Weekly Discussion Group

Points of Light, a certified Teaching Chapter of United Centers for Spiritual Living, hosts a weekly reading and discussion group. Please feel free to join us any time.
WEDNESDAYS, 5:30-7:00 pm at Ann Arbor Interfaith Center (Click for a MAP)

Next Meeting: January 6, 2010

Erin's Blog

The Journal of Erin Fry, RScP - Points of Light's Founder and Facilitator.

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Navy Seal Wisdom

Today I called my mother’s doctor to inform her I was concerned about my mother’s health. I believed my mother was not getting the rest she needed to heal the radiation burns on her legs and every time I recommended more rest, she said that it didn’t make any difference. So I was taking my case to her doctor, but first, I had to get through the receptionist.

I explained to the receptionist that my mother would respond to a doctor’s order, such as an order for rest in the afternoon or to stay off her feet after a certain number of hours. The receptionist took the message and said she would give it to the doctor.

This call to the doctor’s office was the latest of my attempts to stop the busyness of mother’s life and create time and space for her to rest and heal. I was feeling frustrated and overwhelmed by my mom’s unwillingness to go along with my plan.

I decided to stop by the yacht club to see Barnaby. Instead I found Chuck Pfarrer sitting at a table with his portable office. He was exactly the person I needed to see.

As a cancer survivor, surely he knew the correlation between rest and healing. I thought I would enlist him in my efforts to get my mother to rest more. But the conversation took many turns as he artfully and skillfully and humorously took me down a road toward realization and compassion.

First it was established that my mother is now able to sleep at night with the help of her new medications. This, he said, was crucial. Then he questioned whether her condition was getting worse. Well, no, not exactly, I admitted.

Next he had me consider my mother’s baseline. As an example he asked how many times my mother had taken a nap in her lifetime. Hmmm. Good point. I recall my mother taking a nap in the 70’s when she had 4 young children and was going to school full-time to get a college degree. I conceded she rarely took a nap. That is her baseline he said.

Ok, I get it. My request is unrealistic given her baseline. An unenforceable rule as Dr. Luskin would call it, and it was only causing me grief.

I started crying and Chuck sat across from me, behind an opened steel brief-case. He said, I am holding your hand here. Without actually reaching over the table and taking my hand, I knew he was. Chuck, a big, strong Navy Seal, who had lived through countless military operations and medical procedures, was lovingly walking and laughing me through the grief.

Then he had me consider that everyone deals with recovery in their own way and that for some, like himself, the best way is to stay busy and active and not sit on the couch.

I wanted my mom to read about the law of circulation so that she would slow down and allow herself to receive, but Chuck was telling me about how some people just feel better when they are giving and doing. And, he said, this is her comfort zone.

In the end I knew he was right, my mother was doing the best she could and I was the one who needed to relax! Thanks to Chuck, I left the yacht club without my unenforceable rule. I am so glad I followed my instinct to stop by. I thought I was going to see Barnaby and get help for my mom. Instead I found a Wise Warrior Soul and got help for myself.

Thursday, June 11, 2009

Birdsong

















While I was at the Celebrate Your Life Conference on Sunday, I used my lunch-break to take a walk. As I approached the main intersection I felt something was amiss and I heard a strange sound buzzing in the air. I looked around to see what was making the noise.


When I reached the corner I stopped and listened.
It sounded like an electrical buzz and at first I thought it was the traffic signal. Eventually I discovered the sound was coming from the birds.

I continued to listen. It seemed as though the birds were singing the song of the traffic signal --- working together and amplifying it.

I was shocked. I know birds are mimickers (recent house-sitting experience reminded me that birds sing the song of car alarms and other electrical devices) but somehow this seemed over the top.

At first I felt a bit sorry for the birds and then I realized we are not much different --- picking up the sounds around us and amplifying them. As I walked away from the intersection, I reminded myself of the importance of finding and singing our natural song.

This morning I am happy to wake at the FryFarm. Out here on the county line, we have no internet or cell reception. Very little electrical interference. I enjoy the sounds of the birds and I can be still and hear my own song.

I am grateful for Rickie Byars Beckwith who reminds me there are songs inside each one of us.

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Celebrate!













I recently returned from the Celebrate Your Life conference. This was my first time attending the conference. In February, when I received the brochure in the mail, my immediate reaction was to throw it away. We had just arrived in Michigan and as far as I knew, no one had our address. “Celebrate Your Life?” I had never heard of it before and have no idea how I got on the mailing list. Frankly I was a little bothered since I have spent the last several years eradicating unwanted mail.


But somehow I resisted the urge to discard the brochure. I opened it and began reading about some of the authors who would be presenting. Michael Beckwith. He is one of my favorites. Debbie Ford, I love her work. Hmmmm. I didn’t know the other authors and the price seemed prohibitive, but something told me to hang onto the brochure. So I put it back in the mail bag and there it sat.

A couple of months passed, and eventually I picked up the bag and went through the papers. I found the brochure and this time I had a feeling it would be important for me be there. I thought about it for a while and then picked up the phone and made the financial commitment.

This conference was an amazing experience --- one that has catapulted me into greater awareness and celebration of myself and all of life. I had so many wonderful realizations, revelations and insights. I am so grateful to have received this brochure. I now believe it was one of those divine gifts and I am glad that I listened and allowed myself to accept it.

Saturday, June 6, 2009

Daisy


This morning I took a walk in whatever green I could find near the Yorktown Shopping Center outside of Chicago. I am here for the Celebrate Your Life Conference. Fortunately there is a lovely little pond with tree-lined banks at the neighboring Baptist Seminary/Conference Center. [For a second I thought the sign said Buddhist Conference Center because I could only see the “ist” and there was a beautiful contemplation tree that reminded me of where the Buddha awakened.]

The area where I walked was abundant with pinecones and daisies. I looked at the daisies and thought about the game I used to play as a girl, “He loves me, he loves me not.”

Now this games seems so foreign to me: the belief that there is any truth to this game, that there is any power in it, or that nature of life would be so fickle. What I have learned about Life (or God or the Universe or whatever you want to call it) is that it is always loving --- not just sometimes, on certain days or under certain conditions, but all of the time. I don’t have to ask it as a question “loves me?” I know that it is true. And I am extremely blessed to have this in my relationship with my husband where I receive constant unconditional love.

I pick my daisy and carry it back with me to the Westin where my Conference is being held. I was happy to hear the panelist, Elizabeth Lesser, say that there really is no difference between the best-selling authors on the stage and the people in the audience as each one of us, if put on the stage, has incredible wisdom to share. This too I know is true. I am grateful for the reminders of truth everywhere I go.

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Best Friend

















The other day in the car, Barnaby was telling someone about a particular
SNL digital video which we love so much. He said my best friend’s kids made the video. I noticed myself starting to object to the term “best friend” but I didn’t say anything because I didn’t want to distract from the point he was making. Best friend? This is not how I would have described a person who is not my own age
and who I have only seen a few dozen times. What was my objection to him saying that my prayer partner was my best friend? We have been talking on the phone 3 mornings per week since January of 2004 (in the beginning we spoke 5 days per week). We have shared the most intimate details of our lives. She knows practically everything about me and always sees and knows the best for me. I paused on that thought. She knows the best for me. She sees it when I cannot see it myself. Yes, I concluded, she is a best friend. I have more than one prayer partner and I am grateful to have a life full of best friends and people who know the highest and best for me. Sometimes my best friend is my mother, sometimes it is my husband, or brother, or teacher, or sometimes it is even me…