Friday, February 28, 2014

february twenty-fourteen


 This day is a precious gift. Don't waste it worrying about the future. Instead, unwrap the gift of today and enjoy its many blessings with Me by your side. As you open this today-gift fully, you'll find Me. -Jesus Calling: 365 Devotions for Kids

I often want to say to people, ‘you have neat, tight expectations of what life ought to give you, but you won’t get it. That isn’t what life does. Life does not accommodate you, it shatters you. It is meant to, and it couldn’t do it better. Every seed destroys its container or else there would be no fruition.’ But some wouldn’t hear, and some would shatter themselves on principle.
 -Florida Scott-Maxwell The Measure of My Days 

parenting….is not a technique to master, but a day-by-day trek toward greater patience, deeper love, and gutsier faith. - Sarah Dunning Park


                                                                 Superbowl Spirit in Seattle 

I've shared this quote before,
but it bears repeating as it rings more true to me each day...
“Be kinder than necessary because everyone you meet is fighting some kind of battle” -J.M. Barrie

Life will have its demands, it will sing its underbelly, it will disappoint, and we will fall short … AND life will bless, kiss, nourish, create and surprise us. 
Both will happen … both will happen each and every day. But only we have the capacity to decide which story of our day … of our life … we want to soak in.
Today … and hopefully tomorrow too … I want to soak in the story of love.

Think of ways to encourage one another in outbursts of love and good deeds. 
1 Thessalonians 5:24

We sometimes choose the most locked up, dark versions of the story, but what a good friend does is turn on the lights, open the window, and remind us that there are a whole lot of ways to tell the same story.  - Shauna Niequist


We get one story, you and I, and one story alone. God has established the elements, the setting and the climax and resolution. It would be a crime not to venture out, wouldn't it?       -Don Miller
sweet reunion with Pastor Samwell Kaaleng here in the USA                                                                      http://celebrate-2day.blogspot.com/2014/02/worth-every-mile.html
You're going to have wilderness experiences.  The world is a wilderness.  Life is a wilderness to a great degree.  There are drier places than others. But in the wilderness, God gives you provision.  Even in the worst circumstances, there can be places of sweetness and growth and sustenance.....He treats you as His child and will care for you through the wilderness.
 –Tim Keller

We may ignore, but we can nowhere evade, the presence of God. The world is crowded with God. God walks everywhere incognito. And the incognito is not always hard to penetrate. The real labor is to remember, to attend. In fact, to come awake. Still more, to remain awake.- C. S. Lewis

 Earth's crammed with heaven,
And every common bush afire with God;
But only he who sees, takes off his shoes,
The rest sit round it and pluck blackberries,
And daub their natural faces unaware.
- Elizabeth Barrett Browning


a few posts to share from the past month: 




Thursday, February 27, 2014

earth's crammed with heaven...

Earth's crammed with heaven,
And every common bush afire with God;
But only he who sees, takes off his shoes,
The rest sit round it and pluck blackberries,
And daub their natural faces unaware.
- Elizabeth Barrett Browning 


annual crocus hunt... 
We first found these amazing signs of spring in a yard speckled with the color purple in Nashville near my parents' house and then in Knoxville across the street from where we lived.  This is our second year to find this patch here in Seattle near Cowen Park not too far from our house.  
It's tradition to be on the lookout for the hope before us. 



















Wednesday, February 26, 2014

good words bear repeating...

I've shared this quote before,
but it bears repeating as it rings more true to me each day...

“Be kinder than necessary because everyone you meet is fighting some kind of battle” -J.M. Barrie 


 Anna & Taylor with Drew and Tariq (after school foursome who love to play "hot lava monster") 

a few more pictures of the bunny who loves flute 





off to school 


a girl in a tree 

sunshine in Seattle 


fun after school playing a neighborhood game of capture the flag 
(Bruce Hestad - Adam's dad- as the master of ceremonies) 

the sign of a fun afternoon for sure! 

Tuesday, February 25, 2014

an audience of one

Anna was practicing her flute this morning and Poppy kept jumping up on her lap while she was playing. No matter how many times we tried to put her on the floor, she just wanted to be in Anna's lap.  The music and Anna's companionship were the things that kept driving her back up on the couch.  Poppy has such a charm that no one really wanted to put her in her cage.  At least Anna had a captive audience this morning! 




a little hard to play with a bunny in your lap who desperately wants your attention... 



she really is too cute to resist... 



Monday, February 24, 2014

good friends...

We sometimes choose the most locked up, dark versions of the story, but what a good friend does is turn on the lights, open the window, and remind us that there are a whole lot of ways to tell the same story. - Shauna Niequist

such fun last night to be with these sweet friends (Heidi & Shawn Alexander & their two kids- Hannah and Nate) whom we've known since back in the day when we volunteered with the Edge at UPC starting in 1995... 



Sunday, February 23, 2014

the ordinary miraculous




I recently read a book called Tiny Beautiful Things which is a collection of articles from an advice column called "Dear Sugar" from a woman named Cheryl Strayed. Below is a column that is worth sharing from her book. Enjoy... 


