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In the quiet of this evening
as I look back over the day
I realize that there has been
The Joy
that has been so elusive over these last months
walking this day with me.

My heart rejoices.

It’s been too long.

The sorrow has been so deep.

The Joy so elusive.

But tonight
thanks to the prayers of gals who love me
and the mercy of our Heavenly Father
some extra sleep
some answered prayers
and some accomplished tasks —

I feel the stirrings of joy,

and I give grateful praise.

I know, I know.

The Joy is not dependent on circumstance.
(at least it shouldn’t be)

But sometimes hope comes wrapped in understandable packages

And the hope gives The Joy free reign.

 

On another note . . .

I do hope my sweet Mama won’t be angry at me for putting this picture on–
but if you could say a prayer for my Sweet Mama, it would be appreciated.
She has caught some sort of bug–flu or upper respiratory infection — and is really miserable.
The doctor doesn’t think it is terribly serious,
But she could still use your prayers.

THANKS!!!

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It’s Monday morning.  The sun is streaming into the large window in our family room.  Certain Man is off today.  I am so comforted by these Mondays that he has off.  Especially this Monday, when I have been so sick for four days (and now am feeling better). 

It’s a good way to lose weight — nine pounds in four days — but I feel as weak as a kitten.  This stomach virus was a vicious thing.  Although I had my flu shot weeks ago, I wonder if it was a strain of the flu or if it is just one of those things that descended upon me and was intensified by stress.  Fever of 101 and nausea and vomiting– and running to the loo every little bit is no fun at all.  But I awoke this morning feeling so much better, and that is a blessing, indeed.  It also is a blessing that I have a great helper to fill in for me when I can’t be what I need to be.  Middle Daughter has capably filled the place I have with the ladies — and I am so grateful for her help. 

(Now later!) I am also grateful for a call from Dr. Killeen’s office this morning saying that the suspicious area is a cyst.  One they want to keep an eye on, but one that is definitely a cyst.  I need a repeat mammo in three months, but my sense of relief is great, indeed.  If my stomach felt better, I’d be dancing!  But instead, I guess I will plod along and see what I can accomplish here on a Monday morning regular schedule. Laundry.  Tidying. Planning the week ahead, and planning for the holiday next week.  Family will be home — all of them, Lord Willing, and I am so looking forward to it.  Certain Man’s sister is coming from San Diego, and that is always such a wonderful time.  We have some plans and she has some plans, and we shall need to make them work together.

Hope all of you out there in Xanga land have a blessed day, and that the season ahead is one of grateful praise!  Thank you so much for your prayers, your calls, your private letters.  I have such a wealth in the friends that God has given me, and I am humbled and grateful and so, so Blessed!


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It has been a yucky week–

News from faraway that isn’t mine to share, but breaks my heart.

A call back mammogram with something suspicious that needs further evaluation. (I’ve had the second mammo and ultrasound, and there is “something there” but of course, they won’t speculate except to say, “Don’t worry about it.  Your doctor will get a report.”)

And now a bug with fever and intestinal upset that has left me feeling weak in body and soul.

So what do we do when things go so terribly “wrong?”  My Thousand Gifts book lies here on the hearth, and I open it to read,

“. . .that which tears open our souls, those holes that splatter our sight, may actually become the thin, open places to see through the mess of this place to the heart-aching beauty beyond.  To Him.  To the God whom we endlessly crave.”  Anne Voskamp

And then God’s Eternal Word:

10“So do not fear, for I am with you;
   do not be dismayed, for I am your God.
I will strengthen you and help you;
   I will uphold you with my righteous right hand.” Is. 41:10

 

 

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It was a wonderful day.  My friend, Emma took me to lunch, (a birthday lunch which happily extended my 58th birthday into another month!) and Middle Daughter helped with laundry and straightening and cleaning the kitchen.  (In fact, she did that “kitchen thing” pretty much single handedly.)

