DIAGRAM: SKY & TELESCOPE
At 10:30pm, having closed our register, covered the display cases, and deposited our cash envelopes, three of us walked out of the store into fresh air. A brilliant spot of light hung on the night’s black sky, looking not unlike the large cubic zirconium stone in a necklace I sold to a young bride-to-be a few hours earlier. One woman waved goodbye and headed for her car. Diana and I stood for a moment, mesmerized by the sight.
“It’s Venus,” I said in hushed tones reserved for moments of overwhelming glory.
“Venus? Really? See you tomorrow.”
I stood a moment longer letting cool air wash over me and absorbing the planet’s grace. I whispered a prayer of appreciation, taking off my shoes as it were, since I was obviously on holy ground that happened to look like a sprawling mall parking lot.
A few weeks earlier I had pointed out the planet to my hostess as we returned to her home after a speaking engagement.
“Venus? Are you sure? How do you know?”
“Venus is in the western sky now, outshining everything else,” I offered. I am not sure she was convinced, but it is unmistakable.
“On nights like this,” a friend said years ago as he stood on a country road and gazed at the star splattered dome above us, “I could live on the sky.”
Yes. On nights like this one, with Venus hinting at wonders beyond my sight, my soul needs no church. My spirit needs no other nourishment. Gloria in excelsis Deo!
© 2010 Mary van Balen
PHOTO: Moon, Venus, Jupiter over the Collegeville Institute. Mary van Balen

After nine hours of selling bras and underwear and cleaning out dressing rooms, I looked forward to getting off my feet. Hot humid air blew across the parking lot as I looked for the little Civic with an Obama/Biden sticker on the bumper. I collapsed into the driver’s seat, turned the air conditioner on “high” and started the long drive home.
Thirty minutes of sitting quietly in God’s Presence doesn’t sound difficult, but when I am out of spiritual shape, I can’t do it. Signs of spiritual laxity have been evident for a while: lack of energy and focus, interior turmoil, and dwindling hope. Yesterday I decided to do something about it.
Some days when life seems overwhelming, I am drawn to the bane of healthy eating and common sense: Comfort Food! We all have this unique food group that spans those recommended by nutrition czars who devise pyramids and pie charts to keep us on the straight and narrow.
Watching dark plumes of oil and gas rise like dirty clouds from the broken pipe at the BP oil site makes me sick. My stomach turns over when I think of millions of gallons of oil fouling the earth every day. The thought that this will happen day after day for months is unfathomable.
A sizable chunk of the earth is being polluted to death. People who live and work on that coast are watching their way of life disappear. Oil-covered sea turtles struggle to the beach to lay their eggs. That probably won’t happen. Thick sludge is washing into salt-water marshes, called “nurseries” for fish and shrimp. 
While helping me clean my old house, a friend asked if I would miss it when I moved. There are plenty of things I will not miss: non-stop noisy traffic, a one-person kitchen that managed to hold four or five people when the children and I were baking or we hosted a party, and a narrow hallway with four doors that all opened into each other. Of course, all homes have drawbacks.
For over twenty years, when looking out the window over the kitchen sink, I saw a deep yard filled with trees and a gurgling creek that separated our place from a small woods full of wildlife. Below the dining room window in the front of the house is an herb garden bordered with bushy lavender and a crumbling sandstone wall. Whenever I walked past the plants, I ran my hands over its leaves as I passed by, releasing a sweet pungent fragrance that filled the air and lingered on my fingers.
There are abundant spring flowers, so lush and varied that an artist friend who lived above a downtown shop once shared his envy: I would love to have a garden like yours: a bit wild and colorful like an impressionistic painting.
These are the things I cannot take with me; gifts that have blessed me and fed my soul for years. I bequeath these grace-full bits of creation to those who move into this place, whomever they will be. May they be open to wonder and joy so freely given.
A few days ago I had the unusual experience of watching my vocal chords in action. Chronic hoarseness and some difficulty breathing sent me to an ENT specialist. I had gone to one decades before when singing in coffee houses, churches, and at sing-a-longs pushed my voice past its limits, but this time technology had a new tool to offer: a rigid stroboscopic endoscope, or in laymans terms, a long silver tube with a camera that takes a video with soundtrack of ones vocal chords while the patient follows the speech and language pathologists directions for holding pitches and taking deep breaths through the mouth.
Where do you find a room full of enthusiastic authors, poets, and storytellers celebrating life together? At the Ohio Literacy Resource Centers Writers Conference. For twelve years, the OLRC has sponsored a writing contest for adults enrolled in Adult Basic and Literacy Education (ABLE) classes throughout Ohio. From hundreds of submissions, the conference committee chooses poetry, memoir, fiction, and non-fiction stories and puts them together in a softbound book.