Thursday, July 19, 2012

Washing feet at the beach...


“Week 52” is over – the one precious week of vacation I am given each year at Nags Head.  In the company of two other sisters, I overslept, read books, prayed when I felt like it and ate WAY too much.  I am always grateful for these days of holy leisure – for the return to some natural clock inside me.  I am rested and renewed and very grateful to my beach companions for the gift of their presence.  One of the thoughts that came in the car on the way home – other than, “I wish I had TWO weeks at the beach!” – has stayed with me in the transition to “real life”.  We have this tradition at the beach.  When the last day of your vacation comes, you clean the house from top to bottom – scrub the bathrooms, vacuum, wash sheets and remake the beds for the sisters coming in that day.  Then, you prepare a meal for them so that when they arrive around noon; both groups can eat to together.  When the new group arrives we help with their bags, boxes and coolers.  After lunch we clean up the mess and leave them to their “week 52” in a fresh, clean house.  It’s hard work, that last day.  By the time we got our things into the car and waved goodbye, I was ready to collapse.  It was then that the thought came.  That Sunday ritual on the last day of vacation is our annual “foot washing”.  It is our opportunity to serve our sisters in the humblest of ways.  Scrubbing toilets and changing sheets – these simple tasks are the most loving.  Mothers understand this.  To prepare a fresh bed for a loved one is sacramental.  So is cooking, serving and cleaning up.  We wash PLENTY of dishes at the monastery, but in this setting it is so much more intimate.  Our time of leisure is ending and instead of feeling sorry for ourselves, we choose loving action for those whose joy is yet to come.  We bend and wash and serve.  It is very much like the service Jesus asks of us in the Holy Thursday liturgy.  The Lord of sun and moon bends to wash the tired, dusty feel of fishermen.  I watched our prioress make beds, empty the dishwasher and scrub a bathroom.  This is real love – the love that regards the good of the other as sacred duty.  Our “foot washing” at the beach remains one of the sweetest examples of the goodness of this life.  It will be 51 weeks until we go to the Outer Banks [but who’s counting!]  The example of what was done for us and what we did for others has become an icon of humble love.  It’s taken me 10 trips to the beach to see it, but now the basin and towel will never be the same.

Blessings and love to you all…
-          Sister Vicki