Tag Archives: church family

Unexpected

In a season that catches by surprise, I’ve come to anticipate the unexpected.

Four kids fill this house and this calendar and these rooms…

and the minds and the lives and the hearts of their parents.

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Critters live and critters die, and sometimes it comes by way of sudden chirping from the woods when a nest of nine stumbles and weaves behind mama turkey, and sometimes it comes by way of the quiet death of a loud guinea or the noble fight and fall of a beloved pony.

“Moment by moment” round here is never an exaggeration.

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But what’s never expected is the cold stare from one who was once a warm friend.

What catches by surprise and catches in the throat are the words stuck that stream through quiet moments and that are outlined with bold strokes of anger and frustration but mostly just scream Why?? When?? I thought we were friends??

And a rejection like that can make a mama pull in and pull close and focus on just the ones around her, the ones she knows for sure love her.

Making friends never gets easier does it?

And down deep, isn’t there always that little girl who lives inside of us? That first grader in a room full of new classmates who’s standing there awkward when she realizes she’s tied the back of her dress up into her waistband while she shifts from foot to foot at the front of the classroom with her underwear and tights all exposed to the world?

Don’t the bruises get blacker when a soul gets older?

Unexpected.

And when the demands are so great a big gal feels small and sometimes has a hard time breathing let alone doing anything extra, a mama can only just bear down and push through the cramp and know she’s doing what she was meant to do in this moment: deliver these babies out into the world.

She’ll keep pushing and she’ll keep grunting and she’ll try not to swear even though she might yell out during the especially hard parts.

She didn’t know it’d be like this over a dozen years after they were born.

Unexpected.

And sometimes just the day to day can be enough to make us keep things shy and reserved and holding the heart close to the chest and the real feelings tight in the pocket.

Enough of the keeping it tight can make us keep it closed and before we know it, we’ve holed ourselves up while we tell ourselves we’re just in a quiet season of bearing down.

And then the real unexpected…

The exceptional unexpected.

The beautiful unexpected.

The unexpected gift of the unexpected time of an unexpected dinner with a couple from church, two souls just ahead on the sidewalk, and all the unexpected tears and laughter that come from that kind of unexpected encounter.

How the path we’re walking is so very familiar to them.

How the struggles we wrestle are ones they’ve conquered.

How the unexpected keeps on into the empty nest years.

How the unexpected keeps on…

My heart carries the day this month that we drove to the place where we sailed to the spot…

that gate where three seas meet, -just past the sanctuary for mariners- and the wind blew fierce and the waves pounded hard and how could I not feel God hold me there in that spot where warm tears of praise slipped down cold cheeks of wonder?

Unexpected.

The whales of September came by surprise and Native founders sailed those waters on kayaks and I sailed them with my children who stood bravely against the gusts and they braced themselves to the threat and they laughed into the wind because they are young and they trust their father and their mother, but they especially trust the One who made the skies.

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The joy we’ve had this month can be lost in the hard of this month and the hard of lost friendship and the hard of this life…

but when I focus on the good…when I fix my eyes on the pure…the hard isn’t so hard and the good is pure joy.

The unexpected moments from the unexpected trip that grew my babies and grew my mama and that grew me.

The unexpected victories that taught us that sometimes a person will win when they practice hard but that sometimes even hard practice won’t win, and that that’s okay too.

The unexpected setbacks that taught us that sometimes a plan needs a bit more time and a bit more stitching before it becomes a whole quilt.

The unexpected friends that came with what could’ve been a tight and tough competition but instead turned into a tight and tender time.

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All the unexpected.

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How the unexpected keeps on…

And then, just as a mama might start to come out of her September shell and decide rejection won’t keep her because she’s already accepted by the One who made her and Who holds her…

a routine night at church brings the unexpected, a gift, a sweet out-of-the-blue message and warm watery eyes from a new friend who is trailing just behind on the parenting sidewalk, and she might think it a small gift…

but it is bigger than that.

It makes me think of you she tells me.

And I tear up some because I don’t know her that well yet but still she thought of me, and by thinking of me she didn’t reject me, and by not rejecting me she reminds me that even when the world is cold and some people are cold, we really are each other’s keeper and we needn’t be cold back because if we are…if we close ourselves off and make ourselves cold…

we won’t ever make this planet warmer.

How the unexpected keeps on…

So I squeeze her once because her gift is so precious.

I stare at it for a second and see how perfect it is and how sweet the words are, and she smiles and I smile and then I squeeze her again because I’m so touched at her gift and how it is straight from her heart.

