Month: March 2019 (Page 1 of 2)

Help Wanted (Worship Series)

It’s one of the most basic realities of being human: we need help. So, why is it so hard to get “help” right?

Many of us are taught to value self-reliance, and independence – and asking for help requires we inform other people.  As in, broadcast our weaknesses, incompetence, inadequacies for others to see? No thanks! 

On the other hand, when we asked to help someone else, we know it can feel really good to have that chance to be close to another.  We see how asking for help is not weakness, but strength – requiring courage and trust.  

As Brene Brown reminds us, “our vulnerability is…the birthplace of joy, of creativity, of belonging, of love.”

Still, it’s often hard to know if the help we offer is actually helpful. We aren’t sure if it’s too much, or not enough.  If we’ve come in with too much of our own culture, our own values, our own assumptions, our own pain….our own needs…

Offering help often brings us right back there – to our own needs, our own insecurities – if we let it.

Because helping always puts us in touch with our limits. Our humanness. 

For the next five weeks, we’re going to dive into this basic human reality of “help.” Asking for it. Receiving it.  Giving it.  And even, dealing with the feelings of helplessness that are also a part of being human.  

Because even though it is integral to being human, help is something that takes practice, and self-awareness, and an fundamentally spiritual orientation. 

That is, a willingness to live in to our fundamental dependence. To accept that we are not in charge or control of most things in this life. And yet to know that this can be a gift – as we come to embrace and give thanks for the piece that is ours.  Our unique place and part in this great interdependent web of all.  

Join us this Sunday, March 31st, as we kick off this new series, Help Wanted.  

Guiding Music

We always choose one song for each of our worship series that we sing or perform in every Sunday in the series.  It’s usually something you’ll find yourself singing later in the day, without even realizing it.  Because music connects in the deepest parts of our brains, the idea is that we’ll connect more fully with theme, and bring it into our everyday lives.

For this series, we’ve chosen Come With Me from Joe Jencks – who provided special music in the services on February 24th. It’s a great song acknowledging the ways we need each other in this life.  Can’t wait to sing it with all of you throughout this series!!

Go Deeper – Resources for further reflection on the theme

People who need help sometimes look a lot like people who don’t need help. – Glennon Doyle

1.  Want to help someone who’s struggling? Here’s a great mantra: Comfort In, Dump Out.  Check out this article for more details on the “ring theory” of helping.

2. Have you seen the original TED Talk from Brene Brown? Have you seen it lately? There’s a reason that it went viral. It’s a transformational look at vulnerability, shame, and courageous living.  

3.  Ram Dass’s classic book How Can I Help? remains a great resource on helping in all its forms.  

4. One thing we’ve been thinking about as we explore this series is the problems with how we think about “helping” at a social level. Here’s an articleexploring the problems with the way we think about solving poverty, as one example.  

5.  A great model of helping – giving and receiving – was a part of many of our childhood’s – or our children’s childhoods.  If you haven’t caught Won’t You Be My Neighbor?, the story of Mr. Rogers, now’s a great time – it’s out on DVD.  

We usually think of giving as more important than receiving.
Yet only by receiving light can flowers grow
into their beauty and pollinate the earth.
Only by absorbing rain can the earth grow what feeds us.
Only by inhaling air can our bodies walk us to each other.
Only by accepting each other’s pain and vulnerability
can human strength grow between us.
In these ways, receiving involves absorbing, inhaling, and accepting the life that flows through us, between us, and around us. 
– Mark Nepo

Join us for the whole Help Wanted Series
Every Sunday – in person, or online
8:30, 10:00, or 11:30 am
until April 28th when we begin our two-service schedule at 9 and 11 am.

Making Sunday Happen

Newcomers, the Now-Settled, and Longtime Stalwarts –

The Hospitality Team would love to welcome you to its fold. Every Sunday a team is required to create a worship experience that sends you back out into the world fortified and thinking.

Most of the year, we have three services every Sunday: 8:30, 10:00, and 11:30. Even though the first and third tend to be lower in attendance then the 10:00 service, it still takes the same number of volunteers to staff the experience. Some of the jobs require some experience, and some don’t. The Hospitality Team typically arrives 30 minutes before the start of the service for updates/support and some position stay active a few minutes after service.

For example, we need per service:

Two Greeters – the best position for newcomers, as no experience or knowledge about the church is required. You just need a friendly, welcoming persona.

One person at the Welcome Table – arrive 30 minutes before service begins and return to the table after service until your replacement arrives. If you are a newcomer, you can still do this by pairing up with an experienced member your first few times. You may get questions you can’t answer – I’ve belonged to the church for 30 plus years, and I still can’t answer all questions, so I have mastered, “I don’t know, but I’ll find someone who does.” Kathryn Boyle and Kristen Psaki are always floating about (soaring is more like it), ready to help.

Two Ushers – this requires very simple and straightforward training, or pairing with someone who’s done it before.

One Sound Booth Expert: this requires training, but we have folks to train you if sound technology is an interest.

