Dad’s Day

I found this picture when going through a box of old photos. It’s a shot of my dad standing outside the old farmhouse. Both the house and the man are gone now but I’m wishing I could ask him a hundred questions about this precious portrait.

How old were you in this picture?  You played baseball?  What team were you on?  What position did you play?  Were you any good?  Who took this picture?  Did you wonder if you’d have grandsons that would play baseball?  No, I don’t suppose you were thinking about grandchildren yet.  Were you happy to pose for this picture, or were you anxious to get to the ball field?  Did grandpa and grandma go and watch you play?  Did you ever hit a home run?  Did your team win that day?  Did you play any other sports?  Why don’t I know?

This is the first year I haven’t bought a Father’s Day card.  As I walked past the cards today, I couldn’t help but hope I had picked out good and meaningful cards all those years.  I know I got it right once.  The best Father’s Day card I remember giving my dad was when I was about seven or eight.  We were on vacation and dad had cut his finger.  My elaborate home-made card to him stated that I would squeeze the lemon into his iced tea each day, so the juice wouldn’t sting his finger.  He probably got tired of drinking iced tea, but he kept ordering it just so I could make good on my pledge.  That’s what I do know.

10 Things I Miss

Ten things I miss, in no particular order:

1.  I miss writing.  Getting ready for VBS consumes my days and sleep consumes my nights.  That’s all I can manage right now.

2.  I miss the smell of fresh cut hay.  Even though the grass in our yard gets kind of long, it doesn’t give off that heady aroma I remember from the back forty.

3.  I miss getting letters in the mail.  There’s no anticipation when walking out to the mailbox anymore.

4.  I miss my waist.  It went somewhere when I turned fifty.

5.  I miss eating a bowl of ice-cream before going to bed.  Could be related to #4.

6.  I miss Hudson.  Katie sent me a picture today of a very poopy diaper and that even warmed my heart. 

7.  I miss spending summer afternoons at the city pool with other moms and all our kids.

8.  I miss reading.  On June 22 I am going to download ten new books on my Kindle.

9.  I miss Hugh Bonneville and Maggie Smith.  (I’m getting PB hooked on Downton Abbey.)

10.  I miss the sound of the loons on the lake up north. 

What have you been missing lately?

June Scripture Memory Verses

One of the best ways for me to stay attached to the Vine is to keep His words in my heart and mind.  Guess what I’m memorizing this month!  Share your verses, ladies!  Stay faithful!  If you’re just getting started, jump on in!  It’s never too late!  Click on “Comment” and type away.  If you’d like to see what others are putting to memory, or review your own verses, go to the category “Scripture Memory Verses” on the right.

Flower Girl

  

I was the flower girl at my cousin Candy’s wedding in June of 1965.  The only thing I remember about that day was how long the aisle looked as I dropped rose petals, one slow step at a time.  I wasn’t used to wearing a ribbon in my hair or fancy gloves and it all felt very special.  The photographer posed us for this picture, but the look of adoration in my eyes was genuine. 

Candy and I were the bookends of our generation. She was the oldest, I was the youngest, with seventeen years in-between.  Candace Mae passed away this week — and my end of the book case suddenly feels weak and wobbly. 

Family is like that — we don’t realize that we are holding each other up just by being together on the same shelf.  When one is gone, the rest need to move in a little closer.

Orange Tree

 

 PB bought an orange tree — it even came in an orange pot.   He brought it home and set it on the deck, tag and all.  The next morning he got up, opened the blinds and looked out the window to behold a miracle.  Oranges!  Big,  juicy, shiny oranges.  What an amazing plant!

It’s hard to admit it when you’ve been fooled.  PB was a good sport, though, confessing that the tagboard citrus fruit looked like the real thing just for a split-second.  Now we get a kick out of pointing out our miraculous orange tree to every unsuspecting guest.  They are so impressed — until they see our smirks and take a closer look.  It may appear to be an orange, but if it doesn’t smell like an orange, or feel like an orange, or taste like an orange, it’s probably not an orange.  Trouble is, looks can be deceiving.   From a distance, that orange tag is pretty convincing.  Zoom out far enough, and what is fake can be mistaken as real.  Maybe that’s why we don’t like to let people get too close.  Our cardboard fruit will be revealed for what it is. 

