Rainy days are good nourishment for the soul. That is preeminently true for me when that rain comes on a Sunday, when out of habit, I have learned to quiet my inner self.
I am not much inclined to be out of doors in the rain as autumn exchanges her coat for winter. For much of such a day, I sit and muddle, picking a few good books, here and there to read and rifle through, content and cloaked in a most introspective state of mind. And I am ever thankful for days such as these where, listening to the constant drumming of rain, I can wrap myself in its respite.
For the most of my life, Sundays have always been very full of activities, food, people and places. As a child, I remember mornings spent at a country church, meeting, greeting, inhaling the cloying smell of propane heaters mingled with aftershave, and listening to sermons designed to redress any of the previous week's grievances. Guarded by massive 100-year-old oaks, in its white, clapboard clutches, stood a glorious porch, where, if you were fortunate to be on a rainy Sunday, bore witness to verbal accounts of the latest community calamities.
Then, too, were the banquets of family foods where aunts, uncles, cousins and kin of all sort gathered to feast on that week's harvest. You seldom escaped having to eat stuff you didn't like, just feverently praying you were old enough to serve yourself a smaller helping or gift your sibling with the larger of yours.
All too soon, afternoons of televised football games garnered your attention and, of course, the Sunday newspaper, the weight of a small child, required hours of review and meticulous clipping of coupons.
There were some dark times as well. Those Sundays where kids could romp across two acre-sized front yards, grownups gathered to hear news of war, acknowledging old man Jones' son had died in some forsaken valley called la Drang. In a country few of us could even find on a globe in fifth grade geography class, such rainy Sundays left us with the indelible feeling that life half a world away was not so good.
That small church of my youth is gone, a victim of its environment and growth. Football, no longer confined to afternoons, is transformed with near constant cable coverage. App choice has remodeled the means by which many clip coupons; behemoth Sunday papers aggregating into digital editions with less bulk. Lunch has become a matter of what restaurant at which to meet. "Just text me!"
Dark times, though, still exist. Our world, now much smaller in part to technology's reach, intrinsically reminds us that life, now only a few miles away, remains fragile and so elementally precious. Children still die, friends do get sick, jobs are lost, homes get destroyed and some people leave your life, never to return. The very essence of gratitude can get lost, whittled away amidst the unfairness of it all.
Yet on this rainy day, a benediction has given my pause 'pause'. Glorious in nature's technicolor realm has come one incredible rainbow in heartstopping array here in my Sanctuary. My spirit has been provided a much needed time out. It's my reminder that life offers so much, much more for which to be grateful.
Yes, my friends ... rainy days do, indeed, they really nourish one's soul. Happy Thanksgiving


