisco Bay area, I am not much for city dwelling. I really am much more of a country girl. And while I’m not in a particular hurry to leave this area and don’t really have a sense of where I’m going to be, I do know it’ll be a bit more out in the country than my current urban surroundings. As I ponder my “what’s next” I hope I can move in the direction of situating myself more out in nature.

When I think about my own sojourn from “home,” which to me was where my parents were, I always felt like I had some place to come back to. My sisters and I all talk about going “home” for Christmas or other occasions, even though none of us have lived in our hometown in Indiana for decades. And even though my parents are both gone, my brothers still live there and thus, it is still “home” in that sense of place of origin to which I will return at least annually. I am grateful to have experienced a sense of home; there’s an anchoring, grounding feeling to that. And that’s what I want to create for myself, for my children, for my siblings–a place where we can all come to that feels like we belong there. One could suggest that home is where the heart is, and that’s probably true in one regard. Home is about a feeling, and is not necessarily place bound. But for me, place is vitally important in helping create and sustain the feeling of home. I haven’t quite found it yet and neither has it found me, but it’s inevitable. I look forward to making that happen. Until then, I’ll be grateful for the space I now inhabit and call home.

Posted in Gratitude | Leave a comment

Lessons in Gratitude Day 314

Today I celebrate and honor the origins of one of my oldest and closest relationships–today I celebrate the birth of my “baby sister” Ruth. It is hard to describe the depth of my relationship with Ruth. As is true with many siblings, we fought a lot and during our childhood years, she drove me crazy. I eventually came to realize–in my early adulthood (early 20s I think)–that Ruth was one of the sweetest people I’d ever met. (I can imagine her rolling her eyes and saying, “Oh please, Ter.”) I don’t know as much about her life now as I did when we were younger and growing up, but I do know that as a child there was not a mean bone in her body.

Perhaps that is part of why she drove me so crazy. She tagged along behind me always wanting to be part of what I was doing (she is four years younger than I am) and I never seemed to be able to get away from her. I was mean to her, yelling at her, excluding her from what I was doing, even being physically abusive to her at times. Rather than be deterred by this exceedingly unkind behavior, undaunted, she kept coming back around. My mother used to try to reason with me. “Your sister waits excitedly for her big sister and brothers to come home from school every day. She sees the bus coming and is ready to run out to meet you. And look at how you treat her.” I probably snorted and shrugged it off, as I was want to do back then, not recognizing that what Mom said was a true reflection of the genuine love Ruth had for all five of her older siblings, and especially for me and the brother just older than me. The three of us were kind of like a subset of the six–closer in age and got into more trouble together than did the older three.

When I was about 24 I was suddenly struck by how mean I had been to Ruth. She and I were sitting at our sister Sandy’s house in Washington, DC. I think we were both visiting there for Thanksgiving or something–Ruth from college in Connecticut and me from graduate school in Pennsylvania. I can’t even remember what precipitated it, but suddenly I burst into tears and said to Ruth, “I am so sorry for all the times I was mean to you when we were kids. I was so terrible to you. Can you please forgive me?” Now mind you, I was/am not the kind of person who suddenly bursts into tears, so this was rather unusual. Although she was likely somewhat taken aback by this, she nonetheless calmly replied, “Well of course I forgive you, silly.” And that is the essence of Ruth–loving, forgiving, caring, compassionate and all those kinds of adjectives that describe the kind of person I would like to be.

The cynical part of some people might say, “Pshaw, nobody is completely like that.” And it’s probably true that no one completely embodies the qualities that we would ascribe to saints and holy people. But saints and holy people were also human and subject to human frailties and emotions. Like anyone else, Ruth gets cranky and ill-tempered, overwhelmed and anxious, fearful and uncertain. But those things are not her essential nature, and sooner or later, regardless of what whirlwinds or tumultuous events are swirling in her life, her gentle, loving nature always finds its way to the fore. I will restate for this record at least–and I invite and encourage my siblings and those who know her well to support (or even challenge if you feel it important) my assertion–that Ruth Chamblee is one of, if not the sweetest, most loving people I know.

