A Great Many Things

"Last I checked, there was such a thing as overlapping circles on a Venn Diagram, and I find that many times in life, I belong in the gray in-between of A Great Many Things. And, instead of pushing myself toward one clear area, I'm accepting that it's okay to be a hodgepodge mess of everything. A life-loving amalgam...

My point–and there is one–is that there's much in life to dabble in, and I want to swim in every puddle."

Kelle Hampton just nailed my life.  I have spent the better part of it bemoaning the fact that I have never had a clearly defined niche like so many admirable women do.  I love Bach wafting from the piano in the afternoon.  Every bit as much as I love my husband's new road trip playlist which is a lot more Boston and Black Eyed Peas than Bach. I love decrepit pieces with peeling paint but all my decor bookmarks are Scandanavian. I think crepe-y/drape-y Bohemian layers are to die for, yet my own wardrobe is pretty cleanlined. It's like that. 

This love of "A Great Many Things" has been something of an embarassment to me.  Try to design a website when you flip hourly between bright and crisp and faded and textured.  (keep this in mind if you ever volunteer to help me with anything creative. It can be painful ; ))  But I have decided that 44 is going to be the year of embracing what is. I am not an either/or.  (although I am extremely Irish – hence that ghostly pale skin..)

And that's ok.  I'm gonna swim in a lotta puddles.

beach

Here is to jumping in with both feet – into A Great Many Things!

 

Take this path

My husband and boys returned from a bike ride the other day describing a new trail which promised surprises.  I didn't feel much like walking.  But he nudged me out the door and pointed in the direction of the trail head.  

Bikes
Go, he said.  You are always glad when you do.  And he was right. I rarely regret a walk.  It has done more for clear thinking and morale than I can say.  In fact when the dishes stack and the washer loads are are waiting on the dryer to finish and the pitch of my voice starts to creep ever so slightly higher he nudges again.  Go.  Walk.  

path
I left this day with two dog walkers and a camera which was a good call.  I had no idea what we were walking into. The trail begins with crop fields and meanders into orchards.  Coming from the high prairie it nearly took my breath away.  

trees

These trees are all abloom for just a short window of time.  That window is closing already and the meadows and walkways are snowy with fallen blossoms. 

blossom
 This week the temperatures are taking a nosedive back to seasonal norms. I am so glad we got outside when we did.  

"After a day's walk everything has twice its usual value."

  ~George Macauley Trevelyan

Make new friends, but keep the old

The train brought us a wonderful surprise the other day.  Zach's sweet friend from high school, Rachael, is coincidentally studying in Germany this semester. We were so pleased to be able to see her if only for a short visit. 

1

We met Rachael when she was a young teen in a town so tiny it boasts no stoplights. She was full of life and determination even then.  That has seen her through her junior year of college as she is finishing a degree in international business with a double major and additional minors. 

r a
R and T
From that humble hometown Rachael has launched into European travel (this is actually her second trip abroad) having seen Ireland, Italy, and Poland already and heading to Holland and France and the Czech Republic before she's done.

r
We just hope she can fit in one more visit to this tiny town, because there are some little people who were very pleased to see her. : ) 

l boys

Be Positive

I wrote down most of these lines one evening early last winter after spending the morning at the Army hospital with my son. It was too hard to finish at the time.  I want to stress that what follows is not a political commentary, nor meant to invite same. As Plato said,

Everyone is fighting a great battle.

And that is every bit as true for our beloved children. They all leave the downy nest in time and make their way in a dangerous world.  I wonder if all mama birds cover their eyes with their wings as they launch as I do….

*****

 

"It won't be long and we will get you out of here," the camouflaged young man promises the soldier. Nearby in the crowded waiting room a tiny boy wails, distraught, tired, sick.  We are all waiting. 

"Man, I can't stand kids screaming.  I think mortar is more tolerable than that!" he laughs.  There is no response. 

"You have kids?" 

Nothing.

Then there is a slow, barely perceptible nod. Yes.

"How old?" 

There is a pause, the soldier looking as though he was trying to remember a very far off dream.

"Three years old and nine months." 

"Boys or girls?" the young man persists cheerfully. 

Another painful pause.

"The older one is the boy," the soldier replies in a whisper.  

"Ha!  That's good!  Then he can watch out for her when she's a teenager!"  the young man chuckles.  

