What are the words?

What are the words
to say a final goodbye
to the woman who
gave you birth and
made you feel like you belonged
in a family where you always
felt outside of who you were
supposed to be

To the woman who
was your rock
your best friend
the person you could talk to
for hours on end
about everything and nothing

To the woman who
taught you what kindness
and compassion look like
that strength does not have to be
angry and loud
it can be calm and quiet
purposeful, getting things done

To the woman who
never once pressured you
to give her grandchildren
and accepted your understanding
of yourself as aunt not mother
even though being a mother
was a core part of how she saw herself

To the woman who
taught you to knit
while sitting in the front seat of the car
with you in the back seat
to crochet right-handed
though she crocheted left-handed
to cross-stitch
to bake and cook
and to steal away to find quiet
and read romance novels

To the woman who
lived out her faith just like
she'd seen her own mother do
quietly serving
welcoming everyone
teaching through her actions
blooming where she was planted
living out a life of love

To the woman who
unintentionally left you
with voices in your head saying
you're not doing enough
you're too fat
you're too messy
but whose arms were always
wide open to offer a hug
to make you feel at home
and loved unconditionally

To the woman
you have been grieving for years
as the cruelty of dementia
stripped away her words
her ability to communicate
her ability to understand
and everything that made her
who she was

What are the words
to say a final goodbye
to your mom?

These are the only ones I have

Thank you for being
all of who you were
for shaping me into who I am
even though there was more
complexity to our relationship
than I realized before you
no longer had words
I've always known you wanted
the best for me and to know
I am loved for all of who I am

There are no words to say
a final goodbye
to someone whose DNA is
intimately intwined with who I am
far beyond the realms of our biology

I am my mother's daughter
I would not want to be anyone else
I cannot say a final goodbye
I will carry you with me
wrap myself in an afghan
crocheted with your love
knowing that while you are now
physically gone
you will always remain
you are part of who I am
and I would have it no other way
a photo of my mom and I, heads leaned in together with our new haircuts
My mom and me. Neither of us appreciate being in front of the camera, but this is the last picture of the two of us together, and I know she was okay with this photo.

My mom died this morning. I’m numb. I’m gutted. I’m relieved. I’m grateful. I’m … I don’t even really know. Doesn’t matter how long you’ve known the loss is coming, grief is still hard.

I suppose I could have titled this My Mother’s Daughter to make it a pair with the poem I wrote to remember my dad, but our relationships were really different. One things is consistent, I am very much parts of both of them.

Seriously, just don’t

Why do so many people
feel the need
the right
to comment on someone else's
body or weight?

"Oh, you're looking great!
You've lost a lot of weight!"

I shrug. "Maybe. I don't
pay attention to such things."

You'd think that would be enough
of a clue, a not so subtle hint
Let it go. Move on from this
but no
time to doubled down

"Well, you've lost a lot of weight!
Whatever you're doing
you look great!"
more determined than ever
to make their judgement heard

I assume it was meant kindly
but please consider what you said
and what it says
about how you think
I used to look
and how you will think again
about I look in the future
if I regain what you have
decided makes me
somehow better
for having lost

Today I Choose to Wear an Orange Shirt

Can I be honest?
I don't like the colour orange.
Sure, there are places it can spark joy
In dancing flames
In leaves turned to brilliant fiery hues
during the cooling nights of autumn
In the happiness of marigolds

But in clothing or decorating?
Nope, I just don't get it.
Maybe it's growing up in the seventies
And I can't help but associate orange
with uncomfortable brown polyester pants

And orange shirts in particular?
Let's continue with the honesty here
I'm not small. I'm not thin.
I never have been.
And wearing an orange shirt
makes me feel like a giant pumpkin
despite years of work
learning to love the body
that is mine,
childhood taunts still ring in my ears

Yes, there are options
An orange shirt pin
An orange accessory
to ease my inherent discomfort
in wearing an orange shirt

But today is not about me.
Today is a reminder of the harm done
Today is for honouring those who survived
and remembering those who did not.

