April 21, 2005

  • Nothing Original

    I am sadly lacking in the time it takes to be creative today (this week, actually) so instead I will share something clever that I hope will bring a smile to your face.

    One of my sisters sent this to me a few weeks ago. 

    I hope you enjoy it as much as I did.

                                                                                                      ~~Leah~~

    Mathematical conversions

     

    Ratio of an igloo’s circumference to its diameter = Eskimo Pi

     

    2000 pounds of Chinese soup = Won ton

     

    1 millionth of a mouthwash = 1 microscope

     

    Time between slipping on a peel and smacking the pavement = 1 bananosecond

     

    Weight an evangelist carries with God = 1 billigram

     

    Time it takes to sail 220 yards at 1 nautical mile per hour = Knotfurlong

     

    16.5 feet in the Twilight Zone = 1 Rod Serling

     

    Half of a large intestine = 1 semicolon

     

    1,000,000 aches = 1 megahurtz

     

    Basic unit of laryngitis = 1 hoarsepower 

     

    Shortest distance between two jokes = A straight line

     

    453.6 graham crackers = 1 pound cake

     

    1 trillion microphones = 1 megaphone

     

    1 million bicycles = 2 megacycles

     

    365.25 days = 1 unicycle

     

    2000 mockingbirds = 2 kilomockingbirds

     

    52 cards = 1 decacards

     

    1 kilogram of falling figs = 1 FigNewton

     

    1000 milliliters of wet socks = 1 literhosen

     

    1 millionth of a fish = 1 microfiche

     

    1 trillion pins = 1 terrapin

     

    10 rations = 1 decoration

     

    100 rations = 1 C-ration

     

    2 monograms = 1 diagram

     

    4 nickels = 2 paradigms

     

    2.4 statute miles of intravenous surgical tubing at Yale University = 1 IV League

     

    100 Senators = Not 1 decision

    ~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+~+ 

    P.S.  I went to “currently playing” to get this CD and it wasn’t found, which amazes me. 

    It’s a great CD, for anyone who is interested!

    Howie Day  “Stop All the World Now”

    Epic Records

    www.howieday.com

April 19, 2005

  • A Gentle Hero

                                      

     

    I have a few “heroes” in my life, I hope to write about them all at some point.  Today’s blog is a tribute to one of my gentle heroes, Fred Rogers.  I remember watching Mr. Rogers on TV while I was still young, but more clearly I remember watching him with my own children when they were small.  I loved his gentleness, his kindness, his compassion and his quiet and simple, yet elegant ways.  I loved the message of acceptance that pervaded his shows, and his curious mind.  I loved his appreciation for music and for things sacred (he held degrees in music and divinity).  I loved the way he had of making children (making us all) feel special.  He was a good neighbor.

     

    Fred Rogers died just over two years ago, but he lives on in his TV show.  I still watch him from time to time with Isaac, although those opportunities come along less and less often the older and busier Isaac gets.  Some days, I feel like sitting and watching my old friend Fred “just because”…I don’t really need to have a child with me to use as an excuse, I guess. 

     

    To me, the most remarkable thing about Mister Rogers was not that he loved children, although that is immediately apparent to anyone who has ever watched his TV show, and even more so to those who were privileged enough to meet him in person (so I am told)… it was that he respected children, not just for their ability to amuse, delight or inspire, but for their intelligence, their affinity for honesty and their innate sense of right.

     

    Here are some Fred Rogers quotes.  He was a man of simple yet profound wisdom.

     

     “The whole idea is to look into the television camera and present as much love as you possibly could to a person who might feel that he or she needs it.”

     

     “I believe that those of us who are the producers and purveyors of television — or video games or newspapers or any mass media — I believe that we are the servants of this nation.”


    “People say to my wife, `What’s he like?’ What you see is what you get. It’s just who I happen to be.”

    “I feel the greatest gift we can give to anybody is the gift of our honest self.”

    “Of course, I get angry. Of course, I get sad. I have a full range of emotions. I also have a whole smorgasbord of ways of dealing with my feelings. That is what we should give children. Give them … ways to express their rage without hurting themselves or somebody else. That’s what the world needs.”

    “I have really never considered myself a TV star. I always thought I was a neighbor who just came in for a visit.”

    “You know, you don’t have to look like everybody else to be acceptable and to feel acceptable.”

    “I have a very modulated way of dealing with my anger. I have always tried to understand the other person and invariably I’ve discovered that somebody who rubs you the wrong way has been rubbed the wrong way many times.”

    “We live in a world in which we need to share responsibility. It’s easy to say ‘It’s not my child, not my community, not my world, not my problem.’ Then there are those who see the need and respond. I consider those people my heroes.”

    “There’s a generous current in the American spirit. And if we can simply give voice to that once in a while, I think it’s a good message.”


    “This is what I give. I give an expression of care every day to each child, to help him realize that he is unique. I end each program by saying, ‘You’ve made this day a special day by just your being you. There’s no person in the whole world like you. And I like you just the way you are.’ And I feel that if we in public television can only make it clear that feelings are mentionable and manageable, we will have done a great service.”

     

    “You know, I think everybody longs to be loved, and longs to know that he or she is lovable. And, consequently, the greatest thing that we can do is to help somebody know that they’re loved and capable of loving.”

     

    “Our world hangs like a magnificent jewel in the vastness of space. Every one of us is a part of that jewel. A facet of that jewel. And in the perspective of infinity, our differences are infinitesimal.”

     

    “When I say it’s you I like, I’m talking about that part of you that knows that life is far more than anything you can ever see or hear or touch. That deep part of you that allows you to stand for those things without which humankind cannot survive. Love that conquers hate, peace that rises triumphant over war, and justice that proves more powerful than greed.”

