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Aboard Cruise Ship Earth with Coronavirus:  One Woman’s Antidote

“It’s not safe to leave the house,” says my 10-year old son. “We could catch the coronavirus!”

Maybe he’s right. I don’t know for sure. For perspective, it’s March 7, long before NYC’s schools close and we’re ordered to shelter at home. “It’s Central Park, baby,” I reply. “Plus, we need fresh air and exercise to keep us healthy!”

After several minutes of back and forth and some arm twisting in the form of me agreeing to buy Nutella crepes en route, I convince my son to leave the apartment.

Is my son feeling prudent? Or a wee bit paranoid?

Over the last weeks, I’m sure all of us have tinkered with our internal scale of being prudent vs. being paranoid when making decisions. On one side of the scale there’s paranoid, knee-jerk, panicky behavior like buying thirty extra rolls of toilet paper and armfuls of Trader Joes’ dark chocolate peanut butter cups. I MIGHT NEEEEED THEM! 

Then there’s prudence. I’m not in love with the word “prudent” either, folks, but I do love me some alliteration. On this side of the balance there’s prudent, discerning, thoughtful behavior-– kinda like buying five extra packs of toilet paper and gobs of peanut butter cups. Single mother and two children cannot survive on toilet paper alone!

Truth is, we’re all making decisions during the pandemic in different ways. In deeply personal ways. What’s prudent for you, might feel paranoid to me. And vice versa.

When the Novel Coronavirus outbreak first shut down Wuhan City in China at the end of January I was packing my bags for a trip to Thailand. With a layover in Taiwan. A week before the trip I froze up looking at a city under lockdown. This looks serious. I started having second thoughts. Should I go? What if I get sick? What if I get stuck in Thailand or Taiwan and can’t return to the US to my boys? I mean, my ex-husband was flying in to NYC from where he lives in Italy (oh, the future irony) to be with my sons, and I was looking forward to being at an elephant sanctuary on the tropical Mae Wang River on a spiritual retreat (can I get a “Hallelujah” and an “Amen”?). But what if the ten day trip mutated into a quarantine on return? Flights from China were already thwarted. Taiwan (and eventually Thailand) surely couldn’t be far behind.

What on Earth should I do? (I love that phrase, by the way, because it implies that there’s other planetary wisdom out there).

I reach out to friends.

One of my best friends flat out says, “DON’T go. Don’t risk it.”

I call another friend. “You’ll be fine. You’re not transiting in China. Remember SARS? That was way overblown.”

Then I call my friend who was co-leading the group trip to Thailand. “I’m scared, and feel irresponsible leaving my kids. What if something happens to me? What if I get sick or can’t get back to the U.S.?” I say for the first time aloud.

“Trust your intuition,” she declares. “It’s never failed you.”

Oh, yes. My own trusty inner voice. That faithful internal GPS that’s never steered me into the Hudson River on my way home. Why didn’t I think of that?

Two reasons.  One: my internal GPS whispers. She doesn’t shout. And two: Fear has a way of clouding over that sage voice and gobbling it up like nutella crepes on a Saturday morning. Fear is the foe of our trusty inner knowing.

We were due to leave for Thailand on a Saturday evening. I promised myself to decide within the week — by Friday. I prayed on it. Meditated on it. Journaled on it. Walked around in Central Park reflecting on it. Obviously this was way before half of NYC was dressed in full body condoms scraping shelves clean of all products punctuated by 6 feet of distance as I currently write this. And, it was long before my 10-year old son was anxious about leaving the apartment, if it weren’t for the promise of Nutella crepes.

I ask for guidance. Then comes the whisper, “The answer is in your body.”

WHAT? Is this hide-and-seek?!

But I know what the whisper means.

I feel into it — into my body.

What does it feel like imagining myself flying over the North Pole all the while covered in a aloe-ey layer of Purell, landing in Taiwan, transiting on to Chiang Mai, and making our way to the elephant sanctuary? What would it be like to open the flowing curtains of my bamboo hut the next morning to greet the 58 year-old “Grandma” elephant and gently place three plump bananas in her leathery trunk while she blinks her eyelashes at me in delight? What about splashing buckets of cool river water onto Grandma and the other dozen elephants, walking with them (i.e. ducking behind tree trunks to get out of their way), daily Kundalini yoga sessions, and trying my hand at cooking authentic Pad Thai at a local cookery school?
I     feel    e  x    p    a   n   s   i  o    n.

B   r   e  a   t   h.

W   a   r   m   t   h.

O   p   e  n   n   e   s   s.

A   l  i  v   e   n   e   s   s.

I mean, COME ON! Even if you’re NOT into the spiritual/yoga jam, there’s   P A D   T H A I   AND      E L E P H A N T S,  people!

