Showing posts with label Musings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Musings. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 11, 2023

On Grief

 I had an interesting experience with grief last autumn.  

Since January, I had been deep in anticipatory grieving.  We knew my father's cancer was a terminal one.  We knew that the statistics on small cell lung carcinoma are grim. Last year before he died I cried most days.  Sometimes I'd be washing dishes and burst into tears.  Sometimes I'd be driving somewhere and start crying.  It was a constant companion: the anticipatory grief.  Knowing this was the end of something.  Knowing goodbye was so close.  

After my father's death, my primary emotion for weeks was relief.  The suffering near the end of his life was real.  I had envisioned that as a cancer patient, he would drift off in a morphine-induced haze and die peacefully.  That was absolutely not true. I was so relieved his suffering was done, so relieved that we never had to replay it again, that I did not cry.  I was exhausted, I was sad, but I was relieved.

Somewhere about six weeks after his death something else began.  It was like the time I toured the infamous underground bunker at The Greenbriar Resort when I was a teenager.  We walked into the tunnel that leads down into the bunker, and the 20-something ton door shut behind us.  That sound was so final.

Sometime in November I felt it.  The door was irreversibly closed.  The relief had faded and the reality set in: I will never talk to my father, face-to-face, in this lifetime, again.  Our morning cups of coffee, where we'd talk for hours from before dawn until the rest of the household woke up, are over.  Our long phone calls of laughter and teasing and nonstop talking are over.  Our hugs, when I'd rest my head on his chest, are over.  The door felt like it slammed shut on me every time I thought about this reality.  My lifelong Gibraltar was--is--irrevocably gone.

And so a different, deeper grief began.  It was like an underground river, flowing somewhere deep within my spirit.  It was a quiet grief that felt omnipresent, that felt below that place Wordsworth described as "too deep for tears."  

Yes, I have faith in God. The last solid food my father ate was the communion wafer his Anglican priest brought to the house three days before he died.  Was my father reconciled with God?  I believe so.  Will we meet again? I have no idea how heaven works.  I'd like to think so. I am confident of (and unendingly grateful for) my salvation and I'm confident that God has a much bigger plan than I can envision.  That faith does not negate the reality of the pain that I will never make my Dad's morning coffee again, just the way he likes it: black, with two small cubes of ice. 

Every year my Dad and stepmom threw a large Christmas party between Christmas and New Year's. Our initial thought was not to have the party this year, but sometime in the fall my stepmom said she was considering it. I am fully on board with whatever she wants, so I agreed.  We kept it simple, she had it mostly catered, and it was good.  All the neighbors she invited except one were able to come.  There were great stories told, multiple conversations for hours, loads of food, happy conviviality.  Our neighbors in Charleston are good people--it's a sweet, close-knit community.  My Dad, who loved to have his house full of people enjoying themselves, would have loved it. 

Getting past the party was an emotional triumph for me, one more step in the right direction of healing and recovering.  So the grief has shifted, from that reverberatingly heavy closed door and that deep  underground river, to something different yet again.  I suppose the closest thing I can describe it as is "acceptance," although that's not quite right.  But it's close. 

If you're grieving, just lean into it and know it comes and goes in phases, it ebbs and flows, and it shows up when you least expect it.  The best thing to do is acknowledge that it is real, and be kind and gentle with yourself and others while you heal. 

Sunday, January 8, 2023

A New Year

 The calendar has flipped again, and I am not sure I've ever been so glad to see the year turn.  The last time I posted I was sick at Thanksgiving (and the whole family got sick, although to varying degrees: what was a fairly unpleasant experience for me was 48 hours of body aches for my husband!).  Then it was Advent, and Christmas.

I did not have the heart to write much during that time.  Once I recovered from my illness, we were immediately thrown into Nutcracker week, my sister's 40th birthday, and my sweet aunt and stepmom visiting from out-of-state. The month continued to snowball: Finn's piano teacher sold us her car (praise the LORD --I had been looking off and on for months for a replacement to my 19-year-old car, and she just happened to be selling her 4-year old car with 45,000 miles, one of the only two brands I was trying to find!), so we spent an inordinate amount of time the week before Christmas on moving money, dealing with insurance changes, going to the DMV....you know. Then my in-laws lost power during the coldest week of the year, and my brother-in-law moved in with us for a few days while my sister also came to down for Christmas.  On Christmas Eve I was sending a hot Dutch oven of chili and thermos of coffee to my in-laws (who refused to leave their house although it was 39 degrees one morning!). 

But there was something deeper happening also, and I knew it and could feel it.  The dryness, the fatigue, the sadness of wrapping up what--I can see in retrospect--was the hardest year of my life.  I used to think that was 2018, when my husband had cancer. That was hard.  But this one was harder.  By the time the end of this year rolled around and Christmas was upon us, I just didn't have the heart to do much. 

We didn't drive around in pajamas looking at Christmas lights.  We didn't go look at the decorated trees in town.  We didn't bake a single thing--except that I did bake fruitcakes, some sort of primal urge, although my Dad (my annual fruitcake recipient) wasn't here to enjoy them. Although I ordered Christmas cards in October, I have yet to send them out. We didn't pull out our Advent book to read, and I think I watched one Christmas movie.  I didn't put out many decorations. 

 I did give everyone gifts.  We had a beautiful Christmas morning brunch, as always.  I threw a special 40th birthday brunch for my sister, whose birthday is December 10th.  But that's it.

I realized somewhere in there that I was really just wanting to get through the holidays, and get to January, so I could be done with it.  I wanted to check the box and move on. I adore Christmas, so this desire to just get it over with is not my normal state of being. But it's completely understandable.  Grief is a multi-faceted emotion.  I acknowledged this as my reality: my father has died, and I am sad, and I don't feel like doing the normal holiday things.  And I acknowledged this also as reality: God is here, the incarnation was real, and next year Christmas will be easier.  I know it will be. I feel it already. 

I allowed myself to feel all this without feeling "guilty" about it.  My children both said several times that it didn't feel like a normal Christmas to them, and I told them that I understood completely.  But in order for me to have the emotional space I needed to get through the season with grace and joy, I needed to keep everything very light and easy on myself.  I could tell that I had a twinge of depression; I sometimes wandered around the house wondering what to do, and didn't feel "motivated" to do much.  When that happens, I feel like it's important to get rest, to pray, to understand that it's okay to have a hard season.  They come and they go.

It has gone.  We spent four nights in Charleston around the new year, and when we pulled into our driveway on January 2nd I was almost elated: I had gotten through the holidays. I had gotten through Christmas. Most of all, I had gotten through the first Charleston Christmas party (a big annual event at our house there) without my Dad.  I had gotten through 2022.  Hallelujah.  

This new year feels like a gift.  We are only one week in and I feel like a revitalized version of myself. I feel the old optimism and energy, the old purpose and direction--I feel those things pulsing within me again.  

That's where I am, and I'm thankful. 

Wednesday, November 23, 2022

Giving Thanks

 "Rejoice always, pray continually, give thanks in all circumstances, for this is God's will for you in Christ Jesus."  --1 Thessalonians 5:16-18

Thanksgiving Eve has descended into these hills; it's dusky outside, and I can hear the occasional rifle fire (hunting season is upon us). Normally this day is spent doing cooking and baking prep ahead of our big gathering tomorrow: my husband's parents, siblings, niece and nephew, aunt, and cousins all get together at his parents' house for a huge meal, and we look forward to it all year long.  

