choosing choise

Fourth of July: A time of choosing

by Melanie Gruenwald

My husband and I were in the mountains this past week, enjoying the Colorado summer. It’s  a gift to live here, and to have time to bike, hike and explore together. We have been married almost 23 years. We’ve learned to navigate both quiet and busy and take advantage of good times together as a couple and as a family.

We moved to this state in 2008, when my husband assumed a pulpit at Hebrew Educational Alliance.

We’ve learned to flow with the tides of life, competing demands, supporting one another’s careers, while raising incredible children. We find time to be together- to move in the outdoor beauty- to smell the trees.

 

My ‘learning’ for this time away is about choice.

 

We have a choice in how we show up in adversity.

We have a choice of dignity and pride.

We have a choice how we connect to humans and other living things.

We have a choice to experience gratitude and wonder.

We have a choice in how we show up with and for one another.

We have a choice how we show up and love one another.

 

In our personal and communal lives, we always have choice to do better, to fight for justice and to pursue dignity.

Everything else will flow from there.

 

Enjoy your fourth of July weekend. Take care of  yourselves and the people around you.

What will you choose today?

One Response

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related Posts

Hidden Names

by Dr. David Sanders The filmmaker, Alan Berliner, in the preamble to his documentary film (The Sweetest Sound) about the names we are given, referred

What has been, Already is.

by Melanie Gruenwald “What has been, already is; and what will be has already been.”— Ecclesiastes The sages wrestled with this verse. How can what

photo from https://new.ahavassholom.org/home/tikun-olam/abayudaya/

It Takes a Village

by Dr. David Sanders As the former Hebrew slaves encamped around Mount Sinai they were given their mission: “Be a light unto the nations.” That

mask by claudia trevithick

Unmasking a Mask

by David Sanders For almost twenty years the Denver Hospice featured a bi-annual auction of masks created by artists and celebrities across the country.  Through