Lamenting the Winter of our Lives

Listen to the sermon by clicking the play button above.

Rev. Jonalu Johnstone and Rev. Erin Walter
March 5, 2023
First UU Church of Austin
4700 Grover Ave., Austin, TX 78756
www.austinuu.org

Spring has almost sprung, but first we take time for the spiritual practice of lamentation. Interim ministers Rev. Jonalu Johnstone and Rev. Erin Walter will co-lead this service on grief and healing.


Chalice Lighting

This is the flame we hold in our hearts as we strive for justice for everyone. This is the light we shine upon systems of oppression until they are no more. This is the warmth that we share with one another as our struggle becomes our salvation.

Call to Worship

AFTER THE GOOD NEWS
Nancy McDonald Ladd What if worship was just the public expression of the deep relational intimacy that has already busted us wide open with love for one another. What would it feel like if liberal religion acknowledged the broken hearts of it’s own people such that every sanctuary and every celebration of life could also authentically honor the liminal spaces of our own inadequacy and the tightrope we all walk between death and life. In the spirit of those questions, these invitations to our own fullness and authenticity, come let us worship together.

Affirming Our Mission

Together we nourish souls, transform lives, and do justice to build the Beloved Community.

Meditation Reading

ALL SOULS
by May Sarton

Did someone say that there would be an end,
An end, Oh, an end, to love and mourning?
Such voices speak when sleep and waking blend,
The cold bleak voices of the early morning
When all the birds are dumb in dark November –

Remember and forget, forget, remember.
After the false night, warm true voices, wake!
Voice of the dead that touches the cold living,
Through the pale sunlight once more gravely speak.
Tell me again, while the last leaves are falling:
“Dear child, what has been once so interwoven
Cannot be raveled, nor the gift ungiven.”

Now the dead move through all of us still glowing,
Mother and child, lover and lover mated,
Are wound and bound together and enflowing.
What has been plaited cannot be unplaited –
Only the strands grow richer with each loss
And memory makes kings and queens of us.

Dark into light, light into darkness, spin.
When all the birds have flown to some real haven,
We who find shelter in the warmth within,
Listen, and feel new-cherished, new-forgiven,
As the lost human voices speak through us and blend
Our complex love, our mourning without end.

Sermon

HOMILY: “GRIEF” – Jonalu Johnstone

We humans have a need to grieve. It’s part of our bigger need to note and commemorate the changes of our lives, so we can make meaning of them. As Unitarian minister Max Coots, of beloved memory, put it:

When seasons come, as seasons do, old and known, but somehow new,
When lives are born or people die,
When something sacred’s sensed in soil or sky,
Mark the time.
Respond with thought or prayer or smile or grief,
Let nothing living slip between the fingers of the mind,
For all of these are holy things we will not, cannot, find again.

Here’s the thing, though. We have been through a time for the last three years, when our rhythms of marking occasions have been sidetracked. Weddings and memorial services, if done at all were small, or virtual. Graduations, birthdays, holidays slipped by barely acknowledged. We have been separated from people and activities. Stuff abruptly ended, maybe to return and maybe not. Seasons have come and gone, and we have been unable to mark them in the ways we are used to. In missing all of this, our losses have piled up, heaping higher and higher, weighing on our hearts and stirring up grief we don’t even know the source of.

And many of us have the even deeper burden of deaths of loved ones – whether by COVID, or other causes – that have felt more complicated, or maybe less real than they might have. And we have felt acute pain with continued revelations of the on-going racism and other forms of oppression that resist eradication in our American culture. Plus, this congregation has had some special losses – saying goodbye to a beloved senior minister and mourning the death of a cherished staff member.

Our initial reaction to the idea of loss is often to push it aside and refuse to acknowledge its truth. We’ve coped pretty well through all this, we think. Then, the other day someone asked if I knew people who had died from COVIO. And, I do. I do. I don’t like to look at that. I know people who have died. I know people who have long-haul COVIO. I did not have a chance to walk the stage at General Assembly to acknowledge my retirement. I missed ritual occasions with family. So much that has happened that never got the full attention or processing it needs.

How do we deal with what we have already experienced so that we can move into the future – whatever it may be, whenever it comes – more seamlessly, more enthusiastically, more confidently, more hopefully, more whole?

