Or Alternatively

I want to hibernate – just go to sleep
until we’re all together again –
only be awake for those moments
when you’re all near.
Maybe I can function while I sleep –
look like I’m awake and appear
to do all the things that society
requires of me – until your return.

Or…

Alternatively, I could fill those waiting
moments with love and joy –
I might as well, right?
And then when we all meet again
one day around the family table
I’ll have something valuable
to share – I’ll be ready and able.

-Karen Molenaar Terrell

Loss and Separation

I’ve been in mourning recently – feeling deep loss and separation – and feeling a little sorry for myself.

There’ve been a lot of opportunities to deal with feelings of separation in the last decade. Mom died. Dad died. Dear friends died. Sons are making lives of their own and sometimes in faraway places. And there have been times, lately, when I’ve felt almost overwhelmed by grief.

I would never tell someone else to “snap out of it” when they’re feeling grief and sorrow – we feel what we feel, and as it says in Ecclesiastes 3: “To everything there is a season, and a purpose under heaven…a time to weep and a time to laugh; a time to mourn and a tme to dance; a time to cast away stones and a time to gather stones together…” It’s not my place to decide when someone else’s season of mourning has ended.

But today I found myself saying to myself, “Snap out of it!” My time of mourning was over.

I’d been looking for citations about separation and loss in the Christian Science textbook, Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures, by Mary Baker Eddy, and I came upon this passage on page 386: “A blundering despatch, mistakenly announcing the death of a friend, occasions the same grief that the friend’s real death would bring. You think that your anguist is occasioned by your loss. Another despatch correcting the mistake, heals your grief, and you learn that your suffering was merely the result of your belief… You will learn at length that there is no cause for grief, and divine wisdom will then be understood. Error, not Truth, produces all the suffering on earth.” In the next paragraph, Eddy writes: “…when our friends pass from our sight and we lament, the lamentation is needless and causeless. We shall perceive this to be true when we grow into the understanding of Life, and know that there is no death.”

Which. Whoah, right? Mary Baker Eddy does not beat around the bush. And that’s when I said to myself: Snap out of it! I needed that statement of truth from Mrs. Eddy. It was like having a bucket of ice water poured over me on a blistering summer day. Refreshing! Invigorating! Galvanizing!

Mary Baker Eddy experienced incredible loss in her life: Her husband of six months died of yellow fever; Her young son was taken from her to live with family friends when he was four years old and, when he was 11 or 12, the family moved thousands of miles away and Eddy didn’t see her son again until he was 34; her grandchildren were raised in South Dakota, thousands of miles from Eddy’s home in New England – and this was in the 1800s – long before cars and planes, Facetime and Zoom.

Eddy wrote in Retrospection and Introspection: “The family to whose care he (her son) was committed very soon removed to what was then regarded as the Far West. After his removal a letter was read to my little son, informing him that his mother was dead and buried. Without my knowledge a guardian was appointed him, and I was then informed that my son was lost. Every means within my power was employed to find him, but without success. We never met again until he had reached the age of thirty-four, had a wife and two children, and by a strange providence had learned that his mother still lived, and came to see me in Massachusetts.”

So when Mary Baker Eddy says that we will learn “there is no cause for grief” she is speaking from personal experience and not just being cavalier about other people’s time of mourning.

Mary Baker Eddy’s poem, “Mother’s Evening Prayer,” has been a great comfort to me in recent years. I sang this song to myself when my oldest son was traveling through Europe at the beginning of the Pandemic, and have hugged it close to me as both sons have moved out and started their own amazing lives. And, when I think of the loss and separation that Mary Baker Eddy experienced in her own life, I know this poem comes from a woman who has felt the same things I have felt.
-Karen Molenaar Terrell

Mother’s Evening Prayer

O gentle presence, peace and joy and power;
O Life divine, that owns each waiting hour,
Thou Love that guards the nestling’s faltering flight!
Keep Thou my child on upward wing tonight.

