tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2054894348558510373.post7782399669254092265..comments2023-07-17T02:44:10.187-05:00Comments on Clearing the Space: One Woman's Spirituality in the Wisdom Years: Coming Home: Thursday's ReflectionNancy Agneberghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05468885971185443888noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2054894348558510373.post-6378914088544152462016-10-15T16:22:40.432-05:002016-10-15T16:22:40.432-05:00Thanks for reflecting on your "home." An...Thanks for reflecting on your "home." And for reading the post. I so agree about Gloria Dei, by the way. Nancy Agneberghttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05468885971185443888noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2054894348558510373.post-77848166877132704412016-10-15T15:50:01.074-05:002016-10-15T15:50:01.074-05:00Dorothy had it right—there really is "no plac...Dorothy had it right—there really is "no place like home." Like many people, over the years I've had to adapt where home exactly is for me. I once had a place perhaps not unlike your Sweetwater Farm. In some ways, it remains a home away from home, even though I have not been there for many years.<br /><br />I must confess that I feel "at home" in our current residence in St. Paul (as well as our faith community at Gloria Dei). However, there is a certain part of me yearning to go elsewhere. Maybe we'll never go. That's why I believe "home" is where I make it . . . and I leave the yearning to reside in the parousia and the hereafter.<br /><br />Nice post!<br /><br />- DDMDaniel D. Maurerhttp://transformation-is-real.comnoreply@blogger.com