Nothing lasts forever. Every loss brings up the same emotions as death does – denial, anger, sadness, guilt, fear. Every leaving is really a small death that gives us practice for mortality.

Those stages of death aren’t really stages at all. They’re more like waves, waves that come crashing over us. Sometimes, we can see them coming, and other times, they arrive unbidden when we hear a particular song or smell pine or cinnamon, a scent carrying us off to another time, another dimension. The wave crashes over our head and slowly ebbs away.

Most of us don’t like to deal with the reality of mortality, to take the time to say goodbye, to cry and rage against the dying of the light. We’d rather deny that things will really change.

Problem is, that’s not so easy for our bodies, where we live. They know we have experienced loss. They know we need healing, healing we can only achieve through grief, through mourning.


HOMILY ON HEALING AND LAMENT – Rev. Erin J. Walter

“It’s not so easy for our bodies.” I’ll never forget, when I served as a hospital chaplain in Oakland, California, in 2015, a colleague fainted while on patient rounds. Her knees locked and she fell right over.

We cannot be present to so much grief – or healing – if we lock it inside.

After the fainting, I made a choice to think of my body as a channel. I imagine a river of starlight, carrying the grief and pain I encounter in ministry and justice work – up and out, to the Awe..,inspiring All that will not buckle under the weight of the world. This practice that serves me in grief also serves me in joy. When I dance or sing, I also imagine sending love and good energy out through that channel, to wherever it is needed.

“Loosen, loosen, baby You don’t have to carry, the weight of the world in your muscles and bones, let go, let go, let go.”

“Loosen, loosen, baby You don’t have to carry, the weight of the world in your muscles and bones, let go, let go, let go.”

Jonalu and I sang this Aly Halpert song with our colleagues at the SW UU Ministers Retreat this week, hoping to release some of what we’ve all been carrying, like a collective channel.

This week it hit me hard – realizing we’re marking three years since COVID hit and so much changed. I have been listening to the playlists my friends and I started making in March 2020 and letting myself feel it. I may never get over knowing that when my aunt died of COVIO, her daughter, my cousin -just three days apart in age from me- could only sit in her car in the hospital parking lot and weep, not allowed to be by her mother’s side. It was this way for millions of grieving people.

In the memoir “What My Bones Know,” by Malaysian-born New Yorker Stephanie Foo writes of her decades-long quest to heal from complex trauma – an abusive childhood, racism and more. Even as she finds healing, she writes, “It’s ok to have some things you never get over.”

Is there something you fear you might never get over? What do we do with pain like that?

We can loosen. We can name it together, let it go to The All. We can lament.

Today, Rev. Jonalu and I want to spend time on lamentation, one of many spiritual practices handed down over centuries – a written way of channeling grief to the divine, dating back to the Babylonian invasion of Jerusalem, 589 to 587 BCE, after which people used lament-writing to grapple with the emotional and spiritual devastation. The long aftermath, like where we are now, three years after the first COVIO isolation. You’ll find laments not just in the biblical chapter of Lamentations but in the Psalms as well.

The practice of lament writing is regaining popularity, including among Black leaders in Unitarian Universalism. The late beloved Mathew P. Taylor wrote a piece called Lamentations in the book BLUU Notes: An Anthology of Love, Justice, and Liberation.

An excerpt from Taylor:

Lamentations
Are a way to be seen
And held
And heard
For once
So that the weeping
The stories behind the tears
Are not silenced

UU Rev. Darrick Jackson often preaches about the lamentation practice. When he taught it to me and to other seminarians at Meadville Lombard Theological School in Chicago, it felt like a lifeline.

This form of prayer has simple, specific parts.

 

    1. You address your complaint, to someone, something, and name the complaint. You might try on a new of different name for the divine, especially to express your frustration at them – God, Goddess, or like Rev. Theresa Nina Soto has said, Our friend. God, my heart is sick over loved ones I may never see again.

 

 

    1. You confess your trust — your faith, even though it be uncertain – and petition for a solution. Hold nothing back. Do not minimize your complaints or beg for small favors, as Rev. Jackson taught. Go big as you cry out and drop to your knees. The universe can handle it. Spirit of life and love, I am trusting you to take the cancer, the depression, the violence. Take it. Not one more neighbor or friend.

