MAKINGS OF A GOOD PRODIGAL DAUGHTER STORY
As I continue to sit with the question of whether or not to wrap up my blog at the end of the summer, I sit also with the story of the Prodigal Son. And like in the Prodigal Son, my blog Stranded on the Mainland has it's roots in the loss of and longing for, home.
Below are some mid-August thoughts on this:
WHAT IF the daughter didn't want to leave home like the prodigal son did, what if she was sent to the city? What if she doesn't squander her "inheritance" at all, but is (unbeknownst to most, including herself) is amassing a treasure, a fortune, and spiritual inheritance, "one that protects her from nothing and sustains her in everything."--Jim Finley.
WHAT IF it's the daughter who through therapy and grace brings back a new robe for her traumatized self to put on, a ring for her finger, and sandals for her feet?
WHAT IF it's the daughter who's preparing the roast beef dinner?
And the daughter rushing down the road to meet her true self?
Breathe.
I suspect this post is connected to an autobiographical fairytale I wrote in the 1990's: It was a tale of a young woman who disguised her pain, loss, grief and prophetic dream, in a night-sea journey to a tropical island where she hopes to find the Dream Maker's House... and something she has heard called the Feminine Face (mind) of God?
Next. I've heard it said and I'm paraphrasing, "the loss of home casts a long shadow, it messes with our sense of safety and identity and much more." But through experience, I have learned hope also casts a long shadow filled with light! Source:https://neurolaunch.com/
Finally, a last grace today:
Soon I will be pointed in the direction of a writer I have never read, A. W. Tozer. It will inspire within me a radical thought:
"If I have one thing left to give to God, maybe it is my True Self?