Sunday, May 3, 2026
Retreat Chef
Saturday, May 2, 2026
World Labyrinth Day 2026
Today is World Labyrinth Day. It's celebrated the first Saturday of May.
For more on labyrinths, this website is full of information.
Below is a poem-like thing with some of my favorite pictures of labyrinths I have known and loved:
We have walked labyrinths
made of fabric, made in fields,
laid out in tiles
or offered by cathedrals.
We have relied
on the promises of the labyrinth:
one path in, no dead ends,
no false turns, not a maze.
We have trusted
that the path leads
to a center that can hold
us all in all our complexities.
Friday, May 1, 2026
May Day Retreats
Wednesday, April 29, 2026
Poetry Creating Notes at the End of a Term
It's been a week of bits and pieces in terms of poetry. Let me record some of them here:
--In my end of the semester cleaning up of the paperwork piles, I discovered lots of rough drafts of poems. A few of them had some potential. A few I couldn't remember where I thought the draft might be going. A few I didn't remember writing at all.
It was good to remember that I did more than my computer files might indicate.
--I was making some poetry submissions to literary journals before the bulk of submitting season winds down. There are moments when I wonder why I bother. But the occasional acceptance still makes me happy, so I persist.
--As I was looking through my file of finished poems, I realized that I had reviewed a rough draft twice, once back in January when I first finished the rough draft and then again in April, when I had no memory of revising it back in January. I haven't circled back to see which draft I like better. It does bother me a bit that I had no memory of doing the original revision.
--On Monday, I was thinking about the trinity of nuclear war movies of the 80's, and I listened to this podcast about them and other nuclear war movies, including House of Dynamite. As I drove down to Spartanburg, a line floated through my head: The apocalypse will not be televised. Once my students started writing, I put poem ideas on paper and ended up with a fairly good draft, just two hours after the line flitted through my head.
It's not the way I usually create poems, so I was happy to have that experience, especially in a very busy week.
Tuesday, April 28, 2026
The Last Day of Class
I had thought I might go for a walk a bit early to try to beat the thunderstorms that I can see on the radar, a large line heading our way. But thunder rumbles outside, so I will stay put for a bit. I'm not complaining--we're in desperate need of rain.
Today is the last day of in-person classes at Spartanburg Methodist College. There's still a reading day and exams, but today is the last day of regular commuting to Spartanburg until August when classes start again. After classes, I'll stay for the end of year celebration for Humanities graduates at a pizza place in town.
As with every semester, when we get to the end, I have a bit of whiplash--wasn't it just last week that I entered these dates into the syllabus? Back in January, when I put the spring semester syllabi together, the 28th of April seemed so far away. And now, here we are.
My brain can't seem to focus--or maybe it would be more accurate to say it focuses on one thing for one to five minutes and races on to the next thing. I have a lot going on in the next two weeks: both in-person and online classes ending, which means lots of grading, two papers due for my Lutheran Confessions class, two sermons to write, and a week-end retreat this week-end, where my spouse and I are the cooks. I've done many job duties for retreats, but this will be my first retreat as chef.
I am making a shopping list for one of the retreat leaders who will be going to Costco on Thursday. I find myself overly worried about leaving something off the list. But there will be grocery stores, should we forget something essential.
I am also worried about the amount of food we need. Is it too much? Is our menu too expensive? I also worry that we won't have enough--and again, I tell myself, there will be grocery stores, and people won't starve. I am less worried about people not liking the food. We are good cooks. I do worry about people not telling us about food they won't/can't eat until it's being served to them. But they did have a chance to tell us on the registration form, and so far, no one has mentioned anything.
O.K., time to focus on something else. Let me do some grading.
Monday, April 27, 2026
A Sunday of Donuts and Other Treats
Sunday, April 26, 2026
Jesus Remodels a Fixer Upper
I have been up early, both fretful and hopeful, thinking about taxes, thinking about home renovation shows and real life fixer-uppers, working on some poetry submissions. Usually I'd be revising a sermon on Sunday morning, but I got that done last night, after an up and down day.
I was thinking of mid-life crises, how some of us buy convertibles and others buy run down houses to fix up. I had planned to work on a poem about Jesus having a mid-life crisis and buying a run down house to renovate--the idea came to me on Friday. But I worried that readers would reasonably point out that Jesus didn't exactly live until mid-life to be able to have a midlife crisis.
My Jesus in the World poems can demand a willing suspension of disbelief, since Jesus is doing activities that he didn't do in the Gospels: bowling, going to a holiday cookie swap, helping with hurricane clean up, and so on. But I worried that mention of a midlife crisis would disrupt that suspension of disbelief.
This morning, the solution came to me, and it's so obvious I hesitate to admit that it didn't come to me sooner. I can take out the reference to a mid-life crisis. Let the reader decide why Jesus is buying a run-down house to renovate.
There are so many wonderful ways this poem could go--it's so wonderful to have a glimmer of an idea that's closer to fully recognized than just a whisp and to have poem creation to look forward to in the week to come.




