Yet another threshold

Photo by Max Harlynking on Unsplash

Too many people see the years beyond 70 as a static period in which there is little change, just a slowing down. But in Anam Cara, John O’Donohue encourages us to “visualize the mind as a tower of windows”:

Sadly, many people remain trapped at the one window, looking out every day at the same scene in the same way. Real growth is experienced when you draw back from that one window, turn, and walk around the inner tower of the soul and see all the different windows that await your gaze. Through these different windows, you can see new vistas of possibility, presence, and creativity

I have had to look through a lot of windows recently, and ones that I would not have chosen. However, although the paths taken have not been easy, each was part of a different journey in which I learned something about myself. Recently, someone asserted that my life was “really hard.” My immediate internal response was intense irritation, but I politely noted that my life was not so hard—after all, bad things happen to everyone. I quickly realized that I was annoyed because the kindly offered words did not acknowledge that I was grateful for the many blessings that accompanied the view from each unchosen and unanticipated window.

Photo by Remy Penet on Unsplash

By now, you’re probably wondering who is this person. I am a social scientist who is always gathering data and extrapolating from those data. I am also a deeply spiritual person, so I have the tendency to infuse my experiences—which might, on the surface, look ordinary—with spiritual meaning to deepen my understanding of our lives during these challenging times.

As we age, many of us view our lives as a series of milestones and thresholds that are usually clothed in ritual. For some, a milestone marks the completion or culmination of something (e.g., college degree, wedding anniversary, retirement, death of a loved one, etc.), whereas a threshold signals the commencement or start of something (e.g., wedding, career or life transition, relocation, etc.). Crossing a new threshold is always a challenge and requires a certain amount of trust.

Nearly three years ago, for example, I said goodbye to my late husband, Jerry. This was not how the two of us had envisioned growing old together. Instead, I was called to do such difficult, intense, and sacred work as Jerry’s primary caregiver for seven years…and now that work was over—a major milestone for me. Shortly thereafter, I crossed a threshold and slowly embarked on a journey of grieving—a journey made more complicated by the COVID restrictions.

Fast-forward 15 months. My journey of more-or-less solitary grieving ended abruptly—a milestone for me—when a routine blood test revealed chronic leukemia. Even though I still had more grieving to do, the social scientist in me volunteered to participate in a 15-month clinical research trial—another threshold and a healing journey for me in the company of dedicated caregivers/researchers.

Photo by Marcelo Leal on Unsplash

Along the way, I encountered two unplanned pauses when nasty falls resulted in broken bones in both of my hands, my wrist, and later my kneecap. In each case, I was forced to slow down even more and give my body the time it still needed to heal. Because, on both occasions, I needed to be cared for more intensely, I joined a larger group of elderly people who were no longer able to live independently. This was, for me, a very new journey into vulnerability and community.

Gratefully, my disease is now in remission and my bones are healing—a milestone for me—and I can begin to allow myself to look through new windows at possible future thresholds. Unlike the thresholds of the last decade that I could not ignore, this time I get to decide which doors and thresholds I will open and cross.

John O’Dononue offers this blessing for “a new beginning”:

Awaken your spirit to adventure,

Hold nothing back, learn to find ease in risk;

Soon you will be home in a new rhythm,

For your soul senses the world that awaits you.

To Bless the Space between Us

Although I’ve faced many (sometimes abrupt) beginnings in my life, I’m still not comfortable being vulnerable—or not knowing what comes next. Here are the questions that now consume my anticipated re-entry into a “new normal”: How can I take all that I’ve learned over these challenging years and choose among “all the different windows” that await my gaze? How can I make sure that the threshold I am about to cross will nurture my well-being and resilience? And, perhaps most critical, what might be holding me back?

Photo by Les Argonautes on Unsplash

I now can see that I will not have answers to these questions before it is time for me to step gingerly across yet another threshold as it appears in this wild journey called life. To avoid stasis and “just a slowing down,” I must be content to make a choice and, in the words of Jan Richardson, writer, artist, and ordained Methodist minister, “Let what comes, come.”

14 thoughts on “Yet another threshold

  1. I’m so glad you shared this story which is deeply personal but immensely valuable for others to see. As a now “friend from a distance” I had no clue of the journey you’ve been on and hearing it from you was meaningful. So inspiring! So encouraging! Here’s to you Carol and all of us as we “let what comes come”!- jeanne markell

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    • Jeanne,
      Thank you so much for your lovely comment and kind words. I take pride in knowing that, after all these years, we are still “friends from a distance.“ So, for all of us, “Let what comes, come.”

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  2. Thank you for sharing part of your journey, Carol. I will always think of you with gratitude and admiration. While I am experiencing very different milestones and thresholds in my life, I can appreciate discomfort in vulnerability. I’m so glad to know you are healing! Sending all the best your way!

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    • Jenny,
      It is so good to hear from you. Thank you for your lovely comments and kind words. I will always be grateful for the way you welcomed me and Jerry into the choir. We were both your biggest fans.
      Packing up your kids and moving to a different state is clearly an important threshold in your life journey! Sending Lenten blessings and prayers your way.

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  3. Dear Carol – you have so beautifully expressed what has been your life in the last years. I’ve known all of this but have not been aware of your deepest feelings during this time. Your words say it all so eloquently and I hope putting this in words helps you. You are a strong woman and there’s more life waiting for you. Love you!

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    • Carol,
      Reading your message is a perfect way to start my Sunday morning. Throughout this journey, I have been blessed with the love and support of family and dear friends like you…and, for that, I will always be grateful. And, yes, It’s been helpful for me to put my story in words and get ready to “Let what comes, come.” Love you, too!

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