On a sunny morning in June, 2003, two days after my 37th birthday, I had an unsolicited, unexpected and unbelievable encounter with God. Put more simply, without asking, praying or seeking, I woke up one morning a churchgoing agnostic (following years of rabid atheism) and put my head to the pillow that night a newly minted, highly unlikely Christian. I wish I could say my radical conversion happened gently…all harps and angels and light…but that was not my experience. On the contrary, I was nauseous, had trouble catching my breath and felt like there was a 500 lb weight on my chest. I thought I was having a heart attack. But here’s the kicker. A lifelong skeptic who was, at times, militantly anti-Christian, I suddenly believed without hesitation that the Christian story that I had frequently railed against was true. I couldn’t have told you what that story was, but I knew without the luxury of details that it was all true. Now this might make some sense if I needed a spiritual experience. Say if I was fighting a serious illness or was down on my luck financially-or maybe if I were struggling with a painful loss or trying to navigate a tough personal challenge. But I didn’t need a spiritual experience. As far as I was concerned, my life was perfect. I was a successful PR executive making a healthy six-figure salary, married to my best friend who also made a six-figure salary. We had three healthy, happy kids and lived in our dream home about an hour northwest of New York City. I was seven years sober and had faced down most of my major issues/resentments in a program of recovery. Life was pretty good. Yet, there I was-sick, crying and convinced that something beyond my comprehension had happened to me. No one was more surprised than my husband Martin, who was there with me when it happened. He had been a Christian since he was a kid and knew the extent to which I thought the whole Christian thing was a contrivance. I had fought vigorously over coffee and cigarettes to convince him that religion had been created by leaders to control the masses or by weak individuals to soften the blow of their incapacity to deal with their day to day lives. He never did come around to my way of thinking, but I figured if he could overlook the fact that I was an alcoholic single mother with two kids and marry me, I could overlook the fact that he was a Christian and marry him. So here I was, convinced that this Christian thing was true, with no idea what that really meant. What followed was years of learning that is discussed in much greater detail in a book that I am writing. Suffice it to say that I learned that following Christ and living by the dictates of the Holy Spirit does not always add up to the overly simplified “join the team and your life will be wonderful” message that I have heard so frequently. As a matter of fact, the years since that day in 2003 have been some of the most difficult I have ever encountered. We have lost more than you can imagine-money, possessions, prestige and people. And yet, I would not turn back for the world. So, now I’m trying to make sense of this new life. Attempting to go beyond predictable platitudes in order to allow this change of heart to lead to a genuine change of life. This blog will chronicle the day to day joys and trials of my journey and raise some key questions and challenges I face as I find my place in a faith that still confounds me.
This is the first of four reflections on L.L. Barkat’s fantastic book Stone Crossings: Finding Grace in Hard and Hidden Places that will run here daily until Sunday, January 10. Comment on each of the four posts between now and 6:00 p.m. Sunday and your name will be included in a random drawing to win a copy. Free books: Not a bad way to kick off 2010!
CROSSING SOME STONES: A REFLECTION
by Glynn Young
First stone crossed: It was in the hospital that I first met L.L. Barkat’s Stone Crossings. I had
crashed on my bike three days before, and it took that long to figure out that
something was very wrong. As my wife rushed me out the door to the emergency
room, I grabbed Stone Crossings, figuring I would need something to do while we
waited. I was wrong; we didn’t wait. They did x-rays immediately and then
pronounced, like a medical benediction, three broken ribs, a fractured fourth
rib, and a partially collapsed lung. With an oxygen tube up my nose and an IV
drip for pain meds in my hand, I finally got to a room about 11:30. An hour
later, I started reading, and didn’t stop until I was finished, sometime near 4
a.m.
Second stone crossed: The writer in me loved the book’s
structure, each chapter like a stone, or two stones, really – a stone of
remembrance and a stone to cross. Some of the remembrance-stones were painful,
and some of the stones to cross were scary. Each stone had a simple name, like
love, forgiveness, fear, gratitude and justice. The writing, ah, the writing:
extraordinary.
