Last year after my struggle with breast cancer I decided to give up suffering for Lent. I felt I'd suffered enough with all the things that come with a cancer diagnosis. Suffering found me in ways that I couldn't have imagined. In March, Hazzard, my sixteen year-old cat died. He had kidney disease and so his passing wasn't a surprise, it was just painful. He was an old friend. He didn't want to be alone when he died and so he died in my arms. That was hard, that was difficult, but I was shocked at the suffering that was to come.
Losing a pet is like losing one of the family but it doesn't compare to the loss of someone from the human family. In April Andrew was killed in a motorcycle accident three days from his twenty-fifth birthday. He was part of our neighborhood's extended family. He and his sisters and my son and daughters would migrate from house to house, usually the boys at one and the girls at the other. I watched him while his parents worked. As a young man he moved into the house next door to me and started raising his son. He later moved to a different spot in the neighborhood later but I would see him skateboarding with his dog down the street or taking his son sledding. "Hi Andrew." "Hi Cheryl". And then he was gone, dead, abruptly dead. It was like I had been kicked in the gut. This year I am not giving up suffering.
The first reading for Ash Wednesday from the prophet Joel tells us:
Even now, says the LORD,
return to me with your whole heart,
with fasting, and weeping, and mourning;
Rend your hearts, not your garments,
and return to the LORD, your God.
return to me with your whole heart,
with fasting, and weeping, and mourning;
Rend your hearts, not your garments,
and return to the LORD, your God.
I've approached this Lent with a different attitude. I am ready to do what I usually do. I am giving up something that I can give up (don't ask me to give up coffee) and something that is keeping me from spending time with God and from following his command to "love one another". I am giving up Facebook and Twitter for the duration and plan to use the extra time gained getting closer to God and to my friends. It's time to do a little face-to-face or telephoning or physical letter writing to get closer to the people that I love. I guess the old fashioned ways of communicating are something that I will take up for Lent. I'm going to try to work against the excuses for not spending dedicated time with God.
These actions won't keep suffering from knocking at my door but they will lead to a healthier relationship with God. Peace be with you this Ash Wednesday.
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