Dear Sugar,
I printed out your column, “The Future Has An Ancient Heart,” and put it up on my wall so I can read it often. Many aspects of that column move me, but I think most of all it’s this idea that (as you wrote) we “cannot possibly know what it is we’ve yet to make manifest in our lives.” The general mystery of becoming seems like a key idea in many of your columns. It’s made me want to know more. Will you give us a specific example of how something like this has played out in your life, Sugar?
Thank you.
Big Fan


Dear Big Fan,
The summer I was 18 I was driving down a country road with my mother. This was in the rural county where I grew up and all of the roads were country, the houses spread out over miles, hardly any of them in sight of a neighbor. Driving meant going past an endless stream of trees and fields and wildflowers. On this particular afternoon, my mother and I came upon a yard sale at a big house where a very old woman lived alone, her husband dead, her kids grown and gone.
“Let’s look and see what she has,” my mother said as we passed, so I turned the car around and pulled into the old woman’s driveway and the two of us got out.

We were the only people there. Even the old woman whose sale it was didn’t come out of the house, only waving to us from a window. It was August, the last stretch of time that I would I live with my mother. I’d completed my first year of college by then and I’d returned home for the summer because I’d gotten a job in a nearby town. In a few weeks I’d go back to college and I’d never again live in the place I called home, though I didn’t know that then.
There was nothing much of interest at the yard sale, I saw, as I made my way among the junk—old cooking pots and worn-out board games; incomplete sets of dishes in faded, unfashionable colors and appalling polyester pants—but as I turned away, just before I was about to suggest that we should go, something caught my eye.
It was a red velvet dress trimmed with white lace, fit for a toddler.
“Look at this,” I said and held it up to my mother, who said oh isn’t that the sweetest thing and I agreed and then set the dress back down.
In a month I’d be 19. In a year I’d be married. In three years I’d be standing in a meadow not far from that old woman’s yard holding the ashes of my mother’s body in my palms. I was pretty certain at that moment that I would never be a mother myself. Children were cute, but ultimately annoying, I thought then. I wanted more out of life.
And yet, ridiculously, inexplicably, on that day the month before I turned 19, as my mother and I poked among the detritus of someone else’s life, I kept returning to that red velvet dress fit for a toddler. I don’t know why. I cannot explain it even still except to say something about it called powerfully to me. I wanted that dress. I tried to talk myself out of wanting it as I smoothed my hands over the velvet. There was a small square of masking tape near its collar that said $1.
“You want that dress?” my mother asked nonchalantly, glancing up from her own perusals.
“Why would I?” I snapped, perturbed with myself more than her.
“For someday,” said my mother.
“But I’m not even going to have kids,” I argued.
“You can put it in a box,” she replied. “Then you’ll have it, no matter what you do.”
“I don’t have a dollar,” I said with finality.
“I do,” my mother said and reached for the dress.
I put it in a box, in a cedar chest that belonged to my mother. I dragged it with me all the way along the scorching trail of my twenties and into my thirties. I had two abortions and then I had two babies. The red dress was a secret only known by me, buried for years among my mother’s best things. When I finally unearthed it and held it again it was like being punched in the face and kissed at the same time, like the volume was being turned way up and also way down. The two things that were true about its existence had an opposite effect and were yet the same single fact:
My mother bought a dress for the granddaughter she’ll never know.
My mother bought a dress for the granddaughter she’ll never know.
How beautiful. How ugly.
How little. How big.
How painful. How sweet.
It’s almost never until later that we can draw a line between this and that. There was no force at work other than my own desire that compelled me to want that dress. It’s meaning was made only by my mother’s death and my daughter’s birth. And then it meant a lot. The red dress was the material evidence of my loss, but also of the way my mother’s love had carried me forth beyond her, her life extending years into my own in ways I never could have imagined. It was a becoming that I would not have dreamed was mine the moment that red dress caught my eye.

I don’t think my daughter connects me to my mother any more than my son does. My mother lives as brightly in my boy child as she does in my girl. But seeing my daughter in that red dress on the second Christmas of her life gave me something beyond words. The feeling I got was like that original double whammy I’d had when I first pulled that dress from the box of my mother’s best things, only now it was:


My daughter is wearing a dress that her grandmother bought for her at a yard sale.
My daughter is wearing a dress that her grandmother bought for her at a yard sale.
It’s so simple it breaks my heart. How unspecial that fact is to so many, how ordinary for a child to wear a dress her grandmother bought her, but how very extraordinary it was to me.
I suppose this is what I meant when I wrote what I did, sweet pea, about how it is we cannot possibly know what will manifest in our lives. We live and have experiences and leave people we love and get left by them. People we thought would be with us forever aren’t and people we didn’t know would come into our lives do. Our work here is to keep faith with that, to put it in a box and wait. To trust that someday we will know what it means, so that when the ordinary miraculous is revealed to us we will be there, standing before the baby girl in the pretty dress, grateful for the smallest things.
Yours,
Sugar



silhouette of Anna from 2009 

silhouette of Taylor from 2009