Skip to main content


Here’s a very short meditation on Ash Wednesday, Valentine’s Day as well as a photo journal. See what you think.

Close-up of frosty grass blades on a cold field morning.

Ash Wednesday, is the day Christians hear their ministers say, “Remember you are dust, and to dust you shall return“ as they dip their fingers in ashes and smear a cross on the foreheads of the faithful. I look across the fields, at the dirt churned up by farmers, to open it for rain and snow to seep deep, to water the roots of the plants to come.

Pink tulips blooming in a sunny garden patch.

Light is opening the womb of the sky. Our days are getting longer, but before the full arrival of spring, before crocuses and tulips push out of the ground, Christians around the world are called to mourn. We are called to remember the root of human is humus.

Farmland with rows of freshly plowed soil under a clear blue sky.

We walk toward the death of Jesus, the human God, who took on the original curse spoken to Adam, to dust you shall return. I mourn the children killed at NIU sixteen years ago.

Sunset over a foggy rural landscape with silhouetted buildings.“I do not hope to turn, I do not hope.“ I repeat lines from T.S. Eliot’s “Ash Wednesday.“ But the widening light insists I turn, insists I open my eyes to the steadiness of the sun rising, the sun setting. Somehow those colors caught on clouds seem a vision as glorious as the saints so caught in ecstasy, they glowed in the dark.

Sunset sky with dramatic clouds and silhouetted tree branches.

I turn toward love, not just the roses and kisses of Valentine’s day, but I also turn toward the kind of love that helps my neighbor when it’s not exactly what I want to do.

I’m Katie Andraski and that’s my perspective.

If you’d like to hear me read this click here.

Sunset with dramatic clouds over a silhouetted landscape.