 

 

  1. Then, and this is important, express confidence that your prayer has been heard and end your lament with gratitude. Thank you for hearing this plea and for the truth that we are not alone. Amen.

 

That’s it. No promise to fix it. Beware those who promise to fix it. Just the sacred power of naming, trusting the universe to be what Buddhist teacher Thict Nhat Hahn described as the compassionate listener.

The beauty of lamentations is that they create space for both uncensored wailing – and the act of fidelity. Those who lament only do so because, underneath it all, we have a faith that a God of mercy, a universal love, will hear our prayers. And lamentation is counter to white supremacy culture, because it requires humility – not to pretend we have the answers.

TRANSITION TO SPIRITUAL PRACTICES:

So, today, in acknowledgment of the many griefs, both individual and collective, that are known to this congregation – before we move on to things like a new search committee, a new minister, a new chapter – as your interim ministers, we want to offer us all spiritual practices of release. We invite you to think about any pain you may be holding and lift it up to the Spirit of Life, or out to this community, so you don’t have to hold it alone. So your knees don’t buckle. Yes, there are some things we may not get over, but healing is possible. Together, we can loosen.

During a time of contemplative music, we invite you to move about the sanctuary, choosing if you will to light a candle, burn a paper, drop a stone in water. Let something go. We also have a station for lament writing. You may take a paper, with fill-in-the-blanks to make it simpler, and write your own lamentation.

If you need more time, take the paper home with you and pray or meditate on it. Keep it for yourself, or share what you write with a friend, a group, your ministers. In our shared grieving, may we find some loosening, some healing.


SERMON INDEX

Most sermons during the past 23 years are available online through this website. Click on the index link above to find tables of all sermons for each year listed by date (newest to oldest) with topic and speaker. Click on a topic to go to that sermon.

PODCASTS

Podcasts of this and other sermons are also available for free on iTunes. You can find them by clicking on the podcast link above or copying and pasting this link. https://itunes.apple.com/podcast/first-unitarian-universalist/id372427776

Announcement from the Board

Dear members and congregants,

On behalf of the Board, I would like to share a short announcement regarding the shared
ministry. Our beloved ministerial team is more than half way through this ministerial year. As
always, the Board is planning ahead and evaluating next steps in this transition period. Our
co-interim ministers, Rev. Jonalu and Rev. Erin, will be completing their one-year contract and
thus their service to First UU at the end of July. We knew going into their time with us that they
would have other commitments to tend to after this year, and all good things do come to an end
eventually! I would like to express my heartfelt gratitude for everything they have accomplished
in the last 7-8 months in shared ministry with Rev. Chris. You can refer to a more detailed written
announcement from Rev. Jonalu and Rev. Erin sent on Sunday, March 5. It’s truly been such a
blessed and wonderful journey that they have facilitated for this congregation during this
transition period and I feel privileged to partake in it. Thank you from the bottom of my heart to
our beloved ministers!

As I was holding discussions with Jonalu/Erin individually as well as exchanging emails with
them regarding this announcement, Jonalu and Erin reminded me that their work is not done
yet. There is so much more to look forward to!!! The Board facilitated Transitions Committee has
been very busy planning for the Settled Search process with your input. Thank you to everyone
who submitted their nominations. You will hear more about the next steps from the Transitions
Committee led by Kelly Raley in the coming days and weeks.

So what happens after July? Rev. Chris will continue in his current role as the Minister of Values
and Mission. The Board will enter the UUA Interim Search process in the April timeframe to
identify a qualified full-time interim ministerial candidate for the upcoming ministerial calendar
year. To that end, Board members Vic Cornell (President-elect), Nathan Walther and Russell
Holley-Hurt have graciously agreed to lead the search for a full-time Interim Ministerial
candidate. I would like to thank them for taking on this responsibility. As always, we will keep
you updated as we make progress on all these fronts.

If you have any questions, please stop by the Board table in Howson Hall during coffee hour
right after this service. I will also make sure this announcement is part of next Friday’s
newsletter. Thank you and have a wonderful day!
In good faith as always,

Nesan Lawrence
On behalf of the Board of Trustees

NEW Path to Membership Class – In Person!

If you’re interested in learning more about the church and becoming a member, sign up for our free Path to Membership class! You’ll meet with other potential members and church leaders, hear how to get more connected, and learn more about the history of First UU Austin & Unitarian Universalism as a whole.
 
