March 14, 2012

  • gourmet jelly beans. a wedding. and mud.

    Today at our little Mennonite sewing circle (in which we get together and sew comforters and handbags and sometimes pajamas for the Needy in Other Places) Connie kept making coffee and I kept drinking it.  That is why I am turning out blog posts at 1:00 a.m.  I am a coffee wimp.  Just a little gets me going for hours.

    And I don’t know why I am posting when it seemed like everyone and his brother her sister had something to say on xanga today and these posts will get lost in your subscriptions.  I loved reading all the wise and wonderful words of friends tonight right before my first attempt at sleep.

    But in case you wondered about all the strange photos I uploaded the other day, here is the explanation.

    I had a nice little spring post that I was planning about the awkwardness of springtime in Alberta and other little homely thoughts.  And about the wedding of our friends James and Leah, which wasn’t homely, but happy.

    But it didn’t get written.

    So I’ll throw up the photos quickly.

    Last weekend I was feeling all mellow about sunshine and spring coming.  And gourmet jelly beans.  Coffee and mango flavours are my favorites.  But Tori eats the buttered popcorn and cinnamon ones.  And Natalia loves the watermelon.  Yuk.

    It was also the weekend to eat little clementines. I bought 3 pounds on Friday night and there was one left on Sunday evening.

    It was the weekend to put up gel window clings.

     

    And play with Lego.

     

    And to listen to Stuart Little on cassette from the library.  Do yourself and your family a favor.  Borrow the book and listen to it on CD as you look at the pictures.  E.B. White is a master at telling stories that children love and that have deeper meanings for adults.  He’s simply hilarious too.

    I Can Read With My Eyes Shut by Dr. Seuss is good too.

     

    And so is Canadian Cattlemen.

    It is always a good day to go mudding with your quad.

    And to smile for the camera (if you are Tillie) and refuse to smile (if you are Liesl).  Poor little pasty white faces and mother who doesn’t know how to run a camera and get good photos or take the time to edit them to make them better.

    And then there was James and Leah. 

     James: 42-ish trucker who loves children, supports Gospel for Asia with all his heart, has been to India to see what God is doing there, and is never in a hurry.  I went to school with James for one year and he is a dear family friend, even though we see him rarely. 

    Leah:  young Christian single mom who sends her little girl to our little private school, likes black tea, reads her Bible voraciously, drives truck, bravely faces the ugliness in her past, and loves the word “awesome”. 

    It was a happy day.

    photo by anna (thank you:)

    I love weddings. And this is a good pair.  As James says in his bit of a drawl, “Two imperfect people and Jesus.”  Just like our marriage.  And yours.

    In the big United Church where the wedding was held, Jesus stands with the children and in the background there are oil wells.  How fitting for this land of ours.

    And just because I liked it:

     

     

     

     

  • ToRn

     

    And caught somewhere in the middle.

     *Between my hope of a well ordered home and family

     and the reality of budding female hormones and awakening testosterone and the shocking rebellion of a 9 year old and the cries of a two year old who doesn’t want to take a nap.  And the reality of my own lack of discipline that lets the clutter get out of hand and then rushes in madly to try to remedy it.

     *Between that overflowing, abundant love of Christ.

     and the wrath of God against sin.

     *Between wanting to look right and get it right.

     and the knowledge that I never fully will. Not in this life anyway.

     

    Torn.

    *Because I found a bunch of good new blogs tonight (thanks to Audrey’s post on Blogger Envy and everyone saying their favorites)

    and I know I don’t have time to read any of them.  Besides, I really want to read a few more books before summer comes.

     *Because I would be off feeding the homeless, cuddling Chinese orphans, or helping AIDS victims die comfortably

     and instead that logging truck keeps heading up the sawmill lane near the house with load after load of logs that will need to be sawed into loads and loads of lumber. (I will not saw the logs. Dan will. He will also preach. And visit people. And be kind to his employees. And deal fairly with his customers.  And I, the great long-er of feeding the homeless or something tangible am sometimes afraid to visit my new neighbor or tell someone about Jesus.)

    Torn

     *Because I want that cute pair of flats

     but my shoe organizer is full already.

     *Because the wealthiest 20 percent of the world’s population receives almost 83% of the world’s income

     and the poorest 20 percent receives less than 2 percent.

     *Because it is so much easier to check the latest on facebook

     than it is to read His Words to me.

    *Because we conceived and had babies so easily.  And my friend Michelle just had her second miscarriage.

    *Because my life is easy in material ways and I like it that way,

    yet I long for More and Deeper.  I long to have generosity and hospitality and kindness.  And Love that sees beneath the outward facade to the true worth of every person.

     

    Caught

     

    *Between wanting to be popular and beautiful

     and knowing that the most beautiful thing in the world is a heart at peace

     and the fact that Jesus never promised popularity to His followers.

     *Between faith

     and works.

     *Between the seriousness of the Narrow Gate and the Narrow Path to Life

     and my love of peace and harmony and let’s just find the things we agree on, shall we.

    *Between how much time I should spend cleaning and decorating and exploring creative blogs

    and just being content with my life and home as it is in all its ungainly splendor.

     *Between so wanting to be that good and respectful and cheerful little wife

     and my fear of losing any strength of character and uniqueness that makes up who I am.

     

    But in that tearing and searing and stretching

     

    I know that He says,

     “Be still and know that I am God.”

     And Mother Teresa said,

     “Following Jesus is simple, but not easy. Love until it hurts, and then love more.”

