The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Found while cycling Boston’s streets: A new spirituali­ty

- By Steve Leblanc

BOSTON » Bicycling through Boston’s twisting, trafficclo­gged streets may seem more about self-preservati­on than spiritual enlightenm­ent.

For the Rev. Laura Everett, her daily 6-mile commute is a way of connecting to her adopted city, its residents, and her sense of community and vulnerabil­ity.

Instead of hopping on the subway and popping up in another part of town, Everett said, bicycling has exposed her to the warp and weft of Boston’s neighborho­ods and the people who animate them.

It’s also led her to a new sense of spirituali­ty and inspired her to turn her experience­s into a new book, “Holy Spokes: The Search for Urban Spirituali­ty on Two Wheels.”

“Part of the regularity of a daily commute is what I think forms it to be a spiritual discipline,” said Everett, 38.

“That commitment to the same route time and time again, starting to see the same people, seeing the same neighborho­ods, seeing the trees change from budding to bursting — that is where I started noticing this is really having an effect not just on how I move through the city, but on my soul,” she said.

Along the way, Everett, executive director of the Massachuse­tts Council of Churches, stumbled on an impromptu congregati­on — a tribe of fellow bicyclists who share the joys and terrors of Boston’s byzantine streets.

She has married bicycle couples and officiated at an annual “blessing of the bicycles” in which bicyclists gather to pray for fellow cyclists who have died and let Everett and others anoint their bikes with a mix of holy oil and chain lube.

Everett’s most poignant contributi­on may be her participat­ion in “ghost bike” ceremonies.

Ghost bikes refer to the practice of painting a bicycle and its tires solid white and locking it near where a bicyclist has died, often after being struck by a car or truck.

“Bicyclists have the experience of knowing our own vulnerabil­ity, and knowing that in some ways our safety is dependent on the actions of others,” she said.

Ken Carlson, head of the Somerville Bicycle Advisory Committee, first met Everett at a ghost bike ceremony for Cambridge bicyclist Marcia Deihl, who died in 2015 after being struck by a dump truck.

“I was really touched and impressed with Laura and her deep sense of empathy, sympathy and connection to the bicycle community,” he said.

Bicycling raises another spiritual challenge, Everett said: anger.

“What does it mean to absorb other people’s anger? What do you do with your own anger? How do you live in a system that’s unjust,” she said. “Those roads aren’t fair.”

One goal of her book was to ponder what she calls “an intentiona­lly urban spirituali­ty.”

“What if what is transcende­nt and what is heavenly is less like the Green Mountains of Vermont and more like Blue Hill Ave.?” she said, referring to a busy Boston thoroughfa­re.

Becca Wolfson, executive director of the Boston Cyclists Union, sees the connection between cycling and spirituali­ty.

“You’re thinking about your mortality on a daily basis and where you are going and how you are going to get there,” she said.

Everett didn’t always see herself as a bicyclist.

Although she rode for fun growing up in suburban New Jersey, it wasn’t until she moved to Boston and her car broke down on Interstate 93 that she turned to bicycling.

Members of her Bible study group helped her fix up a bike and taught her how to ride from her home in the city’s Forest Hills neighborho­od to her office near the Statehouse.

Everett said she is also interested in the concerns of “invisible bicyclists” — those who rely on bikes, often in poorer and working class neighborho­ods, not to look hip but because they have no other options.

“The guy who’s retrofitte­d his bike to carry all the tin cans he’s picking up,” she said. “Isn’t he a bicyclist, too?”

 ?? STEVEN SENNE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Rev. Laura Everett, executive director of the Massachuse­tts Council of Churches, rides her bike to a meeting of clergy, in Cambridge, Mass.
STEVEN SENNE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Rev. Laura Everett, executive director of the Massachuse­tts Council of Churches, rides her bike to a meeting of clergy, in Cambridge, Mass.
 ?? STEVEN SENNE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A plate featuring the word “clergy” is attached to a bicycle belonging to Everett.
STEVEN SENNE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A plate featuring the word “clergy” is attached to a bicycle belonging to Everett.

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