I'm pretty sure this happens to all stay at home moms with school age children. As I'm out and about, or meet someone I haven't seen for a few months, we chat, and catch up on our families. When I tell the person that all the children are now in school all day every day, THE BIG QUESTION pops up: "What are you going to do with all your free time?"
Now, I really wish I had a great answer for this, something along the lines of "Well, in between working on the great American Mennonite novel and trying to find a way to create a renewable energy source using leftover material from our nation's Pinterest projects, I'm also helping a non-profit in its fight to end Third World hunger!" Alas, this is not remotely close to the truth.
The question itself doesn't offend me in the least, because I used to wonder the same thing. In the haze of the preschool years, the thought of all day school hovered before me like a desert mirage. Somewhere, there was a land of uninterrupted thought, of time to read, to work on projects, to use the bathroom in peace. An oasis of calm awaited me, if I could just stick it out another year or two.
Well, that's partly true. I'm really starting to enjoy the new routine, which, I should mention, is possible in no small part because my husband worked and studied hard for years, and now has a good job that allows me to be the stay at home parent. As the weeks pass, I'm learning with some surprise that even "free time" fills up quickly, and it takes some deliberate thought and choice to structure it in a way that is balanced.
For example, this was my day yesterday: up at 6:30, to finish packing lunch and then greet my nephew, who is dropped off at our house at 6:45 three days a week. In the next hour, our children needed to get up, dress, eat breakfast and get ready for school with a mimimum of fuss. By 7:45 everyone was in the van, and by 8 I had dropped all four children off at school. I then headed into the city, ran for a few miles, and stopped by Central Market to pick up some goodies for my husband, who is working a stretch of nights.
By the time I got back home, it was nearly 9:30. After a shower, I took one load of laundry out of the dryer, put a load in the washer, finished the breakfast dishes, then spent some time talking to Nate and fixing us both an early lunch before he left for work. I drove to Goodwill and bought some clothing for the two older children, then head out to Boscov's to get another pair of yoga pants while they are on sale. After that
Friday, September 7, 2018
Tuesday, November 4, 2014
What do you do with your time?
First of all, the fact that it took me over 3 weeks to sit down and write this post probably says something. As does the fact that last week I found myself cleaning the ceiling fan in our daughter's bedroom and thinking "I should be blogging instead!" However, here at last is the quarterly blog post on that all consuming question "What do you do with your time?"
I've heard that question frequently this fall, since this is the first year all three children are in school all day. In theory, I now have hours of free time each week. This is the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow, the oasis in the desert, the carrot at the end of the stay-at-home- full- time -mom- for- 10 -years stick. Having survived the preschool years, the cancer years, the army years, here I am. What, indeed, do I do with my time?
The ideal answer to that question is probably along the lines of "Well, in between writing the great American Mennonite Novel, I'm working on a project to create a sustainable energy source from Pinterest projects that didn't work out, and helping with a non-profit that provides clean water to Third World countries!" Alternatively, I'd love to be able to say "After the children get themselves up, dressed and off to school, I finish my morning cup of tea and come downstairs at 10 a.m to find the house clean, two loads of laundry already finished, and dinner preparation completed. I then go window shopping, eat candy, and read books the rest of the day."
Here's reality: no two days are ever alike, and I've discovered that even "free time" fills up quickly if you don't have a plan. For example, here's what today has looked like: Up at 6:15. My nephew arrives at 6:45 three mornings a week. I finish packing lunches, call the children, and fix three bowls of yogurt for my nephew. The children get most of their own breakfast, with reminders to clear the table themselves. This is partially successful. Aiden needs help with his shirt, the other two get dressed themselves. I change the sheets on all the beds and start a load of laundry, then sign off on Logan's homework binder. By 7:30 all four children are in the van for school, and I am in workout gear. I drop them off, as I do all five days a week, then head into Lancaster. After running 2 miles around the city, I stop at Central Market and pick up some goodies for Nate, who works two night shifts this week. On the way home, I swing by the Corn Wagon and Pine View. Back at home by 9:15, I talk to Nate, who is working on the treehouse, and help him hold some boards in place. I wash the breakfast dishes, rotate the laundry, vacuum up the cereal, shower, and fix lunch for Nate and myself. I check email and Facebook for 20 minutes. After I write this, I plan to go and vote, then head back out to Park City to get a new phone after mine fried itself on Sunday. By then, it will be time to pick the kids up at 3. The rest of the evening will be spent folding laundry, helping with homework, making supper, and reading stories. If I'm lucky, everyone will be in bed by 8:15, at which point I will sit down and read or crochet for an hour or two.
If you made it to the end of that paragraph, I congratulate you. That's a snapshot of one day. It didn't include things like yesterday's impromptu half hour visit with a dear friend, or the occasional volunteering at our local Re-Uzit shop. It's the surface...but there's more to the picture than that. To be continued....
I've heard that question frequently this fall, since this is the first year all three children are in school all day. In theory, I now have hours of free time each week. This is the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow, the oasis in the desert, the carrot at the end of the stay-at-home- full- time -mom- for- 10 -years stick. Having survived the preschool years, the cancer years, the army years, here I am. What, indeed, do I do with my time?
The ideal answer to that question is probably along the lines of "Well, in between writing the great American Mennonite Novel, I'm working on a project to create a sustainable energy source from Pinterest projects that didn't work out, and helping with a non-profit that provides clean water to Third World countries!" Alternatively, I'd love to be able to say "After the children get themselves up, dressed and off to school, I finish my morning cup of tea and come downstairs at 10 a.m to find the house clean, two loads of laundry already finished, and dinner preparation completed. I then go window shopping, eat candy, and read books the rest of the day."
Here's reality: no two days are ever alike, and I've discovered that even "free time" fills up quickly if you don't have a plan. For example, here's what today has looked like: Up at 6:15. My nephew arrives at 6:45 three mornings a week. I finish packing lunches, call the children, and fix three bowls of yogurt for my nephew. The children get most of their own breakfast, with reminders to clear the table themselves. This is partially successful. Aiden needs help with his shirt, the other two get dressed themselves. I change the sheets on all the beds and start a load of laundry, then sign off on Logan's homework binder. By 7:30 all four children are in the van for school, and I am in workout gear. I drop them off, as I do all five days a week, then head into Lancaster. After running 2 miles around the city, I stop at Central Market and pick up some goodies for Nate, who works two night shifts this week. On the way home, I swing by the Corn Wagon and Pine View. Back at home by 9:15, I talk to Nate, who is working on the treehouse, and help him hold some boards in place. I wash the breakfast dishes, rotate the laundry, vacuum up the cereal, shower, and fix lunch for Nate and myself. I check email and Facebook for 20 minutes. After I write this, I plan to go and vote, then head back out to Park City to get a new phone after mine fried itself on Sunday. By then, it will be time to pick the kids up at 3. The rest of the evening will be spent folding laundry, helping with homework, making supper, and reading stories. If I'm lucky, everyone will be in bed by 8:15, at which point I will sit down and read or crochet for an hour or two.
If you made it to the end of that paragraph, I congratulate you. That's a snapshot of one day. It didn't include things like yesterday's impromptu half hour visit with a dear friend, or the occasional volunteering at our local Re-Uzit shop. It's the surface...but there's more to the picture than that. To be continued....
Friday, August 15, 2014
Framed in domesticity
On this day of perfect weather and blue skies, I gathered my little flock together and shepherded them through 2 hours of last minute school shopping. We went through the pre-game talk in the van, "Are you going to hang all over the cart? Are we here to buy toys? Are you going to fight with your brother/sister?" The only correct answer, of course, was "No, mom."
Shockingly, despite this, there were some hiccups; stealthy sneaking toward the toy aisle, requests for quarters for those horrible claw games, and some sibling teasing, leading to what I call the "mom hiss", where said mother lowers her voice, grits her teeth, and hisses "stop that right now or there will be trouble."
After a restorative lunch, however, we all went to a nearby park, and the day took a definite upturn. Within minutes, all three children found a group of other kids to play with, and the next hour and a half flew by. I checked my messages, watched them play, and actually went for a walk around the park trail, always close by. At one point Aiden ran over to walk with me, and slipped his warm little hand in mine. "How are you, Mama?" At that moment, I was perfectly content.
Watching the children play, happily, on a beautiful, cool day, I realized that this was what I imagined motherhood would be, before I had children. This was my vision, and for a moment, it was reality. It took ten years to get here, but hey. That's life.
There is an old book, called Mrs. Minnver, written in 1940. The narrator, an upper middle class English woman, wife and mother of three, watches her family during the happy chaos of Christmas morning and thinks about domestic life.
"... the room was laced with an invisible network of affectionate understanding. This was one of the moments, thought Mrs. Miniver, which paid off at a single stroke all the accumulations on the debit side of parenthood: the morning sickness and the quite astonishing pain, the pram (stroller) in the passage ... the nameless horrors down the crevices of armchairs, the alarms and emergencies, the swallowed button, the inexplicable earache, the ominous rash appearing on the eve of a journey, the school bills and the dentists' bills, the shortened step, the tempered pace, the emotional compromises, the divided loyalties, the adventures continually forsworn."
"And now Vin was eating his tangerine, piece by piece, Judy had undressed the baby doll and was putting its frock on again back to front; Toby was turning the glass marble round and round against the light, trying to count the swirls... Mrs. Miniver looked towards the window. The dark sky had already paled a little in its frame of cherry-pink chintz. Eternity framed in domesticity. Never mind. One had to frame it in something, to see it at all."
Shockingly, despite this, there were some hiccups; stealthy sneaking toward the toy aisle, requests for quarters for those horrible claw games, and some sibling teasing, leading to what I call the "mom hiss", where said mother lowers her voice, grits her teeth, and hisses "stop that right now or there will be trouble."
After a restorative lunch, however, we all went to a nearby park, and the day took a definite upturn. Within minutes, all three children found a group of other kids to play with, and the next hour and a half flew by. I checked my messages, watched them play, and actually went for a walk around the park trail, always close by. At one point Aiden ran over to walk with me, and slipped his warm little hand in mine. "How are you, Mama?" At that moment, I was perfectly content.
Watching the children play, happily, on a beautiful, cool day, I realized that this was what I imagined motherhood would be, before I had children. This was my vision, and for a moment, it was reality. It took ten years to get here, but hey. That's life.
There is an old book, called Mrs. Minnver, written in 1940. The narrator, an upper middle class English woman, wife and mother of three, watches her family during the happy chaos of Christmas morning and thinks about domestic life.
"... the room was laced with an invisible network of affectionate understanding. This was one of the moments, thought Mrs. Miniver, which paid off at a single stroke all the accumulations on the debit side of parenthood: the morning sickness and the quite astonishing pain, the pram (stroller) in the passage ... the nameless horrors down the crevices of armchairs, the alarms and emergencies, the swallowed button, the inexplicable earache, the ominous rash appearing on the eve of a journey, the school bills and the dentists' bills, the shortened step, the tempered pace, the emotional compromises, the divided loyalties, the adventures continually forsworn."