And then my heart twinges. Travel. It may be difficult to get back to New York. President #45 could close the borders. My ex might have to return to Italy before I can get back home. JFK airport customs and immigration might quarantine me at the JFK Holiday Inn. The boys could be Home. Alone. In. New. York. City.

After the twinge I feel a long, deep pinch in my heart. This virus is serious, and is about to wreak havoc on life as we know it. Not now, or even in the next couple of weeks. But soon.

I take a long breath. The answer is clear. I text the trip leader. “See you in Thailand. ”

I’m going to Thailand, even without the assurance I won’t get sick or that I can get home easily.

I’m not a nervous traveler. I’ve worked in forty-odd countries, including Iraq. I’ve lived outside of the US, my home country, for sixteen years, and spent seven of those living in the Middle East. I’m not braggin’ here; I’m just saying that what happens next was new.

As I pack my bag for Thailand that Saturday evening my stomach is tied up in 329 knots. My hands tremble as I shove my lightweight yoga mat into my heavyweight suitcase. Although I’d decided to go, fear wells up in my body and spills out.

I’m shaking like a 46-year old nervous traveler leaf! What the Tom Kha Kai is wrong with me? I know I’m supposed to go on this trip, but I’m AFRAID. 

I go for a walk to help move the nervous energy through me, still shaking. Then I zip up my suitcase, hug my two young boys tightly, and say, “I’ll be back in ten days,” hoping that would be true. My ex arrives in time to lug my bag down the two flights of stairs before I make my way to JFK airport, where he’d just landed.

On the trip to Thailand I decide to take precautions. You know, the prudence thing. I’ve got Purell, WetWipes, face masks, multi-vitamins, and oil of oregano. And I have an epic, once-in-a-lifetime adventure with Grandma, new Thai friends, a super fun group of fellow travelers, and SO MANY ELEPHANTS !

Have I mentioned there were ELEPHANTS?????!!!!!!!

In ten days I’m back home in New York. I’m healthy. We all know that symptoms of coronavirus could develop within 14 days.  None of us develop symptoms.

Fast forward to a few weeks later. New York City closes Madison Square Garden, Barclay’s, and all Broadway shows. The shows must NOT go on. Soon after, all schools and businesses in NYC shut down.

But LIFE must go on. And we must choose how to live it. And our children and grandchildren — even if you aren’t a parent or grandparent– are watching, folks.

As you make decisions during these days, are you weighing in more heavily on the side of prudence or paranoia? Only you’ll know.

On a meditation broadcast on social media by Deepak Chopra recently he said, “We’re all passengers on Cruise Ship Earth.” Indeed, we’re all on the same boat. Whether we’re in first class, economy, or workin’ on the ship. Whether we’re infected or not. This is not to say we’re experiencing the pandemic the same on board. But it is our collective illness. We’re all affected and we’re all needed to be a part of the remedy.

What do we do while aboard? Turn up in arm-long gloves and N95 masks at the lobster buffet and hoard all the crustaceans? Curl up in solitary confinement in a drafty lifeboat? Or do we dance in perfectly — social distanced — formations in the galleys? Make love in the cabins?

We choose, knowing that our choices have a ripple effect on everyone aboard.

We can choose FEAR – i.e. grasping, scarcity, not-enoughness (insert toilet paper, basmati rice, bottled water, Lysol spray, and peanut butter cups), thereby allowing our fears to thrust themselves outward like waves across the ocean. And where our fears meet the fears of others, a thick current of collective fear, mistrust, and anxiety will flow. Dare I say, this tide is a-risin’ fast.

It’s easy to be in fear now. That’s the vibration buzzing aboard. We know that fear and stress compromise our immune system. We also know that in most cases fear is about future worries and is not about the present moment.

Winston Churchill said, “If you’re going through hell, keep going.”

Cruise Ship Earth, we may be going through hell. Let’s not throw anchor out here!

What do we do with our fear? Let it rise UP and OUT. Fear is not meant to stay in the body. It’s meant to activate us to move, to change, to transform it to something else. Fear is a natural way for us to deal with feeling threatened. But we’re not meant to live in this state – a state of increased blood pressure, heart rate, and anxiety.

We all deal with fear in our own ways. The key is to process it. See it, feel it, allow it, and move through it. Talk to a loved one or counselor about it. Let your body shake it out, cry it out. Walk it out. Whatever works for you.

My ex and his family have been in lockdown in a town in northern Italy for several weeks now and he notes that none of the panicky stockpiling of goods is happening in Italy as it is here in New York City, and from what I’ve heard across America.

Why’s that?