     “Simple but not easy-and in the difficult times: Simple and hard as crud.”-Shaine Claiborne-

     

    “What the world needs is people who believe so much in another world that they cannot help enacting it now.”  (that Claiborne guy again)

    And the good words of that hymn:

    “Be still my soul, the Lord is on thy side….

    Leave to thy God to order and provide….”

    Peace to all of you.  THAT kind of peace.

March 6, 2012

  • all over the place

     It’s -14 degrees Celsius (8* F) out there this morning.  But these girls in the sunroom think it’s July.  I want to hug them in their luscious redness.  Oh I love me some geraniums.

     

     

    Somehow last week between trying to get Liesl to eat her peas and Bryant to practice his piano music, between finding half-eaten hotdogs and dried up carrot sticks under the couch cushions and giving Alec driving tips,  I learned worked at learning some some hard but good lessons. I want to write about them, but it isn’t coming together just yet.

    I did learn this from Bryant, researching pioneer life online for a school report:  “I think I’m unhappy because I have so many things.”

    And from an elderly  lady named Olive at a bridal shower, I learned (after I blushed shyly and stammered several thank yous) that I should hand out compliments more freely.  In the tiny livingroom full of ladies and gifts, she clasped my hand and expostulated over how BEAUTIFUL I was. (laugh)  And not only that, I was “so intelligent looking!!”  blush  Later she told Ruth what a gorgeous girl her granddaughter (who was sitting beside Ruth & was about 16) was.  And she told Tammy that she had just met her husband Tim and he was “SUCH a nice man”.  She also told Tammy that her mother in law is such a “cute little lady”.  Olive was wrinkled and going quite bald.  And maybe her eyesight was failing.  And later I learned that her husband was killed not so long ago when a gun he was holding went off accidentally.  But I want to spread kindness like that when I’m 80 and losing my hair.  I want to do it today too.  When I’m almost 38 and parenting these teens and tweens and babies.

    From the children’s teacher I learned that my sons are capable of hockey fights.  (not that I didn’t know it before)  I went into the school at the day’s end to put away the cleaning rags  I’d washed.  There I heard Mr. Mack talking to some poor parent about a hockey skirmish.  I tried to hum loudly as I put away my rags and hurried out.  And when I questioned the children about if someone got in trouble in hockey today, I was humbled with their response.  And l realized that Dan was the poor parent, recipient of the The Call.

    And there were other lessons too.  Some of them too raw to speak of right now.  But they were necessary.  And I want to see the good and beauty of them.

     


    I’m dreading time change this weekend.  Finally mornings are light again.  I am sad to see that go backwards. 

    I’m reading The Irresistible Revolution by Shaine Claiborne.  He got serious and literal about selling everything and giving it to the poor and he called Mother Teresa and told her he wanted to come and help her.  So he did.  He went to Calcutta and worked in the Home for the Destitute and Dying, the first home Mother Teresa started. The radical & literal in me would so be doing the same if given the chance.

    Last night  Bryant found “Encyclopedia Brown Lends a Hand”, which has been missing since last summer.  The library has been so gracious, but this was The Week to pay for The Lost Book.  It was on the shelf with the picture books, plain as day. 

    I changed to xanga premium.  I was tired of the invitations to chat with Romanian girls.  And other stuff that was constantly popping up on my page.  I don’t know what kind of ads you were seeing from this site, but I apologize for anything offensive.  Now I’m wondering how to do a personalized page header–like with my own photos.  I can’t figure out how to do it for the life of me.

    Last Sunday evening when the pastorly calls we were going to make fell through, we stayed home and played “Dictionary” with the three oldest.  It was so much fun.  The caller finds a word in the dictionary (can be familiar or unfamiliar) and you each write a definition.  Make it up if you don’t know what the word means.  (it’s good to know what part of speech the word is.)  The caller writes the dictionary definition and that is entered along with all the home-made definitions.  Then you all vote for what you think is the dictionary definition.  You get points for choosing the correct definition and points for if someone chooses your definition.  Unknown nouns are the most fun.  We learned the meaning of “gourami” and “marc” and “inky cap” and “rampike” and “sot”  and “minaret” and I forget what else.

    Here is an example:

    Inky Cap:

    1) a species of African spiders of the Hensmant family, known for its red body and blueish legs

    2) a learned person who is teased for writing silly poems and riddles

    3)  a slang term used in fun to mock a person of studious interests

    4) a mushroom whose cap dissolves into an inky fluid as it decays

    5)  a cap for an inkwell, usually with a holder for a quill pen

    Now cast your vote.  Without google. :)   Or maybe your already all know what an inky cap is.  I didn’t before last Sunday evening.

    ———————————————————————————————————————

    Andre wonders what would happen if you planted a penny in the garden.

    And Natalia (playing hospital and wanting a deadly disease for a poor 1 year old patient) said, “Mom, what’s the sickest sickness you can think of?”

    And Liesl really, really wants a band-aid for her tongue right now.  She scalded it on hot peppermint tea this morning and that makes me full of mom-guilt.

    ____________________________________________________________________________________________

    Tomorrow marks 4 years since my brave soldier of a brother died from his brain tumor.  I struggle with how to deal with these dates.  I have written of him often.  More than enough, probably. I won’t this time.  But (maybe because of who I am), silence feels too much like forgetting. 

    He was loved.  And always we will miss the vibrant link of life that was him.

    I can just see how proud he is of his nephew, who got his learner’s licence recently.  We’re proud too.  Way to go, son.  I like having teenagers in the house and behind the wheel. 

     

    And that’s all for today.  Love you all.

