Alumni Spotlight: Marq Loza

Name and pronouns: Marq Loza (he/him/his)

Cohort year: 2015-2016 and 2016-2017 

Where are you living now: Des Moines, Iowa  

What I’m doing now: Career Planner and Adult Educator 

How has Life Together impacted your life?

Life Together opened some amazing opportunities for me. My fellowship years were on the South Coast of Massachusetts. The work through my site placement focused on worker’s rights, but this experience made me aware of my love of learning. I learned about the living history of manufacturing and immigration in America, as well as the struggles faced by communities that see their jobs disappear. Our program on the South Coast encouraged us to engage with the community outside our placement, so on my free time I became involved with Portuguese United for Education, a non-profit language school that celebrates the history of Portuguese-speaking peoples and the multicultural roots of the South Coast. With them, I learned to speak the Portuguese language and they reviewed my application for a Master’s Program at the University of Coimbra, in Portugal.

At the end of my two-year experience with Life Together I packed up and moved to the other side of the Atlantic, where I was successful in completing the Master’s program entirely in Portuguese. Of course, this was in large part thanks to my experience in Life Together and the South Coast community that prepared me for the adventure. Although I had the opportunity to stay in Portugal, I decided that after my master’s it was time to return to the United States. I wanted to start a career and hoped to find something true to what I learned about myself during my years in Life Together: I wanted service and learning at the core of my career. 

I moved to Des Moines, Iowa in the fall of 2019 and took a job teaching a High School Equivalency curriculum to adult learners. The community college I work for was starting a new group for Spanish-speaking adults pursuing their High School Diploma, and they asked if I would help develop and teach the curriculum. I was fascinated to find a job that had would demand so much service and learning, so this became my focus for two years. Once the program was in place and it required less hours I continued teaching but started another job through the State of Iowa, as a career planner. In this role I assist people from all social and cultural backgrounds transition to new careers. On a daily basis I meet people who are curious or excited to start something new, but I also meet those who are experiencing very difficult moments, trying to figure out what comes next for themselves and for their families. 

It is an honor to serve. I am thankful for the many experiences that exposed me and equipped me to meet people of diverse backgrounds and recognize all as my neighbors. Although my time in Life Together seems distant at times, I don’t forget that building community happens intentionally, and I plan on continuing to learn, to serve and to walk with others, whether the connection feels evident or perhaps non-existent.

Fellow Reflection: Sam Osakue

Over the past two years of being a fellow at Life Together, I have gained a lot of experience here, at the house, and at my site placement. I had my highs and lows, in my moments, but I learned a lot, especially at my site placement, which is Grace Episcopal Church in Medford. In my site placement at Grace, I have been given the opportunity to help with the livestream, website, and eNews, and lead a monthly film discussion series. I also will be given the opportunity, in a few weeks, to preach for the first time there. The opportunities that I have been given at Grace Church have truly given me the experience of working at a church.

I have grown a lot as a person during my time at Life Together. I gained new insights into myself, especially regarding my interests and activities, as well as those of my fellow housemates. My spirituality has also shifted thanks to the spaces that Life Together provided, such as Prayer Partners, a mentor, and a spiritual director. As someone who is autistic, I really appreciate the support that I have gained, especially with my mentor and in group therapy. As for what is next for me after Life Together, I plan on embarking on a career in tech. I hope that Life Together will grow stronger during its year of sabbath. Thank you, Life Together, for all the memories and experiences I have gained.

A Sermon on the Transfiguration by Hazel-Grace Strong

Gospel: Matthew 17:1-9

Six days later, Jesus took with him Peter and James and his brother John and led them up a high mountain, by themselves. And he was transfigured before them, and his face shone like the sun, and his clothes became bright as light. Suddenly there appeared to them Moses and Elijah, talking with him. Then Peter said to Jesus, “Lord, it is good for us to be here; if you wish, I will set up three tents here, one for you, one for Moses, and one for Elijah.” While he was still speaking, suddenly a bright cloud overshadowed them, and a voice from the cloud said, “This is my Son, the Beloved; with him I am well pleased; listen to him!” When the disciples heard this, they fell to the ground and were overcome by fear. But Jesus came and touched them, saying, “Get up and do not be afraid.” And when they raised their eyes, they saw no one except Jesus himself alone.

As they were coming down the mountain, Jesus ordered them, “Tell no one about the vision until after the Son of Man has been raised from the dead.” 

Today I’d like to talk about the Glory of God. What is the glory of God? Well like any 3rd grader stuck on a math problem, we know the answer is Jesus. Which, yes that is the answer, but yes in a different way. S. Ireneus, the 2nd century bishop would answer the question by saying “The glory of God is the human person fully alive”  The Transfiguration is often associated with the revelation of Jesus’s divinity, which is right and obvious. Normal humans do not glow like that. Or if they do glow tell your family you love them, but from a safe distance. Jesus is a divine person, with 2 distinct natures, a divine nature and a human nature. Fully Human. Fully Divine. Id like to view the Transfiguration from the lens of Christ human nature. In the Transfiguration, the Glory of God is fully alive in the humanness of Jesus, and in him, the humanness of us. 

I have generally felt weird about my body for most of my life. I'm at the point where that is beginning to change. I'm satisfied for the most part.  A solid 7/10. I think many people have been in a similar place with their own body. Being trans and recently coming to terms with being disabled has often brought bodies to my mind, bodies and their limitations. I am someone who does not want nor need medical assistance to transition at this point in my life, but many I know do. Many trans people feel a certain limitation of their body in communicating who they are. For my own part I felt constricted by what was around my body or what I could or could not do. Pretransition, my clothes, mannerisms, hair, even my glasses and shoes did not communicate who I really was. It was not until I began to push what I perceived to be the limitations of my body that I began to feel like I could be me. I had always been myself, but until I transitioned it was as if I lived under a veil, hiding who I was. 

And I wonder if Jesus ever felt the same way? I wonder if Jesus, God Incarnate, ever found he could not express who he fully was? The whole point of the Gospel is ultimately the Divinity of Jesus, but the Gospel is full of people not believing him or putting their own meaning on to him. The people Christ encounters have a preconceived notion of how God would act and and look like. Those who have this preconceived notion do not recognize him, but are afraid of who Jesus is and what changes he might bring. For this brief moment, the veil is lifted. 