"And now Vin was eating his tangerine, piece by piece, Judy had undressed the baby doll and was putting its frock on again back to front; Toby was turning the glass marble round and round against the light, trying to count the swirls... Mrs. Miniver looked towards the window. The dark sky had already paled a little in its frame of cherry-pink chintz. Eternity framed in domesticity. Never mind. One had to frame it in something, to see it at all."
Wednesday, June 18, 2014
Where it all started - the Florida road trips
Over the last few years our family has taken several road trips. Traveling eight or nine hours with 3 children isn't always blissful, but it followed several years of virtually no travel at all, so I was just happy to have any excuse to cross the PA state line. And, once we found a way to avoid the nightmare that is the D.C. beltway, I began to enjoy the journey. It reminded me of the many Florida road trips we took when I was a child.
My dad's two brothers lived in Sarasota, and for over a decade we went down to visit them regularly. The trips took place in the winter, naturally, and the first one I remember was when I was four or five, before my sister was born. The memories are fuzzy, but include sliding into the back seat beside my great grandfather Daddy Wiker (this was the '70's, so no car seat needed), while my mom handed me a package for the road. It contained a ballerina Barbie doll, my first and favorite. She had a crown and little ballet slippers that would come off. I was entranced. At some point on the trip there were raspberry filled Archway cookies. "Bought cookies" were a huge treat, since this was the only time we got them. Archway cookies and car trips were linked in my mind for a long time. I picked oranges from the tree, played along the edge of the ocean wearing a bathing suit my mother made for me, and accidentally sat on an ant hill. Good times.
Sometime in the early 1980's my parents bought a two-tone brown station wagon. The back seat folded down, and the resulting space was big enough that all three children could stretch out and sleep. A pattern evolved, whereby we would attend the Herr family Christmas in the evening, and then leave for Florida immediately afterward, between 9 and 10 at night. We'd pile in the back of the car, holding new Christmas toys, and set out. My grandparents lived about 30 minutes from the Maryland line, and we tried to be awake for the Baltimore Harbor Tunnel. I often remember crossing into Virginia, but that was it. If we were lucky, we'd sleep through Virginia and the Carolinas, and wake up somewhere in Georgia.
Of course the night was punctuated by bathroom stops, or waking up briefly when dad pulled into a gas station. I'm sure there were chain gas stations, but in my memory they are all small, independent stores, where it was always a toss up if the bathroom would be quasi decent or horrible. I remember getting out of the warm car, into the freezing December night, and running with my mom to the bathrooms, which were often "around the back!" Then, still half asleep, going back to the car and crawling thankfully under the blanket. I can see my dad under the fluorescent lights, younger than I am now, standing by the car pumping gas and drinking from a gallon of Turkey Hill Iced Tea, so he could stay awake. (He has never been a coffee drinker!) Then, slowly getting warm again, and drifting off to sleep, hearing the thump of the tires underneath me and the whine of the road.
Getting through the rest of Georgia and Florida was tough, but mitigated by an exciting event: we got to eat out. I cannot emphasize the importance of a restaurant meal; seriously it was a big deal. We. Never. Ate. Out. At all. When I was growing up, "eating out" meant being invited to someone's home for a meal. I think I was 9 years old before I tasted a McNugget. This was mostly due to finances, but also to the fact that there weren't many restaurants around us at the time. It was Willow Valley, the local diner, and a pizza shop or two. I think the closest McDonald's was at East Towne Mall, 25 minutes away. Now, when Lancaster is a veritable paradise of restaurants, that seems like another world. So, having breakfast and possibly lunch out was a real treat. We usually stopped at independent restaurants that served good breakfasts; I have only one specific memory from all our trips: my brother ordered pancakes that came with scoops of "ice cream" on them, and we were so excited until we realized it was just butter.
Back in the car, tired and a little grumpy, we settled in for the last leg of the trip. By this time mom might drive a few hours, so dad could sleep. We were to be quiet, reading books, playing small car games that mom surprised us with, eating a few snacks, and surreptitiously fighting over who got the window seats. This was before children had to be strapped into car seats like little astronauts headed to Mars; we didn't even wear seat belts. Usually my brother crawled into the back to stretch out, leaving Amy and me each with a window seat. Finally, we played the alphabet game. "J", "Q", "X" and "Z" were always the hardest letters, and when the first person shouted "Done" the rest of us would call "where did you find ..."? Then came explanations ("didn't you see the Quality Inn sign?"), laughter, and the game began again. Finally we crossed into Florida, and the last few hours crawled by. I don't remember the exits, or the road we took, but I can picture the roads that ran by both uncle's houses. The sky was blue, the air warm, the Spanish moss exotic. We had arrived.
My dad's two brothers lived in Sarasota, and for over a decade we went down to visit them regularly. The trips took place in the winter, naturally, and the first one I remember was when I was four or five, before my sister was born. The memories are fuzzy, but include sliding into the back seat beside my great grandfather Daddy Wiker (this was the '70's, so no car seat needed), while my mom handed me a package for the road. It contained a ballerina Barbie doll, my first and favorite. She had a crown and little ballet slippers that would come off. I was entranced. At some point on the trip there were raspberry filled Archway cookies. "Bought cookies" were a huge treat, since this was the only time we got them. Archway cookies and car trips were linked in my mind for a long time. I picked oranges from the tree, played along the edge of the ocean wearing a bathing suit my mother made for me, and accidentally sat on an ant hill. Good times.
Sometime in the early 1980's my parents bought a two-tone brown station wagon. The back seat folded down, and the resulting space was big enough that all three children could stretch out and sleep. A pattern evolved, whereby we would attend the Herr family Christmas in the evening, and then leave for Florida immediately afterward, between 9 and 10 at night. We'd pile in the back of the car, holding new Christmas toys, and set out. My grandparents lived about 30 minutes from the Maryland line, and we tried to be awake for the Baltimore Harbor Tunnel. I often remember crossing into Virginia, but that was it. If we were lucky, we'd sleep through Virginia and the Carolinas, and wake up somewhere in Georgia.
Of course the night was punctuated by bathroom stops, or waking up briefly when dad pulled into a gas station. I'm sure there were chain gas stations, but in my memory they are all small, independent stores, where it was always a toss up if the bathroom would be quasi decent or horrible. I remember getting out of the warm car, into the freezing December night, and running with my mom to the bathrooms, which were often "around the back!" Then, still half asleep, going back to the car and crawling thankfully under the blanket. I can see my dad under the fluorescent lights, younger than I am now, standing by the car pumping gas and drinking from a gallon of Turkey Hill Iced Tea, so he could stay awake. (He has never been a coffee drinker!) Then, slowly getting warm again, and drifting off to sleep, hearing the thump of the tires underneath me and the whine of the road.
Getting through the rest of Georgia and Florida was tough, but mitigated by an exciting event: we got to eat out. I cannot emphasize the importance of a restaurant meal; seriously it was a big deal. We. Never. Ate. Out. At all. When I was growing up, "eating out" meant being invited to someone's home for a meal. I think I was 9 years old before I tasted a McNugget. This was mostly due to finances, but also to the fact that there weren't many restaurants around us at the time. It was Willow Valley, the local diner, and a pizza shop or two. I think the closest McDonald's was at East Towne Mall, 25 minutes away. Now, when Lancaster is a veritable paradise of restaurants, that seems like another world. So, having breakfast and possibly lunch out was a real treat. We usually stopped at independent restaurants that served good breakfasts; I have only one specific memory from all our trips: my brother ordered pancakes that came with scoops of "ice cream" on them, and we were so excited until we realized it was just butter.
Back in the car, tired and a little grumpy, we settled in for the last leg of the trip. By this time mom might drive a few hours, so dad could sleep. We were to be quiet, reading books, playing small car games that mom surprised us with, eating a few snacks, and surreptitiously fighting over who got the window seats. This was before children had to be strapped into car seats like little astronauts headed to Mars; we didn't even wear seat belts. Usually my brother crawled into the back to stretch out, leaving Amy and me each with a window seat. Finally, we played the alphabet game. "J", "Q", "X" and "Z" were always the hardest letters, and when the first person shouted "Done" the rest of us would call "where did you find ..."? Then came explanations ("didn't you see the Quality Inn sign?"), laughter, and the game began again. Finally we crossed into Florida, and the last few hours crawled by. I don't remember the exits, or the road we took, but I can picture the roads that ran by both uncle's houses. The sky was blue, the air warm, the Spanish moss exotic. We had arrived.
Thursday, June 5, 2014
Time passages
Time softens the sharp edges of memory. The harsh feel of stubble on the head, the long red scars, the bone aches from Neulasta, the shuffling post-surgical walk... they hover around the edges of my mind now, written down in journal scraps or facebook posts.
One of the reasons I began this blog was to work through unresolved issues from cancer. It was only six months from diagnosis to final surgery, but the aftermath went on for much longer. Any stressful life event causes fallout, long after we expect it to. It was as if all the pieces in a kaleidoscope had shifted, and were falling around me. I didn't want to shed any of those pieces - home, marriage, family, friends - but I had to find the new pattern. It's harder than you might think.
The past few years were a time of re-evaluation and processing all that happened, and trying to figure out what my purpose is now. (Perhaps entering midlife had something to do with it too). After a final surgery over a year ago, it began to feel as though a chapter had truly closed, on several levels. Along with a sense of loss, there came a sense of renewed possibility. As I worked around the house, ran, went about my life, I would stop sometimes, and look at the sky, so thankful for the ability to see its blue beauty. A verse that seemed to define my life for the past number of years no longer applied; a new one did. The children were growing up. Life was moving on, and I was ready to move with it.
Cancer invaded my life and will always be a part of who I am, but it does not define me. There are some songs that are hard to sing, and every now and then a sudden memory will make me cry, but that's okay. It just means I'm here, to experience the pain and the joy of life. Change comes to all of us, even if it's not in such a dramatic way. What I've learned, if anything, is that it is possible to survive something that looks overwhelming, and that life, in all its beautiful messiness, is a gift.
When I began to lose my hair, I went to my hairdresser and asked her to shave my head. It wasn't empowering; it was grim. My memory is of staring into the salon mirror, seeing a stranger...a bald woman. In my mind rang the words "Charm is deceptive and beauty is fleeting, but a woman who fears the Lord is to be praised..." I didn't care about any of that. I wanted my hair and my old life back. My hair is back, but not the same, and it took me five years to embrace that. My life is not the same, and I embrace that too. It's about new life that can be even better than the old.
One of the reasons I began this blog was to work through unresolved issues from cancer. It was only six months from diagnosis to final surgery, but the aftermath went on for much longer. Any stressful life event causes fallout, long after we expect it to. It was as if all the pieces in a kaleidoscope had shifted, and were falling around me. I didn't want to shed any of those pieces - home, marriage, family, friends - but I had to find the new pattern. It's harder than you might think.