I have the choice to wear what I choose
A choice that was taken away from Phyllis

And so I put aside my discomfort
I choose to listen
I choose to learn
I choose to be open to new ways
of seeing and understanding the world
I choose not to look away from the harm done
and the ways the harm continues to be perpetuated
I choose to recognize how I benefit
I choose to consider how I can walk
more gently on this land that
my ancestors settled on without invitation
I choose to be grateful for the stewardship
of the Anishinaabe and the Haudenosaunee
on whose lands I was raised and grew to adulthood
oblivious of the history right around me
and of the lək̓ʷəŋən Peoples on whose lands
I now live, work, play and write as my whole self
Today I choose to wear an Orange Shirt

Today is Orange Shirt Day. If you’re not familiar with Orange Shirt Day, please visits OrangeShirtDay.org and read Phyllis Webstad’s story.

Yes, the federal government has chosen to call it the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation, but that’s not how the day started. For thoughts on that change, I’d recomend reading this thread from @OnaagoshinAnang on Twitter.

I’m going to spend much of my day reading the memoir Apocalypse Child by Carly Bulter and listening to the Gord Downie & Chanie Wenjack Fund’s A Day to Listen. When I pause for a bit to scroll on social media, I will be seeking to amplify Indigenous voices, because those are the stories we need to hear.

And even though I’m going to be at home for much of the day, I will be wearing my Orange Shirt.

Ten years further on …

A photo of me, a woman with purple framed glasses, greying hair and a big grin, wearing a loose fitting purple tunic top, standing facing the camera with a view of the Golden Gate Bridge and the city of San Franscisco behind me.
Me! Taken by my friend Matt on a trip into San Francisco a couple of weeks ago.

ten years ago
I thought I understood
the price of hate
ten thousand children
tossed away in the name of
protecting orthodoxy
rather than allowing
homosexuals to be treated
with dignity and equality
I couldn't understand
that version of christianity
concluded I was done
never to return
but, it made me find my voice
take pride in who
God created me to be
entirely, unashamedly
queer

ten years further on...
there are micro labels
giving details to queer
I better understand
who I am
how I got to 43
before knowing
I wasn't straight
queer
cisgender
asexual
sapphically-oriented
panromantic
but still
queer

ten years further on...
the price of hate
grown exponentially
our trans and non-binary siblings
attacked verbally and physically
on a daily basis
their lives at risk for living
the truth of who
they were created to be
the charge led by those
claiming to speak
on behalf of a God
defined by love but
perverted into fear and hate
of everything
queer

ten years further on...
I've experienced the gift of love
unconditional, freely given
without expectation of return
seeking the flourishing of all
I've found faith in God
allowing my full self
all of my questions
all of my doubts
all of my queerness
without having to hide
I've learned there is much more
than I was taught
evangelical christianity isn't
the only understanding
liberation for all
is possible if your faith is
queer

ten years further on ...
I am grateful
that I didn't know
until I was ready
until my family could accept
who I am
until I could accept
who I am
I am grateful
for friends old and new
who see me for who I am
for chosen family
some by biology, most not
who love me and see
my queerness
I am grateful
for my family of faith
in-person and online
richer community
than I had ever known
because I can be fully
queer

Today is ten years since I came out about being queer. I'd only figured it out about 8 months before. It feels both like yesterday and like a lifetime ago. 
For those who have been part of the journey, thank you.
For my partner who I never imagined I would find, I love you and I'm so grateful for you and the delightfully queer family we have created. You will always have my heart.
For my chosen family, you know who you are, my life would not be as rich without you.
For my queer community of faith, I am so grateful for each and every one of you. I see Jesus in you in every encounter, in person and online. The fruit is real and it is very good. Don't ever doubt that despite what accusations are hurled in hate and fear.
For queer elders, both in age and experience, thank you for sharing your wisdom, for fighting for our rights, and seeking to make our world a place where we all can thrive.

As I have never been before

I am here
as I have never been
before

I've been on this path before
in this very spot before
so many times before
over countless years before

and yet ...

it is not the same
as it was before

I am not the same
as I was before

it does not have to be
as it was before

same path
same spot
new choices

I am here
as I have never been
before

With thanks to a couple lines from Wendell Berry’s poem “Rembember that it happened once” for inspiration found during our Lectio Divina practice a few weeks back.

