A hearty welcome to the generous batch of new subscribers from this week’s Festival of Homiletics! It was an honor to share some thoughts about HopePunk and the Gospel: Narrating Hope When All Seems Lost. I’m planning to summarize and distill those thoughts for an upcoming article. In the meantime, I’m glad you’re with us. Here’s a recent introductory post.
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Dear Blue Roomies,
You may recall that three weeks ago, I got baptized.
A second notable thing happened that morning. At the end of the worship service, a woman I’d never met came through the greeting line and let me know that she was hoping to pray with a pastor. We sat on a back pew in the mostly empty sanctuary and she shakily told me about her life. I offered up some words of prayer, and when I finished, she proceeded to pray for me, an unexpected grace. Taken together, these twin events of “baptism” and prayer reminded me that while pastors are leaders in their congregations, we are called to be servant-leaders, receiving as much as (or sometimes more than) we give.
That afternoon I got on a plane for preacher camp with treasured friends, a week of fun and friendship in that same vein of mutuality: lots of listening and being listened to, laughing and (some) crying together, commiseration, singing, studying, sharing of WTF ministry moments, and more. It’s a boisterous, relaxing time.
On Wednesday evening of preacher camp, I started developing a few dots of rash on my forehead above my left eye. At first I assumed it was menopausal acne, but it gradually got worse. By the time I flew home Friday I’d convinced myself it was a patch of eczema. I put some of Robert’s prescription-strength lotion on it and didn’t think any more about it.
Saturday morning it was no better. As I weighed the merits of consulting Dr. Google (terrible bedside manner; always suggesting the most dire outcome), it slowly dawned on me: This rash doesn’t itch. It… hurts. My heart sank, knowing what that meant. Robert had just gotten on a plane for San Diego, so I drove myself to urgent care. It was a long wait for a short appointment. The nurse practitioner walked in, took one look at my face and said, “Did you have chickenpox as a child?” Sigh.
Shingles.
For the uninitiated: after you recover from the chickenpox, the virus remains in your body for the rest of your life. At moments when the immune system is weak, the virus can kick into gear, traveling along the nerves, those below-ground cables we mostly think nothing about, until. At its worst, my shingles rash (and accompanying pain) progressed from my forehead down to the side of my face, spreading to the scar from when I had a mole removed two years ago. Like a lightning strike finding its quickest path to ground, it sought out the newest, most vulnerable patch of skin on my face. I’m thankful it bypassed the eye, at least. Shingles rashes often sprout up on the torso, easily masked with clothing, but there was no hiding mine. I sported a bandaid above my eyebrow for days on end, inviting caring questions and sympathy.
No, I hadn’t gotten around to the vaccine yet.
Yes, you’re right, I’m pretty young to have gotten this.
They say that stress can bring it on.
Do you have any idea how absurdly competent I am? How productive? I’m fine receiving the waters of baptism from an exuberant toddler, or a word of prayer from a woman trembling with anguish. Those are welcome reminders that we’re all walking each other home, like Ram Dass says. But this? There’s no suffering in silence, no masking our enfleshed reality. I’m just a person occupying a weird and mystifying body, like you. (Even worse: we’re all basically worms with appendages. Thank you John Green.)
Robert developed shingles ten years ago after leaving a stressful job. Not during the job, mind you; the shingles came on while enjoying a solo hiking trip in Shenandoah. We assumed it was a series of insect bites, or a contact rash. But no. It came on while he was relaxed, unguarded. It astounds me, the body’s calculation of when it can break down; in my case, while wrapped in the safe cocoon of preacher camp. I’d had a massage just that afternoon, for heaven’s sake.
It’s been three weeks since the diagnosis, and I’m basically back to normal. I was wiped out for several days, though. Even when my energy started to return, thanks to well-timed antivirals and steroid, I continued to receive pleading texts from my spouse on the West Coast: Please rest. You don’t want any complications. I took many naps.
“I have shingles.” It’s something I said often, as people’s caring attention wandered from my eyes to just above them. But my therapist reminds me that illness isn’t something we have, like having a cell phone or a water bottle. Dr. Gabor Mate, author of the wonderful book The Myth of Normal, talks about illness, especially chronic illness, as an organic process that we move with (and sometimes through). It isn’t separate from us. This idea isn’t a romanticization, it’s an undertaking, that’s all… a reality to be embodied. My kid is ADHDing. Or depression-ing. How appropriate that we say I’m grieving, not I have grief.
My therapist said, “You’re shingling. So let yourself do that.”
If we “have” an illness the way we “have” an ugly scarf our aunt gave us, we can stick it in a drawer and not think about it. But if it’s a journey, then it warrants some time and attention, even if we were forced into it. I couldn’t parent or write or pastor or spouse with the same intensity because I was shingling too, which needed space and care. It was necessary for me to devote time to it, even if I didn’t relish the task.
I wonder sometimes whether learning to relish taking care of the inconvenient and unsightly parts of ourselves is the real work.
What’s your body wanting to spending time on right now? Are you allowing yourself to do so?
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What I’m Up To
While we’re on the topic of bodies talking to us: this time last year, I was preparing for sabbatical. I recall this not because I looked at a calendar but because my body has been recalling the various anticipations of last May. I’ll be working this summer, but I’d like to honor the echoes of sabbatical through a series of posts that revisit some of the themes I explored for those three months. Think of it as our summer curriculum. Paid subscribers will receive details on Monday. Members and friends of Trinity Presbyterian Church can receive complimentary gift subscriptions; just ask.
Speaking of Trinity, I’m preaching Sunday at 10:15 EDT, in person or on livestream.
The latest Ted Lasso post is here.
Hope: A User’s Manual is a Good Read for Difficult Times.
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Link Love
I mentioned The Soundtrack Show recently. This podcast got me through the early months of the pandemic, then went on a painfully long hiatus. They’re back with a multi-part series on the music from E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial. Each episode was fascinatingly well done, but the final one was the strongest of the bunch.
Steady on.
I am so sorry. Yes our bodies are mystifying and difficult. I got the vaccine during seminary! I was 50, my parents and parents in law were ill and dying - seminary was hard and i thought this would be the time. Oddly it has not appeared - the vaccine seems to have been effective. Now I manifest stress inother ways - my teeth grind, My legs cramp and I crave sugar. No vaccine for these???
MaryAnn, I’m so sorry you’re having to shingle and I empathize! Some years ago, my daughter Juli and I took a trip to Costa Rica. It was a wonderful combination of beautiful new sights, birds and animals (howler monkeys), and adventures, some of which challenged me. As the week passed, I developed what I thought was a cold sore on my lips. It got bigger, more painful and “the ugliest cold sore I’ve ever had”! When I saw my doctor, she immediately named it. It went up into my nose and I had to take time off from work and lie low for a week.
The idea of being with whatever one’s malady is as opposed to jumping immediately into recovery as very helpful at this time in my life!
Get the shot!! I don’t remember it as being all that debilitating?!😉