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Crosswalk Parenting � Support for Christian Families Today
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Wednesday, September 15, 2004

Welcome to Crosswalk Parenting, a free newsletter from Crosswalk.com.  Crosswalk 
Parenting brings you informative and inspirational articles to help moms and dads grow 
in their God-given roles. If this newsletter no longer meets your needs, please use 
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>> Moments for Mom: Planning a Spiritual Retreat, Part II
Elizabeth K. Corcoran

...my retreat adventures continue from last month's column...

What do I do once I get there? What are the benefits of having a spiritual retreat?

Here's how my time went. I arrived at 9am on Monday morning. Okay, 8:50 --- I was 
really excited to get started. But my assigned nun/tour guide wasn't there yet. So I 
had to sit and wait for ten minutes. As I watched the clock, I was thinking, "Woman, 
where are you?!? Don't you know I want to spend time with God?!?"

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I guess you could say I was a little on edge...case in point of why I was there to 
begin with.

So I got established into my quaint room and unpacked. I headed outside but chose not 
to bring any of my many 'aids'. I just needed some alone time. I found this gorgeous 
rock by a peaceful creek and settled in. Within moments -- and I mean moments -- God 
cut to the quick and we wrestled through my biggest current issue. Like I shared last 
month, what had been lingering for six months under the surface of my soul was worked 
through in about 15 minutes. What was spoken doesn't need to be shared...that's one 
thing I'm learning...not all of my encounters with God need to be for public 
consumption.

Anyway, I could have called it a day already if I had wanted to. But I didn't --- 
because all I had right then was time on my side...what an amazing feeling for a 
working mom.

Time to just sit in the sun...in the Son.

Which brings me to another benefit of retreating...it's not just about getting away 
from the everyday...though kids, and dishes, and laundry, and cleaning, and cooking 
(okay, so I don't really cook all that much, but if I did, it would be on this list), 
and work, and the husband can all wear on a woman from time to time, even though they 
are all blessings...for me, though, this time was just as much about what I was 
choosing to live without for four days...no television, no shopping, no fast food, no 
email (which is huge for me --- when my husband and I went on a Caribbean cruise last 
summer for a week, I checked email each day from the ship! --- in the freaking 
Caribbean!), and no magazines (oh, but speaking of magazines...when walking to 
breakfast that first morning, I saw the newest issue of People in the nun's lounge and 
I began plotting how I could grab it without being caught)...another case in point of 
why I needed to be there...my propensity to be more concerned with 
 getting caught than committing one of the seven deadly sins, let alone while on a 
spiritual retreat!

Basically, I filled my time with quiet meals, quiet times, a quiet hour of writing 
about a dozen notes, some quiet reading outside, a quiet spell of laying on my bed 
looking out the window, quietly working my way towards finishing my first full reading 
of the Bible (not in one sitting...unless you'll allow me to count two years as one 
really long sitting), quietly napping, quietly lingering in prayer, quietly watching a 
gaggle of geese find their breakfast, and walking very, very slowly. (That is 
something I hoped to continue...I tend to walk fast even when I'm not in a hurry. I 
would like to walk as slow through my day-to-day as I was around the retreat grounds.) 
Which beckons the question --- how do you go from silent, slow, chore-less monastic 
life to the daily grind? Very, very carefully.

> How do I re-enter my normal life?

I was concerned about re-entry. In four short days, I had come to relish the silence 
and the whispering. My life is not a quiet one. I didn't want to head back home with a 
chip on my shoulder as if to say, "I was created for quiet and you people are ruining 
it for me." So I realized that I needed to prepare myself for going back. I did three 
simple things.

One, I made sure my husband knew when I was coming home so the house could be somewhat 
picked up (this might not be a thing for you, but it's a thing for me). I didn't want 
four days to go out the window because I felt I had to grumble and straighten up my 
first hour back.

Two, I had spent some time reading about various spiritual disciplines, so I jotted 
down a plan for implementing a few of them in my life. Saying that you want to try 
something is one thing...committing to try it by setting a goal and scheduling it on 
your calendar is quite another.

And three, right before I left, I asked God to prepare my heart for going home. He and 
I agreed that, although that time had been wonderful for us, that is not real life. 
Did something supernatural happen over those four days? Yes, absolutely. A healing 
came to pass that I had desperately needed. It was restorative and renewal at its 
best. However, true transformation into Christlikeness happens in the day to day. And 
I was about to head right back in with both barrels. I needed the quiet spirit that I 
had settled into to stick...and I asked God to help it do so.

> What if I really, really cannot get away?

If you find that your schedule or circumstances absolutely do not allow for an 
extended period of solitude, there are few things you can do. First of all, most 
people can carve 2-3 hours out of their month -- and that is what I would suggest. 
Start slow --- schedule an appointment on your calendar, two-three hours, once a 
month, for six months.

Secondly, begin arranging your life around the concepts of retreating. How can you fit 
them into your normal day? It's one thing to tarry for 15 minutes watching dragonflies 
chase each other over the surface of a babbling brook and chock that up as worshipping 
the Creator of the universe when you've got four days with nothing to do and nowhere 
to go. It's quite another when all you've got is fifteen minutes total to commune with 
God. You need to simply talk to God about it --- he knows your life --- he knows that 
you can't just stop your day for three hours to watch nature, but if you ask him, he 
will give you creative ideas to spend with him.

Go for a walk. If you live in a quiet neighborhood, use that time to pray or just 
observe creation. If you're neighborhood is busy, bring a Walkman and a worship tape. 
Get up fifteen minutes before everyone else, grab a cup of coffee, and sit outside, 
watching the sunrise. During lunch, light a candle, and sit down with your Bible 
instead of eating over the sink like you usually do. Walk slower. Talk less. Listen 
more. Simply quiet your heart.

So there I was --- God had already spoken. I suspected he would again, but there was 
no pressure. It wasn't about the revelation. It wasn't about the wrestling. It wasn't 
even really about the rest. It was simply about me and God and nothing else. And no 
matter what personality type you are, where you are in your spiritual journey, or what 
is going on in your life, you cannot find a better use of your time than this.

� Elisabeth K. Corcoran, 2004

Visit http://www.crosswalk.com/family/parenting/1280176.html to read Part I of this 
article.


Elisabeth K. Corcoran is the author of �Calm in My Chaos: Encouragement for a Mom's 
Weary Soul.� She is wife to Kevin, and mom to Sara, 7-&-1/2, and Jack, 6. Her passion 
is encouraging women and she fulfills that through heading up the Women's Ministries 
on staff at Blackberry Creek Community Church in Aurora, IL and writing and speaking 
as much as she can. �Calm in My Chaos� (2001) can be purchased directly through her 
publisher, Kregel Publications at #1-888-644-0500 or www.kregel.com, at amazon.com, or 
through your local Christian bookstore. This article is original and not excerpted 
from her book.


>>  Visit Crosswalk's Family Parenting channel for more great articles and resources 
>> to help you serve your family's need.
www.crosswalk.com/family/parenting/


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