Last Wednesday I began getting sick, and by Wednesday night I was Quite Sick.  Today is Day 8 for me of covid--my second covid infection of the year (the first was a very mild one in January).  Although I rarely catch even a cold, and I bounce back from illness fairly quickly, this virus has been protracted and difficult, with a whole host of unpleasant symptoms--although fortunately, none have been scary!  Just exhausting, lingering, and aggravating. And painful--my sinuses hurt!

We are not able to go to my in-laws' house tomorrow.  It's fine--I don't feel well enough to go right now, anyhow--but it's also hard.  You see, I didn't realize how the orphaned child within me longed to gather together with a family and have a normal-feeling holiday. I haven't had a normal holiday since last Thanksgiving. Every holiday since last Christmas has been clouded with the pain of the reality of my father's illness and his impending, inevitable death.  It has been a hard year. I miss the comfort of family gathering around food, without the specter of cancer overshadowing it all. I was looking forward to the happy conviviality of our Thanksgiving meal. 

After my Dad died, Annie asked me--are you an orphan now? I assured her that no, I am not an orphan.  Orphans are children! And I'm an adult. 

But the deeper truth is this: even though I'm an adult, and adults cannot be orphaned, I feel it.  My grandparents are all gone, and now both of my parents have died.  I'm so fortunate to have aunts and uncles, a stepmother, and in-laws who all love me in a similar way, as parents do.  But they're not my parents.  My actual parents are gone, and I did not realize how lonely that would make me feel, especially at holidays. There's something that existed that is now unraveled, a thing that can never be restored: mother, father, two daughters. I am not at all alone! I have my husband and children, my sister, and a lot of other relatives who love me.  But I still miss my parents. I still feel sad that they are no longer here with me.

I am thankful tonight for the 23 years I had with my mother and the nearly-45 years I had with my father.  I am thankful that although I have been sick, I believe I'm healing along an upward trajectory. I am thankful for sweet Allison for bringing potato-bacon soup to us this afternoon, to neighbor Kate for the elderberry syrup and chicken noodle soup, and to the inventor of the Neti Pot! :)

This too shall pass.  And we'll have our own little Thanksgiving here--not as elaborate, but still special.  Rejoice always.

Happy Thanksgiving, friends!

Tuesday, October 18, 2022

What Does the Resume Say?

 I recently--and completely by accident--spotted a position for a part-time attorney at a local organization: 10ish hours a week. Hmm, I thought.  I wondered if I could look into it. I have no wish to work full-time, but a few hours a week could be an interesting fit, especially given this season of life--I am finally "freer" than I have been in the past, and I wouldn't mind dipping my toe back into the legal world. I do love research and writing!

I unearthed my resume, blew off the dust. I looked at the grades, at the awards. I looked at the descriptions of my master's program, which I attended on a full tuition scholarship, and I looked at the interesting things I did in law school.  I looked at my descriptions of the work I did when I was practicing law. It made me smile to remember everything.

Then there's a blank period of fourteen years. Nothing really "resume-worthy" took place in those fourteen years, except a modest smattering of published articles.  It's a huge, gaping hole.

I looked at the page and realized that all the best work I've ever done has been done during the time of that gaping hole.

The past decade and a half look unimpressive in terms of my resume, my legal skill-building, my networking. And yet this has been the happiest, most productive, most fruitful period of my life. In those years I have worked hard at raising my children.  I've cooked and cleaned, re-learned how to sew, taught myself to knit.  I've taught my children to read and do math, read thousands of pages of books to them, introduced them to the world and, most importantly, to God. I've cried over my own weaknesses and been stunned at my own strengths. I supported my husband through a difficult year of cancer treatments, and I walked with my dad through his final months of life, right into his brutal last moments. I shepherded my children's hearts through those challenging times.  I nursed children through illness and baked birthday cakes and volunteered at ballet performances and read Shakespeare and managed our household...and, by the grace of God, I've stayed in good spirits through it all. I have grown exponentially in my faith and character, although I'm well aware that I'll never be perfect. (Alas!)  I am changed--and all for the better.

Many, many years ago I turned down a couple of opportunities in law school in order to be more present for my family, because my sister and I had just lost our mother. I should have known then that I was setting a precedent that I'd never be able to break. 

I don't know what to think about my resume now.  It seems so incomplete. So inaccurate.

(Perhaps for fun I'll write a *real* resume that accurately reflects my adult life!)

As I pulled into the grocery store this evening, thinking about Annie back at the house with a sore throat*, and what she might need or want, and how unglamorous my life is, and how much money I most certainly do not make, and about an acquaintance who just won a big victory in a trial, the words of Luke 10 came to me--"Mary hath chosen that good part, which shall not be taken away from her." 

May it always be so, whether I practice law, raise children, pull weeds, write poems.  God will always provide what I need, and my job is to trust, and to try to choose the good part.

*Please pray for Annie!  She spent a day doing cartwheels on the beach yesterday and today she's in bed with a fever.  My poor girl.

Tuesday, May 17, 2022

For My Father

 In a few days I'll be able to tell my father happy birthday in person, but I had to settle for the phone on his actual birthday.   When I called him we chatted for a long time, as we are wont to do, and he said to me "time goes so quickly.  Don't waste a minute of it! Enjoy it." 

He enjoyed his career, and he has enjoyed his dozen years of retirement, in which he has done volunteer work (representing foster children in the court system, and grassroots political work). 

My Dad has taught me so much in life.  

{Dad with a newborn me!}

He taught me to drive, to laugh, to love music, to prune azaleas, to take my civic responsibilities seriously, to not take myself too seriously, to stop and smell the roses, to love my children well.  And so much more. 

{Dad with my little sister}

He is funny, intelligent, passionate about politics, self-effacing, a ready dispenser of wisdom, an excellent driver, a lover of ice cream, and an unfailingly good and calming presence in a crisis. 

And small creatures love him. 

I love my Dad!

Sunday, March 6, 2022

Blue and Yellow on Broad Street

 Last week in Charleston, hanging from the City Hall building on Broad Street.  


At the end of Broad, the Old Exchange and Provost Dungeon flew it near the U.S. flag and the South Carolina state flag. 

We continue our fervent prayers for peace, freedom, and democracy.

Friday, September 17, 2021

Portrait of My Mother

After my grandfather died, my aunt and uncle, who lived down the gravel lane from me, purchased my grandparents' house from the family trust.  My aunt and uncle moved out of their farmhouse (which was originally my great-grandparents' farmhouse--are you confused yet?!) and their son and his wife moved into the farmhouse.  In other words: there was some house-shuffling here on the farm last year. 

My aunt and uncle had an enormous amount of work to do sorting through the 80 years' worth of stuff that my grandparents owned.  Because I am the oldest grandchild, a girl, and live on the farm, and also because I am well-known for my sentimentality, I've gotten some special things over the past few years. 

This photograph of my mother was in her former bedroom at my grandparents' house. This was taken when she was just out of college, I believe.  A freshly-minted young lady with a degree from Mary Washington College in Virginia.  She had that same beautiful smile her whole life.

When I looked at the photograph closely, I could see that she was wearing a little twisted gold and emerald ring (her birthstone), which I still own today.  It's barely visible in this photo; I had to look very closely to identify it.  But that's the one that sits in my jewelry box to this day!


I passed this along to my sister, so she'd have this luminous beauty looking over her each day. 

 My mother had more grit, grace, optimism, openness, positivity, and straight-up joie de vivre than anyone I've ever met in my life. Twenty years gone. I wish everyone could have known her. 