February 28, 2012

  • the cheese sauce is lumpy

    The cheese sauce for the casserole I made to take to school for hot lunch got lumpy.

    The jello didn’t set.

    And when the JWs knocked on the door I crouched down in front of the kitchen sink and sat quietly until they left. They saw the lights on and the kiddoes running around inside. And they didn’t give up easily. But I held my ground.

    This morning I realize anew that my propensity to say what’s on my mind and bring out in the open the subjects that we kind of skirt around but all know are there is not necessarily a healthy trait.

    I also know that it’s in me to act all nice and genuine and then have a few little barbs to throw somehow.

    And though I truly didn’t mean to be that way in my last post, I see now that it could have come across that way.

    The timing was really bad.

    In a community of bloggers that welcomed me warmly and taught me so many things, I have insinuated exclusiveness because a group of you are able to get together and share real life.

    I know that I wanted to simply talk about my misconceptions about people ‘above’ and ‘below’ and on the same level as me. And I wanted you ladies who were privileged to be at FFE to be able to share about it and not feel exclusive. Because we all want to see pictures of you together and get in on a little bit of the wonderfulness. And we’re interested. And nosy.

    I just want to say I’m sorry to those of you who found my words on cliques and stuff hurtful or thoughtless.

    And I hope that experiences like this can help me to become a more well rounded person.

    If I had grown up in a big church in PA would I have fewer hangups and labels and wariness of popularity?

    But the flesh/spirit battle is part of life no matter where you grow up. I know that there is a lot of competitiveness and jealousy left in my heart. And I want to bid it goodbye.

February 27, 2012

  • Friendships, Cliques, & FFE

    Started this post on Saturday. Finished it late Sunday night. I don’t know if it makes sense, but I’ve been missing my blog and this is the muddle of my brain right now…..

    A snowy Saturday morning after a winter of very little snow. A day delightfully unplanned with no major schedule. I can’t think of much that is more delicious. Except….

    I can’t get my mind off of the Flip Flop Event in Ohio this weekend. I miss the bloggers who are there. I miss them on Facebook and Xanga. I wonder what they are doing right now. Most of you in my xanga circle know what I mean by the Flip Flop Event–the big FFE. To those who don’t: It’s a blogger meet-up. I think they had a similar get-together the summer of 2010. A unique group because most of the gals are Mennonite or ex-Mennonite. *Excuse the labels, ladies.* (I don’t know whether to call them girls or gals or ladies or women or what. Nothing sounds right. Gals is too western, girls too familiar, ladies too elegant, women too woman-ish. I don’t like my hyphenated words up there either.)

    Back in my first days of blogging, I remember this elite group of ladies who were SUCH pals. I felt myself hovering on the edge of things, enjoying them and their writing and wanting to learn to know them, but afraid of looking too eager to join a clique or something. I know. I overthink badly. And that’s not really how it works anyway.

    Oh me. I thought the days of cliques kind of ended after I quit going to Bible school. I’ve always been clique-wary. (excuse the hyphens) I think it had something to do with having the mom I did and also with coming from a very small and isolated church and school. My mom always looked out for the underdog and she pounded that into us. (I love her for it.) At our church, if you were only friends with your age group or the people who thought like you did, your group of friends narrowed to next to nothing. So I kind of grew up with this wariness of all close groups of friendships, exclusive or not. Not that I didn’t have close friends, but in my mind I was always bending over backwards to make sure I wasn’t part of any cliques. I remember having a fun group of girlfriends at Maranatha Bible School and getting together to go out for dinner several times. My best friends would get a little disgusted with me because I worried about this person and that person that we should invite and just had a general guiltiness because I feared being exclusive.

    To this day I automatically gravitate to the people standing alone in the corners. I do not say this to sound righteous. It’s just a part of my nature that will probably never leave me. But sometimes the corner people want to be there. Sometimes you leave a good conversation to look out for the “lonely”, only to realize that they’re just fine, thank you very much. Sometimes you may sacrifice one friendship of depth for 5 shallow friendships. And the balance can be very, very delicate and hard to find. Maybe especially when you are a pastor’s wife or someone in leadership and you try hard to maintain unprejudiced relationships and stay away from anything exclusive or friendships where you might be tempted to gossip about someone else. And another thing: You can go crazy in a large crowd trying to talk to all the corner people. It’s just impossible.

    But getting back to FFE. I don’t know how they worked their invitations to this event. I think maybe the core group of ladies each invited a friend and then that friend invited someone else until it was the size of a group they could handle. Or whatever. I may be off track here. I had a last minute invite and felt a little like it was an afterthought. And probably the inviter didn’t really expect or hope that I’d come. (yes. That’s how I reason.  Never think too highly of yourself, you know.  ) But I was honored. And unable to attend. Flights to Columbus Ohio were $950 six weeks before FFE and $2300 at the last minute. Much as I fiercely love Canada and the North, these are the times when it’s the hardest to live so far north and west and so far off the beaten track. My sisters and I are getting together in Virginia this spring and it didn’t seem wise at all to pay for two trips back east in so short a time. I was disappointed and in a way it bothered me more than I thought it might not to be there. But in other ways it was a relief not to be worrying about outfits and fighting nervousness. I’m afraid I would feel really northern and unique in that group of ladies. And unstylish. :)

    But I need to go on to say that this group of girls/gals/ladies/women/bloggers has been so accepting, gracious and kind online. Just because you’re a popular writer and get 30 comments every time you post doesn’t mean that you’re proud or snobbish. Just because you know how to take beautiful pictures or decorate a house perfectly or are witty doesn’t mean you expect everyone else to excel at the things you’re good at. I think in the past I’ve had hang ups and held people at arm’s length because everyone else thought they were great. So I’d make up my little mind that I wasn’t going to like them. And that is pride in one of the worst forms: jealousy, really.

