Year: 2021 (Page 11 of 23)

Home is…

[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]Last week we asked you to share words that come to mind when you think of home. Here are your responses:[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row][vc_row][vc_column][vc_gallery interval=”3″ images=”43860″ img_size=”full”][/vc_column][/vc_row]

Guided Meditation/Journaling Prompts with Rev. Elaine

In the following text, I invite you to consider how the sacred shows up in our everyday lives through the contemplative practice known as daily examen. 
While its roots of this practice are in the Ignatian Christian tradition, 
its wisdom stretches far and wide across traditions and theologies. You may use these reflection questions as journaling prompts or simply reflect on them. You can also find a video version of this guided meditation HERE.

Let’s experiment with this practice together to discover what wisdom it may offer us today.

So, to begin, Perhaps you’d like take a look around – take in your surroundings
Move your body gently — wiggle your fingers and toes
And, if it feels right, close your eyes to let yourself turn inward.

Bring your focus to your breath, moving in and out.

And as we rest our awareness on our breathing, we ask ourselves:  
What do we need to take in today?

What do we need to let go of?

And next we shift our attention to gratitude — 
gratitude for this moment, for the miracle of being alive.  What are you feeling moved to give thanks for right now?

Now, In your mind’s eye, look back at the last 24 hours — the events of yesterday, and the hours of today so far.  

Take a moment to find the experiences — Yesterday morning, the afternoon, Before bed, and this morning.  Where were you?  Who were you with?  Where was your attention, your energy focused?

If it takes a while to locate, that’s ok, offer yourself patience and compassion.

And now, with the language that feels most authentic, ask yourself this:
When did you feel most connected with Spirit?  
Most fully alive? 
Where was God in this day?

Gather together the images, the feelings.  If you’d like, feel free to jot them down.

Next, we reflect on our lives from another angle:
When did you feel disconnected from the flow of life?
When did you feel most distant from Spirit? From God? From your best self?

Gather together the images, the feelings, and hold them with compassion.

Next, we ask ourselves with honesty and kindness: Is there anywhere we wish to make amends in our lives? Do we need to return to something left undone?

This is a time where we can set our intentions for the day, knowing that the work of loving and living is never done, and repair and forgiveness — of ourselves and others –is deeply healing.

As we turn our hearts and energies towards the day ahead, 
Mindful of our recent learnings and experiences
Holding our intentions
Practicing forgiveness of ourselves and others,

We begin again in love

In this present moment
Here, now, in this body, in this life
Knowing ourselves loving….and beloved
Connected to the family of all humanity
And the vast interconnected web of all creation
We belong, we are beloved, we are beautiful

Coming Home (series invitation)

My kids and I got back from a visit to see my family in the northwest Thursday night a little after midnight. My partner and I both started work before 9 Friday morning. My daughter headed to a sleepover with a friend before noon, and by 5:30, we were headed to kickball with other Foothills friends. Later today, we’re headed to Denver to meet friends we haven’t seen for over two years, and Sunday we’re hoping to finally see In the Heights.  

Life is suddenly, overwhelmingly, amazingly, confusingly – as it was before – in so many ways.

And still, behind the sudden rush and the returning, we know we aren’t the same as we were before. 

Like I told each person I greeted in Washington, we did it.  We survived.  By which I mean to acknowledge, there was something to survive.  A trauma that changed us.  That’s still changing us. Not to mention that when we review the recent case numbers, we see that despite the availability of vaccines, COVID is not over. We aren’t who we were before. And we aren’t yet who we will be.

And so even though it feels like we’re all “going back,” I have the sense that what we actually need is to step back. To pause in a kind of great global check-in, where we can re-meet ourselves, and each other for who we are now, and also who we are becoming.

Before we go back, we need to come home.

Come home to some of our most basic questions – those anchoring mysteries that can help orient us, and propel us, and comfort us through whatever comes next.

Come home in a way that will help us start off again on a whole new adventure.  

This is our invitation for the next six weeks in our series, Coming Home – to both come home and to set off on a great journey, as we focus on some of life’s greatest questions, and the tools and practices of Unitarian Universalism in meeting these questions. 

It’s a great series for newcomers and those wondering if Foothills is a good fit for them/their families, so be sure to invite your Foothills-curious friends. 

As our new theme song describes, home is the place where we are together. And it’s not the same without you.  9 & 11 am Mountain every Sunday through August 15th – foothillsuu.org/livestream

In community,
Rev. Gretchen 

Mount Rushmore

[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]Last week we asked you, “If you could add anyone to Mount Rushmore, who would it be?”