I am ashamed of myself.  This morning as she was going out of the house to meet someone for coffee, I made a comment about her having a “life of Riley” and was immediately sorry I had said it.  She loves people with intent and intensely.  She tries so hard to connect with her siblings, and often feels like she doesn’t quite measure up.  She works at a heartbreaking job, that of being an in home care hospice nurse.  She has watched her friends and family members find the loves of their lives and become wives and mothers and even though she doesn’t allow herself to become bitter or jaded, she sometimes cries private tears.  She would so much love to be a mommy.

She does have an exciting life in so many ways — and one that doesn’t have lots of mundane demands upon her.  She travels and explores and reads and quilts and just does so many things for which most of us have neither talent, brains, time or resources.  I don’t think I’m jealous.  I love being a wife and a mom.  I love being an in home caregiver for handicapped adults.

But sometimes, there are days like today, when I just want to go out for dinner with a friend and not have to worry about when I need to be back.  I want Nettie to use her words instead of her sign language/charades routine to ask me questions.  I don’t feel like dropping everything to go and fill the one bird feeder she can’t quite reach.  I want her to let me sit at my computer without coming in and interrupting my train of thought by asking me for the trash can on the other side of my office chair.  I want Cecilia to sit quiet in her chair without coughing and snorting and burping when I want to sit quiet in my chair.  I want to not answer questions about the tears that are threatening to spill over.  I want the house to be orderly, to have the laundry all done and put away, to have supper finished and the kitchen cleaned (again!) and I want time to study and ponder and think about the things I need to teach this week.

I’m facing a challenge again with our three kids.  Sunday, just before the closing prayer I looked down and saw a dollar in Muffie’s bag.  I said, “Muffie, where did you get that dollar?”

She looked as guilty as all get out, but said, “It’s mine.”

“But where did you get it, Honey?”

“Um, I found it here.  On the bench.”

I was really puzzled. 

(Certain Man and I provide them each with two dollars to put into the offering plate as it goes past, and they have been so excited and enthusiastic about this.  When they noticed that we use the brown envelopes for our morning check, they each wanted a brown envelope, too.  That was okay, I decided, so they each make a big deal of writing $2.00 on the outside, carefully sealing it and then dropping it into the offering plate.  I had watched them on this Sunday morning and had said to Certain Man, “I love how much they enjoy this.  It’s like they really are having fun giving!”  He smiled at their enthusiasm, and we felt like maybe this was one thing that was going “right” in our efforts.  Oh, dear.  Pride goeth before destruction and a haughty spirit before a fall.)

So I kept looking at that dollar and trying to piece together the morning, and the circumstances around the offering time this morning.  I had an extra dollar, but I thought I had put it back into my wallet.  I said to Muffie, “Did you put both of your dollars into the offering envelope this morning?”

“Um, yeah,” she said a little uncertainly, and shifted uncomfortably.

“Well, Sweetie, I am sure that this dollar doesn’t belong to you.  I’m not sure where it came from, but we are going to put it into the offering.”

“Alright,” she said resignedly, and I took it and kept it in my possession until church was over.  I remembered what her offering envelope had looked like because she had written her $2.00 and then decided that it didn’t look right, so she had scribbled over it and rewritten it on the other side. It was easy to find in the stack.  I opened it, and my heart sank.  One lonely dollar in the envelope.

Just about then, Muffie ran up to me to show me a note that someone in church had written to her.  I looked into her happy eyes, and wanted to just let this go, but I said, “Muffie, you didn’t put both of your dollars I gave you into the offering.”