All around the waiting room is filling with crutches and wheelchairs and soldiers walking, carrying their charts.  I search their faces, wondering.  They filtered past me  a few moments before, in the snow, outside the door as I tried to make a cell phone call, their bus bringing them from the airport.  A few hours earlier they stood in a battlezone waiting for med-evac.   I worked my way back inside to my new recruit.  Before the doorway I wait as a soldier sits up on his gurney and transfers to a wheelchair.  

"Don't forget your bible now," they remind him and a quick scan of the gurney finds the worn volume that has accompanied him to the desert and back.  

Back in the lobby we wait for the last bus.  A series of department representatives make their way in to brief the new arrivals. They will be admitted. They will all undergo TBI – traumatic brain injury – screening.  And they are instructed to call their mothers. In no uncertain terms.  Call home first they are told.  There will be congressional inquiries and desperate searches for them from stateside family if they are remiss.  No mistake – their mothers need to hear they have arrived and know when they will be home. 

It is different now.  I used to look at soldiers through the eyes of a wife.  In many ways I still do.  I think of that three year old boy waiting for his Daddy.  I think of his wife who is doubtless counting down til her husband is home and they can get "back to normal".  

But today I sit next to my own son who will join their ranks soon. I look at their backpacks.  Did I ever notice before that their blood types are written on them?  I think of my once baby boy, and my friend Lisa's marine son, our old friends back home whose son is a Reservist, countless other stories we have heard. Looking around me it seems all I can see are mama's, there in spirit, holding vigil at home.  

This is a different sort of feeling. I became used to letting go of my husband, though it never got easier.  I am just beginning to learn to let my babies go. It seems this will be even harder. All these years of protective instincts on high alert. Then one day you are supposed to turn those off as they venture off without you.  How do we do this? 

I think we never really do this.  That is why along with instructions for administrative paperwork there is the directive – Call home. Whether it is a literal battlefield or a spiritual battlefield, at some point they all go out to fight their battles without you. And you suffer, you cry, you want more than anything to turn back time and enjoy the absolute certainty of looking at a living room strewn with Legos and goldfish crackers knowing that, at that moment, all is well. It is a small window of time in their lives where we believe we have the ability to completely protect and control. And it doesn't last long.

"You ok?" asks the young Marine with the wheelchair who has come to retrieve the soldier by my side. 

"Hmmph," is all he musters. 

"It's ok," says the Marine in reply,"you're here now and we'll take care of you." 

"I don't need a wheelchair."  The soldier has found his voice. 

"Uh, you sure?" 

"I don't need a wheelchair," he insists.

We all watch as he works himself to his feet, gets his weight balanced between his crutches, and makes his way to the hallway.  I pray for his healing, in all the ways he will need to heal.  For his wife, his babies.  And for his mother.  

I look over at my son, assuring me with confidence and courage.  "It's ok, Mom."  

I search his eyes and try to interpret his response.  Is it denial? Naivete? Then I understand.  It is simply faith.  The one realization I have had watching and talking to this boy-turned-man is that my children have tended to believe what I say.  Reality is, this makes me pause and consider the extent to which *I* have believed what I was saying all these years. In the night I have done battle with crazy fears and nagging doubts.  Was he really meant to do this?  This one?  What if…?  Should I have said more?  Less? 

That torrent of panic is stopped in its tracks when I remember his face and my children's words.  It either all makes sense and is falling into place exactly as it should or nothing makes sense and is all just a random series of meaningless disasters.  I remember the words of a friend many years ago, when I was first carrying these babies, telling me that my children's stories have already been written upon the heart of God.  He knows what lies on every page. He is good.  Whatever He allows will be for our ultimate good.  Now I must choose to believe and rest in that peace or be overcome with torment.  

I choose Him.

I choose peace.

B pos

7 Quick Takes

Back by demand of our big boys I bring you…..

7_quick_takes
which are never all that quick but whatever….

1.

Ok here is a cool thing I learned recently.  Bokeh is a photography term which refers to the circles of light in the blurred background of images shot with a short depth of field.  In that sort of image, the subject is in clear focus and the background is softly blurred out.  If you have a light source in your background – like Christmas lights or window blinds or car lights – they will become a series of circles.

Now here is the neat thing about that.  If your aperature is set 'wide open' (small fstop number) you will get circles.  If you aperature was set to any other setting you will get hexagonal bokeh.  I had to go check for myself and found one of each in the archives. Now we know why. If you look at the chart you see the aperature is a series of 6 overlapping flaps which open at their widest into  a full circle.  So there you have it.  Just a fun fact.  And we love our fun facts around here. 