The words I cannot unhear

The voice I heard inside my head
I'm not enough
I won't be good enough
no matter how hard I try
that voice was my father's

But I've learned that voice
does not speak truth
it speaks from his own childhood
I know that family story
I understand the source
I know it does not reflect who I am ...
... at least most days I do

The voice I hear inside my head
You're too fat
You're lazy
You just need to try harder
You could lose the weight
if only you tried
You'd be so much better then
that voice ...

it is my mother's

The one who was also
the voice of love
the safe place
the one who understood me
the one who was my rock
it is more complicated than I've admitted
to anyone ...
... including myself

My father's voice is silent
he can speak no more
I learned to stop listening to his hurt
before the end I knew he loved me
the best he knew how
and he was proud
of who I had become

My mother's voice???
her words was stolen years ago
by the disease that stole what made her
my rock, my safe place
my mom

But hers is the voice that still rings loudly
not the voice of her love
not the voice of her understanding
the voice unacknowledged for its complexity
for the hurt that it has caused
and still causes as I write these lines

those are the words I cannot unhear
those are the words I wish I could forget
those are words that feel like they were said yesterday
even though she hasn't spoken a comprehensible word in years
those are the words I must learn how to silence

Choosing Gratitude

unexpected
a name from the past
appears on my screen
my world tilts on its axis
forgetting for a moment
I am not the same

how easy to slip
back into old habits
back into anger
back to proecting myself
at all costs
seeking desperately to belong

suddenly
I'm the scared almost ten year old
still looking 
for a place to belong
at twenty
and even thirty years old

but I'm not
I have grown
I own my story

I understand now
what he meant in my life
why he had such power to hurt
what he taught me
and I can look back in gratitude
almost

gratitude
for believing in me
loving me
not trying to change me
accepting me
unconditionally
seeing worth and value
and beauty in me

gratitude
almost, but not quite
claiming my vulnerable story is new
old habits of fear
dig sharp claws deep

then I lived unknowing
unthinking
giving away my power
stuck in fear and shame

now I live 
understanding
able to choose
acceptance
forgiveness
gratitude

Written April 11, 2012 and originally published on my old blog.

Apparently I’ve forgotten things I knew then and also there were things then I hadn’t even begun to figure out. The story of that friendship makes much more sense now on this side of the closet door.

Also looking back … it never really was about unconditional love and acceptance, but that was how I experienced it at the time and how I remembered it when I wrote this. This side of the closet door and this far in the journey out of the toxic theology of evangelical Christianity, I have a different understanding of what those things mean.

Goodbye GLBG (Good Little Baptist Girl)

once upon a time I knew
Child of God
Created in His image
Christian
Believer

or at least
I acted like I knew

I did believe
I wanted to believe
I was scared if I didn’t believe

The GLBG
“Good Little Baptist Girl”
was what I knew

all I knew how to be
all I thought
I should be

but The GLBG
was always afraid
what if someone finds out?

what if someone realizes
The GLBG doesn’t
read her Bible
or pray
everyday
or even
every week

what if someone discovers
The GLBG would rather do
anything other than
pray out loud
in a group

what if someone discerns
The GLBG doesn’t believe quite
as hard as they do
or that the GLBG can’t
just take it on faith
because the bible
or the church
or the pastor
says it is so

The GLBG always knew
if she were known
she would be cast out
adrift
cut off
unwanted
unloved
because she was never
enough

Not good enough
Not spiritual enough
Not … something she didn’t even have words for …
enough

The GLBG knew if anyone
God included
looked deep enough
she would be found out

The GLBG hung on to faith
for as long as she could
she hid her GLBG heritage
and tried to live into
the faith she claimed
with freedom
and compassion
and grace

but eventually
she failed

even freedom
compassion
and grace are not enough
when you don’t actually believe
they could ever apply
to you
 
so I left
I wandered
I explored
I listened

eventually
I found words
for what was deep inside

I cried
I raged
I hated
I loved
I listened some more

The GLBG
slipped away
I learned
not to be afraid
not to hide

Goodbye GLBG
I don’t need you anymore
I am enough

unexpectedly
my path wandered back
I didn’t plan it
I tried to avoid it
but I found myself
at home in a church
where I am not afraid
where I hear words from the pulpit
that assure me of
unconditional love
grace
acceptance
as I am

a queer person
of faith
who doesn’t really know
what she believes
but does know
that if god
by whatever name you call
is to be found
they