And so very unexpected.

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I delight myself in You
Captivated by Your beauty
I’m overwhelmed, I’m overwhelmed by You
God, I run into Your arms
Unashamed because of mercy
I’m overwhelmed, I’m overwhelmed by You
I delight myself in You
In the Glory of Your Presence
I’m overwhelmed, I’m overwhelmed by You
And God I run into Your arms
Unashamed because of mercy
I’m overwhelmed, I’m overwhelmed by You
~Big Daddy Weave

It’s Influenza, Now HOLD ME!

I almost died last week.

I’m talkin real-life, not-sure-I’m-gonna-pull-through-this-one, kids, mama-might-go-meet-Jesus-today almost died.

That’s right.

Influenza will do that to a gal.

{{I’ll wait while you grimace and shake your head in sympathy and awe that I’m still here to tell about it.}}

And if you’re not grimacing and shaking your head in awe, I should tell you, I had a husband and four kids almost die with me.

You’re grimacing now aren’t you?

Especially at the husband part huh?

Although MY husband, who, after staying home only ONE wee little day from work, went right back to it shortly after I suggested maybe he was being a little wuss-like since **I** wasn’t falling NEARLY as hard as HE seemed to be.

And yeah, those were probably the last words I said to him before he went out that morning, coughing stoickly and leaving me behind in a house that wasn’t yet a sick house.

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He didn’t do the typical sick-husband, stop-the-household-Daddy’s-sick bit.

So those WERE the last words that rang through my ears when, just hours after his departure, I found myself sitting in shell shock on the couch, a glass of ice water on the end table, a blanket over my lap, and razor blades in my throat.

My eyes glazed I’m sure at the kids when they asked “Mama? Are you okay?” My husband may or may not have reminded me of my cheap shot  lack of confidence in him when he heard how sick I was later that day.

“Mama’s fine kids. However, today might be the day that Mama goes to meet Jesus.”

Their awkward silence filled the room.

“Uhhh…geez Mom. Don’t do THAT okay?”

I’m sure I heard another one mumble “Yeah..who’ll feed us??” but instead of asking them to repeat, I used all my remaining muscles to feebly shape my mouth into a smile and shriek a silent, just-kidding laugh through the butcher knives that had taken up residence in my tonsils.

Yeah, it was that bad.

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Somehow, my big strong husband who was sick but still worked his twelve hour shift that day and every day since, well he managed to swing in somewhere and bought some sort of food product and the kids ate it for dinner while I practiced my skills of staying still.

I moved only to breathe. If I could’ve gotten out of doing that, I would’ve. Something had happened to my ribs and my backbone and moving/breathing/sitting/laying/talking/standing/living hurt like a fresh bruise. My knees and ankles felt the same but I didn’t have to breathe out of them so they just laid there still and obedient on the footstool and under the blanket.

For three days my routine was to wake up mid-morning after not sleeping all night. I’d stand before the household, think of something to tell my children to make for breakfast and they’d slip into their chef roles to take care of chow time while I settled my dying self on the couch-turned-command center. Somewhere round mid-afternoon, we’d all lay down and take a solid nap where I went unconscious for no less than two hours and would wake feeling like maybe the fever had subsided at least enough to not toast my cerebellum.

My guilt was terrible, and on the phone with my hard-workin husband one day (who was still coughing stoickly by the way) I told him I was so thankful for his hard-workin self and that I felt terrible for calling him a wussy.

He assuaged my guilt and reminded me that as a dad, when he’s home with sick kids he lets the crowd go Lord of the Flies and just throws the conch shell out in the middle of the room and tells em to go at it.

I didn’t remind him that I wasn’t doing much more, because frankly, just hearing him say he thought I was doing anything made me feel a wee bit better. Since there was no conch shell involved, maybe by just being Mom I was doing SOMETHING.

I should note that by date 2 of this abrubtly imposed quarantine routine, one of my children came to me feverish and schlumpy, complaining of a sore throat, and a second cherub was showing signs of a cough that rivaled a barking seal.  They joined me at Command Central and the three of us, pajama-clad and glassy-eyed, practiced our staying-still skills together.

In and out of naps I dreamt of conch shells and face paint.

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My big boy was running the show.

Barnyard chores? BOOM. The teenager took care of them.

Lunchtime? BAM. Not a thing that kid can’t cook.

Phone ringing? Don’t worry Mama, I got it.

