Saturday, April 11, 2015

My Last Blog

I used to blog about my life here.  Thought and action. Events and feelings all consuming and the fleeting.  But I feel these days I have lost my life. At least my ability to catch it in glimpses and waves. I have this desire to continue. If not here, in public, in some sort of journal.  A recollection of all that happens in a day.  This vapor life. 

One friend writes only a sentence as he shuts out his bedside light. I like that idea, too. Not for the whole world to see, but for me. Nothing long or profound but a chronicle just the same. A chronicle of MY life.  

But the problem now is that my life is seemingly no more than a melting pot of other's lives. My worries, fears, struggles, exhaustion, joys and laughter are none my own, but the carrying of relationships.  My chronicling these days would simply be a chronicling of the stories of others as they intertwine with me. Weigh on me and delight me. This fading of self is ok. This sense of privacy I feel toward the lives that intersect mine is healthy I think. Lonely but good.  These stories are beautiful and they will be told in their own beautiful time. I could ask permission I suppose, but I feel no need. 

Of my children now.  I began this blog when they had not their own words. Now they are their own beings - no more do I feel a freedom to tell of their woes and victories. These are their own. I do not know when it became such, but I know now very truly that I have no place to share my struggles concerning them, for they own the struggles as well.  

Of the men at the farm.  Abiding the law I cannot tell their stories, but as family I have felt I could.  Of late I feel they tell their own tale, and superior than I.  They will often ask for a particular photo to be posted to their Facebook or ask if we can text it to a specific friend. They own their digital world well for now. I need not manage it.  

Of the students. They flood in and out of “my life” - but to tell their story here is such a small and disjointed piece of their own woven tapestry - it feels unfair. Distorted. And the days jam pack full, too full, to pull out instances and scenarios. I am not skilled enough to give a clear picture of the deep complication and beauty of living in such a delicate home.  I wish I were. I wish I could give these clear pictures of each of the lives that so beautifully color mine. They color mine to the point now that without them, without their private stories, mine stands naked. 

And my husband. Perhaps I learned this quiet from him.  This “I have nothing that needs to be said,” feeling that runs deeper than any words.  

So, what I guess I am saying is, for now, this blog has run its course. I read a bit the other day about our growing narcism. How the internet feeds it. Perhaps it does. But perhaps when we take the internet along just far enough that we fall into the actual midst of a sea of lives - instead of just staring at the possiblity within ourselves  - and we let go - we find we can swim. 


Thanks for reading.


Saturday, April 4, 2015

Hope Saturday



But when this perishable will have put on the imperishable, and this mortal will have put on immortality, then will come about the saying that is written, “Death is swallowed up in victory. death, where is your victory? O death, where is your sting?” The sting of death is sin, and the power of sin is the law; but thanks be to God, who gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ. 1 Cor. 15:54-57 


There is this photo - of us - and children - and students from all over playing a game of hay-bale tag during a quick stop during a spring break road trip. 


And it makes me smile.
Because I have photos like this from my childhood.
And from two years ago with students at Thanksgiving.
And the sun is shining.
It also rises.
Each and every day
For this we do not worry, and because of this we live.
And today we celebrated Good Friday. 
Each in our own ways.
With silent alone time, Bible studies, planting a garden, and a large Easter Egg hunt.
We celebrate a “day named wrong” - because, Lucy says, “How can it be GOOD if Jesus dies?”
And Jude knows. In his head still. Maybe only. “Because it was good for us.” “So that we live.”
And we do.
Tomorrow I wake on “Holy Saturday.”
My spiritual groundhogs day really.
This day where “It is finished” - forgiven, atoned.
But “not yet” arisen in new life. Complete.
Today there is still Al-Shabaab bringing tears to my home, 1/2 a world a way.
4 funerals this week. Others sick in bed. treatments. coughs. Exhaustion. 
Flowers and memories scattered - beautiful and broken
There are still arguments in my home - selfish desires raised like guns.
We all still aim. Take fire. In fear.  Of the unknown, unwanted.
Still self-protective.
Still in the dark.
"Most to be pitied if this hope is in vain"
But we know what tomorrow holds.
The Son also rises.
Sure as I can sleep tonight in calm knowing to be awoken in the morning, 
this is the sureness of the completion - celebrated today, tomorrow, and not yet.
And this is Easter.
We will all stand together again in that early hour - awaiting the sunshine 
Every age
Any nation
Nothing in common but the finishing that has come and the finishing awaited
And the hope this brings
And so on these Saturdays… this string of endless Saturdays
We jump together, laugh together, rejoice together
On unsure footing and seeming senseless wondering - almost caught
with gaps greater than we can bear but always a hand to pull us up
We wait together - knowing
The Son shall come
So perhaps more than Holy Saturday - 
it is Hope Saturday

every day



And if this joy is contained - amidst the curse... then how much greater the unimagined joy there after?
Where sin does not corrupt and thieves do not break in and steal.