ETA: Right Now

A person delivering a brown, cardboard package to another person.

I was coming down a hill on my bike when I saw a delivery van parked on the street outside a house. On the side of the van, a slogan read,

ETA: Right Now

This situation meant I had to leave the bike lane: Right Then. The van was in my way. But I digress.

Once I returned to my rightful part of the road, I found myself thinking about ETA: Right Now.

Beyond letting us know that this van moves fast, or is delivering — right now! — it made me think about how often we have to be on, or how often we feel like we have to be available immediately. This can creep into our day and into our living.

For the record, I’m also fine with,

ETA: At a time that works for us both.
ETA: After my body gets some rest.
ETA: Let’s meet in the middle.
ETA: Can you come to me?

Renee Roederer

Small Wire by Anne Sexton

Summer Storm I Christen Yates  | 2017 | oil on paper

Small Wire by Anne Sexton

My faith
is a great weight
hung on a small wire,
as doth the spider
hang her baby on a thin web,
as doth the vine,
twiggy and wooden,
hold up grapes
like eyeballs,
as many angels
dance on the head of a pin.

God does not need
too much wire to keep Him there,
just a thin vein,
with blood pushing back and forth in it,
and some love.
As it has been said:
Love and a cough
cannot be concealed.
Even a small cough.
Even a small love.
So if you have only a thin wire,
God does not mind.
He will enter your hands
as easily as ten cents used to
bring forth a Coke.

Is there a word, phrase, or image that stands out to you in a particular way?

Homecoming

A house. Public domain.

Yesterday, I asked, “How expansive can a sense of home be?”

I was returning to my town and my house and was on a plane, in fact, when I read an email from Richard Rohr. He talks about these themes too.

He says,

“In the metaphor of life as a journey, I think it’s finally about coming back home to where we started,” and, “I don’t know where that trust comes from or even what home is like, but I know I’m not going to someplace new. I’m going to all the places I’ve known deeply. They’re pointing me to the big deep, the Big Real. I do think homecoming is what it’s all about.”

There is something of an internal homecoming when we internalize all the places and people we’ve known deeply. Perhaps we do also move again or travel from place to place. But some part of homecoming is internal. Good food for thought.

Renee Roederer

How Expansive Can a Sense of Home Be?


I started this year off with a guiding question:
How expansive can a sense of home be?

With that, I’ve also engaged in a practice. I’ve tried to be frugal in a lot of directions so I can be less frugal in one. Once a month, I have traveled to see loved ones. And without fail, all the weekends I’ve done this have been the very best months of the year. I can feel my nervous system settle, and I can feel my desires come more alive every single time I do this.

And within that, I have been energized to come home to Michigan and prioritize the same kinds of relationships here, too. How expansive can a sense of home be? Michigan is home; each of these places is home. My people are my home.

So I’m asking it again. How expansive can a sense of home be?

And how might that be true for you, too, whether you actually travel or not?

Renee Roederer

P.S. I’m also reminded of this Billy Joel song.

“We Show Them Life”

Bisan Owda is a 25 year old Palestinian journalist and filmmaker. She is best known for documenting experiences in Gaza on social media during this time of violence.

This video really moved me. She says, “This is the rule: When they show us death, we show them life,” as she leaves the unending sounds of drones to distribute water.

May this vision prevail and thrive, and right now at this time and in this vulnerability, in Gaza.