Maybe we’ve forgotten that we’re all on the same boat. We’ve put such value on the individual in the “United” States of America we’ve lost sight of the fact we’re all connected.

And this virus has already reminded us in dramatic ways this disease is all of ours. Covid-19 knows no country borders, social classes, voting party lines.

United we sail. Divided we sink.

There’s no my toilet paper and your toilet paper. Okay, maybe there is. But I believe there’s PLENTY for all of us when we share the toilet paper.

Let’s shift point of sail. Remember the LOVE BOAT show and its theme song from the 1970’s?

Love, exciting and new,
come aboard, we’re expecting youuuuu.

You’ll thank me later for reminding you of that tune. Or not. Probably not.

We get to bring ONE PIECE OF LUGGAGE ON BOARD, matey! We get to choose: is my luggage packed with fear? Or is it filled with love? It can’t be a little this, and some of that. It’s one or the other.

When we choose LOVE-– in the form of trust, faith, peace, calm, kindness, and generosity – we embrace it like the inflatable pants we’ll need when a fellow passenger throws us overboard.

IT’S LOVE!

When there’s LOVE there’s no room for fear, scarcity, anxiety, and not-enoughness. Oh, and small point, our true selves know only love. So the bad feelings we get when we’re packing up the fear (and Lysol, all the frozen foods available, and way too much TP) are because they’re so out of alignment with who we really are.

Bottom line. Fear is absolutely normal. Especially now as we sail through uncertain waters. Be gentle and compassionate with your fears.

However, love is MORE NORMAL!!! But how do we make sure we’re bringing the LOVE aboard?

Bring the Weather– The single most important thing I’ve learned doing stand up comedy in NYC over the last couple of years is that while it’s fine to read the crowd, you don’t let the crowd dictate your energy on stage — whether they’re quiet and not laughing much or ‘hot’ and roaring. If the last comedian bombed, you bring your ALL. If the last comedian crushed, you bring your ALL. If there are three people in the crowd and you paid for their entrance and drinks so you could get on stage, you bring your ALL. If you’re in a packed room of hundreds who came to see you, you bring your ALL. Same same in life.

Folks, I know for most of us it’s cloudy on board, and sh*#’s flying at us from all angles. We can’t control what’s happening around us and how other people are feeling and responding to what’s happening, or how much frozen food they’re buyin’ and stockpilin’. But we are FULLY RESPONSIBLE for the weather we bring. So, as much as possible, bring the sunlight, bring the calm skies, and bring the smooth seas.

My son told me this post was long — even in pandemic times — so read on about how to bring the weather during Storm Corona here… How to Bring the Weather  feel free to check it out later or now and then come back. We’re expecting youuuuu!

On Saturday morning, March 28th, Oliver, my 10-year old son asks, “What are we gonna do, Mama?”

“We’re making crepes at home this morning,” I answer steadily. My internal GPS says it’s more prudent to stay outdoors than go into restaurants, even if they’re still open. “Then we’re going to lather up in Purell and head into Central Park for a walk.”

Just kidding. I don’t know how to make crepes. We have peanut butter cups for breakfast.

That same day I make plans for us to leave our itsy bitsy teeny weeny Manhattan apartment and head to a friend’s empty home on Long Island (with bikini –just in case we’d be there a long while). My internal GPS has been consistent and clear that it’s time to prepare to self isolate in a place with more leg room (and refrigerator space). I pack all the peanut butter cups I have, plus the remaining rolls of TP I’d gathered.

I pack not knowing how I’ll “remote school” two young boys while working to support us in a new place with no support network of friends or family nearby. I pack not knowing what New York City will be like when we return. I pack not knowing how long we’ll be gone, nor who we’ll be when we come home.

There’s so much uncertainty. For us all. But the truth is, there always was. And there always will be.

There always was uncertainty. And there always will be. Uncertainty isn’t the enemy. Our oversized fears about uncertainty are.

On Saturday March 28 my 12-year old son FaceTimes with his papa in Italy while “remote learning” how to make Nutella crepes for breakfast. We’ve been isolated — alone, together — in our new home on the east end of Long Island for ten days. “One cup flour,” he says. “Make sure the butter’s melted before you mix it with the eggs.”

I can’t help but wipe a river of tears as my youngest plates our thin, phoned in from Italy, made in America, French crepes smothered in just as much Nutella. They’re what we’re all craving: a sense of normalcy. A taste of New York City. A feeling of home.

You’ve read this far. Much more than I planned to write. But this is where it gets good, folks.

ATTENTION PASSENGERS: This virus may attack our respiratory system, our lungs, our friends, neighbors, and family members. It may overwhelm us with its toxicity. But this disease does not know the indomitable power of the human spirit aboard our ship.

