• About
  • Photography
    • weddings
    • portraiture
    • 35mm
  • Projects
    • 'How the Story Ends'
    • 'To Be Relieved'
  • Published Writing
  • blog
gathering rosemary
  • About
  • Photography
    • weddings
    • portraiture
    • 35mm
  • Projects
    • 'How the Story Ends'
    • 'To Be Relieved'
  • Published Writing
  • blog

hurry up & slow down

A poem(?) inspired by John Mark Comer’s sermon series & book, The Ruthless Elimination of Hurry.

We never begin 

We never rest 

We never sit, 

Ponder the sky

Understand the trees.

Because time is precious,

Too precious to invest in 

What stands through the years,

What is valuable 

At the end of our existence. 

We invest in momentary satisfaction,

What gives us worth 

For a moment.

The truth is,

The elimination

Takes the most time,

To settle,

To break from the hurry,

The motion,

The noise. 

Yet the first part of the process

Of the elimination 

Is most necessary. 

Soon, 

In a week

In a year, 

After a month of up & downs, 

Soon the smallest trace of hurry 

Will taste sour in your mouth 

Will shake your bones

And you will say

“Never again.”

Soon.

Today, you begin.

You begin by

Sleeping ten minutes longer.

Tomorrow, you begin again. 

And this time

You’ll read ten minutes later. 

And the next day,

You will find

Time in the day to walk. 

But today,

As many times as is necessary,

You begin again and again.

This is why 

They call it ruthless.

There can be no mercy 

For the hurry that takes from life,

That robs love,

That stunts creativity. 

For it has no mercy on you. 

So today, 

Walk, don’t run, 

And begin the elimination

One steady step at a time.

“Rest is the conversation between what we love to do & how we love to be... Rest is the essence of giving and receiving; an act of remembering, imaginatively and intellectually but also physiologically and physically… To rest is to give up on worrying and fretting and the sense that there is something wrong with the world unless we are there to put it right; to rest is to fall back literally or figuratively from outer targets and shift the goal not to an inner static bull’s eye, an imagined state of perfect stillness, but to an inner state of natural exchange.
Rested, we are ready for the world but not held hostage by it, rested we care again for the right things and the right people in the right way. In rest we reestablish the goals that make us more generous, more courageous, more of an invitation, someone we want to remember, and someone others would want to remember too.”
— Consolations, David Whyte
tags: poetry, ruthless elimination of hurry, slow down, John mark comer, bridgetown church
Friday 04.03.20
Posted by Grace Gilroy
Newer / Older