(singular or plural
you choose
but definitely
non-gender specific)

they will be found
in the depths
in the darkness
in the margins
in the hopeless
in the lost
in the wanderers

Originally published on my old blog in January 2017 as my entry in that year’s Queer Theology Synchroblog on the theme of “Identity”

Reclaiming what was taken

you took something that day
or maybe, I gave it away?
No. it wasn't my choice

it was your actions
your carelessness, your selfishness
your lack of willingness ... or maybe ability
to understand how your actions affected
someone else

that shouldn't have been a surprise
the history, the pattern, 
well-established by then 
and yet ... it was 
because I was the one 
you trusted more than the others
and so I thought you were the one I could trust

I want to say you took my innocence
but someone will assume something sexual
it was never that, not between us

whatever I call what you took
after that day I trusted even less easily
you'd seen more deeply than I'd let anyone see before
still not to the truth
but back then I didn't let myself see that deep either

but you had seen what I knew then and
you had tangible reminders, words I'd written
words I'd reluctantly shared
until you sent them back

you said later it was about not deserving them
but at the time
you said less than nothing
other than you didn't want
them ... or me? ... anymore

I was ... heartbroken
the word I used that night through my sobbing tears
swinging at the park with the only person
I could still trust enough 
was ... violated

it's taken a very long time
almost thirty years
before I've felt the same freedom
to write with vulnerability that I knew before that day

I didn't block you when you 
reappeared on the edge of my life this time
I thought that was giving away my power
I let you lurk
at some level wondering when you'd engage

I'm done waiting
leaving you lurking ... 
that is what gives away my power
you're not in my world
your voice no longer holds any sway
you are gone never to return

I guess you could say I’ve been unpacking some boxes.

Mainly I wrote this for me because I needed to take back my power, but maybe it will also reminds someone else that they can also reclaim what was taken from them.

And even if it doesn’t, part of reclaiming what was taken is giving myself permission to share the words I’ve written even if they might really only make sense to me, because sometimes all we can do is tell our stories in whatever form they come most naturally.

Closing a door left open too long

I don't know why I didn't block you on sight
why I allowed you to add me to a list of friends
knowing you would quietly lurk 
and part of me would always be wondering when
you would decide to reach out 
and bring turmoil back into my world 
as you've done so many times before

I'm not really sure friends ever described 
what was between us
it was both more and less
though I've never really had 
words to explain 
us

friend, confidant
best friend's fiancée
partner of my heart
unofficially adopted brother
soulmate, stranger
betrayer, advisor
almost boyfriend
no one

all of those things
and none of those things

at times you brought so much good
into my life
you taught me I was worthy of love
... until you walked away
you taught me my words had value
... until you threw them back unwanted

I know there were reasons
I know the hurt that was in your life
I know I needed you as much as 
you needed me
and we were both broken and damaged
and it wasn't just the two of us
it was the four of us always
even when it wasn't

I know I promised I would always be there
if you decided to stop running and needed me
That's why it's hard to close the door firmly
I didn't make that promise lightly

but I'm not the same person I was then
you're probably not either,
but I wouldn't know, because this time
you didn't reach out, you just lurked

Well, actually, I am the same person
but I didn't know me then
and neither did you
I just thought I was broken
and you, many times,
made me feel less broken
until, in your own brokenness,
you broke me more

I was probably foolish to trust you
stable wouldn't have been a word
to describe anything about you 
in our previous versions of this story

there is still anger at you 
for abusing that trust
and for how guilty I feel for closing the door
but, also, maybe I'm mostly angry
at myself for hiding away who I was
and allowing myself to be so easily hurt
and believing the lie that I was broken
because I couldn't see my own value

and maybe that's the anger
I need to let go of in order to finally 
close the door 
not on who I was then
but on the power I gave you in my life

there's never been a healthy version of us
it's always been too tied up 
in our brokenness and shame

I'd still be there if you needed something
because the good you were in my world still exists
but there are boundaries now that cannot be crossed
so the door is closed 
because I know who I am
and sometimes there is no going back

The person I wrote this about knows who he is. This is me saying I’m done. What connected us then is no longer.