Have you ever hoped for the well-being of another? Wanted more for our planet and for humanity? Then, YOU are ready to take on the real threat that’s on board — fear, anxiety, paranoia, scarcity, and lack.

YOU, dear one, are an essential part of life on “cruise ship” earth. And you, me, and all of us, have been preparing for this exact moment in time for eternity.

This is the time to choose love. Pack up the love, folks, share it widely, and sing it as if it’s your mantra on repeat shuffle.

IT’S LOVE!

… but it’s not just a kitschy 1970’s theme song lyric now.

IT’S LOVE  because it’s downright essential to navigate these waters, calm the skies, and smooth that rocky sea.

IT’S LOVE and as the song goes, now more than ever…

Let    it    flow,    it    floats    back    to    you.

 

 

 

 

 

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What’s Knocking at Your Door?

What’s knocking at your door…besides the delivery person with another Amazon package?

Which opportunity is seeking you out? Is it love, a new job, a change in lifestyle, a new place to live, a new friend or something even more wildly exhilarating?!  

In 2014 I became a life coach. I loved coaching from the start. When I asked for five practice clients when starting my certification, I was shocked that people actually wanted me to coach them. I loved coaching so much I thought I should just pay them to do it.

Then my coaching clients asked me to do workshops in Amman. I started offering those in 2015 and loved conducting women’s circles and workshops so much that I again wondered how is it that I’m getting paid to do what I love?

I kept going. I kept coaching. I kept learning new ways to work with people as a ‘soul worker.’ I learned how to lead meditations and how to lead  circles. I got certified to do Reiki energy healing and to open the Akashic Records. Maybe I just remembered how to do all of these things. Even so, I still wasn’t sure how to offer my own special sauce mix of all of those things.

In September 2018 I sat with a group of friends in NYC. “You’re so intuitive,” said one friend I’ll call Maria. “The world needs your intuitive gifts, especially now.”

“If you could print a business card with any title on it, what would it say?” asked another friend.

“Healer,” I said for the first time aloud. “Whether I’m working with people in a corporate environment, working with the Akashic Records, coaching, doing my stand up routine, or even writing blogs, it’s all about healing.”

That same night Maria sent me a message. “When you decide what you want to offer in terms of healing, I’d like to sign up.” That was September 18th, 2018.

I thanked her. I said I would put something together and send it to her.

Weeks passed.

Maria didn’t give up. She knocked on my door again (via text) on October 15th. “Could you do your intuitive healing work with me by phone?” she asked. “I have several people who want to sign up to work with you (including me)!”

Oh shit! She hasn’t forgotten! Maria even knows other people who want to work with me? But I don’t even know what I’m offering? 

Another month passed. Maria gently probed once again, “Do you have my correct email address? I want to make sure I haven’t missed your email!”

Holy cow, it had been over two months since our initial discussion. I so much wanted to work with Maria and her friends, and I wanted to offer myself up in new ways. I just wasn’t sure how and I wasn’t sure what I’d call it or if I’d even be good at it.

At the end of November, Maria became my first official “intuitive coaching” client. I opened up her Akashic Records and blended coaching with Reiki distance energy healing along with the rich wisdom and energies of the Akashic Records. Since that time I’ve worked with several other people individually, some in person in NYC and others via phone. I’ve also led circles in NYC and a 6-week Zoom tele-class teaching others how to unlock the power of their intuitive gifts. I’m still wondering how I got those people to sign up and how they continue to find me since I still don’t have a business card…

Then there’s all the testimonials from clients:
“I’ve spent money on worse things,” said an unpaid actor who was unharmed in the making of this blog.
“I didn’t know what to expect from my Akashic Records session, and my expectations were low so Kimberly exceeded those,” said another unpaid actor.
“I knew one day Kimberly would stop being an Interculturalist (whatever that is) and do something I could actually explain to my friends,” said my mother. Sorry, Mom.
“Thank you for another eye opening experience in your group last night.  It was enjoyable and by far the best meditation experience(s) I’ve had in New York. Please keep doing this wonderful work.” N.H. a real person in NYC
“Your 6-week course was a gift to my soul. When can we set up the next healing session?” said Maria, another real person who goes by another name and who I hope is smiling as she reads this blog.  🙂

“When are you going to tell people you are ‘open for business’?” Maria recently asked me.

You’d think the grim reaper was a-knockin’ at my door! What’s been knocking is about to knock down the door, and I’ll be laying there in my jammies eating gluten free chocolate cupcakes wondering what to put on my business cards!