The past few years were a time of re-evaluation and processing all that happened, and trying to figure out what my purpose is now. (Perhaps entering midlife had something to do with it too). After a final surgery over a year ago, it began to feel as though a chapter had truly closed, on several levels. Along with a sense of loss, there came a sense of renewed possibility. As I worked around the house, ran, went about my life, I would stop sometimes, and look at the sky, so thankful for the ability to see its blue beauty. A verse that seemed to define my life for the past number of years no longer applied; a new one did. The children were growing up. Life was moving on, and I was ready to move with it.
Cancer invaded my life and will always be a part of who I am, but it does not define me. There are some songs that are hard to sing, and every now and then a sudden memory will make me cry, but that's okay. It just means I'm here, to experience the pain and the joy of life. Change comes to all of us, even if it's not in such a dramatic way. What I've learned, if anything, is that it is possible to survive something that looks overwhelming, and that life, in all its beautiful messiness, is a gift.
When I began to lose my hair, I went to my hairdresser and asked her to shave my head. It wasn't empowering; it was grim. My memory is of staring into the salon mirror, seeing a stranger...a bald woman. In my mind rang the words "Charm is deceptive and beauty is fleeting, but a woman who fears the Lord is to be praised..." I didn't care about any of that. I wanted my hair and my old life back. My hair is back, but not the same, and it took me five years to embrace that. My life is not the same, and I embrace that too. It's about new life that can be even better than the old.
Saturday, March 22, 2014
What's in a blog name?
Last week during Sunday School the discussion led to my uttering the words "grinding horror."
"That," my brother said immediately, "would be a great title for a blog." I thought about that on and off throughout the week, and realized that not only was he right, but that once you go down that trail, all sorts of possibilities emerge. Here's my list of alternate blog names:
Grinding Horror: for those moments when life is the grinder and you're the coffee bean.
While the Butter Softens.
Ad-Libbed (in honor of my favorite Calvin and Hobbes strip, where the father is talking to his wife and says "I don't think I'd have been in such a hurry to reach adulthood if I'd known the whole thing was going to be ad-libbed.")
Still Life With Books.
Thinking and Driving.
As the Kitchen Sinks (inspired by an old Transformer cartoon where the Autobots are shown briefly watching a soap opera of the same name. Hysterical.)
Mom, Interrupted.
So there you go. What would your list look like?
"That," my brother said immediately, "would be a great title for a blog." I thought about that on and off throughout the week, and realized that not only was he right, but that once you go down that trail, all sorts of possibilities emerge. Here's my list of alternate blog names:
Grinding Horror: for those moments when life is the grinder and you're the coffee bean.
While the Butter Softens.
Ad-Libbed (in honor of my favorite Calvin and Hobbes strip, where the father is talking to his wife and says "I don't think I'd have been in such a hurry to reach adulthood if I'd known the whole thing was going to be ad-libbed.")
Still Life With Books.
Thinking and Driving.
As the Kitchen Sinks (inspired by an old Transformer cartoon where the Autobots are shown briefly watching a soap opera of the same name. Hysterical.)
Mom, Interrupted.
So there you go. What would your list look like?
Wednesday, February 26, 2014
Potpourri of Thoughts
The first blog post of a new year should no doubt be pithy, funny, compelling, and of such high quality that it goes viral, and gets me a permanent invitation to blog somewhere important. Ha. Instead, I offer a potpourri of thoughts, in no particular order. ("Is the noise in my head bothering you?")
The Long Winter seems the best book for the season. I haven't been able to go running around the Acres since December because of the constant snow cover. Branches are down everywhere, frozen in place. There's a brief, tantalizing thaw, then "only kidding folks, back to Siberia for you" and it snows and freezes again. Somewhere, a groundhog is congratulating itself on being right. Despite this, I actually noticed signs of life in one flowerbed on the east side of the house. Tiny green shoots are bravely trying to grow. Spring always comes, even if sometimes it's later than we'd like.
I love road trips. We took one to North Carolina a few weeks ago, and even traveling solo with 3 children was okay. This probably goes back to the long Florida trips of my childhood, a topic which deserves its own post. Now, I enjoy getting ready, packing, getting directions, and driving. (Well, enjoy is maybe too strong a word. Better to say I don't mind it). The only task for the day is to get there safely, and I love having time to think. I also prefer to take back roads whenever possible; America is much more attractive when you get off the main highways. We drove through Loudon County, VA, and the echoes of the Civil War were all around us, under the housing developments, over the mountain ridges, crossing the Potomac.
I hate conflict. I hate when people misunderstand one another and when we can't find common ground. Above all, I like niceness. I wonder sometimes how godly that is. And no, I don't want to talk any more about that right now.
Middlemarch by George Elliot is one of those classic books that I tried to get into about 10 years ago, and couldn't. I've been reading it again, slowly, over the past few weeks, and am really enjoying it! Her characters are so well drawn, and her observations into human behavior are generally accurate. I find myself laughing in recognition, and saying "Yes, that is how people behave!" Perhaps you have to be a certain age to appreciate some of the classics?
Last year's trips to Europe were so wonderful they made me eager for more international travel. Dreaming, yes, but you never know ... most great events start out as dreams.
The Long Winter seems the best book for the season. I haven't been able to go running around the Acres since December because of the constant snow cover. Branches are down everywhere, frozen in place. There's a brief, tantalizing thaw, then "only kidding folks, back to Siberia for you" and it snows and freezes again. Somewhere, a groundhog is congratulating itself on being right. Despite this, I actually noticed signs of life in one flowerbed on the east side of the house. Tiny green shoots are bravely trying to grow. Spring always comes, even if sometimes it's later than we'd like.
I love road trips. We took one to North Carolina a few weeks ago, and even traveling solo with 3 children was okay. This probably goes back to the long Florida trips of my childhood, a topic which deserves its own post. Now, I enjoy getting ready, packing, getting directions, and driving. (Well, enjoy is maybe too strong a word. Better to say I don't mind it). The only task for the day is to get there safely, and I love having time to think. I also prefer to take back roads whenever possible; America is much more attractive when you get off the main highways. We drove through Loudon County, VA, and the echoes of the Civil War were all around us, under the housing developments, over the mountain ridges, crossing the Potomac.
I hate conflict. I hate when people misunderstand one another and when we can't find common ground. Above all, I like niceness. I wonder sometimes how godly that is. And no, I don't want to talk any more about that right now.
Middlemarch by George Elliot is one of those classic books that I tried to get into about 10 years ago, and couldn't. I've been reading it again, slowly, over the past few weeks, and am really enjoying it! Her characters are so well drawn, and her observations into human behavior are generally accurate. I find myself laughing in recognition, and saying "Yes, that is how people behave!" Perhaps you have to be a certain age to appreciate some of the classics?
Last year's trips to Europe were so wonderful they made me eager for more international travel. Dreaming, yes, but you never know ... most great events start out as dreams.
Tuesday, October 1, 2013
Postcard from the airport
It's now been 25 hours since I've slept, so if this post is incoherent, that's the reason. Still, what better way to pass the time till check in than to write? So, faithful reader, here's a postcard from the airport.
As an infrequent traveler, who just finished her fifth flight ever, the novelty hasn't worn off. The last 18 hours have been an almost complete disconnect from my normal life. It's as if, when I walked onto the plane, I temporarily shed my identity. No one here knows anything about me. (Interestingly, people seem to assume I'm German, until I start speaking. Must be the Hess and Herr coming out). It's nice, at least for a short time. No phone calls, no driving, no one asking me for snacks. Instead, I'm being catered to, with free coffe, apples, coffeecake, and wifi at the USO. The lack of domestic responsibility almost cancels out the jet lag.
I'm aware, by the way, that if I was staying home with children and reading a friend's blog, even reading a complaint about something like jet lag would probably come across like a size 2 complaining to a size 10 about how hard it was to find clothes that fit. It would be a little hard to empathize. ;) I"m still pinching myself a little that we get to have this amazing opportunity/gift.
Clothes and fashion always interest me, so I've been observing everyone's style. If you want to dress like a European this fall, the two must-haves appear to be scarves and boots. Any kind of boots. They should be worn with slim pants, tights, or leggings. Short hair is more popular over here too, so I feel right at home.
A cup of coffee is calling my name. That's it for now.
As an infrequent traveler, who just finished her fifth flight ever, the novelty hasn't worn off. The last 18 hours have been an almost complete disconnect from my normal life. It's as if, when I walked onto the plane, I temporarily shed my identity. No one here knows anything about me. (Interestingly, people seem to assume I'm German, until I start speaking. Must be the Hess and Herr coming out). It's nice, at least for a short time. No phone calls, no driving, no one asking me for snacks. Instead, I'm being catered to, with free coffe, apples, coffeecake, and wifi at the USO. The lack of domestic responsibility almost cancels out the jet lag.
I'm aware, by the way, that if I was staying home with children and reading a friend's blog, even reading a complaint about something like jet lag would probably come across like a size 2 complaining to a size 10 about how hard it was to find clothes that fit. It would be a little hard to empathize. ;) I"m still pinching myself a little that we get to have this amazing opportunity/gift.
Clothes and fashion always interest me, so I've been observing everyone's style. If you want to dress like a European this fall, the two must-haves appear to be scarves and boots. Any kind of boots. They should be worn with slim pants, tights, or leggings. Short hair is more popular over here too, so I feel right at home.
A cup of coffee is calling my name. That's it for now.
Saturday, August 3, 2013
Tea and stereotypes
If I had a bucket list, a visit to England would be somewhere near the top of the list. The bookworm in me yearns to see the home country of P.G. Wodehouse, Agatha Christie, Jane Austen, Charles Dickens, Lewis, Tolkien, Sayers ... need I go on? So, when our first British guests were due to arrive this summer, I was excited. Sure, I knew my view of the country was somewhat out of date. Rosamunde Pilcher is about as modern as I get. Still, I made sure the tea kettle was clean, the tea supply was replenished, and purchased a carton of milk for the refrigerator.
Our guests, 2 couples touring America together, pulled up in a white SUV. The driver leaped out and strode over to shake my hand. "Julia? I'm Nick." I blinked. Instead of the button-down jacket wearing guy I'd been expecting, the man before me could have taken his place at a Grateful Dead concert. Gray hair flowed to his shoulders, and he sported a black Hard Rock Café T shirt, baseball cap, and a pair of patchwork pants. He managed to carry off this look with aplomb.
By now the second man had climbed out of the car. He looked like the missing member of ZZ Top. Grey hair reached to his shoulder blades, and his mustache and beard were impressive. I began to wonder if we would be hosting a Battle of the Bands in our driveway. Their wives emerged, also clad in T-shirts and jeans, and we all began to chat, as my stereotypes fell in ruins at my feet.
