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256 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 1993
The effect of dryness on living tissue is in evidence all around us . . . In open country, far from any trees, the wind beats against you, a insistent as an ocean current. You tire from walking against it just as you would from swimming against an undertow.In the wake of my loss, I felt scoured out and utterly alone. I was terrified of the emptiness I now faced, a future without my father's wise and loving presence. He was always there, although toward the end he became less and less the father I knew. I'd watched him deteriorate into illness, anger, paranoia. I became his caretaker and he resented me. When I ran out of tasks, I could no longer put off reckoning with my grief.
It is in deep solitude and silence that I find the gentleness with which I can truly love my brother and my sister.
“The Plains are not forgiving. Anything that is shallow � the easy optimism of a homesteader the false hope that denies geography, climate, history; the tree whose roots don’t reach ground water � will dry up and blow away.�
“Fear is not a bad place to start a spiritual journey. If you know what makes you afraid, you can see more clearly that the way out is through the fear.�
“Conversion means starting with who we are, not who we wish we were. It means knowing where we come from.�
“A fledgling ascetic, I am learning to see loneliness as a seed that, when planted deep enough, can grow into writing that goes back out into the world.�
“Here we discover the paradox of the contemplative life, that the desert of solitude can be the school where we learn to love others.�
“Ironically, it is in choosing the stability of the monastery or the Plains, places where nothing ever happens, places the world calls dull, that we discover we can change. In choosing a bare-bones existence, we are enriched, and can redefine success as an internal process rather than an outward display of wealth and power.