Friday, September 10, 2021

Happy Things in September

 We are wrapping up our third week of school (well, Finn will have work to do on the weekend, but I'm ignoring that reality) and enjoying the absolutely perfect September weather here! Summer gets very hot and humid--not as humid as Charleston, I'll grant you, but still hot and humid--and somehow right before Labor Day the tide turned and suddenly we are in the midst of warm days, crisp mornings, cool nights, and very low humidity.  So perfect!  A bonfire is nice on evenings like this; keeping the windows open at night lets in refreshing air and not sticky sludge.  It's wonderful. 

{sunset}

Although I am hit with Autumn Fever, I'm not able to sit on the porch or do yardwork all day (which is what I'd prefer).  Things are busy.  It's okay--it's my season of life! I know this and embrace it.  I remember the season of life with little children, when they took 1-2 naps per day, we took leisurely walks and played outside a lot, I sewed and knitted, and I could go for days without getting in my car to go anywhere!  Those days have passed and the season I'm in now involves lots of time in my car, lots of time waiting to pick a child up from practice/class/rehearsal, and lots more executive functioning skills.  Good thing mine are pretty strong. 

{our basement lounge, aka the movie-watching space, aka the place where I read to Annie!}

Now that the weather has turned, I seem to be turning back to my books, even though I don't have much time to actually read.  I like to read in bed right after I tuck my children in at night, but I'm often so very tired that I get a couple of pages into the book and need to turn out the light and go to sleep. My days begin early!  But here are a few things I'm really loving right now:

*A Gentleman in Moscow (Amor Towles) on Audiobook

*A Tale of Two Cities (Dickens) on Audiobook (Finn and I are listening to this together as part of his literature for the year)

*good walks in the crisp, non-humid air

*Almond Butter Brownies: I don't know where I got this recipe, but I'm loving it! Almond butter + an egg or egg substitute + cocoa powder + maple sugar + chocolate chips + salt...I'll post it here sometime.  I make them on Friday evenings (that's today!) to give to Annie before her four hours of ballet rehearsal on Saturdays.  She's a rather delicate eater in the mornings, so I need to tempt her into getting some calories, because four hours of ballet is intense and she needs her energy. These brownies are enough like dessert to interest her at 7:30am, but not unhealthy as a pre-workout snack! 

{these aren't the brownies, but this is my flourless chocolate cake. SO GOOD}

*A variety of random books that I picked off the bookshelves at the library a week or two ago--it's just fun to walk through the library and get whatever jumps out at me.  I did that in college all the time, and it was one of the highlights of my collegiate experience.  Why not continue it now? 

*Mary Oliver's poetry, anytime I feel a little overwhelmed

*Working casually on Finn's high school transcript. I'm starting this process *now* so that I don't feel panicked in 3 years, and I know the Polly of 2024 will thank the Polly of 2021 for doing this.  Interestingly, all told, he'll have about 10 credits-ish by the end of this year. That's almost half of the required credits for public high school graduation in our state! 


{a cup of tea + a bit of transcript work = energizing}

*Still knitting a cardigan for my cousin's baby, who lives on our lane, who will turn 1 next month.  Trying to knit this by his birthday. I have picked up the habit--why did I never do this before?--of knitting while I sit with my children during schoolwork.  They often don't need me there, but I want to be there to keep them on track and to answer questions, so knitting is the perfect activity during school time. 

*Thinking about what to do for our kitchen backsplash after our new countertops are installed (suggestions?! I'm thinking either beadboard, because it is so warm/casual, or some sort of marbled tile, but I'm just not sure yet--the tile might be too "shiny" and cold for me!) and kids' bathroom renovation, which I hope will be begun in the next 2-3 months.  Our contractor is going to take the room down to the studs: a total overhaul. I am very excited about this!  The bathroom needs it.  

*My Dad's pathology report came back negative after his cancer surgery, so he officially does not need chemo!  I am so very thankful for this. He won't have to suffer the horrific effects of chemo and all that those treatments entail. It means he'll probably move to his house in the mountains in October and stay until around Thanksgiving, so I hope to get to see him often. Then he'll be back to Charleston for Christmas, and we will go down for New Year's! 

{a quilt top that I found in my Grandma's things.  One day I will make it into a real quilt! But not today....}

*I turn 44 in 2 weeks.  I feel exactly like I am 19 years old, except I need more sleep!


Saturday, March 13, 2021

The Sandbox

 Today I spent most of the day outside, which makes it the best kind of day in my book!  The weather was mild enough for gardening, so I worked on a project that I have needed to conquer for years--pulling the wire grass out of my children's old sandbox. I was feeling quite sentimental while doing that today. I was envisioning Finn when we built it for him, as a birthday present. He was 3. He loved flags, and so my husband included a flower bed to the side with a flagpole centered in the middle.  Finn sat and played in that sandbox for hours, and ran the flag up and down the pole dozens of times. While I was pregnant with Annie and constantly nauseated, I remember him sitting there playing happily while I sat, open and unread book on my lap, and tried to just stare at one thing in order to fight the nausea. Later, when she was a toddler, they would play in the sandbox together.  That's where they learned certain rules of etiquette, like: don't throw sand.  And share your toys!

A little while later, my husband decided to build a play set for our children.  He designed it himself.  Two swings, one slide, and a very cool "clubhouse" that was centered over the sandbox. Slowly, the sandbox fell out of favor because the swings and slide and clubhouse above were so appealing.  Slowly, I allowed the wire grass to invade it, thinking I'll get around to pulling the weeds sometime....

That time was finally today.  Now the sandbox is actually a sandbox again; there was plenty of sand beneath all that grass! It's cleared-out.  While I was working I thought I would add some soil and plant grape hyacinths in it. Then I pondered grape hyacinths and Siberian irises.  Then I considered lavender.  Now that it's all cleaned out, though, I have to say I feel so sentimental. It's a sandbox again. It's the same sandbox, the same sand, where my children sat and played, their tiny little voices chattering and giggling.  Looking at it gives me a pang of sentimentality that I didn't expect.  I don't know: am I ready to say goodbye to that sandbox?  Am I ready to plant it with flowers and usher it into a new role in our lives?  

Finn turns 14 in a few months.  It has been 11 years since he was that little 3 year old, enchanted by a flagpole and driving his trucks through his sandbox.  In less than 2 years he will be allowed to drive a car.  I remember when he turned 5, I cried because he seemed so old!  5 was the age a child went to school!  I try not to think too hard about the passage of time because it is so bittersweet.  My children are supposed to grow up. I want them to grow up!  And yet, when I stop to think about it, or to look at the sand in that sandbox, my heart cracks just a little bit. Sometimes it cracks a lot.

When Finn turned 10 I made a video collage of photos for him set to music--Dar Williams' song "The One Who Knows."  He and I sat and watched it and cried our eyes out.  (Annie and my husband laughed at us.)  But oh, this song makes me cry. 

Sometimes I will ask the moon

where it shined up you last

and shake my head and laugh and say

it all went by so fast.

I have tried hard over the years to be present for and with my children. I mean, I homeschool them!  I'm with them pretty much all the time!  I've tried to observe them, to pause and enjoy little moments every day, to treasure up the tiny things (like how I am sitting right now watching Annie engrossed in a book, so intently reading, and so expressive--something big must be happening! Oh, now she's laughing...it must be something funny...).  Even so, the truth is--it all goes by so fast

What shall I plant in that sandbox? Or should I even try to replace it with anything?

 Because right now it just holds my memories, and they are so precious to me. 

Thursday, March 11, 2021

In the Greening Spring

Annie and I sat on a quilt outside this morning, warm sun beating down upon us, and we finished The Trumpet of the Swan.  The last chapter is called "The Greening Spring," and it could not be a better fit for today!

