Seeing Red

I’m out of the loop here on the farm. Intentionally.

We keep the TV just for movie rentals and Netflix, I’m constantly forgetting to pay my newspaper bill, and for the sake of my sanity, (and my family’s), I limit my time on the local news chat groups.

Some folks might call that sticking my head in the sand.

I call it keeping my home peaceful, focused, and free from angst.

Oh I’m aware of the evils.

Pollution. Tweakers. Police brutality. Hatred for law enforcement. Riots. Corrupt politicians. Orphans. ISIS.

And now, this week, red paper cups.

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You’d have to be a homeschooling mom with no cable living on a farm in the middle of nowhere in rural Alaska ((awkward pause for crickets…)) to not hear about the red cup debacle.

I haven’t read all the posts. I don’t CARE about all the posts.

But is there one written like this already?

Cuz I don’t know…

I’m a Christian. Evangelical even.

And I LIKE the red cup.

I have no qualms with it whatsoever and I even went so far as to think maybe Starbucks was getting a little evangelical too. I kinda want to stand up and applaud them.

Because really?

As a Christian, as a Christ follower, as one who puts her hope and her faith and her life at the foot of the worn and weary and rugged cross…

…a simple red cup with no words or pictures speaks LOUDLY to me.

A simple red cup reminds me of Christmas.

A simple red cup reminds me to keep things simple.

A simple red cup reminds me that life, and the holiday season doesn’t need to be, SHOULDN’T BE, cluttered up with junk and glitz and trashy materialistic bling.

A simple red cup reminds me that simply drinking a cup of coffee is a wonderful pleasure and a privilege.

A simple red cup reminds me that it’s not the packaging that counts but what’s inside.

A simple red cup reminds me of the exciting stories that live in my heart and in my history and that I know them because they’re in my worn and tear-stained copy of the book with red letters that were written by some of my favorite men of all time under the direction of their master and maestro Who is my favorite-ever coffee companion.

A simple red cup reminds me of hyssop and lambs and escaping death while running to freedom.

A simple red cup reminds me that there was a man with strong arms that were stretched and pierced and that the blood from those wounds covers me and every one else on this planet who know Him too and that because of that blood, those same strong arms hold the whole world and they carry it into eternity.

A simple red cup reminds me of how messy and horrific and beautiful love is.

Yes, a simple red cup simply reminds me of Jesus.

Can we just quit being mad?

Can we simply celebrate Him? Celebrate the gift He gave us?

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And if you haven’t accepted that gift yet, can you extend grace and not be mad too?

Can you ignore the nay sayers and just enjoy your cup of coffee?

And know that just like me…

…you too are simply loved.

Every good and perfect gift is from above…James 1:17

Kids and Clothes, and Mama, It’s Delightful

I used to be so tough.

A basket full of four children six and under would see me steely faced, jaw clenched, muscling my semi-truck cart through the store in firm, mama determination as I made my way through aisle after aisle with purpose and grit.

Now though? I’ve been at this shopping-for-a-family gig for awhile and quite honestly, I’ve kinda come to hate it. My once-a-month grocery shopping trips and Amazon have pretty much spoiled me for trips to the store, and lest you call me weak and wonder how I escape the mall at back-to-school time, let me remind you that we homeschool so clothes shopping isn’t a regular occurance round here.

But today I went clothes shopping with two of my lovely children who, coincidentally, happened to run out of everything to wear all at once. When I looked at my boy yesterday and realized his one good pair of jeans now had two blown-out knees and one blown-out crotch, I came to the obvious conclusion that it was time to take them to the department store. Not even Amazon Prime was gonna be fast enough to get clothes for my kid to wear to church tomorrow, so there was one solution and I knew it wasn’t gonna be pretty.