     

    “I believe that appreciation is a holy thing, that when we look for what’s best in the person we happen to be with at the moment, we’re doing what God does; so in appreciating our neighbor, we’re participating in something truly sacred.”

     

    “It’s our insides that make us who we are, that allow us to dream and wonder and feel for others. That’s what’s essential. That’s what will always make the biggest difference in our world.”

    “The nearer I get to the end of life on this earth, the simpler I want to become.”

    You are never too old to be one of Mr. Roger’s neighbors.  Make it a beautiful day in your neighborhood today! 

                                                                       ~~Leah~~

     

     

April 18, 2005

  • Fantastic, Whirlwind Weekend

    Picture Day!!!!

     

    I had a fantastic weekend.  Rather than try to describe it all in words, I will use the pictures I took to illustrate what a whirlwind it was.

     

    First of all, the fundraiser/talent show on Friday night was a huge success.  There was a packed house, and the confirmation class raised over $1200 for Heifer International…enough to buy 2 cows, a goat and several chickens, I’m told.  Since their original goal was to buy one cow, they succeeded far beyond their expectations.  My two singing numbers went well, except that the microphones weren’t turned on for our women’s quartet .

     

    Hubby’s skit with his 6th grade SS class was a hit.  Here he is in his goofy costume, checking his ear for an infestation of “Irresponsiblity Rattlers” (it was a humorous skit to illustrate the 5 character traits that are emphasized in our school district and re-inforced in our church…they are respect, responsibility, honesty, compassion and self-discipline).

                

     

    His character’s name in the skit was Dr. William Ullyses Tumuch (Dr. Bill U. Too-much)   I had to leave right after the skit because I had to pick up Mark and Grant.  They had been performing in another town with the boy’s choir on Friday evening, and unfortunately missed out on all the fun at the “Black Cow” coffeehouse and fundraiser.

     

     

    Moving on to Saturday…after dropping my choirboys off again in the morning (they had another gig in Wisconsin Saturday evening, it required an overnight trip) I headed to the Mall of America to meet my three sisters.  It was pouring down rain the whole way there, which made the driving a little stressful  But I managed to get there in one piece and relatively on time…in fact I was the second one to arrive!  I snapped this picture out of my car window as I approached the Mall:

                   

     

    The first store on our agenda was DSW Shoe Warehouse.  My sisters and I have pretty much gotten our routine down when it comes to our trips to the MOA…it’s much too huge and overwhelming to attempt a shopping trip w/o a plan, and our plan is well-honed from our 1/2 dozen or so Annual to semi-annual get-togethers.  At DSW, we all head straight to the back of the store to the clearance racks (the only way to shop, in my opinion).  I found two really fun pairs of sandals for this summer, and a couple of pairs of more “sensible” shoes…a pair of black, sling-back pumps and some black leather loafers.  Here are the sandals:                              

        

     

     

    Once we got the shoe shopping out of the way, we headed for the café at Nordstrom’s.  We discovered this on our last trip to the mall and it’s now on our permanent itinerary.  Here we are waiting for our yummy food to arrive…(I’m the one in the green shirt). 

      

     

    This picture shows my sisters pouting because our sister who lives in Indianapolis couldn’t be with us (We missed you, Rhoda!).

                  

     

    Next stop for me was Archiver’s.  My sister Mary Lynn came with me, while the other two headed to Bare Essentuals.  I found some more great scrapbook papers and embellishments that I will use when I scrapbook the events of the boy’s Choir from this season (’04-’05). 

     

    The 4 sisters met up again at the “QVC at the Mall of America” store.  I didn’t buy anything there.

     

     

    After QVC we decided to stop at Starbuck’s for a “pick-me-up”.  I had a Java chip  Frappuchino…mmmmmm, cold and delicious! 

     

     

     

    The last store that all four of us went to together was the Atlantic Book Warehouse.  Another great discount store, my favorite kind!  I only bought one book, Anita Shreve’s Sea Glass.  Don’t know for sure when I will get around to reading it, but I have read several other books she has written and found them enjoyable.

     

    By this time we had been shopping (and snacking, laughing, and generally enjoying each other’s company) for about 7 hours!  Time DOES fly when you are having fun.  Two of my sisters were staying overnight at a hotel in the area, so they had to leave to meet their husbands for supper.  I was still full from lunch and coffee, as was my other sister so we decided to make one more stop before heading home. 

     We went to Marshall’s , where I found some t-shirts for the boys for summer.  

     

    As it so often turns out, Marshall’s was on the exact opposite side of the mall from where I had parked and entered, so I had to walk all the way around to the other side, dragging my packages, which by this time were starting to get very heavy, and head home.  I stopped and took this picture on my way out. 

     

      

     

    (Sorry it’s so dark, it was getting late in the day)

     

    For anyone who has not been to the MOA, it’s hard to imagine the immensity of it.  Pictures do not begin to convey the size of the place.  If it were not such a convenient meeting place, and if it did not have such a suitable selection of stores, it would not be my first choice of places to spend the day, shopping or otherwise.

     

    On to Sunday.  It was very foggy when I woke up Sunday morning.  All the rain from Saturday, combined with warmer than average days and cool evenings produced a misty, grey blanket for the dawning of a new day and a new week.  I have to drive over the river on my way into town.  It looked so cool I thought “I should take a picture of this”, but I was past the river and in town before my camera was ready, so I took this picture instead.  I’m about 2 blocks from church here, not really much to look at, but you can tell how foggy it is, I think.

              

     

    By the time church was over, the sun had burned away the fog and we had a glorious day in store for us.  We did get out in the yard to do some cleaning.  We also had a band concert to attend at 3:00 in the afternoon…it was hard to leave the backyard to go sit in a dark auditorium, but it was an excellent concert.  The high school Symphonic Band (the top band) was playing, and also a community “Grad” band, which is made up of people who have graduated, but still want to play their instruments.  There are all ages in the grad band, some recent grad’s all the way to retiree’s.  I’d love to play in it someday, but my embouchure is shot from years of dis-use (playing oboe requires some pretty rarely used facial muscles), and besides, for now I really don’t have the time.