Jehovah’s Witness coming up the drive? “Please go away today. My mom is sick.”

What did I do when I got sick and they were all little?

Oh that’s right. It didn’t happen.

Us moms of littles have no time for luxuries such as influenza when there are diapers to change.

On Day 4, I got up and never took a nap that day.

On Day 5, I sat at the table instead of on the couch.

On Day 6, I felt like maybe Jesus wasn’t ready for me to come Home just yet after all and on Day 7 my body was so strong and my love so big, with the faithful help of my big boy and my Bosch mixer, I was able to whip up 20 loaves of bread to send in for our church family’s Wednesday night dinner and I didn’t even break a sweat or have to sit down.

We were ALIIIIIIIVE.

Well, most of us.

I still had two in the tail ends of the satanic flu claw, one who’d come to me that morning with a pink face and a scratchy voice, but then, there was my big boy, the lone hold-out who woke each morning and gave me the voice test and had, each day, passed with flying colors.

We cleared our calendar for the week.

We made a few phone calls and people said “Whoah. Yeahhhh….good idea, stay home.”

We learned that this nasty had taken out MANY folks, some of them twice.

So we enjoyed our home.

We ignored its messes and its laundry that overflowed and its refridgerator that heaped up kid-packed bowls of leftovers and bottles of katsup piled on the shelves instead of in the door compartments.

We watched Netflix. Goodness did we watch Netflix.

We worked some on 4-H assignments and we cleared the table when we could no longer see the top and we swept the floor when we lost a dog in the tufts.

We were home.

And then, when it was time to go back out….

…I heard angels singing.

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I crawled out of the cave of my home like a mole who one day comes to the bright surface of the planet and the light OH DID IT SHINE and I even put my make up on that day because it’d been at LEAST a year since I’d seen another living soul and I was ALIIIIIIVE as I crawled up into my old creaky Ford and flashed a brilliant smile to my babies in the rearview.

Our trip found us at the department store (a step up from Walmart) because somehow, we’d neglected to have ENOUGH laundry done to provide nice clothes for my littlest’s violin recital.

The stress of the trip about took us out at the knees, and sweaty and shaky, we all left after two trips to the fitting room, some mindless throwing of clothes into the cart and a few Cadbury eggs for strengthening.

We doubled up on cough drops to silence the sound we’d come to call The Traveling Hospital and all six of us managed to smile and clap our way through the recital to the very end.

And then today….back to church.

We weren’t gone long. Just two Wednesdays and one Sunday.

But something about being back to church after having almost died….

…everyone looks a little different, a little softer around the edges.

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It’s a big church, so it’d probably take us quite a while of being gone before too many people missed us…

But boy, seeing the familiar faces after a couple weeks of not…

…it made me realize how much we’d miss THEM.

The cozy little cliques that always tend to gather together and chatter and giggle and smile about the small comforts and pretty things.

The sweet little elderly couples that wrote the book for us on marriage and sit shoulder-to-shoulder week in and week out and link fingers on the thighs of church slacks as they share through their pinkies and minds the hurt and love and joy and wonder of falling in love and raising a family and watching the body of their best friend grow older and feebler and one day closer to leaving this earth and meeting the One they have served together all these years.

The ones that, like us, have been gone for a short time.

The ones that have been gone for a long time.

The ones that look to our family for hugs.

The ones that don’t quite know how to hug yet.

The ones that sing so beautifully you just want to close your eyes and let their voice carry you straight to the angels because you know one day it is going to sound just…like…that.

And you just want to say HOLD ME.

I almost died but now I’m here and I missed you and I need you so HOLD ME!

And if it wouldn’t embarrass your kids who love too but who love quiet, you’d go around and hug everyone and say let’s just not worry about not looking put together and healthy because we’re ALL sick and we all need each other and I miss you when we’re apart so hold me.

You’d hold everybody’s hand who came close enough to touch and if they didn’t come close enough you’d just go on and touch them anyway even though there are germs involved because maybe they’re saying HOLD ME too but just a little quieter than you.

That preacher who missed us while we missed him, he talked about worship and how every single time we’re in church we can be worshipping but especially when we’re not at church.

We need to hold people.

The ones who reminded us of the psalms that were a part of this day so long ago, they sang and said Behold! and made us all feel like we walked Jerusalem too.

We need holding on the walk.

And my body can be an act of worship and I can use these hands to hold and these arms to hug and the smile on my face can build and the words my mind thinks can travel out my mouth to encourage and when I do that…

I’m holding you.