 

Somehow, in thirteen years of mommying, I’ve never once clothes shopped at the department store with more than one of my children with me. The thrift store, surrre. But that’s different. At Sally’s there’s the fun little toy section where the kids can quietly play among all the busted up second hand toys that they think are all brand new and fancy because they’re NOTHING like we have at home Mama, and while they enjoy their holiday time on the Island of Misfit Toys, I can peck carefully through the racks of second-hands and find the perfect ones to bring home at a bargain price for my little people’s dresser drawers.

But today wasn’t a Sally’s day. Today was a day when they needed new clothes and they needed them now. Today was a day when I needed to know that they would walk into the store owning one pair of pants (albeit holey), two stained-up shirts, and three single socks, and walk out with enough clothes to look presentable for at least the rest of the week, but more aspiringly, the rest of the year.

So off we went. They were excited on the way over, no one had to climb into the way-back back seat, and everyone got a turn at talking since there was only three of us in the truck.

Just my two kiddos and me and there we were, clothes shopping.

And after filling up the cart with a healthy, hefty stack of girlie possibilities while brother acted the gentleman by waiting patiently on the beige pleather armchair (the kid-version of holding the purse), I pondered exactly how different these two children are.

One is very deliberate. She likes to think things through. Extensively. And she has very high sensory preferences when it comes to anything touching her body. Tags slay her. And sleeves that don’t reach her wrist bones can ruin her day. Tight things are of the devil. So are low collars. Especially V-Necks. Crew necks are okay but don’t even mention the words scoop neck. Or wool. Or anything that is not as soft as your favorite pair of softie jams. Or that is not one of her favorite colors.

 

Within seconds of parking the pile in the dressing room hallway, I remembered all these things from all the Sunday-morning fashion fiascos and I worked her pile into a color-coordinated assembly-line system of trying on structure and order, making her name each item with a No, Maybe, or Yes.

My other one built a pile of shirts in his size, ripped off his clothes and went one by one through the stack, yelling YES! for his favorites before the hem of the shirt even touched the waist of his underwear, or tearing them off within a millisecond if he didn’t care for it, tossing it into the No pile before the hair had even settled back onto his head. I don’t think we even got to the code-word game in his little room.

Four hours and hundreds of dollars later, I about laughed in mad-woman hysterics when the cashier told me that the 25% off Doorbuster coupon I’d been clutching tightly in my fist for the past three hours had expired two hours before, promptly at 1 p.m. just like it says right there in the small print ma’am.  And then, I near melted to the floor in a puddle of mama mush when the big red honking siren-light at the exit doors went off.

The angst.

I dragged my children and my bags back to the checkout line where the sweet elderly clerk went through every.single.item until she found the offending black magnet tag.

It was then that my son told me he hadn’t even eaten breakfast before we left the house.

My composure threatened to crack when I heard that, so I pasted on the everything’s greaaattt Sunday morning church smile at alllll the folks I met on the way out the doors and at the nice drivers who saw me clutching my children’s hands and bags of new wardrobe and figured I was either a sweet, smiling mom who needed a break in traffic or that I was a maniacal Mrs. Joker who was just about to snap so they’d better stay back. I held it together so much that I even managed a three-fingered wave and a head tip to one of them before I finding my truck and making sure all the clothes and both the kids were tucked and buckled.

We pulled out of the parking lot, it was near dark now, dinner time, so I rolled over to Taco Bell and ordered one of everything on the menu for my hungry, wilty children and got them each a soda pop, which only happens when Mama is besieged by guilt over somehow not feeding her child breakfast before subjecting him to HOURS of waiting outside the women’s fitting room while his sister deliberated over a pair of jeggings like a hung jury.

My knees were still trembling with Post Traumatic Shopping Syndrome but my white-knuckle grip on the steering wheel helped to steady me and I flipped on the headlights and pointed the truck toward home.

We hit the highway and big sis passes out tacos and napkins and takes a big gulp of her Sprite and she sighs happy and deep.

“You know what? That was the first time I ever remember clothes shopping like that.”

“Mmmmh. Uh huh.” It’s barely a mumble from my throat but finally, my nerves feel like they might be able to come back and live inside my body again.

