Sunday, April 21, 2019

dancing with dementia - c. bryden (2005)

an almost unbelievably upbeat book about that most feared of all diagnoses, dementia.

several points strike me as i speed my way through this book in the wake of the odd aftertaste of another dementia book, before i forget by b. smith and dan gasby:

  • in the interest of accuracy, she has FTD, not Alzheimer's.
  • she sees herself as the embodiment of three layers - the cognitive who and what that is most visible and is lost soonest, the emotional with which she engages others and over which she is losing control bit by bit, and the inner core of who she is in her spirit, which she does not lose. dementia takes her memories and her thoughts but has no power over her core self. i suppose, having lived with dementia for twenty-three years (by 2018, not 2005), she has some authority in this.
  • and she says, why does it matter if i cannot remember... if i enjoy your visit, why must i remember it?... let me live in the present. if i forget a pleasant memory, it does not mean it was not important for me.
a remarkably wise book, this. it reminds me of that old promise that nothing shall separate me from the love of God.

hear ye, HEAR YE!

the easter affirmation, to be read in progressively louder tone as font size increases.

one cannot help thinking that the triumphant proclamation upon which the christian faith is built deserves more considered and innovative treatment than that of decibels alone.

easter morning thoughts

there is a fountain filled with blood drawn from Immanuel's veins
and sinners plunged beneath that flood lose all their guilty stains.
e'er since by faith i saw the stream thy flowing wounds supply
redeeming love has been my theme, and shall be till i die.
- william cowper

the cross and the resurrection redeem me from more than i care to consider
and make me worthy of more than i will ever grasp.
thank God.

Friday, April 19, 2019

good friday

a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief...

i make a startling realization in the wake of the familiar words. when i say God, this is my heavy heart and the bitterness of my spirit; what can you do to sweeten it? really he is telling me child, i know your sorrow and your grief. i drank the cup you could not drink.

he shares my burden.

Tuesday, April 9, 2019

surprised by joy - c.s.lewis (1955)

he calls it joy, this ephemeral longing that comes upon him and catches him unawares when he reads a passage of a book, or when he contemplates a scene, or when he remembers a memory. it is the pursuit of this, he believes, that leads him to God.

why does he call this joy, i wonder. when we usually think of joy as an uplifting of the spirit and countenance, why does he link it to this elusive feeling that needs to be described almost laboriously? i begin to realize that the opposite of joy is not, perhaps, sorrow, but longing. and if longing, then joy must be the fulfilment of that longing. there is a logic to this strange nomenclature.

and i have felt that joy too. i have felt that unexpected burst that expands my soul and gives me, momentarily, a glimpse of something far bigger than i am, when i chance upon an empty road, or when the storm clouds come in their ominous glory, or when i hear danny boy, or i join in a chorus of how great thou art. so joy is my glimpse of the eternity that God puts in my heart, and i am the richer for having read about it.