     

     

    Here is Nathan coming onstage for the band concert (he is the one just left of center carrying the huge bari sax).

                  

     

    Here is the whole band, standing for recognition after they finished playing.

                  

     

    Here are some pictures of the yard.

     

    This morning:

     

     

     

    A couple of months ago:

     

     

    My front entry, this morning: 

     

                                  

    One month ago: 

     

                                  

    Here are my dogs out enjoying the nice day today.  I wanted them to come closer so I could get a better picture of them, but they were standing guard against the evil squirrels that like to attack the bird feeders, and wouldn’t budge.  They are sitting at the base of the big clump of oak trees.

         

    Here is my cat, Royal.  I’ve never shared a picture of him before.  He really does think he is royalty (as do most cats).  We don’t call him by name very often…mostly he gets called just cat or “fat-cat”.

         

     

    Time to get busy, my messy room downstairs still awaits…I haven’t touched it since last week, I guess I’d better try to make some progress today.  Here You can see the mess inside the room and also all the junk I moved out that eventually needs to get moved back in or discarded/sold/re-distributed (in otherwords moved somewhere else!)

        

     

    Happy Monday, everyone!

                                              ~~Leah~~      

     

     

     

April 15, 2005

  • The Essential Skill of Typing

    Good morning, Xangaland!  Welcome to my two new subscribers, Applepie2005 and Ariadynne.  Ms. Apple has been reading and commenting for awhile now, but Ms. Ariadynne is a Xanga newcomer, so let’s all give her a great big warm Xanga welcome!

     

    Let’s see…it’s FRIDAY!  How did this week go by so fast?  And for all of us procrastinator’s it also happens to be tax day.  Ugh.  Oh well, we turned ours in a couple of days ago.  It’s a relief to have that done for another year. 

     

    You probably don’t know this (how could you, really?), but I am not a very good typist.  I can type using both hands, like I am supposed to, a skill I learned back in high school…it was one of those classes I took just because I had some space in my schedule to fill and I thought “oh what the heck”… and it has turned out to be one of the most useful classes from high school ever.  So I am not a BAD typist, I’m just not very good.  My problem is that I get my letters all out of order.  Especially the vowels—A’s and E’s mostly—well, I’s and O’s too, but rarely U’s and Y’s.  I always leave the “p” out when I type the word “coule”…I mean “couple”, as well.  I can type fast, but then I have to go back and correct all sorts of mistakes.  My other bad typing habit is that I often hit two keys at the same time, so that a word like typist comes out looking like “typiost”.  Thank goodness for spell-check.  Actually, I am a good speller, I usually catch my own spelling mistakes.  But spell check does come in handy sometimes.  Oh yeah, that’s another word I almost always screw up on…”soemtimes” is how it usually comes out on the first try.  I tend to watch my fingers when I type, but I actually make fewer mistakes when I look at the screen instead.  There is another nemesis of mine and it usually comes out looking like thier or theri.  When I type my entries in Word and paste them into my weblog, the program automatically fixes many of these mistakes for me…again, hurray for computers!

     

    Who would’ve known back when I took typing in high school that it would become such a necessary skill.  No one had any idea then what an integral part of daily life the personal computer would become.   Back when I learned to type it was on one of those clunky old electric IBM typewriters.  They were state-of-the-art at the time.  Man–they were noisy!  Some of you probably had the same experience…a room full of novice typists, say 30 or so, all typing away on these monstrosities, creates quite a clatter!  I wonder if my typing teacher ended up with a hearing loss?  It wouldn’t surprise me. 

     

    When I left for college my Dad let me take his old Underwood manual typewriter to school with me.  When I had to write papers for any of my classes I would pull out that antique (it literally was an antique!), set it up with some good ol’ carbon paper, and start hammering away.  Oh the misery of making corrections in those days…at least the electric machines I learned on at school had self-correcting ribbons.  I had to pull the paper out (but not all the way, or I would never get the original and the carbon lined up correctly again) and use white-out.  The old fashioned white out—you know, the kind that came in a bottle with a brush like nail polish.  Then I had to let it dry…sometimes I would blow on it to hasten the process…occasionally to the point of near-hyperventilation.  But enough about that…I think I am really dating myself! 

     