“And you know what else Mama?” She chomps on a bite of taco and looks at the dusk outside rolling by.

“Hmmm?” I think back to when they were toddlers and I thought I had it down.

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She shakes the ice in her cup and wipes her mouth and I’m able to smile now, and yes, it used to be hard, but sometimes it feels even harder than it was now that they’re getting bigger, but isn’t it all a joy?

And she smiles back and she says “Mama…it was just delightful.”

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Birthdays and Beaches and Turning Forty-Two

Sometimes a mama can get busy and when that happens, every little interruption becomes a big interruption and then pretty soon the baby who’s not really a baby anymore comes in and his big brown eyes well over and he hugs long and tight and he says “Mama the sign at the hardware store says ‘don’t be so busy making a living that you forget to live the life you made'”. DSC_0877

And my heart quivers in my chest a little and even though it’s just a short-term project that’s taken me away from my normal everyday routine for the past week, to them…a week without mama is a long time.

It worked out nicely that it rained so hard over my birthday…our outdoorsy stuff could be put on hold. And by the time they all got home from shopping with Daddy for Mama -how they love to spoil me with hair pretties and earrings and construction paper cards- everyone was too tired to go to the movie we were all itching to see.

So I kept on working.

And he kept on coming in for extra hugs.

I pushed the guilt aside, no time for stopping when there are already too many stops to get this thing done.

But then today, after the third solid day it dawned on me.

We’ve weathered cancer and we’ve weathered loss and we’ve weathered pain and we’ve weathered struggle and along with all the weathering there have been stops to get out of the rain and if we didn’t stop we might’ve just shriveled and is that what He meant when He said Be Still and Know that I am God?

If I DON’T stop working, my baby might stop hugging.

The project will get done.

The work will be finished.

The computer will still be waiting.

But my babies are growing.

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This weekend I turned forty-two, and half my life is on the wind and if this body faces aging and if Jesus waits to call me Home, I may have another forty-two years on this old planet here, and that’s only four more times to celebrate the really big anniversaries with my beloved and that’s only thirty-one more times to have birthday parties for my babies before they’ve all gone on to not be babies anymore and that’s only forty-two more times that they’ll all squish right on up next to me and whisper and squeal in delight as I slowly and suspensefully rip open their little packages wrapped with layers of paper towel and newspaper and tied messy with all the Christmas ribbon in the world.

If I’m not still and set the projects aside and let the to-do list lie down for a rest, how will they know I love this life we made more than I love making the living?

I shut the computer down and asked my husband to take us to our favorite beach.

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And we celebrated my birthday.

We celebrated the beauty of this earth God made.

We celebrated family.

And we celebrated life.

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He says, “Be still, and know that I am God; I will be exalted among the nations, I will be exalted in the earth.”  Psalm 46:10

More With Me Than Without

I opened my eyes and do what I normally do, grab my iPhone. Kept close for an alarm, it serves as a way to get some things done before my feet hit the floor and my mind hits the day.

But then I remembered.

There is someone I need to talk to first.

Thank you for another day Jesus. I want to be a good steward of this day and all you’ve given. Thank you for a heart that beats and lungs that breathe and for your gift of salvation. Thank you for loving me even when I am unlovable.

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How easy is it to just plow ahead and forget? How many days of forgetting until we just forget altogether? Why does our to-do list claw at the fiber of our day, every day?

And isn’t a soul at peace after a talk with the Lord?

The big warm man next to me fills his side of the bed and as he reminds me in not-quite-wakefulness that today is my birthday and says more with me than without now, I remember.

I’d just turned twenty-one when we wed. Just a pup. A bawling, demanding pup and now, today, I turn forty-two so that means I’ve officially been married to this man half my life.

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I try not to bawl and demand so much now.

I still feel like a pup most days though.

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How does it go so fast?

How does time claw at the fiber of our days and make them go so fast that sometimes we forget?

I don’t want to forget. I don’t want the next twenty-one years to go as fast as these.