This lifted veil is a similar to the experience of many trans people. We are able to find out who we are and when we express that newly discovered reality, there is a glow of joy and euphoria as bright as the sun. When I wore my first skirt I felt whole, like I was finally fulfilling a desire I had since early childhood. I have seen the refulgent smiles of my family putting a new and affirming name to who they are. I have seen the serenity from chest bond, ears pierced, and nails painted for the first time. I have been graced in those moments to feel and know the “peace which surpasses all understanding” 

I believe transness is a gift from God. Transitioning brings new life to a person. They fully embrace who they have discovered themselves to be, like I hope all people grow to do. Jesus, In showing who he truly is, manifests the glory of God in his physical body, and so it is for all those who are joined to the mystical body of Christ. This manifestation can be the loving acts done to your neighbor, the hymns of praise sung at church, the quiet prayers offered in the silence of our hearts, the blessing of enemies. But I see the mystery of the Transfiguration reflected most clearly to me when a person understands who they truly are and embraces it. For me that is a spiritual aspect of Transness. Christ liberates us, all of us, to be fully alive, just as we are, the Beloved of God who are to be listened to. 

The Transfiguration, this manifestation of God in our lives to others, Transness, can cause a lot of reactions from others. The three disciples (characteristically) jump between the right and wrong response. Peter affirms “it is good we are here”, yet is struck with fear at the voice of God. (I'm not going to fault him too much here, that has to be terrifying). When the disciples fall down in fear, our Lord tells them “get up and do not be afraid” I was struck by John Wesley’s commentary on do not be after. “And doubtless the same moment he gave them courage and strength” The idea of Jesus giving the disciples the courage and strength needed to understand what they had seen moved me. This is allyship. To see the supposed strangeness, take the courage and strength Jesus offers to us all and say “it is good we are here”

To close let us reflect on what happens next. Jesus reveals himself, then goes to Jerusalem to begin his passion. This last Epiphany is to give his disciples the courage and strength needed to journey with him to Calvary. So it is with us. God has manifested himself to us, so we might manifest him in us. The Transfiguration event ends with the promise of the Resurrection, when Christ glory is then forever displayed. He now invites us to go down the mountain and prepare for Lent, not as we were but as those who have seen the glory of God in Christ and now reflect his glory to others.

Alumni Spotlight: Meredith Clark

Name and pronouns: Meredith Clark, she/they

Cohort year: 2017-2019 (two years)

Where are you living now? New Haven, CT

What are you doing now? I’m a leather worker under the name Beacon Craft Studio. I am also co-founder of the New Haven Crafters of Color collective.

Website: https://beaconcraftstudio.square.site/

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/BeaconCraftStudio/

How has Life Together impacted your life?

I stayed full-time at my host site, I Have A Future, for two years after Life Together. My time as a Life Together fellow and later Lead Organizer continues to shape my orientation to the world. The clearest example is the New Haven Crafters of Color collective—the fruition of the community oriented justice work that I learned in my time in Life Together. It’s not always easy, but we have put on about 10 free pop-ups for artists of color in New Haven who struggle to break into the art scene. Our group is entirely POC of all races, and the majority make under 50% of the average median income for our area. We believe that work and dedication are no less valuable than financial deposits, and seek to lift each other up together. One event I’m particularly proud of is our recent fundraiser for Palestine, in which we raised almost $3,500 for Medical Aid for Palestine and Palestinian Children’s Relief Fund through artist donations that were raffled and auctioned off. I am under no illusion that Gazans can access aid during the onslaught of bombing, but it is a way to help along with contacting legislators and shutting down business as usually. It was also a beautiful way to experience solidarity with other people who believe in Palestinian life. All of us as artists have all faced repercussions like shadowbanning for our pro-Palestinian, anti-war advocacy, but we believe that our relative privilege as Americans means we have a responsibility to the artists of color in Palestine as well.

In a less obvious but spiritually meaningful way, I also turn to chant-songs as my preferred form of prayer. I also lived with Mer Wade, my LT housemate, from 2019-2023 and count my cohort-mates Mer and Hannah as two of my closest friends to this day.

Fellow Reflection: Olivia Stanley

I’m writing this reflection from the annual Life Together Advent Retreat at the Bethany House of Prayer. Last Advent I was gearing up for my second to last finals season. I remember the feeling of anticipation to finish my last Advent semester at Sewanee. The period of waiting to be done with all of the exams is long, hopeful, and preoccupying. I had to work hard to recount the semester in two weeks in order to enjoy my reward: a long break from school. I expected a clear reward for all of my waiting.

Where I was last year compared to where I am now in Advent is a mirror of this life I once lived. I always want a break; the feelings of anticipating something are resurfacing as my body prepares for the finals season it’s been used to for so long. There are no tests to take, all nighters to pull, and the people around me are very different. No academic pressure, just the same old waiting. This Advent I’m reflecting on questions around lingering. Why are we waiting? Do we want things to be better or just different? What are we waiting on? What makes us wait? Henri Nouwen offers some answers to these questions:

“Open-ended waiting is hard for us because we tend to wait for something very concrete, for something that we wish to have…for this reason, a lot of our waiting is not open-ended. Instead our waiting is a way of controlling the future. We want the future to go in a very specific direction, and if it does not happen we are disappointed and can even slip into despair.” !!!!!!

I am someone that tries to control the uncontrollable. And fix everything. To change. To be better and do better, all the time. I am feeling so lost about what I’m waiting for this season because I have had control of my direction, up until this point. I am a college educated young adult with anxiety that does not want to make the wrong move – and there is a bleeding and suffering world that needs a lot of tending to – how am I supposed to know how I can best heal the wound? There is so much to do it feels impossible to know when is the right time to take action and how to do it right.