    I am looking forward to another fun-filled weekend.  Tonight the confirmation class at church has organized a fund-raiser for the Heifer Project.  It’s a great organization that provides people in third world countries with cows and other materials that help them obtain a sustainable source of food and income.  The fundraiser is a talent show and coffee house.  I’ll be participating both by attending and buying some (organic, fair trade) coffee—mmmmmm–as well as singing in a coule (that should be couPle) of groups.  Our church choir is backing up one of our more flamboyant members as she sings the song “No Time at All” from the musical “Pippin” and my women’s quartet is singing a nice, gentle Irish ballad-y type song called “Away From the Roll of the Sea”.  Hubby’s 6th grade Sunday School class is going to be performing a skit that he came up with—he really is such a clever guy.  There will be lots of other entertainment as well, from story-telling to comedy to piano solos…everything from the serious to the ridiculous!  It should be a great time.  I hope they raise a lot of money.  Tomorrow I get to go to the Mall of America where I will be meeting 3 of my 4 sisters for a fun day.  I don’t really have anything in particular I want to shop for, it’s more about spending time with my family.  I’m sure that my sister Mary Lynn and I will be heading to Archiver’s, however.  She makes these amazing hand-crafted greeting cards, and I am addicted to scrap-booking, so we always have to check out the merchandise at our favorite paper crafting store in the mall.  On Sunday, I hope the weather cooperates so that I can get out in the yard and get the planting beds prepared for the season.  Lots of my perennials are already popping up, but it will be another month before I can start setting out annuals.  If I happen to get stuck indoors due to bad weather, I have an on-going project that I will turn my attention to.  I have a room in my basement that I affectionately call my “project” room.  Since Christmas I have only been in there to shove junk into it to get it out of the way from somewhere else in the house…so it is a disaster area—seriously!!!  It’s much like the rooms you might see on one of those organizational TV make-over shows, Clean Sweep or Mission Organization, and I am NOT exaggerating.  Unfortunately, I don’t have a professional organizer and a TV crew coming to help me make order out of chaos…I have to do it all by myself.  I’ve been plugging away at it slowly but steadily all week this week.  I really wish someone would come help me throw things away, I’m such a pack-rat.  I’ll take pictures of it once I get it all organized for you all to appreciate.  I should have taken a “before” picture, but I wasn’t thinking ahead. *gasp*.  It’s shocking, really, because since I have become a Xanga regular, I often look at my ordinary, everyday events and wonder to myself “How can I make this into an interesting Xanga post?”  It’s amazing how thinking about my life in that way has changed some of the ways I perceive my daily goings-on.  I had a similar paradigm shift when I started scrap-booking.  Every picture I took was done so with the idea of “How will I use this in a scrap-book layout?”  It’s revolutionary, really *grin*. 

     

    So, Xanga playmates, I hope you all have something to look forward to this weekend.  Don’t over-do anything!  Some parting words of wisdom…..

     

    Only actions give life strength; only moderation gives it charm.
    Jean Paul Richter

     

     

    Thanks for listening !

                                ~~ Leah ~~

     

    Here are some of my freshly-sprung perennials:  (I took these pictures on Monday)

     

    Stonecrop–sedum:

     

    Bleeding Heart:

     

    Day Lilies:

      

     

    Poppies:

    Poppies again–this is how they will look in another month or so:

     

     

April 14, 2005

  • Welcome to the World of an Introvert

    I’m having one of those blank moments while trying to think of something to write about that anyone would care to read.  Look at this pretty picture while I try to come up with something.

     

                                           

     

     

     

    Okay, I’ve thought of something……

     

    It seems lots of people on Xanga like to take and post results from various “Personality Quizzes”.  I’m pretty much a sucker for those things too…I love the little insights they give us into ourselves and each other.  I’m pretty confident I already know who I am.  Some of these quizzes are amazingly accurate.  Others are purely fun and apparently random in their results.  The one where you take your name and make an acrostic out of it is one that comes to mind.  When I tried that one I got these results (btw–if anyone can tell me how to get these things into my blog without ending up with a bunch of HTML gibberish, I’d appreciate it):

                                          

                                           L  is for Lucious

                                           E  is for Energetic

                                           A is for Amorous

                                           H is  for Hip

     

    Now that one is so far off the mark it’s funny!  I don’t think any of those terms have ever been used to describe me…well, occasionally energetic, but even when it applies, it’s a “low-key” kind of energy, if you can imagine that.

     

    It has been rattling around in my brain for a couple of days now that how other people perceive me vs. how I perceive myself can be completely different.  One of the things that triggered this introspection was having to come up with responses for the Me, Me, Me challenge (see my previous post).  I mentioned that I am quite a shy, introverted person, but the people around me generally do not perceive me that way.  They look at the way I sing in public, for example, or the way I take on responsibilities (I’ve been chairperson for a number of fundraisers, president of a local service club, officer in several other organizations and so on), or the way I interact with my “social circle”, and they remark “I would never have thought of you as a shy person!”.  That always puzzles me, because I think my shyness is so apparent.  I am not ever (NEVER) the lively one at a party.  I tend to be more of an observer.  I talk to the people I know, but rarely make the first move to introduce myself to a stranger.  I need to know at least a little bit about the person in order to make “small talk”…I am really horrendously bad at small talk.  I am perfectly content to spend time by myself, and I almost never feel bored in my solitiude.  Rather, I feel calm, relaxed, and peaceful.  Going to places where I don’t know very many of the people is exhausting for me.  My husband’s class reunions are almost painful, for instance.  Granted, I don’t think that attending your spouses class reunion is high on anyone’s list of favorite pastimes (unless you happened to graduate from the same school…preferably in the same class or perhaps a year or two apart), but to me it’s about as much fun as a trip to the gynecologist.  Awkward and uncomfortable, I feel very exposed.

     

     

     

    Part of the problem, I think, with the disparity between my true personality and the way I am seen by others is rooted in the misunderstanding of who an introvert is, or what characteristics are commonly attributed to introverts.  Being introverted doesn’t necessarily mean you don’t like to be around people, or that you are socially unskilled.  Nor are all extraverts dynamic, eloquent, and popular.  The terms introvert and extravert were coined by the famous analytical psychologist Carl Jung, who was a student of Freud in the early 20th century.  I found a good website with a very understandable explanation of the basic characteristics that determine whether a person is introverted or extraverted: 

     

                Extravert

     

    An extravert is a person who thinks in a way that centers on the object, task or person they are interacting with. The person, the subject, is object  oriented. The worst fear of an extravert would be to be the last surviving human on the earth after a terrible catastrophe; they fear loss of contact with the outside world and the people in it. They feel energized through interacting with people and find being alone for long periods to be more draining. They are not, however, hugely more confident or popular than introverts. It is quite possible to be an extravert and a wallflower at the same time. Extraverts make up between 60-75% of the population. Their predominance explains society’s tendency to prefer and reward extraverted behavior.

