Out of the shadows

Most of us have something that has scored our soul, a darkness that we hide, or hide from until we become strong enough, or are forced by circumstances, or the heat of love to pry our fingers off the door and let the light in.

Sometimes the shadow flits so quickly across our vision that it doesn’t register as darkness. We say life is good. We don’t look back.

Sometimes it has gouged a canyon in our psyche and we think that is who we are. The lone pine, bent and twisted in the wind.

The darkness can be long-standing loneliness, the shadow of depression, chronic illness, a damaging relationship.

It can be the dread of what may come, or the fear that what we yearn for may never come.

Or fear of failure.

It can be a simple hurt, injustice or betrayal.

Or the loss of a loved one.

Whether we sing hello to the darkness that is definitely not our old friend (Song of Silence, anyone?) or laugh it away, no one survives life in our world without an injury, or two.

What do we do with the darkness, this unwelcome presence?

Does it matter?

When my firstborn had her first splinter in her finger, I sterilized a needle in a flame, as my mother and grandmother had done before me, and picked up K’s hand to tease out the splinter. She screamed before I even touched her and yanked her hand away. Huge tears followed, with pleading to leave it alone. K was sure it would come out with soaking, and without that nasty needle. Being a soft-touch first-time mother, I conceded and left the splinter to work its way out.

As I’m sure you have guessed, it didn’t. Instead, daily her finger grew redder and began to swell. The pain intensified as infection increased. Finally, she offered her trembling hand to have the nasty splinter removed. It was embedded in a very unhappy finger. What would have taken seconds the first day took many painful minutes of poking and digging with the dreaded needle.

Even if we try, I don’t think we are as good at hiding the darkness as we think we are. In spite of our efforts to suppress it, it can come out in many different ways: snide remarks or sarcasm, anger, belittling others, addictions and cravings (food is mine), depression, incapacitating fears or incomplete relationships. From meanness to low self-confidence, the darkness we suffer at some time in our lives leaves its mark.

Too sadly, it may drive us to leave an unhealthy mark on others as well. I understand the dysfunction in my father’s family, but that knowledge by itself doesn’t take away my wounds from his darkness.

I have been grateful to learn I don’t have to ignore, or accept the darkness or its effects on me. I can acknowledge it and hold my hand up for whatever it takes to rid my soul of the shadow before it can fester, or for cleansing if infection has already set in.

With the trust, and needs, of a child, I hold myself up to the Great Physician, the one who suffered far more than I ever will so he could bring light to every dark place. Heal every wounded heart. Dry every tear. Make every fractured soul whole.

Sometimes the healing hurts. Sometimes the path is way longer than we would like. Sometimes it doesn’t look like he is there at all.

In this world, he doesn’t promise perfection. He isn’t our Santa Claus waiting to deliver whatever our little heart desires.

He wants us whole, and holy. He will use whatever is necessary to clean the wound.

No matter the means, his way leads us toward the light.

Out of darkness.

Not one sparrow

My prayer request list is growing heavy. A young family loses their husband/father to a vicious cancer. A fiancée, instead of planning her wedding, dreads the anniversary of the jog her loved one never returned from last year. A son goes off to college, and two months later is diagnosed with stage four cancer. Others battle infections, chronic pain, family hostility, strokes, break-ups, houses that won’t sell, or bills that can’t be paid.

It’s pulling me to my knees.

Sometimes in tears, always with anguished heart, I lift the aching ones up to the father who cares.

In this huge, crazy world, how can anyone care about every person, every family, and every broken heart?

I know only one who can, because he is love. Love that never fails. The source of life, and in the end, all we have.

And not one sparrow falls to the earth without his knowledge.

The common house sparrow is probably the least noble or photographed of all feathered creatures. They certainly aren’t sought after by birders, since sparrows cluster in towns and cities, and their little tan bodies display little to warrant attention.

We’d expect him to notice great birds of flight, or colorful plumage

swan in Switzerland ©Jack H Thompson
swan ©Jack H Thompson
Roseate Spoonbill
Roseate Spoonbill

Black-bellied whistling duck
Black-bellied whistling duck
Great Blue Heron
Great Blue Heron

Hummingbird, Cloud Forest, Ecuador
Hummingbird, Cloud Forest, Ecuador

Red Tailed Hawk, Celery Fields, FL
Red Tailed Hawk, Celery Fields, FL
Sandhill cranes in flight
Sandhill cranes in flight

or rare appearances.
Blue-footed Boobie, Fernandina, Galapagos
Blue-footed Boobie, Fernandina, Galapagos

Nazca Boobie, Espanola, Galapagos
Nazca Boobie, Espanola, Galapagos

Sparrows can’t swim, fish or land or take off in the water.
Flightless Cormorant, Galapagos
Flightless Cormorant, Galapagos

Galapagos penguin
Galapagos penguin

Anhinga with fish, FL
Anhinga with fish, FL

Galapagos Heron
Galapagos Heron
Brown Pelican, Sarasota, FL
Brown Pelican, Sarasota, FL
Great Egret, Celery Fields, FL
Great Egret, Celery Fields, FL

And they certainly aren’t fierce or noble.
Osprey, Florida
Osprey, Florida

Nevertheless, each tiny sparrow gets his attention.

And every hair on your head. Thick and curly, thin or balding, he knows them all, even the ones you washed down the drain in the shower.

He knows our loses in more detail than we do.

And he cares.

By now, are you singing this song?

All photographs are property of Jack H Thompson. All rights reserved
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