The official music & blog site of Dove award-winning singer-songwriter, Jim Croegaert
Random header image... Refresh for more!

Alabama Skies

Plain Views

An article on Spiritual Development called Alabama Narrative by Jim Croegaert appears in this months special disaster relief issue of PlainViews, a newsletter of the Health Care Chaplaincy, an organization leading in the research, education and practice of spirit-centered palliative care.

The article includes the lyrics to a song written by Jim about his Alabama relief experience called Alabama Skies (repeated below) and also links to a recording of the song by Jim.

ALABAMA SKIES

Jim Croegaert

She said she saw the sky
It seemed so very strange
The way the clouds were forming
How rapidly they changedAnd then they came together
And she found it so odd
That she found herself thinking
Looked like the arms of God

And I don’t understand
So much of what I’ve seen
One moment there’s such beauty
And all seems so serene
And then it comes with such fury
That it’s hard to visualize
How it was before the storms came
Out of Alabama skies

It’s hard to comprehend
When someone has lost
A sister and her grandkids
How you count the costClinging to an image
So deep and so broad
That somehow they’re flying
Into the arms of God

And I don’t understand
So much of what I’ve seen
How it comes out of nowhere
And changes everything
But I will remember
And try to see with Sadie’s eyes
How it was before the storms came    (What she saw before…)
Out of Alabama skies

Copyright 2011, Rough Stones Music, 827 Monroe St., Evanston, IL 60202, USA. All rights reserved. Used by permission.

DOWNLOADS

July 20, 2011   No Comments

Final Alabama Update

Tomorrow I will fly home.  None too soon.  I am very proud of the work done by our group of chaplains here.  But ready to go home, and leaving things in good hands here.  Did sing my “Blessing” song this a.m. for our Headquarters morning meeting, which was well received, and meaningful to me to do.  Will post a poem (Tearing), hoping it is not too heavy.

- Jim

May 20, 2011   No Comments

Alabama Update

Last days have been very full.  Integrated Care Teams have been out doing work with people who lost family in the tornadoes.  Chaplains have done some wonderful work as team members.  Stories are heart-breaking, such as a mother whose child was literally ripped from her arms while she was doing all in her power to hold on.  There are no words.  Trying to get help to people when they have no homes, have lost family members, etc., is what these care teams are about, with (ideally) a nurse, a caseworker, a mental health worker, as well as a chaplain.  We have some experienced top-notch chaplains in the field, who are in many cases taking the lead in terms of the personal interactions with the family.  Personal needs can be addressed as primary, and then the information, signatures, forms, etc. can be addressed by others.  Other chaplains are going to Disaster Recovery Centers and doing the work of spiritual care for people who have been impacted profoundly by the storms.  Alabama will be coming back for a long time.  I am definitely going to be ready to head home on Saturday, but feel very good about being here.  Thank you to all for your prayers and support.
Jim

May 18, 2011   No Comments

Jim with Red Cross in Alabama

Saturday (5/14) was my first day being fully “in charge” here, as the previous manager was “out-processing” and getting ready to return to his home in the Cincinnati area, where he now is.  It was a non-stop day but at day’s end we chaplains, 9 or 10 of us, were able to gather at an area restaurant where we had a room somewhat to ourselves, and a round table so we could carry on a single conversation.  It was inspiring just to hear people identify themselves and what they do back home, and realize the wonderful breadth of talent and experience that was there, some with lengthy history working with AIDS victims, another from a children’s hospital ICU, a retired chaplain (who happened to be the unit chaplain on my clinical assignment for my first unit of CPE!) who is now pastoring two small Methodist churches in Wisconsin, etc., etc.  Our “model” is an Integrated Care Team, made up of a chaplain, a mental health worker, a caseworker and a nurse, but we also have chaplains who go out to Disaster Recovery Centers, shelters and other places in the hard-hit areas.  It is hard for me to not be going out any longer but it does seem that I am the person best qualified to do this managerial task right now, so my focus is on helping this talented group utilize their skills to meet the needs around here, which are still quite substantial.

On Sunday, we had the day mostly off, I went to mass at the Prince of Peace Church, a nice liturgy, so refreshing to see children and families etc., in “normal” situations; did laundry (first time in a long time I used a laundromat) and went to the Civil Rights Institute in Birmingham which is across the street from the 16th Street Baptist Church where the 6 girls were killed when the KKK bombed the church while they were in Sunday school – a turning point in the Civil Rights movement, as the whole world could see what the nature of the racist system really were.  Last evening there was a get-together for as many Red Cross workers as could make it from around the state, to recognize and entertain as well as feed them.  About 600 came (they had planned for 300-400) and we chaplains did the “Flexibility” song – lyrics I wrote to the tune of “Unforgettable” which I wrote when I was in Texas for Hurricane Ike.  I changed the bits that had been specific to our Texas experience.  It was fun, and appreciated.  (Although less meaningful to me personally than singing “Workplace Blessing” a cappella for our morning meeting here at Headquarters last week.)

The stories are many and poignant.  One is of a 6-yr.-old child who told the chaplain she had not been frightened during the tornado because her grandmother had taken her and her brother to the basement and read to them and held them.  She knew something was going on, but felt safe with her grandmother.  Fortunately that house was not one that the storm completely destroyed.

Blessings to all, prayers are welcome, especially for the people here.  Recovery will be, as the Red Cross people say, a marathon, not a sprint.  But lives are being touched.

Jim

May 16, 2011   No Comments

google