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Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Day 31: candy, costumes, carving pumpkins


31 Days!  Woo hoo!  I feel the need to celebrate…hmmm, maybe something with candy, costumes, carving pumpkins?  **smile**

This evening we will gather at a friends’ house for dinner and neighborhood trick or treating.  The kids will be dressing up as a Turkish princess, a Medieval princess, and Frodo the Hobbit.

We carved our pumpkins last night using a method that was new to us.  I printed out templates online, which we taped to the pumpkins. The the kids used push pins to poke tiny holes all along the lines of their template.  When we took the paper off, there was a perfect outline of their picture!  Brilliant!

Making a pumpkin into a cat

Carefully working on his howling wolf

Showing off her handiwork

















Here are our finished products!  Aren't they spooky??

 ***I want to take this time say a heartfelt thank you to you for reading here this month, for your encouragement, both in the comments and in real life, and for helping me take this step out into a dream I have had for a long, long time. 

I am going to continue writing here.  This month, I have found creative joy in crafting words and trying to put the everyday grace I experience into word pictures that hopefully, prayerfully bring glory to the One who gives me that grace. 
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I also want to thank Nester for hosting all of us 31 Dayers!  What a journey this month has been...








Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Day 30: not forgotten


Sitting in a room in a doctor’s office, gowned up and ready for the doctor to come in, you wait, reading every printed word in the room wondering when the door handle will turn announcing the doctor's arrival.  The minutes tick by.  If you were properly dressed, you may be tempted to throw open the door and say, “Excuse me, I’m still here!  Have you forgotten about me?"

Waiting can make you feel forgotten.

I studied Noah this week and, boy, he was in the ark a LONG time!  Perhaps there were times when he wanted to throw open the door and shout up to God, “Hey, have you forgotten about us in here?”

Then these words that begin Genesis 8: “But God remembered Noah…”  Of course, he never forgot about him to begin with, but the time had come for God to act on behalf of the folks in the ark, to dry up the water and let the animals and people back out on His earth.

During the lecture portion of my Bible study this morning, I wrote this in my notes: Noah waited on God’s perfect timing.

Then I wrote these questions that the teacher asked us:

How are you waiting? 

Are you resting, or feeling restlessness?

What do you know about the character of God that will keep you waiting in hope?

I wondered, what characteristics of God did Noah dwell on during those long days floating safe on the ark?

November 10th will mark one year since becoming certified to adopt a child.

I continue to wait in hope, believing God to be good.  I believe He is able to work both for my good, for the good of the baby we will adopt, and for the good of all those involved in the process.  I believe God to have purpose in what He does and I believe that He can bring good things out of circumstances that don't seem good at all.

Last night a sweet friend listened with the deep understanding of one who knows as I shared through tears that this waiting is growing burdensome.

She was going home to mother four children from her body and one who was born into her heart and family from Ethiopia, the one she waited over two years to hold. 

She knows.

And she could tell me from that place of knowing that there will come a day when God will remember us.

I wait for that day.
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Tomorrow is the 31st day!!  Amazing!!  Click on the link below to visit the other 31 Dayers:


Monday, October 29, 2012

Day 29: the best way to end a day


The kids scatter to bathe.  They no longer need help to get clean at the end of the day.  I stand at the sink, clean up our last meal.  Scrub dishes, stack the last dishes in the dishwasher, wipe the countertops, sweep under the table. 

Kids appear with wet, just-brushed hair, clean jammies, smelling faintly of shampoo.  Mellow and happy, they gather quiet things, paper and crayons to draw with, legos or small figures to play with. 

We all gather in the living room, sitting in our favorite customary spots.  My husband finds the current family read-aloud book and with an hour to go before bed, starts in on the next chapter.

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Sunday, October 28, 2012

Day 28: gift after gift


Counting gifts from His hand on this Sunday evening…

: spending the weekend with my kids and the friends they have known since they were babies
: gifted movie tickets to take this gaggle of kids on an outing
: cool fall evenings, even if the days are summer-hot
: introducing Emma to Anne of Green Gables, one of my favorite movies of all time
: whipping up a batch of Toll House cookies with three sweet girls
: eating those delicious cookies!
: praying for the men of our church, including my husband, on a retreat this weekend
: looking forward to worship, and the Harvest Festival, and being with my community of faith
: good conversations with folks at the festival, especially those I don’t talk to frequently
: resources to fill my cupboards and fridge, full to bursting

I have enjoyed ending/beginning my weeks this way, pausing to think on the days that have passed, noticing the tender, generous acts of God in and around me.

May this be a week full of noticing, friends, the many gifts He generously gives.
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Friday, October 26, 2012

Day 27: sometimes the business of heaven is pancakes


There is a book on our shelf containing four volumes by C.S. Lewis: Surprised by Joy, Reflections on the Psalms, The Four Loves, and The Business of Heaven. Looking at the spine of the book one day I became curious: all of the titles were familiar to me, save one: The Business of Heaven.  I pulled the book off the shelf,  opened up to the page where the volume began and read:

The real problem of the Christian life comes where people do not usually look for it.  It comes the very moment you wake up each morning.  All your wishes and hopes for the day rush at you like wild animals.  And the first job each morning consists simply in shoving them all back; in listening to that other voice, taking that other point of view, letting that other larger, stronger, quieter life come flowing in.  And so on, all day.  Standing back from your natural fussings and frettings; coming in out of the wind. -  C.S. Lewis, The Business of Heaven


This image of the wild animals has stayed with me clearly since that first reading.