And the winner is…

 

First Place Winner:

Barack Obama  (15 votes)

Second Place Tie (3 votes each):

  • Sitting Bull
  • Crazy Horse

Third Place Tie (2 votes each):

  • Franklin Delano Roosevelt
  • Martin Luther King, Jr.
  • No one – return to it’s natural state
  • Ruth Bader Ginsburg
  • Susan B Anthony

Honorable Mentions:

  • Eleanor Rooseselt
  • Harriet Tubman
  • Lyndon B. Johnson
  • Mark Twain
  • “My granpa”
  • Red Cloud

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Sanctuary Everywhere Update

With so much shifting so quickly, we wanted to take a moment to update you on one of our many impactful justice programs – and our July/August Share the Plate partner – Sanctuary Everywhere.

We started Sanctuary Everywhere in 2019 when in-church Sanctuary was no longer a viable way to help immigrants at risk of deportation from actually being deported. Unfortunately, due to a changing political climate, in-church Sanctuary became like a “church jail,” and many saw going into hiding or being deported as more humane choices than an interminable residency in a church.

In response to this change, we pivoted to companion asylum seekers reaching the U.S. through the formation of local Villages. These Villages were loosely modeled after Homeward Alliance’s One Village One Family program. In this model, a group of 6-8 volunteers companioned an asylum seeker who was referred to us from one of our partners – La Cocina, Fuerza Latina, RMAIN, or from Kim Medina (local immigration attorney). One of the Village members served as the official sponsor, providing housing and a degree of assurance to the government about the person’s support in the community, thus allowing the asylum seeker to leave the detention center.  

Foothills ran three Villages through summer 2020. All of those asylum seekers found their way to a degree of stability with quite a variety of paths. Additionally, the Sanctuary Everywhere team continues to provide support (emotional, financial, logistical) for the individual who came into Sanctuary briefly with us in 2020. We also provide ongoing support to his family.  

Our Villages have provided housing, medical/dental funds, dozens of rides to ICE and other appointments, support in learning English, connections with mental health support, and community relationship building. Foothills Unitarian has covered these costs through a designated fund for which we raised money in 2019 and 2020. The fund is also supplemented by individual donations as well as the Ministerial Discretionary Fund. While we saw enormous generosity initially, the need for supporting asylum seekers remains high. For this reason, Sanctuary Everywhere is our Share the Plate Partner for our new series Coming Home, starting July 11th. (Stay tuned for an email this Friday introducing our Coming Home series!)

The Sanctuary Everywhere fund also supports its volunteers through our partner organization, La Cocina. Through this program, facilitators from La Cocina support both Villagers and the Sanctuary Everywhere Core Team in dismantling white supremacy and fostering effective companioning as a white person. La Cocina’s support of us and our work has been invaluable in our discernment and learning.

All of this work came to a pause in the fall of 2020, as COVID made it impossible to recruit Villagers, and the asylum process was politically gridlocked – only one person got asylum in the US in the fourth quarter of 2020. 

However, in March of 2021, we restartedWe are now supporting a family of 13 from Nicaragua, two of whom remain in detention. We are doing this in deep partnership with Fuerza Latina, La Cocina, and Homeward Alliance. Alianza Norco is also involved – they helped get the over 16 folks driver’s licenses! Up until early June, 11 of the 13  family members were living in one small mobile home that was, as you can imagine, very cramped and stressful. However, with our Core Team’s support, five family members moved into their own trailer. In partnership with Homeward Alliance, Sanctuary Everywhere volunteers have provided the first month’s rent, the security deposit, a bike, sleeping bags, and a seemingly endless list of clothing and kitchen wares. Additionally and importantly, the Core Team has transitioned support from itself (a small group of volunteers) to a new Village – a group of volunteers from Foothills, Fuerza Latina, and our broader community. 

The Core Team is preparing to host a meeting across all community partners to establish a long-term plan for continuing coordination and cooperation.  

This is just a brief overview of Sanctuary Everywhere’s work. The life-changing impact of this justice program cannot be overstated, and I can’t imagine a better Share the Plate partner for our Coming Home series. Supporting the Sanctuary Everywhere Fund will help make home a tangible reality for dozens of individuals who have traveled thousands of miles, often fleeing violence, only to face the fear of deportation. We can’t wait to see you Sunday as we kick off our Coming Home series and reaffirm our commitment to Sanctuary Everywhere and immigration justice!

In partnership,

Rev. Gretchen

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