The Time Inbetween

Sunrise over the Atlantic Ocean on March 22, 2015, photographed from the shores of Ocean City, MD by Robert J Banach Photography. Wikimedia Commons.


New life and new possibility can be jolting, even when it’s exactly what we’ve been hoping for. Have you ever had moments like that? I think of relationships that are reconciling, difficult situations that suddenly resolve, or new opportunities finally appearing on the horizon after we’ve been tilling the soil for so long.

This has been on my mind as spring unfolds, and as I consider new questions and new experiences emerging in my own life.

I had never thought about this before, but Easter — not just a day, but a season — isn’t only an arrival of new life, but also a period of waiting. That’s what happens in the Easter story. People are jolted by life, and then they wait for fifty days before a transformative experience at Pentecost. In my own spiritual tradition, I’ve often thought of Advent or Lent as seasons of waiting. But Easter is as well.

So if you feel like you’re on the precipice of something important — a new possibility, a reorientation, a redeeming moment, or a consequential change — but you’re not fully there yet, it’s wise to wait with intention and let it continue to unfold, trusting that it’s finding its way to fullness.

You don’t have to rush what is still becoming.

Renee Roederer

In Bloom

Blooms of a Bradford pear tree. Photo: Renee Roederer

As I mentioned earlier this week, I spent four days at the Leadership Conference of the Epilepsy Foundation of America in Bloomington, Minnesota. That’s a small amount of time, but when I returned and was getting a ride home from the airport, I was surprised to see so many Bradford pear trees suddenly in bloom nearly everywhere I looked.

Where I live, we are entering a season when we can witness the changes of spring on the scale of a week, or even just a handful of days. Later, still on my way home, I stopped to get coffee and found myself standing outside, taking a few pictures of the blooms. A woman noticed what I was doing and said, “These all opened overnight. They weren’t like this yesterday.”

I know the scale of visual change is much greater at this time of year, but when it is not this obvious, I wonder how much we miss simply because we’re not paying attention. I suppose this is a reminder to keep looking.

Renee Roederer

“I’m Going to Encourage You Not to Be Stoic”

“The Power of Us” — Epilepsy Foundation Leadership Conference

This week, I’m in Minneapolis for the Leadership Conference of the Epilepsy Foundation of America. I adore this conference because it’s a wonderful experience to reunite with colleagues and friends. We have many opportunities to learn and make fun memories together. At this conference, you can do a deep dive on health equity and have karaoke. Both are happening over the next few days.

As people have led speeches and workshops, I’ve noticed how many have shared the vulnerabilities of their own stories. 1 in 26 people will be diagnosed with epilepsy at some point in their lifetime, and 1 in 10 will have a seizure at some point in their lifetime. That means there are a lot of people living with epilepsy, and a lot of people who are caring for someone with epilepsy.

People have been very personal here. There is a “Why” behind their work. Walter Koroshetz, former director of NINDS (the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke), spoke today, and he, too, made his remarks personal. He shared that he appreciates these deep ways of sharing in our community.

“I’m going to encourage you not to be stoic,” he shared.

I bet a lot of us — inside this community and beyond — could appreciate that reminder.

And I hope whatever we are experiencing, we can be real and find our people. Everyone needs that. Everyone deserves that.

Renee Roederer

Two Songs, Two Lessons from Fred

Black and white image, Fred Rogers with the Neighborhood Trolley. Wikimedia Commons.

I admit these were strange songs to play joyfully in the car with the windows down. I didn’t even select them. They came on shuffle. But I certainly chose to enjoy them. There I was, cruising through Ann Arbor on a 70 degree-day with the wind blowing through my hair, listening to Mr. Rogers.

It’s such a good feeling to know you’re alive!
It’s such a happy feeling you’re growing inside,
And when you wake up ready to say
I think I’ll make a snappy new day! (Snap, Snap!)

Of course, this is the closing song of every episode of Mr. Rogers’ Neighborhood. And at the end of the song, Fred Rogers would always say the same thing. This also played out of my window.

“You make each day a special day. You know how, by just your being you.”

I’ve always found it interesting that he chose to say “your” being you. It could have been less clunky if he said, “You know how, by just being you.” But I wonder if he said “your” because it’s good for us to make “being you,” something that is really ours — a kind of specialness that can’t be taken away.

Good lesson.

Next the hymn “How Firm a Foundation” came on. I don’t make it a habit to play hymns in my car (though no shade to anyone who does) but this one is special to me. I used to love watching one of my most formative and influential people sing this hymn. He would come totally alive singing these words:

The soul that on Jesus hath leaned for repose,
I will not, I will not desert to its foes;
that soul, though all hell should endeavor to shake,
I’ll never, no, never, no, never forsake.

He was so deeply convicted, and you knew that his fervent singing was connected to stories of prevailing in struggle and feeling loved within it all.

I remembered that Fred Rogers also used to say,

Values “are caught, not taught.”

I caught this one. We watch others and internalize so much — for good and for ill. I’m grateful for the ones who have shaped us well.

Good lesson.

Renee Roederer

Activated

An analog clock reads 8:00. Public domain image.


Just checking in: How are you all doing after we became aware of a dire ultimatum with a timeline on Tuesday – that genocide, even nuclear weapons, might happen?

That situation really shook me. And there were many reasons for it. Now we have an unsteady ceasefire, and that’s a good thing… sort of. It still has a time clock. I joined many in being deeply concerned for the people of Iran, as well as the globe itself, and the fallout of hearing that “an entire civilization will die tonight.” And if you, or anyone you know, has been a victim of abuse in their own personal lives, that intense line in the sand,

“If you do this, I will…” level of threat gets deeply activated.

And I experienced that in a way I haven’t felt in a long time. For the first time in a year, I was doomscrolling. I usually have personal practices to get me out of this freeze state. But I went there. And maybe you did, too.

For me, the cycle went like this.

  1. The administration is physically activating me and connecting to early life experiences I’ve had.
  2. I am checking my phone to not feel crazy or alone.
  3. I am getting triggered by the intensity I’m seeing on my phone.
  4. The administration is physically activating me and connecting to early life experiences I’ve had… wash… rinse… repeat.

And if you were feeling overwhelmed or alone, I am telling you this so that you know you aren’t alone.

Most of all, I’m angry that Iranians are living with immense danger and instability. And I’m angry that many – if not most – of us have to feel this, too.

Renee Roederer

Knowing the Trees

Pink, crabapple flowers. Public domain image.

I was driving down the street when I noticed the bare branches of a row of trees. “Those will soon be filled with pink blooms,” I thought.

I only know that because I have lived here long enough to become familiar with the trees near my home. I suppose, in their own way, they are neighbors, too. When you live in a place long enough, you begin to know its rhythms.

I am not knowledgeable enough about trees — especially when they are bare — to identify what kinds they are. For me, that part is always a discovery. It’s a joy to notice their patterns for the first time each year. And it’s also a joy to have internalized them and be able to anticipate what is coming.

Renee Roederer