“…Coming in out of the wind,” he says.  A friend recently told me of standing on top of the Empire State Building.  The strength and noise of the wind astounded her.  She couldn’t hear what the people standing right next to her were saying.

The sound of the wind fills our ears making it impossible to hear anything else but its insistent roar.  Jesus invites us to come into the calm surety of His presence, to step in out of the wind, moment by moment, every day. 

Sometimes I wake already wrestling those animals, already anxious and worried, losing the battle to lists and expectations, as Lewis puts it “all our wishes and hopes for the day.”  Wishes and hopes sound positive, don’t they?  The problem lies when those wishes and hopes do not get fulfilled, when something thwarts them and we are left with something else entirely, a day that looks nothing like we wished or hoped it would.

Earlier this week, I said yes to pancakes, chocolate chip ones.  And tea, hot tea, with sugar and cream. 

My initial plan for the day had been to simply slap some bagels on the table and get on with it, to rush on ahead of the clock and into this day so that I wouldn’t feel behind, behind, behind.

Into my hopes and dreams for the day walked my girls with their sleep tousled hair and their jammies still on, asking for some kitchen love.

So I said yes. On the outside, I was doing a “nice mommy” thing: making a delicious, hot breakfast for my children.  But it took quite a while for the inner me to stop seething over the time ticking away.  Inside I was actually angry, feeling that push of time, like I was already behind even before serving breakfast. 

I forced myself to stand there at the stove, breathing slow, watching the bubbles come up on the pancakes.  Just being there, in the moment, the warm fragrance of chocolate and batter filling my senses.

And then it came.   Or rather, He came.

Truth.

And He spoke softly to me.  This act of love is worth doing, He said.

Sometimes being on schedule IS extremely important.  This morning, however, was not one of those times.

The homeschool police were NOT going to show up at my door and wonder why school hasn’t started already!  At least I didn’t think they were.  I was willing to chance it, anyway.

I was free to love, free to let those first hopes and dreams of the day go and to listen to “that other voice, taking that other point of view, letting that other larger, stronger, quieter life come flowing in”.

The pancakes were really, really good.
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Day 26: Five Minute Friday: Voice


Every Friday, Lisa Jo hosts Five Minute Friday.  In her words: 

We write for five minutes flat.  All on the same prompt.  No extreme editing; no worrying about perfect grammar, font, or punctuation. Unscripted.  Unedited.  Real.




Today the prompt is: Voice.  Here are my five minutes:

 My clothes swirled and sloshed in the washing machine, as I sat in the storefront window of the little Laundromat, looking out on Monroe St. in Madison, WI, a California girl  far, far away from home that holiday season.  Since the place was deserted, and since I was sitting close to the glass and the acoustics sounded nice, I started singing Christmas carols.

I sang Come, Thou Long Expected Jesus, one of my favorites, along with, Thou Didst Leave Thy Throne.  I sang Silent Night, O Little Town of Bethlehem, and It Came Upon a Midnight Clear. 

The familiar and true words soothed my homesick soul and, even though my voice is not fabulous or anything, I do love, love to sing.

Then, in the middle of a verse, I froze.  A sound from the back of the Laundromat.  Someone switching their laundry…OH NO. 

Apparently I wasn’t exactly alone!

My face burning with embarrassment, I eventually got up and walked to the washer to switch my own clothes and a young man said to me, “Was that you singing? It was nice.”

My mortified self said, “Yes.  Thanks.  I, um, thought I was alone.” 

And that may or may not have been the last time I sang a solo in a laundromat!
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I love singing, and I love Five Minute Fridays!  


Thursday, October 25, 2012

Day 25: glow of accomplishment


It is 10:13 p.m. and I am just sitting down to Day 25.  It’s been one of those days, full of driving children to school and back, teaching math, supervising piano practice, making a quick trip to Costco, and finishing the afternoon with dinner preparation and house tidying. 

Repeatedly over the past couple of days, my youngest daughter has asked me to get the fleece cut and ready to make a tie blanket to contribute to a Christmas blanket drive at church.  I taught her to make the blankets last week and she absolutely LOVES doing it.  Once the strips are cut up the side, she ROCKS tying them.  Her knots are neat and firm, and she goes slow and keeps everything straight. 

She finds me in the kitchen, her big blue eyes earnest in her sweetly freckled face. “Can we get the blanket ready today, Mama?”   

I must have planned to cut the fleece at least ten different times over the last two days.  It kept not happening. 

Today when I came home from one of my errands, I saw she had set everything up for me.  The fleece was laid out neatly, and all I had to do was start cutting. 

Her initiative moved me.  After the chili was bubbling and the cornbread was baked, I plowed through the necessary preparations to make the blanket.

After dinner, she got down to the business of tying the strips all along the sides of the blanket and before dessert was served, she had the project finished. 

The glow of accomplishment and pride on her seven year old face was so worth the time I took out of my crazy afternoon to help her. 
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