That little plant sitting outside my kitchen window has become a daily reminder to me: it’s not enough to look like a Jesus-follower.  I had better sound like one and act like one and even smell like one (believers are “the fragrance of life”. 2 Cor. 2:16).   If I want to bear real fruit, it has to come from the real Vine.

I am the vine; you are the branches.  If you remain in Me and I in you, you will bear much fruit; apart from me you can do nothing.  John 15:5

 

Rivers Run to the Sea

For many years, I saw my life as a river — a swiftly flowing current, constantly moving, carrying me along.  Well-defined banks kept my life on course, but the river was rolling, incessantly rolling, ever rolling.  School activities, sporting events, concerts, homework, practices, games, musicals, friends, youth group, driver’s licenses, laundry, dating, college, cooking, parties — always a feeling of just trying to keep my head above water.  Surrendering to the river’s energy that kept me moving forward, I learned to navigate the steady stream and keep us all afloat in the family lifeboat.

What I didn’t know was that the river had a destination. 

I wasn’t even aware that the familiar waterway was actually hurrying me along to a new place.

Rivers run to the sea.

Suddenly there has been a great emptying out, a swift deposit from the river into a deep and wide expanse.  Instead of being pushed along by a demanding, coursing current, I now find myself bobbing, floating in unfamiliar waters.  The schedules, the menus, the lists, those rigid banks which were so much a part of river-life, are not necessary here.  I still feel a powerful force beneath me, but in a different sense.  My life-as-a-sea plays out as a series of waves — in and out, ebbing and flowing.  Great tidal waves of family gatherings are followed by even greater times of stillness.  I must adapt to this new rhythm of the waves and discover how to ride them in and out with grace.  I must learn to manage this new sea-life — to become at ease in vast open spaces without clearly marked boundaries, yet endless possibilities.

There’s a wideness in God’s mercy, like the wideness of the sea.

 

Bubbles

Hudson learned how to blow bubbles while he was visiting us.

 

 

For a solid week three uncles, an aunt, two girlfriends, a Nonnie and a Grandpa blew a steady stream of bubbles into Hud Bud’s face. 

 

 

He thought we were amazing.  There was no end to the smiles, squeals and coos brought on by blowing saliva out of our vibrating lips. 

 

 

Then one day wet little air pockets came trickling out from his lips, bringing on our smiles and squeals. 

 

 

The little guy was pretty proud of himself and he hasn’t stopped since. 

 

 

I never knew how magical slobber could be coming from a three month old.

 

Hudson flew back home, but with some new skills.  

Company’s Coming

Since when did my own kids become “company”?  PB and I have been cleaning like crazy, getting ready for everyone to come home.  We vacuumed the dust bunnies along the walls, we wiped out the crumbs under the toaster, and even Bo got a bath.  PB pulled the weeds out in front of the house, he mowed the yard not once, but twice, and put aromatherapy beads in the hot tub.  I bought enough food to feed the Green Bay Packers, laid out new towels in the bedrooms and sprayed “Italian Linen” room freshener all over.  I tell ya, we’re going all out.

Didn’t they used to clean for me?  I faintly remember the days of making lists of household chores for each of the children.   Alas, we have crossed a line into a new season.  My own offspring are now my guests. 

I’m ok with that, as long as they bring grandkids with them.  (Hub Bud arrives today!)

My Apologies

I’m so sorry. 

My deepest apologies. 

Our grandson, Hudson, is coming this week and I just want to prepare you.  There will be no holding back from posting umpteen pics of the little guy.  I will unashamedly gush and carry on about this perfect child.  If you can’t stomache the ravings of a head-over-heels-in-love Nonnie, you’d better turn the other way.  Before clicking on your link to small drop, consider whether or not you can endure unabashed bragging about Hud Bud. 

 Trying to be up-front with you.

I won’t be able to help it. 

Just so you know.