Third stone crossed: It’s easy to see Stone Crossings as a
kind of meditative memoir. And it is that. But about a third of the way into
the book, I realized that something profound was happening, something very
powerful for a reader. The stories were becoming my stories; the stones were
becoming my stones to cross.
Fourth stone crossed: As each stone became more and more my
own, the pain behind the author’s remembrances became my own, and I started
turning my own stones over. There it all was – the pain, the hurt, the
ugliness. And much of it was my own, of my own doing. None of the book’s
promotional statements prepared me for this.
Fifth stone crossed: So many things go back to my father. He
died more than 20 years ago, and quickly, from a massive stroke, which for him
was a blessing. He would have hated any kind of disability, and in the worst way.
But he left behind some heavy stones – he hadn’t spoken to my older brother in
more than two years; he had just gotten mad at me for some reason still unknown
earlier that week he died; so many unresolved issues with my mother; and a
business that was a mess, an accounting nightmare. And I was the executor of
his will. Grief, sorrow, anger – it was all bottled up while I helped my mother
through all the legal morass. Two years later, I broke down and cried in my
wife’s arms. More than 20 years later, as I picked up this stone in the
hospital, I forgave him. And me.
Sixth stone crossed: And then with the pain of each stone
came the gratitude. Someone had already turned my stones over, found the
ugliness and cleaned it up. All of it. Instead of hiding ugliness and weighing
me down with guilt and regrets, the stones had become steps forward, ways to
cross the stream.
Seventh stone crossing: I read Stone Crossings in late July.
Now I go back and reread the stones. And the gratitude grows.
- GLYNN YOUNG
- Professional writer exploring faith and culture, life and work; happily married to Janet, the love of my life; father of two grown sons. Award-winning speechwriter and communication consultant.




posted January 7, 2010 at 6:29 pm
The third stone…I understand that. Yes, they became mine too. But that fifth stone…whew! You healed in many ways during that hospital stay, yes? Forgiveness is good. Thank you for sharing your stones, Glynn.
posted January 7, 2010 at 6:48 pm
Glynn, I love your words about loving her words. Both powerful.
posted January 7, 2010 at 7:22 pm
I am a huge fan of LL’s…as she is a huge inspiration to me as I find my writing wings!! Great post…Thanks for this chance…
Bina
posted January 8, 2010 at 11:01 am
This sounds like a book I could really use right now – I’ve lost a brother and my father to cancer in the last two years and deal with depression on a continual basis. It’s a struggle – sometimes helps knowing that others are struggling as I am . . . .
posted January 8, 2010 at 11:53 am
This one is next on my list of books to read. It seems that Stone Crossings does much to foster God-vulnerability in its readers. The best kind of book there is…
posted January 8, 2010 at 12:42 pm
“The pain . . . became my own.” That happened to me, too.
posted January 8, 2010 at 12:52 pm
Depending where we are in life, will depend on how many stones we have to cross. I have not read any of this authors books but this one does sound very interesting.
posted January 8, 2010 at 2:19 pm
would love a copy of her book.
thanks.
I love her new poetry book Inside Out.
posted January 8, 2010 at 2:19 pm
Sold on this before I finished the Second stone crossed — gracias for this post! To the person who lost their father and brother, I’m praying for you. Loss is so extremely difficult, but you can work through it…trust! Books help a lot, and a good counselor you connect with is transforming!
posted January 8, 2010 at 5:13 pm
So I’m mainly commenting because I like free books.
But I’m also commenting because I like art.
And I’ve only read a little bit of her poetry (having only discovered this talented writer…yesterday?), but it’s really good. I really appreciate the role that natural theology plays in her work, woven together with truth and art.
posted January 8, 2010 at 6:20 pm
This book review definitely made me want to buy (or win) the book…not many reviews do that for me. Excellently done!
posted January 10, 2010 at 3:48 pm
I really enjoyed the reflection. I have never heard of either of the authors, but think both books will be excellent reads no matter how I acquir them.