Sign up for the April 22nd IN PERSON class here!
 
We hope to see you there!

Braver Angels

 

 

If you are heartsick about the rancor tearing our country apart,
If you believe that your opponents should not be your enemies,
If you believe that America’s best days can lie ahead,

JOIN US for our FREE workshop, SKILLS FOR BRIDGING THE DIVIDE.
Saturday, March 25th 9 a.m. – 12 p.m. in Room 17.

This workshop teaches crucial capabilities for having respectful
conversations that:
• Improve our ability to re-frame difficult conversations.
• Explore creative ways to discover seemingly hidden areas of common
ground between us.
• Develop good boundary-setting capabilities to ensure that our
conversations begin, progress, and conclude in more respectful ways, even
in difficult moments of interaction.

For more information, contact Laraine Altun at laltun@braverangels.org.

Nonviolent Communication (NVC) Practice Group

Sundays from 1 p.m. – 3 p.m., March 26th – May 28th, except April 23 and May 21 (congregational meetings)
 
Meeting in Howson Hall

Through the emphasis of NVC on deep listening—to ourselves as well as others—we discover the depth of our own compassion.
 
NVC can be seen as both a spiritual practice that helps us see our common humanity, using our power in a way that honors everyone’s needs, and a concrete set of skills which help us create life-serving families and communities.
 
Please join us to learn more and practice using these compassionate skills together. Register here.
 
For more information, contact Laraine Altun at larainea@gmail.com.
 

March 2023 Monthly Service Offering Recipient – Austin Justice Coalition

PlayPlay

Austin Justice Coalition has had “a long, challenging year of advocating for change and more equitable policies. (They) have been a part of some key wins:

  • Furthering housing justice by eliminating HACA screening criteria that blocked formerly incarcerated people from accessing housing vouchers.
  • Working with the Eviction Solidarity network and a coalition of renters to win the ‘Right to Organize’ and seven-day‘ Right to Cure’ period for Austin’s tenants.
  • Advocating at the SHFC board and County Commissioner’s Court for the Tenants at Rosemont Apartments
  • Encouraging the City of Austin to put the largest housing bond in its history on the ballot, and working in coalition with many orgs and advocates to get the bond passed by over 71% of the vote
  • Championing permanent supportive housing developments like Cady Lofts, which will provide housing
  • Organized the first Community Investment Budget proposal at the City and saw many of our priorities funded including:
    • A pilot for a guaranteed basic income program,
    • The creation of a Trauma Recovery Center,
    • An increase in the minimum wage for city workers,
    • Continuing the rental assistance and anti-displacement program following the end of federal dollars
    • Additional dollars for inclement weather shelter and permanent supportive housing for those experiencing homelessness
    • Defeated efforts to increase sworn police staffing and the police budget, which enabled many of the Community Investment Budget items above to be funded.

  • Supported a successful coalition effort to get a petition strengthening Austin police oversight on next May’s ballot
  • Supported the successful unionization drives of workers at the primary public low-income healthcare provider (Integral Care) and nurses at the Ascension Seton Medical Center, creating the largest hospital union in Texas to ensure better conditions for those serving the poor in our community
  • Supported allocation of dollars to community-based organizations to support gun violence victims in the hospital and to enable those accused of illegal gun possession to avoid the worst outcomes of the criminal legal system – 2 approaches shown to help prevent future gun violence

& of course (they) served our community in a multitude of ways, including:

  • Supported community members financially with childcare, rent relief, medical bills, groceries, funeral expenses, etc… equaling over $100,000 in crisis relief for the community
  • Sponsored back-to-school drives, Black youth football, cheerleading, and basketball teams, Brown Boy Productions, UNCF @ Huston Tillitonson, Jump On It, DOLE, Tomorrow’s Promise Foundation, community events, and more.
  • Hosted supply drives to support our unhoused neighbors and families in need.*”
 
For all these reasons and more, FUUCA is proud to support Austin Justice Coalition as a 2023 Split the Plate recipient and is grateful for all the work that they do to build the beloved community here in Austin.
 
* Excerpted from Austin Justice Coalition’s 2022 End of Year Recap.
 
