A website about being a friend when life falls apart.
Informed compassion—compassion based on knowledge and understanding. You know what to say and do to help a friend because you’ve learned something about what they are going though.
The All-Weather Friend
Comfortable. Connected. Kind.
A New Year’s idea: Saving Suppers
CLICK HERE for link to tweet.
Once you've set your menu, @AllWeatherFrnd challenges you to join her & throw dinner parties to end world hunger : http://t.co/wIrrDbs9Ce
— Maria Shriver (@mariashriver) April 20, 2015
CLICK HERE to read the “end hunger” blog.
To me, this feels like a time when a lot of us are scrambling to feel good. There is so much to worry about in our country and our world. A while ago, I wrote a blog for Maria Shriver’s “Architects of Change” series (see above) challenging readers to entertain inexpensively and share funds with an organization aimed at alleviating world hunger. I’m reviving the idea now as a way to feel better by connecting more often with friends, cooking more happily (I hope) due to a less shocking experience with grocery store prices), and contributing to the community food bank.
Join me! More later, but for now…
This is how to do it.
Ask. Plan a dinner party at your home. Expand your circle of friends. Share the method and main purpose of the party: to help the local food bank.
Cook. Make a dinner as sumptuous as you can for less (not necessarily counting drinks) than the cost per guest of one hour’s work at minimum wage wherever you live.
Share. During dinner, ask everyone to share a 4-5 minute story—about anything. (Maybe give advance notice, so no one is put on the spot.) David Brooks inspired this idea with his excellent book, How to Know a Person.
Give. Contribute to the food bank the same amount you spent on groceries for dinner. Encourage each person to make a contribution of one hour’s minimum wage, too, and to host a saving-supper dinner party at their house. Here’s why.
Looking ahead.
I was pleased when Lauren Samay, who hosts a meaningful and (believe it or not) uplifting podcast on grief, My Mourning Routine, invited me to be a guest. The episode aired August 30, 2024. Visit Lauren’s website, where you can access the many stories about grief she has collected. And check back—I’m planning an All-Weather Friend podcast, which you’ll find here, hopefully by next fall.
Also…
CXMH is a podcast at the intersection of faith & mental health, hosted by Robert Vore & Dr. Holly Oxhandler. We bring together faith leaders and mental health professionals for honest conversations.
This week we’re joined by Dr. Mary Cail, author of Dementia and the Church: Memory, Care, and Inclusion and Alzheimer's: A Crash Course for Friends and Relatives. She explains why the church’s role can be so important in caring for those impacted by dementia, some basic steps to start in memory ministry, and why ‘informed compassion’ is so important.
CLICK logo to listen on the CXMH website.
Mary McDaniel Cail, PhD, creator of the All-Weather Friend writes and speaks about grief, compassion, and dementia.
Mockingbird Ministries mentioned Dementia and the Church: Memory, Care, and Inclusion in a podcast. You can listen here (about midway through):
https://themockingcast.fireside.fm/246
Mockingbird Ministries is a fresh expression of Christian faith in today’s world. From the website, “Mockingbird is an organization devoted to ‘connecting the Christian faith with the realities of everyday life’. [mbird.com] is one of our chief venues for doing so. We also publish books and magazines, host conferences, and distribute podcasts.
We think of mbird.com as an ever-growing catalog of the ways in which a Christian understanding of reality – what people are like, what God is like, and how the two intersect – is borne out around us. This looks different every day….”
Excerpt from “My Darkest Hour,” an essay in the Love and Death issue of the The Mockingbird, about my search for God after my husband died. Click here to read more.
It was late afternoon. The house was empty except for my dog. She yawned at me, stretched her long body and ambled across the room. I tossed my handbag on a chair and went upstairs to my bedroom. I was back from meeting a friend for coffee, one of my closest friends. She had called me every week, unfailingly, for coffee or dinner; she was a steady presence after my husband’s death. I often cried during “those years,” as I think of them now. I was like an animal with its leg caught in a jaw trap, unable ever to escape the sadness. I sank beside my bed in the fading sunlight and buried my head in my hands. Tears came, so many tears that they poured from my eyes, ran through my fingers, and splashed in two pools on the carpet. I remember the darkening rings, the motion, the strange awareness of how fast those tears were falling. . . .
…I had less than a week to make these desperate plans, and the morning of departure, I locked my house wondering what essentials I'd failed to cram into a suitcase overstuffed with horseback riding gear. I was not in good shape. While packing I tried to make coffee, which in comparison is a simple task, and the result was a hot brown river running over the counter and into the towel drawer…