After a session or a circle I dance my way through the streets of New York City and think, Well, that was just another lucky one-off experience. Crazy Mofos are paying me to do this work, but I’d pay them! Although this work is my calling, it’s like I wouldn’t answer the goddamn phone! It’s taken me many months, or even my whole 45 years on the planet, to catch up to the fact that maybe, just maybe this is what I’m supposed to be doing. Not just as a hobby, or a side business. Maybe this is exactly what I should be focusing my time and energy on now because it’s my true calling.

Here’s what I know for sure because Oprah and Deepak have said it to me in their meditations a hundred times:

What YOU are seeking is seeking YOU!  
Your DEEPEST DESIRES are your DESTINY!

If something similar is happening in your life, listen to its’ whispers, which will eventually become calls, knocks or even shouts.

They   are   the   voice   of   your   soul. 

Pay attention to what makes you feel alive and what makes your soul sing out for more. And don’t be caught with a mouth half-full of cupcakes in your jammies with a green facial mask on when the door gets knocked down. Trust me on that.

So I’m shouting it from the rooftops: “I’M OPEN FOR BUSINESS, Y’ALL!!!!” … at least until my neighbors tell me to ‘shut up’ or call the police. Maybe I’ll just keep it to an email newsletter and this blog for now because who cares about business cards anyway. And because I like my neighbors.

I hope that YOU also continue to step into your deepest desires, that you know that your gifts are absolutely essential part of what your community, your family and our world needs NOW, and that when LOVE, OPPORTUNITY and FUN come knocking at your door, YOU’LL ANSWER, too!!! 

Rock on!!

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Are You Going through Hell?

Churchill said, “If you’re going through hell, keep going.” Instead, when I look back at some of the most challenging times in my life leading up to my divorce and raising Samuel and Oliver on my own in Jordan, it’s as if I set up camp. Camp Hell. I didn’t get the t-shirt but I imagine it would read: “Camp Hell: Come to Roast, Stay to Burn.”

It sounds grim, right? It WAS grim! 

It’s not that there weren’t people around me willing and able to support me on the journey through the fiery pit. It’s that I bought INTO the full range of sizes and colors in t-shirts reading, “This too shall suck,” “What doesn’t kill makes you wish it did,” “Success is born of struggle. Struggle. More Struggle. Repeat,” and “If you want to run fast, run alone; if you want to run far, run alone. Life’s a long-distance sprint down a lonely-ass road.” 

Grim. Earnest. Serious. So grim.

What got me out? Two buried treasures that it would take me time to dig up:

Community + Spiritual Growth.

“Spiritual Growth” simply meaning there’s something larger at work in my life and it’s a force of goodness and grace. It goes by names like God/Goddess, the Divine, Spirit, the Universe, and many more. And “Community” meaning people who would see me through the darkness with support and acceptance, hellish burns and all. 

After two decades working in the corporate world as a cross-cultural trainer and coach I feel deeply called to provide space where like-hearted people can come together to flourish and grow while experiencing life’s challenges. I feel called to share what I’ve learned about finding our own inner truths and letting them guide our way, instead of relying on outside voices. I feel called to help myself and others navigate our lives based on LOVE vs. fear and all of the shapes it can take in our lives such as control, jealousy, holding on, worry, comparisons and scarcity mindset. And I feel called to do this all in a fun and funny way, knowing that the most SACRED in life can be not-so-f*$#ing-serious. 

My NEW t-shirt slogans are: “It will be easy, fun and light or I ain’t doing it!,” “If you’re going through hell, bring marshmallows!” and “I run fast and far, but never alone.” 

If you are going through hell, please read these words slowly and as often as helpful:

Keep going.

Go with support.

Go knowing you are loved.

Go with courage.

Go with ease, grace and lightness.

All is well. And all will always be.

And if you would like some support on your walk, I’m offering three programs in the next month which offer my own special sauce of life coaching, Reiki healing, Akashic Records consultation and Com-eD-Ee. I’m kicking off with a free webinar this Thurs, Jan 30 on “Unlocking Your Inner Superpower” at 12noon ET. Bring a question you want an answer to, and we’ll play with one of our greatest gifts, our INTUITION! Whether you’re a seasoned intuitive or can’t even spell the word, you are welcome!  

I’m also starting an online course on Friday, Feb 8th  that will meet for weekly for six weeks for people who feel called to transform their lives in community called “ExtraOrdinary Grace in Challenging Times.” We have a few spots left for this first Friday cohort, so please let me know if you are interested! 

And I’m continuing my face-to-face open circle “Spiritual Growth’ meetings in New York City. The next one is Wed, Jan 30 from 7-9 at the Meditation Studio on the Upper West Side.

I’d love to have you join one of the events and I’d be grateful if you’d share them with friends and loved ones if you feel called to do so. 

