Two years ago I began what has now become an annual tradition at Abbey of the Arts during this time of new year reflection. I offer the same invitation this year, again with some prizes to give away on January 6th, and this time with a free gift for everyone who participates.
*Everyone* who shares their word for the year and a brief description in the comments below also gets a *free guided meditation recording* from the Abbey with an *Embodied Examen Prayer for the New Year.* It is a great way to reflect on the past year and tend your dreams for the next. To claim your free gift, read through the instructions below and when your word for 2012 emerges, share it in the comments (scroll to the bottom of the page) and then email Eveline, the fabulous Abbey admin at admin@abbeyofthearts.com and request the link.
Then share this invitation with others! Help spread the love and opportunity for reflection!
Read on for more inspiration:
In ancient times, wise men and women fled out into the desert to find a place where they could be fully present to God and to their own inner struggles at work within them. The desert became a place to enter into the refiner’s fire and be stripped down to one’s holy essence. The desert was a threshold place where you emerged different than when you entered.
Many people followed these ammas and abbas, seeking their wisdom and guidance for a meaningful life. One tradition was to ask for a word – this word or phrase would be something on which to ponder for many days, weeks, months, sometimes a whole lifetime. This practice is connected to lectio divina, where we approach the sacred texts with the same request – “give me a word” we ask – something to nourish me, challenge me, a word I can wrestle with and grow into.
Last year my word was sanctuary. Sanctuary has multiple meanings: the sanctuary in a church is the place where the holy of holies dwells, but we also create sanctuaries for animals needing protection or for persons fleeing persecution. The layers to this word shimmered throughout my year, but especially the sense of finding sanctuary within my own heart, to feel at home in the world. This was the grace of this past year, its fierce lesson for me. This year my word is *savor* (click the link if you want to read more about its meaning for me). It came to me in a moment of silent prayer as I reflected on the call I am feeling these days to deeply savor each moment of my life, to immerse myself even more in the present moment. I am eager to discover what the word holds for me this coming year.
If you want help in letting a word choose you, scroll down for several suggestions.
- What is your word for the year ahead? A word which contains within it a seed of invitation to cross a new threshold?
- What word, phrase, or image is shimmering before you right now inviting you to dwell with it until it ripens fully inside of you?
Share your word in the comments below before Friday, January 6th
Leave your word for the year ahead in the comments below plus a couple of sentences describing your choice.
Letting a Word Choose You
For some of you the word may have come right away, but for some you may desire a word to ripen within your soul these coming weeks and months, but one doesn’t seem to be coming. So here are some suggestions for allowing a word to choose you:
- Release your thinking mind in this process, this isn’t about figuring out just the right word to improve yourself this coming year. The word comes as gift, often your sense of it being “right” is more intuitive, a more embodied sense of yes. The word (or phrase) is one that will work in you (rather than you working on it). Remember that a word that creates a sense of inner resistance is as important to pay attention to as one that has a great deal of resonance.
- Lectio divina is one of the primary practices we have in Christian monastic tradition for listening for a word or phrase that shimmers or calls to our hearts. Lectio is traditionally applied to scripture, but can also be engaged to pray with life experience. Allow some time for prayer and in your imagination review this last year, honoring it as a sacred text. As you walk through your experiences notice which ones stand out, call to you for more attention, or shimmer forth. There may be more than one, but for this time of prayer select one of them (and you can return to others in future times of prayer). Enter into it with all of your senses. Remember it in all of its detail. Experience it from this place you are in now. Notice if there is a word or phrase which rises up. Then allow that word to unfold in your imagination and welcome in images, feelings, and memories which stir in you. After a time of making space for these, begin to ask what is the invitation or call rising up from these noticings? Where is God calling you to a new awareness or action in your life? Close with some time of silence.
- Approach a soul friend, a spiritual director, or a wise elder for your word, as in the desert tradition. They might need some time to ponder this with you. It is always wise to consult with a soul companion or community when testing the fruits of prayer.
- Create a time of retreat for this holy time of year. A couple of hours is enough. Make space to sink into silence, journal, reflect on your experiences of the year past. Write about your dreams and deep desires for the year ahead. In the space of contemplation and stillness, notice if there is a word, image, or phrase which rises up.
- Go for a contemplative walk where you aren’t trying to get anywhere. Your sole purpose is to be as present as possible to each footfall. Listen for how your inner life is calling you forward with each step. Be present to the gifts of creation around you (even if it is the city pigeons and trees planted down the sidewalk). Listen if they might have a word to offer to you.
- Listen to your dreams in these coming days. As you go to sleep, lay a piece of paper and pen by your bed as a sign of your willingness to receive the wisdom that comes in dreams. Consider strong dream images as possible words calling to you. Pay attention to synchronicities through the day. Are there images or words which seem to repeat themselves? If so, take note.