Rebecca Solnit writes about human existence in the 21st century in the book Hope in the Dark:

“This is an extraordinary time full of vital, transformative movements that could not be foreseen. It’s also a nightmarish time. Full engagement [in the world] requires the ability to see both…The 21st century has seen the rise of hideous economic inequality, working conditions, and social services…the elites who forgot they conceded to some of these things in the hope of avoiding revolution…Hope doesn’t mean denying these realities [CLIMATE CHANGE]. It means facing them and addressing them by remembering what else the 21st century has brought, including the movements, heroes, and shifts in consciousness that address these things now…This has been a truly remarkable decade for movement-building, social change, and deep profound shifts in ideas, perspectives, frameworks for broad parts of the population.”

I am an Enneagram 4, the type known as the Individualist – I dream up lives I could spend forever waiting for. I have a vast imagination and I love to fantasize about the world I could live in. Particularly I dream up lives I think have worth, and they often do not align with my reality. Having unrealistic expectations of myself can be really unfair to me, and also to those that support me because it can prevent me from being grateful for my reality. Easing into open-ended waiting and embracing the in-between can make it easier to accept our best. Showing up authentically as ourselves and uplifting the support that carries us through the waiting combats self-isolation. Life Together has been a time of waiting for me – I am taking a gap year in between college and graduate school. An intentional gap year can produce beautiful products out of the waiting. I am trying to ease into not having control over what is next for me. I am able to do this because of the immense intention I have put into waiting. Even though it feels like I have been passively waiting for life to happen to me, I have been seriously discerning my vocation and purpose in the world. There will come a point when we have to stop waiting for the perfect moment to respond to the world’s needs and just do it. I hope that one day I will understand that while I was waiting for God to give me the full image of my life, God was painting on me the whole time. It has no allusion to worthiness being in good grades, or a list of letters behind my name. But it’s an image of a fulfilled call and a life well-loved.

Fall Newsletter from Executive Director Kelsey Rice Bogdan

In the midst of all the changes at Life Together, we have also been affected by a little-known transition that has evoked Halloween-level frights at the Diocese of Massachusetts' headquarters: office renovations. My diocesan colleagues have been abuzz since the summer about renovations to the fourth and fifth floors of the diocesan offices, including the cozy office and cubicle Life Together has called home since our move out of 40 Prescott in 2020. Shortly after Orientation, I finally got the word I had been dreading: we needed to pack up our spaces by the end of the week. So I wrapped my portrait-sized Mary Magdalene and Christ icons in strips of bubble wrap, where they will eventually return from the storage tomb to resurrected office glory. We don't know exactly what to expect when the renovations are over, though we are trusting that the freshly painted walls, gender-neutral restrooms, and reconfigured office spaces will ultimately make the building more comfortable and values-aligned.

Preparing for a sabbath year is a bit like office packing. Since Orientation, we have been standing in the metaphorical office, looking around at our stuff and figuring out where to start. In the case of the Discernment Team, this means defining the process for the next several months, as the necessary precursor to forming a team. Though that takes time-- sometimes more time than I would like-- failing to get that clarity at the outset will ultimately make the work ahead even more difficult. Our fellows just completed their Transformative Teams workshop, postponed after a fellow and trainer came down with COVID during Orientation. And as all our alumni who have been through that workshop know, taking the time to define shared purpose, norms, and roles can mean the difference between a strong team and a waste of everyone's time. 

We are busy packing and preparing for the new thing, laying the groundwork for an unknown future. Life Together isn't alone in this, of course. The Diocese is renovating its offices in the midst of a bishop transition. The Episcopal Service Corps program directors met earlier this month and spent time talking about new ways of doing this work on a broader level. Some days, it is hard not to feel a little overwhelmed by all the transitions and unanswered questions. But I am energized by the notes of encouragement and excitement about what is next that I have received from so many of you. I am hopeful when I read reflections like the one offered in this newsletter by Emmaus fellow Margaret Walker, sharing their own energy for this discernment. And I am grateful for those who have come alongside us in this year, especially new Prayer and Wellness Partner Lydia Strand ('13-'15), who bring so much insight and care to this community. We are in this together, finding the path forward together, and that gives me hope.

Being in this together also gives me a measure of hope in light of war and the deepening humanitarian crisis in Gaza and Israel. Last night I joined the Diocese of Massachusetts' online prayer vigil, responding to a call from Archbishop Hosam Naoum of the Episcopal Diocese of Jerusalem for fasting and prayer by all in the Episcopal community. In the Zoom room, I saw Life Together fellows. I saw diocesan colleagues I had worked with over the years. I even saw quite a few parishioners from my site placement when I was a fellow back in 2009-2010. And even as we prayed and lamented together, it reminded me that we aren't alone. That in the stillness of prayer together, we can discern our collective call to work toward a just peace in the land of the Holy One. In this season of lament, transition, and fear, I pray that we find those spaces to discern together, to act together, to love together. And at Life Together, we will continue forming young leaders for such a time as this.

Fellow Reflection: Margaret Walker

The year is turning, in more ways than one. Despite the unseasonal warmth, the mass gatherings of geese and the golden locust leaves have made it clear that Autumn is approaching. The familiar, new smell in the air reminds me, too, that this time of year has been honored across time and space as a “thin place” of liminality, transformation, and deepening.

Life Together is in a bit of a strange season as well, both in the short and long term. Our cohort has started to settle in, and over the course of the last few months I have been deeply grateful to witness the cascade of small moments that have led to us becoming a community. The bursts of laughter or singing I hear from across the house have become part of my daily routine, and have brought me such joy. I also am aware of the ways in which this year is positioned in the life of Life Together, as we prepare for the upcoming Sabbath. We can expect that a time of reflecting, processing, and intention is ahead, yet there are so many unknowns underlying it all. Looking even more broadly, as we as Humans contend with various crises on both sociopolitical and environmental scales, all of us seem to be inhabiting a place of uncertainty and transition. In recognizing the convergence of all these places of liminality, I feel a calling to reflect more deeply on what it might mean for me to be a part of this Season. And that has led me to wonder also what God might be revealing about my/our role within the times we are in more broadly, in Life Together and in the world. What a holy opportunity, to be rooted in legacy, embedded in the networks that have been built, while also living into the joyful, challenging questions of new relationships, of new possibility, of radical change.