 
 

UBarU Monthly Service Offering – May 2023

UBarU is a Unitarian Universalist Camp and Retreat Center located on 142 rugged acres in what is, again this year, a peaceful, greening and soon-to-be wildflower strewn patch of the Texas Hill Country near Kerrville. Since the property was to passed on to us by the Quakers, we have sought to fulfill our UBarU Mission “to provide a welcoming, peaceful place to gather for spiritual, educational, and recreational purposes in harmony with our Unitarian Universalist Principles and the Land.” Over the last 20 years, scores of members of this church have joined in Spring and Summer youth camps, Deep in the Heart of Texas Women’s Retreat, Heart of Texas Men’s Retreat, Texas Wine – Texas Stars Celebrations, Fiber Arts gatherings, GenderFUUL welcoming retreats, Dark Sky Star Party weekends, contemplative retreats and personal family reunions.

 

Our efforts to be good stewards of the land have benefitted from grants to expand our solar panels, a new grant from H-E-B Environmental for a Rainwater Catchment System, expansive seeding of native grasses and wildflowers, and to create an additional firebreak corridor in the east, adjacent to the Meditation Oak. An additional grant from Live Oak UU Endowment created an active bird blind with native plantings and a wildflower pollinator garden. We have hosted a delightful array of birds, including Scrub Jays, Golden-Fronted Woodpeckers, a Great Crested Flycatcher and a Baltimore Oriole! In addition, our remote camera below the pool has captured photos of White-tailed Deer, Red Fox, skunk and raccoon families as well as wild turkeys and Road Runners.

If you are familiar with UBARU, you are likely aware that last year, the effects of climate change and Hill Country population pressure put our ancient water well in jeopardy of going dry. Last Fall we launched a two-year Capital Campaign, Digging Deeper to Reach Higher! Thanks to generous gifts from many of you, we have raised funds to successfully drill a new well, and refurbish the iconic, though leaking swimming pool! But we still aim to Reach Higher, expanding our septic capacity, upgrading the water-use efficiency of showers and toilets, and expanding lodging with new solar panels to accommodate more guests and Kid’s Campers! We so need your financial support in this campaign.

For those of you that have visited UBarU, you know that all activities revolve around the traditional Quaker-style Meeting House and radiate to the decks, the limestone rock pool by the windmill, the Meditation Oak, the two meditative labyrinths and the evening fire circle. We so much look forward to hosting you this year. Our children’s camps are open for registration; we hosted a BioBlitz on Earth Day and an upcoming Dark Sky Star Party Labor Day weekend and are directly in line for an Annular Eclipse this fall.

This month, UBarU is proud to have been chosen again by you, the members of First UU Austin to receive the Monthly Special Offering. Thank you for your continuing support. For a more detailed Update Letter or information on upcoming programs or the Capital Campaign please visit www.ubaru.org or check out the many photos on the UBarU Facebook page at www.facebook.com/UBarURetreat.

 
 
 
 

Austin Sanctuary Network Celebration

Join Austin Sanctuary Network as we celebrate Ivan, Hilda’s son, receiving his Legal Permanent Residency Saturday, March 11 from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. We’ll celebrate this momentous occasion with games and fun with Ivan at St. Andrew’s Presbyterian Church, 14311 Wells Port Dr., 78728. Feel free to bring any snacks or drinks to share. He loves Takis, Tres Leches Cake and Flan! RSVP on our Facebook page: The Foundation for the Austin Sanctuary Network.

We are so excited to celebrate Ivan and reconnect with our Austin Sanctuary Network friends including Alirio Gamez! We still have work to do to free Hilda and Alirio, but it’s time to celebrate Ivan and his freedom now. We hope to see you there! For questions email Peggy Morton at insideamigos@austinuu.org.

Your Candidates for Search Committee Membership

Over 60 candidates were nominated for search committee membership and the Board
Transitions Team contacted the top nominees (i.e. those nominated the most times) to
determine who is able to serve. As a result, we have 10 candidates for the Search Committee
that will work to bring to the congregation a candidate to be our next settled minister: Wendy
Erisman, Ruth Friede-Cornell, Carolyn Gremminger, Tomas Medina, Peggy Morton, Celeste
Padilla, Gillian Redfearn, Tom Shindell, Bis Thornton, and Susan Thomson. You can read about
these candidates here.

