Category Archives: Uncategorized

Best Vet Ever

He’s a little bit like James Herriot, a little bit like Dr. Pol. and a lot like our elderly, laid-back pediatrician, and all of that in one package makes the man our farm could never do without.

He hasn’t been out since there was last winter’s snow on the ground, and as much as we love him, that’s a GOOD thing. It’s been a pretty easy year as far as the critters go.

But he came out yesterday because my little mini needed her teeth done, the pony was dropping feed and my youngest daughter’s guinea pig had the slobbers.

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We crawled around on the ground holding tools while did the yearly maintenance on the mouth of my little horse, my daughter listened intently as he explained how her pony’s teeth are aligned as close to perfect as a horse’s teeth can get, and then we all came inside and had a cup of coffee while he performed a kitchen table dental exam on the guinea pig with the massively overgrown incisors.

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He left like always, leaving us with two things: a pocketful of country wisdom and horse sense…

…and a smiling and grateful heart for small town farm vets.

 

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~

All things bright and beautiful,
All creatures great and small,
All things wise and wonderful,
The Lord God made them all.

 ~

 

Wood Smoke through the Window

The laughter of my children fills the truck and there it is through the open window…

The first sniff of wood smoke.

And the leaves turn yellow round us.

The tears of my mama fill the phone and here we go…

One of her friends gone all too soon.

And the older ones are leaving us.

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So Lord in Heaven, last night we sat around the big box in our book-cluttered living room and we watched the movie that says God’s not Dead and while we’ve known that for a long time now…

The reminder is good.

Because looking round can make one forget so won’t you remind us today?

Remind us not to use our pulpits to make ourselves higher but instead to lift YOU up.

Remind us to not use our words to label or make us sound like the guffawing bully noise that came from the throng of cool kids, intimidating and huddled up right there at the corner we all had to shuffle by, so we’d go fast and keep our heads down and try to escape the tease of the day, the prod, the bruise to our heart that would come when certain words bounced off the cinder block walls.

Remind us to instead use our words to lay down a lining of love on the bruised heart of everyone we meet. Remind us that they might shuffle by with their head down in fear so we may just need to move ourselves to reach them.

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Remind us that your house is to be filled with words that don’t tear down but that we are to fill it with words that build, the words that are your Word.

Remind us that hate is hate and there is no room for it except to hate what you hate, and that is sin.

Remind us that while there will always be evil in the world we are not to let evil into our hearts or into our lives.

Remind us to not be like the people of so long ago, the ones who thought they had your word but they forgot the people, and because they forgot the people they turned into rule lovers and people haters.

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Remind us that while we drive in our warm trucks and sit in our cozy living rooms with grape soda floats and movie stars on the big box, there are people who sit in self-made boxes or peer-made boxes or culture-made boxes with broken hearts or broken bodies or broken minds or the worst of all, broken spirits. Remind us that they might never know what a treasure they are to the people of this world and to the Maker of this world…if someone doesn’t tell them. If someone doesn’t show them.

Remind us that every action we choose can change the world. And if maybe the bad is just too big and we can’t change the world, remind us that we can at least help the world.

Remind us that you give us the tools.

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Help us use all we have to help the world.

Because God, in the fall when it’s all dying…and in the spring when it’s all new…and in the winter when it’s all quiet…and in the summer when it’s full of light and fun…

…this world always needs help.

This world needs you.

This world needs you now.

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And as the giggles fall on my ears, the fireweed burns red and the air smells a little like death and little like life and all at once and I’m reminded again…

I need you too.

We love you Lord God.

And we’re thankful, so thankful for what you gave us when you gave us your son and you gave us the cross.

And your grace. We cling to your grace.

We’re so thankful He’s alive.

We’re so thankful God’s not dead.

We’re so thankful for your love.

Lord God, we’re so thankful for you.

~

 My hope is built on nothing less

Than Jesus blood and righteousness

I dare not trust the sweetest frame

But wholly trust in Jesus name.