All four were pleasant and easy to talk to, and we chatted a little about their trip to America. "I think I'm finally getting the hang of your money." the one said. "Oh yes," I remarked, trying to show off my knowledge, "The euro is different isn't it?"
"We're not as bad as that yet!" they all exclaimed. "We still have the pound!" Oops. "But, you are part of the European Union, right?" Groans all around. "Don't get us started on politics. We could talk your ear off." I began to wonder if London was till the capital, or if any impression I'd had of England was true, but kept these thoughts to myself.
By this point we were in the apartment, and I showed them around. The kitchen was the last stop, and as we walked in, one of the women looked around, then clasped her hands. "You have a tea kettle! Wonderful!" Finally, the universe began to make sense again. Apparently the English still like tea. "Yes, and I have some milk in the fridge for you." "Marvelous!" they all exclaimed. "There's nothing like a cup of tea."
They were a fun bunch to host, and when they had checked out a few days later, I went over to clean up. To my delight, they had left a bag of British made Tetley tea. I went home and brewed a cup, and it was some of the best I'd drunk in years. Times change, but Brits still know how to make a good cup of tea. This is what you do:
Start with the best quality black tea you can get.
Wash your tea kettle and fill with fresh cold water. Bring it to a boil. Meanwhile, get out your tea, and place it in a china tea cup, or a Hard Rock Café mug. Pour the boiling water over the tea, and let steep for a few minutes. Add milk, lemon, or sugar as desired. Sit down, put your feet up, and enjoy your tea. Patchwork pants optional.
Our guests, 2 couples touring America together, pulled up in a white SUV. The driver leaped out and strode over to shake my hand. "Julia? I'm Nick." I blinked. Instead of the button-down jacket wearing guy I'd been expecting, the man before me could have taken his place at a Grateful Dead concert. Gray hair flowed to his shoulders, and he sported a black Hard Rock Café T shirt, baseball cap, and a pair of patchwork pants. He managed to carry off this look with aplomb.
By now the second man had climbed out of the car. He looked like the missing member of ZZ Top. Grey hair reached to his shoulder blades, and his mustache and beard were impressive. I began to wonder if we would be hosting a Battle of the Bands in our driveway. Their wives emerged, also clad in T-shirts and jeans, and we all began to chat, as my stereotypes fell in ruins at my feet.
All four were pleasant and easy to talk to, and we chatted a little about their trip to America. "I think I'm finally getting the hang of your money." the one said. "Oh yes," I remarked, trying to show off my knowledge, "The euro is different isn't it?"
"We're not as bad as that yet!" they all exclaimed. "We still have the pound!" Oops. "But, you are part of the European Union, right?" Groans all around. "Don't get us started on politics. We could talk your ear off." I began to wonder if London was till the capital, or if any impression I'd had of England was true, but kept these thoughts to myself.
By this point we were in the apartment, and I showed them around. The kitchen was the last stop, and as we walked in, one of the women looked around, then clasped her hands. "You have a tea kettle! Wonderful!" Finally, the universe began to make sense again. Apparently the English still like tea. "Yes, and I have some milk in the fridge for you." "Marvelous!" they all exclaimed. "There's nothing like a cup of tea."
They were a fun bunch to host, and when they had checked out a few days later, I went over to clean up. To my delight, they had left a bag of British made Tetley tea. I went home and brewed a cup, and it was some of the best I'd drunk in years. Times change, but Brits still know how to make a good cup of tea. This is what you do:
Start with the best quality black tea you can get.
Wash your tea kettle and fill with fresh cold water. Bring it to a boil. Meanwhile, get out your tea, and place it in a china tea cup, or a Hard Rock Café mug. Pour the boiling water over the tea, and let steep for a few minutes. Add milk, lemon, or sugar as desired. Sit down, put your feet up, and enjoy your tea. Patchwork pants optional.
Wednesday, July 10, 2013
Finally, something that isn't gloomy!
The last few posts have been, um, kind of heavy, haven't they? Surgery fears, more than we can handle, discontent ... string them all together and the picture is decidedly skewed toward the dark side. (Yes, I know: if I wrote more frequently this might not be an issue). I do end up using this space as therapy, and you may feel in need of some after you read it!
There are many good things going on right now in the midst of the craziness that is summer. The children and I have 5 weeks under our belts, 6 more to go. Sure, there's the daily squabbles, but no one has yet threatened to run away or hide in the bathtub for the afternoon. I have 6 fun events saved up my sleeve, one for each remaining week, which feels like money in the bank. The guest house rental is going reasonably well - everyone seems to be enjoying themselves, and our daughter is thrilled that several visitors have had girls her age. Oh, and airconditioners, even the window unit kind, get my vote for best top 10 inventions ever. Nate and I get to talk almost every day, and I'm actually remembering to send notes and care packages on a semi-regular basis.
We even have room for some long planned extras like swim lessons, an upcoming 2 days off for me (hallelujah! hallelujah! .... ) and a possible day camp. I'm learning to let the housework go a bit, and expand my "messiness comfort zone." Hey, the children are over getting their own breakfasts while I write this. They're probably watching a video and eating cornflakes in the living room, but at least they're getting independent. So many things to be thankful for!
There are many good things going on right now in the midst of the craziness that is summer. The children and I have 5 weeks under our belts, 6 more to go. Sure, there's the daily squabbles, but no one has yet threatened to run away or hide in the bathtub for the afternoon. I have 6 fun events saved up my sleeve, one for each remaining week, which feels like money in the bank. The guest house rental is going reasonably well - everyone seems to be enjoying themselves, and our daughter is thrilled that several visitors have had girls her age. Oh, and airconditioners, even the window unit kind, get my vote for best top 10 inventions ever. Nate and I get to talk almost every day, and I'm actually remembering to send notes and care packages on a semi-regular basis.
We even have room for some long planned extras like swim lessons, an upcoming 2 days off for me (hallelujah! hallelujah! .... ) and a possible day camp. I'm learning to let the housework go a bit, and expand my "messiness comfort zone." Hey, the children are over getting their own breakfasts while I write this. They're probably watching a video and eating cornflakes in the living room, but at least they're getting independent. So many things to be thankful for!
Wednesday, May 22, 2013
Contentment and other impossibles
Well, I walked over to mom's computer all prepared to write a review of The Great Gatsby, Baz Luhrman version (bottom line: long, but worth your time), and made the mistake of opening facebook.
Saw a picture someone posted of their newly purchased beautiful stone historic house, with incredible landscaping.
How honest can I be here on this blog? How honest do I want to be? Friends, I coveted that house. Seriously, it was like a punch to the stomach. I wanted it. I was jealous of this person, who I don't even know. Then I was angry. Why can't I have something like this? Or even close to this? I'm a freaking cancer survivor for Pete's sake - don't I deserve this? Then, the guilt. Coveting, envying - this is sin. Being ungrateful for what you do have, that you and your husband work hard for - this is sin. But I still want a house like that.
Contentment is a hard lesson to learn. This is why I stay off Pinterest. But you can't disengage from life, and when you live in this area, you can't avoid beautiful houses that belong to other people.
Feelings pop up all the time - with me it's usually envy and anger. For you it may be different. And each time I have to play spiritual whack-a-mole: hit them on the head with prayer and then redirect.
Why do I share this with you? Because writing it out helps. Because I don't want to hide struggles, even if they paint me in a bad light. Actually, light is usually the only thing that banishes the darkness.
Now, in the spirit of whack-a-mole, I'm going to get off the computer.
Saw a picture someone posted of their newly purchased beautiful stone historic house, with incredible landscaping.
How honest can I be here on this blog? How honest do I want to be? Friends, I coveted that house. Seriously, it was like a punch to the stomach. I wanted it. I was jealous of this person, who I don't even know. Then I was angry. Why can't I have something like this? Or even close to this? I'm a freaking cancer survivor for Pete's sake - don't I deserve this? Then, the guilt. Coveting, envying - this is sin. Being ungrateful for what you do have, that you and your husband work hard for - this is sin. But I still want a house like that.
Contentment is a hard lesson to learn. This is why I stay off Pinterest. But you can't disengage from life, and when you live in this area, you can't avoid beautiful houses that belong to other people.
Feelings pop up all the time - with me it's usually envy and anger. For you it may be different. And each time I have to play spiritual whack-a-mole: hit them on the head with prayer and then redirect.
Why do I share this with you? Because writing it out helps. Because I don't want to hide struggles, even if they paint me in a bad light. Actually, light is usually the only thing that banishes the darkness.
Now, in the spirit of whack-a-mole, I'm going to get off the computer.
Thursday, April 11, 2013
More Than We Can Handle
I'm sitting in Monkey Joe's, Fayetteville's overly airconditioned but well equipped bouncy house (huge bouncers for the kids, cushioned rockers, cable TV and computer access for the parents). This will be our last visit here before Nate's deployment at the end of the month.
There's a lot I have to learn about being a military spouse, but one thing comes up frequently: be strong. "You must be a strong woman" several people told me. "I could never do what you are doing." "Army Strong." "Be strong and don't complain too much," I've told myself. "People won't understand your situation, and you don't need to hand them reasons to doubt your decisions in life." (Painful to admit, but true). Undergirding all this is a hazy assumption that God won't give me more than I can handle. That's Biblical, isn't it?
Well, not really. Something didn't sit quite right with that assumption, but I didn't put a finger on it until I read a book called "God Strong" (recommended by the only other Army wife I know: thanks again Kristy!) I wish I could give you the direct quote, but I didn't pack the book in my bag when we left the house. However, her basic point is that in tough situations we often tell ourselves that God will not give us more than we can bear. The assumption is that if we just grit our teeth hard enough, pull our bootstraps hard enough, work hard enough, we can get through things in our own strength. Wrong.
Where does this idea come from? Probably from the Bible verse that says "But God is faithful; he will not let you be tempted beyond what you can bear, but will provide a way for you to bear up/escape from it" (My paraphrase). The author (Sara Horn) rightly points out that this verse is about temptation, not necessarily every tough life issue. When I am tempted to anger, to laziness, to gossip, to gluttony, that's when God always provides a way out of it.
At other times, however, God allows things in our lives that are much more than we can "handle." If that hasn't happened to you or someone you love yet, don't worry, it will. You or someone you love will be diagnosed with cancer. A marriage will end in anger and tears. Chronic illness will stretch out its weary lifetime. Children will rebel. Friendships will break. Unemployment, money worries, family fights, mental illness, 9 month deployments, stress ... these will break our backs.
Why does this happen? Isn't Christianity supposed to be my ticket to peace, joy, and abundant life? Yes, but it begins/continues with this truth: We need God for everything. There are stages in life when it's easy to push this aside. When life is going comparatively well, it's tempting to think that my own efforts and good character are what carry me through. It's only when the rug gets pulled out from under me that I realize how weak I am.