Because really, aren’t we’re all dying?

I might not be the cool kid, and you might not dress fashionably, and each one of us is a little awkward, but most days we all read the news and on the smell of the newsprint we can see that while we’re all busy trying to look healthy and strong and part of the in crowd, we’re all dying and this world needs holding.

And in that need there are kids who’d love to share our messy home, any home.

There are mamas who lose their fight to cancer and cross into glory leaving their best friends and children behind.

There are families uncertain about the future and how to best train up their child as they watch more and more of their freedoms disappear.

There are countries that are eating themselves alive from the inside out.

There are armies fighting an imaginary war and killing their enemies whose only offense is carrying the light of the world.

And during it all He lives and He says, “Be still, and know that I am God.”  {Psalm 46:10}

Be held.

As sick ones sit tender in their illness and practice their stillness skills, He says “I will be exalted among the nations,  I will be exalted in the earth.”

He is alive.

So we are too.

The flu isn’t going to kill me.

It’ll slow me down for a bit and it’ll still me and it’ll remind me of where my strength comes from.

But it won’t kill me.

One day this body will eventually give out due to illness or age if He doesn’t return for us first but before it does, He gave me you.

He gave me the ones that share my walls.

He gave me the people who come to church now, and the ones who will come later.

He gave me the ones that don’t yet know Him.

He gave them to me and to you and He gave us the reminder that He holds us and He sustains us and He tells us that He made these arms and that He strengthens them too.

And today, when I was feeble, He reminded me.

These people are brothers and they are sisters and though we are dying, we are strong.

That sometimes we are to be still. But that even in our stillness we are serving.

And in my stillness and in my strengthening and in my serving, today, I realize it.

In my holding, they hold me.

Because we are alive, -because we are dying- they need me.

And for all the same reasons…

…I need them too.

God sets the lonely in families; He leads out the prisoners with singing…Psalm 68:6

Standing in the Presence and…The Ugly Cry

I’m not a big crier.

Unless you count that one time when I was about halfway through my first pregnancy and couldn’t sleep so I decided to stay up late and watch Beaches. You know, Bette Midler…Atlantic City…her best friend dies Beaches?

I found myself sitting in the dark in front of the TV that night with a roll of toilet paper next to me, most of it in torn-off clumps all around my fat lap, shocked and surprised by the body racking sobs that had overtaken me.

I’m not talking just a good cry here. I’m talking snot flowing, spit flying, teeth bared, I can’t breathe kinda sobs. I didn’t know what came over me! That had n-e-v-e-r happened before.

I was later informed by my bff, it’s what’s called…

…The Ugly Cry.

(For the record, there is a counterpart to The Ugly Cry called The Ugly Laugh. It looks much the same but there is usually table pounding involved.)



I don’t not-cry in attempts to be stoic, or strong, or studly, or because I hate crying. It’s none of those things. My heart isn’t hard and I’m touched deeply and moved by life’s tender moments and love to talk and write about them all openly and honestly. Without tears.

Unless…

…unless it’s one of those moments where I just know I’m standing in the presence of God.

Now, I could write pages on that one little sentence alone couldn’t I? How do you know when you’re standing in the presence of God? As a child of God, isn’t He always standing with you? Or for that matter, how can God stand anywhere?

All good questions, and we could talk long about them theologically, but I think you know what I mean.

Those times when it’s been ages since I’ve made a point to dig into the Word and I open it, determined to read today, but scared that He’ll have given up on my wandering heart. And there, right there on the page where I last left off, are words that speak so tender to my heart it could only be that the Author wrote them just that morning while I waited for the coffee to brew.

Or the day when I didn’t even realize I was needing some extra guidance from Him, but pulling out of the driveway that dark morning to go meet a little horse I suspected belonged on our farm, I was shocked to flip on the radio right in the middle of an hour-long interview with a woman who spoke about horses and Jesus and the power of one to bring us closer to the other and how these animals have a way of bringing out the best in us and bringing us closer to Him.meandcharlottespring

Or when I’m at church and the praise team starts a song my heart knows from childhood and it’s almost like I’m standing in the old, light blue chapel with Granny Cakes again, her loud, off-key voice belting out the song after hearing just the first note while her large-print hymnbook rests, unopened, on the pew next to her. She sang so much louder in church than she did at her kitchen sink. I’d wish she had one of those soft, soprano sing songy voices like other grandmothers had and it wasn’t until I was an adult that I realized, she held the tune for the whole group of fifteen. She knew all the songs and she sang them as loud as she could and she loved the Lord she sang her heart out to and she didn’t care what she sounded like and now, as a grown woman I’d give all the money I had to stand next to her in church again and hear her beautiful voice sing.