I want to embrace every moment now. Embrace my people. All my people. This life.

Half my life in this life and what’s the second half going to bring?

Thank you Jesus for the breath in my lungs and the blood in my body and the good man in my bed and the beautiful children in my heart and the family who holds us and the friends who love us and help me to be a good and then better steward of it all. Help me not bawl and demand like the pup I still drag around on the leash you cut for me so long ago.

Help me cherish each moment and help me not forget even for a second.

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The kids make me pancakes and sing. Two besties text precious blessings and my mama calls to celebrate all these years of being my mama. Facebook fills up just like my heart and then Chuck the house- quail screams his raptor scream and it mixes with all the house and in it I hear life is nutty and life is fast but birthdays are good and all the days are good so embrace every last ounce of them.

And all these sounds…all these people…all these critters…

…these are the things that help me not forget.

And I embrace the day.

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Hit rewind, click delete.  Stand face to face with the younger me… All of the mistakes… All of the heartbreak… Here’s what I’d do differently, I’d 

 Love like I’m not scared,  Give when it’s not fair,  Live life for another,  Take time for a brother
Fight for the weak ones,  Speak out for freedom,  Find faith in the battle,  Stand tall but above it all
Fix my eyes on You
~On You~

(Fix My Eyes, For King and Country)

 

Gettin’ On Autumn

I had the rare opportunity to drive home at dusk with my girl after a late meeting.

This time of year, us Alaskans start to see things we haven’t seen in quite a few months.

Like stars.

Pitch blackness.

Snow on the mountains.

Aurora borealis.

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And she tells me, sometimes at night, when it’s starting to get dark like it is right now, me and Colton just like to go outside and take a big gulp of nighttime air.

And when it’s crisp and it’s sharp and it smells like cranberries….

…that’s how we know it’s Fall.

And there in my truck…holding her sweet hand…watching the stars twinkle over the dusky mountain…

…she reminds me what it’s like to be a child again.
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One Matters

If there were a few more days to August, it could just take a mama out at the knees.

We’re at the end of it now and the yellow leaves have begun to flutter down slow and it’s becoming a little easier to breathe.

Round here, we don’t much look forward to winter when the days will get short and the nights will get cold and the darkness just goes on, and on most of those short cold days we’ll pine wistful for the long-gone time of summer when the midnight sun beams round the clock and projects get done and fish get caught and energy stays high and the mountains shine bright.

We’ll mourn summer’s passing.

But sometimes, when the babies get big and the farm gets busy, the shortness can bring a fastness and in the summer rush of things…

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…a mama’s spirit can get blistered with burn.

Oh, she’ll keep going.

She’ll keep doing what us mamas do…

..running and cooking and laughing and project planning…

…the fairs, the butchering, the events, the camping…

But at the end of it, she’ll stand rumpled and disheveled, gravel in her Birkstocks and manure on her cowboy boots, dust in her nostrils and sand in her hair, with a thick, black line of August right up under her fingernails and she’ll feel a little beat up from the grittiness of it all.

She’ll feel a little traumatized.

And she’ll want to retreat.

To hide.

To be one less in the crowd of folks who all seem to have weathered the past thirty-one days with neat hair and clean shoes.

She might even feel outside of them, these ones she once felt so much a part of.

And she might wonder if she even matters to anyone but the little band within her walls, the ones she orchestrates and dances with daily.

Saddest of all, she’ll wonder if she’s even been missed in this flurry of days that has taken her and her and her people away from the ones she’s stood with all these Sundays, those voices she’s sang with and laughed with and cried with and grown with.

All that wonder can make a mama feel isolated. Separate from those she once felt so united with.

As if maybe she doesn’t matter.

But then one of those mornings during the thirty-one frenzied August days, she’ll hear that one of those she loves has passed into eternity while his family stood near and the sun was high, and she knows.

She knows that yes.

One does matter.

One matters.

