August 08, 2025

Seasons of Purpose by Bob Jones


The prompt for August is: Write about a season you are currently experiencing or have experienced. How did it affect your writing life?


Depending on where you live, the seasons in Canada will be shorter or longer, harsh or gentle or unique to the area’s character. In Edmonton we have two seasons: winter and construction. I imagined that was a westerner’s sense of humour until our family of four moved to Edmonton thirty-five years ago. That’s how I now describe our seasons. In eighteen months from now, Alberta will be the place I have lived more than half my life. I feel like an Albertan. Growing up in Ontario, I never paid my province of birth any mind. I was Canadian. Still am. Forever Canadian.

Politics and Hockey 

Alberta is an interesting place to live and write about. It feels like we are either under construction by the latest government misplay, or we are in winter in June, cheering on McDavid and the Oilers and feeling sorry for the Flames. I would write about politics, or politicians but everyone takes their politics very seriously in Alberta, almost as seriously as they take their hockey.

Edmonton bleeds copper and blue or orange. And there was a lot of blood the last two years in the Stanley Cup finals. 

Ukraine

At this time in my writing life, all things Ukraine are in season. 
 
It’s embarrassing to admit that I thought the war with Russia started on February 24, 2022. Sadly, this was the beginning of my education in Ukrainian history. The Russian invasion of Crimea and the eastern regions of the country in 2014 was the start of the war. How was I oblivious to that for eight years? I know Ukrainians. I pastored Ukrainians. I was invited to go to Ukraine on missions trips numerous times. None of that clicked with me. I must have been focused on Alberta politics and hockey. 
 
Now, three humanitarian trips to Ukraine in 18 months doesn’t feel enough.

Jocelyn came with me on a seven-week trip in June and July. The trip coincided with Russia’s change of tactics. June set the record for drone attacks and July exceeded it. There is no safe place in Ukraine. 
 
People were impressed that Jocelyn was eager to deliver food further towards Russia than any Canadian woman since 2022. And she did it with a smile. Our friends assured us that just being with people in the war was 90% of the benefit of us going. “People send their prayers and promises to come after the war but having someone leave a peaceful country in the summer and come to us is a priceless gift. Thank you.” The pleasure and privilege were all ours. It hardly seems enough.


Purposeful Writing 

I recently sat with a political science professor from one of our Canadian Universities. He’s a bit younger than me. His heritage is Czech where two generations of his family suffered as anti-communists. He resonates with what Ukraine is going through. We talked about how, at our ages, using our skill and experience to draw attention to the injustices against Ukraine is highly purposeful. Ukrainians are engaged in the largest and most deadly war in Europe in 80 years. 
 
There has never been a more needed moment in my lifetime for advocacy than now. I am Canadian. Canadians stand up and fight together for the freedom of others.

 

I am in a season of writing about children, churches, the trauma of war, Canadian generosity, and faith in Ukraine.

Thank you for reading. There is more at REVwords.com







August 07, 2025

The Season for Gathering Memories by Brenda Leyland



Everything has seasons, and we have to
be able to recognize when something's time has
passed and be able to move into the next season.
Henry Cloud
found on BrainyQuote.com



Little did I realize that I had been waiting for the season when I'd turn 60. Having reached this stage (successfully finishing 60 trips around the sun), I had some inner sense of having 'made it'. I'd come safely and reasonably happy through my childhood, young adulthood, and now middle age—and all that went with these various stages of life. It had been—and still is—a good life.

At the outset of this new decade, there were lots of things I didn't have to do anymore. By this time, I'd now lived the major portion of my life. I was no longer setting down roots for my future or laying foundational blocks, learning how to live the life God had given me or trying to carve out a lifestyle based on my situation, passions, and needs. But as a bit of a late bloomer—not having married until I was forty-one and never having dreamed of being a writer until I was older—I was well into my forties when I attended my first InScribe event around 2002. As the desire to write grew, I knew I wanted to write about life from my corner of the world, using my own life experiences as fodder. Somehow I came to recognize that I had had to live my longish life before I could write about it. I needed time and distance to see how God’s faithfulness, loving guidance, and grace had umbrella-ed everything that had ever happened to me. When I approached 60, it signaled something on the inside that this was the time the writer in me had been waiting for, and the season would start with a lot of rearview mirror gazing and gathering in the memories. 