The Search Committee Election will occur on Sunday, April 30th. Individuals who are members of the
church as of March 31st will be able to vote either in-person or online. The ballot will list all 10
candidates and voters will be asked to rank the candidates by preference. More details and a
chance to practice are forthcoming.

After the search committee has identified a candidate, the congregation will vote on that
candidate. Our bylaws require that a candidate get an affirmative vote of 90% of the members.
The timeline depends on whether the search committee and Rev. Chris Jimmerson agree that
he is the right candidate for the job.

 

Vespers Service

James Baldwin stated, “History is not the past, it is the present. We carry our history with us. We are our history.” As the church explores the theme of vulnerability in the month of March, March’s Vesper’s service will help us explore how our bodies carry our histories. Borrowing exercises from Resmaa Menakem’s book My Grandmother’s Hands, we will explore how we can heal the wrongs of the past and harmonize our nervous systems to create a better future for all of us. Join Lay Leader AJ Juraska for Vespers on Tuesday March 21st at 6:00 PM in the Sanctuary.
 
(Please note: If you would like to join the service but prefer everyone be masked, please email aj.juraska@gmail.com or let AJ know when you arrive and we will require that everyone wear masks. If you attend, please bring a mask or be willing to wear one that the church provides if asked.)

General Assembly 2023

General Assembly is the annual gathering of Unitarian Universalists, where we conduct business of the Association, celebrate and worship, and learn about our faith. This year’s GA will be June 21st – 25th, 2023 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and you can attend online or in-person. More information and registration here.

Scholarships are available. Contact David Overton at denom@austinuu.org with any questions.

Would you like to get more involved at First UU but aren’t sure how? We can help!

The Transformation Connection Service (TCS) team can help you find meaningful connections with the many church groups and ministries available at First UU.

Here’s how it works:
1) Schedule a conversation with a TCS team member by emailing transform@austinuu.org.
2) Tell us about your interests, skills, and experience as well as what you hope to get out of being a part of First UU.
3) Get connected with church groups, activities, and/or service opportunities that match your interests, skills, and time availability.
We look forward to talking with you soon!

Protecting Ourselves and One Another

The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) is recommending that we take precautions over the next months, as the spread of viruses such as the FLU, Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) and Covid-19 is increasing. Here are some tips to help protect yourself and others:

– Wash your hands frequently with soap or hand sanitizer.
– Maintain social distancing when possible.
– If you are feeling sick or having symptoms, stay at home and get plenty of rest and hydration.
– Keep your vaccinations up to date.
– Carry tissue and cover your mouth and nose when coughing or sneezing.
– Avoid touching your eyes, nose, and mouth.

If you think you may have been exposed or just want to be even more cautious to avoid getting an infection and/or infecting others, wearing a mask when outside your home is a reasonable and perfectly acceptable practice.

To help stem the spread of potential infections, our religious education department is expanding the use of Force of Nature, a people-safe, hospital-grade disinfectant. 

If we all take these simple and sensible precautions, we can help protect ourselves and one another.

Green Sanctuary

Our Green Sanctuary Program has been working in youth and adult partnerships on the climate crises for the past few years. Green Sanctuary is currently partnering with Sierra Club to fight the Climate Crises. Bob and Victoria Hendricks are hosting the Climate Crises Committee Meeting first Tuesdays of each month @ 7 p.m. Meetings had been happening at First UU, but will now be held via zoom due to the Covid uptick. Contact Bob at roberthhendricks@aol.com for zoom link. 

Beki & Richard Halpin green@austinuu.org

 

Learn more about Climate Solutions.

Video: Katharine Hayhoe: To fight climate change, “Talk about it”

 

Serve Dinner to Austin’s Homeless Community at the ARCH

For more than ten years, First UU Austin has provided volunteers to help serve the chef-prepared cafeteria-style dinners at the ARCH, Austin’s downtown homeless shelter. We provide that service on the 1st and 3rd Sunday of each month from 5 – 7 p.m.

In order to fill this service need, we need one to two volunteers for each Sunday we agree to help. It’s an opportunity to connect with our homeless neighbors, an often rewarding and transformative act. The clients served are approved for spending the night in the shelter. Scott Butki leads the group, and utilizing an email list of volunteers, announces openings for service. The work itself is easy.

Contact Scott Butki, sbutki@gmail.com to sign up or get more information.