The light went out of her eyes and she dropped her head.  I reached out and pulled her into a hug.  “Muffie, why didn’t you give both dollars?”  She wouldn’t look at me.  Wouldn’t answer me.  “Was it because you wanted dollar so much that you decided to keep it?”  No answer, just a miserable little girl with downcast eyes.  I didn’t see any rebellion, just a deep, deep sadness.  I decided to deal with the obvious things first — like how it messes everything up to have one thing written on the envelopes, and another thing inside, and how it is confusing to the bookkeeper when the numbers don’t match, etc..  She wouldn’t look at me.  I finally cupped her chin in my hand and said, “Muffie, look at my eyes.”  She finally raised them enough for me to catch the sadness, the guilt, the misery, and I decided that it had been enough.

“Muffie,” I said, “I really don’t think I will ever have to worry about this again, will I?” 

She shook her head vehemently, her black poof of a pony tail on top of her head dancing back and forth in agreement. 

“Okay, then, Muffie.  I don’t want this to happen again.”  I squeezed her one more time and set her free.  The light was back in her eyes, and she handed me the note again that someone had written to her about what a wonderful little girl she was.  And I thought this little episode was over.

It wasn’t.

That evening at our monthly “Grandma night,” Certain Man and I had occasion to discuss this with Josh and Winnie, and there we came to find out that this wasn’t the first time that the money hasn’t added up in the envelopes that the kids put into the offering.  Because of how we have divided things, we know it hasn’t always been Muffie that kept back money. 

My heart has been heavy all week.  I know it is just a few dollars, and in light of the generous offerings at our little church, it isn’t the money at all.  You all know that.  It is the principle of the thing.  I wish the kids could realize that so many things go in to whether people trust us or not.  And, quite frankly, the church family at our little church DOESN’T really trust these children.  I’ve been pondering all week how I can approach this issue in a way that will cause the kids to want to be trustworthy — make them long for transparency and honesty and simplicity in the relationships that are so complicated by deceit.

OUCH!  That tromps on my own toes, (to be honest, here!) more than is comfortable.  Sometimes it seems that what is most wrong with how the people of God “do church” is that we are so afraid to let people see us the way we really are.  We can be ever so honest in the dollars and cents, but so “hidden” in the things that we should confess and forsake so that we could be “at home” in the presence of Jesus and His people.

I know I need to deal with this business of the kids and their trustworthiness.  It’s been an issue from the beginning.  But I also need to work at my own heart issues and trustworthiness.  You know what?  That too, has been an issue — actually, from the beginning.

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Remember these pictures?

(At least, I think I put them on . . .)

 

It’s that time again!
Tonight at Shady Acres.
Bring your own hot dogs, hot dog buns and sticks to roast them with.

 

Bring an extra “potluck picnic dish”
Drinks and paperware will be provided.

6:30 is when we hope to be able to start roasting the hotdogs

When we are sufficiently full, and the fire starts to really die down,

We will go on a hay ride.

 

 

Dress warm, you may even want to bring an old blanket or two–


(because not all of us have “armstrong heaters!”)

bring your lawn chairs, and good humor.

Hope to see you there!

 

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When you are the slave of the world and HAVE to wash Grammy’s dishes,
And Auntie Beebs won’t let you quench your thirst
by drinking the dish water through a big old dirty straw:

 

it really is enough to break your little heart!
MEAN AUNTIE BEEBS!

(The Bible says you aren’t supposed to muzzle the ox that treads out the corn!)

 

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It’s Autumn at Shady Acres. 

The pilgrims are out:

And I’ve been burning candles and enjoying the many years’ accumulation of fall foliage and little gourds.

 

The leaves have been falling for a number of weeks,

 

but we escaped frost until two nights ago. 

 

A week ago, I went through my yard and took some pictures of the flowers as they made their last big splash of the season:

        
                                                                                                *                                              

         
*                                                                                 

 

 

     

 

This morning, all the coleus are hanging brown and terrible!

             
                                                                       *This is the same plant that is the
                                                                       third and fourth picture in the previous set

And it won’t be long until the rest of the flowers join them.
I’ve brought a very few in — the rest I’m leaving to go to seed for the birds.

Outside, it’s a strange and unfamiliar COLD.