Whatever you are going through — heaven or hell, tough times or smooth waters — may you know that YOUR *Special Sauce* is something that is absolutely needed RIGHT NOW on our planet. Lay on that sauce, baby! 

Let’s do this, and get the NEW t-shirts!

~ Info and registration links available on EVENTS page ~ http://www.newyorkminutes.org/events/

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ExtraOrdinary Grace on a Monday Morning

“Sorry. I can’t come tomorrow morning,” was all the text said. It was from the college student slash babysitter who was due to be at my apartment at 7:30 am on Monday morning. I had a feeling she wasn’t going to come.

Last week the same sitter had helped me out with task of making sure that my kids were dressed for school, ate breakfast, brushed their teeth and had their backpacks ready to go. This morning routine can be relatively pain-free and dare I say even enjoyable, taking only 15 minutes on some days. But on other days accomplishing the same handful of tasks involves a fair bit of cajoling, several shouts of “Why does this take so long?!” and even bribery. Plus 45 minutes of time. The amount of time depends on a formula that is directly proportionate to the amount of patience and cups of coffee that I have stored up that morning as reserves, divided by the collective amount of additional hours we all wished we had slept.

This was the third Monday in a row that I needed to be ‘at work’ at 8:00 a.m. “At work” might sound like I needed to be in shiny shoes in a midtown high-rise with my comfortable pair tucked discretely into my laptop bag. But I just needed to be connected to a phone line and have a quiet desk to lead a virtual training session for a team spread throughout Europe and North America. I took this series of three 8:00 a.m. training sessions knowing that I would need some support to get Sammy and Oliver off to school since we usually leave the house at 8:00, but having spent a year in New York City I felt confident that I could work something out three Mondays in a row.

On the first Monday I was wading in grace and good fortune. My ex happened to be in town and he took Samuel to school. And since Oliver was home sick that day, a friend who lives just a block away on the Upper West Side offered me space at her dining room “desk” in her studio apartment so that I could be ‘at work’ without an ill 3rd grader and Minecraft survival mode as background noise.

On the second Monday the sitter who had just cancelled on me helped the boys get ‘school ready’ and shepherded them on the half-mile walk to their elementary school. And even though the babysitter doesn’t live far from us, I guess $20 for the hour of work for a busy student was probably not incentive enough to come the next Monday at such an early hour. $20 is basically one drink out at a NYC bar. But heck, I wish someone would pay me 20 bucks for my valiant efforts to get three tired and cranky human beings over the finish line which is our front door and a half mile beyond it each morning.

Basically for two out of three Mondays when I needed to be at work early everything had worked out, well, with grace and ease.

But maybe what I refer to as ‘grace’ had run out that Sunday night? Maybe I had only earned a certain amount and it was all used up? After all, I’d spent the weekend at a monastery in upstate New York with a group of new friends from the neighborhood church that we recently joined. One of our pastors had invited me to join a small group for a weekend of worship, meditation, prayer, time in nature and divine conversation with my new friends, our pastor and the monks… without my kids! That meant I didn’t have anyone to feed or keep alive but myself for two days! And the weekend away was only possible by another act of grace: my upstairs neighbor and friend had volunteered to check-in at my place and stay with my boys for the weekend. Considering how not-so-religious I am, the whole weekend was nothing short of amazing grace for a single parent in the City.

The kids got spoiled by their upstairs aunt, and I got some much needed time away. By Sunday evening all three of us felt like we had been carried down a river of grace bopping along on a buoyant inner tube. The sweet river ride came to a halt when I got the text message from the sitter. Then I was suddenly up that creek without a life jacket.

“The sitter can’t walk you to school tomorrow morning,” I announced to the boys while they squeezed bubble gum toothpaste on their bristles.

“Well then who is going to take us, Mommy?” Samuel asked, mouth agape.

“I’m not sure,” I said. “Maybe I can just drop you off around 7:45 and you can wait in the playground until the school opens at 8:00.”

“I don’t want to wait outside!” said Oliver with both arms up and his thin red toothbrush hanging from one side of his mouth. “What if it’s raining?!”

“Well when I was little,” I began to relay the true story of my own father dropping me and my younger brother off at our elementary school in rural Ohio an hour before the school doors opened on his way to work. “I remember that one winter we got inside the big tires on the playground just to stay warm while we waited for the school to open their front doors so we could go in.” I was clearly taking the ‘telling your kids about how much worse off you had it as a kid to make them feel better about the sucky situation they are about to be in’ approach.

“Why did he drop you off so early, Mommy?”

“I guess because we were not in the school bus district that year. And my Dad had to get to work early,” I replied, not satisfying any of us with the answer. What I do recall is that the early drop offs must have happened for months or even a year until my Dad eventually left us at my friend Tracy’s house, which was a short walking distance from our school. Tracy’s parents must have taken pity on our frostbite.

