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an everyday life

Tag Archives: Everyday Life

Telling Stories Ripe

30 Friday Jul 2010

Posted by Janell in Life at Home

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Everyday Life, Listening, Parents, Story Telling

“Do you recall when Dad shared this story with you?”

I was glad to hear Jon recount Dad’s sad tale.  Without knowing it, Jon had confirmed a missing piece to the puzzling last day of our paternal grandmother’s life.

Hints between the lines of what my paternal grandfather didn’t tell and what made print in two newspaper accounts of the fatal car crash allowed me to piece together the why.  What came as a surprise were the two extra jigsaw pieces Jon threw on the table I hadn’t known were missing.

But isn’t this just how stories are put together?  One person receives part, another deduces some other detail, both keep what they know until one day, they sit down to compare parts and piece the story together.  Of course, we never know whether we’ve gotten the story right since much gets lost in history and in our own and others interpretation.  But it doesn’t stop us from trying, especially when the story concerns one we love.

When it comes to Daddy and his story, there are many missing pieces and lots of room for interpretation.  There is a period of Dad’s life — two years, maybe more — that I’ve come to regard as the silent years.  His sister Carol once asked Dad about this period of his life but Dad declined to talk about it.

Some can’t wait to tell what’s going on in their lives while others keep their stories to themselves.  Dad told his story as he felt the need, or when he hoped something good might come from the telling, which is how my brother came to know what he shared.  Yesterday made me realize some stories are better kept in reserve until ripe for the telling.

Time and Space All Around

27 Tuesday Jul 2010

Posted by Janell in Life at Home, Prayer, Soul Care, The Great Outdoors

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Everyday Life, Prayer, Ranier Maria Rilke, Soul Care

Out my west window a Jack-in-the-beanstalk Sunflower bathes in moonlight.  Further west, far beyond sight, my youngest son flies home.

It feels good to reread these words, to let them sink under my skin, to become absorbed by heart and mind.  The time apart went fast; it’s only in the everyday that time grows still enough for questions.

My one-day retrofit back into everyday life  has made me wonder how Kyle will adjust to being home, after two months in southeast Asia.  From short emails received each week, I know Kyle has been thinking of home.  Kyle’s initial messages focused more on his new life there; latter ones mixed thoughts, always including a note on missing family and home.  At times, Kyle was torn in two, wanting to be there and here too, like when his father’s birthday rolled around mid-way through his Asian assignment.

I expect my youngest son to come home changed.  He will return full of stories to share.  He will carry some sadness at separating himself from daily contact with friends who became family during his absence.   Then there are complicating factors Kyle will face since he will not return to his old way of life.  As a new college graduate, Kyle will be sorting out next steps until he sells his first manuscript.

Up in the air, Kyle is coming down to earth  — by moving back home with me and his Dad.  As I pray Kyle’s landing is not bumpy, I recall Ranier Maria Rilke’s admonition to the young poet to “live the questions now.”  Rilke’s advice wears well one hundred years from when he first offered it.

As is my nature, I prayed yesterday with broom and dust cloth and soap and water too, preparing Kyle’s room for his return.  Going two steps further, I created space in Kyle’s closet for clothes he’ll bring home; I replaced treasured artwork with posters Kyle brought home from college.   With dust removed and fresh bedding on, his room is ready for use.  Kyle’s cell phone is charged and his laptop connected.  But how pray, do I ready myself?

I don’t kid myself that the long hours spent creating Kyle’s physical space was my part of Kyle’s re-adjustment equation.  What will be harder is to grant Kyle emotional space to sort out changes in himself, especially new views on his old home.  Can I master the fine art of being available to listen without succumbing to mother-hover?   Or not being invited to listen at all?

It will take time and space all around.  It will take holding off some of my questions until Kyle frames his own.

Flip-Flop, Rain-Drop

24 Saturday Jul 2010

Posted by Janell in Far Away Places, Life at Home, The Great Outdoors, Writing

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Everyday Life, Iowa Summer Writing Festival, Travel, Writing

I’m not sure if I’ll venture out before the shuttle comes.  It’s raining and I’ve lost a third of my rain gear, once made up of a  jacket and pair of flip-flops.

Holed up in my hotel room, I’ve been thinking about changes this trip will bring — how last night, my teacher thanked me for coming.  I’m wondering where “this” will lead.  Knowing that “this” depends upon me.

My teacher sensed what I did not confess:  I had risked by coming to Iowa.  Putting myself  ‘out there’ has never been easy.  Instead I flourish within an everyday security blanket of a few people back home.  This is what I like to say.

But this had been good.  It helped to get away.  Alone.  To be myself without props.  To see who I am.  Alone.

Alone and not alone.  Wanting to write but not wanting to write.  Fears of being good but not good enough.  Good enough for what?   Is it the publishing thing again?  Do I want that?

There are so many great writers.  I sat with a few in class this week.  Their words amazed, their speed at writing amazed more.  They shared their work with ease.  I too shared, but only when called upon.  And then not always.

I am not ready to recite a litany of what this week has given me.  I don’t yet know.  But there’s expectation, if not in myself, at least within others, that there will be change.  Imperceptible.  But there — like all those things we can’t quite “put our finger on.”

The words came into my mind just now — the other shoe must drop. It sounds corny, but given that I lost one of my flip-flops around town yesterday, I’m wondering about that lone flip-flop that remains in my purse.  Where will it land?  What use does one lone flip-flop have?

— FOOT NOTE —

After finishing this entry, I had two hours to spend.  I decided to go out.  What the heck, I thought, the worst that can happen is I’ll get wet.  Out the glass door, I rounded the corner and stopped.  Lying on the ground near a trash can was a flip-flop.  I leaned down, shook my head and smiled.  Claiming what was mine, I weighed the rubber sole in my hand before dropping it in my purse.  Then putting on my hood, I stepped into the rain.


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