One Slide Technician – this requires training. Again, this is relatively simple, and having done slides several times and made just about every mistake possible, I have found the congregation and staff to be most forgiving. It does help to sing along with the hymns. Anna Broskie (anna@foothilsuu.org ) does the training and always has your back during the service.

Coffee Captain/Coffee Barista – this is two jobs. Our most excellent staff have written out the direction with pictures even, to make this job easy for anyone to execute, even if you are not a coffee drinker – and serving coffee to UUs earns you high praise.

As I write this on the day after Pi Day, the math shows these equals 10 volunteers per service or 30 total per Sunday. See why you are needed?

Finally, Kristen and Kathryn meet with the Sunday Hospitality Team before each service with updates, there is a whiteboard in the office where you can document questions or ideas you have, and every month or so we meet at church for a simple potluck dinner to process how the Team is doing, get to know other team members (a real plus), and to receive some thoughtful wisdom from Kristen.

Don’t be shy! The church needs your service. The congregation is loud in their gratitude. Do yourself the favor of joining the Hospitality Team here.

Jane Everham, a Hospitality Team member

Share the Plate: Homeward Alliance

February 2019 – The Share the Plate offering was for Homeward Alliance’s Outreach Program. Homeward Alliance was started in 2008 as Homeless Gear in Ken Johns’ garage. Then over the years it morphed!

“Homeward Alliance operates a continuum of programs and initiatives, ranging from critical survival gear, to employment services, to homelessness prevention. We are not only an alliance of services, but also an alliance of volunteers, donors, agency partners and other community stakeholders. We envision a community in which homelessness is rare, short-lived and non-recurring.”

This month Foothills donated $3879.72 to help Homeward Alliance’s Street Outreach Program: “Three nights per week (cold months) and two nights per week (warm months), we send volunteers and staff onto the streets of Fort Collins to engage directly with people experiencing homelessness. We distribute supplies, share resource information, build relationships and help connect people to other services in the community.”

OF SPECIAL NOTE: Last year we collected money for another branch of Homeward Alliance, One Village One Family. As of today, our work for OVOF has generated the following statistics:

Families supported and housed since June 2015 = 13 (3 in 2019)

Two Villages are ready to go. NEWSFLASH: both new villages are now assigned families – launched!

Total children housed = 43 (6 in 2019)

Total adults housed = 17; includes one multigenerational family (60% of children are from minority groups (Latino/Hispanic, Black, Other)

Kudos to Gretchen for bringing us this program and for enlisting Anne Fisher in a Leadership role – Anne has taken it and run with it! Thank you, Anne

Learn more: www.homewardalliance.org

Share the Plate: La Cocina

January 2019 – The Share the Plate offering was for La Cocina, a program of The Family Center/La Familia.

“The program offers free-of-charge mental health services to monolingual Spanish-speaking families living in Larimer County. There are times in life when we all need extra care and support.

“La Cocina, or ‘The Kitchen’ in English, is named after the warmest, most inviting, and most nourishing place in our home. Our program offers a safe space for adults, children and families to come together for key Spanish-language therapy services, including recovery from trauma, forensic assessments for immigrants in detention, individual and/or family therapy, parents coaching, structured therapy groups for parents and adolescents, directive and non-directive play therapy to promote safe and healthy childhood development, and Charlas (talks) that sustain community well-being.”

Foothills Unitarian Church donated $8500 from a combination of the January offerings and a special appeal at the annual auction in November.

For more information, visit their website.

Become a WUULFIE – Let’s Howl Together in the desert!

By Jane Everham, church member

The Western Unitarian Universalist Life Festival (WUULF) is a family camp for all ages that has been happening for over 35 years at Ghost Ranch in Northern New Mexico. At WUULF you will meet UUs from all over our Mountain Desert District and beyond. WUULF is dining, worshiping, learning, dancing, star-gazing, hiking, singing, drumming – all together in the breathtaking Georgia O’Keefe landscape. My family has been attending WUULF for over a decade and only regret we didn’t start sooner. My young adult son who went to his first WUULF at age 13 complaining, “I don’t want to go to a church camp.” is now a Youth Advisor and never misses. WUULF is a special community that showed me the wide range and reach of UUism.

This year’s theme is The Bones of Our Community – “What would happen if we allowed our faith to be forged not only in the fires of direct personal experience but through the fires of a community of trust, discipline and community?”

AND, this year our own Rev. Sean Neil-Barron will present the Adult Program, while our kids are in full day childrens’ programming. Does your family love The Buckhorn Weekend Retreat? Come to WUULF for a week-long UU retreat experience.

I am counting the days until we gather- June 24-July 1, 2019. 

Registration for WUULF is OPEN and the catalog is available on the website at www.wuulf.org. Deadline is May 20, but don’t wait!

WUULF 2019 Catalog is available at info @wuulf.org. Enjoy the video – Now More Than Ever Contact Jane Everham at jeverham@frii.com for more information.

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