This is an invitation for me to let go of my human pride, and "goodness" and "strength" and to use God's unending strength instead. "My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness." We can do the hard things in our lives, but only because God gives us His strength.
Paradoxically, it's often easier to realize this in the big crises of life. I knew cancer was more than I could handle, and so did everybody else, and it was much easier for me to rely on God and help from others. It humbles me to admit that the day to day parenting issues, car stuff, and house maintenance are sometimes more than I can handle also, but there it is. The challenge is to turn to God instead of my own resources.
"When you have exhausted your store of endurance,
When your strength has failed ere the day is half done;
When you come to the end of your hoarded resources,
Your Father's full giving has only begun!"
There's a lot I have to learn about being a military spouse, but one thing comes up frequently: be strong. "You must be a strong woman" several people told me. "I could never do what you are doing." "Army Strong." "Be strong and don't complain too much," I've told myself. "People won't understand your situation, and you don't need to hand them reasons to doubt your decisions in life." (Painful to admit, but true). Undergirding all this is a hazy assumption that God won't give me more than I can handle. That's Biblical, isn't it?
Well, not really. Something didn't sit quite right with that assumption, but I didn't put a finger on it until I read a book called "God Strong" (recommended by the only other Army wife I know: thanks again Kristy!) I wish I could give you the direct quote, but I didn't pack the book in my bag when we left the house. However, her basic point is that in tough situations we often tell ourselves that God will not give us more than we can bear. The assumption is that if we just grit our teeth hard enough, pull our bootstraps hard enough, work hard enough, we can get through things in our own strength. Wrong.
Where does this idea come from? Probably from the Bible verse that says "But God is faithful; he will not let you be tempted beyond what you can bear, but will provide a way for you to bear up/escape from it" (My paraphrase). The author (Sara Horn) rightly points out that this verse is about temptation, not necessarily every tough life issue. When I am tempted to anger, to laziness, to gossip, to gluttony, that's when God always provides a way out of it.
At other times, however, God allows things in our lives that are much more than we can "handle." If that hasn't happened to you or someone you love yet, don't worry, it will. You or someone you love will be diagnosed with cancer. A marriage will end in anger and tears. Chronic illness will stretch out its weary lifetime. Children will rebel. Friendships will break. Unemployment, money worries, family fights, mental illness, 9 month deployments, stress ... these will break our backs.
Why does this happen? Isn't Christianity supposed to be my ticket to peace, joy, and abundant life? Yes, but it begins/continues with this truth: We need God for everything. There are stages in life when it's easy to push this aside. When life is going comparatively well, it's tempting to think that my own efforts and good character are what carry me through. It's only when the rug gets pulled out from under me that I realize how weak I am.
This is an invitation for me to let go of my human pride, and "goodness" and "strength" and to use God's unending strength instead. "My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness." We can do the hard things in our lives, but only because God gives us His strength.
Paradoxically, it's often easier to realize this in the big crises of life. I knew cancer was more than I could handle, and so did everybody else, and it was much easier for me to rely on God and help from others. It humbles me to admit that the day to day parenting issues, car stuff, and house maintenance are sometimes more than I can handle also, but there it is. The challenge is to turn to God instead of my own resources.
"When you have exhausted your store of endurance,
When your strength has failed ere the day is half done;
When you come to the end of your hoarded resources,
Your Father's full giving has only begun!"
Sunday, February 17, 2013
Control
I like the illusion that I'm in control of my life.
Most times the regular routines prop up this myth: get the children out the door and off to school, do laundry, housework, shop, visit a friend, go to the library, prepare meals ... vibrant, purposeful activity shapes my day and my sense of control.
As I write this, I'm convalescing from surgery. Humanly and medically speaking, I've now done everything possible, sacrificed every last bit to ensure that breast and ovarian cancer are not in my future. The prolonged weakness and pain took me by surprise - I'd forgotten what even a "minor" surgery does to the body. No housework, no driving, no shopping; just me, the sofa and my thoughts. No distractions. No escape.
Right now even the internet is not my friend. Google "surgical menopause" and the words "abrupt", "premature aging", "osteoporosis", "a shell", "afraid of change", and "anger" unscroll in a litany of
fear.
Issues that I believed I'd dealt with, surrendered to God, started poking their heads above ground, like resurgent weeds. Why must I face these hard choices and their consequences? I had followed all the rules, lived a good girl life, no smoking, no drinking, no drugs, a healthy lifestyle. Why must I pioneer this course in our family? I'm a terrible pioneer. In a melodramatic moment I told Nate I felt like a punching bag - just as I'd reached equilibrium and stopped swaying after the events of four years ago, the universe reached out a casual hand and punched my life again. What next?
Now I am aware that the appropriate mature Christian response is not "Why me" but "why not me." I must also confess that at times the mature Christian response is long in coming. I'm not sure it can be hurried. God is bigger than my anger, my questions, my fears. Rationally, I know God works his own purposes for His glory and our good, but emotionally I think frankly that I could do a better job running my life at the moment. Instead of building up my soul with unpleasant and permanent choices, I'd choose to build up my soul with some unexpected blessings like a trip to Europe, a four bedroom house, children who obey me at least two thirds of the time, and a landscaped yard.
I'm only partially kidding.
At the same time, I realize how ridiculous it is to expect that I could control my life in a positive way when I can't get through a day without losing control of my temper.
Dear reader, this is a more honest post than I usually allow myself. It's where I'm at on February 17, 2013.
I cannot know Why. I can only learn to know and trust Who.
Most times the regular routines prop up this myth: get the children out the door and off to school, do laundry, housework, shop, visit a friend, go to the library, prepare meals ... vibrant, purposeful activity shapes my day and my sense of control.
As I write this, I'm convalescing from surgery. Humanly and medically speaking, I've now done everything possible, sacrificed every last bit to ensure that breast and ovarian cancer are not in my future. The prolonged weakness and pain took me by surprise - I'd forgotten what even a "minor" surgery does to the body. No housework, no driving, no shopping; just me, the sofa and my thoughts. No distractions. No escape.
Right now even the internet is not my friend. Google "surgical menopause" and the words "abrupt", "premature aging", "osteoporosis", "a shell", "afraid of change", and "anger" unscroll in a litany of
fear.
Issues that I believed I'd dealt with, surrendered to God, started poking their heads above ground, like resurgent weeds. Why must I face these hard choices and their consequences? I had followed all the rules, lived a good girl life, no smoking, no drinking, no drugs, a healthy lifestyle. Why must I pioneer this course in our family? I'm a terrible pioneer. In a melodramatic moment I told Nate I felt like a punching bag - just as I'd reached equilibrium and stopped swaying after the events of four years ago, the universe reached out a casual hand and punched my life again. What next?
Now I am aware that the appropriate mature Christian response is not "Why me" but "why not me." I must also confess that at times the mature Christian response is long in coming. I'm not sure it can be hurried. God is bigger than my anger, my questions, my fears. Rationally, I know God works his own purposes for His glory and our good, but emotionally I think frankly that I could do a better job running my life at the moment. Instead of building up my soul with unpleasant and permanent choices, I'd choose to build up my soul with some unexpected blessings like a trip to Europe, a four bedroom house, children who obey me at least two thirds of the time, and a landscaped yard.
I'm only partially kidding.
At the same time, I realize how ridiculous it is to expect that I could control my life in a positive way when I can't get through a day without losing control of my temper.
Dear reader, this is a more honest post than I usually allow myself. It's where I'm at on February 17, 2013.
I cannot know Why. I can only learn to know and trust Who.
Friday, December 21, 2012
The light shines in the darkness...
Christmas is coming. The nativity is arranged, cookies are baked, decorations are in place. We even managed to get a wreath on the door this year, and the presents are all purchased. Our children are excited. My husband and I are trying, but we feel strange.
All tragedy is horrible, but it seems worse when it happens near Christmastime. Today before I sat down to write this, I looked on a few news sites, and soon my eyes were brimming with tears again. I see our precious children, ages 8, 7 and 4, reflected in each little face. My "why?" is a pale shadow compared to the grieving parents. In self-defense, we can't look too long at such pain.
How, especially as a Christian, do any of us navigate suffering? How do we find the life preserver to cling to, the rock to stand on when the waves are so wild? And how can we balance a world that contains both pain and joy so close together?
In thinking about this for the past few days I realized again that the original Christmas didn't occur in a holy vacuum. There may have been peace in the stable that night, but all around the world was up to its usual tricks. Poverty, hunger, cruelty, slavery - all were thriving even as Christ was born. Days later, dozens of mothers reeled as Herod's men killed their tiny sons, for reasons they probably never understood. Pain and joy were side by side from the start.
"In Him was life, and that life was the light of men. The light shines in the darkness and the darkness has not overcome it." John 1: 4, 5.
The light seems so small and fragile at times. The candle flickers and nearly goes out. The darkness looms large for days, months, decades. Evil marches on. In such moments, despair seems entirely logical.
The message of Christmas that I want to understand is that the light does indeed shine and the darkness has not overcome it. Christmas is only the beginning of the story, and it takes place amid the pain and heartache and joy of the real world. It is not unrealistic fantasy - it's the truest thing there is. There is evil in the world, yes; but there is also much good. I want to strengthen and uphold the good, to fight for it and protect it, to be on the side of joy and light. So this year I will say a prayer for those in Newtown, and weep with those who weep, even at a distance. I will hug my children more. I will sing carols in hope and anticipation, I will strive to make good memories for our family. I will try to remember that "though the wrong seems oft so strong, God is the ruler yet." In every way I can, I will uphold the light. Darkness will not overcome it.
All tragedy is horrible, but it seems worse when it happens near Christmastime. Today before I sat down to write this, I looked on a few news sites, and soon my eyes were brimming with tears again. I see our precious children, ages 8, 7 and 4, reflected in each little face. My "why?" is a pale shadow compared to the grieving parents. In self-defense, we can't look too long at such pain.
How, especially as a Christian, do any of us navigate suffering? How do we find the life preserver to cling to, the rock to stand on when the waves are so wild? And how can we balance a world that contains both pain and joy so close together?
In thinking about this for the past few days I realized again that the original Christmas didn't occur in a holy vacuum. There may have been peace in the stable that night, but all around the world was up to its usual tricks. Poverty, hunger, cruelty, slavery - all were thriving even as Christ was born. Days later, dozens of mothers reeled as Herod's men killed their tiny sons, for reasons they probably never understood. Pain and joy were side by side from the start.
"In Him was life, and that life was the light of men. The light shines in the darkness and the darkness has not overcome it." John 1: 4, 5.
The light seems so small and fragile at times. The candle flickers and nearly goes out. The darkness looms large for days, months, decades. Evil marches on. In such moments, despair seems entirely logical.