    And you know what else?  In life we do have favorite people.  There are people that we click with.  There are people that we sit up and take notice of when they speak or write or post on facebook.  Maybe we’ve never met them, but they make us feel good or happy or challenged.  Or they make us laugh or think or cry.  And it’s okay to have favorite people.  I could name you about 10 of mine in short order.  But our favoritism needs to be balanced by love and acceptance and growth in loving the un-favorites that rub us raw in spots.

    I would love to have met Cindy the Encourager and the Gentle Rachel and Wise & Funny Jenny K. and Down to Earth Audrey R. and Lovely Amber H. and Comfortable Christy and Smart Farm Wife Andrea this past weekend. I would have loved to reconnect with my old friend Audrey M. and calm and beautiful Kay (my student from looong ago when she was 16 and I was 18) and the Becky I last knew as a little 16 year old Mennonite girl. And the rest of you. I have no doubt (I think :) that you would be nicer in person than you are on the screen

    Random observation:

    (*NAME DROP: To mention casually the names of illustrious or famous people in order to imply that one is on familiar terms with them, intended as a means of self-promotion.* And yes. I’ve been guilty.) 

    I can understand that a group like FFE has to have a starting and stopping point. I want to embrace the world, rush around making sure everyone has a spot, look out for the ones who might have been missed, and in general make a muddle of things. Especially online, there is a point where you have to say: “I have enough friends now.” I could wear myself to a frazzle trying to comment on every post I read or encourage every person on facebook who needs encouragement. And then I realize that I am not indispensable and maybe I need to be quiet for a while.

    The blogging system is an intricate and mysterious one. I remember a friend comparing it to being at the playground and wanting to be friendly, but unsure if the kids who are having fun want you to join them or not. If you are a total newcomer, as I was almost two years ago, you cautiously make a few comments, then sit back and see if the others ask you to join and play or not. Some do. Some don’t. And that’s okay. Maybe sometimes you need to wander off and find someone else who needs a friend and get your own game going. I seldom keep commenting on a blog when there is no reciprocation. I may keep reading it because I like the writer, but friendship is usually a two way thing. Some people are overwhelmed with readers and can’t follow you just because you follow them. ( And as I write this, I realize how thankful I am that Jesus always has time for a new follower.)

    On the subject of cliques and things: I have found it so interesting and sad that some of the people in my life that I once looked at as having it all together and always dressing right and knowing how to play volleyball and knowing how to get in with the right crowd are actually needy adults who don’t necessarily have a niche where they feel comfortable. They may be aching for friendships but don’t know how to be a friend. Maybe they never learned to reach out to all kinds of people and now they’re left high and dry.  I don’t know.

    One really cool thing about the past and present is this: Now that we have children and greying hair and aren’t quite as concerned about the latest style, we’re so much more on the same level with those people we once thought were above us. Those volleyball experts are quite nice in their own homes with their children around to keep them humble. And then they do things like get ordained as ministers and you have lots in common and maybe the ladies are still doing their hair the way they did when they were 17 and they just don’t seem intimidating like they did back then.  I think the truth is this:  They probably weren’t as scary as I deemed them in the first place. 

    No matter where you go or where you read or what job you do, there are people who need friendship. And whether you connect because you both adore Ann Voskamp or both read Karen Kingsbury or because you both can’t stand KK and find AV overwhelming or because you love vintage stuff or you can’t decorate worth a hoot, friendships are good. And they’re still good if one of you loves KK and one of you can’t bear her. And people never want to be a “project”. And close groups are healthy and we all need friends to get us out of that shell of self that makes us nasty to live with. And I should be quiet now because I’m just putting words together and I’m not sure any of this makes sense. Sometimes I just have this urge to say who the real Luci is and what she thinks even if she’s strange.

    I know you FFE ladies/gals are going to have a camaradarie that the rest of us won’t share. There will be inside jokes and warm memories that we know nothing about. You’ve been careful about not talking too much about things publicly, but now I want to hear a little bit about your weekend. I’m nosy like that. :) Pleeee….ase. With a cherry on top. I hope you had a fabulous time and felt loved and accepted and understood and alive.

    This post will be hard to comment on and you don’t need to. FFE gals/women: Don’t tell me you missed me. I know better. You don’t miss someone you’ve never met.

    Edit:  I know how easily I label and categorize and put people on pedestals when really we’re all made of the same stuff.  And while none of us want to be the pathetic person on the outskirts, we all find ourselves there sometimes, needing someone to reach out to us.

    I pray for myself and anyone reading this

    ….that our friendships may be healthy, not self-centered.

    ….that our hearts be free of jealousy and comparison and coveting and all the nasty things that eat away at what could be beautiful relationships.

    …..that we recognize those who need a friend.

    ….for wisdom to know what relationships to pursue and those we need to give up and move beyond.

    …for less judgment, more acceptance, and the freedom to give people the space they need.

    ….for genuine goodwill in seeing the friendships of others grow and strengthen.

    A joy-filled Monday to each of you.

February 9, 2012

  • Once in a While

    Mornings can be so hectic at our house.

    But once in a while the chores are done, Dan hasn’t come by for the ride to school yet, and things look like this:  

    feb 2012 010 

     And my heart aches with happiness.

    (I NEED  to change the settings on my camera because I don’t like this yellow look, but I’m not sure how to.)