Although there is great meaning to be found in these times, I do not want to discount the grief, rage, and lament of all that is not right. Contending with the vast amount of change and disconnection can often be exhausting and discouraging. A quote that I came across in February, which is now posted at the top of the stairs in the Sacred Grove, has been particularly grounding for me as I have navigated the compounding layers of liminality:

“To live a lifetime of audacity, dwelling in the place where joy meets justice, year after year, can only be sustained by being so in love with a vision of what’s possible that we no longer flirt with despair”

– Aurora Levins Morales

In the past I have most definitely tended towards despair when I imagined what my/our future might hold, and that is one part of what led me to decide to join Life Together– I felt unequipped to face the impending crisis I was anticipating and wanted to quickly deepen my relational and community organizing skills. In a twist of irony, I have discovered, throughout my time here, a way of living that truly does give me hope that we as a species can transform towards something more life-giving for all of us. In other words, when I gather in community and see the ways we strive to show up in the world, I am sustained by that loving possibility of joy and justice. Life Together for me is a place where I/we can practice living into those ways of being and visions of liberation now, not just theoretically but in our actions. In these ways, I can see this Season as a bountiful space to imagine, discern, practice, and create a new way of life, together.

Alumni Spotlight: Lydia Strand

Name and pronouns: Lydia Strand (she/they)

Cohort years: 2013-2015

Where are you living now? I’ve been in Boston since Life Together and live in Jamaica Plain with my partner, Cicia Lee (2014).

What are you doing now?

I’m working part time with Life Together as the Prayer and Wellness Partner – supporting the fellows and their community as they navigate their lives through the program year! I’ve enjoyed re-steeping in some of the core material and commitments of Life Together’s to a life of community, prayer, and action–and learning about how the program and fellows over the last several years have developed and evolved conversations about each of these pillars.

And, I’m also working with a project born out of the “Nuns & Nones” group that is building an interfaith and interspiritual community of people across the country committed to shared study, prayer, action, and celebration. It draws inspiration from relationships with communities of women religious–nuns in monasteries across the US. In some ways, there are similarities to the Life Together program in that it’s an attempt to build an alternative lifestyle in which spiritual practice, justice, and relationship is at the center.

How has Life Together impacted your life?

The greatest impact that Life Together has had on my life is through the relationships and friendships that have shaped the last decade of my life. I’ve been in community with people who have been so creative with seeking lives of spiritual community, of social change, and of self-knowing. From building various informal intentional communities, to pursuing contemplative retreats, and trying out learning the various crafts of community organizing and political action, the people I’ve met through Life Together have helped me keep open the call and dream of a life full of Spirit-led connectedness and transformation. I’ll soon age out of the identity of ‘young adult,’ but the experience that was seeded in Life Together of a life of prayer and action has been nourished and strengthened through these relationships. I’m not done with the experiment!

And, I hope it is a lifelong one. I was introduced to Bede Griffiths, a Benedictine monk and Christian meditation teacher, by Ethel Fraga, a mindfulness and contemplative practice teacher who taught with Life Together about a decade ago. He writes:

“It is a real challenge to find a new way to express our Christian life. It is so easy to get into rules and organization and so to narrow the freedom of the Spirit. The essential thing that Jesus left the church was the Spirit. It is by learning really to trust the Spirit, in our prayer and meditation, and to share this trust with one another that a new language will gradually form.” -- Bede Griffiths, from The New Creation in Christ: Christian Meditation and Community.

I hope to keep deepening in awareness of the always-evolving leading of the Spirit–in and through new and old experiments in living into the transformative and redemptive teachings of Jesus.

Summer Newsletter from Executive Director Kelsey Rice Bogdan

Since sharing news of Life Together’s sabbath year last week, I have encountered a wide range of reactions. Some have expressed curiosity about the broader trends that make this time necessary. Some speak of sadness about an era coming to an end. Many have shared support and encouragement, for which I am deeply grateful.

I have experienced all these reactions and more since last winter, when Life Together’s Advisory Leadership Team first began to imagine possibilities for a pause. And yet in this moment, as we reflect on the year that has passed and turn toward our 25th cohort of fellows arriving next month, I am excited. Excited for the year ahead, as we learn from and walk with a fantastic group of young leaders. Excited for the formation of a discernment team to dream of Life Together’s future, and the commitment to young adult ministry that it represents from the Diocese's bishops. Excited for the conversations already swirling, the partners emerging from unexpected quarters, the pieces coming together to give birth to what’s next. 

I don’t know what shape that new thing will ultimately take. But in the midst of it all, I come back to the core teaching from my own Life Together Orientation 14 years ago: “Leadership is helping others achieve purpose in the face of uncertainty” (Marshall Ganz). There is no doubt that we face uncertain times, in Life Together, in the young adult service movement, in the Church. Yet our network is rich in leaders formed for such a time as this.

I will share updates with our community, via email and on social media, as this sabbath process unfolds in the coming months. Please don't hesitate to reach out if you would like to offer insights or get involved in some way. Because I have also learned in Life Together that leadership isn't an individual activity for one or two of us. We will find a path forward together, in community, listening to the Spirit and leaning into our shared values. Whatever you can offer to this process-- your prayers, your wisdom, your networks and resources-- will strengthen the outcome. Thank you for walking with us into this season.

Alumni Spotlight: Lily Luo

Name and pronouns: Lily Luo (She/Her)

Cohort year: 2016-2018

Where are you living now? New York City 

What are you doing now? 

I just moved to New York last fall so I'm working on getting settled there with my wife. We just had our big church wedding in June and it was so lovely to gather all the friends and family. A highlight was that we had our mothers read a passage from bell hooks’ All About Love in four different languages- German, Portuguese, Chinese and English!