The message of Christmas that I want to understand is that the light does indeed shine and the darkness has not overcome it. Christmas is only the beginning of the story, and it takes place amid the pain and heartache and joy of the real world. It is not unrealistic fantasy - it's the truest thing there is. There is evil in the world, yes; but there is also much good. I want to strengthen and uphold the good, to fight for it and protect it, to be on the side of joy and light. So this year I will say a prayer for those in Newtown, and weep with those who weep, even at a distance. I will hug my children more. I will sing carols in hope and anticipation, I will strive to make good memories for our family. I will try to remember that "though the wrong seems oft so strong, God is the ruler yet." In every way I can, I will uphold the light. Darkness will not overcome it.
Thursday, September 27, 2012
The Joys of Jello Salad: Because sometimes Jello makes life better
So here I am after a 2 month hiatus, and what do I choose to write about? Jello salad. Makes perfect sense, right? Follow me on this.
When I went to the supermarket this week, I ventured down the candy aisle, because we may have a camp out this weekend, and camp outs require S'mores, which require marshmallows. Then I decided to check the back of the mini marshmallow bag to see if they had a receipe for Rice Krispy bars. (I have tried to make Rice Krispy bars without a recipe, and it was a complete failure). Not only did the bag have a Rice Krispy recipe, it also had the recipe for Watergate Salad.
If you've never had Watergate Salad, just wait till the end of this column, because I'm going to give you the recipe, and it's so easy. I still remember the first time I ate it. It wasn't at home; my mother never made Watergate Salad in her life. She cooked mostly out of the More-With-Less Cookbook, which, in its chapter on salads, sternly informed the reader that "Too many salad recipes read like dessert - gelatin mix, whipped cream, sweetened canned fruit ..." When we had jello, it was made with orange juice and plain gelatin, or had carrots in it. Just not the same. That being said, she made great chocolate cake and chocolate chip cookies on a regular basis, so I don't hold the orange juice jello against her.
Grandma Rhoda was different, and it was in the little brick rancher on Sprecher Road (which always smelled like fresh bread) that I first ate Watergate Salad. We had gone there for dinner on Sunday, into that tidy house with the corner china closet, the chenille-like sofa with the afghan draped over the back, the painted china lamp, and upholstered rocking chair. We all sat down around the table, which had been moved into the living room, and extended its full length. I don't remember the rest of the menu, but based on what she served over the years it was probably ham, ham loaf or roast turkey, mashed potatoes and gravy, succotash made with home frozen corn and lima beans, a cut glass platter of celery, perhaps sweet potato croquettes, buttered noodles, and angel food cake. There was also a glass bowl of something strangely light green: "Watergate Salad." One bite of the Cool Whip, pistachio pudding, marshmallow and nuts, and I loved it. From that time on, I looked for this concoction at every reunion and fellowship meal, and gleefully helped myself.
Fast forward to the early years of marriage, when I borrowed mom's cookbooks. In the salad chapter of the Black Rock cookbook, what should I find but my old friend, Watergate Salad. I hadn't realized how easy it was to make, and proudly made a bowlful for us that week. Nate liked it but wasn't crazy about it, and I decided it had better remain an occasional treat, or I'd eat way too much.
Most of the time I try to eat healthfully, and avoid jello and instant pudding, which, let's face it, is pretty much pure sugar. But there are times when my inner Mennonite cannot be denied; times when a meal feels a little skimpy, and needs something to round it out, times when life seems the better for a touch of sweetness. In that light, I present my two favorite jello salad recipes. If it makes you feel better, call them dessert.
Watergate Salad:
3 1/2 oz pack pistachio instant pudding
9 oz container Cool Whip
20 oz can crushed pineapple
1/2 cup chopped nuts
1/2 cup mini marshmallow
Mix all ingredients in a bowl. Chill. That's it.
Cranberry Orange Salad
6 oz. pack orange jello
1 1/2 cups boiling water
1 16 oz. can jellied cranberry sauce
1 8 3/4 oz can crushed pineapple, drained
1/2 cup diced celery
Dissolve jello in boiling water, add cranberry sauce. Chill until thickened; stir in pineapple and celery. Pour into mold and chill until firm. If it makes you feel healthier, unmold "onto crisp salad greens."
p.s. I am aware the Watergate Salad is technically not a jello salad, but I lump all the jello/pudding/canned fruit/cool whip concoctions into that class. And it's my blog :)
When I went to the supermarket this week, I ventured down the candy aisle, because we may have a camp out this weekend, and camp outs require S'mores, which require marshmallows. Then I decided to check the back of the mini marshmallow bag to see if they had a receipe for Rice Krispy bars. (I have tried to make Rice Krispy bars without a recipe, and it was a complete failure). Not only did the bag have a Rice Krispy recipe, it also had the recipe for Watergate Salad.
If you've never had Watergate Salad, just wait till the end of this column, because I'm going to give you the recipe, and it's so easy. I still remember the first time I ate it. It wasn't at home; my mother never made Watergate Salad in her life. She cooked mostly out of the More-With-Less Cookbook, which, in its chapter on salads, sternly informed the reader that "Too many salad recipes read like dessert - gelatin mix, whipped cream, sweetened canned fruit ..." When we had jello, it was made with orange juice and plain gelatin, or had carrots in it. Just not the same. That being said, she made great chocolate cake and chocolate chip cookies on a regular basis, so I don't hold the orange juice jello against her.
Grandma Rhoda was different, and it was in the little brick rancher on Sprecher Road (which always smelled like fresh bread) that I first ate Watergate Salad. We had gone there for dinner on Sunday, into that tidy house with the corner china closet, the chenille-like sofa with the afghan draped over the back, the painted china lamp, and upholstered rocking chair. We all sat down around the table, which had been moved into the living room, and extended its full length. I don't remember the rest of the menu, but based on what she served over the years it was probably ham, ham loaf or roast turkey, mashed potatoes and gravy, succotash made with home frozen corn and lima beans, a cut glass platter of celery, perhaps sweet potato croquettes, buttered noodles, and angel food cake. There was also a glass bowl of something strangely light green: "Watergate Salad." One bite of the Cool Whip, pistachio pudding, marshmallow and nuts, and I loved it. From that time on, I looked for this concoction at every reunion and fellowship meal, and gleefully helped myself.
Fast forward to the early years of marriage, when I borrowed mom's cookbooks. In the salad chapter of the Black Rock cookbook, what should I find but my old friend, Watergate Salad. I hadn't realized how easy it was to make, and proudly made a bowlful for us that week. Nate liked it but wasn't crazy about it, and I decided it had better remain an occasional treat, or I'd eat way too much.
Most of the time I try to eat healthfully, and avoid jello and instant pudding, which, let's face it, is pretty much pure sugar. But there are times when my inner Mennonite cannot be denied; times when a meal feels a little skimpy, and needs something to round it out, times when life seems the better for a touch of sweetness. In that light, I present my two favorite jello salad recipes. If it makes you feel better, call them dessert.
Watergate Salad:
3 1/2 oz pack pistachio instant pudding
9 oz container Cool Whip
20 oz can crushed pineapple
1/2 cup chopped nuts
1/2 cup mini marshmallow
Mix all ingredients in a bowl. Chill. That's it.
Cranberry Orange Salad
6 oz. pack orange jello
1 1/2 cups boiling water
1 16 oz. can jellied cranberry sauce
1 8 3/4 oz can crushed pineapple, drained
1/2 cup diced celery
Dissolve jello in boiling water, add cranberry sauce. Chill until thickened; stir in pineapple and celery. Pour into mold and chill until firm. If it makes you feel healthier, unmold "onto crisp salad greens."
p.s. I am aware the Watergate Salad is technically not a jello salad, but I lump all the jello/pudding/canned fruit/cool whip concoctions into that class. And it's my blog :)
The Joys of Jello Salad: Because sometimes Jello makes life better
So here I am after a 2 month hiatus, and what do I choose to write about? Jello salad. Makes perfect sense, right? Follow me on this.
When I went to the supermarket this week, I ventured down the candy aisle, because we may have a camp out this weekend, and camp outs require S'mores, which require marshmallows. Then I decided to check the back of the mini marshmallow bag to see if they had a receipe for Rice Krispy bars. (I have tried to make Rice Krispy bars without a recipe, and it was a complete failure). Not only did the bag have a Rice Krispy recipe, it also had the recipe for Watergate Salad.
If you've never had Watergate Salad, just wait till the end of this column, because I'm going to give you the recipe, and it's so easy. I still remember the first time I ate it. It wasn't at home; my mother never made Watergate Salad in her life. She cooked mostly out of the More-With-Less Cookbook, which, in its chapter on salads, sternly informed the reader that "Too many salad recipes read like dessert - gelatin mix, whipped cream, sweetened canned fruit ..." When we had jello, it was made with orange juice and plain gelatin, or had carrots in it. Just not the same. That being said, she made great chocolate cake and chocolate chip cookies on a regular basis, so I don't hold the orange juice jello against her.
Grandma Rhoda was different, and it was in the little brick rancher on Sprecher Road (which always smelled like fresh bread) that I first ate Watergate Salad. We had gone there for dinner on Sunday, into that tidy house with the corner china closet, the chenille-like sofa with the afghan draped over the back, the painted china lamp, and upholstered rocking chair. We all sat down around the table, which had been moved into the living room, and extended its full length. I don't remember the rest of the menu, but based on what she served over the years it was probably ham, ham loaf or roast turkey, mashed potatoes and gravy, succotash made with home frozen corn and lima beans, a cut glass platter of celery, perhaps sweet potato croquettes, buttered noodles, and angel food cake. There was also a glass bowl of something strangely light green: "Watergate Salad." One bite of the Cool Whip, pistachio pudding, marshmallow and nuts, and I loved it. From that time on, I looked for this concoction at every reunion and fellowship meal, and gleefully helped myself.
Fast forward to the early years of marriage, when I borrowed mom's cookbooks. In the salad chapter of the Black Rock cookbook, what should I find but my old friend, Watergate Salad. I hadn't realized how easy it was to make, and proudly made a bowlful for us that week. Nate liked it but wasn't crazy about it, and I decided it had better remain an occasional treat, or I'd eat way too much.
Most of the time I try to eat healthfully, and avoid jello and instant pudding, which, let's face it, is pretty much pure sugar. But there are times when my inner Mennonite cannot be denied; times when a meal feels a little skimpy, and needs something to round it out, times when life seems the better for a touch of sweetness. In that light, I present my two favorite jello salad recipes. If it makes you feel better, call them dessert.
Watergate Salad:
3 1/2 oz pack pistachio instant pudding
9 oz container Cool Whip
20 oz can crushed pineapple
1/2 cup chopped nuts
1/2 cup mini marshmallow
Mix all ingredients in a bowl. Chill. That's it.