 Although it's not technically spring *yet,* spring is springing here at long last.  What made this winter so long?  The fact that we got a good amount of snow?  Or the fact that it was an unusual winter due to covid-19?  In any case, I am more than ready for spring this year.  

My daffodils and tulips are up, but not budding yet. The pin oak is still bare, but the red maple is fuzzy with its earliest buds. The birdsong is more intense and the squirrels are clearly more active.  We noticed robins today--a sure sign that winter is fading!  This afternoon, because we have no activities planned and no appointments to keep, I am planning to spend a few hours working on de-wintering my flower beds: raking, trimming, tidying.  I bought myself a pair of Felco pruners (and a scabbard!) a couple of weeks ago, a special treat. I use my pruners virtually every day during spring, summer, and fall, and my old Fiskars had about had it.  I was gnashing my teeth trying to cut out branches of the silky dogwood last fall when I promised myself that I would not start the 2021 garden season without a pair of nice, new, Swiss-made pruners.  

My parents and husband are now fully vaccinated (parents because they are the appropriate age, both with some health risk factors, and husband because he's classified as a frontline essential worker) and we are heading to Charleston soon to take the Trip That Didn't Happen last year.  Last year I had planned a historical tourist extravaganza for my children, who have been to Charleston plenty of times, but have never really done many touristy things because we are usually busy visiting family and attending holiday parties! We were set to go in May, but the covid virus threw a real wrench into the plans.  Last week I decided on a whim that we should go.  Soon.  Now! The azaleas will be blooming soon and I haven't been to Charleston during the azalea season in about 7-8 years!  There is one week that my husband can be off of work this spring, so we quickly planned to head to the coast that week. I'm so glad it will work out.  My children are beyond excited.  They love Charleston, and Finn in particular is happy because he is deeply into architecture these days, and part of the touristy plan is a pretty comprehensive architectural tour. We won't have time to go everywhere, but we can knock out a few of my own favorites.  He will love it. 

I recently looked back at what I'd written earlier this winter about my goals for before-the-forsythia-blooms:

-Knit a hat! (DONE! I adore it! I learned to read from a pattern chart and I learned a few new techniques.  Photos to follow sometime!)

-Read copious quantities of books. (Definitely have been doing this.  I think I've knocked out a couple dozen so far this year.)

-Write. (Yes! I did it.  I finished the novel I was writing. Now I am cooling my heels before I begin to rewrite it.)

-Figure out 9th and 5th grades. (I've done a lot of this!)

-Exercise as many days of the week as possible. (Yes!)

-Homeschool diligently. (Yes, mostly!  On nice days the school may slip a bit, but I'm not worried about that.  We're having fun. :))

-Be kind and loving to my family.  (Yes, I do think I have done that well...but I'm not going to cross it off the list!)

So the forsythia hasn't bloomed yet, but it will within a few weeks.  Now I can think of a few more goals.  Let's say these are the things I'd like to do before Finn turns (GULP) 14 years old in June. 

Fourteen years old.

My spring things, to do before Finn turns 14......

-Sew 2-4 dresses for Annie, using this pattern, the 1780s Portrait Dress.  She is obsessed with it! I have already traced the size she needs.  She's 10, but she's pretty tiny in girth, so the 8 will probably be the best fit.  I'll likely need to lengthen it, though. 

-Read! Read, read, and read.  It will be harder to read in summer, I think, with all the gardening responsibilities, so before that gets going full-force, I hope I can read a lot.

-Possibly knit another hat, or a pair of legwarmers for Annie for ballet, OR a baby hat for our new little baby on the farm, who is growing so quickly and is so darling that I cannot resist him. He is 5 months old now!

-Clean and reorganize Annie's room. (Not my favorite task, but one that must be done. And then I'll try to be better about having her keep it tidy.  That's hard for me.  I like the rest of my house to be really neat, but I do tend to turn a blind eye to my children's rooms, unfortunately.  Anne is a girl who loves her things: clothes, toys, hair do-dads, books, papers, pens, trinkets, handbags....you name it, she loves it.)

-Clean and reorganize Finn's room. (Ditto, although Finn is easier; he's a minimalist male, and basically owns as little as possible.  This will mostly be recycling papers and basic cleaning, which he can do.  Easy.)

-Finish up the 9th and 5th grade school planning so that I don't have to do any of it over the summer!

(Oh! To that end, if you have an online high school science curriculum recommendation, please pass it along to me Finn has been going through an Apologia textbook this year, but it's very general--it's a middle school book--and he wants in-depth teaching; he's not super satisfied with the way certain things are explained in the text.  We would like to move to an online format with a supporting text, so that there is a person doing some "teaching." I am considering Honors Biology through The Potter's School or Honors Biology through Pennsylvania Homeschoolers.  Help!)

-Do more reading aloud to my children. This is sort of ridiculous because I read aloud to them every morning during the week (we just finished Padriac Colum's The Children's Homer today! I hated the first half, but loved the second half), but I want to be more consistent with reading aloud at lunchtime and bedtime. 

-Prepare the flower beds for spring/summer--stay on top of the spring pruning, etc.  This shouldn't be hard, as gardening is one of my favorite activities in the world. 

-Keep homeschooling, exercising, and being kind. :) 

...and that's more than enough!

Spring fever has obviously hit me full-force. :) And I love it!

Friday, February 19, 2021

On the Intersection of Money + Contentment

 Don't ever let anyone make you feel badly about living within your means.

As I was painting window trim last fall--oh! so many hours of trimwork--this thought bubbled up into my mind.  

I'm not sure where the thought came from; I spend a lot of time deep in thought when I'm doing a task like painting. As I've spent time picking colors, I've looked at a lot of home decorating websites and blogs to see what I like, what other people use, etc.  And let me tell you: there's so much beautiful stuff out there.

Some blogs are just so polished!  The photographs are polished!  And the homes themselves are magazine-worthy.  The funniest thing about these homes, I think, is that there's usually the "sign of life" element thrown into the otherwise-perfect photo.  (Does this crack anyone else up?)

But then there may be sponsored ads and links to products that the homeowner uses and some sort of, let's face it, sales pitch to make you, the reader, feel that if you just purchased that tablecloth or that cutting board or that mug, suddenly your rather average, ordinary home life would be transformed into something polished and perfect as well. 

And often the owner of the lovely polished photos is somehow making money off of making you feel that your rather ordinary life just isn't quite *enough.* Sometimes the person is simply encouraging or inspiring, but sometimes they're just--well--selling their encouragement or inspiration.

There's nothing wrong with inspiring websites and photos. (Does anyone want to see a messy room with dishes everywhere and clutter and unfolded laundry?  I don't!)  But I do feel like there's something amiss when the "inspiration" makes the reader feel somehow lacking, and like purchasing something will fill that lack. When I see sites like that, I begin to smell a rat, so to speak.

{I also think that some people do truly need to make the extra money they can get from online work, and it can be helpful to their families, so I'm not making a blanket statement against monetized sites and "influencers."  But I do think that any website that constantly encourages people to spend money under the guise of "inspiration" feels a little disingenuous and that we must proceed with caution when we choose to consume them.}

The Bible says that "godliness with contentment is great gain." This passage in 1 Timothy is perfectly applicable and instructive.  

I have already made my case in defense of the ordinary life. I do not get onboard at all with "FOMO", "YOLO," or "bucket lists."  These things all imply that the lives we are given are somehow not enough.  Generally spending money is seen as the cure to this ill, but it's not. 

Money definitely matters and is vital to provide a certain level of comfort and stability, but beyond that, it's pretty much just a matter of degrees of luxuries. 