    This morning I bundled the littlest  up tight and they went to visit the neighbors across the field.  This is the first time they have walked that way alone.

    002 

    And we see lovely sunsets almost every night, but once in a while I take a picture of them.

    feb 2012 003 

    And once in a very great while the house is quiet for an hour.

    I shall clean the fridge, bake some carrot muffins, and keep the laundry going.

    I wish you a dazzlingly beautiful Thursday, bathed in peace & joy.  May an extra special once-in-a-while be your experience today.

     

February 7, 2012

  • I Wonder

    I wonder what it would be like to be Princess Kate, practicing my royal wave.  Or attending an elegant charity ball.

    royal wave royals

    I wonder what it would be like to see this lighthouse from a cottage by the sea.

    lighthouse 

    Or to build a beautiful sand castle today.

    0408021357121castlesinthesand2329_1_t 

    I wonder what it would be like to breakfast in this kitchen.

    pretty kitchen 

    I wonder what it would be like to be flying to Jamaica to see my daughter like Dorcas Smucker is doing.

    *************************************************************************

    I wonder what it would be like to be caught in the unrest of Syria today. (Syrian refugees below)

    syria_ref_0619_01 

    Or to be one of these Somalian ladies.

    0283369055085 0283355955085

    I wonder what it would be like to be that dad in Pennsylvania who just lost his young

    wife to cancer.

    Or my neighbor who recently came through colon cancer treatment.

    Or my good friend whose husband can’t come home for weeks at a time.

    I wonder what it would be like to be the victim of sex trafficking.

    Or to be going through drug withdrawal.

    I wonder what it would be like….

    and I really have no idea.

    *********************************************************

    This morning there are tomatoes cooking on my stove.  Procrastinator Luci is finally making juice from last fall’s tomatoes that I put into the freezer instead of doing them up as they got ripe. They’re sorry little things, victims of a rainy July. They ripened on the sunroom counter instead of in the garden–like all good little green tomatoes do in Alberta because frost comes too early to have many sweet vine-ripened ones.  I have been putting this job off for ages.

    The mad school rush was as mad as usual.

    Natalia had a little meltdown because the butterfly I drew for her to embroider is TOO BIG.

    Our brown dugout water and the stains it causes make me very cross.

    It feels very cold outside after so much mild weather. 

    My need to organize and dejunk the house is really weighing me down.

    Liesl just fell over a toy tractor and nearly brought down the house with her cries.

    But the sun is shining.

    There are chocolate covered malt balls and mixed nuts in the pantry.

    The children are unspeakably  healthy.

    I bought one pink and one grey scarf last evening for $2 apiece.

    My heart is full with the love of faraway and nearby friendships.

    Dan makes breakfast and is always home with us at night.

    And though there may be places I’d rather be today,

    I will make this kitchen an altar of thanksgiving

    and I will Pray for and Remember and Intercede for

    THE MANY

    who would give a lot

    for a life like mine.

February 5, 2012

  • Come Walk With Me

     I love all things warm and green and flowering. I love the sound of waves. And blue skies make me very, very happy. Most of all, I love sunshine. I think I could live without green or warm if the sun shone every day.

    Thankfully Alberta is a sunny province. Even when it gets very cold, the sun usually shines. But in the long winter the dark comes early and stays late, even on a sunny day. And the sun just doesn’t climb very high in the sky on the shortest days of the year. Sometimes in December, the darkness is like a literal blanket to my spirit, settling over it in an almost palpable way. I want to run from the suffocation, push it away with my hands, keep it from descending on my head. I move about the kitchen making supper, turning on every light in the house, admiring the setting sun, but dreading the oppression and the blackness.

    feb 1 2012 002 

    My doctor told me of these three ways to treat depression: exercise, counseling, drugs. Guess which one is the most effective? Dr. Ashwell says exercise.

    And so I walk.  By fits and starts. But I really try.

    feb 1 2012 027 

     

    This winter has been exceptionally warm and we’ve had very little snow. These photos are from a beautiful February day. We live in a wide and wonderful country. These are the the views we see from our west windows.

    feb 1 2012 021 feb 1 2012 016 feb 1 2012 017 025

    ^^^massive windmills on the horizon

    019

    livingroom window ^^^^

    feb 1 2012 044

    Our home on the hill ^^^^^^

     feb 1 2012 037

    ^^^^^The ridge where we live and Dan has his sawmill & cattle

    I’m not a big fan of winter. I do like the slower pace. And I like blankets and hot chocolate and a fire in the wood stove. The lights on the mantle are sweet.  And sometimes when we’re in town on a really cold night and there’s the smell of exhaust in the air and the big diesel pickups are idling and you go shivering into the store and grab a frozen cart and shake your head at the cold and pull on your gloves when it’s time to go back out there is a sense of camaraderie and northern-ness that I love. I guess I also really like skating and sledding. Alec is wild about snowmobiling and ever so disappointed that there is so little snow this year.   Northern lights are absolutely awesome and are much more common in the winter, maybe mostly because that’s when it’s dark and you see them. But all that stuff loses its appeal after about a month when it is overtaken by sodden mittens and dark mornings and the entry overflowing with snowpants and boots and freezing dashes outside to start the car or dump the garbage bucket.

     014

    Birthday party of sledding girls.^^^^^^^

    474

    ^^^Here is what I look like on a walk in -37 degree weather.  I am smiling, I promise.

     

    And then I start to dream of the three frost free months again. June, July, and August.  The glorious LONG days of summer sunshine, which deserve a post of their own.

    family 1748

    But till then I will walk. Unless the wind is too cruel or the snow too biting. Then it’s the elliptical. Or it’s chocolate chip cookies and coffee. :)

    Tell me about where YOU walk.