Christ alone; Cornerstone…

Weak made strong; in the Savior’s love

Through the storm,

He is Lord,

Lord of all…

(Cornerstone, Hillsong United)

 

 

Photo credits: {Fireweed, This Crazy Little Farm} {The Good Shepherd, Greg Olsen} {The Prodigal Son, Charlie Mackesy} {Widow’s Mite, Amy Pectol} {The Sower, Unknown}

 

The Shed

 

 

For every house is built by someone, but God is the builder of everything. Hebrews 3:4

The shed fell and my heart fell too.

One long season of building a structure.

But really…

…building a marriage too.

The house, a stake in the ground, a foundation of love.

This is where we stay. We’re not moving anymore. We’re not going away from here. Or away from us. We’re not leaving.

The shed, that first monument. Our sign on the door. The first wall up. An I’ll build this greenhouse side for you and I’ll build this shed side for me and together we’ll build it and it’s ours and it’s us.

That’s what the shed was.

One side for him, for man things, the tools, the work side.

The ‘I’ll take care of things and we’ll keep our stuff in here and sometimes it will be messy and cluttered and sometimes things will hang from the roof and sometimes I won’t know exactly where those things are because I am just a man after all but it will all be here for the finding and when we need it’ side.

It’ll be there, right here at our fingertips. The things you need will be right here. Right here because I’m.not.going.anywhere.

And one side for me. A smaller side, a softer side, a side drawn right out of his own mind, his own love idea and right onto that paper in black and white, a part of the plan and it belongs right there, has to be right there, attached and joined to his half. Clear walls and full of light and fun and this is where we’ll grow things.

The side just for me that he draws in and in drawing it he says it. ‘You’ll be able to create, I know you love to. You are sometimes messy and a lot of the times start things you don’t want to or know how to finish but you need a spot to grow beauty and I want you to be able to in this place. For you. For me. For us. This is a place I know you’d want to be and while we need my side, a practical side, I know you need a creative side too and I want that for you.’

My side says this shed is different and this shed is love and this shed gives hope.

Hope drawn into the plan, hope right next to your side and being side by side makes us one and joined and attached and I’m.not.going.anywhere.

Strong hands drew up that plan, a custom, one-of-a-kind, fearfully and wonderfully made plan…no one else has a shed like it kind of plan.

And strong hands chose lumber and strong hands hauled and hammered and cut.

And then strong hands rebuilt a marriage.

Built a shelter, and though just a shed, it was somehow still a place out of the storm for her, for him, from the rain that’d been falling and falling…

…and soaking them in their own darkness over a year.

He hammered and cut, and sometimes they hammered and hauled together and when it was done…oh..when it was done…

…it was theirs.

Proudly it stood, side by side, for that first winter, and the next winter after and for years and years, reminding them of what they built.

What he built when they’d both said we’re not going anywhere.

And the shed they built became the shed they really needed and with each baby came more need …

…and the boats and the tools …the shed became a shed.

A full shed, a cute shed…a shed full of memories…a shed full of things.

The monument, the stake in the ground, now a statue covered in moss. Showing years and altogether beautiful…

…patina showing its age.

Its age and use and love.

And when the foundation moved…the foundation of the marriage, well, when that happened, the foundation of the shed shifted too.

The sinkhole they didn’t know was there shifted the shed downward.

But the foundation on the Rock that they were learning IS there, it shifted the marriage upward.

Toward strength. Toward oneness. Toward forever. Toward light after the dark and rainbows after the storm and no more need for fixing or for shed building.

Toward the One with even stronger hands. Hands that took the nails and made all things whole again.