The curious thing about money also seems to be that the people who appear to have the most, often have the highest incomes and greatest debt.  Which makes their net worth lower, if we want to get technical.  (This book has lots of good information, if you're interested in it. But check it out of the library!) And consumer debt is an albatross and can cause huge conflicts in marriages. As in 1 Timothy, it can cause people to be "pierced with many griefs."

Maybe that's one of my motivations for writing here. I do occasionally ask myself why do I even have a blog? Back in the old days I used my old blog as a way to keep family and friends updated on the adventures of Finn and Annie, but that has shifted significantly.  Yet I still do want to keep a blog.  And I think this is why: to just encourage other people, with no strings attached.

So if you are struggling with envy, or feeling inferior, or not being Enough, based on what you see online, turn off the computer/phone, open the Bible if you are a Christian, put a pen to paper to work through your thoughts, and really analyze what is encouraging you and what is just making you feel badly about your own circumstances. 

I suspect that a lot of what we are "fed" via social media (it's called a feed!!) consists of people living outside their means.  

And if you're a person who is trying to live within yours, then don't ever let anyone make you feel badly about that.  You're doing the right thing. And your life may look messier and a lot less decorated and significantly less exciting or luxurious than the polished pages online would have you believe it should look. And you may have to say "no, I cannot afford to buy that" or "no, that's outside my budget." That is perfectly fine; there is no shame in living within your budget!  

So if you're being fed things that make you feel inferior, remember that we only digest what we allow ourselves to consume in the first place. Seek out the things that will make you feel more contented with your own life and more inspired to make your own life happy and lovely, and make you feel less like you're missing out on some nebulous, glossy, "ideal life." 

(Maybe next time I'll talk about "little luxuries," which are a nice antidote, in my mind, to this feeling of not being (or having, or doing) "enough!" Little luxuries can help cultivate a feeling of contentment!)

Friday, December 4, 2020

On Time

This fall I've enjoyed reading Charlotte Mason's Fourth Volume, Ourselves, in preparation for reading it with Finn within the next year.  It's such a great instruction manual on living a good life! I wish I'd read it in the 1990s.   

I've particularly enjoyed the chapter entitled "Integrity: Justice in Action."  I'll share some quotes from this occasionally over the next few months, but I'll start with some wisdom on time. 

{a gorgeous cloud over my aunt and uncle's house}

"It is a bad thing to think that time is our own to do what we like with.  We are all employed; we all have duties, and a certain share of our time must be given to those duties.  It is astonishing how much time there is in a day, and how many things we can get in if we have a mind.  it is also astonishing how a day, a week, or a year may slip through our fingers, and nothing done. We say we have done no harm, that we have not meant to do wrong.  We have simply let ourselves drift......

"[People] dawdle through the working day, hoping that some one will make them do the thing they ought.  Now, this is a delusion.....[t]his power of making oneself work is a fine thing.  Every effort makes the next easier, and, once we mount upon that easy nag, Habit, why, it is a real satisfaction to do the day's work in the day, and be free to enjoy the day's leisure."

Isn't this true?  And I love the "easy nag" of Habit. Truly, I believe our habits either make or break us. 

"Some people dearly like to be going on with a little job of their own in the time which should have a fixed employment.....Integrity forbids this....[e]very piece of work has its due time.  The time which is due to an occupation belongs to that, and must not be used for any other purpose."

I agree with this, for the most part.  I do think we have to take time seriously; otherwise, days and weeks are wasted.  At the same time (sorry; can't resist), we also need to be wise in deciding how our time should be spent.  If you've got a tendency to over-productivity and over-work, you can fall into the habit of simply working all the time.  But sometimes life demands we must use time for a purpose other than the one we'd originally assigned to it.

Illness and medical emergencies are obviously one example of this. But other examples are:

talking to a child late into the night (when really, you should be sleeping so you can get up and exercise in the morning)

extending a breakfast theological discussion a bit longer, because people have questions and need to talk (when you should use that time to begin "formal schoolwork" or chores)

paying attention to a child or spouse's emotional state and spending time with them (even if the time had been allotted for some other purpose)

I suspect Charlotte Mason would agree with me.  After all, the work of the family is tending to each other's needs; that's my primary "occupation" right now and that's where the bulk of my duties are focused. So although some days we can stick strictly to a routine, there are days when the "do the next right thing" approach is the most valuable use of our time. 

{farm life! lots of lessons in doing the next right thing on a farm....}

There have been seasons in my own life when I have outwardly accomplished very little, but the spiritual and emotional work was enormous.  When my husband was super sick after radiation treatments, I was as "unproductive" as I've probably ever been, but I was tending to my husband and children's physical and emotional needs.  We all grew during that hard time.  Not much felt like it was "done," but what was done, was what was meant to be done.  So, if you're in one of those times, don't forget 2 Corinthians 4:18 (part of the passage my children and I are memorizing right now), which reminds us to fix our eyes not on what is seen, but on what is unseen, because what is unseen is eternal. You can't really check "tend to my family's emotional and spiritual needs" off the list every day; how in the world can we quantify that?  But it's of the utmost importance.  

 I appreciate this reminder to use our time wisely, to use the time allotted to a specific task for that task, while also keeping at the forefront of our minds the reality that our highest duties often require setting aside that task and allowing a more eternal, important task to take its place. 

Onward and upward, with small faithful steps, every single day.......

Friday, October 30, 2020

A New Year of Life--with Dreams and Goals

 For the past few years I've been reluctant to make "resolutions" or even many goals.  Life threw us such a curveball; I often feel I need to just hold all my plans loosely now, because you never know.  And I still feel that way, but seem to be more open to thinking in a more concrete way about the future. (My husband hit the 2-year-in-remission mark last month!!)

I turned 43 on September 25th. I am so grateful to be in my early 40s, in good health, with two healthy children, with a husband who is healthy and alive, with a roof over my head and food in the refrigerator.  I honestly feel gratitude for these things every single day.

How about the other stuff?

One of my biggest dreams, and by far the most important one to me right now, is to raise two well-adjusted, respectful, hard-working, kind human beings who love God and love others.  There's a lot to that dream, and I have many goals that I'm working on along the way.

But I think it's time to articulate a few others as well--I feel comfortable enough to do that right now.  I feel far out enough from the uncertainty of stage 4 cancer, although the truth is--nothing is certain in our lives.  We have to spend our days as wisely as we can in light of that reality.

I like to think in terms of dreams (the big, almost-nebulous things that we'd like to do) and goals (the small steps we have to take to get to the dream). 

So here are my dreams and goals for the upcoming year of life: 

1) Dream: write a book (I estimate I'm about 3/4 of the way there)

Goal: write 20 minutes each day

I began working on this story a year or two ago, but it sort of turned itself into a book this year. I spent every Saturday morning working on it for a few hours at a time in January, February, and March; I stopped when the pandemic hit (because I was staying home!).  But I did spend a long weekend in a cabin by myself at the end of March and wrote about 30,000 words that weekend.  This past weekend I spent two days writing (but it wasn't as productive, because I was at home!).  My goal was to finish the first draft of the book by December 31, 2020, and I may be able to take another writing weekend soon.  I want to carve out the time each day to work steadily now.  Twenty minutes isn't much, but it's doable and it is better than nothing!

2)  Dream: drop one more dress size (I don't think I need or want to drop more than that)

Goal: walk 30-45 minutes a day, exercise 15-30 minutes a day, and follow the general eating routine that works best for me

Pretty straightforward!

