My Spiritual Practice It is practice, the going again and again through the heavy double doors and along the polished wooden pews, the week’s program in my hand, the list of hymns and verses ready for the faithful and the struggling, the ones like me who repeat the prayers silently but with my lips in motion. It is practice, the discipline of repetition, the dumb fingers climbing the scale, rehearsing the tricky cross over, making time to serve the melody, making the body serve the will, and training the spirit when the spirit no longer feels the flame of faith. It is practice, the familiar, the regular, the repeated that will keep the spirit afloat assures the priest, agrees the therapist, the bright orange vest you wear to sustain you through the rapids and buoy you in the deepest waters, the keel of the life boat where you cling even after belief has capsized. It is practice, not perfection, not mastery, that winches me out of my despair following her loss, the winding rope of dailiness, the meals with awkward friends, the re-filling of bird feeders each morning, the dogged breaking up of concrete and hauling of debris, the work down on my knees to level flagstones, the Wednesday morning doughnut rendezvous, the Sundays inside the heavy doors, under high ceilings, arches, and the rhythmic words that I heard again and again that hold me here.
Cecil Morris retired after 37 years of teaching high school English, and now he tries writing himself what he spent so many years teaching others to understand and (maybe) enjoy. He has had a handful of poems published in Cimarron Review, English Journal, The Ekphrastic Review, Hole in the Head Review, The Midwest Quarterly, Poem, and other literary magazines.

A deep sense of loss and a poem to break my heart, and yet, what at first appears as empty ritual is, at the very least, a comforting one. Thank you for yet another thought provoking poem. I was too busy to return to it yesterday, and sought it out today. It has a doppler effect! -Jane
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