Fear is the primary force upholding structures of domination. It promotes the desire for separation, the desire not to be known. When we are taught that safety lies always with sameness, then difference, of any kind, will appear as a threat. When we choose to love we choose to move against fear-- against alienation and separation. The choice to love is a choice to connect-- to find ourselves in the other. —bell hooks, All About Love: New Visions

Jocelin, another Life Together alum, helped officiate the wedding and gave a beautiful sermon about how we find God in connections. I also just got back from visiting Detroit, because I'm working on my PhD dissertation about Grace Lee Boggs. It was amazing to see the visionary organizing happening there as people try to reimagine systems beyond capitalism. Urban farms that fight for food sovereignty. Schools that model place-based learning. Activists that take seriously both the material and spiritual needs of us all. Shout out to The James and Grace Lee Boggs Center to Nurture Community Leadership, The Boggs School, Feedom Freedom, Birwood House, Freedom Dreams, and so many other orgs that capture the lineage and legacy of both the Boggses! 

How has Life Together impacted your life?

What I really appreciated about my time in Life Together was the intentionality with which we approached our organizing work, facilitation, and spirituality. And that intention was toward connection. Even through disagreements and struggles, I've found that the skills I gained have stayed with me. Skills like how to ask ourselves and each other, what does it mean to grow our souls and what does a world governed by love look like? It was such an honor to be surrounded by other travelers who were equally passionate about protesting white supremacy as they were about creating spaces of queer joy. 

Fellow Reflection: Sarah Mattea Lane

Dear Friends,

Our role is essential

Olakoneo --- Greek: To be a servant, to serve

Windows and doorways

to the opening of understanding

disaster, impossible, interrupted

leads us to action

I remain so

For all of us to work and teach together

The longer I am … the deeper I delve

What’s Next?

FORWARD

During Dis-Orientation (our end of year programming), my housemate Kris led us in an activity called collage poetry. We flipped through magazines and books and wrote down words or phrases that stood out and constructed poetry out of what we discovered. We were asked to reflect on the past year and to let that guide our creation. The above poem was created in that reflection space. 

Life Together is inherently transitory, like windows and doors, a threshold for young adults to pass through. My journey in Life Together has been one of exploration and becoming. As I am looking backwards, I am in awe of the ways in which I have changed. That “advocate” is a descriptor that comes to mind when others think of me. That living with and loving others often means holding multiple truths, which are sometimes in conflict. That I believe the Divine lives in each of us. I am so grateful for the opportunities I have had to challenge myself and others, to root myself in community, to slow down and listen.

As I finish out my Emmaus year, the question of “What’s Next?” has been on everyone’s lips (including my own). And I don’t have an answer. That does scare me more than I would want to announce. However, I do feel that my years in Life Together have prepared me for whatever is next; from disasters to more doorways, I am ready to move forward. Forward towards new community-building. Forward towards living my values out loud. Forward towards whatever life might throw my way. I am ready for FORWARD.


Fellow Reflection: Sam Osakue

April is an interesting month for many people, especially those who are Autistic/Neurodivergent. April is Autism Acceptance Month. It was formed by people who are autistic and wanted to help shift the narrative and erase the stigma of being Autistic, according to the Autistic Self Advocacy Network. As to why it is better to say Autism Acceptance Month, instead of Autism Awareness month, the ASAN says, “Acceptance of autism as a natural condition in the human experience is necessary for real dialogue to occur.” Autism or autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is a developmental disability that affects how we experience the world around us, and that we think, process, communicate, and socialize differently.  

With Autism Acceptance Month coming up, I wanted to share my experience of being Autistic and being a Life Together fellow. Life Together has been a revolutionary experience for me. It has allowed me to truly discover more about myself and leave my comfort zone. I tend to struggle with social situations because of my autism. Thankfully, I found that my housemates deeply cared for me and that they almost feel like family to me. They have been very open and responsive to me whenever I share my needs, especially those that are related to my disability, and have helped me to find ways to meet those needs.

I also appreciate the resources that I have from Life Together. In our house, we have a lot of fidget toys that are great for when I need to stim (self-stimulatory behavior). I also enjoy the knowledge that I gain from our Prayer Partners and training sessions, which help me and others in my house find ways to connect. One training, in particular, was the Non-Violent Communication (NVC), which helped me understand needs and feelings, which is something I struggle with as an autistic person. I even helped lead a session talking about my experience with Autism and ways I struggle in social situations and it helped a lot with developing a greater relationship with my housemates, including resolving conflicts.

What I want to conclude is that being in Life Together has allowed me to fully open up and truly accept who I am. And so what can you do to help support Autism Acceptance Month? Let’s all be brave and proud of who we are, no matter what life hits at us. If I had a call to action for Autism Acceptance Month, a few things would be, first educate yourself about Autism and encourage others. If you know someone who is Autistic, try to get to know that person better and have a conversation. If you don’t know that, try to find blogs, books, YouTube channels, and social media pages of Autistic creators, the more the better. A few books to read are Neurotribes, We’re Not Broken, and On the Spectrum. A few Autistic YouTubers to watch are Autism from the Inside, The ThoughtSpot, and Mom on the Spectrum. Lastly, help amplify Autistic voices, and if you are on social media, use the #AcutallyAutistic hashtag to help find and spread Autistic voices.

A Modernized Continuation of the Beatitudes

by fellow Kris Varga

Blessed are the volunteers,

for their time is in God’s hands.

Blessed are the sorrowful,

for their tears will be wiped by angels.

Blessed are the empathetic,

for their lives will be wise and true.

Blessed are the broken,

for their pieces will be made into mosaics.

Blessed are the meditators,

for their peace will be shared in presence.

Blessed are the marginalized,

for they shall know liberation.

Blessed are the mindful,

for every detail of theirs will be tended.

Blessed are the helpers,

for they will be adored.

Blessed are the visionaries,

for they shall create hopes and dreams.

Blessed are the gentle,

for they shall soften the world.

Blessed are the joyous,

for their smiles will shine from the heavens.

Blessed are the givers,

for them love will be received.

Blessed are the sincere,

for them truth will be made reality.

Blessed are they who vocalize injustice,

especially when refraining from

hardening their hearts,

they are the true prophets of this world.

Image: “Christ Blessing” by Hans Memling

March Newsletter from Executive Director Kelsey Rice Bogdan

Eight years of practicing sacred chant with Life Together cohorts has made me a bold harmonizer. Though I have minimal formal vocal training, many of you have taught me over the years how to add layers to the sound we produce together. When it works, the result is rich and powerful. But sometimes, my harmony just comes out weird. Maybe my key is off-- there are some harmonies that are better in my head. Or maybe my deviation from the melody throws the whole group off-balance, and a moment of chaos ensues. In those moments, I pause, reset, and think to myself, "Back to basics," before rejoining the main melody.

