
“In everyone’s life, at some point, our inner fire goes out. It is then burst into flame by an encounter with another human being. We should all be thankful for those people who rekindle the inner spirit.” — Albert Schweitzer
This quote appeared in my web wanderings on Friday morning. I’m grateful for people who post research online about just about any subject, so I can confidently know that Schweitzer did, in fact, write those words — or to be precise it’s a faithful translation of a passage from his 1924 memoir.
I’m also grateful for web archives, so that I know I was writing every day between the end of June 2023 and December 2024, and some of it was very good writing, if I say so myself.
The truth is my inner fire was out. I was stuck in the hospice room where I left my beloved partner, best friend and wife.
I was driven by the words I was reading to her when she passed — “Love God and love your neighbor” — but if I’m honest, I felt hollow. The life I had known was over. This was a time in my life when there was only one set of footprints in the sand, to recall the old story about Jesus carrying us through bad times.
I am grateful for my pastor friend, who invited me to join the worship team, because without any weekly commitment to be in that church, I’m not sure where I would have been, and I certainly would not have been there when a beautiful woman named Mary prayed for a companion, and when God answered that prayer by showing her a guitar player behind the singers in that church.
When I saw Schweitzer’s quote on Friday morning, I saved the meme and forwarded it to Mary, adding, “You are my rekindle girl.” She is the human who found the ember of my inner fire and burst it into flame again. It began with the warmth of a hug offered one Sunday morning after the service, and it continues to this day.
I told her Friday I was lost for ideas about how to celebrate Valentine’s Day because, in all seriousness, every day has been Valentine’s Day since the hug grew into something as special as I’ve ever known.
Mary has become my Valentine. I thought I had lost my inner fire forever after my Valentine died, but God had other plans and gave me an encounter with an amazing other human.
Happy Valentine’s Day, Mary, every day.






