It’s ironically confusing how the most anticipated season of the year can hold the most heartache. For all the filling we do of stockings, tummies and calendars, there remains an inescapable emptiness we are required to reckon with.
This symphony of wise voices anchors and settles me in the elusiveness of the holidays:
In the words of Anglican priest and author Tish Harrison Warren:
To practice Advent is to lean into an almost cosmic ache: our deep, wordless desire for things to be made right and the incompleteness we find in the meantime.
In a section entitled “Loving our Longing” from his book Addictions and Grace, psychiatrist and spiritual counselor Gerald May wrote:
Human life is meant to contain yearning, incompleteness and lack of fulfillment. To claim our rightful place in destiny, we must not only accept, claim and affirm the sweetly painful incompleteness within ourselves, but also come to fall in love with it.
Finally, words from activist and novelist Anne Lamott:
Death is incredibly hard to bear, and we don’t get over losing people we love. We Christians like to think death is a major change of address, but the person will live again fully in your heart, at some point, if you don’t seal it off. Memories of the people you love will make you smile at inappropriate times, but their absence will also be a lifelong nightmare of homesickness for you.
How could making peace with abiding ache, incompleteness, and homesickness transform your posture towards yourself and others during this intense time of year? What childhood stories of intolerable heartache did you survived with a strategy of “filling”? How might returning to those stories lead you to a deeper soul rest as you make peace with emptiness?