The phrase "back to basics" has run through my head a lot in these past few weeks, and not just during a round of "To the Hills." In our current season of staff transition, the limits of my own capacity have meant thinking seriously about what is actually important. In that context, "back to basics" boils down to relationships. Relationships as the basis of our recruitment efforts. Relationships as the heart of our fundraising. Relationships as the core of how we all experience transformation through Life Together, as fellows, alumni, staff, and friends. Returning to my own Life Together organizing training more than a decade ago, I am doing a lot of 1:1s this spring to tend to existing relationships and help new ones to grow. And that time has already yielded creative energy and support to navigate this liminal season.

And of course, "back to basics" has also meant fostering the spiritual practices that connect us to God and the sacred. As we prepare for a training next month on contemplative practice, our community has talked about the deep lament we're holding over the brokenness of relationships. Some of this brokenness is interpersonal. We also experience it in the social climate of transphobia and racism that impacts so many within and beyond Life Together. And while we seek ways to act for justice and repair, we are also returning to those deep spiritual connection points as the wellspring for action: to the Bible and other sacred texts; to centering prayer and meditation; and yes, to chanting. Because as the upcoming story of Holy Week and Easter reminds us, year after year, death is not the last word. The fear and hatred surrounding us are not the last word. God speaks something new on the other side: through those 1:1s, through our action together, through the still, small voice in our exhausted hearts.

So in this spring of transitions, I am returning to the melody of Life Together, the melody of the Spirit. As we approach Holy Week in the Christian tradition, I hope that you also find and anchor yourself in the "back to basics" melody of your own life and faith.

Fellow Reflection: Margaret Walker

As a teenager growing up in Minneapolis, I couldn't wait to move far away. Despite my best efforts, I ended up attending college at the University of Minnesota, a whopping 6 miles away from my house. There, I discovered there was something deeply right about being in my hometown in this new way. I fell in love with the closeness of the skyline, the hushed wonder of the Mississippi River, which I crossed daily, and the wild turkeys who roamed the streets. Over the past 22 years, my heart has been both broken and filled with joy because of this city, as I have been raised in the midst of rivers, artists, bogs, and uprisings. (An essay, or perhaps novel, for another time). Moving across the country gave me a whole new perspective on what home means, and the significance of Place. I had never spent more than a few weeks outside of Minnesota before coming here. Now that I was gone from the city I had once been itching to leave, nothing seemed to make sense. How could this Place embrace me when it does not know me? Why are the roundabouts called rotaries, and why are everyone’s vowels so short? How could I belong here when I have almost no understanding of this Place?

On my first day here, as I was pulling up to my new home, I saw a tree on the boulevard that made me do a double take. I gazed at the smooth, flaking bark and the pointy tipped leaves. A sycamore. Never in my life have I had them so close, so constant. I was abuzz with excitement. What other newness will I share space with here? Months later, although my heart still longs for my cottonwood friends, I rejoice at the shagbark hickory, sweet gum, pin oak, and beech trees that have now become part of my surroundings. I have tasted the salt of the ocean, and watched honey bees bathing in pokeweed pollen. I still see wood ducks, great blue herons, and wild turkeys, but they live near Scarboro Pond rather than Minnehaha Creek. I have also exchanged homemade bread and locally grown eggplants with parishioners, and held people’s hands as they shared their stories with me on the mobile clinic where I work. I have slowly found new walking routes, new neighbors, a new community and way of living that have been extraordinarily transformative. Even during our house meetings, which often go on for hours, I am filled with wonder, love, and a sense of simple yet indescribable correctness. I have been connected with a web of people who exist at the intersections of spirituality and social justice, and I have finally begun tangibly developing resources, skills, and relationships to engage with my commitment to emergency preparedness.

After a night walk with one of my housemates one day, we sat and talked on the porch for a while, watching the steady stream of traffic go by. As we moved through the conversation, we approached the subject of friendships, reciprocity, and the desire for change. I paused and asked, “Do you want to create a new pattern with me?” They agreed, and we sat in excited silence, marveling at the magic of that moment. I am grateful for the Life Together ecosystem, which allows such conversations to occur regularly. Questions of belonging and feelings of homesickness still arise within me, but over time I have seen myself and others creating incredible new ways of being. My suspicions that intentional community has the power to re-calibrate who we are as a species on this planet have been confirmed in the ways I have seen us show up together, and in the ways we strive to carry our values and connections more wholly into our lives. Being here has allowed me to live in the way I have always wanted to, and I know these experiences will always be with me, no matter where I call home.

Alum Profile: Will Harron

Name and pronouns: Will Harron (he/him/his)

Cohort year: 2014-15 Micah; 2015-16 Emmaus, 2020-21 Prayer Partner; trainer in 2019, 2021, and 2022.

Where are you living now? Greenfield, MA, in the Pioneer Valley of Western Massachusetts 

What are you doing now? Wearing too many hats - I'm the Province 1 Coordinator and the Network Organizer for the Young Adult Ministry Network in Western Massachusetts, plus I serve in all sorts of volunteer gigs on the topic of formation and young adult and campus ministry. My paid work is basically in planning and running Zoom meetings between people engaged in ministry who want to connect, collaborate, and support each other in that work, and excitingly, I can direct them towards various grants to support that work. I coordinate a provincial (New-England wide) Young Adult and Campus Ministry network, serve on churchwide councils for Young Adult/Campus ministry and Christian formation, and am doing volunteer campus ministry in Amherst MA. Plus, I've gotten involved in the Western Massachusetts Sacred Harp shape-note singing community, which has been a dream.

How has Life Together impacted your life?