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When the tears come over the sadness that is left in this world without that one good man…

…when his precious sweet widow’s smile is still bright because she’s happy that her beloved stands with his Savior even while she mourns with a whole community over the loss of the gentle presence her husband brought to so many people for so many years…

…when their family fills a row at church and stands as one to sing to the One who gives just three days after their strong leader flew…

…a mama is reminded.

One life matters much.

And that same night that strong gentle elder flew from this earth, my strong gentle husband took the knife from my son’s hand when it was time to butcher the pheasants that were our boy’s market sale.

We’d watched those birds grow all summer and we’d sit at their pen and in the quiet we’d observe their silent march and marvel at the kingly colors of the roosters with honorable names like Phillip and Chief…those rainbows of feathers who were both wild and noble.

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My son loved those birds.

And he knew the day would come and we knew the day would come but how does that stop a person from loving a creation? And when my husband took the knife and said Son, let me do it, tears rolled down my cheeks and my man-boy looked away as his father gently sent that first noble bird into eternity.

Those lives mattered.

One always matters.

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When we broke away from this flurry, this August, we went far to the big fair and we got there late and we stayed there late and we rode rides and we celebrated the end of this the busiest summer of all and we remembered what it’s like to be together and not be frenzied.328

And when the late-August sun set over the mountains, we dragged a bench out into the middle of the woodlot and we sat there, all six of us in the dark, and we watched the sky light up with the fireworks display and we were quiet.

I thought about all the years I’ve been loving this little family and the sky shook with cannon booms.

I thought of how my precious friend must be deeply missing her beloved right at that moment.

I thought of how thankful I was that my husband and my boy got to go see him one last time before the Father gently carried him into eternity…

…how odd this world will be without that wonderful laugh and sense of humor…

…how my own grandparents have been gone for so long now and how different this world is without them.

…how quickly a person goes from being here with us to becoming part of the cloud of witnesses…

…how every life matters…

…how one matters…

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…I thought of how fireworks must look so lovely from Heaven.

The sky got bright and the night got noisy and the colors got big and we started to hoot and holler.

And there we were, the loudest ones in the woodlot, my husband laughed, and we were yelling with joy and August was almost over and our friend was with Jesus.

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So when thirty-six hours later, we went back home and gathered with those ones who’ve been loving us all these years, those ones we could feel separate from if we listened to our doubts too long…

…we listened instead to the voices of those who smiled at the stories of our dirty shoes and our gritty month.

We listened to the ones who told us of their own fast and dirty month of August and we laughed at the sunshine and another year of growing and we cried for the ones who aren’t with us this year.

And we embraced and held tight to the ones who said we’ve missed you.

Because in the fastness and the grittiness of this month, this world…

we’ve missed them too.

We might be busy but we can’t be separated.

Life might get frenzied but we can’t get isolated.

We might feel outside the circle of things, but we’re never out when we’re in His family.

He came to clean us all and even the grittiest and the dirtiest fingernails are kissed and loved and in my dirt He cherishes and polishes and shows me how to love the neighbor who has even dirtier fingernails than mine.

He shows me that even in my dirt I am clean and He shows me how to hold tight to that until I fly into eternity with Him.

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And until that day, He sends gentle peacemaking men and He sends warm embraces of sisters and with the wind in our hair and with the flutter of leaves and with the flight of wild birds,

He reminds us.

We are one.

And one always, always matters.

 

I Will Not Be Shaken

So a mama can get worn and weary and sometimes when the state inspector leaves after a pleasant visit with only a few comments about a few little things that have to do with your crazy little farm…

…a gal could just shut down.

Every few years a mama gets tired.

But sixteen hours curled up and restful after a long and busy summer can bring a few things into perspective.063 (2)

And tired or not, I will not be shaken.

The weight that won’t come off enough or the days that will never run quite smoothly enough or the house that will never be quite clean enough or the calendar that won’t ever be quite easy enough or the peers that will never be quite understanding enough or the friends that will never be quite close enough or the marriage that will never be quite nurtured enough or the Bible that will never be quite read enough…

…it will make me tired as I strive but it won’t kill me and as long as I follow that path where I first put my foot down some twelve years ago…

I will not be shaken.