So after the earthquake hit,- the biggest one they’d known- and the shed was rattled, left ragged and tippy, looking at them tiredly for weeks as the last aftershocks rolled through…

…looking at them like this might just be the last sink this old shed can take…there wasn’t much surprise when the oldest boy came to say, very matter of factly…

“Mama? Our shed is no more.“

The roof, flat and near level with the ground, held that wet heavy snow while it all pushed and pushed down on the frame of that shed, built with so much love…so much hope back then…

…until the boards just couldn’t take the weight…

…and it all caved in.

And the practical side, the man side, with all the tools and the tires, lay right next to the light side, the pretty side, the place he built for her to grow things.

Yes, the shed fell flat.

But the foundation?

The foundation is now firm.

And for that…

…the shed has faithfully served its purpose.

For we know that if the earthly tent we live in is destroyed, we have a building from God, an eternal house in heaven, not built by human hands. 2 Corinthians 5:1

the shed blog

© This Crazy Little Farm

Get Used to It

So I finished writing a little book yesterday.

Actually, I finished it back in October, but yesterday I finished finished it. I finished my edits and proofreading and cuts and adds and rewrote that dreaded twelfth chapter and I got it to the point where it’s finished enough that I’m excited for other eyeballs to see it.

That kind of finish.

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If it’s going to go anywhere other than the top drawer of my filing cabinet, there will be more finishing I know. Little changes that I had completely missed in the editing were flying off the page and crash landing on my eyeballs last night in the printing.

So really, it’s not finished but…yesterday, in my mind, I finished my little book.

And it felt kinda weird.

Kinda sweet and sorrowful and fulfilling and grown up and juvenile… all at the same time.

Because who hasn’t wanted to write a book right?

Since high school I’ve wanted to write one. Since being married I’ve wanted to write one. Since moving to Alaska I’ve wanted to write one. Since being a mama I’ve wanted to write one. Since becoming a Christian I’ve wanted to write one. Since people tell me to I’ve wanted to write one and then doesn’t a woman just get busy in the days of growing and loving and raising up a life and a family?

But if you’re like me, having a mind that constantly yearns to write, you think in blank pages and the thoughts you think form in lines, sometimes tidy and sometimes flung but always, always that white page with words. It waits ready on the backdrop of the brain.

Even in the busy, the writing is always there.

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My husband doesn’t share my love for words. The page in his brain has grids and lines and drawings and things solid. His page holds work and touch and nature, and reading is okay for a day or so…but let’s put the book down and get back to real life now.

He has a lot to say but he would probably never set out to write a book. His mind mixes the letters and mixes the words and writing me a card is a beautiful finish for his writing hand. Oh he’s smart. And he has a lot of words. He just likes to whisper them soft or laugh them together.

Not everyone knows how to organize and compartmentalize their words. Sometimes when you are one who puts down words, you forget, not everyone is. Sometimes words don’t always have to be written. Sometimes they just need to be lived.

So when he reads mine and doesn’t have a lot to say but his eyes water tender, I know that means the words I put down are good words. I know he loves them. I know he loves me.

And when the world wants to go and tear down a woman for doing marriage and life the way she believes best, haven’t we forgotten? Forgotten that sometimes, the way of this world, this culture, is not always the best way but that there’s a page and there’s a Word and it is compartmentalized and it is organized and it is grace…and it is good.

But we’ve taken those words and we’ve made them bad and we’ve used them to stifle and degrade and make ugly what He wrote beautiful when He said For this reason a man will leave his father and mother and be united to his wife, and they will become one flesh.

How could that ever be oppressive? How could the beauty of two souls uniting in flesh and being seen as one unit of two individuals before the maker of this universe ever be scorn worthy?

Or is it the submit part that causes the ruckus?

Maybe this one: Everyone must submit to governing authorities. Can’t we agree though, that there needs to be submission to the authorities? Don’t we appreciate the organized and compartmentalized word of the speed limit that keeps, if not all of us, most of us, traveling along safely together and collision free?

