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DSC_0534Drop Another Stone in the River

One of the delights of my vacation this summer was building rock cairns along the way. The first I built were on the banks of the South Fork of the Kings River. We were at the far end of Kings Canyon National Park, the sometimes ignored sibling of Sequoia National Park.

My family and I spent a long stretch of one late morning in the Zumwalt Meadow just tossing rocks in the river, wandering along the bank, staring up at brilliant skies. And I was so drawn to the smooth, round river rocks that I began stacking them. Then we were all stacking them. We left a half dozen stacks behind for the next travelers to find.

I became a fan of Carrie Newcomer just days before this part of our trip. She sang at the Alliance of Baptists gathering at Asilomar. In her collaboration with Parker Palmer she wrote “Stones in the River.” Here are the opening words:

Thereโ€™s a crack in the glass where the water gets out.
Thereโ€™s a dusty wind when the heart’s in drought.
And the map of the world looks as if true north,
Disappeared entirely.
I can live divided or bent
Conspire in my own diminishment
Or believe in the better world Iโ€™ve dreamt
That grows from inside out
Chorus: So today Iโ€™ll drop stones into the river.
And the current takes them out into forever.
And the truth is most of us will never know,
Where our best intentions go.
And still Iโ€™ll drop another stone.

Thereโ€™s a crack in the glass where the water gets out.

Thereโ€™s a dusty wind when the heart’s in drought.

And the map of the world looks as if true north,

Disappeared entirely.

I can live divided or bent

Conspire in my own diminishment

Or believe in the better world Iโ€™ve dreamt

That grows from inside out

Chorus: So today Iโ€™ll drop stones into the river.

And the current takes them out into forever.

And the truth is most of us will never know,

Where our best intentions go.

And still Iโ€™ll drop another stone.

Carrie says about “Stones in the River

“This song was inspired by a conversation I had with Parker J. Palmer about how smallย our actions are in the large and rushing river of time. And yet, each stone cast into aย river may be the final collective bit that changes the course of the water. And so we allย search for our spiritโ€™s true north, we offer our best intentions to the world, and we castย our stones into the water.”

So tonight no matter how small the deed is or how insignificant you may feel, this story and song invite you to drop one more stone in the river of intention. Who knows where it might go?