3) Dream: read 44 books by my 44th birthday (this is a fun one, right?  I seem to pretty consistently read about 25 books per year--I do keep track--but this year I want to increase that significantly)

Goal: read for 30-60 minutes every evening 

My new favorite habit is getting completely ready for bed, tucking my children in, and then curling up in my own bed with my stack of books. I also like reading in the morning and afternoons, but those times are more "hit-or-miss" for me because I need to take care of my family during the day!

4)  Dream: learn to play violin (I began playing in fall of 2017, then took a long break when my husband was sick; I'm ready to pick up regular practice again, even if I'm not ready to re-start lessons yet)

Goal: practice 15 minutes a day 

That's all I have time to do, but I can do that!  

5) Dream: post more regularly on my blog

Goal: write three posts per week 

I genuinely enjoy writing here, and I miss it when I don't do it.  

6) Dream: learn to oil paint

Goal: paint for 1-2 hours every week

I recently decided I wanted to learn to oil paint; this could be a huge disaster, since I don't consider myself an artist.  At all.  But: why not? I think I'll try to paint on Sunday afternoons.  It's our most relaxed day, and my husband always naps, so that's the perfect time for me to putter around in some paints, I think!

*         *       * 

These are all personal goals.  They are not relationship-oriented, but that's because I don't quantify what I do in my relationships. In fact, my relationships come before any of the things I listed here.  Always. I don't care if I write a dozen books, play virtuoso-level violin (ha! what a dream!), oil paint like Vermeer, or read 100 books a year--if I do all of that and I neglect my home and my family, or don't show kindness to my neighbors in need or my friends, then I haven't done my real job, because I consider those things my real work in life.

Life is a gift!  I'm grateful to have the margin and vision to try to spend it well.  I know I'll come up short and never achieve every dream or goal, but I'd rather aim for the stars and reach the moon than never look up at all.

Friday, July 24, 2020

In Defense of the Ordinary Life

The acronyms "FOMO" and "YOLO" are two little indicators of the type of culture we live in today.  "FOMO" means "fear of missing out" and YOLO means "you only live once."  I dislike both of these acronyms and the things they represent, and I'll tell you why: they undermine the value of an ordinary life. 

"Ordinary" means, among other things: standard, commonplace, normal. 

The rise of social media has somehow catapulted us into a sphere hitherto unknown to humanity.  Suddenly instead of "keeping up with the Joneses"--that is, our nearby neighbors who probably have similar incomes, values, lifestyles, and means (which is bad enough!)--we are keeping up with everyone.  We have windows into the lives of people whose capacity and tolerance for debt may be much higher than our own, or whose incomes are astronomically more than our own, and somehow we may find ourselves thinking that those lives are more satisfying, interesting, or more meaningful than our own.  

Even people who purport to laud domestic life on social media platforms or in magazines are often doing it with an agenda: to sell a book or product, to gain an income through advertising sales or commissions, et cetera.  I'm not saying that this is wrong, but I'm saying that those of us who consume this type of media must be extremely cautious to take it all with a grain of salt.  Annie Dillard once wrote that when she reads some books, she can tell they were really written to become films, and "I smell a rat!"  I feel the same way at times. We live in a capitalist society and I'm glad we do. But the phrase caveat emptor applies to all consumption, including the consumption of other people's lives via media platforms. 

What if:

*you never have a net worth of seven figures?

*you live in an ordinary, unremarkable home?

*your children are, well, typical children?

*you would never win a beauty contest? Or a fitness competition?

*you are not always highly organized, efficient, and motivated?

*you never leave the boundaries of your own country?

*your clothes are primary culled from thrift stores? Or perhaps homemade?

*you don't eat sumptuous, Instagram-worthy meals--you just eat nice, normal food? Maybe from your garden?  That is also not Instagram-worthy, because of weeds? :)

Is your life, then, an unworthy one?  We would all say no--but would we really believe it?

I always return to the question: how did Jesus Christ live?   His life was the most remarkable human life that ever existed, and yet he wasn't born into riches.  He probably grew up in a relatively unremarkable home.  We don't know what he looked like, but most indirect indicators in the Bible would point to the idea that he was a fairly average-looking man.  He never traveled the world.  He did feast on occasion, but more often than not, he was likely eating humble meals.  I don't know what he wore, but given his life circumstances, I'd be surprised if he were richly-robed.

And yet he lived the most meaningful life--he changed the world in a mere 33 years, and he did it through loving and serving others. 

Fear of missing out?  Dave Ramsey says one way people get into debt is that they spend money they don't have to impress people they don't like!  (I'd add: or to impress people they don't even know!) This is a funny saying, but all too true. I think people often pursue things in order to report about it on social media--again, spending money they don't have (or could use elsewhere) to impress people they don't know.  The only "fear of missing out" I have--and I'm being absolutely genuine and honest on this point--is the fear of missing out on loving my family.  If my eyes are fixed elsewhere and my energies directed at chasing down some sort of "ideal" lifestyle, I'll have less time and attention to devote to the thing that matters most to me.  

You only live once?  Well, that is true.  We only live for a short time on this earth, and then our lives are over.  Isn't that a key reason to be intentional and thoughtful about how we spend our years, months, days, and hours?  Isn't that a good reason to enjoy the things that truly matter, and celebrate every day as a gift? I think so! But what "YOLO" in its popular application misses is that the purpose of life is not merely the pursuit of our own pleasures and goals (the "bucket list" phenomenon). And I think it also misses that there is an eternity beyond this life.  Can we make decisions in our lives that impact eternity?  I do believe so. 

I am in no way saying that my values must be the values of everyone else!  But I am a contrarian when it comes to modern culture.  I believe an ordinary life is a gift, and those of us who have them are called to live them with purpose, joy, and dignity.

 I wake up, drink coffee.  I take walks, pick squash bugs off the pumpkin plants. Check the roses for Japanese beetles. I read the Bible and pray for people. I put on an apron and make breakfast. I read to my children from Proverbs.  I make my bed, clean the bathroom. I help a child with math, another with spelling.  I bake banana bread.  I sweep the floor. I teach a child how to use the sewing machine. I clean the windows.  I hang out the laundry.  I harvest lavender.  I make dinner.  I read to someone, correct someone.  I check on a neighbor or friend. I listen to my husband's report of the day.  I decide where to spend money and where to save it.  I help brush teeth with braces.  I tuck children in and try to listen and patiently respond to their concerns when I'm so tired I can barely keep my eyes open. I pack my husband's lunch.  I try to read a book.  I go to bed.  And then I get up and do some combination of things all over again the next day! Hundreds of times a year, nothing particularly remarkable about any single day, except that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts.  

Or, to quote George Eliot--who is my new favorite author right now--

"Her finely touched spirit had still its fine issues, though they were not widely visible.  Her full nature, like that river of which Cyrus broke the strength, spent itself in channels which had no great name on the earth.  But the effect of her being on those around her was incalculably diffusive: for the growing good of the world is partly dependent on unhistoric acts; and that things are not so ill with you and me as they might have been, is half owing to the number who lived faithfully a hidden life, and rest in unvisited tombs."

God bless the unhistoric acts, the hidden lives, the faithful souls living perfectly ordinary lives. 

 I do suspect these lives are, at the end of them, the very best lives of all.  

Sunday, June 28, 2020

Social Media and Cell Phones

I reflect uneasily and often on the culture my children are growing up in right now. I'm not talking about the big news stories, actually, which are issues enough to manage in themselves; I'm just talking about technology.

Technology can be a great blessing.  And yet it can also be a terrible distraction.

