Last year I tried three Lenten practices: I refrained from one thing (Facebook), I engaged in one thing (daily drawing), and I gave money to justice work (abolishing human trafficking). I didn’t keep to the drawing practice very well. The other practices, I kept, and they were deepening. I’m going to follow the same structure this year: a negative practice, a positive practice, and the practice of generosity.
This year I have a somewhat different internet-related practice: not to use the internet as entertainment. In his poem “Ash Wednesday,” T. S. Eliot prayed, “Teach us to sit still.” It’s something I strive to learn, and the net is amphetamines for my monkey mind. So although I will appear on Facebook, I will endeavor not to fritter. Right now I want to go over there just to see what’s going on. That’s the kind of thing I’m planning to resist from now until Easter.

photo by JamesJen, used by permission (Wikimedia Creative Commons)
The line is fuzzy. Reading the week’s secrets every Saturday night at Postsecret seems like a spiritual practice, even though it sometimes affords all the satisfactions of gossip; reading others’ blog entries is serious but can easily drift into just fooling around; using Facebook to see how a friend is doing or take some political action honors the spirit of the practice, but can easily turn into mere entertainment. I will have to be attentive to what’s calling me to a webpage in order to know when to continue and when to stop.
My positive practice is to walk the labyrinth each day I’m at church. The first couple of days’ practice will be to restore it. It’s made of river stones, which are easily dislodged, and the path has actually been altered in at least one place, as I realized when I walked it the other day and discovered that once you get to the center of the labyrinth you can walk right out. There may be labyrinths with that design, but ours is the Cretan labyrinth and follows the same long path out as one took in. I for one need that contemplation time both going into the center and emerging.
I’m going to continue the support of justice work I began last year by putting much more time into the abolition work I’ve been neglecting. I have no desire, or evening time, to be on organizational boards. What I do best is write, speak, coach volunteers, and teach, so I think this is the time to dig out my notes for a UU abolition curriculum and get a draft done. I’ll also be helping the good folks at Aptos, which has the only anti-slavery action group of any UU congregation that I know of (if there are others, please chime in in the comments!), to have a strong presence at General Assembly (GA), where the Congregational Study Action Issue they proposed is being considered as the next official UU-wide issue and where they have a program on the GA schedule, bringing Kevin Bales of Free the Slaves to tell UUs what the problem is and what we can do about it. I already give to anti-trafficking organizations, but I’ll give a special donation for the season.
Do you have, or have you had, any practices for Lent? What are they?
4 comments
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February 22, 2012 at 2:55 pm
Donna Tensuan
Hi Amy,
Is the labyrinth open to the public? It sounds like something I would like to do . . .
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February 22, 2012 at 4:07 pm
Amy Zucker Morgenstern
Yes! It’s in the front garden–come park in the church parking lot and walk anytime. It will be all fixed up, eh, probably by 1 p.m. tomorrow but definitely by Friday afternoon.
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February 26, 2012 at 9:11 pm
textwanderer
Walking a labyrinth sounds as though it would be a wonderful practice to pick up. I need some more contemplative quiet time in my life right now. However, there aren’t many laid out walking labyrinths near me at school. All we have is one on a metal disk in the wall of the ‘meditation’ stone garden behind the chapel.
Best of luck with your goals/choices for the lenten season.
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February 26, 2012 at 9:16 pm
Amy Zucker Morgenstern
Thank you–and yours.
“Finger labyrinths” are surprisingly powerful contemplative tools. If you can’t find a walking-size labyrinth, do try the one on the disk. I hope the chapel is also a good place for quiet reflection.
Have you tried this?: http://labyrinthlocator.com/
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