Belated
Autumn
by
Jane Curran
Its
been a belated autumn. Here we are making plans for Thanksgiving and
were seeing colors we expected in mid-October. Still lots of leaves
on the trees. Still lots of green not yet turned to red or gold. Still
warm, rainy nights with grass growing. But its not September or
October. Its November and getting near to winter. Its been
a belated autumn.
Some seasons
are like that, arent they? They dont come on schedule (remember
October with its green trees?) and they dont stay on schedule
(weeks of brilliant colors instead of that peak weekend).
Some seasons arrive late and stay awhile. Some come and leave before
weve drawn a breath. Seasons of the year and the seasons of our
lives have a rhythm and a timing of their own. We participate in the
timing, but we surely have no control of the tempo.
Remember when you believed that the seasons of our lives were predictable?
We would grow up somehow, go to school, get married, have children,
get better jobs, send our kids off to college or wherever their paths
might lead them, and wait for the grandchildren to come home for Thanksgiving.
There existed a cycle and season to all things, an order, that we could
follow to keep things straightand safeand predictable.
And, of course, weve all learned in the hardest way how quickly
this set of expectations can turn to dust. Sorrowful things burst into
our lives and change these cycles and seasons forever. Sometimes its
divorce. Or the death of a child. We might experience the loss of dedication
to the work that was to change the world and right all wrongs. Someone
too young is diagnosed with a life-threatening disease. Enormous, soul-wrenching
events that are seasons out of order. Perhaps the seasons are premature.
Perhaps belated. But the seasons somehow end up way out of order and
way out of our expectations or control.
In creating our dreams and expectations for our lives, its so
easy to forget the fragility of our humanity, our vulnerability to hurt
and disaster. Just as the summer drought has created a belated autumn,
events that we can neither control nor understand become seasons that
arent what we anticipated. Then the tearing apart of our dreams
of the happy marriage or family or vocation or financial security can
make us feel cheated, bitter, or just plain miserably sad.
Life becomes an April without dogwoods or an October without golden
leaves. And we are left gasping in the grief of seasons disrupted and
hopes dissolved. How are we to live through these torn seasons?
Well, its November and everywhere lie great sweeps of beauty on
the earth. Its not the usual November beauty; its October
beauty. Its a belated autumn, but its beauty none the less.
Its beauty with a timing that has nothing to do with our expectations.
It has only to do with the grace to receive what is offered and acknowledge
the seasonwhen it comes, as it comes.
For all the splintered expectations, for all the belated cycles and
seasons, for all the grief in broken heartsthere is a rhythm felt,
but mysterious to us, that does bring back the crocus and cycles around
to flaming dogwood and a frozen earth at rest. What for us seems belated
or premature may be the perfect time. We cannot know. We can only participate
with as much kindness and hope as we can manage on any one day. And
trust the rhythm beneath us all.
Its been a belated autumn. Its been a shining reminder of
cycles and seasons that dont match the calendar of our expectations.
Belated autumn. Novembers glory.
For every thing there is a season, a time for everything under
heaven.
Jane Curran is a United Methodist minister and
the chaplaincy supervisor at Carepartners/Mountain Area Hospice where
she has served for thirteen years. Along with her chaplains responsibilities,
Rev. Curran has worked extensively with ethical issues around end of
life care. She also provides education in the Asheville/Buncombe County
community on the emotional and spiritual aspects of end of life issues.
Recently she has written a book for caregivers on the ongoing work of
being there for others. Rev. Curran is also a certified
spiritual director.

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