I don’t wax deeply emotional or sentimental very often in this blog, but I find myself with tears of gratitude and deep, deep respect, love, appreciation and admiration for my baby sister Ruth. She is my example and role model for so many things and I am blessed beyond measure to have her in my life. Today I am praying for and wishing all good things for her as she celebrates her birthday. I hope she feels as loved and blessed by the people around her as I have felt being in her presence all these years.

In 1976 in honor of “Little Sister Weekend” at my college, I wrote and performed a song in honor of my little sister Ruth. Enjoy, “Little Sister” and celebrate Ruth Chamblee with me today.

(P.S. I realized somewhat belatedly after I’d re-recorded the song and written this blog that I’ve written about my admiration for Ruth before. You can see that at http://walkinyourpower.com/blog/?p=369. So what can I say, she inspires me!)

Little Sister
Where are you, my little one, who followed me around?
Where’ve you gone? Where have you gone?
It seems I haven’t seen you for so long.
Where’ve you gone? Oh, where have you gone?
Well there you are, my old friend.
Hey kid, where have you been?
Well you’ve grown up much too fast
Or am I living in the past?
Hello Little Sister, my old friend.
I remember how we argued and we fought.
Those were the days, those were the days.
We didn’t care if it was right or not.
Those were the days, Oh, those were the days.
Hey kid, do you remember when,
Those days when you were my best friend?
Well you’ve grown up much too fast, Or am I living in the past?
Hello Little Sister, my old friend.
Well you’re not so little any more.
Where’ve I been? Where have I been?
I guess I never noticed it before.
Where’ve I been? Oh, where have I been?
When I look at you I smile at what I see;
‘Cause you’re everything I knew that you could be.
Well, you may be pretty tall and make me look pretty small;
But you’ll always be Little Sister to me.

© Marquita T. Chamblee, 1976

© Marquita T. Chamblee, 2012

Posted in Family, Gratitude | Leave a comment

Lessons in Gratitude Day 313

Tonight I am grateful for many things. Continuing the theme from last night, I remain grateful for changes in perspective that have been occurring lately. For the most part they are not epic, seismic events, but more like microshifts. They are no less significant, though, because they sort of represent tiny cracks and fissures that eventually become epic, seismic events. I can’t wait. It is hard to describe what’s happening, particularly because the changes are small enough that at first they are not noticeable. It’s kind of like, “Did I just imagine that or am I really sensing a shift in my way of thinking/being about certain things?” But no, I’m pretty sure they are occurring. I reckon I need to be taking notes on what’s happening so I can keep track of it.

Simple wonders are cause for gratitude tonight as well. As I was leaving my class this evening walking toward my car, in the heavens a gorgeous sliver of moon was hanging in the sky and above and to the right of it a bright, brilliant planet kept it company. I tried to take a picture of it with my phone, knowing it would be hopelessly inadequate for capturing the sight. What a wondrous spectacle. As a child I used to dream about being an astronomer (along with being a cowboy), or at the very least wanted to spend summer evenings looking through my telescope at what wonders hung in the heavens. I still dream of actually seeing the rings of Saturn or the giant spots on the surface of Jupiter. So far I’ve only gotten a decent look at the moon (My telescope really isn’t that good), but one of these days I’ll get to look through one of those big scopes and see something really spectacular.

The psalmist says, “When I consider your heavens, the work of your fingers, the moon and the stars, which you have set in place, what is man that you are mindful of him, the son of man that you care for him?” There are times when I look into the heavens–particularly in these past weeks with super moons and annular eclipses–when I really do think to myself how small and insignificant we are. And yet, I know we are also miraculous beings in our own right. Given all that how can I help but be grateful for all that I see around me.

Tonight will be an abbreviated entry. I was out at class until late and got home late from picking up Jared. As a purist, I like to post before midnight each day and that hour is now upon me. It will soon be tomorrow. I’ll keep paying attention to all the shifts that are happening and report back once I’ve begun to make sense of them. Until then, I’ll continue to express gratitude for all the changes great and small. Thanks for being along with me on this ride!

Posted in Gratitude | Leave a comment