Or maybe it’s this one that causes all the trouble: Submit to one another out of reverence for Christ. Is it because we think the other person should be doing it all that this one offends? Any person married more than a year understands that marriage is a two-way street. There is no My Way or the Highway in a healthy marriage. There just can’t be. So why would we have such a hard time with the idea of submitting to one another?

Maybe those aren’t the submission verses that get everyone in a twist and make normally nice people turn into name-calling, mud-slinging opinion ranters.

I betcha it’s this one:  Wives, submit to your husbands as to the Lord. For the husband is the head of the wife as Christ is the head of the church.

Ah, yes. There’s the issue.

We women don’t like to hear that we’re not the boss. That we don’t wear the pants. That we don’t keep him on a short string. That our roar isn’t as loud as we think it is, that our You’ve Come a Long Way baby might mean something different than what we want it to mean.  We might not even know exactly what it means, but we don’t.like.the.word.s-u-b-m-i-t.

Period.

One little word will get this nation in an uproar.

So what if I didn’t? Submit. What if I didn’t voluntarily place myself under the leadership of my husband? What if I didn’t want to play by the rules and I wanted to scorn those women who read the words and love the Word and are an example to this world of how to live it out?

What if instead of letting my team captain be the team captain and my coach be the coach, what if I went gang busters unsubmissive and decided I didn’t want to do MY job of being on the team and building up the team and leading the team right from where I was positioned? What would happen then?

Submitting doesn’t mean we’re just sitting on the bench, folks.

And us Christians? Those of us who follow what the Bible says about marriage right there all through the New Testament? We understand that if it’s not your belief too, you won’t understand what it means to be on this team and so you’re certainly not going to follow the Playbook. But we don’t hold it against you, because really, we look forward to the day when you’re on our team too. We want you on our team. We love the coach and we know how much he loves you and spends this season recruiting you as one of his best players.

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But if you decide in your mind that the game’s just that, a game, a made up bunch of scrimmages, well, that’s okay. Because we’re gonna keep at it anyway. We’re gonna run the race and we’re gonna play the plays and we’re gonna use it all up for that coach and our team because it’s not just a game.

And those husbands he puts on our team? Those leaders he gives us, each wife her own team captain? Guess what their job is?

Husbands, love your wives, just as Christ loved the church and gave himself up for her…husbands ought to love their wives as their own bodies.

There’s a whole lot of words in that job description. But we forget that part sometimes don’t we? The coach tells husbands to be just like Jesus. And what did Jesus do for his church? He died. He thought so much of his bride that He made himself little and he died for her in order to make her beautiful and blemish-free.

I can get behind a leader like that can’t you?

Wives, our husbands are the team captain, the lead player, the ball kicker and the quarter back of the family. If the team is going to take a hit, he’s to be the one to take it. If someone’s body is to be bruised, he’s the one to withstand it. He’s to take his big and his strong and make sure his team is safe and able to play well and that they’re all doing what the coach wants them to do.

And as his woman, we’re to be right there beside him. Running with him, ready to take over a play should he need a rest, willing to take the field should the team need it, helping him determine exactly what it is the coach said, and always, always to be a cheerleader and encourager to him and the rest of the family team.

That’s submit. Simple. Not ugly. Not oppressive. Not door mat. It’s the breakdown of the team and everyone has a job and when everyone’s doing that job it’s like a dance on the field and it makes sense and it works. It works because the words in the Word says it will work.

And when my husband, my non-word loving husband who has come to cherish the words of his coach and has come to quietly love the words his wife puts down and call her his wordsmith in secret, when he hears that the little book I’ve been working so hard on all these months is finally finished, he has some words for me.

He tells me congratulations.

He pauses and picks them carefully. He knows this is a time for some words. He has learned that a writer heart needs more than “fine” and “good” and that when a piece of that heart is splayed open out there on the page, a soul can squirm until it hears just the words it needs to know that it really is finished. He has learned to put his words together and whisper what his word lover needs to hear.

“How does it feel honey?”

