"How's your prayer life?"
I remember being asked. I looked at my friend in surprise and asked, "Are
you talking to me?" I knew she was, but I was stalling for time, because I
didn't pray. "I volunteer at the church. Isn't that prayer enough?"
She persisted, "That restlessness you've been moaning about is because you
have no prayer life!" "Yeah, right!" I said dripping in sarcasm.
Still, my restlessness got worse! Better reconsider and give this praying thing
a chance, I thought. It can't get any worse.
"How do I pray?" I asked.
My friend suggested I start by setting a place aside in my home - a prayer
space -- where I would pray. My translation - It's time to go shopping for a
prayer table! Walmart had a great little side table and pretty tablecloth. The local
Catholic bookstore had a beautiful standing crucifix and a print of Jesus
praying in the Garden of Gethsemane. At Marshalls I found the perfect frame for
my Gethsemane print. From the corner of my eye, I saw a beautiful crystal bowl
that I could use as a prayer bowl - dropping in the names of the people who
asked for prayers. I arranged the prayer table in the corner of my bedroom. I set a chair
beside it and re-upholstered its seat cushion to match the new tablecloth.
Perfect!
One morning, my husband sitting on
the edge of the bed putting on his socks and shoes, shook and shook the
bed while I was trying to sleep. "Can't you sit on the chair to put
on your shoes?" I snapped. He looked over to the chair by the prayer
table, then looked back at me, and said, "That place is too holy to sit
at!" Truth be told, it had been six months since I arranged the space and
I had yet to sit there myself!
Why is it so
hard to pray? Yes, life is busy -- hurried, pressured, and distracted -- days
begin and end without one thought of God. Truly, that's not the whole story.
Dare I say it - sometimes praying is boring. It's not that I don't want to
pray, but other things peak my interest. I'm checking e-emails and Facebook,
texting my friends, and watching the news all before I eat breakfast! I drive
listening to the radio, talking on the cell phone, and planning my day's to-do
list. I get home and turn on the television again, catch up with my husband,
and power down by watching Netflix. The spiritual writer Henri Nouwen said it
best, "I want to pray, but I also don't want to miss out on anything -
television, movies, socializing with friends, drinking in the
world."
The restlessness continues and nothing satisfies
deeply. God places in every heart the desire to seek him. We ache for God. The
wonder of prayer is that it is God who speaks first calling each person to this
mysterious encounter with Himself. (CCC 2591) "Prayer has a single aim: to
draw us and our loved ones into deeper intimacy with Christ; it is prayer that
opens us up ... that we hear God say to us, 'I love you.' For only that can
make us whole," explains Fr.Ronald Rolheiser.
Prayer is truly
a discipline. St. Teresa of Avila advises to persevere in the
struggle: "We must have a determination to never give up
prayer." The devil will do all he can to trick us into
believing that we are wasting our time in prayer and that there are many more
noble and worthy pursuits that should override prayer." Park Avenue
advertising tells us, "Why do something if your heart isn't in it?"
Prayer has an ebb and flow. At times our hearts are burning and sometimes our
emotions flat line. The lesson from all the great mystics is that you show up
for prayer and you show up regularly regardless of how you feel today. Fidelity
to prayer reveals our abiding commitment to friendship and intimacy with Christ
despite feelings and mood to the contrary. 

At the Last
Supper the Gospel writer, John, depicts the Beloved Disciple as resting on the
breast of Jesus, hearing Jesus' heartbeat. This image is an icon of intimacy
and oneness describes Fr. Rolhesier: "When our ear is pressed to
God's heart - to the breast of all that is good, true, and beautiful - we hear
a certain heartbeat and we remember..... at a place beyond thought, that we
were once gently kissed by God." Here then is our deepest longest. To feel
that kiss again, to hear God's heartbeat, we need prayer.
P.S. I eventually sat in the chair.
With practice and perseverance, in the ebb and flow of my seasons of prayer, I
can hear God's heartbeat.
Journaling with Jesus
What
restlessness in your life has kept you from hearing God's heartbeat?
What
do you need to do to quiet yourself to experience God's presence in prayer?
Resting in God's Presence

Choose a place where you can sit quietly, comfortably for 15 minutes or more. If I will help you relax, set a timer so you will know when it is time to end your prayer.
Read a
short passage of Scripture or some other spiritual reading, then put the
reading aside.
Close your eyes or focus your gaze on a candle flame, a beautiful icon, or a peaceful image. Imagine yourself in the presence of God, a God who yearns to be close to you. Some people find it helpful to silently repeat a simple word or phrase: “Jesus.” “Blessed be God.” “Hosanna” “Lord, have mercy.”
If you
begin to feel anxious or to worry that you are not “doing it right,” remember
the words of a holy peasant who, when asked to share his secret to deep prayer,
said simply, “I just look at God, and I let God look at me.” Anyone who has
ever been in love will know the power of those words. It is enough to be
relaxed and quiet in the presence of God, ready to receive and to return God’s
loving glance.