I began curating my personal history, organizing the motley collection of photo albums, journals, yearbooks, scrapbooks, and multitudinous touchstone keepsakes. It was the season of gathering the fruit—stories, experiences, lessons—of my life. And putting some order to it. Based on the advice from Natalie Goldberg, or was it Julia Cameron, I created ten-year increments of 'Just the Facts' timelines, of my life from birth to present day. From there, I took the barebone facts and began creating a more detailed narrative timeline. A lifetime in a timeline. I felt so organized and orderly (smile). 

It was a such a satisfying season. Some things got wrapped up, some got sorted. Other situations remained shrouded in mystery and no answers to the whys of life but it was okay to let it be. Some things were dusted off as I paid close attention to which memories shimmered and begged to be told. Quite often bits and pieces of this material worked its way into essays for blog posts and anthologies. I self-published a magazine through Blurb that housed my simple but cherished childhood Christmas memories. Which made lovely Christmas presents one year and I was amazed at how much interest it garnered in sales from strangers.

From the start, I wanted to write about my lost dream to marry and become a mom early in life. My twenties disappeared as did my thirties; I was still single and earning my own way in an unchosen but good career for years. It wasn't the plan at all. It would be years before I'd meet my partner. I even thought about a working title for this memoir "Between a Prayer and a Proposal: Twenty Years of Waiting... and Living". I never realized until I started looking back that I'd been composing possible chapters in my head for years, ever rehearsing those touchstone experiences till they were etched in my heart of how I had learned to let go of my expectations and invite God to show me how to create his beautiful life for me. I had lived the story for years; the time had come to get it down on paper. I took a memoir writing course with Lisa Dale Norton and loved her book Shimmering Images on the topic. The first draft got done, but I never quite got up the courage, and energy, to push through and finish it. It's still a work in progress.

Turning another corner

That was several years ago now. The gathering season ended. The pressing need to collect those memories and record them was over. I just came across a line I'd jotted in my journal in 2023 which summed up my feelings at this time: "I don't want to keep living my old memories - I want to make new ones." My soul was longing to once again start looking forward and make some new memories. Some people use their retirement years to travel. I have traveled some, and I enjoy going away on holidays. Truth is, I'm really a homebody, where I'm happy in the heart of my home, near my writing desk, computer, and windows overlooking the garden. Where I can read books stacked up on shelves. And spend time with family and friends. Stay in wonderment and curiosity as I wander, wait, listen, pray.

I still want to share my life through writing... whether it's on my blog (my favourite place to write for these past 17 years), curating some of my favourite essays into small book collections, or finishing a memoir or two. I have known God's faithfulness and great grace through every stage of my life, including my writing life. Now as I edge toward my 'elder' years, a line from a song* Sandi Somers mentioned in her latest post seems such a lovely reminder: "In ev'ry change He faithful will remain". Amen.

_______________________________

Top Photo credit: Image by CongerDesign from Pixabay
*Be Still My Soul



Brenda is living her beautiful life in slower mode, having time to watch the world go by, sit in her comfy spot by the bay window, read, walk, watch the birds and clouds and flowers grow. And she enjoys writing on her blog It's A Beautiful Life and here on InScribe. She can also be found on Facebook, Instagram, and BlueSky.


 


 


August 06, 2025

Reduction by Susan Barclay

 

Image by CongerDesign@Pixabay
                                                        

 

REDUCTION

 

In this season of caregiving

I am being reduced

Cooked, simmered, evaporated

A concentrated version of myself

 

Who am I now?

I am daughter

I am mother

I am wife

 

Who am I?

What is this new flavour?

This new texture?

This new consistency?