Lately I've been trying to puzzle this out.  My sister has been texting me a lot, so I feel I've been on my phone a ton, because I want to be available to her. (She just closed on her first-ever home on Friday!  I helped her with house-hunting, financing details, insurance coverage, inspection report, and a million other little details.)  She is unmarried, and so in many ways I'm her support person. ;) 

And then there's social media. Instagram. Facebook.  Those are the only two things I do, but that's enough, and some days I am tempted to just get rid of it all and see what life would look and feel like.  It's a double-edged sword: on the one hand, I like the connection it can provide.  On the other hand, sometimes the connection is pretty tenuous and superficial.  On the other hand again, sometimes the connection leads to genuine help and encouragement. 

And there's a dark underbelly of social media, too: the combination of negativity plus the distraction/addiction that it can provide.  (Facebook was designed to be addictive!)

I am the type of person who loves meaningful interactions and conversations.  Interestingly, my best friends, most of whom do not live locally (only a couple do), are not really my social media friends at all.  I just prefer in-person discussions, deeper connections.  I think most of us do, when we step back and think about it.

And always underlying my analysis of this is the reality that my children, with every second of every day, are getting older.  Finn is a teenager now!  Annie is nine and a half!  I wonder how much time I have spent of their childhood distracted--?  I only got a iphone 2 years ago (right before my husband's surgery, because I knew that I'd need fast and easy communication with multiple people), but lo, that is a distracting device.  Before that, I found myself easily distracted by my ipod and even the laptop!  I keep notifications off on my iphone, do not have the Facebook app, and have it always turned off (so I don't hear any bells or dings), but it's still extremely distracting.  

When you are in the room with someone and they are on their phone--texting, scrolling, etc.--it can be so annoying.  And I think for children in particular, this must be particularly annoying, when their parent is on the phone.  Sometimes I will say "just a moment while I reply to this text" and I KNOW I am doing something helpful (communicating with another person about something--often something important, but admittedly, sometimes not), but my child has no idea.  They are not part of that. I don't want my children to recall me as someone who was so easily distracted by her phone/laptop/etc.

So where does that leave us?

I need to begin to pray for guidance on this. 

(A few years ago our internet quit working, and I didn't have a cell phone. I took our laptop to the coffee shop to answer emails 1-2x per week, and it was the best couple of weeks EVER! I loved it!  I asked my husband if we could just not fix the internet, but he thought that was unrealistic--because, given our situation, it really is. But I loved it.)

I'd love to hear what anyone else thinks/does about this pervasive cultural issue that doesn't look like it's going away anytime soon. How do we balance the people in front of us with the people behind the screen, especially when the people in both scenarios mean something to us? And how do we manage social media?  Do I just pretend that I don't have internet except for twice a week?!

It's a challenge for sure. 

Thursday, January 23, 2020

Consistency v. Rigidity

Today on my walk I was thinking about consistency, about the value of consistency, and how tiny bits and pieces of things done consistently bear so much fruit over time. 

I have seen this in so many realms, including:

*Finn's piano education.  Daily (or nearly-daily) practice for 6 years.  He plays so beautifully now. 

*Exercise: when I just decided to be consistent with exercise instead of heroic, I got into excellent shape!

*Keeping house: obviously staying on top of laundry and dishes, but also consistently tidying the house each day--so there's never a big mess (exceptions: the garage and the mechanical room!)

*Reading to my children: just a chapter a day, over time, adds up to so much reading.  I read a chapter from the Bible at breakfast and a chapter from a fiction book at lunch, and try to read close to a chapter of another fiction book at bedtime. Little bits and pieces, but they do add up.

*Saving money.  Just save it, set it aside....time will make it grow....

But it's funny, because I was not raised in a household that really valued consistency.  In fact, I think the primary guiding factor of my childhood was whim. This was fun in a way, but ultimately was quite difficult for me because (I now know) I am a person who prefers predictability and routine.  But for the first three decades or more of my life, I confused consistency with rigidity, and thus rejected the idea of being consistent, because I equated it with being too rigid.

Rigidity is different: it says  we always or we never and doesn't make any allowances for circumstances.  Rigidity is legalistic.  Rigidity is powering through a to-do list when really what you need is a good nap.  Rigidity makes no concessions.  Rigidity doesn't allow a child to pull out the Legos because This is When We Do Math.  And I really do not like this mindset!  So in my quest to avoid rigidity, I didn't value consistency nearly enough.

Truly, though: consistency and strong habits are what make life sweet.  

Consistency says we usually or we sometimes.  Consistency considers the circumstances and uses good judgment to determine how to proceed.  Consistency is gracious.  Consistency says the nap will benefit me more than crossing things off this list.  Consistency looks at the Big Picture and decides to let the child play with Legos, and do math later, because childhood is fleeting, and Legos are creative, and the schedule can be a little flexible.  The math still gets done, the to-do list is still crossed off, but there's flexibility and rationality in implementation. 

So I think that developing consistent, reasonable routines around the most important priorities in our lives makes good sense.  

I imagine that people raised in a more consistent setting than my own childhood home will not see the contrast between consistency and rigidity as particularly revelatory.  But I sure did!  

Saturday, December 21, 2019

2020 Word of the Year: Slow

Have you ever heard of the "word of the year"?  I think the idea is to either reflect back on your year and choose a word that describes it, or--more commonly--to think ahead to the new year and decide on a word that you want to focus on throughout the year.

Earlier this year a friend of mine asked what my "word of the year" for 2018 was. I didn't even hesitate, although I'd never actually thought about it before.  It was, without a doubt, surrender. The unfolding of my husband's cancer, the three surgeries (one major), the week in the hospital, the two months of living out of state, the incredible side effects he suffered.....throughout all of this, I had to surrender everything: my expectations, my schedule, my *THOUGHTS ABOUT THE FUTURE*, my homeschooling ideals, my finances, my privacy. I even had to surrender my husband, as he became unable to speak for weeks and was extremely sick.  I wrote more about how cancer changed me here; but suffice to say, when you have to surrender so many things, your core being really does morph and change.

Lately I've been trying to decide what my 2019 word of the year would be, in retrospect.  It's not obvious to me this year; it doesn't rise up from my subconscious in such an obvious way, like it did last year. And, if I were to look ahead to 2020, what would I choose as a word to focus on in the new year?

I'm honestly not sure what my 2019 word would be.  The cynical side of me that has felt overwhelmed for part of the year whispers that it might be something like stressed or undone or even distracted, but that's not very inspiring.  Then the optimistic part of me responds that yes, I have felt more stressed and unsettled than I'd like, but then again, it has driven me to continuously turn to God in the humbling realization that I'm unable to do even Normal Life on my own.  So perhaps my word is something like reliant. 

And what would my word be for the upcoming year?

One word that comes to mind is focus.  I have felt distracted and pulled in many directions this year.  Part of that is simply motherhood; after all, there are people who need me *all the time!*  And that's okay. But I don't enjoy feeling so scattered. It makes my mind feel like I am not at rest.  And even when I'm at home, I often feel pulled and unfocused.  The perceived urgency of texts and emails that pop up are so distracting!  And honestly, they're almost NEVER urgent. I resent the way cell phones and technology have changed my life.

But another word that comes to mind is slow.  Ever since my husband's cancer, every time I feel myself getting pulled and frantic and overwhelmed, I put the brakes on. I slow down--waaay down.  I make sure I'm getting sleep.  I take my time with basic chores.  I avoid making a long, overstimulating to-do list.  This is a therapeutic approach to living for me!  But it's sometimes hard when my children have seven activities outside the house every week (yes, it's true, and yes, I'm a little undone by this reality, but my husband and I agree that each activity contains specific value that we believe is worth the sacrifice of time right now). 

