Sacred Attention
I did not witness the Buddhist monks’s Walk for Peace (2,300 miles from Fort Worth, TX to Washington, DC) through Fredericksburg today. I didn’t even know it was happening since I do not regularly watch the news or participate on platforms like Facebook. But I did feel its impact. The flowers strewn along Lafayette Boulevard stopped me in my tracks. And while cars whizzed by, I slowed to notice every petal and stem along the roadside, contemplating the calm safe places in my life. Praying that those spaces might exist for us all. That we all might have enough.
The Walk for Peace post today: On Day 104, we continue our journey through Virginia, walking through Fredericksburg and heading to Stafford via US-1 Highway. Step by step, we carry the message of peace, mindfulness, loving-kindness and compassion forward. We are deeply grateful for the continued support and warm welcome we receive along the way.
From the poet James Crews, The Weekly Pause:
As Mirabai Starr writes in Ordinary Mysticism, “When we make a pact to show up for reality just as it is, reality rewards us by revealing its hidden holiness, its ordinary wonder, its fruitful shadows and radiant wounds.” I see now that my mother knew this, how we reclaim some measure of our power when we learn to revere what is already here. This pledge leads to a life of awe for the everyday, for the simple beauties, for the kindness of memories, for the wounds that require our tending to heal. Doesn’t the whole world long for the balm of our sacred attention