Thursday, June 23, 2011

The Last Three Weeks

Life is always crazy, but, well, it's been more so lately.

Here's how...
  • hosting 225 kids at our church's four-day VBS
  • putting the Church back to rights after VBS
  • writing thank you notes to the 137 volunteers
  • hauling thirty 4th, 5th and 6th graders to read to young kids at a local summer school and then taking them for pizza. (I have a not-so-secret and intense distaste for kids' pizza places, so this was a big step for me. Yuck.)
  • spending four days at a Christian educators' retreat
  • laughing hysterically and learning lots at said retreat
  • coming home to another case of strep for son #2
  • scheduling a last-minute trip to see our beloved Dr. Mike
  • facing a week without my summer intern who had the nerve to look forward to going to camp with 5th graders (Some people are really sick!)
I'm not really complaining. Really. I loved every minute of it -- minus the strep part. I love the VBS kids, the ladies at my retreat, Dr. Mike, and even the 5th graders. I just wish these big events were spaced out a bit more for better recovery time.

Then, again, who else has questioned -- and requested improvement on -- God's timing? Oh, yeah, you, too? I thought so.

As you ponder the deep and confusing theology surrounding our need to accept God's timing, please enjoy this picture of son #1 enjoying summer break, playing the Wii and getting a Shiatsu back massage. It's a great set-up, one he came up with all by himself.

And forgive me if I am quiet for a few days while I recuperate.

Saturday, June 18, 2011

Five-fingered Biographies

I wrote this article in 2007 for the San Angelo Standard Times. I still love these ideas -- love hands, in general.

            Recently, I received an email from my father-in-law.  He often forwards emails that have been well circulated around the Internet, but this email struck me very differently than the other hundreds of weekly forwards I get in my inbox.  In this email, someone was telling the story of meeting an old man who was considering his hands.  The old man told the stranger of all the amazing and mundane things those hands had done in his life – everything from combing hair to fighting a war.  The old man claimed his hands were “the mark of where [he had] been and the ruggedness of [his] life.”  It was an amazing story he told through the life of his hands, and it began a series of thoughts for me that I had never contemplated in quite the same way before.
I began to consider that hands are much like biographies.  My dad's hands, especially, reminded me of this:  Every scar, callus, wrinkle, age spot, and black fingernail tell the story of his life.    For nearly 40 years, he has used those hands to build and maintain natural gas pipelines and the mammoth engines that move the gas.   As a result, those hands show vividly how he has spent a life working to support his family – how he worked to buy me things like prom dresses and tennis gear, as well as the larger part of a college education.  They do, indeed, show "the ruggedness of [his] life."  I only wish that somehow they also showed the gratitude that I have for all that they have done.
Similarly, this email also reminded me of my grandfather's hands -- large working hands that were always somehow very kind.  In the last months of his life, when he was so overtaken by Alzheimer's that he did not know his own wife and children, his hands remembered how to thread pipe, something he did often as a young man working in the petroleum industry in West Texas.    His hands remembered, and they threaded that pipe as he slept.  During a time when he could remember virtually nothing of his own biography, his hands remembered for him.
Hands, too, seem to reflect our legacies.  In my three-year-old son’s hands, I see so many others'.  Sometimes, I see my husband’s 12-year-old cousin’s hands, thin and boyish.  Sometimes, I see my mother-in-law's hands; something about the first knuckle of his first finger is so similar to hers.  Of course, my husband's hands are also often reflected in the movements of those tiny, sweet fingers, especially the pinkie.
Beyond my son and his hands, there are times when I look down and see my sister’s hands doing what I am doing; my own hands oddly morph into her hands as the fingers move.  A little older with a few tiny scars in different places, her hands do what my brain tells them. Then, without warning, the illusion vanishes, and my hands are my own again.
At times, I remember being jealous of other women’s hands, hands that seem so cool and smooth while being also elegant and purposeful.  I have often wished that my hands were more like these women’s.  In recent years, however, I have come to realize what my hands represent.  They are large hands, hands that have been bequeathed to me by a family tree filled with farmers, with folks who worked and worked hard.  These were people who valued hands that could work a long day without tiring.  I am learning to appreciate this legacy in myself, in my own hands.
I realize now that my hands do all they need to: They hold my babies, and they show the world the ring of promise between my husband and me.  They fill sippy cups and throw baseballs to a preschooler, and they turn the pages of my Bible.  They are not perfect, but they are my life – my biography. My hands, like everyone else’s, exist as far more than digits, palms, and nails; they tell the stories of my life truthfully with every mark and line.  They serve not only as tools, but also as tangible, visible memories of where my life has been and as an inheritance, tying me to those who came before. 