Inside, the pellet stove is burning with its merry and steady light.
We just came through a delightful weekend with good friends, good times, good music and good food.
I’m looking forward to the holidays and some happy family times together. 
I’m not done with the grief, but I am grateful for your encouragement and prayers.

“. . . weeping may endure for a night, but joy cometh in the morning.” Psalm 30:5b

 

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I will remember October, 2011 with a lump in my throat and so much sadness.

Late on the evening of October 6, we received a call that one of Daniel’s cousins had passed away.  A continent away, alone in a park in the early morning hours, he chose to go.  Someone, somewhere may know why.  We don’t.  I doubt we ever will.  He was handsome and gregarious and musical and kind.  I have wept for the waste of a human life, and for the pain that brought him there, yes.  But I’m angry, too.  I cannot understand how a man can do this to his aging parents, his family.  How is this supposed to make things better? 

Ten days later, as chronicled here, a beloved uncle also left us.  I’ve thought so much about this passing.  About how it is when we are loved, and needed and even useful, how hard it is to say good-bye.  I’ve thought some of the same things I thought when my Daddy died. I went back to one of my other xanga sites:   www.xanga.com/letterstomydaddy  where I wrote down some of my rawest grief, and found that things haven’t changed much when it comes to losing someone we love — there will always be questions.  There will always be people who get to live that are far less deserving in our eyes than the one who died.  And this ache, though not as intense for me as it was when Daddy died, is just as intense for Uncle Vernon’s wife, Freda, and his children, Jay, Kathy, Vernon Jon, and Andrea, and his beloved grandchildren and his brother and sisters. 

And then, Merlin.  So unexpected, so tragic, so inestimable the loss.  I’ve almost not allowed myself into this room of grief because it hurts so much, and because I almost feel like what is there in its intensity for me is almost improper, bordering on profane.  It’s like it isn’t right to feel this kind of pain when it really isn’t “mine to own.”  I keep thinking about his wife and kids and his mom and siblings, his friends, the community there in and around Pigeon, MI, who will feel this loss in ways I won’t even begin to.  I remember feeling grief when Daddy died that felt so specific to me and our family — like no one else feels a grief this raw and stays sane.  We had the hope of Heaven, we believed that God’s timing was best, we didn’t wish him back to that sick, unreliable body — but he was so GONE, and we missed him so acutely.  The grief was so intense that it was physical in nature — “sick in the stomach, wanting to throw up” kind of grief.  Daddy had 16 more years than Merlin had — and strangely enough, that seemed so young for someone like my Daddy.  It just feels so WRONG for someone like Merlin.

And so, these days have passed.  My hands have been busy, and I’ve tried to occupy my mind with things other than suicide, disease and accidents.  Sometimes, though, in the middle of absolutely ordinary, everyday busy-ness, I cannot stop the tears, and I find myself wanting just some quiet time to answer no questions, to have no responsibility, to just do some honest grieving.

But it will have to wait.  There is an annual hymnsing and minister’s meeting to prepare for, there are cakes to bake,  vegetable trays to assemble, and overnight guests to enjoy.  There are homemaking chores that I cannot ignore, and my ladies’ daily needs that are always “beyond normal” by necessity, to attend to.

And God is God of The Timing of Things.  He isn’t surprised by how everything has come together.  He didn’t set out to “ruin” the month that has always been my favorite.  There is a plan here, and when I am just a little bit better able to cope, I think I will see a little glimpse of what He had in mind.  And if not — Well, I’m going to still trust Him.  He is God.  He will do what is best for me if I can only let go of the pieces.  I want to do my part — but I cannot do God’s part, no matter how hard I try. 

It’s a good time for me to let God be GOD, not only in my heart, but in my head.

