Open for Business

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Already, that first bluish light on the eastern sky is lifting the darkness that covers Mesta Park.

I like to watch the day open for business.  One solitary car drives on nearby Walker Avenue.  There are no birds yet.  No squirrels.  No dogs running up and down the fence.  All of this will come later.

My day began at four-thirty this morning  with my husband getting ready for his Houston day trip.  We both have full days, so an early start helps keep the day more spacious.

Tonight I’m bringing supper for my contemplative prayer group.  Nothing difficult — just a little potato soup and chicken salad, that I will serve on those lovely French Saigon baguettes from the grocery store near my home.  I have the night off from leading; it will be easier to prepare the physical food than serving in my normal role of writing and facilitating the evening’s prayer meditation.

The break creates space for my spiritual direction coursework.  I’m contemplating my final project — a paper that I will present to my small group of fellow students and instructors.  The topic, rather open, will allow me to pursue my own interests as they apply to the work of spiritual direction.

I shake my head in wonder that this three-year journey is almost over.  The prayer practices, the Ignatius retreat and even this spiritual direction practicum year have all helped to open up my life, much like the day opens up before me.  What business will  arrive  after the course work is over and my certificate is in hand?

For now, it is enough to rejoice in knowing that light has washed away some of my former darkness.  I will end my three-year journey better acquainted with myself and an Everyday God — such knowledge allows me to be more accepting of faults and brokenness — by own and others.   I notice that I also exercise greater patience, and though I still keep busy days, I no longer try to stuff 10 pounds of life into a five-pound day — now I’m down to six pounds.  Maybe in time, it will be only four.

I am better at waiting in the dark unknown for the light and answers to come.  Even now, I look out my window and the day is here.  Walker Avenue is busy with cars.  And the wind is shaking the leaves of that old Magnolia tree  to wake it up for business.  The birds are out, for I hear their sweet chirps.  And somewhere out there, hidden behind the Magnolia leaves, is a squirrel or two beginning their day.

It’s time to wake up three sleepy-head dogs.

What You Do To Me

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Sometimes I surprise myself by how much I share on this web log.

Yesterday’s post may have made for uneasy reading.  Everyday Life does get uncomfortable — scary even — when we take off our masks of pretense and dare to share our personal truth.  Perhaps a few readers wished to look the other way, thinking, “Oh my .. she must not know her slip is slipping or her soul or whatever is showing.  Let’s just pretend we didn’t notice until she pulls herself back together.”  But not so with everyone.  One dear reader — God bless her soul — chose not only to share a bit of her story — but dared to ask…”are things better now?”

Oh, gentle readers — surely you know by now that if you ask I will tell you.  And God help us all if I tell more than I really should, for propriety sake, about my Harlequin Romance life.

The short answer to my reader’s question is this:  “Yes, things are better now.”

And the longer answer is what?  The long answer is that twelve years later, after making a life bond with Janis in my 1972 Camaro, I ended up marrying that same boy who broke my heart in my second trip to the altar.  We have two boys together and this second husband of mine – who is the absolute love of my life  —  helped me and my first husband raise two beautiful girls.

But how we came back together was not so easy.  To begin with, I didn’t know how or whether to respond when he contacted me by letter to wish me a happy thirtieth birthday.  It was, by then, eleven years too late by my count and a girl does have her pride.

But after a while, the strange newness of the left-field letter wore off enough to cause me to write back to see what would happen next.  And then he wrote back.  And then I wrote again.  And on and on our correspondence went — fifty letters going back and forth across 500 miles —  before he proposed marriage at Surfside Beach as we searched the sky for Halley’s Comet.

But oh… was writing that first letter hard!  I didn’t want to love this guy.  After all, who wants to love someone after being discarded once before?  But as much as we might wish, we  hold little power over who we will love over the course of our lives.  And ultimately, love won out over pride and even public and private opinions.  What mattered most was what he did and does to me….

I confess to a few regrets.  I wish I hadn’t hurt my first husband… and I wish I hadn’t hurt my two girls by separating them from everyday life with their father… because even “amicable” divorces cause scars.

But mostly I’m grateful.  I’m even grateful to my sister who had the audacity to reveal my deepest darkest secret —  when she said to my husband on their first and only date — “You know, Janell never did get over you…”

So he sent a birthday card to see if sis knew of what she spoke.  And the rest, as they say, is romance history.  And about that first and only date between my sister and my husband…?

If you don’t ask, I promise not to tell.

Portals to my Past

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Some songs have become time portals to my past.

Who knows why or how this happens.  I can’t explain it other than to acknowledge that the sounds of certain songs — those mystical arrangements of notes and words and silence and instruments mixed with voice —  in some inexplicable way became part of who I once was, and because of this, will always be part of who I am.

Janice Ian’s “At Seventeen” is one.  To hear its opening sounds is to once again find myself in 1975, driving home from O.U. in my gold 1972 Camaro. I’m taking two classes in summer school and hurrying home to drop off my books and catch a quick bite before going in to work.

Life is too full.  Yet it is not the life I thought I would be living a year ago.  I am exhausted between school and studies and working full-time in retail and teaching a few young girls at my church on Wednesday nights.  I have no time to think.  Or feel.

There are a few nice guys who have expressed interest in a date though I have not encouraged their interest.  When they ask for my telephone number, I make excuses.  Intentional or not, all nights are safely covered by an excuse that discourages involvement.  Perhaps my busyness is deliberate as I’m nursing a broken ego, trying to get past a failed romance.

That summer, my world was getting ready to break open in a new and different way.  My parents were moving to Austin, leaving me behind to live life on my own with a girl I hardly knew.  But it didn’t matter because her mother and my mother knew each other.  It was sort of like an arranged marriage — awkward for us roommates but convenient for our parents who were footing the bill.  But all this was in the future, two months down the road.

For now, I am in the car connecting my life with this song.  It’s not the first time I’ve heard it.  But from this moment on, I will forever listen to this song as I am on that summer day in 1975.  I will be young again, driving the highway with my car window all the way down.   My long brown hair will be blowing free.  And for some reason, when I hear the opening notes, I will once again reach toward the radio to turn the sound way up so that my car speakers vibrate.

But back in the past, I grow sad as I listen to this song.  It invites me to wonder about might-have-beens.  If I had been prettier, would I have been good enough?  Smarter?  Funnier?  If I have been better somehow, would I be living in the land of happier-ever-after?

Do tears fall that day?  I don’t remember.  But I know I am sad for this girl in the song.  And I am sad for myself.  This song and I share a common truth of not being good enough.  And even when I pretend to no longer be hurt, this song allows me to confess otherwise.  And like any good confessor, this song will not breathe a word of my private truth.  My secrets are safe with Janis.