 

I seek more of Him and less of me

Holy Spirit, come

I am jellied and trembling

When I am weak, I am strong

 

Give me this day love, joy, peace

Patience, kindness, goodness

Faithfulness, gentleness, self-control

Teach me Your ways

 

Make me lie down in green pastures

Lead me beside quiet waters

Restore my soul

Fill me with Your sacred rest

 

In this pressure cooker, sautéed

I become saltier for Christ

Taste and see that the Lord is good

His mercies are new every morning

 

This is my desire

To spend time in God’s stock pot

Take up less volume in the world

And enhance its flavour

 

Father, You are the Master Chef

The 3-star Michelin

Make of me what You will

I am Your creation

_______________________________

c. Susan Barclay, 2025. For more about Susan and her writing, please visit www.susan-barclay.blogspot.com 

 

 

August 05, 2025

Navigating Change by Sandi Somers

 


During the summer and fall after I retired I felt at loose ends. As a teacher I had always lived with autumn bringing new students, new curricula, new projects, new dreams and goals. But not this year. My old lifestyle and daily routine of going to work was behind me. Yes, I was thankful for what God had given me in the life I left behind. But now I felt adrift. 

Life gave me an ending—two endings. Mom had passed away a few months earlier, and I was still adjusting to living without her. I found great comfort in the hymn, “Be Still My Soul”, especially the part, “In every change He faithful will remain.”  

What lay ahead was an uncomfortable unknown.  Yet what could I do except carry on with my summer activities, fall gardening, other family and friend contacts, and daily responsibilities. 

There had to be something more, but what? 

In my feeling of lostness, God graciously led me to a devotional booklet, Minute Motivators for Women, and there on page 37 was a short reading. "Life is like a river,” I read. "The current will start pulling you downstream to new adventures...Ask God to get into the boat and take compete control of your life.”[i] 

With this metaphor, the Lord brought a perspective I desperately needed. I imagined myself pushing my canoe off the shore to begin paddling into the unknown. But I was not alone. While I was up front J-stroking, Jesus was my companion, the skillful boatman, steering me into the unknown waters ahead. The Lord had new plans and a special purpose for me and would faithfully point me in that direction. 

As I visualized plunging into the river, embarking on the next phase of the river of my life, I needed to trust God’s purpose and presence in every curve of the river, every eddy and swirl, every rock-infested spot, every rushing waterfall, and every storm. At other times as I followed the bends and turns, the river would open up with wide vistas and long views, where the Lord would give me a fresh vision of what lay ahead. There I would receive a renewed revelation and vigor of His purposes for me. 

In the months after retirement, the Lord resurrected my dream of writing. Now that my time was free from the daily demands of teaching, I began to write more intentionally—developing my skills and publishing more than I had in the past. Knowing I needed a  community of writers, I joined InScribe and later began a local InScribe writers’ group. Life became replete with the Lord's faithfulness in leading me into some of the most productive experiences of my life. 

I had landed on a bedrock of writing—my life now found its orientation. 

Since then, the Lord has given me other changes of seasons, other tributaries of the river of life, each accompanied by His presence and purpose.

~ ~ ~

In a change of seasons, the rhythms of life have been broken, with endings and beginnings. Acknowledge the moments of in-betweenness—the todays of unknowing. Acknowledge that our seasons of life will carry us forward like the river of time: flowing, flowing, flowing. Acknowledge that as we paddle with Jesus, one stroke at a time, we can hear God’s promise: “Behold I am doing a new thing” (Isaiah 43:13 ESV). 

Be unafraid to step into your canoe and embrace moving forward as you paddle into the unknown. The hymn, “Be Still My Soul,” will remind you that “In every change He faithful will remain.” When the Lord changes seasons, wait and watch as to how the Lord will open up His plans for you.

“Live now as well as in the days ahead in the power of Christ.”[ii]

 


Sandi Somers is an outdoor enthusiast--and is very grateful for the gift of loving nature. The description of this canoe trip came from personal experience. Her writing encourages others to pay attention to what the Lord can do in their lives and to become devoted followers of Jesus. She writes from her home in Calgary. 

Image by Black Feather


[i] Stan and Linda Toler, Minute Motivators for Women, (Kansas City, MO: Beacon Hill Press, 2010, 2014), 37

[ii] Stan and Linda Toler, Minute Motivators for Women, 37.