Love is our refuge; only with mine eye
Can I behold the snare, the pit, the fall:
His habitation high is here, and nigh,
His arm encircles me, and mine, and all.

O make me glad for every scalding tear,
For hope deferred, ingratitude, disdain!
Wait, and love more for every hate, and fear
No ill, — since God is good, and loss is gain.

Beneath the shadow of His mighty wing;
In that sweet secret of the narrow way,
Seeking and finding, with the angels sing:
“Lo, I am with you alway,” — watch and pray.

No snare, no fowler, pestilence or pain;
No night drops down upon the troubled breast,
When heaven’s aftersmile earth’s tear-drops gain,
And mother finds her home and heav’nly rest.

By Mary Baker Eddy

(This is me singing “Mother’s Evening Prayer” at the beginning of the Pandemic as my son was traveling through Europe. Mount Baker in the frame.)

Stockpiling Memories

Storing away memories
like a squirrel stores nuts
before the winter cuts in
They’re leaving soon
so I’m storing fast
gathering memories
before they pass
Walks around the block
as we laugh and talk
steaming tea in our favorite mugs
curry soup and extra long hugs
I tuck these memories
into the safe places
in my heart –
stockpiling the memories
for when we’re apart

-Karen Molenaar Terrell

“We think of an absent friend as easily as we do of one present.”
-Mary Baker Eddy

The Sun Will Rise Again

In the middle of it
I have to trust
as the darkness builds
around me
and I feel the loss
this will pass

the sun will rise again
-Karen Molenaar Terrell

We Do It for Us

We don’t turn to God
to please
or appease
God.
God isn’t some proud
man at roost
in the clouds,
in need of a boost
for his ego.
We seek God for ourselves –
we’re innately drawn
to the Power of Love.

-Karen Molenaar Terrell



Lake Padden Forest (Photo by Karen Molenaar Terrell)

I Collected Smiles Today

Bellingham, Washington:
Walked my walk on the boardwalk. Before I drove home, I thought I’d check with the youngest son and his wife and see if there was anything I could bring them. The answer: A fruit smoothie.

I drove to the juicer place (Refresh Juice) on Cornwall, but it wasn’t open, yet, so I walked to the vegan bakery (Wild Oat Bakery and Cafe) down the street to see what I might find there. And I found all kinds of fun there. I ended up buying a slice of banana nut bread for the son and a cupcake for myself and had a cheery conversation with Nolan who was manning the counter.

I left with my loot and saw a young man with a sleeping bag. I thought he probably needed the cupcake more than me and offered it to him. He happily accepted it.

Then a young woman in a sleeping bag called out a hello to me. I asked her if there was something I could get her and she said a bag of chips. “Just chips?” I asked. “Could I get you something from the bakery?” She said that would be great.

So I went back to Nolan and explained my situation. Nolan started grinning when I told him I’d given away my cupcake. “Spreading the love!” he said. I told him it had started with his kind smile. I bought a scone for the woman and a cookie for myself and told Nolan he might be seeing me again in a few minutes. He started cracking up.

I brought the scone to the woman and went to the juice store. It wasn’t open, yet, but I thought I’d just work on my word puzzles while I waited. The juice shop ended up opening five minutes early and I was the first customer. Teagan and Kristen were fun and efficient and quickly presented me with the smoothie for my son and friendly smiles to take with me. They let me take their photo.

Now I went back to Nolan and asked him if I could take his picture, too. He graciously agreed. I announced to all my fellow patrons that Bellingham is full of the nicest people and, on that note, made my exit.

I stopped by the sock shop (Crazy Socks) on my way back to my car – I wanted to get some socks for my daughter-in-law. Reed was working the counter there and quickly helped me find some cat socks and a pair of otter socks, too. And, of course, I had to take a picture of Reed.

Socks, banana bread, and smoothie were successfully delivered to the son and daughter-in-law, and I brought home all the smiles I’d collected for myself.
-Karen Molenaar Terrell
(Originally publised on bellinghambayblog.wordpress.com.)