     

    Extraverts tend to…

    Get energy from interaction outside
    Real world is the outer world of people and things
    People of action and practical achievement, easy to understand, often sociable
    Are the same in public and in private
    Expansive and less impassioned, show emotions as they go along
    Feel energized by people; feel drained by being alone
    Make lots of friends easily
    Outspoken in groups, take risks
    Can be distracted easily
    Think out loud, make decisions quickly
    Learn by doing, understand life after they have lived it
    Go from doing to considering and back to doing

    Introvert

    An introvert is a person who thinks in a way that centers on his or her own feelings and thoughts about a situation. They, the subject, are subject oriented. The thing guaranteed to give an introvert an anxiety attack would be the thought of being overwhelmed in a crowd of many people; they fear the loss of their individuality. An introvert is energized by spending time on solitary activities and will find being amongst many people fatigues them eventually. Introverts are not shy and mousy people compared to extraverts. It is possible to be a very assertive and socially confident introvert. Introverts are in the minority; estimates place them between 25-40% of the population. 60% of gifted people are introverted.

     

    Introverts tend to…

    Get energy from inside themselves
    Real world is the inner world of ideas, understanding and meaning
    Be people of ideas and abstract invention, difficult to understand, often shy
    Have a public and private self
    Intense and passionate, tend to bottle up emotions
    Feel drained by people, need privacy
    Have a few close friends
    Quiet in large groups but comfortable among friends
    Fear humiliation and criticism
    Can concentrate intensely
    Mentally rehearse before speaking, need time to make decisions
    Learn by observing, live life only when they understand it
    Go from considering to doing and back to considering

     

     

     

    I am so much the introvert, as described above.  I think it is especially interesting that introverts are characterized as having a public and a private self.  This would explain why people who know only the public side of me don’t realize what a shy person I really am, nor how much of an effort it is for me to put on that public side, at least for long periods of time.

     

    I have been blessed in my life to have a number of people with whom I feel the comfort of being myself with…people I can totally relax with, reveal my private side, so to speak.  These are my dear friends and at least some of my family members (if you are a family member and you are reading this, then you probably know I am comfortable being “just me” with you).  

     

    Another misperception I am aware that some people have of me is that I have the “perfect” life.  I’ll admit, I have a lot to be grateful for…but perfect???  Hardly!  I have problems just like everyone else, but one of the manifestations of my introverted personality is that I don’t like to talk about them.  It does not mean they don’t exist or that I don’t deal with them on a personal level…I just don’t feel comfortable sharing them.  Besides, when I have so many blessings, isn’t it better to stay focused on them?  I firmly believe in the power of positive thinking.  Call it Counting Your Blessings, the Law of Attraction/Universal Energy, Good Karma, having a Clear Chakra….whatever; the words are different but the idea is the same…what we think and how we decide to react to the world around us and the circumstances of our life has a profound effect on our physical, emotional and spiritual well-being.  Since I am a Christian,  I can best express my beliefs about dealing with life’s difficulties through positive thinking using these words from the Bible (the Message version): 

        

    Don’t fret or worry. Instead of worrying, pray. Let petitions and praises shape your worries into prayers, letting God know your concerns. Before you know it, a sense of God’s wholeness, everything coming together for good, will come and settle you down. It’s wonderful what happens when Christ displaces worry at the center of your life.  Summing it all up, friends, I’d say you’ll do best by filling your minds and meditating on things true, noble, reputable, authentic, compelling, gracious–the best, not the worst; the beautiful, not the ugly; things to praise, not things to curse. Put into practice what you learned from me, what you heard and saw and realized. Do that, and God, who makes everything work together, will work in you  his most excellent harmonies.   Phillipians 4:6-9

     

    I guess you could say I’m living in introverted harmony—(which is not perfection, but it works for me)

                                                                                    ~Leah~

April 13, 2005

  • Me, Me, Me

    KoffeeKween challenged me to take on the “Me, Me, Me—it’s all about ME!” exercise, so here are my responses.  Keep in mind as you are reading that my answers in each category are in no particular order, I just put them down however they happened to occur in my head.

     

     

    (TEN) Things that scare me:

    1.       Falling from heights, or watching someone else fall from heights (I can’t even bear to watch movies and TV shows where this occurs, it sends shivers up my spine ~~shudder~~)!

    2.     Losing a family member—child or husband

    3.     Having my house burn down

    4.     Becoming paralyzed

    5.     Scary movies…I haven’t watched one since I saw “The Shining” back in about 1980.  I had read the book, so I knew what to expect, but the movie just creeped me out in a very big way.  Since then, I just don’t do creepy scary movies.  Suspenseful movies are fine, but I can’t stand the supernatural kind of scary—but I can watch supernatural scary TV shows…the X-Files used to be one of my favorites!  Weird, huh?

    6.     Being in a car accident

    7.     Having any of my sons go to war—I would be a basket case if the draft got re-instated, I think.  I would be proud of any son of mine that chose to serve his country by joining the military, but I don’t want any of them to be drafted if it’s not their choice, and I would probably be in a constant state of near panic until they came home again. 

    8.     Speaking in front of a large audience.  I can do it, but it’s a huge effort on my part. 

    9.     Religious/political fanatics—the kind that are so blinded by their beliefs that they are willing to kill for them.  Think Osama Bin Ladin or Hitler, for example.

    10.  Alzheimer’s—it doesn’t run in my family, but I think that would be a horrible thing to have to endure, for either myself or a loved one.

     

    (NINE) Things that attract me to the opposite sex:

    1.       A great smile

    2.     Poise and self-confidence (but not arrogance)

    3.     The ability to express himself well, either in spoken word or in writing (being able to do both would be a bonus).

    4.     Good grooming/hygiene

    5.     Easy-going personality—low maintenance kinda guys–patient, kind and gentle.

    6.     A humorous side, the guy that can recognize a good joke and appreciate it…not necessarily the one who is great at telling jokes or pulling pranks.  I would be more attracted to the guy who can appreciate good humor than the comedian/practical joker.