I may sometimes be misunderstood and I may sometimes be misdirected and I may sometimes be mistreated but God is God in Heaven and when He fell on His face in the garden and He said Okay, I’ll do it and then the next day when He stretched His arms wide, He grabbed me and He grabbed you and He said it will be hard but this is harder and this….this is enough…

He gave us the example sisters on how to do things all our livelong days, right there in red, and because He did…

I will not be shaken.

I will sin and I will beg forgiveness and I will try hard, and even harder tomorrow, and I will trust in Him and I will follow the instinct He gives and the guidance He provides and I will hold tightly to His hand and even when I slip and let go I know He’ll hold me and because He does…

I will not be shaken.

We will be insecure and we will be unsure and we will be doubtful at times but because He’s not…

We will not be shaken.

The big voices of the men up front boom it loud for us Sunday morning and my spirit sings it too even when my mouth can’t…

in the tiredness I’m learning…

…twelve years and I’m still always learning…

…still sometimes new…

…still sometimes unsure…

…still sometimes needing a reminder…a rest…

…but I know.

And I will not be shaken. DSC_0636 (2)

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~

My soul finds rest in You,  My fortress and my rock, 

My hope for life my hiding place,  My refuge and my God

In You I’ve found my home,  My shelter from the storm, 

And I’ll pour out my heart to You,  And lean upon Your throne

I will put my trust in You,  I will put my hope there, too, 

I will stand upon Your word,  And I will not be shaken

I will let my praises show,  Holding on to what I know, 

Because I know You’re always there,  And I will not be shaken

I will not be shaken

I will not be moved,  I’m leaning on the throne, 

Because You died for me,  And called me to Your own, 

And even when the strongest winds begin to blow

I will stand my ground,  I will not be moved,  I will not be shaken…

 I will not be shaken.

©2002 Nickeldimeus

Admiral Annie the Baby Hedgehog

We took Annie over to the chunk of land our family is purchasing. We’ve been over several times as we wait for signing day and yesterday after a hard day’s work, I ran the kids over to enjoy a cold rootbeer in the open space we hope to build a new house on next year. All Annie needed to hear was “Truck?” and she was OFF for a ride with her favorite people.

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She sniffed..she ran…she explored…she pooped…

…I think she liked it.

And my littlest boy watched her play and he said “Mama? I think Annie’s happy here. She looks just as happy as a newborn hedgehog.”

That’s our girl. Wild Alaskan, tough survivor, farm dog extraordinaire…Admiral Annie…

…and just as cute as a baby hedgehog. DSC_0032 (2)

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What fun adventures have you taken your pup on lately?

Peace, Interrupted

The kids go and grow big and all those mamas that told us way back when that it gets easier now…

I’ll say what no one is bold enough to say…

….it actually gets a little harder.

Their interruptions are more of an interruption and instead of wiping a snotty nose and getting back to the conversation, you’re wiping out hurts and trying to find the way back to a conversation that started before the kids were even born.

They’re bigger.

They’re louder.

They take up more space.

In the room…in the house…in our days…in our minds.

Our hearts have gone and grown big right along with them and when I ask my husband why I seem so much more tired now that they’re older than I did when they were little when it seemed like I was working harder then, he said “We’ve been parents a long time now. When you do something for a long time, it’s bound to be tiring.”

I’m tired.

And even though I’m tired, they’re not and they go and they go and they do and they do and they adore us and want to be around us all the time and ask questions and talk long and have us take them places and do fun things and I wouldn’t ever want that to change, and if it does, that IS okay to lie to me about because I don’t want to know when the day will come that they don’t want to be around me anymore.

But theses times are tiring.

And the peace can be hard to find.

So when I blast past the pal at the grocery store after a quick hello, I can hear it in her voice when she says feebly…okay…well have a good day then…

And my tired heart sighs.