    P.S.  Sweetest little doctor in town administers meds to her very sick Keisha doll in the pink snowsuit.

    015

    016

January 30, 2012

  • of unplanned boys and blogging

    When this little girl Natalia was only seven months old and I realized I was pregnant again we didn’t know whether to laugh or cry.  I did both. 

    family july 06 074 

    -baby and picnic June 06 021 

     

     I remember telling my family that it was kind of like the virgin birth.  We weren’t sure how he had come about, as the precautions we were taking not to conceive were pretty rigid.  Dan smiled and took it in stride and I had some frustrated little issues, but when you’re growing a child and nurturing another small one there’s not a lot of time for temper fits.  God gave me a very good pregnancy and then it was the end of July and he was due.  Garden was exploding with produce, Dan was busy making hay, and it was time for our church’s vacation Bible school.  Very great with this boy child, I rolled my eyes and laughed at another July baby in our crazy busy life. And sometimes I cried with weariness.

    Then he came.  So fast that I hardly remember his birth, so happy I was to actually be at the hospital instead of in the Pouce River canyon, where I felt sure he would be born on the way to town because I labored too long at home.  All 10 lbs. and 6 oz.  of chunky boy.  We were grateful.  And we loved him.

    aug sept 07 015 

     

      After initial newborn fussiness, we turned the 2 month calendar on a happy, sweet, lazy, fat baby.  He didn’t walk until he was 17 months old, a quiet little blondie with just a few grunts for words.  We called him “Dray”–and still do.  He potty trained like a dream.  And we loved him.

    jan-march 08 014 jan-march 08 005 jan-march 08 008

    july 07 001 

    And now he’s four and he’s still sweet and happy and lazy.  His perspective on life is so much fun.  From last week: Standing on the back of his trike, with a shoestring around his neck,”I look like such a cool dude like this that I just laugh at myself.”

    Helping me take spices off the shelf to clean it:  “All this stuff is GWOSS by itself.”  Truth right there.

    Out playing with his friend and they come in, cold and rosy.    “It’s bweak (break) time, Mom.  Kay, what are the options?  Hot chocolate or a cookie?” 

    “Kay Mom, here’s a joke for you:  Teacher tells boy to bring him what he’s got in his mouth.  Boy says, “I wish I could.  It’s a toothache.”  (Heard from his brother, and delivered in his deadpan voice without a lot of inflection.)

    When I came back from a walk yesterday Andre came out to meet me. As we walked up the lane, getting closer to the house, he started to sing, “Each step I take just leads me closer home.”

    vbs 11-andre's birthday 058 

    Right now he takes everything apart and then isn’t sure how to get it back together.  The other day the office door was locked and I discovered he was in there taking apart the ride-on car that has been around forever.  Do you think we can find the screws to get the steering wheel put back on?

    He is not a perfect child.  Right now he’s having a meltdown because  he has to wait to eat a piece of cornbread until after school snacktime.  Because he threw a mini fit he needs to have 10 minutes of quiet time.  This makes him very, very sad.  And he thinks I am very mean.

    tori reading 

    He eats almost everything cheerfully, gives tight hugs, and loves to drive his little quad. (northern canadian lingo for 4 wheeler)

    004 

    And we love him.  It’s not a bit hard. God knows what He’s doing when He gives life. He really does.

     

    *************************************************************************

    I’ve been thinking a lot about blogging and facebook.  And how much time I spend here, reading & writing.  I’ve been thinking about how much time I spend thinking about writing and editing what I’ve already written and checking for comments.  I wish I wasn’t such an all or nothing type of person.  I wish I could take it or leave it a little more.  And will I ever find the balance, or do I need to quit cold turkey? (Which reminds me of a comment I read on facebook about adults threatening to quit facebook being like kids threatening to run away from home.  Maybe because it’s a threat that seldom happens?  ;)  I read an article a long time ago by a teenager who gave up facebook because she realized that it turned her thoughts to herself too much, looking for that perfect photo where she looked good, trying to be witty or wise, etc.  I can relate.  And then of course the comparison thing, which has been hashed and rehashed by all us who blog and read.  Also, in rereading some old posts, I see glaringly how much I use the word “I”.  It seems like some people gracefully know how be personal without being narcissistic about it. I admire that just like I admire short posts that say a lot in just a few words, unlike my extreme wordiness.  (see last post)

    AND YET.  Here I have connected with wonderful old friends and  made lovely new ones.  Here I have been inspired, encouraged and even changed.  Here I have learned that I will never be the best, but that’s okay.  I love this outlet for the words that natter away at the walls of my brain and beg to be released.  I feel like it meets a need that for  a long time I didn’t even know I had. 

    AND YET.  This house needs to be housecleaned.  Badly.  I want to read good books, learn to know Jesus better, talk often with my church people and neighbors, exercise, organize, get my rest, and love my family in the best ways I know how.  Could I do this more fully and engagedly (is that a word?) if I freed up the time I spend online?  I don’t want my online life to be an escape, a place of easy comfort that only feeds the surface of my soul.  Because as surely as I turn to social networking for affirmation, gratification, or escape from reality, it disappoints.  I know I’ve been over this 100 times (or something in that vicinity) but I’d love to hear your ways of keeping balance.  Thank you.

    And happy Monday afternoon, my cyber and IRL peoples!

January 24, 2012

  • Dreams, Whims, and Reality

      These days I do things that I never dreamed I would do.