In so many ways. LT was a place from which I could spend two years serving in a parish (Saint Mary's in Dorchester) building relationships, being formed by a community, learning how the church functions, and experimenting with how to do ministry as a lay leader and as a young adult in and alongside the church. LT was an incubator that trained me in community organizing and helped give me superpowers like "facilitate a 1 hour zoom call that people leave energized and want to come back to" or "put on a short worship service with no notice and no sweat" or "give a public narrative for something I love" or "run a training that doesn't turn into a grumble-thon." LT was a community where I made dear friends who continue to shape my life. LT is a source of hope and inspiration to me: that these old bones of the church still have life, that an Episcopal organization can thread the needle between being something that's part of a church and something that can serve and resource people who have no desire to be a part of the church, that young adults can be given power and resources and turned loose to experiment and collaborate and make the somethings-new that the world needs. And LT gave me concrete connections that have led me to the career and vocational place I am - from my first job out of LT in the DioMA offices to my M.Div program at the Boston University School of Theology, to my work now in Western Massachusetts and across the Episcopal Province of New England.

Fellow Reflection: Kristopher Varga

Kris preached the following sermon at Church of Our Saviour in Milton, MA on October 2, 2022.

I was officially received as an Episcopalian yesterday. I’m sure it’s not common for a new member of the church to preach the day after they become a new member. So I’m hoping what I say here will have that extra zest of spirit that I received at St. Paul’s Cathedral.

What does it mean to be a Christian? The easiest answer is a follower of Christ. Maybe that’s a simple response, but the actuality of it is far from simple. There’s a line from Paul’s letter today that says God “called us with a holy calling, not according to our works, but according to his own purpose and grace.” That’s hard to embrace, realizing that what it means is to let go of what we think we want, and to accept what God knows we need. Think about this for a moment. How much do we involve God in our lives, communicate with God in our decision making process, and trust that God is with us as we continue forward? How much of our lives involve humbling ourselves to the truth that we, alone, might not have the best answer, and that God, who knows us better than ourselves, does contain that answer? This takes a deep faith.

And faith is far from easy. I wish I could say that it is easy, that all one has to do is check the box once and all is fine for life. But that’s not the case. Faith is a struggle, sometimes daily. And here we are, having faith in Jesus, a man who lived two thousand years ago, written in text that was put together not long after. So what compels us to have this faith? I’m sure for everyone it’s different. Maybe some of you truly have seen miracles. Maybe it’s that feeling you get when you walk into church and receive communion, or when your prayers are answered, or you witness acts of kindness from strangers, or look an infant in the eyes and revel in their wonder. Maybe it’s marveling at nature, sighing at sunsets, discovering the serenity of a calm ocean after a storm. Maybe it’s hearing and reading scripture, or admiring the discipleship of your priest, or learning about the saints and their sanctity.

Today is the feast day of St. Francis of Assisi, one of my greatest inspirations. St. Francis himself was born into luxury, his father a prosperous silk merchant. Yet, during the Crusades, spirit moved him to turn away from a life that might have been physically fulfilling, but was not spiritually fulfilling, and he fully embraced Christian values, living among the poor and the disregarded, tending to them and spending his days praising and glorifying God. Through this divine intervention, he entered into the faith of God’s will, trusting that this grace and the teachings displayed in the gospel were of a deeper truth than anything humanity could conjure.

Paul is another example of this conversion from a life of comfort to a life of discipleship. Having been a Pharisee, he was seen as a well-respected individual in society, someone who knew Jewish law and Torah. Yet, because of a vision, because of a change of heart, Paul relinquished his title, his respect in the Jewish community, and followed what God intended, which was to live out the gospel and share the love of Christ to all. There’s a quote from Henri Nouwen in his book Spiritual Direction: Wisdom for the Long Walk of Faith that goes, “Those who have really listened to God’s voice have often found themselves being called away from familiar and relatively comfortable places to places they would rather not go.” Both Francis and Paul here are prime examples of this, and so are numerous others who have decided to embark upon the Christian faith. They have entered into union with Christ, one who willingly surrendered himself to the cross, and are thus called to go out into the world and embody the “good news”.

My journey of faith is shared in these stories. I was born Catholic, altar-server and everything, but during my teenage years I abandoned my faith, losing connection to God and spiritual life. In my early twenties I began working in the film industry, pursuing a life of money and success. But it was an ugly lifestyle. I recall working at a casting agency and after a series of auditions, the casting agents returned to the office and started mocking with cruelty a majority of the people who auditioned! This made me feel really uneasy inside. On sets of Hollywood movies, I noticed how cold everyone was to each other, how desperate some people were to be noticed, focusing only on their own ambition. It was all wrong. There was no love being shared. Yet, we idolize Hollywood, its people and fame and glamour. 

Life outside of that business wasn’t much better. I was working at a corporate audio/visual job at a prominent hotel in Philly, and I was miserable. One night I had to sleep in the office because I finished work at midnight and had work again at five in the morning. There was another instance where a woman demanded a refund on her million dollar event, all because we had a technology issue and it took a minute for her video to start playing. I put on my best customer service performance, and all that did was prevent her from trying to get me fired. This lifestyle of working for a paycheck, to gain recognition and to buy material things is ultimately hollow, and it wasn’t until a late night of divine intervention that I wrote a long prayer to God asking for help to change my life. From there I started to discover new opportunities. I began working at natural food stores and got involved with various spiritual groups. My inner light began to shine again. Later in my twenties I came across an Episcopal church that offered “mindfulness worship” in the evenings. I remember walking into the chapel and seeing a priest dressed in ordinary attire sitting at the head of a circle of lit candles, Celtic music playing faintly in the background. He offered me a pamphlet and we began the worship, incorporating Christian texts in ways I never thought of before (this was my initiation to mysticism). I loved being in the chapel with its stained glass and old, wooden pews. It brought back the familiarity of church life in my youth. I started to attend the Sunday service and discovered that the values and beliefs of the Episcopal church matched my own. From there my faith was reawakened, and I began to devote my life to God’s servitude. For years to come I saw my calling as working with people with disabilities, supporting them and promoting their inclusivity. Now, God has inspired me to pursue a calling towards priesthood. And to be honest, neither path is very lucrative. Yet, the importance of living a way of life that focuses not on the individual, but on everyone is fundamental to the Christian faith. A life that has gratitude for existence and the wonders around us, that cares for others as yourself and recognizes the futility of what our society deems as success. On trusting the guidance of a power beyond your own logical reasoning at times, and seeing that wisdom in not aiming for the top, but taking care of those at the bottom.