  Aperture-chart-1

2.

Saw this article about a Mom who was suspended from her job and fined for running a 30 minute errand while her 14yo stayed home with his younger brother.  Apparently in the UK the legal babysitting age has been raised to 16, although there was supposed to be an exception when they are your own children. Interestingly enough, this is the same or higher than the age for legal consent in many western countries. (which is as low as 14 in Germany) One would think perhaps it might be good if people had a bit of personal experience with children before they are in a position to produce some.  But I digress….

 Over the years we have really scoured the internet and  each military base we have lived on for local regulations. Some of those are here, and here and here.  The most noteworthy thing about those guidelines?  They are all different. Ditto the state by state guidelines. Moral of the story? Check your local regulations, especially if you homeschool or have a large family. And be nice to your neighbors.  You have no idea how much time they may have on their hands. I am betting the British mum guessed they had better things to think about than her half hour grocery run. 

 3.

More fun facts.  In Europe, many kitchens are BYOB – bring your own baseboards… and cabinets and appliances to go with. A 'built in" kitchen is often provided in rentals to Americans who would otherwise go "Huh??" 

Our kitchen was built in.  Yet while cleaning the baseboards some time back I noticed they were actually clipped on. They are repositionable so you can pull them off to clean both them and under the cabinetry which isn't built in the way American cabinets are but rather are standing on these legs.  Just thought you might like to check that out.  And admittedly felt more than a bit virtuous cleaning not only my baseboards but UNDER my cabinets.  I felt sufficiently smug right until someone dropped the big whopper bottle of soy sauce the next day and it spilled where?  Yup. Under the baseboards.  But hey.  That baseboard popped right back off.  This is how God keeps me humble ; D

Baseboard

4.

I don't know why I thought it so funny but the other day I asked Abbie if she wanted something and she says, "ummm, sure."   Sure is appearing regularly now in place of Yes and I think its hysterical.  She is also using Actually.  As in, "Do you want some oatmeal Abbie?"  "Yes.  Um… no, actually I want g'nola Mom." 

 

5.

 I am not a weather person fwiw.  I don't much care if it rains or snows or sun shines or whatever.  It's weather, you know? It changes.  It should.  So why do I know our temperature has been lately?  Because the heat is off. Why is that you ask?  Well, funny you should bring that up. I asked the landlord the same thing.  His response?  "ist too varme outside".   Turns out the boiler is on a sensor and when the outdoor temp hits a certain level the furnace kicks off.  I think perhaps a polar bear set up the sensor.  The landlord is sending someone out to warm up the house for the wimpy Americans. 

6. 

24 hrs

That is the answer to this week's most frequently asked question.  How long does it take to have an appendix problem unfold?  The answer is that she started to have a stomach ache late the night before surgery.  She woke up ill in the middle of that night and was up and down all that morning.  I was pretty suspicious because the pain had begun to migrate to the side so we went in.  And sure enough it was appendix.  It was removed pronto before rupture and recovery is much speedier this way. Teeny incision. No Madeline scar.  Just a sore belly. But I have been quoting Miss Clavel in my head anyway. Once a homeschooler, always a homeschooler lol!

Madeline
and fwiw – our insurance company sent out this book years ago.  I have used this and its family edition as well to quickly assess symptoms in the kids over the years. 

7.

"Heavy Duty.  Well, we are a heavy duty family."  This is what my husband said in the ironing board row of the store choosing one to replace the one we wore out.  It made me think of our conversation earlier tonight. A friend had commented about our crazy roller coaster life.  We talked about that.  "Do you feel that way?" he asked me.  Well, no.  I don't.   It may seem crazy to say but neither of us does. I always say there is a lot of life happening but it is just that. It is just life, exactly the way it was meant to unfold, and right now there is an abundance of grace not letting us forget that. 

I know now what Jesus meant when He promised peace – but not the kind the world brings. The only peace found in the world is totally based on circumstances which never fail to disappoint sooner or later. This peace can only happen when the stars align and all is well. This other kind is the sort you get when you refuse to "be troubled or afraid."  Easier said than done, especially for me. And there hasn't always been this. Not by a long shot. But when I remember and grab ahold of that truth, there is peace.  

Heavy duty peace.