Cranberry Orange Salad
6 oz. pack orange jello
1 1/2 cups boiling water
1 16 oz. can jellied cranberry sauce
1 8 3/4 oz can crushed pineapple, drained
1/2 cup diced celery
Dissolve jello in boiling water, add cranberry sauce. Chill until thickened; stir in pineapple and celery. Pour into mold and chill until firm. If it makes you feel healthier, unmold "onto crisp salad greens."
p.s. I am aware the Watergate Salad is technically not a jello salad, but I lump all the jello/pudding/canned fruit/cool whip concoctions into that class. And it's my blog :)
When I went to the supermarket this week, I ventured down the candy aisle, because we may have a camp out this weekend, and camp outs require S'mores, which require marshmallows. Then I decided to check the back of the mini marshmallow bag to see if they had a receipe for Rice Krispy bars. (I have tried to make Rice Krispy bars without a recipe, and it was a complete failure). Not only did the bag have a Rice Krispy recipe, it also had the recipe for Watergate Salad.
If you've never had Watergate Salad, just wait till the end of this column, because I'm going to give you the recipe, and it's so easy. I still remember the first time I ate it. It wasn't at home; my mother never made Watergate Salad in her life. She cooked mostly out of the More-With-Less Cookbook, which, in its chapter on salads, sternly informed the reader that "Too many salad recipes read like dessert - gelatin mix, whipped cream, sweetened canned fruit ..." When we had jello, it was made with orange juice and plain gelatin, or had carrots in it. Just not the same. That being said, she made great chocolate cake and chocolate chip cookies on a regular basis, so I don't hold the orange juice jello against her.
Grandma Rhoda was different, and it was in the little brick rancher on Sprecher Road (which always smelled like fresh bread) that I first ate Watergate Salad. We had gone there for dinner on Sunday, into that tidy house with the corner china closet, the chenille-like sofa with the afghan draped over the back, the painted china lamp, and upholstered rocking chair. We all sat down around the table, which had been moved into the living room, and extended its full length. I don't remember the rest of the menu, but based on what she served over the years it was probably ham, ham loaf or roast turkey, mashed potatoes and gravy, succotash made with home frozen corn and lima beans, a cut glass platter of celery, perhaps sweet potato croquettes, buttered noodles, and angel food cake. There was also a glass bowl of something strangely light green: "Watergate Salad." One bite of the Cool Whip, pistachio pudding, marshmallow and nuts, and I loved it. From that time on, I looked for this concoction at every reunion and fellowship meal, and gleefully helped myself.
Fast forward to the early years of marriage, when I borrowed mom's cookbooks. In the salad chapter of the Black Rock cookbook, what should I find but my old friend, Watergate Salad. I hadn't realized how easy it was to make, and proudly made a bowlful for us that week. Nate liked it but wasn't crazy about it, and I decided it had better remain an occasional treat, or I'd eat way too much.
Most of the time I try to eat healthfully, and avoid jello and instant pudding, which, let's face it, is pretty much pure sugar. But there are times when my inner Mennonite cannot be denied; times when a meal feels a little skimpy, and needs something to round it out, times when life seems the better for a touch of sweetness. In that light, I present my two favorite jello salad recipes. If it makes you feel better, call them dessert.
Watergate Salad:
3 1/2 oz pack pistachio instant pudding
9 oz container Cool Whip
20 oz can crushed pineapple
1/2 cup chopped nuts
1/2 cup mini marshmallow
Mix all ingredients in a bowl. Chill. That's it.
Cranberry Orange Salad
6 oz. pack orange jello
1 1/2 cups boiling water
1 16 oz. can jellied cranberry sauce
1 8 3/4 oz can crushed pineapple, drained
1/2 cup diced celery
Dissolve jello in boiling water, add cranberry sauce. Chill until thickened; stir in pineapple and celery. Pour into mold and chill until firm. If it makes you feel healthier, unmold "onto crisp salad greens."
p.s. I am aware the Watergate Salad is technically not a jello salad, but I lump all the jello/pudding/canned fruit/cool whip concoctions into that class. And it's my blog :)
Wednesday, July 25, 2012
You Might Be a Swiss German Mennonite If ...
The inspiration for this post came to me on Saturday night. I had some leftover cooked chicken, and decided to make a casserole, using the white sauce recipe from the More-With-Less Cookbook. I concocted the casserole, put buttered bread crumbs on, and baked it. After eating the first mouthful, it seemed rather bland. Pickles, I thought, that's what this needs. Accordingly, I ran down to the basement, fished the last jar of bread and butter pickles off the shelf, and added them to my plate. As I finished supper, I started thinking about how stereotypically "Mennonite" the whole episode was, from the cookbook I used, to the pickles, to the buttered bread crumbs. This led to a whole list:
You Might Be a Swiss German Mennonite If ...
1. You think home canned peaches or applesauce enhance almost any meal.
2. You own the Mennonite Community Cookbook, the More-With-Less Cookbook, and/or Simply in Season.
3. You've ever dated your fourth or fifth cousin.
4. You can easily trace at least one side of your family back to the 1600s, usually to Switzerland.
5. You grew up doing Buy Fresh, Buy Local.
6. You secretly miss accapella hymn singing.
7. At least one member of your family is still involved in farming.
8. You have a female relative named Esther or Ethel.
9. You always make sure to attend church when there's a fellowship meal.
10. You grew up collecting soap for MCC at summer Bible School.
11. You have put together an MCC relief kit.
12. You feel vaguely guilty each time you shop at WalMart.
13. You never admit to shopping at WalMart.
14. Your family photo albums are an excellent record of the appearance and disappearance of plain dress in the 19th and 20th centuries.
15. Your church library had books by Christmas Carol Kauffman.
16. Someone in your family spends a lot of time in geneaological research, and has produced a "family book."
17. You married someone with the same last name (see number 3).
18. You freeze crazy amounts of corn each summer.
19. Thrift store shopping is entertainment and a sport.
20. You know several people who participated in VS, YES, STAT, or GO with EMM, and you immediately know what these acronyms mean.
21. Your church library had an old copy of the Martyrs Mirror on the top shelf that no one ever looked at.
22. You think pretzels and ice cream are a great Sunday night supper.
23. You chuckled at this list and could easily make your own.
You Might Be a Swiss German Mennonite If ...
1. You think home canned peaches or applesauce enhance almost any meal.
2. You own the Mennonite Community Cookbook, the More-With-Less Cookbook, and/or Simply in Season.
3. You've ever dated your fourth or fifth cousin.
4. You can easily trace at least one side of your family back to the 1600s, usually to Switzerland.
5. You grew up doing Buy Fresh, Buy Local.
6. You secretly miss accapella hymn singing.
7. At least one member of your family is still involved in farming.
8. You have a female relative named Esther or Ethel.
9. You always make sure to attend church when there's a fellowship meal.
10. You grew up collecting soap for MCC at summer Bible School.
11. You have put together an MCC relief kit.
12. You feel vaguely guilty each time you shop at WalMart.
13. You never admit to shopping at WalMart.
14. Your family photo albums are an excellent record of the appearance and disappearance of plain dress in the 19th and 20th centuries.
15. Your church library had books by Christmas Carol Kauffman.
16. Someone in your family spends a lot of time in geneaological research, and has produced a "family book."
17. You married someone with the same last name (see number 3).
18. You freeze crazy amounts of corn each summer.
19. Thrift store shopping is entertainment and a sport.
20. You know several people who participated in VS, YES, STAT, or GO with EMM, and you immediately know what these acronyms mean.
21. Your church library had an old copy of the Martyrs Mirror on the top shelf that no one ever looked at.
22. You think pretzels and ice cream are a great Sunday night supper.
23. You chuckled at this list and could easily make your own.
Tuesday, June 12, 2012
We Can Rebuild Her, part 2 (finally!)
Let's see, where was I? Oh yes, thirsty and floating on morphine. Ahem. The rest of the day and night is a blur. I remember being moved to my room, Nate talking to the doctors, me staring down dazedly at all the tubes I was hooked up to, and being thankful that everything was still numb. On Saturday, I was allowed to have some soda and bouillon. University of Penn is a wonderful hospital, but three years ago their food fulfilled every bad hospital stereotype in the book. I didn't think it was possible to make chicken bouillon and jello taste bad, but they managed it. But hey, it was nourishment, of a sort. Since I couldn't sit up unassisted, we spent some time learning how to raise and lower bed so that I could recline. Did I mention that I also had big cuffs (like blood pressure cuffs)wrapped around each leg, massaging them so I wouldn't get blood clots? I'd forgotten about them till this moment. I was a rag doll, propped up on pillows, content, for the moment, to lie there quietly.
Doctors and nurses popped in every few hours. My surgeon came by, and said all had gone well. She asked if a group of residents could come to see me, and I agreed. By this point in the game so many people had seen so much that a few more eyes didn't matter. So a group of cheerful young surgeons in training came in, inspected the six surgical drains, the incisions, listened to Dr. Wu describe part of the surgery, and trooped out. Later that day Nate headed for home, and it was just me, the nurses, and TV. I spent a lot of time watching things like "What Not to Wear" and the soon-to-be-trainwrecked Jon and Kate. Somewhere out there people were having makeovers, living their lives, and raising children. I wanted to be part of that world.
My sister came to visit on Sunday. I ate more horrible jello as we watched TV and talked. Later that day, at least I think it was that day, the nurses told me I would have to get up and walk. What a process. Somehow they got me out of bed and behind a walker, and there I was, hunched over like an 80 year old bald woman, shuffing out of my room and down the hall. A nurse helped me get started, and said to take it slow and do my best. Again, the surrealism of the experience took over. Was this me? A year ago I had been a healthy new mom with a full head of hair. Now ... who was I? A hunched figure in a hospital gown, muttering through gritted teeth "My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness."
Perhaps it was seeing all the happy people on TV who were learning what to wear, or perhaps the drugs were wearing off, but for whatever reason, Monday was a low point. The day started out well, with a visit from a woman I had met on some cancer forums. She'd had a similar surgery in the same hospital less than a year earlier, and she drove all the way from New Jersey to meet me in person. She brought a care package, and was full of encouragement. A Muslim woman, she blogged for about a year after this, then disappeared from the internet, so we never met again. Khala Jan, if you're still out there, I don't know if I ever thanked you for your kindness. I truly hope to see you again.
After she left, I was able to get up and use the bathroom for a few minutes, where I could look in a mirror for the first time. The surgeon did an incredible job, but the reality of the scars, bandages, drains and my own helplessness hit me full force. A sweet nurse found me, 15 minutes later, still sobbing. She helped me back into bed and assured me that I would indeed recover, and all would be well. I made an effort to trust that she was right. I also resolved not to look in the mirror for at least a week.
Next time, "Moving On"
Doctors and nurses popped in every few hours. My surgeon came by, and said all had gone well. She asked if a group of residents could come to see me, and I agreed. By this point in the game so many people had seen so much that a few more eyes didn't matter. So a group of cheerful young surgeons in training came in, inspected the six surgical drains, the incisions, listened to Dr. Wu describe part of the surgery, and trooped out. Later that day Nate headed for home, and it was just me, the nurses, and TV. I spent a lot of time watching things like "What Not to Wear" and the soon-to-be-trainwrecked Jon and Kate. Somewhere out there people were having makeovers, living their lives, and raising children. I wanted to be part of that world.