    7.     Someone who enjoys music…it would be even better if he were musical himself (my hubby is not, sadly—but it’s one of only a few flaws that he has, so I’ll overlook it J).

    8.     Someone who looks good in jeans and a t-shirt OR a tux…the ruggedly handsome type.

    9.     Someone with a sense of adventure!

     

    (EIGHT) Things I love:

    1.       My God

    2.     My family

    3.     Breyer’s all natural vanilla ice cream–or better yet, HOMEMADE vanilla ice cream!

    4.     Nature…I love the diversity in the world around me, from the wide open prairie to the tranquil lakes of MN to the soaring mountains to the vast oceans to the awesome night sky to my own peaceful backyard…I love it all (well, maybe not bugs and reptiles…not so much…I don’t want to eliminate them, but I would prefer not to encounter them.)

    5.     Music

    6.     Good books

    7.     GOOD coffee

    8.     A true friend  

    (I could go on and on and on for this category…it was hard to stop at just eight).

     

    (SEVEN) Things I hate:

    1.       Greed

    2.     Violence

    3.     Sexual exploitation

    4.     Poverty

    5.     Deception

    6.     Disease

    7.     Extreme selfishness

     

    (SIX) Random facts about me:

    1.       I am not a good dancer.  I think it would be cool to take dance classes like Richard Geer in “Shall We Dance”…I would like to take them with hubby, because he is an even worse dancer than I am!

    2.     I used to play the oboe in high school

    3.     I love to travel.  If I had the means, I would be traveling somewhere for a minimum of a week, at least once a month, and taking my friends with me!  I think part of the joy of traveling is in the coming home, though.  My home is my sanctuary. 

    4.     I was terribly shy as a child, and I still am, although most people don’t see me as shy.  I am a classic introvert, who works very hard at being more outgoing.

    5.     I have been in love—truly, madly,deeply—four times in my life.  But I made one of the wisest choices of my life when I chose to marry hubby!  He is by far the best husband/father out of the four men I have loved, and probably the only one who could put up with me for a lifetime!

    6.     I had a double major and double minor in college…majored in Biology and Medical Technology and minored in Math and Chemistry.

     

    (FIVE) Things I want to do before I die:

    1.       Travel, travel, travel (see #5 in the previous category)  Places I want to go: Ireland, Italy, Hawaii, Australia, China, Israel, Greece, Africa, Yosemite, New York City, Alaska, Seattle, the Galapagos Islands, Belize, Paris, New Orleans,  Myrtle Beach, Hilton Head or the Outer Banks of NC…need I go on? 

    2.     Finish the scrapbooks I am making for each of my children…and also make one (or several) for myself!

    3.     See all of my children become happy, successful, productive, responsible, caring adults.

    4.     Become a grandma…I’ll be a very good grandma!

    5.     Write something that gets published.

     

    (FOUR) Things I want to do right now:

    1.       Take a shower

    2.     Finish reading The Memory of Running

    3.     Start reading The Lovely Bones (for my bookclub—we were planning to read The Secret Life of Bees but that book club kit was already checked out from the library, so we went with Lovely Bones instead).

    4.     Brush and floss

     

    (THREE) Things that annoy me:

    1.       That I cannot eat whatever I want, whenever I want, and not get fat.

    2.     Commercials and telemarketers that interrupt my life with useless information about things I don’t want or need.

    3.     Judgmental/extremely opinionated people who refuse to listen to any other viewpoint but their own.

     

    (TWO) Things I can do:

    1.       Love my family—no one does this better than I do !

    2.     Sing.  I would rather sing in front of an audience than speak to the same group.

     

    (ONE) Thing I can’t do:

    1. Wiggle my ears.  (My Dad and about ½ my sibs can perform this unusual feat…I inherited my Mom’s inablility to activate those muscles…it’s like they don’t even exist on my body…like trying to fly without wings.  I can’t even comprehend the ability to do this, no matter how hard I think about making this happen, my ears don’t even twitch…nope, not even a millimeter!)

April 11, 2005

  • Juxtaposition

    Juxtaposition

     

    Last week was one of those glorious spring weeks (as far as weather goes) that I dream about all winter long here in Minnesota.  Usually at this time of the year, we are struggling along with high temperatures in the 50’s, nights dropping to near or below freezing.  Last week we had the good fortune to enjoy sunshiny days with temps in the 70’s.  You could feel life straining to burst forth from the bare tree branches and the slowly warming soil.  It was a time to take advantage of the weather by spending time outdoors, as much as possible.  On one sunny afternoon, Isaac and I did just that.  But we didn’t go to the park with its playground equipment, or even go for a walk or a bike ride.  Oh no—not my unconventional child–he asked for an outing to the local cemetery!

     

    Now I have always rather enjoyed a stroll through a cemetery on a sunny day, but I was somewhat taken by surprise last Tuesday afternoon as I was driving by the cemetery with Isaac, on our way home from a play date with one of his school chums, and he announced out of the blue that he wanted to stop and take a closer look.  We happened to be on a fairly tight schedule that day–I had to get home in time to take Grant and Mark to their voice lessons—so I put him off with a promise to visit on the next “nice, non-school” day.  Considering that he has school only every other day, there was a pretty good chance that we would be able to go in the near future, so after his initial disappointment (he likes everything to happen “immediately”—it’s the only time schedule he operates on–like most 6 year olds, I suppose), he reluctantly agreed to the delay.

     

    Fast-forward two days to his next free day.  As I mentioned, the weather was pretty consistently splendid all week last week, so when the day dawned as radiantly as the previous days had, I knew we would be in luck for an afternoon visit to the cemetery.  Sure enough, Isaac (who rarely forgets any promise made to him) was ready to head out bright and early.  He chafed at the continuing delays I imposed on him…

     

    “Wait until after lunch, sweetie, I’ve got to finish <this, that and the other thing> first.”   I told my impatient adventurer.

