I’ve never experienced a Christmas that felt less like Christmas than this one does.
It’s Christmas Eve, but it feels like just another gray and rainy winter day. I had some work to do at the office, but I was the only one in the building. By the time I left around 3:30 p.m., the rain had stopped and the clouds started to clear as the winds turned bitterly cold.
I didn’t want to be alone, but I couldn’t think of anywhere to be with anybody who I wanted to see. I had planned to go to a Christmas Eve service at my church. There were three services through the afternoon and evening, to accommodate the crowds and still maintain safe distances. But I suddenly realized that if I couldn’t be with a family of my own, the last thing I wanted was to see other happy and loving families together.
As I drove home — lost in thoughts of missing connection — I remembered the chapel at a monastery along my route. I wasn’t dressed appropriately, but I stopped and asked the guard at the gate whether the chapel was open. He warmly encouraged me to go right in.
“There’s a service at 8 tonight, but you’d be the only one in there right now,” he said.

Don’t blame politicians; you’re to blame for growth of government
Everybody has times when he needs someone to save his life
Who were you before someone told you who you were supposed to be?
Appeals to ‘common sense’ are frequently excuses to avoid thinking
We live in Reverse World, where black is white and good is evil
Here’s the jobs growth Obama promised—in federal workers
We find meaning in responsibility, not in pursuit of empty pleasures
When you compromise principles, you soon won’t recognize yourself