I tell him the feeling is odd, finishing something you always wanted to do. Taking paths different than the ones you originally thought you’d take. Having it be done.

“It’s a weird feeling, finishing a book” I tell him, ready now to move it off the desk and get on with the day and just let it sit awhile, this heart still a little squirmy and insecure with the idea of feeling like a writer, doubtful at the thought of maybe even being a writer.

He’s not done with his words though. He’s the captain and now he’s the cheerleader and he may not love words like I love words but he loves his wordsmith and he knows his job is to help make her feel radiant and make her be radiant so he simply says “Well babe,”

“…You better get used to it.”

I am my beloved’s and my beloved is mine. Song of Songs 6:3

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Scriptures cited: Genesis 2:24, (Romans 13:1-2) (Ephesians 5:21) Ephesians 5:22-24 Ephesians 5:25-28

 

Tsk Tsk Bloggy To-Do

The Liebert.

The Zero to Hero.

Items on my bloggy to-do list, haunting my days and my nights. Keeping me awake…tossing…turning…rolling on my bed in the wee hours then staring back up at me from my coffee cup come morning.

Well okay, not really.

But there is this slight little pressure between my shoulder blades. That’s what happens to a wanna-be Type A when crucial bloggy tasks such as these remain undone.

So this is what I’m gonna do.

I’m going to follow along on the Zero to Hero only as I can. I’m kinda happy with how this thing is shaking out so far. I’m not out to have hundreds of followers. Heck, truth be known, I’m just happy to see real, live people who are not spammers down on my sweet little visitor’s list. Seriously.  Give me a few writers, a few Mamas, some folks who love Jesus too, add my high school English teacher into the mix and BAM, I’m in bloggy Heaven. What more’s a gal need?

So I’ll just poke along the Z2H path as I can but really, having this pretty little corner to tuck my writing into is the perfect amount of fun for now. Having a few friends and some new blog pals actually read it…that there is just yummy icing.

Now. Liebert.

Liebert, Liebert, Liebert.

What am I gonna do about you Liebert?

I’ve been doing some research.

There are two camps. People who LOVE blog awards. People who {{squeallll}} in delight when someone lays one on their blog. That’s what I did. Squeeeall. Like it was the Emmys squeal.

Not everyone squeals. There there are folks who are polite and gracious and kind with their words and say: Yeah. Thanks. But NO thanks!

And I kinda get that a little…there’s a few stips to this award thingy.

So what’s a new-to-blogging gal to do? Especially when she doesn’t really have many blog friends yet, and those she does either 1) have thousands of followers (literally thousands), 2) have already been hit with at least 8 Liebert nominations and are working their way through the legwork or 3) have sweetly and respectfully tucked and rolled their way out of a dozen nominations in their comment log?

Really. What’s a gal to do?

This is what this gal is gonna do:

I’m going to nominate two of the blogs I’ve read that do not fall into one of those three abovementioned criteria and call it good. I have read some uh-may-zing blogs…and I know there are gajillions more here on the Word Press. I just haven’t been able to explore that many yet. My reader list is small and I’m kinda slow, so rather than let the slow take the lead, I’ll let the small go first 🙂

Here’s my two. I hope I don’t kicked off Word Press for not following the rules. I especially hope I won’t have to give my purty and shiny OscarImeanLiebert back.

Without further ado, I nominate:

Rachel over at At the Corner of 14th and Oak. She’s got an adorable little blog, all full of nostalgia and history, which I totally dig and she talks about seeking and searching, all in an open, honest way, which I also totally dig.

Heidi over at His Will, His Way. She’s got a great thing going and honors the Lord with her precious new blog. Love it.

So gals, here’s how it goes:

liebster

The rules:

1. Thank the person who nominated you and link to their blog.

2. You must answer the 10 questions given to you by the nominee before you.

3. You must nominate 10 of your favorite blogs with fewer than 200 followers and notify them of their nomination.

4. You must come up with 10 questions for your nominees to answer.

Here are my ten questions for my not-quite ten bloggers:

1) What made you decide to start your blog?