In any case, that was small town Ohio about four decades ago when kids didn’t regularly wear seat belts, frost bite wasn’t front page news, the Citizen app didn’t showcase how many pedestrian deaths there were in a 1 mile range of my NYC apartment at any given moment of the day, and the slack of freedom on the leash of children was much longer than what most parents give today. I’m pretty sure my big city boys could walk on their own to school, even crossing busy Broadway and Amsterdam Avenues. They both know their way around and after a year in NYC, they are seasoned street crossers. But neither of them have a phone, and all I could imagine was them quarreling over who has exploded more Minecraft creepers smack dab in the middle of Broadway and subsequently getting run over by a school bus—such an ironic and tragic ending to a Monday morning that would make.

I thought of some options…
-I could write the sitter back and say, “Please, please, please don’t cancel on me with such short notice! I will pay you more! Your next happy hour is on me!”
-I could ask our ‘regular’ babysitter who is a trusted family friend to help out. Or even one of my cousins. But they both live over a half hour away from us.
-Or I could ask the neighbor who had taken care of my boys all weekend. But as of this evening we were still friends and I wanted to keep it that way.
-I could email the entire parent group at the boys’ elementary school and see if anyone who lived near us would be willing to walk with them.
-There’s also a family from New Zealand who lives around the corner from the school. The mother and I run together on occasion and she must be one of the kindest people I’ve met in NYC. I could ask her.

So I texted the New Zealander mom, asking if I could drop the boys off at her house at 7:45 with, “I can imagine that might be a bit crazy with three other kids at home so feel free to say ‘no’!” And as soon as I pushed the green arrow to send the text I half-regretted asking an already busy parent for help at that time of day.

I alerted my colleague in Denmark about what was happening and went to brush my teeth too. Looking at my reflection in the mirror I said to myself, “I don’t know what is going to happen tomorrow morning, but I know it is going to be ok. There’s no need to call the neighbor, email the full parent group or panic.” Maybe I was just too tired to summon up more action. Or maybe I was ready to lean into grace.

At the monastery over the weekend I had spent time with one of the monks named Brother John. He, along with all of the monks I met at the Monastery, was so down-to-earth and easy to talk with. On Friday evening he had shared his journey from librarian in Pennsylvania to monastic life and his decision to take the Benedictine vows of Obedience, which includes chastity, Stability, and Conversion to Monasticism. Brother John compared his life and devotion to God to someone being in a committed marriage with a spouse. He was the first monk that I’ve had the chance to get to know personally and his piety intrigued me. Part of this might have been due to the fact that my only lifelong devotions to date have been to pop music and anything made from potatoes. But I am also relatively new to most things church-related. I consider myself a spiritual person but was never particularly religious and never felt a strong sense of a ‘spiritual home’ until I found this church on the Upper West Side. Last Spring I went to one of the weekly candlelit Taizé meditations held at the church down the road from me. After that I went to their Easter Sunday service. Then I started to bring my boys. And the rest, well, that is grace too.

At lunch overlooking the gently flowing Hudson River I asked Brother John, “Considering how much time you spend in prayer, can you tell me how do you pray?”

At lunch overlooking the gently flowing Hudson River I asked Brother John, “Considering how much time you spend in prayer, can you tell me how do you pray?”

I mean, I pray. I meditate. I light candles, send wishes, white light and blessings. But maybe I’m not doing it right? Maybe he knows the right way to pray, I thought.

His eyes smiled. He paused, put down his fork and replied, “Well, yeah, we do pray a lot here.” The monastery, true to its Benedictine roots of being a welcoming host and refuge for many visitors, is steeped in the tradition of prayer and worship, with a typical schedule of five services full of prayer, meditative psalms and hymns. Guests and locals come from all over to listen to the monks sing from opposing pews in a entrancing harmonized melody. Brother John looked me directly in the eyes and said, “It doesn’t matter how you pray or where you pray. The most important thing is praying regularly. If you pray regularly before you know it, your life becomes a prayer.”