Slow is the antithesis of how I have basically lived for most of my adult life.  I am efficient.  I am a planner.  I like to get things done.  My executive functioning skills are really, really good, which means I'm excellent at making lists, managing tasks, and juggling commitments. My sister calls me "Type A PLUS." I have often confused slow with lazy and I despise laziness.  However, as I grow older and wiser, I can see how trying to uber-accomplish can be detrimental to my peace of mind.  Resting, relaxing, getting sleep, and slashing things off the to-do list (because they're undone and just not that important) are not signs of laziness.  They're marks of wisdom.

So I think this year my word will be slow, and I'll see if I can craft a few goals (resolutions?) that align with the spirit of slowness!

In the meantime, I'll leave you with this: my husband's 6-month CT scan on Thursday showed that his lungs are clear and his liver looks great; no sign of metastasis.  (He'd had a few spots on his liver in June which we needed to watch, but they appear to just be benign spots, because they've not changed at all, and nothing new showed up on the scan.)  His clinical exam was unremarkable, no sign of anything in his mouth or neck.


Thanks be to God, really and truly, from the bottom of my tender heart. 


Monday, October 28, 2019

Occupation: Homemaker

Last week I was filling out a form at the orthodontist's office and was writing down all the pertinent information that they need in order to treat my children, when my pen hovered over "occupation."

Occupation.

My mind raced to all the interesting professions my friends are peaking in right now.  We're at an age where most of them have worked in their chosen field for 15 years or so and they're hitting new heights in their careers.  My good friends are now tenured university professors, published authors, partners in law firms, licensed psychologists.

My pen paused, hesitated, as my mind raced through the list of occupations my friends have, occupations for which they are getting paid (very well, in nearly all cases).  Occupations that present a specific identity to the outside world.  

Then, as my pen continued to hover, I thought about my own occupations.  I do not earn an income, although my earning potential as an attorney is in the six-figure range. I do not attend lavish social functions, which was part of the job when I practiced law in the private sector.  I am not making a name for myself in the legal world.  I haven't practiced law in any official, paid capacity in over 10 years, and I do not wish to start again anytime soon. I also write, but I wouldn't really classify that as an occupation for me.

What is my occupation? Options swirled in my head: stay-at-home mother?  Homeschooling parent?  Teacher?  Housekeeper?  Laudress???

That blank space stared back at me as I thought of all the things I do every day. Little images of our daily life, as simple as it is, flitted in and out of my mind.  Hundreds of walks down our gravel country lane. Washing off the eggs from our chickens.  Fluffing up pillows. Rearranging a bookshelf.  Drinking a cup of tea and listening to the birds.  Washing countless dishes. Changing lightbulbs. Planting flowers.  Braiding my daughter's hair.  Cooking dinner. Mending clothes. Painting a piece of furniture. Washing the sliding doors.  My occupations.

I've been at these occupations for over 14 years now, after I left the full-time practice of law with no plan except to stay at home and be mistress of my own domain.  I had to learn everything from scratch. I didn't know how to do so many things.  I learned by doing, by making mistakes, by reading books, by praying, by reading blogs, by watching YouTube videos, by thinking, and by trying to learn what, exactly, I was after in the making of a home.



(The front porch in autumn.)

After nearly 15 years of it, am I at the peak of my "career"? Am I hitting new heights?  It's an amusing question to ponder.  By God's grace and practicing a lot of self-discipline, I've improved.....but I don't have a paycheck to show for it, or any public accolades. I don't even make a "career" out of keeping house, in any kind of Martha Stewart-esque way: I don't decorate my house impressively, don't bake intimidating cakes, don't do any sumptuous entertaining. I do the best I can, and am not looking for public approval of it.

As I sat there at the orthodontist's office, I thought of all of this, and wrote "homemaker" in the blank.  I thought of what a simple word it is, and how it barely scratches the surface of who I am or what I do, and isn't going to earn me any respect in the eyes of most of the world, but it's what I decided I wanted to do when I was in my mid-twenties. I wanted to make a home.  I wanted to learn what that meant. 


(Our simple, small living room, with the geriatric dog, the used furniture, and the coziness of home.)

I turned in the form with "homemaker" written on it, and I wondered at what in the world would have motivated someone as motivated as I always was for the first quarter-century of my life to leave the things the world (and some of my family) told me were alluring and valuable in order to do something so mundane that the people who *are* paid to do it are among the lowest-paid in our society.

I think it was love (of my husband, of the children we did not yet have, and also of myself, simply because the job made me sick and unhealthy) and a genuine desire to create a stable, healthy home life.  It had become clear to me that my long-term career trajectory was at sharp odds with my vision of home life.  Working 60 hours a week didn't feel like enough. I brought work home constantly.  I took files on our 5th anniversary getaway.  I knew it wasn't sustainable. 

And I deeply desired something I did not know well, because my childhood sometimes felt chaotic and disorderly to my quiet, orderly nature: I desired a steady, routine, peaceful life.  I had absolutely no idea how to bring that to fruition, I didn't understand how to manage my home, I had no experience, no background of it at all, no mentor. But this force within me knew I had to make the change. 

(Does it go without saying that I'm not insisting that a career and a happy home life are mutually exclusive? Of course they are not.  But the reality of the constraints of time and energy cannot be denied, and anyone who is realistic understands that life involves trade-offs.)

So at the orthodontist's office that day, as we sat and waited to be called back, I thought about all of these things. I sat there and looked at the children who were only figments of my imagination 15 years ago. I thought about our house, which is homey and happy.  I thought about the childhood my children are having--a childhood that sometimes astonishes me in its sweetness, innocence, and simplicity. And I was grateful to be able to write "homemaker" in that little blank space. It means so much more than I thought it did when I was a college student contemplating her future! 

Monday, September 30, 2019

Be Joyful and Consider

"In the day of prosperity be joyful, and in the day of adversity consider: God has made the one as well as the other, so that man may not find out anything that will be after him."

--Ecclesiastes 7:14 (ESV)

God has made the one as well as the other.

I am thinking about this verse lately.  My husband just celebrated one year in remission, one year since he finished his grueling, brutal radiation treatments and we moved home. So of course we were joyful about that; I was downright ebullient! 

There have also been Hard Things this month. I'm a little glad to see September wrapping up, simply because although it is often my favorite month, and it's my birthday month, this one was tough.  Some of the things were piddly,minor headaches and not worth mentioning.  Some have been larger but I also won't mention them (except to say that last week in an MRI I found out I have an allergy to gadolinium; let's just say it's not fun to find that out.....and that I'm so glad our car insurance pays for 100% of the damage from hitting a deer....) And one thing is very large but simply cannot be mentioned at all at this time.  I'm not meaning to be mysterious; it's just that sometimes it's not my story to tell.

 I am seriously praying that October will be easier, that somehow I'll have the wisdom to navigate the must-dos and let go of everything else, and that God will grant us grace and health (I have two sick children right now!) and wisdom.

In the midst of it I've been trying to sew a little.  Trying to read here and there. Trying to get enough rest.  Trying to eat (thanks to a stomach bug earlier this month I'm at an all-time low adult weight....I haven't weighed less than this since.....elementary school? I don't know!).  Trying to breathe. Trying to manage my distractions.  Trying to be kind. Trying to remember that I'm not really in a place in life where I can operate like I did 5 years ago. Many things have changed.

Yet again I come face to face with the fact that, for whatever reason, in this season of life things are challenging for me, and I need to keep things streamlined and simple.  And I need to rest. 

God has made the one as well as the other

And so I will take each day as it comes, and give thanks and gratitude for the lessons we learn along the way. 

And most of all, huge thanks for this: one year of remission.  One down.  Four to go. Praise be to God!