I will add a disclaimer that I don’t believe there’s anything inherently wrong with success or money, with using the rational, thinking mind to make logical decisions. There’s nothing wrong with enjoying the pleasures and comforts of life. Life is meant to be joyful, but when these aims become our sole focus, we lose sight of the presence of Christ in all, we forget to support each other’s needs to help ensure equality and to help relieve the suffering that we all encounter. I chose to become an Episcopalian because I believe the truth of this church today embodies these values in its seeking for social justice and change, in its inclusivity and focus on love, and also in its worship and prayer and devoted relationship to God and Jesus (you can learn more about this by joining our spiritual discussion group). To me this is the meaning of being Christian, and sometimes this means getting out there and volunteering, or trying out a different career path, or changing your lifestyle altogether, and sometimes it means checking in on your neighbor to make sure they’re doing okay, or treating your friends to a meal or planting a garden or even taking time to provide some needed self-care and turning to God for consolation. Of course attending church and being part of a community is important, but Christianity is beyond the walls of the chapel you worship in. So take the time today and ask yourself, what does it mean for me to be a Christian?

Christ tells us in today’s lesson that if we have faith the size of a mustard seed, miracles can happen. We might view these miracles as healing the sick, turning water into wine or raising the dead, but I've seen other miracles that are just as important. I have seen people change their entire lives around, view the world through a new lens, from a heart-centered way of love. This is what Christ is trying to showcase, that we need to allow the faith that we have, even if it’s as small as a mustard seed, to crack open and become something miraculous. If we can have the courage to do this, then by God’s grace we can become the change we wish to see.

I leave you today with this famous prayer attributed to St. Francis of Assisi which I feel embodies what it means to be a disciple of Christ, that which is not fixated on one’s self, but on the entirety:

Lord make us instruments of your peace:

where there is hatred, let me sow love;
where there is injury, pardon;
where there is doubt, faith;
where there is despair, hope;
where there is darkness, light;
where there is sadness, joy.
O divine Master, grant that I may not so much seek
to be consoled as to console,
to be understood as to understand,
to be loved as to love.
For it is in giving that we receive,
it is in pardoning that we are pardoned,
and it is in dying that we are born to eternal life.


Fellow Reflection: Andrea Albamonte

Greetings friends,

I was accepted to Life Together in February of 2020. I planned to build a network in Boston and within the Episcopal Church. I planned to get some great experience, start the process to the priesthood my second year in the program, and then settle in Boston while being sponsored for the priesthood by my site placement, Grace Episcopal Church. I imagined all the cool things I would get to do and try, the people I would get to meet, the places I would get to explore in Boston.

As you can imagine, I could not have imagined that a month after being accepted into the program, the COVID-19 pandemic would dash my plans. I still learned a lot, built a network, got a lot of great experience, and grew deeply into my faith. But my network was mostly virtual, and many of the chances that I expected to have to make friends and meet new people couldn’t happen because of COVID safety reasons. I still had a lot of great experiences, but there were a lot of tears and grief over the fact that much of that experience occurred online. 

I also couldn’t have anticipated the direction that my faith journey would take. 

I entered with questions about what kind of ordained vocation I would explore. I spoke with Death Doulas and military chaplains. I spoke with young priests who had come through Life Together. I spoke with older priests who had been in this Diocese for decades. I got involved in the Young Adult Advisory Committee. I taught classes, preached, and started a new ministry at my site placement. 

Upon reaching the deadline to sign the papers to commit to starting the process to the priesthood in the Diocese of Massachusetts, I realized that I needed to put this on hold so that I could explore whether I had a monastic vocation first. I never would have anticipated that this would be my path when I began this program. It used to be that I didn’t fully believe in the power of prayer. I was embarrassed about being a person who prayed. Turning to God in the hardest, most uncertain times has deepened my prayer life to an extent that dedicating my life to prayer is a lifestyle that now makes more sense. After getting in contact with a few different monastic communities and planning visits (two of which had to be rescheduled because of COVID sickness), I finally visited my first community this past weekend. 

I’m so grateful for everything that I have learned since I joined this program, vocationally, personally, spiritually. It’s been an incredibly difficult and fulfilling journey.

Alum Profile: Lib Gatti

Name and pronouns: Lib Gatti (they/them)

Cohort year: 2015-2016

Where are you living now? Mission Hill, Boston MA

What are you doing now? 
After working as a chaplain with my Life Together placement site (The MANNA Community, at the Cathedral Church of St. Paul) for five years, I transitioned into various public health roles. First, with Partners in Health during the initial phase of the COVID-19 crisis, and then Fenway Health, at their Drug User Health Program needle exchange site in Cambridge. I learned to adapt my leadership and chaplaincy skills to a healthcare setting, and was able to keep working with the communities that I love. I took a few months off this spring to rest and support a family member experiencing some deep grief, and just this week I have started a new job as the Manager of Wellness Programs for the New England Culinary Art School. I will be developing and implementing curriculum and programming centered on student wellness, as well as helping the school become more trauma-informed in its approaches to learning and student care. I am extremely excited to be bridging my love for people, community care, and amazing food into what feels like a dream job!

How has LT impacted your life? 
In so many ways! Life Together gave me concrete skills, as well as a network of relationships, that have made my success as a leader possible. Since completing the fellowship in 2016, I have lived in community with friends from Life Together and used many of the tools we were trained in at every job I have had. Working at MANNA completely changed the trajectory of my career, empowering me to go to divinity school and enter the Postulancy for Holy Orders with the Episcopal Church. Both my placement site at MANNA and the monthly trainings with Life Together laid an organized, spiritually grounded, and relationally resourced foundation for my career, and set me on a path to do powerful work rooted in community and oriented around justice. To this day, I reach for the LT network when I am trying to solve complicated problems at work, when I am facing a spiritually challenging situation, or when someone in my community is in need. In so many ways, I am who I am (and where I am!) today thanks to Life Together.