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an everyday life

an everyday life

Category Archives: Soul Care

The Long Goodbye

29 Tuesday Sep 2009

Posted by Janell in Life at Home, Prayer, Soul Care

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Death, Everyday Life, Prayer, Soul Care

Standing in front of the stove making a pot of chili, I was still thinking about words of Kathleen Norris that I ran into early this morning, in the midst of that promised quiet time I longed for yesterday evening.

“Now the new mother,
that leaky vessel,
begins to nurse her child, beginning the long good-bye.

I’ve been thinking a lot about the saying of goodbyes, long and otherwise, since Sunday evening when Kara called to tell me that her friend Linda (and fellow kindergarten teacher) had lost her battle with cancer.  Linda is no more in this world.  Linda has died.  Linda has passed away.  Linda has said her final long good-bye. 

Death was expected I’m told.  Linda told her daughter last week that it wouldn’t be long now.  And needy as all get-out, Linda asked her daughter to go to the funeral home to make her final arrangments for burial.  I pray Linda’s daughter did not do this alone, for I remember — and believe I’ll never forget — how my mothers two sisters accompanied my sister and me to finish up that last little bit of my mother’s funeral arrangements. 

Even when death is expected, it’s not always easy to say goodbye.  I blubbered through the last week of my mother’s life, so much so, that I recall apologizing to my comatose mother a few days before her death.  I believe Mom understood, though she was never one to readily express her own vulnerability.  Dad on the other hand, can’t help showing his naked need for others, especially my sister Christi.  At the neurologist’s office on Friday, when Daddy saw me walk in, he looked up and sweetly said, “Where’s Chrisit?”  In these final days of my father’s life on earth, Daddy needs the rock steady assurance of my sister’s love, to know that everything will be all right. 

In some mystical other worldy way, love makes living amidst the surety of death all right; and most days, love makes life better than all right. “For better or worse, for richer or poorer, until death do us part” is not just marriage liturgy;  these words are reality for all of life, even our own. 

I wrote some words to this effect in my journal a few weeks back, in a quiet morning time in Louisville, before most of my gal pals were up out of bed.  Only my gracious host was quietly afoot, making preparations for the day.

“The human experience teaches us detachment.  If we live long enough, we will say goodbye to grandparents, parents, friends and maybe even a spouse and siblings, before we must finally say goodbye to our own humanity.”

My mother died without family by her bedside.  When Mom decided to go, she went.  It was the same for Kara’s friend Linda.  On the night Linda die, Linda’s daughter left her mother’s bedside for just a few minutes; long enough for Linda to quietly slip out of this world, surrounded only by the presence of God and heavenly host.  I’ve read that this dying alone, waiting until no one else is around, is not unusual.  Animals go off to look for a quiet place to die.  And it looks like some people choose to do the same.  Will it be this way for my father I wonder?

As I think about it, maybe that’s partly what lays underneath this mornings’s desire for quiet time with God — a need to die to myself so I might be more alive to the needs of others, so I might be more alive to a God who will never die.  With the psalmist I pray,

“Satifsy us in the morning with your steadfast love, so that we may rejoice and be glad all our days.”

Just Scattering Time

28 Monday Sep 2009

Posted by Janell in Prayer, Soul Care

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Everyday Life, Parable of the Sower, Prayer, Soul Care

It was a busy day.  That’s what I told my sister Christi when she called this afternoon.  But when she asked the inevitable question about what I was doing, I struggled to come up with an answer.  You know you’re too busy when you can’t sum up your day with a few words.  

Mondays are always busy, always scattered, a little of this and too little of that.  Today the little of this was housekeeping, laundry, the much dreaded grocery shopping, cooking dinner, dropping the dogs off for their grooming, going to the laundromat to wash the comforter that’s too big to fit in our washer at home and scattering and watering more grass seed over at ‘Cinderella,’ because round one was either eaten by birds or didn’t receive enough water. 

And the too little of that — well, I never got to our year-end tax review I promised myself I would do this afternoon — nor did I make it to my special “God chair” to just sit and be still.  I had planned both in the early morning hour of 5 am, as my coffee was waking me up to what the day might bring.  Had I got up at 3 am, would I have made it to my God chair then?

Scattering time and my scattering of grass seed reminds me of the parable of the sower, one of those great teachings of Jesus.   In the parable, some seed is eaten by birds, some seed falls on rocky soil and withers from shallow roots and some falls on thorny ground and is choked by weeds.  I don’t regard my Monday doings as weeds or rocks or hungry birds.  But I am feeling a little shallow, a little dry, a little scattered.  I am in need of some quiet, restorative be-still time with God.

So first things first.  Tomorrow I’m going back to the basics and scatter time in my God chair first.  With a cup of coffee, of course. 

Homecoming

22 Tuesday Sep 2009

Posted by Janell in Far Away Places, In the Garden, Life at Home, Soul Care

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Everyday Life, Homecoming, Housekeeping, Oklahoma Gardening, Søren Kierkegaard, Soul Care, Travel

There is a sad-gladness in returning home after a long awaited trip has ended.    

So it was very good that my Sunday homecoming made me feel infinitely precious.  After dinner and the all important walk with the dogs, our empty nest settled down in front of the television to pick up the threads of our common everyday life.  But I’ll be forever glad that I  looked away from the story unfolding on the television to catch a better story being told within my husband’s loving eye that I found focused on me.  As our eyes met, I watched the love in his eyes slip down his face to his mouth to break into a huge smile of gladness.  “I’m so happy you’re home,”  he’d offered up, just in case I missed the message spoken by the preface of his glance and smile.  

By Monday, it was time to slip back into reality, into my repetitive world of everyday life.  As I went out to tend my garden, I found the aphids were back in full force to dirty up the leaves of my potted citrus trees; and that the old ailing Magnolia tree was once again littering the back yard by dropping its leaves into a messy mass.   Sometimes as I stoop down to pick up leaves it reminds me of all the past times I stooped to pick up my youngest son’s socks.   So I have Kyle to thank for preparing me for life with this old messy Magnolia. 

Weekend get-aways come to an end but everyday life goes on without end, with or without my presence.  Laundry builds up, dust gathers on table tops and floors become dirty.  And each cries out for attention, just like a young babe who needs nourishment.  Yesterday, as I tended to the repetitions of  everyday life, I found they in turn nourished me by helping me shake off the lingering sadness of saying goodbye to friends I will not see (at least all in one place) for another three to four years — if our repetitive cycle keeps to the same schedule.

The repetitive nature of life turns my mind to these words of Søren Kierkegaard:

“If God himself had not willed repetition, the world would never have come into existence.  He would either have followed the light plans of hope, or He would have recalled it all and conserved it in recollection.  This He did not do, therefore the world endures, and it endures for the fact that is a repetition.  Repetition is reality, and it is the seriousness of life.”

The sun comes up and goes down; the seasons change as summer slips into autumn, and my lungs  breathe in and breathe out the air of life.  And with each breath, my heart grows lighter and I know that everyday life and the repetition of housekeeping and gardening and the making of meals for my empty nest family somehow feeds my soul and the creative spirit that lies within me.  And as lovely as my weekend was, and as good as it was to see the familiar ageless faces of my best and oldest girlfriends, it is the routine comfort of these four walls and my husband’s loving glance and hugs that remind me of the reality of an everyday God, who lives without end.  Amen and amen.

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