Thursday, February 14, 2013

Someday I will spend eternity with Steve Dooley.  His is not a name most of you know, and even I did not know him well.  But I have been thinking about him a great deal this week since learning of his death, too young, from cancer.

Every life comes with a gift, and Steve's gift seemed to be an abundance of grace in the ordinary moments of life.  As an older female musician, I first encountered Steve at a local chain guitar store where he worked in the audio department.  This was a hard store to shop in.  Most of the clerks would barely give me any time when I had questions, and if a younger, hipper male musician walked in, I was left to my own devices. 

Not so with Steve.

His patience with my questions was extraordinary.  I was trying to transition into the world of digital recording, and through many years of drop-ins as I progressed through the process, he would carefully listen and guide me through. In his presence I felt respected and valued, and his kindness was a warm blanket in the less than welcoming marketplace in which he worked.

Later, while working with a local prison ministry, I encountered Steve again at a large church where he was doing sound.  He was a gifted soundman who could mix a stage full of musicians and singers with such expertise that each part of the mix had a unique place, yet the whole was complete and well-rounded.  Again, no matter how busy he was, he would take the time to give full eye contact and listen, as though you were the only person who mattered at the moment.

Somehow, we kept running into each other over the years-- at the grocery store, at the church---and through those brief encounters, he shared snippets of his continuing struggle with cancer, always upbeat, always moving along to some more "important" subject.

And now he is gone, and I am left thinking about his legacy.

Our world is so consumed with the worship of celebrity and a desire to be noticed for being extraordinary.  But people like Steve teach us that the greatest gift to this world is the gift of ordinary kindness.  I treasure his footprint in my life not because he was an extraordinary sound man, though he was, but because he gave the gift of being present in the lives of others.  He gave the gift of respecting you no matter where you came from.  He gave the gift of letting others shine as he patiently listened.

It is hard to write about someone you do not know well.  Others may read this who called him a close friend, and to all of you, I offer my sincere hope that my recollection of Steve honors him as you  knew him.

I may not have known Steve well, but I do know well the arms who hold him now--- the arms that lovingly crafted him and molded him into the man who impacted my life and the lives of so many others. And with all my heart, I know those same mighty, merciful arms welcomed him home with, "Well done, thou good and faithful servant."

Someday, I will join Steve where he rests, but until then, I hope to master, as Steve had done, the gift of extraordinary kindness in the ordinary moments of life.
 

Sunday, February 3, 2013

Someday I will be at peace...

Someday I hope to be able to write about the achingly beautiful life we have been given and do it justice. Our lives are so chock full of rush and worry...and these same lives are lived out at break neck speed with a cosmic sized to do list attached to our bended backs. Life passes by like a bullet train, and we stand at the platform waving at a disappearing shadow wondering why we have been left behind. Or perhaps it is just me...
 
But the train slowed down yesterday for me because of Athena, the small, frail Greek woman in her nineties who stopped my mom and I at the elevator at her senior apartments. She wondered if we would be around for a few moments because she needed two witnesses for her will. As we crossed the threshold of her apartment, I noticed a child sized easel with some excellently drawn pieces and asked if she was an artist. A humble woman, she was difficult to draw out, but finally she showed me a picture of two beautiful hands reaching out towards a ball of light. "I had a vision,” she revealed.
 
When I pressed her for details, she stated plainly, her voice nearly a whisper, "It was all of my senses... And I knew I could die in peace." Her son knocked at the door, and when we found out that the notary would not appear for about an hour, I plugged in my headphones and went for a walk at a nearby nature trail, thinking about being at peace with death.
 
The lyrics to a Robin Mark tune played in my head, accompanied by penny whistle..."when it all is said and done, all my treasures will be nothing; only what I did for love's reward will stand the test of time..."
A couple walked ahead of me with an unwieldy bike device. A small child tried to ride without success. Suddenly, mom jumped on and a laughing father and child pushed her awkwardly on the small bike. As the penny whistle played a score behind my steps, I begin to unravel.
 
A young father walked towards me, his face serene and filled with quiet pride. He pushed a stroller filled with a blanketed infant, too young to walk but not too young to smile. Her face was a mirror of her father's, and as they approached, I saw their lives pure and surrounded by promise. I came undone by the picture, and I could no longer hold back the flood of tears, my own joy and gratefulness overflowing out of these passing life pictures.
 
We have been given this life- this beautiful, awkward, joy filled, painful, abundant life. It unfolds before us every day in these tiny moments of hope and possibility which get swallowed up or overshadowed by the other small things that really don't matter.
 
But today, Athena spoke of a vision, and the day began to slow down. A family had a moment of spontaneous laughter. A father embraced a quiet winter walk with his daughter. And when I had returned for the signing, a fellow occupant of the senior apartment complex showed up in a furry bathrobe and announced she has worn her formal wear for the witnessing of the will. Suddenly, I am no longer necessary... We have one witness too many.
 
But I did witness this beautiful day unfold and embed itself into my heart. And like Athena, I was given a vision that someday I too will die at peace, having lived a life, if I am lucky, filled with tiny moments of love and grace.
 
And though I love this life with all the vigor and passion that emanated from that young father's face, that is a someday I welcome and embrace.