Thursday, June 2, 2011

Merry Adventures

As I write this, my sister, my mom, and my nephew are gazing up at the Statue of Liberty. No, seriously. Right this second. THE Statue of Liberty in New York Harbor. It's ironic somehow that they are there and I am here writing about this...

We had a great Memorial Day! One particular creek about 20 miles from our house still has a respectable amount of water in it, and there is our favorite place to put our kayaks in the water.


Here are my boys ready to drive their boats a few miles. Aren't they cute? Like little warriors ready to do battle. They do have to be reminded that their oars are not light sabers. They are decidedly adept at maneuvering and took to kayaking like, well, like ducks to water.

Down the county road from this low-water crossing where we put the 'yaks in is a small, country cemetery -- a cemetery I never had occassion to visit until Monday when, after rowing for a few hours, I asked Metro Jethro if we could see where the road went.


It went here...

Metro and I have always liked cemeteries. We've checked out lots of them in our 15 years together, some with family members in them and some without. Somehow cemeteries are reminders of what could have been -- and motivation to seize that same possibility and cherish it.

The boys, Metro, and I stomped through the whole place -- a quiet place situated on a peaceful hill. It was also a heartbreaking place; the number of children buried here is roughly equal to the number of adults.


This stone was the oldest marker we found. It belongs to Ellar Stonehouse who lived 8 days in 1882. At the bottom, it read, "Budded on Earth, to Bloom in Heaven." Poetic. Crushing. Hope and optimism in the midst of amazing pain. The headstone of the parents who chose these words were to the right of Ellar's, as was the stone of her brother who died at age 12.



We also took time to take special notice of the veterans buried at Sherwood.

Note the close-up. Grass in May in our drough-stricken land isn't pretty.

Then, Metro found the markers for the grandparents and uncle of a friend I have known my entire life. West Texas is indeed a very small place sometimes. Metaphorically speaking, of course.

After paying our respects, we followed the road past the Cemetery to the very small burg of Sherwood, pop. 72.

Several towns in our area are named after a few of the classics... Tennyson, Bronte, and even Eden. So, when the town of Sherwood was ever mentioned, I always assumed that Robin Hood, Maid Marian, and a band of merry men were involved. In truth, it was just named after some guy named Sherwood.

My boys pose on the porch of the old Sherwood Courthouse, built in 1901 when the locals were sure Sherwood would become the central locale for all things Irion County. The railroad, however, thought differently, and the county seat was moved in 1939. Since then, this building has been used for community events.

Check out the rocks the building is made of. They are local to the area. If there is one thing in West Texas you can depend on having, it's good rocks.

The clock at the top of the building is false. It perpetually reads 8:17. Legend has it that Lincoln died at exactly that time.

In truth, he died at 7:22 a.m. Maybe someone converted Eastern to Central time incorrectly, or maybe they just had the wrong time. Regardless, I like the legend. I hope it's true.

I like it the same way I like the story that Lincoln, at the first formal affair after Robert E. Lee surrendered, asked the band to play the song, "Dixie." I like that. True or not, I like it.

So our tour of Sherwood was quick and complete. We headed home hot and dusty -- and with a tiny but fascinating piece of local history stuffed in our family pocket.