 

 

 

 

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I was sitting in my chair, in the corner beside the fire on this chilly Monday morning.  I kept trying to wrap my head around the ache in my heart.  I just could not really believe that Merlin was gone.  He was so vibrant, so healthy, so alive!  The usual things have been said, and I believe, I believe!  He IS more alive than he has ever been.  He IS in the presence of the LORD, and he would never have wanted to stay in that broken body.  I’m sure he has seen The Father, I’m sure he has seen his Dad — and mine.  But it all seems so surreal.

I was working on a letter to my kids when the morning quiet was interrupted by the phone.  It was Certain Man. His quiet strength and understanding have helped to hold me steady in this last week.  Sometimes I see him watching me with a calculating look, sometimes worried.

“I don’t know if you can see it or not, Hon,” he said, “but the sunrise is spectacular this morning.  Go look to see if you can see it.”

Almost four decades with this guy tells me to never ignore such information, and I got up and looked towards the east.  “What do you see, Sweetheart?” I ask, looking at a gray horizon, and seeing nothing of significance.

“I just came across the bridge at the swamp,” he says, “and the sun is hanging over the swamp like a big ball of fire.  You may not be able to see anything because of the trees, but it is simply gorgeous.”

I look and look, and don’t even see a glimmer of the fire.  Just gray horizon with an area that is a bit brighter where the sun will probably appear after a while.  I don’t doubt that he is seeing it — and that it is breath taking, but I just can’t see it.  Yet.

“I’m sorry, Daniel, but it isn’t up far enough yet.  It sounds wonderful, though.”  We exchange a few more bits of conversation and then I am back into the morning routine with my ladies and laundry — busy stuff to keep my hands occupied while my heart weeps.

And then, fixing a cup of coffee, looking listlessly out the side window where the summer flowers escaped frost one more night, I keep thinking about the morning and the sunrise I couldn’t see.  I keep thinking that there is something nagging at edge of my conscious thought.  I keep thinking about Merlin and how they said he often would call one of his brothers in the early morning hours to “go riding.”  He was an accomplished biker, and loved to cycle, too.  I got to thinking about what he might tell us this morning if he could call back.

“Come.  Ride with me!  You can’t see it yet, but the Morning is glorious!  The Son is like a ball of fire, and all the air is alive with His presence.  You can’t see it yet, you can’t see it yet, you can’t see it yet . . .”

And the fact that I don’t see it yet — don’t begin to understand it yet, doesn’t change the fact that I believe it is for real, and that someday, The Son will come for all who look for him, and it won’t carry the grief of this day, but rather the promise of a Glorious reunion and an eternity without the pain of separation.

“Ah, Merlin!  The ‘if only’s’ and the sadness of this day crowd out the the things my head wants to say.  We will miss you, and you will always be thought of with good memories in the hearts of so many.  May God grant healing to your family, and may this “seed sown in the mortal body” rise to everlasting life.”

(Lord Jesus, forgive my questioning heart, but WHY did it have to be him????)

 

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I said I wasn’t giving any more updates —

But this just came through on our Family network:

“We’ve said goodbye to Merlin. We believe that he is at this moment exploring the back roads of heaven with Jesus. Or maybe he’s swimming the river of life from one end to the other. He might have even convinced his dad to take a bike ride with him, trying out his new body.

We talked to the neurologist around 8:00 and received the results of the CT scan and the EEG. The doctor told us that the CT scan shows signs of lack of oxygen to the brain. The EEG showed slow brain activity. He says that the tests paint a grim picture.

Although we are celebrating that Merlin is alive and well in heaven, we are grieving being away from him. We are so sad. And the hurt is so deep.

Keep on praying. We are not standing in our own strength. Your support has been overwhelming. We’ll let you know our plans when we know them. Our headlights aren’t shining too far ahead at this point.”

I feel like my heart is going to break.  I am so very sad for his family . . . for this old world.  There are so few fine men — and he was one fine man.  

Healer of our every ill
Light of each tomorrow
give us peace beyond our fear
and hope beyond our sorrow.

 

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