Day: April 3, 2020

How Do You Get the Pulse of a Congregation?

[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]Being a large congregation with over 1200 people in our community circles, it can be difficult to get a pulse on how every individual person is doing, all the time. But just because it’s difficult doesn’t mean it’s not worth doing, especially in times like today.

When we launched the Community Circles, we had our entire community answer a simple heart-based check-in question:

  • ❤️(red): I am ok. I have what I need and I am feeling as well as can be expected.
  • 🧡(Orange): I have some anxieties and/or logistical challenges but I am pretty much all right.
  • 💛(yellow): I am anticipating hardships and concerned that they will escalate. I don’t yet know how I will handle everything.
  • 💚(green): I’m facing significant hardships and I don’t have the resources to cover them. I wouldn’t mind if someone reached out to me.
  • 💙(blue): I am in crisis; I need help.
The results gave us a snapshot of how our congregation was doing on both a community & individual level.
  • 79% ❤️
  • 18% 🧡
  • 3%   💛
  • 1%.  💚
  • 0%. 💙
One trend we noticed in the data was those who filled out the survey earliest trended better than those who filled it out more recently. Which makes sense, as the situation with COVID-19 evolves our lives are going to (and have already) become MORE challenging.
To ensure we keep an accurate and up-to-date pulse on how we are doing, we have decided to regularly ask our community to check-in using this same heart scale. This weekly check-in will allow us to take the pulse of our congregation, and help enhance our communities care efforts.
The prompt will come via text message from #97000. It will link to a page on our website to fill out the check-in https://foothillsuu.org/checkin/. Information will be shared with those directly involved in our community care efforts (circle leaders and key staff and ministers).

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How Far Out Can You Go?

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How are you holding up?

Wherever you are, and however you are doing, as Sean shared on Sunday, you are loved, and it is enough.  

In my reflection Sunday, I shared how my partner and I had acccidentally started to think too far ahead. I say it like this because I’ve found that a core spiritual practice these days is to plan in small segments.

Segments that help rather than hinder a sense of joy, and resilience.

It’s somewhat of a spiritual cliche to talk about “one day at a time,” but in these times, I’ve found it to be a life-saving mantra.  Some days, I’ve found it’s more like “one hour at a time.”

For example.  The middle of this week, Colorado’s Governor told us what we mostly all knew but wished would be otherwise: schools will remain closed and online at least through April 30th, and likely won’t re-open this school year.

When I think about sustaining online school with my kids, while also working, and maintaining our home for the next 8 weeks – it becomes overwhelming to the verge of despair.  But when I think just about tomorrow.  The small goals we have together.  The small lessons we are building in every day to learn new things together. I’m ok.  We’re ok. One day at a time.

This practice doesn’t take away dreaming about the future. We are cultivating lots of dreams about the future in these times – all the places we want to go, all the people we want to hug.  It more keeps us grounded in the here and now, especially in the midst of all that is uncertain.  It helps turn us to gratitude, and to the things we have a say in, the ways we can listen for and partner with courageous love – as it is unfolding in our own lives, as they really are.

So for this week, I’d invite you to think about how far out you can go in your thinking without compromising your connection to life in its fullest sense. How far out you can imagine before you lose sight of joy, or gratitude.  And then just stay in that place.  Balanced with the dreaming of the far-out-future long after this crisis has past, and the world we will cherish even more, then.

This practice of being fully present to life in the here and now is one of the practices of what it means to live while also being aware of our mortality. It’s a theme that we’ll be exploring over the next few weeks, and it’s especially relevant in these days of increasing illness, dealing with grief, and navigating so much change.  I hope you’ll join us – and invite your friends from all over the world! – this Sunday at 9 by Zoom, or 11 on Facebook or on the website.  See you there.

With love,
Rev. Gretchen

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