- Allow time for the word to ripen. This may be a slow process. If you hear a word calling, sit with it for a couple of days. Listen attentively to the stirrings of your heart in response. Eventually there will be a tugging inside of you, where you feel yourself drawn again and again to this word. Allow yourself to be in a space of unknowing with this and practice being present to your anticipation knowing that things of the soul unfold in their own time. This is a journey of transformation and the word may not make immediate sense to you, but trust that over time more of its meaning will be revealed.
When the word emerges, please share it with me and others in the comments section below. I am truly blessed by the sharings offered there – it is such a gift of hope in this time of holy darkness (and if you share by Friday, January 6th you are entered into a random drawing for a chance to win one of several prizes!)
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458 Responses
My word is REAL. It has come to me over and over and over again.
My word this year is “emergence” and was given to me by my spiritual director last month when I asked her to look through my art prayer journal and see if anything struck her as seeming to form a thread. I thought then it might be my word for 2012 and since have found it cropping up all around. This practice has been a wonderful one the last two years. Thank you, Christine. I looking forward to seeing what emerges from emergence in this year ahead:)
I believe that my word this year is TRUST !
I know that God has blessed me in so many ways all through out my life ….and now once again during this time of discernment and possible transition…..I need to Trust and remember that I am not alone.
It makes me think of the “footprints” poem.
“Be still and know that I am God” !
My word for the year is “tree”. Last year, it was “presence” and the year before “self”. In the first days of this year, I’ve heard trees calling to me, read some beautiful works about them and have been realizing that they are incrediably important to our lives. I want to pray with trees, to stand with them, be with them and learn from them. So, tree it is.
I love that, Elsa. Trees are important to my journey, too. I was talking about this with Christine at last year’s Spiritual Directors International conference, and she recommended a book to me, which I now recommend to you: The Tree: A Natural History of What Trees Are, How They Live, and Why They Matter.
Beautiful exploring to you!
My thanks. I greatly appreciate this recommendation!
‘Listening’ kept popping up here and there in December but stayed just a blip along with non-judgemental and love, and did not come together until a few days ago. A crow was atop the bell tower of our church and I stopped to listen to his call. And there it was………Hark! Listen!…….over and over. Eventually I realized, with the help of a comment of a grace filled lady, that I was to strive to become a listening……to listen non-judgementally in love, for that is how God listens to me. So it seems the call is to learn to listen without judgement, without allowing anything in me to color what I hear. May God grant the grace.
Give me a word
Hey Christine: I am changing my word to “SURRENDER/SURRENDERING
for the new year 2012.
Staying open to grace/ life’s opportunities.
Yes SURRENDER my word for the new year!
yes that is beautiful and resonates we me. The chineese honor the willow(bamboo) for its flexibility, endurance and this accomplished by its hollowness. All bamboo is always hollow, and this idea captures the idea keeping your interior mind/spirit empty i e ridding yourself of all your junkie stuff. I like it a lot!
Have fun and u might need a garage sale!
My chosen word is “beauty”. I pray that I will honour the beauty within me, all around me, above me and below me this year in a most loving way.
Last Saturday in our newspaper there was an article written by a local rabbi on living gratefully. He said that feeling grateful is not enough; we must live gratefully. So that is my word for 2012: gratitude – gratitude for everything that people do for me on a daily basis. Living a life of gratitude means being grateful for my body and taking care of it. It means being grateful for the oxygen that supports my life and working to preserve it. It means saying thank-you and treating people with respect. According to this rabbi, living gratefully means not “polluting our community with bigotry, anger, fear, gossip and ill-will.”
Lord, help me to live a life of gratitude.
My word for the year is RESILIENT. In the last couple of months I’ve been noticing with wry humor some mundane manifestations of my change-adverse self – new sneakers I bought 6 months ago but haven’t worn because they’re different, same thing for reading glasses, a new printer for which it took me several months to do the very easy installation, despite my current printer being almost completely unworkable. That plays out on much more important levels too. I have a deep engrained belief that “something terrible is sure to happen.” That’s actually true, that’s a basic fact of this human life that both terrible and wonderful things keep happening. And in looking ahead into 2012, some hard losses, including my most precious Betony dog, seem very likely. Probably people around me would say that I deal well with changes and challenges, but the internal price feels awfully high sometimes. So I thought about ADAPTABLE and FLEXIBLE and FLOW, but RESILIENT it is. I like these parts of the definition: “capable of withstanding shock without permanent deformation or rupture” and “capability of a strained body to recover.” With my word, I got the image of a willow, rooted but able to move with the weather, not to break. This year, I resolve to become like that willow and, as I sway in the storms, also to glory in the sky and the sun and wind and the rain, all the gifts that enable me to be here and to grow.