One Unspoken Question Hanging in the Air Every Food Pantry Day
People entering a food pantry bring everything with them: their hearts, minds, soul, feelings.
And, finally, forgiveness.
A food pantry is a good place to work on the future.
A trip to a food pantry is a meditation. This is the time and place to let go of limiting habits and lifestyle activities. This is where you experience a new life.
The food pantry offers spiritual insights – insights on friendship, love, work, hope, and despair. A trip to the food pantry can be a prayer.
When you open up to this transformative experience, you have an opportunity to ditch grudges, resentment, and painful memories.
Then, of course, there’s the opportunity to experience new life.
Leaving the past behind is hard. And getting to the place of “letting go” can be challenging. But, that’s what food pantries do. They get you there.
Remove everything and escape from everything preventing an embrace of the future which waits for you. This is a new life to grow into.
Ask this: What is calling to be left behind?
Grudges, resentments, painful memories.
Gather the strength to grow into whatever opportunities the future has waiting.
Blessings!
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Find out more about Thurman Greco at www.ThurmanGreco.com.
To find out more check out some of the older posts. This blog has been telling the story of Hunger in America for over 10 years.
Thanks again – Thurman Greco!
Find out more about Thurman at www.thurmangreco.com.
Hungry and Homeless Now
The food pantry is closed for business and will not open today.
Where will the hungry and homeless go now?
It’s Wednesday, the pantry day in Woodstock. Weekly, the food pantry attracts several hundred hungry and homeless people to the basement of a local church where they experience community, gratitude, healing, and a three-day-supply of shared food. The isolation often felt by hungry and homeless people is softened in the pantry. One thing the soul longs for is connection.
As people travel down their life path to the pantry, they lose things. One of the most soul-strangling downsides of this new-found simplicity is isolation experienced as people become cut off from their community. This experiences always changes reality.
When people no longer fit in, their voices become smaller and smaller and smaller until, finally, all is silent.
The rule is this: As the community for the hungry and homeless diminishes, so diminishes the support system.
All things are connected and intertwined but we have a difficult time remembering this when we are in our most alone circumstances in life. With assistance, we begin to recall our spiritual connections and know we are not along, not forgotten.
But, with the Coronavirus, this is very challenging. A few things are in play here.
First, for those needing to shelter in place, the main question is this: ” Where will I go?” Sofa surfing won’t happen anymore. The cemetery will work as long as it doesn’t snow or rain.
Second, a person without food can think of nothing else: “Where can I get food?”
For the hungry and homeless person in Woodstock, that focus is real because the food pantry closed.
At a time when the people need this food the most, the pantry is closed.
“Where can I get food?”
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Thurman Greco
Woodstock, New York