     

    Aw-www” was his typical mildly annoyed response.  What he lacks in eloquence he makes up for in body language.  He turned and walked away, his head slightly drooping, his arms stiff, his fists loosely clenched and his feet propelling him with the decided hint of a stomp.  His time schedule once again had to wait for mine to catch up with him.  He felt the perceived injustice of it and was letting me know—subtly—of his disappointment.  But he also knows that I try very hard to keep my promises, so that if he could only be patient for a little while longer, I would come through for him.  

     

    Finally afternoon arrived and off we went at the appointed hour.  It’s not far to the cemetery, only about a 10-minute drive, but Isaac could barely contain his enthusiasm.  I explained to him that the cemetery is a place where it’s important to be respectful of the surroundings, that it is a place of remembrance, so he couldn’t run and be as wild as he is at the park.  He, in all his worldly wisdom, answered me with an exasperated “I know, Mom—uh course!”  I drove into the cemetery grounds and headed towards the back to find a place to park the car so as not to be in the way if any other visitors should arrive, but as it turns out we pretty much had the run of the place. 

     

    The landscape of this particular cemetery is quite light and airy.  There are some trees and ornamental shrubs scattered throughout the grounds, but most of the gravestones are out in the open, in the sunshine. 

                                             

     

    There are occasional stone or wooden benches placed at various spots as well, places to pause, to rest and reflect.  It’s not a large cemetery, probably owing to the fact that it’s located in a smallish community.  It’s bounded on the east by the road, on the north and south by residential properties, and on the west by the railroad tracks.  I’ve sometimes thought its’ proximity to the train tracks a little odd, but practically speaking, the residents of this piece of real estate aren’t going to be disturbed by the rumble of the trains as they pass nor by their occasionally plaintive but loud whistles.  It is one of two cemeteries in town, the other one being a bit older, larger (and darker) and located nearby one of the oldest churches in town.  The instant the car came to a stop, Isaac unbuckled his seatbelt and bounded out to make his way haphazardly from one prominent tombstone to the next.  It was easy for me to see that he was attracted to the biggest and most ornate stones first.  At each selected grave, he would stop and ask me to read the inscriptions for him.  Although he is not yet reading, he is pretty good with numbers, so after I read the name, he would recite the inscribed dates.  After following this routine at about a dozen or more gravesites, I suggested to Isaac that we look for the oldest grave that we could find.  This slowed our pace down a bit, as our exploration became more methodical.  Instead of looking for the biggest or prettiest looking markers, we searched for the oldest looking ones.  The oldest grave we found was for a man who died in 1888.  The tombstone was on the small side, a white marble stone dappled with gray veins and covered in places with greenish-gray lichens.  It was somewhat difficult to make out the engraving; time and exposure to the elements had worn away what had once been deep carvings in the hard stone surface.  The engraving, although still visible, had lost much of its definition.  I found myself needing to trace my finger in the grooves in order to distinguish some of the finer details.  The person memorialized by this stone had died at what seemed to me to be the rather young age of 56, but put into 19th century context, it was probably not unusual.

     

    We made some other interesting discoveries during our trip through the cemetery.  At one simple gravesite a young mother and daughter were buried together, their deaths noted on the same day…the mother obviously dying in childbirth.  I imagined the anguish the husband and father must have felt as he laid his wife and daughter to rest, his immediate hopes and dreams for the future being buried along with them.  I wondered if he ever re-married, if he had older children he had to care for by himself, or if this child would have been the much-anticipated firstborn.  Another more imposing tombstone was inscribed with three names.  Mother and daughter were again buried at this site; the daughter had died as a young women in her late teens, the mother some twenty or so years later in her mid-60’s.  The father’s name, although inscribed with his birth year indicated, had no companion inscription for the date of his death.  However, given he was born in 1894, it is unlikely he is still alive.  I had to wonder about what circumstances had intervened in the years after the tombstone was carved that prevented his burial in what was obviously his intended “final resting place”.  At another location a teenage boy who died just a few years ago had a diorama encased in a sealed Plexiglas box adorning his gravesite, memorializing his passionate love of NASCAR.  I imagined the time and effort and love that had gone into crafting this intricate and unusual memorial, and wondered if it had been therapeutic for the artist who created it.  Did his mother, father, or sibling make it to remember this young man?  Was it another family member or friend?  Was it the product of one individual, or was it a group of grieving loved ones working together?  Isaac was particularly fascinated by it, because of all the details including toy cars, racetracks and miniature figures, and two pennies…I couldn’t make out the dates on the coins, they were darkened with tarnish, but I surmised that perhaps one was dated for the year he was born and the other for the year he died.  Many of the other graves were also decorated with flags and flowers and momentos that represented something special to the person buried there.  They were evidently still visited on a regular basis.  In contrast, other graves looked forlorn,  graves of people who had lived so long ago that even those left to grieve for them had long since joined them in their journey to whatever afterlife awaits.

     

    The grave that affected Isaac the most on an emotional level was the one dedicated “For All the Unborn Children”.  As I read it to Isaac, he was at first confused about the meaning of unborn children.  After I explained to him that not every child who is conceived lives to be born as a healthy baby like he and his brothers did, he got very quiet for a moment and asked to sit on one of the benches placed nearby.  I sat next to him and hugged him a little closer, and said an extra prayer of thanks for this child who is so very alive, and for all his lively and vigorous brothers.

