December 7, 2022
“If It’s Okay, I’d Just Like to Talk a Bit”: A Prayer
O Lord, if it’s okay with you, I’d just like to talk a bit
because
any prayer I try to pray
won’t be much of a prayer,
because
whatever it is
they’re filling me with
makes it hard to remember
much of anything, like
whatever it is they’re filling me with;
can’t remember what they call it,
can’t remember what I want to remember,
can’t remember what I just remembered;
nearly impossible
to put together
a prayer
because
just as a
word comes,
it’s gone;
antibiotics,
I just remembered,
that’s what they’re filling me with,
extremely strong, so strong that
in a minute or two I won’t remember that
that’s what they’re filling me with;
so if you don’t mind,
I’d just like to talk
with you, especially about
Mrs. Whatever Her Name Was,
because suddenly
there she was
one day last week,
alive and well in my head;
there she was,
shopping at the Piggly Wiggly
in Richfield, Minnesota where I was
a 14-year-old bag boy;
there she was,
Mrs. Whatever Her Name Was,
all nasal and nasty,
mean as a snake,
hissing her way along;
terrorizing
bag boys,
because
she thought
they were stupid;
telling bag boys
how to bag,
where to put what,
when the bag too heavy;
warning bag boys
not to smash the bread,
not to crush the eggs,
not to put your thumb
through the cellophane wrapping
around the hamburger
in the cardboard tray;
she was
arrogant,
mean,
thoughtless,
always complaining, always criticizing, always carping;
and one day I had enough of her and
drove my finger through the cellophane
wrapped around the hamburger she bought,
threw it in the bottom of the bag,
strangled a loaf of bread,
and tossed it in,
followed by a 5 lb. bag
of flour and a
5 lb. bag of sugar
dropped on top,
camouflaged
by a bag of chips,
and put the bag in her cart
while she was getting
all nasal and nasty
with the cashier;
finally,
sweet revenge,
and it felt great...
but not for long,
because
walking home
I realized that
I had allowed
“Mrs. Whatever Her Name Was”
to make me as
mean and nasty
as she was; but
that wasn’t me,
Nan raised me,
that wasn’t the behavior
Nan taught me; and
I stopped dead in the road and
vowed
I would always try to be kind to others,
no matter how unkind to me; and
never again allow the meanness of others
to change me;
not even
someone as mean as
Mrs. Whatever Her Name Was.
And after all these years, Lord, she was the one who came to mind
because there she was,
alive and well in the Wellstar Cobb ER last week;
Amazing Grace
told me so;
Grace the Amazing
was young man who
rolled me to and from my scan, told me about
the craziness in the ER waiting room the day before;
“It was awful,” Grace said, “people were mean
and rude and arrogant and nasty;”
then he said
something very true and very sad,
“But it’s like that everywhere now.”
Mrs. Whatever Her Name Was
in the flesh
wherever you go.
And Lord, that’s what I wanted to talk to you about, tell you about,
that I saw some
very kind, very caring, very dedicated people
remain true to who they were
in the face of meanness and nastiness
and rudeness,
never allowing others to change them,
remaining kind and caring
and dedicated;
and may that be
the prayer
of all of us,
that we
remain kind and caring and dedicated
no matter how others are;
remain obedient to your way
no matter what other do;
remain true to being the people you call us to be,
and never allow anyone to
turn us into what we
never want to be.
And speaking of that, Lord, let us always respond with
kindness to those who are ill, those who are suffering
and hurting, those who are dying, those who are
grieving, those who are struggling in their families
or jobs, and the hungry and homeless and
refugees of this world.
And may healing
and consolation and comfort
grace them;
lift them in hope;
through us and others may food and shelter and safe haven
be given.
And Lord, there is something else I need to say in this prayer
that’s not really a prayer,
and what I need to say is
thank you,
thank you for
Grace the Amazing, Tori the Terrific,
Belinda the Beautiful, Glenn the Great,
Julie the Jewell, and more:
thank you
for the kindness
they showed me,
thank you
for the people they are;
and for my family, the congregation, friends (another prayer needed);
and even for Mrs. Whatever Her Name Was,
because she’s why I try to be kind;
and even for whatever it is filling me,
because whatever it is, it worked;
and for your grace and mercy
by which I have made it
to this day.
Amen.