My sister came to visit on Sunday. I ate more horrible jello as we watched TV and talked. Later that day, at least I think it was that day, the nurses told me I would have to get up and walk. What a process. Somehow they got me out of bed and behind a walker, and there I was, hunched over like an 80 year old bald woman, shuffing out of my room and down the hall. A nurse helped me get started, and said to take it slow and do my best. Again, the surrealism of the experience took over. Was this me? A year ago I had been a healthy new mom with a full head of hair. Now ... who was I? A hunched figure in a hospital gown, muttering through gritted teeth "My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness."
Perhaps it was seeing all the happy people on TV who were learning what to wear, or perhaps the drugs were wearing off, but for whatever reason, Monday was a low point. The day started out well, with a visit from a woman I had met on some cancer forums. She'd had a similar surgery in the same hospital less than a year earlier, and she drove all the way from New Jersey to meet me in person. She brought a care package, and was full of encouragement. A Muslim woman, she blogged for about a year after this, then disappeared from the internet, so we never met again. Khala Jan, if you're still out there, I don't know if I ever thanked you for your kindness. I truly hope to see you again.
After she left, I was able to get up and use the bathroom for a few minutes, where I could look in a mirror for the first time. The surgeon did an incredible job, but the reality of the scars, bandages, drains and my own helplessness hit me full force. A sweet nurse found me, 15 minutes later, still sobbing. She helped me back into bed and assured me that I would indeed recover, and all would be well. I made an effort to trust that she was right. I also resolved not to look in the mirror for at least a week.
Next time, "Moving On"
Tuesday, May 8, 2012
We Can Rebuild Her, part 1
Note: It's hard to write about major surgery without getting close to the realm of Too Much Information. I will try to avoid most of the actual gory details as I reflect on this date 3 years ago. You've been warned!
May 8, 2009. Friday before Mother's Day, 6 a.m. Nate and I drive through the Phildadelphia streets. We have to be at the hospital by 6:30. We drive in silence. What is there to say? I hurried through getting dressed. Didn't look down. Tried to pretend it was just another doctor's appointment. I will be in surgery for 8 hours if all goes well.
Thanks to heredity and chemo, my already small veins had shrunk to nothing. The poor young man tried five separate times to start an IV in my arm or hand so the doctors could begin administering anesthesia. In case you were wondering, it really hurts to have an IV put in, especially after the third time. Dr. Boraas, one of the surgeons, came over to talk to me as they began try number five. The last thing I remember is her kind voice.
The first thing I am aware of next is the thirst. It is raw, intense, primal. I need water, and I need it now. My tongue feels like cotton, my throat thick and dry. Blinking, I see that Nate is there. "I'm thirsty." He gets the nurse. No water. One ice chip. It barely makes a dent. The first hour out of anesthesia feels like a constant battle for ice. I'm angry. Stop being so stingy about it! I feel heavy and numb.
Next, they move me to a different room. Everything has gone well. No trace of cancer in the tissue, and things look good. I'm thankful, but so tired, and getting more aware of the pain. Where's that morphine pump? I have 8 surgical drains, and a pump that I can hit for more medicine. All I have to do for the rest of the day and night is rest. We'll talk about getting out of bed on Sunday (Mother's Day). As far as I'm concerned, they can postpone that thought for a week. I can't even turn on my side or sit up in bed without the nurse's help. But at least they're giving me more water.
May 8, 2009. Friday before Mother's Day, 6 a.m. Nate and I drive through the Phildadelphia streets. We have to be at the hospital by 6:30. We drive in silence. What is there to say? I hurried through getting dressed. Didn't look down. Tried to pretend it was just another doctor's appointment. I will be in surgery for 8 hours if all goes well.
Thanks to heredity and chemo, my already small veins had shrunk to nothing. The poor young man tried five separate times to start an IV in my arm or hand so the doctors could begin administering anesthesia. In case you were wondering, it really hurts to have an IV put in, especially after the third time. Dr. Boraas, one of the surgeons, came over to talk to me as they began try number five. The last thing I remember is her kind voice.
The first thing I am aware of next is the thirst. It is raw, intense, primal. I need water, and I need it now. My tongue feels like cotton, my throat thick and dry. Blinking, I see that Nate is there. "I'm thirsty." He gets the nurse. No water. One ice chip. It barely makes a dent. The first hour out of anesthesia feels like a constant battle for ice. I'm angry. Stop being so stingy about it! I feel heavy and numb.
Next, they move me to a different room. Everything has gone well. No trace of cancer in the tissue, and things look good. I'm thankful, but so tired, and getting more aware of the pain. Where's that morphine pump? I have 8 surgical drains, and a pump that I can hit for more medicine. All I have to do for the rest of the day and night is rest. We'll talk about getting out of bed on Sunday (Mother's Day). As far as I'm concerned, they can postpone that thought for a week. I can't even turn on my side or sit up in bed without the nurse's help. But at least they're giving me more water.
Tuesday, April 17, 2012
Three years later
Friday the 13th was a good day. Nate was home, Easter goodies were prepared, eggs were painted. The day was filled with the usual laundry, childrearing, food prep, and general housekeeping work. Nothing special, but everything good.
Monday April 13 2009 was another good day. I walked into the chemo room for the last time. For the eighth and final time I sat down in the beige recliners, pulled down my shirt collar so the nurses could put the needles into my port, and started chewing the tic-tacs to cover the taste of saline, anti-nausea medicine, and Taxotere. For the last time I looked around at the bookshelf with light literature and mostly current magazines, the box full of crocheted hats under the table, and the flyers for TLC, a company that makes wigs, hats, and scarves. The next day I would come back for one last painful shot of Neulasta, to keep my white blood cell count up. The shot always hurt going in, and my bones would ache for three days. But it was the last time.
I remember hoping that this treatment would be scheduled before Easter. It would feel good, and symbolic, to have this part behind me, to enter fully into the triumphant celebration of the resurrection. But actually, I think it's more appropriate the way it was.
It's often said that we live on the Saturday before Easter: Jesus has died for us, but hasn't returned to the earth for the final time in power. We are still waiting for the full promise. It's more accurate to say that we are living on Easter Monday, Tuesday, and every day after that. We know Jesus died for us, rose again, and defeated death in that moment. Now we wrestle with what to do after that, when each Monday morning rolls around again.
We live in a world where the "resurrection power" is not fully realized, and will not be until Jesus returns. Like the disciples, we try to go about our lives with the hope and knowledge that Jesus rose from the dead: as we gather together, as we walk along the road, as we go back to the lake, before breakfast, trying to find ... something that will help it all make sense. In the Bible, Jesus shows up at random, odd moments: in an upstairs room, along the road to Emmaus, by the Sea of Galilee, where he is cooking fish. That is how the resurrection power expressed itself to the disciples. I think I would have been expecting something more dramatic. (Although after the Holy Spirit came down at Pentecost, the drama did pick up).
The world is still full of suffering. People get cancer and MS. Children are hurt. Marriages break apart. Tornadoes destroy homes and communities. Daily life is filled with the sandpaper irritation of living with fellow sinners. What do we do with all this? Jesus rose from the dead, we know the eventual end of the story, so why isn't life better?
I don't have any profound answers for this, but the past three years have made a few things more clear. First, Jesus was honest about the reality of suffering. "In this world," he said, "You will have trouble." He never gives false hope. So, the next words are also true: "But take heart; I have overcome the world." Second, many people, including myself, can say that it is in the hard experiences of life that we can feel God's support most clearly. There are no more illusions that I am in control. God has to carry it all, which is how it should be since "underneath are the everlasting arms."
And finally, I think God is always trying to help us grow, and strengthen our trust and faith. Like muscles, they have to be worked so they can become stronger. It can hurt, and it usually does. Why is it set up this way? I have no idea. But in the end, as a Christian, I trust that God's plan is best, and he will give me strength. Even on Monday mornings.
Monday April 13 2009 was another good day. I walked into the chemo room for the last time. For the eighth and final time I sat down in the beige recliners, pulled down my shirt collar so the nurses could put the needles into my port, and started chewing the tic-tacs to cover the taste of saline, anti-nausea medicine, and Taxotere. For the last time I looked around at the bookshelf with light literature and mostly current magazines, the box full of crocheted hats under the table, and the flyers for TLC, a company that makes wigs, hats, and scarves. The next day I would come back for one last painful shot of Neulasta, to keep my white blood cell count up. The shot always hurt going in, and my bones would ache for three days. But it was the last time.
I remember hoping that this treatment would be scheduled before Easter. It would feel good, and symbolic, to have this part behind me, to enter fully into the triumphant celebration of the resurrection. But actually, I think it's more appropriate the way it was.
It's often said that we live on the Saturday before Easter: Jesus has died for us, but hasn't returned to the earth for the final time in power. We are still waiting for the full promise. It's more accurate to say that we are living on Easter Monday, Tuesday, and every day after that. We know Jesus died for us, rose again, and defeated death in that moment. Now we wrestle with what to do after that, when each Monday morning rolls around again.
We live in a world where the "resurrection power" is not fully realized, and will not be until Jesus returns. Like the disciples, we try to go about our lives with the hope and knowledge that Jesus rose from the dead: as we gather together, as we walk along the road, as we go back to the lake, before breakfast, trying to find ... something that will help it all make sense. In the Bible, Jesus shows up at random, odd moments: in an upstairs room, along the road to Emmaus, by the Sea of Galilee, where he is cooking fish. That is how the resurrection power expressed itself to the disciples. I think I would have been expecting something more dramatic. (Although after the Holy Spirit came down at Pentecost, the drama did pick up).
The world is still full of suffering. People get cancer and MS. Children are hurt. Marriages break apart. Tornadoes destroy homes and communities. Daily life is filled with the sandpaper irritation of living with fellow sinners. What do we do with all this? Jesus rose from the dead, we know the eventual end of the story, so why isn't life better?
I don't have any profound answers for this, but the past three years have made a few things more clear. First, Jesus was honest about the reality of suffering. "In this world," he said, "You will have trouble." He never gives false hope. So, the next words are also true: "But take heart; I have overcome the world." Second, many people, including myself, can say that it is in the hard experiences of life that we can feel God's support most clearly. There are no more illusions that I am in control. God has to carry it all, which is how it should be since "underneath are the everlasting arms."
And finally, I think God is always trying to help us grow, and strengthen our trust and faith. Like muscles, they have to be worked so they can become stronger. It can hurt, and it usually does. Why is it set up this way? I have no idea. But in the end, as a Christian, I trust that God's plan is best, and he will give me strength. Even on Monday mornings.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)