We long for the acceptance of home, a place of peace where we can be truly ourselvesāseen and heard, loved and believed, held and yet free. Our longing is the existential homesickness that THIS isnāt all there is and that when we get a taste of unconditional acceptance and love, we want more. Our longings are good and holyāit is our Divine inheritance to experience all that it means to feel at home.
Inspired by the lyrics of Homesick, a song by friend Jana West, my annual Advent retreat was titled Homecoming: A SoulFully You Retreat. We explored how the Divine accompanies us, making a home within, and what it means to feel homesick or āat homeā with ourselves and others. I offer some of our reflections so you, too, can take part:
āLove is home. Home is both an external dwelling and an internal abode. Home is the place where we belong, our place of acceptance and welcome. There, in this shame and judgment-free embryonic cocoon of love, we practice unconditional acceptance; we learn to relate to ourselves and the world around us.
And home is a soft place for the body to land, a safe place for the soul to fully disrobe. Home is the place where our failures donāt kill, our sins canāt crush, and even when we are at our worst, weāre safe. Home is a place where we are free to take our deepest, fullest, least encumbered breath.
At home, thereās no need to guess whether weāre in or out, welcomed or not. Home always prepares a place with us in mind.ā (Center for Action and Contemplation, Home, 5/10/2024, Felicia Murrel)

What words or phrases resonate with you? Indeed, our personal experiences of home can bring a spectrum of feelings, from warm and fuzzy to sadness or terror, when we consider what being āat homeā means. The ideal is what we seek and long for, both within ourselves and with others.