    I sweep up dog hair in the porch. I (try to) shake dog hair off of black coats.

    I throw things in a junk drawer when I don’t know what to do with them. My mom never had one. I have about three.

    And every Sunday I sit on the un-cushioned but comfortable (to me) pews of Bay Tree Mennonite Church. My husband preaches three Sundays out of four. Children crawl over me, ask for their pencils, and unbutton my sweater buttons through the service.

    Three times a month our little church sings at the nursing homes we sang at back when I was 16. And we sing at funerals of people who die in our community. The Mennonite Choir, made up of the entire church.

    ******************************************************************************************

    I have been working on this post in terrible fits and starts and now it has become a monstrosity.   Read on at your own risk.

    ***********************************************************************************

    From our house:

    The other day The Man said to The Woman, “Honey, what would you think of us getting some chickens and a couple of pigs to eat up our scraps? The children need more chores to do and I think it would be good for us.”

    And The Woman raised her unplucked eyebrows. And she tried hard to look enthused but failed. And she said things like where would we put them and do you have time to fix a place for them and would the chickens be for eggs or meat. To which The Man shrugged and said that they’d figure something out and it wouldn’t really matter if they’d be egg or meat birds and it would be nice to just live off the land a little more.

    And The Woman knows how much of a nurturer The Man is. She who doesn’t care for animals much at all, (though she can’t stand to see them cold or ill or in pain) is married to he who loves to feed them and talk to them and see them happy and well.  Ocasionally she says hi to the horses when she walks by them, but it embarrasses her because they look at her strangely.  He’s the one who picks up the little stray dogs by the road that even she grows to like in time. And the same nurturing nature in him is what makes him such a good provider and the reason that he takes his family out for supper more often than she’s comfortable with people knowing about lest they think they’re an extravagant family. It’s the same nurturing that makes him cook breakfast almost every morning and love to invite the neighbors for a grilled steak dinner.

    So The Woman tried to be nice but she said that she really didn’t know if she could butcher chickens. And she thought in her heart of how she’d always been kind of scared of the crazy birds anyway.

    And later the boys decided that if the family was starting the hobby farm thing then they’d like to milk a cow. The family had discussed it many times before, but always left it hanging because they didn’t want to be tied down to a cow. They have 200 cattle on their farm already, but not one of them needs to be milked at a certain time. They just need to be fed and watered and checked regularly.

    And The Woman knows that a milk cow would make sense. These six children can easily drink a gallon of milk a day and at $4.50 a gallon from the grocery store that adds up to a lot in a week. But she is remembering washing milk pails and trying to use up cream and selling milk when she was a young girl still at home and she tries to be enthused but she fails.

    And then she remembers that the lady whose husband does long distance trucking and has adolescent sons lounging around the house would do almost ANYTHING for a little barn and a few goats and chickens to give her children work. And she realizes that her city friends think a milk cow would be awesome. And she knows of organic style health minded people who would be so delighted to raise their own chickens. And she feels ashamed.

    So she tries to act enthused. And if the plan works out, she will go with the flow and start straining milk and washing eggs. And maybe you can buy her butter next summer.

     ****************************************************************************

    Always a dreamer, I used to dream some wild ones. Some of them were noble. Some of them were small.

    Maybe I would be a teacher. Preferably an English major. Preferably a missionary English major.

    I would marry someone intellectually stimulating. Preferably someone of exotic race.

    The exotic man and I would have a small, well-spaced brown-skinned family.

    Maybe we would adopt children.

    He would teach and I would be his intelligent sidekick once the family came along.

    I would be beautiful and gracious even if I lived in a mud hut. I would keep house just like Mom did.

    I would be the fun lady who did stuff with the village children and chalk drawings for the church and sang in the choir.

    OR I would be a slim aristocratic lady.

    Dreamy and unmarried, I would write in some lovely English cottage on the Maritimes.

    The gentlemen who came into my life made it exciting, but they were never quite right, somehow.

    Or maybe I would be a designer of signs. (This was back before web design, people.) I loved lettering and words and have a slightly artistic bent. (Or I once did. Something seems to have robbed me of it.)

    Or maybe I would just teach my days away. I always wanted to teach English as a second language in foreign places.  Inner city work also appealed to me a lot.  I dreamed of being that teacher who gave a kid the chance they’d never had.

    After a taste of choir at a short summer term at Faith Builders in Pennsylvania, singing with some famous group of Mennonites was also a hazy dream.

    Of course I usually dreamed of marrying someone extraordinary and having an extraordinary family. Because I liked boys and I liked children. Very much.

    And this one thing I knew: I didn’t want to live in the little community where I grew up. It was too small and unexciting and far away from everyone.

     

    And then I went to Maranatha Bible School when I was 16 and again when I was 17, nearly 18.

    There I met Dan. Me the social butterfly who made it my business to learn everyone’s name the first day, agonized and delighted over my classes, played volleyball terribly, and had crushes on strange boys. He the quiet studious Wisconsin fellow with glasses who sang good bass.

    He liked me. And I liked him okay. But just that.

    He was so nicely ordinary, he didn’t cause a lot of waves, and he was a Dairy Farmer.

    A few months after Bible school was over, he wrote and told me that he’d like to learn to know me better . I wrote back and said I was sorry that I didn’t like him that way. And besides, we were pretty young.

