Making All Things New

I’m breathing a little easier these last few days.

I accepted the reprieve offered by my HeartPaths instructors.  That capstone paper originally due Monday will instead be turned in next month.  Taking the extra time may serve to improve life for me and the project, as well as those involved in the project’s review.

So what have I done with this space of grace?   With little ability to think deep thoughts, I’ve chosen to work through my backlog of projects, the kind that keep life going on the home front.  Bookkeeping, housekeeping and cooking — to the deep sighs of my husband’s pleasure.

And then I tackled bigger projects too.  I finally had a repair man out on my washing machine, which stopped working during the days when Daddy laid dying.  We now know the washer will cost more to repair than to replace.  So as I write, the delivery people from Lowes are trying to figure out how to negotiate these big pieces of equipment in and out a too-tight basement stairwell.  Lord, have mercy.

Most of my activity — like renewing my long expired passport and sending out party invitations to celebrate my two son’s college graduations — opened up life for new ways of living.  And in these days after my father’s funeral, I need a new lease on life.

I rest in these words of Jesus, that I read at my father’s funeral, from the twenty-first chapter of Revelation, which are a mainstay of comfort:  “Behold  I make all things new.”

And likewise, these words of St. Paul that found a home in the fifteenth chapter of 1 Corinthians:

“All flesh is not the same:  Men have one kind of flesh, animals have another, birds another and fish another.  There are also heavenly bodies and there are earthly bodies; but the splendor of the heavenly bodies is one kind, and the splendor of the earthly bodies is another.  The sun has one kind of splendor, the moon another and the stars another; and star differs from star in splendor.  So will it be with the resurrection of the dead.  The body that is sown is perishable; it is raised imperishable; it is sown in dishonor, it is raised in glory; it is sown in weakness, it is raised in power; it is sown a natural body, it is raised a spiritual body.”

At times like these, I think that everyday life is just a dress rehearsal for the big show.


Nana Who at the Zoo

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Like a giant amoeba that had lost its way of knowing how and when to divide, sixteen of us slowly made our way through our local zoo yesterday.  Blessed with blue skies, fluffy white clouds, an occasional gentle breeze and springtime temperatures hovering in the low eighties, who, in their right mind, could ask for better?

Everyone but Amy was there.   My oldest son’s girlfriend had wisely stayed home to study for finals (not knowing Bryan had run off with her study materials when he borrowed her car.)  Looking back on it, I wonder if disconnections such as this were simply metaphors of our day.

Three steps forward. Two back.  Inching along, exhibit by exhibit, we took turns waiting for one another, as one would temporarily break free to buy a cool drink or check out the local flora and creatures.  Three hours later, all out of steam in spite of covering only a fourth of the exhibits, we began breaking apart in earnest.  We decided to call it a day, to go home to our individual caves.

Were we just going through the motions yesterday?  It sort of felt that way.   My son Kyle called it boring.  It’s there, in black and white, on his Facebook wall.  And if I’m being honest, Kyle was right — even the animals looked a little sleepy and bored.

It has been three years since we last gathered for our annual zoo date.  The last two were preempted by rain and Mother’s death.  So maybe yesterday — come hell or high water or family death —  we were bound and determined to pick up the remnants of life and get on with it.   And though the weather was grand, some of us (like me) were not quite there.

I’m pretty sure I didn’t fool anyone.  Nor was I trying to.  About the time we were closing in on the sea-lion show — which in tune with our day, we missed by mere minutes — I overheard Kate telling  step-daughter Tayler something about Nana.

“”Nana who?,”  asked Tayler.  While Kate reminded Tayler that I was the only Nana in residence, I thought maybe Tayler was more right than Kate.  Though not quite a zombie, I was walking around in slow motion, a lost soul in search of the next bench to park my tired body.

It has been a long week, with Dad’s death and funeral.  Sleep has been scarce and fitful.  As my mind wandered back to the events of last Sunday, I kept thinking:  Has it only been a week and a lifetime ago that I held Daddy’s hand? He was here.  And now he’s not.

Someday it will be me.  I will be here.  And in the blink of an eye — or in the space of three sneezes, like it was with Dad — I will vanish from the face of the earth.

“Who am I anyway?”  “And why am I here?”  These merry-go-round questions separate us from those other creatures of the animal kingdom who call the zoo home.  And until I find new and fresh answers, they have served to sever my spirit from my body.

Slip Simon Away

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“Slip sliding away, slip sliding away
You know the nearer your destination, the more you slip sliding away.”
— Paul Simon


“We’d like to know a little about you for our files.”

I can’t focus.  Thoughts are disjointed when I need them to come together.

“We’d like to help you learn to help yourself.”

I’ve been up since  5 AM, running on four hours of sleep.   I should be further down the metaphoric road, closing in on my destination.

“Here’s to you Mrs. Robinson, Jesus loves you more than you will know.”

Of course he does.  But listen up.  I’m stalled.  Fighting a bad case of “stuck-itis.”  Unfortunately, those thoughts left simmering on the stove a week ago have gone to mush.

“Look around you, all you see are sympathetic eyes.”

Normally, it’s easier to think than do.  You know us contemplative types:  we like to wonder, dream and ponder life.  Or projects.  Or whatever.

“Coo coo ca-choo, Mrs. Robinson…”

Instead thoughts are circling.  They won’t park.  I write a little.  To no end.  That’s not like me.

“Wo, wo, wo.”

And with my “capstone” project due for class — one I’d like to deliver in ten days or so — I need my old self back, the one who doesn’t struggle in pulling together loose threads of thoughts and sewing them up in a tidy bow.

“Stroll around the grounds until you feel at home.”

I guess I’ll eat bon bons until I pull myself together.  And whine and pray — I’m pretty sure this counts.  Hey Abba — what’s up?

“Heaven holds a place for those who pray.”

I’m giving Simon the slip.  No more Mrs. Robinson.  In need of a major distraction.  Going straight to ABBA.