2) What are your goals for your blog?

3) If you are a writer? An artist? A blogger? All of the above?…How much of your life to you devote to these talents?

4) If you were able to visit anywhere in the world, where would it be?

5) Dogs or cats?

6) Introvert or extrovert?

7) City or country?

8) Write then post, edit a little before hitting enter or obsess over a piece for days before any eyes see it?

9) Summer or winter?

10) What’s your biggest blogging/writing/online challenge?

Phew. That was kinda hard.

Now I’m off to let them know I’ve nominated them.

And maybe I’ll finally get a good night’s sleep tonight.

🙂

Up in the Hood

Day 4: Explore the Neighborhood

“Blogging is a communal experience; if you didn’t want anyone to read your posts or interact with you, you’d keep a private diary… Today, you begin the process of engaging with the blogging community, a key step of building an audience.”

Today’s assignment: follow five new topics in the Reader, and begin finding blogs (and bloggers) you love.

I’ve been here a little over a week I think.

Found some AWESOME blogs to follow already! My blogging friend gave me that assignment on my very first day here.

Check. Day 4 done.

So I thought I’d “explore the neighborhood” some in the folks that have found me here on my crazy little farm.

Anddd…soo..yeahhh..ummm…

About that.

I guess it makes sense that stepping onto the worldwide web would bring out opportunistic internet salespeople and make them glom on just like they do when you make a ton of online orders right before Christmas and then notice that your email is getting an extraordinarily high number of spam mail come January.

I get it.

But I guess there was an itty bitty part of my tender writer’s heart that thought this was going to be a cozy little place where all of us author wanna-be folks sat around with our doodled up notebooks and our skinny lattes and oohed and aahhed as we read each others brilliant words and passages and pieces.

Yeah. Not so much.

Where do these folks come from anyway?

And why do I have to have them taking up space around our little writing table with their internet sales pitches and their fake profiles that hide their pornographic websites?

You know the ones….they don’t even bring a coffee to the table.

No profile or website other than either a) a grainy pic that looks like it was snapped in someone’s basement or b) a “studio” pic that could be taken off a local real estate agent’s business card or c) a high adventure photo that includes white sand, snowboarding, coastal resorts or tan people in bikinis.

I’m fixin to cry here. I thought this gig would be me, some of my bffs, and a few new friends I’d make on blogosphere. And my high school English teacher of course.

Not single men looking for women or single women looking for love or photos of people who supposedly travel the world and do all the amazing-incredible-you’ve-not-lived-life-until-you’ve-lived-like-me sorts of jobs that us normal everyday boring in the dark schmucks like me are just waiting to sign up for so we can give up the drab nothingness we’ve lived so far and FINALLY have the life we’ve always dreamed of.

Puh-leeze.

Sigh.

{{Sip the latte}}

This must make me a Pollyanna amateur writer wanna-be, thinking this would be a great place to network, write, grow, sharpen my skills and learn how to start giving a little more time to the writer side of me.

Is this really how it is now?

Everyone after an easy buck?

Everyone glomming onto the coattails of other people so they can tout their get-rich-quick bs?

Ah, the bitter taste of disillusionment.

I’ll stick to my coffee thank you very much.

How funny is it that my husband tells me “if you want people to read your writing you have to put it in a place where people can read it.”

And by putting it in a place where folks can read it, I’m sitting among folks who have no interest in reading it.

This makes me mad. Mad for me, who gives darn good time to stringing these here words out, and mad for all the folks here who do the same. Flamin mad I tell ya.

But then I go peek through my itty bitty list. And not everyone’s a Take Advantage Of kind of follower.

There are some here in this place who LOVE writing.

Who LOVE catching up on the world via blogs.

Who LOVE sharing their words and honing their skill.

Who LOVE encouraging others.

Who LOVE me.

And THAT right there is why I’ll stay.

That right there is why I’ll  continue to blog and if you want to bring your nasty and your schemes and your sales pitch I will let you sit here because I have to, it’s a public blog after all, but I don’t have to listen to your attempts to take advantage of me, or anyone else here in this community. While I understand you need to make a living, the rest of us are here for the reasons of wanting to write, wanting to share, wanting to learn, wanting to grow and wanting to read what others have to say.

There’s no coat tails in them there reasons.

So.

Go on and jump off your ski slopes in British Columbia, and go on and bed the woman of your dreams in Bali.

But me?

Me and my friends, well we’ll be right here, writing our little  hearts out and living this boring old writer’s blogging life just like everybody else.

And we’ll be loving it.

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© Cassandra Rankin, This Crazy Little Farm

{{photo credit: <a href=”http://www.flickr.com/photos/explainthatstuff/9994605475/”>explainthatstuff</a> via <a href=”http://photopin.com”>photopin</a> <a href=”http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/”>cc</a>}}

Day 3 – Heaven Came Down, Crazy Little Farms, and Words that Come Forth

Zero to Hero Blogger

Day 3: What’s on your mind? When you thought about starting a blog… Today, you’ll write it.

Today’s assignment: write the post that was on your mind when you decided to start a blog.

The post that was on my mind when I started to blog and the post I posted were two totally different things.

This blog was initially going to be Heaven Came Down. Because Heaven did come down.

But that name was already taken.

So I changed directions and used a piece I’d recently written as the inspiration for the name and feel of my little nook here on the net.

You can read it here: Life is Messy and Things Aren’t Always Little on This Crazy Little Farm

That really is who we are and what we’re all about on this crazy little farm.

And it’s funny how, with a family and kids and a farm and animals…they kinda all roll into everything you do and you’re learning always and even when it’s not about the farm it’s still about the farm ya know?

I don’t know if that makes sense to you.

But it does to me and that’s why my posts aren’t always specifically about farming.

It’s a guarantee though that they’re usually all about growing.

And maybe that there is where the farming comes in.

{{The piece that made me start my own blog}}

Heaven Came Down

It’s been ten years since I told Jesus I do.

A short ten years. In that decade I’ve watched a lot of other people get baptized.

And do you know, after they come up we always sing Now I belong to Jesus. But on the day I came up it was Heaven Came Down. Just that once for some reason. Oh what a wonderful, wonderful day.

And on that day Heaven did come down. And glory filled my soul.

But some days it’s just too much. And that filled soul just wants to weep.

When there are people dying of cancer. Or when three families stagger under the loss of their loved ones and whole communities grieve their stunned hearts out. Or when a mama leaves early and her babies are little, so little. Or when a baby leaves early and her mama is left just a shell. When cities riot. When a dear friend’s heart is breaking. When a country falls apart.

And today the preacher talked about a caterpillar. Tucked up tight in its cocoon, all wrapped up in there.

Clinging.

A thread.

Holding right there tight to the branch. Secure, that tree keeps the cocoon from falling…

…right on down into nothing.

Into death.

Those strong men today telling Jesus I do, up out of the clean, getting stronger. They didn’t fall. Slippery floor they stand and against the stagger they stood and they said Now, I belong to Jesus.

And then that cocoon…

…oh what emerges. The butterfly…flying, and don’t we all know that story? That beauty of when Heaven came down?

And we weep with joy.

But we weep with sadness too. At the weight of what death leaves behind. The shell.

But when it emerges, when we watch for it, if we look and see, search for it with all our hearts….

…in the falling we can still find the beauty. Right there in the weight of it all, right there in the sadness…

…glory fills our souls.

…weeping may remain for a night, but rejoicing comes in the morning. Psalm 30:5

© Cassandra Rankin, This Crazy Little Farm

Last Day of a Decade

My life is no longer than the width of my hand. An entire lifetime is just a moment to you; human existence is but a breath.  Psalm 39:5

On the last dIphone photos Summer 2013 501ay of her twenties it was all new.