    Conservative Mennonite style, I went to teach school when I was just 18 at a church about 3 hours from Dan’s home. The youth groups got together often and Dan & I saw each other periodically. The second year I taught, his sister Kim was my co-teacher. We’d go north to Hayward on the weekends sometimes, where the boys could all play hockey like pros and it was fun to get together with a bigger youth group. I stayed at the farm with Kim some nights and tried to act natural around her family. Dan taught school at his home church that year and we had lots in common. He’d call to the school where I taught to borrow books or talk to his sister. As the year wore on, I felt my resolve to steer clear of the Dairy Farmer with the Kind Brown Eyes wavering. I remember wailing to my sister, “I just have this feeling that God wants me to date Dan. It’s going to turn out like the stories and it makes me so mad!” His students and their parents loved and respected him. My list of reasons NOT to date him was getting shorter as the list of his qualities got longer. He loved children, respected his mom, worked hard, sang well, knew how to make a good breakfast, and drove a nice Beretta. And he liked me. Indecisive little me of the frizzy hair and big nose and poor volleyball skills.

    We dated. And I obsessed over whether he was the right one and he never gave up and I eventually knew how much I loved this steady man. So we were married 4 years after we first met.  And I realized that I was the one getting the good end of the deal.  

     I had become resigned to the Dairy Farmer idea, but we decided together that we should move to Alberta instead. Because the church there was small and struggling. And we felt like maybe there was more work to do there than in Dan’s already well established home community. It wasn’t an easy decision, but were happy with it.

    And the years went by and Dan worked for my dad on his sawmill and bought cattle and made hay. We had three babies. Then we went to Belize where he filled in as pastor for two years and taught high school. And I cooked for company and visited my neighbors and loved the warm sunshine.

    And when our two year term was over in Belize we agonized over whether to stay there or to come home and we were so torn that we did a public lot to make the decision. And the lot fell to return. And I cried hard because I thought maybe God had a life for us down there. I had grown to love it so much.

    And then we were back in Alberta and Dan was ordained minister of our tiny little church. And he bought Dad’s sawmill and kept farming. And we had more babies than we knew our hearts could hold, but somehow they stretched wider to acommodate each one. And Dan preached and combined oats and sawed lumber. And I changed babies and battled depression and cooked for company. And we were mostly happy.

    But sometimes it feels like all the things I didn’t think I was good at doing I am now required to do.

    Like lots of cooking. And lots of nursing tiny ones. And driving to school in the cold dark winter. And keeping a household of 8 organized and efficiently run. And being a pastor’s wife. {I like the relationship part of that role. I like being involved with people and hosting the evangelist and going to minister’s meetings. But I just never quite fit the spiritual role that I feel I should fill. I don’t feel demure and strong of faith and exemplary in my love for God and submission and motherhood.}

    Sometimes I chafe.  Sometimes I have temper fits.  But I don’t usually look back and say, “Man, I wish I could start my life all over.”  Because it’s a good life.  It’s been tough in spots, but it’s rich.  I am surrounded by people I love and they love me despite my horrible faults.  And God is good, even when I don’t believe it.

    You know what else?  I got to teach school for four years and loved it.  We got to experience a taste of life in a foreign place.  And I love my six children and their dad more than I ever dreamed possible. Our little church, with its quirks and faults, is also a peaceful place where we love each other.  And Dan is really much more intelligent than I am.

    I still dream incessantly.  I hope that’s okay for someone who’s almost 38.

    Just lately I’ve got this new whim. After reading this blog, I wonder if God is calling us to adopt a couple of special needs children:

    http://www.nogreaterjoymom.com/2011/11/reckless-abandon.html

    I know it’s crazy. And I feel like I would be selfishly selective about what type of need we could handle. {Dear Lord, could we please have two cute little Down’s syndrome babies?}

    The day that I first got stirred up about this idea, when Dan came in for lunch I said, “What if we’d adopt a couple of special needs kids from Romania?”

    And he said, “I was just thinking when Andre and Liesl came running to meet me that I’m not sure I want these days to end.”

    But who knows? Only God does.

    Maybe someday we’ll be sitting in a cottage by the sea and Dan will be cooking and milking his cow and I’ll be writing my books. (big HA)

    On the other hand, we’ll probably be sweating it out somewhere in voluntary service work. I kind of hope so.

    Or maybe we’ll be home gathering eggs with our young adult Down’s syndrome kids.

    I hope that whatever I’m doing when I’m 65, I won’t be fighting it. I hope I’ll be embracing it and loving my husband through it. I hope that we’ll be those neighbors that people can count on when they need a hand. I hope we’ll be those pillars in the church that encourage the young and burdened.

    I had a good single friend who used to say, “All I ever wanted to do was get married and have a big family.” She later married but is now unable to have children.

    Or maybe you’re the girl with big dreams of a career who married young and you’re now at home wiping noses and battling postpartum depression.

    Maybe you’re that lady who longs for a big garden and you’re stuck in a little house in the city.

    Or maybe you love animals and your children beg for a pet but your husband can’t stand them.

    Maybe no one reads your blog

    Maybe you feel like  a prisoner in your kitchen or your church.

    Maybe you’re part of a big church and you feel like no one notices you.

    Maybe you dreamed of becoming a professional singer  but failed Voice.

    Maybe all the writing pieces you send in are rejected by the editor.

    Don’t give up your dreams.

    But don’t let them hold you back from experiencing life and purpose right where you are.

    Don’t let the loss of a dream make you ingrown and selfish.

    Hold your dreams close but let The Now flower with friendship and stretching and growth.

    (and now I’m sounding all demure and having-all-things-together when I am not and I don’t)

    I would love to hear a dream of yours that has never materialized and a wonderful reality that has taken its place.

    Now I simply MUST go brown spare ribs for supper and then go sliding with my babies.

    -The End–AT LAST-