We’re in a hurry, we’re all in a hurry and it’s going so fast and if we don’t rush we’ll be late…and the kids need me and the house needs me and my husband needs me and my friends need me and the church needs us and the organizations need us and our communities need us and the unreached need us and even the clerk at the grocery store, she needs us too, just to give her a smile if nothing else, and….

…and my heart deflates because my truck is so close but I may never see her again so I take a deep breath and even though I’m almost to the door I turn around and walk back across the store and give her a hug.

I’m sorry I was rushing I tell her in one breath.

“Peace be with you” she says into my neck.

And we hug long and I leave again.

I’m tired of rushing.

I’m tired of peace interrupted.

I’m tired of the distractions that pull me in four hundred different directions before my eyes even float open in the morning.

I’m tired of missing the marriage that I love to fall in love with daily and I’m tired of knowing my man is probably missing it too.

Another interruption comes today and I have to take a minute to think it through and get peaceful about it, because how many interruptions can one day handle really? Or a week? Or a season?

I accept this new invitation and it gives me an hour to myself and I sit among fireweed swaying in the summer breeze on this piece of land that’s almost ours and while I wait on my girl who’s hard at work at a friend’s house, I puzzle where we’ll set the house my children will finish growing in and I reach for the Peace Be With You.

Forgive me Lord.

All those babies last year in church that I stood up front to share our work of the season…

…our Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest….learn from me for I am gentle and humble in heart…you will find rest for your souls.

All that time years back when the sister of my heart read it with me when she too was reaching for peace…we read it every day, right there in red in John 14… Peace I leave with you; my peace I give to you. I do not give to you as the world gives. Do not let your hearts be troubled, and do not let them be afraid. DSC_0028 (2)

How easily do we forget where our peace comes from?

I drive home and I drive slow.

I take a little extra time to clean up the toenail polish that’s slowly chipping off since my husband painted it on thick and red a couple months ago as an act of peace.

I look at the flowers on my table that he brought home in the hopes of calming my restless spirit.

I watch the children working hard in the yard on their 4-H projects as they prepare for their summer grand finale, our local fair.

This life is busy…and these days are busy and these children are busy…but this life is good.

Peace Be With You.

Until these children are grown, my schedule won’t ever be peaceful. I will have hurricanes and friends will have storms and husbands will have stresses and family will have deep needs and this world will always require just a little bit more of what I have to give.

But just like the interruption of today turned into a blessing for tomorrow, I have to embrace it.

This season.

This life.

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And I have to remember where to go when I’m weary and burdened.

Because sometimes even when there’s nothing wrong…a mama can just get weary. With wiping noses…with wiping tears…with wiping clean slates from the messes of the day.

But I have to remember to stop and hug and breathe in the scent of love and friendship before I’ve gone so fast that I’ve missed it.

I have to remember to spend time on what’s important, and on the people who need me the most.

I have to remember that this heart can’t be troubled or afraid and that it needs to welcome…to embrace…interruptions.

And that as it does, this heart will find its peace.

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There is no other name, by which man can be saved…

there is no other name under Heaven.

There is rest for my soul, and the wounded made whole…

and the captives set free and forgiven.

~There is No Other Name, Robin Mark

Thank you at a Parade

I had the joy and the pleasure of meeting Mr. Billy Graham’s nurse today at our little small town parade. She was with one of my friends who adopted one of Annie’s pups all those years ago. She was a beautiful and gentle southern woman who cares for a great man and I was so very honored to meet her.

We talked chickens.

We took pictures.

I would’ve loved to sit with her over coffee.

Naturally, I had to give her a copy of Annie Spruce to read on her flight home. I carry a few in my truck and as I signed it for her, she said “Mr. Graham will love this. He loves animals.”

How many souls has that beloved man reached for the Kingdom of God? How many has he clasped hands with and escorted onto Christ’s path?

He has counseled and prayed with presidents.

He was a hero to my grandparents.

All day since…I haven’t been able to wrap my mind around the magnitude.