Those are the moments I’m talking about.

Those are the moments when tears will come.

Because even though He’s always there, it’s in those moments you know He’s there. It’s in those moments you feel He’s there. And it brings forth tears straight up out of your heart that you didn’t even know were there.

So yesterday when I didn’t want to go to church…when I wanted to let the blankets keep me warm and keep me wrapped and keep me isolated from the movements of the morning and the people of the day…

…doesn’t a soul just get tired sometimes? And doesn’t the road just seem long sometimes? And even when it seems like it should be so easy, can’t it get hard sometimes?…

…I went anyway.

Because my little people need me to.

Because my husband said we were.

Because even tired in the body and weak in the spirit and weary with the weather and burdened with the everydayness…

He says get up.

He says even when you’re tired, especially when you’re tired, when you seek me with all your heart, you WILL find me.

He says I am with you. And I will strengthen you.

When we want to isolate isn’t that when we need to stand in the presence the most?

So awkward and bumbling, I go, walking through the movements, bringing what I can to Him, my kids, my smile, my out of sorts, my weak.

The songs can sometimes be the same, those poems up there on the screen and the organ starts up and the preacher starts singing and then I’m ten again and Granny Cakes is in my ear except it’s not her, it’s our dear Mrs. K who teaches the babies like my Granny Cakes did and who loves Jesus with all her heart like my Granny Cakes did and who sings loud for Him just like my Granny Cakes did.

That sweet voice in my ear makes the tears come and my knees buckle and here out of the blue comes The Ugly Cry because how could I have almost missed this today?

My husband brings Kleenex and my boy holds his Mama’s hand strong and the tears just trickle on down as I was brought Nearer, Nearer to the cross where Thou hast died.

I stood in the presence and all I could do was cry.

He was with me.

And in that moment my faith grew a little stronger.

The deacon, that man who is a little like me and has tears when He stands in the presence, well he talks about the goodness of the Lord and brings us righteous Good News.

And the friends that were in a car wreck two days ago, cracking ribs and crunching their big truck right up there on a stretch of road known for killing people, they walk in and people in their seats cry quiet happy…we have them with us still.

And the preacher talks about hard things that make him want to cry but when you speak in front of a crowd, you have to work hard not to because up there it could go real quick to The Ugly Cry.

And I might’ve yearned for my blankets to keep me safe, but this…

…this is what really covers me. I needed to be here. These people need me. And I need them.

Even when it seems like I just want to stay home and give up the familiar, routine, every-week-for-years-now Sunday morning steps, God gave these people to me and they are the ones that help me walk toward the joy when I’m having a hard time finding it on my own.

I’ll stand in His presence and they’ll help hold me up and I’ll help hold them up and together, tears and mess and mistakes and all…

…we’ll grow a little stronger.images

My husband’s big strong arm. My boy’s getting-bigger strong hand. Mrs. K’s strong voice and stronger hugs. The strong laugh from across the room. The strong smiles of all those who might be a little like me today, feeling outside the circle, tired out with the time of year…the time of month…this time of life. When I’d rather stay home, let my blankets protect, let the familiar of my house keep my insecurities safe, they’ll come too and stand with me in His presence and I’ll stand with them and when we’re the weakest aren’t we really the strongest?

When we’re weak and weary and burdened and we come to Him, won’t He give us rest?

When I take His yoke and learn from Him, doesn’t He prove that He is gentle, and humble in heart?

Won’t I find rest for my soul?

He says it all right there in red in that eleventh chapter of Matthew’s book. He told us true and spoke it into the generations.

It’s easy. And it’s light.

When we stand together…

…no, sometimes we won’t want to…

When we stand with Him…

…yes, our knees might occasionally buckle …

While it might be hard…

…you’ll probably find yourself hit with The Ugly Cry once in a while…

Don’t we need to though?

Stand in the presence?

To sing. To pray. To learn. To lean. To grow.

To be weak.

Together.

Because when we’re weak…

…that’s when really…

…we’re strong.

“‘My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness’. (Jesus)
Therefore I will boast all the more gladly about my weaknesses, so that Christ’s power may rest on me…
For when I am weak, then I am strong.”(Paul)
2 Corinthians 12:9-10