Amen to that.

~~~

It had been a couple of hours and I had not heard back from my Kiwi running pal. As we turned off our bedside reading lamps we said our regular evening prayer, the one I learned from my grandparents:

Now I lay me down to sleep, I pray the Lord my soul to keep, if I should die before I wake, I pray the Lord my soul to take, Amen.

Although the nighttime prayer might sound like it sleeps on the foreboding side of the bed, it has always reassured me. And my little guys rattle it off at their own pace too before we share what we are grateful for from the day and other special prayer requests.

If this same situation would have occurred a year ago, I would have likely called the regular babysitter and both of my cousins and when they didn’t answer I would have sent an SOS to the full parent group asking if anyone could help, and then without waiting for any replies I’d email my colleague and apologize profusely for having to cancel my participation as lead trainer in a just-another-manic-Monday panic. And then I would have spent a restless night in bed wondering what the opposite-of-heaven have I done?! When it came down to leaning into faith and grace in moments of uncertainty like this one, I would have clawed my way against the river’s current by sheer muscly force, only to drown.

But not tonight. Tonight at the end of our bedtime prayer ritual I thought about Brother John, and all of the regularity of grace that has been flowing slow and steady in my life since we moved from Amman, Jordan to New York City one year ago. I thought about the possibility of living a life of prayer, even if wasn’t totally sure what Brother John meant by that. Something inside me signaled that all would be ok, and that it always is. So I clicked off the bedside lamp and added, “I pray that tomorrow Samuel and Oliver get to school safely and easily and that I’m on time for work” and went to sleep.

The next morning I woke up, turned my phone on, and received a text message that had come while we were sleeping. It was from my New Zealander running friend, the super-fit mom who always has a kind word for you on hand and brightly colored running shoe laces on her feet. True to form she wrote, “Happy for you to drop off the kids in the morning or I can check on them in the playground if you take them early!”

There it was again. “Grace,” I joyfully muttered to myself right before tripping over Oliver’s aircraft carrier made of Legos. Then came a word a bit less holy.

~~~
At 8:00 am on this Monday morning I was ‘at work’, running shoes still laced up, and re-connected to my training group and to grace. My colleague in Denmark welcomed all of the participants who logged in early. And meanwhile the kids were enjoying the early morning sunrise view of Manhattan from their friend’s 23rd floor apartment.

Life regularly offers up surprises — illness, transportation issues, inconvenient working hours, and missing sock pairs — all the time. Grace asks me to let down my resistance to whatever I believe may be happening to me, and consider how it might be happening for me.

The origin of the word Grace comes from Latin and means thankful. Considering all that had happened for me in the last 12 hours, I was so thankful that I didn’t panic the night before and get my pajama shorts all in a bunch trying to control a certain uncertainty. I was grateful that my boys were so cooperative, good-humored and fast moving from “Why do we have to get up so early, Mom?” to the “Do I have to wear shoes today?” end of the routine. And I felt deeply thankful for the busy New Zealander mom, newly anointed as one of my ‘single mom saints,’ who helped me out at the last minute. Most of all I was thankful that I leaned into my inner knowing and the grace that lives inside me, as well as the grace of the universe that always surrounds me, trusting that no matter what the kids would get to school fine.


I used to think that Grace was just something I could experience on a mountaintop, in stillness or at a sacred place. It was some elusive, fleeting touch of the divine that I grasped for but could never hold onto. Now I believe grace is absolutely extraordinary because it is extra ordinary – it is everywhere in and in everything and in everyone. It’s not earned or taken away. It’s in the temple, synagogue, church, mosque, ashram and monastery. And it is also on Broadway and on the bus. It’s the magic that’s inside of us and all around us, always. It’s heaven and earth. Grace is where our humanity meets our divinity.

Sometimes the most ordinary moments– like getting to work on a Monday morning — provide us with just the right opportunity to dance with grace. This week I showed up on the dance floor ready to tango in my super sized Nikes. Grace encouraged me to, “Kindly let go of the tight grip you’ve got on me, sister.”

“Sorry, so sorry; I’m kind of new to this still,” I replied, easing up on her hands.

Then Grace whispered, “No need to step on my toes either, dear one. Just lean into me; let me guide you. You know, it takes two…”

To dance with grace.

 

To find out more about our upcoming workshops on “ExtraOrdinary Grace in Everyday Life” please go to the Events page here!
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Inviting a Stranger to Broadway – The Show Goes On

Watch what happens when a stranger agrees to join Kimberly for an afternoon of snacks and heartfelt fun at Come From Away on Broadway. The stranger becomes a friend and they both invite us — as does this touching Broadway hit — to all give what we can without expectations.

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Why Invite a Stranger to a Broadway Show?

“Why not?” answers Kimberly, as she purchases two tickets for the Broadway hit, Come From Away. Follow her as she heads out on a Saturday morning to purchase the essential Twizzlers candy for her and the mystery guest that she hopes will join her in about 24 hours.

On Sunday see what happens when she still doesn’t have a taker to join her for the 3pm matinee show. Will she eat 10 packs of Twizzlers on her own next to an empty chair?

 

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Meeting Mrs. Maisel

Join us on just an ordinary dog walk in NYC’s Central Park that led us onto the set of The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel…