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an everyday life

an everyday life

Tag Archives: Books

Magical Suitcases

25 Saturday Apr 2009

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

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Books, Evelyn Underhill, Everyday Life, Soul Care, St. Ignatius, Writing

In a couple of weeks, my ‘noisy’ Ignatius retreat will be over.  My bags are a little lighter for the journey but I’ve still plenty to unpack, which will help make room for the ‘spiritual writings’ I can once again read. 

 

In anticipation of this, I’ve set about collecting old favorites and buying a few new ones. For some reason, I’m especially drawn toward picking up writings of Evelyn Underhill.  Someone once told me that Ms. Underhill called God by the name ‘Reality.’  I want to know more about how she came to her God name just as I wish to know more about anyone who found God real enough to name ‘Reality’.       

 

Being real is important to me, which goes hand in hand with this idea of being more comfortable in my own skin.  I think my journey with Ignatius has helped with both, though God knows, my work in both areas has only just begun.  My pretending to be something other than who I am began early in life.  First grade, actually.  So I’ve acquired more than a few masks and costumes and magical tricks along the way.  It will take a lifetime to unpack my acccumulations and my tendencies.      

 

For instance, why do I begin thinking about moving every spring?  I’ve worked so hard on this lovely old house we live in, and while some work remains, I know the lion’s share is already done.  It’s hard for me to rest on my laurels.  I want to go out and buy another historical ‘diamond in the rough’ and start all over.  Hocus Pocus, presto chango:  The ugly duckling becomes a beautiful swan.  The house next door would be a good duck candidate.   But my neighbor is probably a ‘lifer’.  And this much neglected house will outlive both my neighbor and my own magician’s interest.     

 

Then there’s my writing.  Right now I have a writing project in mind.  And even though I began it about a week ago, I can’t motivate myself to get back to it.  I’ve no excuses other than fear or lack of interest, because with my husband gone, I’ve time on my hands to devote to it.  Time and a too quiet house, with a new writing desk pushed into the corner, with shades drawn.  I’ve all the necessary ingredients, but no interest in the task at hand.  

 

I grow bored easily, and while I enjoy the creative process, the creating process can be a lot of drudgery.  Except those times when I begin writing words I had no notion to write.  Sometimes words just come and leave my fingers all tingly from their writing.  And I imagine some of those ‘spiritual’ writers that I long to read know exactly what I’m writing about.  This may be part of the reason I wish to cozy up to them right now.  I want to unpack their thoughts and let them rest in my own mind and heart.  And maybe something of their experiences and words will stir me to unpack and write about my own sacred souvenirs. 

 

Sounds a little like magic.  But probably more like ‘Reality.’

The Final Word?

22 Wednesday Apr 2009

Posted by Janell in Life at Home, Soul Care

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Aging, Books, Death, Parents, Soul Care

There is something different about daddy. 

 

This week and last, daddy appears sad.   His eyes look sunken.  When I speak to him, it takes a while to capture his attention.  He goes from hanging on, as if he never wants to let go of my hand, to an almost complete withdrawal that is hard to describe.  While he’s there in body, his mind seems far away.  It’s a kind of blowing hot and cold, and I’m not sure if there’s a way to adjust the thermostat or whether we are past the point of fine-tuning.  Is Daddy’s body on its last legs?

 

I am sad.  Yet, I know Dad will be okay.  Not because he will continue to hobble along in this world, but because I possess this abiding sense that Dad’s life will continue in some altered state once his soul flies free of his body.  Daddy may be taking the first steps of his final dance on earth, but there will be other dances with partners more attractive than his much ignored walker and the walls and pieces of furniture he uses as support to shuffle his way around the house.

 

Some will find this all to be just ‘wishful thinking’ on my part.  “If wishes were horses, then beggars would ride.”   Or the cuter variation my friend Ann recited with her daughters, back in the days of young family when her husband Jack was still alive:  “If wishes were Crisco, then beggars would fry.”  In response to either of these proverbs, I would simply smile and echo the words my youngest ‘grand’ so often says.  “That’s otay.”  I’m not too bothered about what other’s choose to think about matters, like life after death, that are based solely on belief rather than first-hand experience.  It’s just as easy to believe as to not.  Or as expressed more eloquently by Blaise Pascal:  “In faith there is enough light for those who want to believe and enough shadows to blind those who don’t.”

 

But there are those near death experiences one reads about.  And those personal stories I’ve heard from others.  One story was from Ann in fact.  Hard to believe it happened almost four years ago now.  Her son-in-law Stuart was on his last legs, after a two year battle with leukemia.  When no more could be done, M.D. Anderson released him to Hospice.  And in an apartment within the Houston Medical Center complex, his wife and children gathered around Stuart to say a month’s worth of final good-byes. 

 

Close to the end, perhaps it was during Stuart’s last days, he shared a final gift with his gathered family.  Stuart told Ann that he had seen Jack, who by that time had been dead fourteen years.  From all my reading on death during my time as a Stephen Minister, this ability for the dying to see the dead is not uncommon.  I read a book written by two hospice nurses that reported case after case of near death experiences like the one Stuart shared with his family.  I pulled it out last night and begin flipping through it, wondering if my sister might like to skim though it as well.  Appropriately, the book is called Final Gifts.

 

This word ‘final’ that weaves through my words — final dance, final goodbye and final gift – I should not have used if death is not the final word. 

Quotidian Laundry

08 Wednesday Apr 2009

Posted by Janell in Good Reads, Life at Home

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Books, Everyday Life, Friends, Kathleen Norris, Laundry, Writing

My dryer is not working so I’ve turned our upstairs bath into a makeshift dryer.  Everyday I hang a new load of laundry on towel and shower curtain rods, and on the shower head and caddy.  With the sun streaming through the west window, the little room quickly becomes saturated with the lovely scent of clean laundry.

 

As I’ve hung clothes this week, I’ve thought of those old clothes lines that use to be a staple in every backyard, long before backyards became outdoor entertaining spaces.  When we redid our backyard a year ago, we created a small utility area to hold my compost tumbler and two large trash cans.  I expressed hope of making room for a small clothes line as well…. but my husband couldn’t imagine how this would mesh with our landscaping plan. Remembering my granny’s clothes line full of sheets and towels and unmentionables flapping in the wind, I thought it might fit in quite nice, as I am planting a cottage garden rather than one more formal.  

 

My next door neighbor still has one of his vintage clothes line poles.  The big letter ‘T” hangs out near our shared fence and I wonder where its twin has gone.  My daughter Kara’s backyard may also have just one clothes line pole.  I wish I could put one and one together and marry them with wire for use in my own backyard.  Then I could once again sleep on crisp white sheets, bleached by the sun, full of that special scent that can only be described as line-dried sheets.  I fear at least half of North America would not know this smell if it hit them in the face, because unlike me, they’ve never  had the pleasure of being near sheets, anchored by clothes pins, flapping them in the face.  An Oklahoma wind doesn’t always play nice, and rarely does it tumble gently.           

 

These words about laundry remind me of a Kathleen Norris book I read six years ago – “The Quotidian Mysteries – Laundry, Liturgy and “Women’s Work.””  My friend Kathy, who once titled herself, the “diva of the dishwasher,” could write words worth reading if she were so inclined,  like this other Kathy whose book she gave me. 

 

I would like to be a ‘diva of the dryer,’ but the repair shop cannot tell me when my part will be in.  Even in this day of high technology and instant communication, some things remain mysterious.  Is this a quotidian mystery as well?   To answer, I must pull out my partially chewed up Merriam Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary, Tenth Edition, which is now a little lighter for the hunk Max took off the corner last Sunday.  And there it is:      

 

“Quotidian:  occurring every day; belonging to every day, commonplace, ordinary.”

 

No wonder I am pulled toward reading this old friend again.  Ms. Norris’ everyday mysteries and my own everyday stories make me think of two clothes poles in two separate yards.  What kind of laundry connects them, if any?  And how in the world could an un-everyday word like quotidian mean everyday?  It is a word worth hanging onto, as I hang our freshly washed laundry on my makeshift clothes lines and wait for the quotidian mystery of a dryer part to show itself.

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