New in the marriage that, at a decade old, was starting to change. New in the child that was not yet two. New in the friends that were coming into her life. New in not working the job she once loved to instead work each day in her warm old house. New in the baby that was still at her breast.

And it was especially new in the Book she was reading, that anthology of 66 that was teaching her so many things…so, so many of them…all brand new.

New ways of living. New ways of learning. New ways of growing. New ways of reacting. New ways of saying yes. New ways of saying no. New ways of trusting.

She was fresh up from the water.

New.

And when she turned thirty, her friends came and her husband smiled and her heart beamed. And she wondered.

The old could still cling on.

She wasn’t sure what the pull inside was exactly, it just felt…new.

So she kept following it. Even when the old pulled on.

Then two more babies later, and many more times in that Book, through that Book…late night prayers and late night tears and missing him when he had to go to work, sometimes far away, and loving him when he came home, and smiling when he too came up fresh out of the water, and learning how those children grow and how they act and how they love and what makes them giggle…and praying, praying all the years along and then one day soon before she knows it…

…it’s the last day of another decade.

And it’s not the old kind of new anymore.

It feels like a different kind of new.

A comfortable new. A familiar new. A warm new.

An old new.

It might not be a new new but in this life, isn’t every day new?

A sunrise, a good morning smile, jobs waiting, chores to be done, friends to be made, people to love. Another day, just one day, fresh, ours, air into the lungs, God into the heart.

New.

The old can still cling on, but not so much anymore.

The last day of her thirties she smiled the whole day through.

Through the leaky roof and the chores and the blue tarp and the mud and the rain that just went on and on.

When her boy, not near two now, but near on twelve, did the wet and cold and messy man work on the farm while his Daddy worked hard for their paycheck, her heart smiled and she thought of him as a toddler. Back then he liked to help Mama bake cookies, his strong mama who held him tight. He liked to help her do the fun work of homemaking. Now he likes to help his mama with the hard work, the ugly work of farm making. She doesn’t have to be so strong when he’s there. Almost a man he shows her.

And her heart smiles joy.

That girl, that baby just a decade ago, she tends too, but she tends tender and keeps the young ones inside, warm and dry and away from the parts of farm life that just might hurt a heart too young. She protects without even knowing that’s what she’s doing and because she does, they get a little more time to just be little. Almost a mama that girl could be.

And her heart smiles love.

Those other two, precious babies, so tall now but always her babies, coming in the first half of the decade, they hold her heart and make her smile. Growing so big. But still so fresh. So young. So new.

And her heart smiles peace.

And that old that clings on doesn’t cling so tight.

And the new she feels is an older new.

A wiser new.

A thankful new.

What can another decade bring? This marriage, still new but almost crossing the two-decade line; these children, growing so strong, learning so much, changing each minute;  these friends, holding her up, making her laugh and growing with her year by year, what more could come?

What new could come?

Could it be here in that Book? That Book, that 66 volume Book, old but so fresh.

Alive.

Active.

Ancient.

New.

She flips through its pages that last week and realizes how much more she wants to learn. There is so much more to know about Him, that One who wrote it for her, for all of them, and she looks forward to a whole new decade of learning…reading…studying…growing.

The old that clings on now is the old that smiles.

Her history.

The path that brought her round on to Him.

The road to Jesus that marched her straight through her thirties. That two-track that feels like the road she always wanted to take…the road she never wants to veer off of.

She feels the pull and it still feels…new.

New ways of living. New ways of learning. New ways of growing. New ways of reacting. New ways of saying yes. New ways of saying no. New ways of trusting.

How much more can another decade bring when the past ten years brought so much?

Those are the things she ponders up in her heart on that day….

… the last day of a decade.

Ancient words ever true…Changing me and changing you…We have come with open hearts…Oh, let the ancient words impartImage