     

    Another tombstone that gave me pause was a family gravestone.  It was an approximately 4 foot tall obelisk, again made of pale whitish marble, which seemed to be the stone of choice for the older graves in this cemetery.  On the west-facing surface of the stone eight names were engraved.  The first two were the names of the husband and wife, and under their names were the names of six children.  All of the children had died before reaching adulthood.  Four had died before they were a year old; one had lived to age thirteen and another to age seventeen.  I wondered if these parents had any other children that survived them, children who went on to live full and productive lives, to marry and have children of their own, and to eventually be buried in their own graves, rather than in this melancholy milieu.    

     

    Some of the names I saw as we strolled through the cemetery were familiar to me.  They evoked memories of real people I have known over the past 20 years that we have been a part of this community.  Most of the names held no memories for me, only the shadowy possibilities of what may have been.  I know that every person buried there was at one time loved by someone, and that upon their death their loss was grieved.  But life goes on, one generation follows the next, and for that afternoon as I enjoyed the warm spring day with my six-year-old son, it was our time to live and breath and rejoice in life.  Juxtaposed on this setting dedicated to remembering the past, I found in the midst of my soul a celebration of the present, a celebration of life! 

     

    We probably spent about 90 minutes at the cemetery, and Isaac would’ve liked to have stayed longer.  I promised him we would come back sometime on another sunny day.  He is already looking forward to our next visit to the cemetery.  So am I.  

    Continue reading

April 7, 2005

  • Sorry for the mammoth entry yesterday.  I know it’s long.  I’m going to leave it here for a couple of days so I hope you can find some time to read it.  In the meantime I plan to get some stuff done in the real world.  Life is precious!

                                                                             ~Leah~ 

    P.S.  My book club starts tonight…!

April 6, 2005

  • The Sacred Moment

    The Sacred Moment

    I’m going to continue with a friendship themed entry again today.  I’ve had many friends and acquaintances over the years.  Some have passed through my life like smoke rising from a fire, briefly lighting a moment in time, but then gone–ethereal–with nothing much to show for the time we have spent together.  Some have been around for years, our bond of friendship unaffected by time or distance.  Some friendships have taken time to grow, others have blossomed almost immediately.  Sometimes my friends have left their imprint on me through the love and loyalty they have shown towards me, seeing me through the difficult times, loving me in spite of my flaws.  Some have passed through my life and left an indelible mark on me, so that even though we have lost touch, they remain fixed in my memory and my heart.  A few have left my life too soon, taken from this life by circumstances beyond the control of any earthly power.  This story is about one such friend. 

    Gretchen and I were close friends in high school.  I spent many a school-girl Friday night giggling in her bedroom.  I shared meals with her family and went “cruising” the streets of our hometown in her dune buggy…a rare experience for the somewhat shy, late-blooming, bookish girl I was back then…for anyone living in midwestern obscurity, for that matter.  Dune buggies belong in the realm of sun drenched beaches, not on the streets of a sleepy farm town, after all!

    I’ll never forget the time that Gretchen, Cindy and I drove out to the campus of the local college and decided to experience the thrill of one of the current fads of the era…streaking!  At the heart of the campus was a wide-open grassy lawn surrounded by well-manicured trees and flower beds.  We carefully chose our parking place so as to be obscured by the perimeter landscape, scoped out the area for possible hiding places (should the need arise), stripped down to our birthday suits and ran like rabbits being chased by wolves from one end of the lawn to the other and back again.  We collapsed back in the safety of the dune buggy, out of breath from our mad dash and our nearly uncontrollable laughter.  We scrambled quickly back into our shorts and tank tops and drove away from the scene of our raucous romp, our laughter trailing behind us, echoing in the twilight air like the fading sounds of the refrain at the end of a favorite song on an old 45 rpm.   I really don’t think there was a soul on campus who might have even gotten a glimpse of us that mid-summer night–it had a distinctly deserted air about it.  But that didn’t matter to us, we had triumphed over modesty and decorum with the typical fervor and abandon of youth.

    After high school graduation, Gretchen and I went our seperate ways. For me, the options were limited by my family’s modest income and the lack of scholarship funds in spite of my high school accomplishments.  My achievements, though impressive, were accompanied by a curious lack of confidence in my own ability to compete in the wider world beyond, so I stayed close to home and kept my goals ”manageable”.  Gretchen had both the means and the abilities to achieve great things, and she had the self-assurance to reach for the stars.  She was remarkable, in many ways.  Perhaps owing to my own lack of élan, I never felt like she and I were playing in the same league, although it was not because she made me feel that way.  In fact, knowing that Gretchen considered me a friend boosted my confidence in myself….a little, at least.  The last time I saw Gretchen face-to-face was at Christmas break during our second year away at college.  We were both home to spend the holiday with our respective families.  Trips back home were rare for her, less so for me as my college campus was only 90 miles away.  I don’t remember our meeting as anything special…I have no recollection of what we talked about.  Probably the usual things…how is college, have you met any cute guys, are your classes hard, what do you miss about home…all the while I continued to admire her for her easy graceful ways, although I was not quite so much in awe of her as I had been in high school.  My own confidence was growing.  I do remember receiving a letter from her a couple of months later…airmail…all the way from London, where she was “studying abroad” for a term…another experience I considered beyond my grasp.  She related having gone back to California after Christmas to watch the Rose Bowl parade in person before heading overseas with a group of fellow Stanford students.  She reminisced about our high school days, and reflected on the good times we had shared.  Our paths did not cross the following summer.  While she returned home for the summer, I was off working at a college internship.  When I had time off from work, I would spend that time in the company of my college sweetheart.  He and I later broke up, and today I have no idea where he is or what he is doing.  If I had known then what I know now, I would have made time to go home and see Gretchen.  But in those days, I had all the time in the world.  Life stretched out before me with unimaginable horizons.  I was beginning to spread my wings and take flight…I thought there would always be time for me to soar beside Gretchen when we met again.  

    I’ll let another high school classmate of mine tell the rest of Gretchen’s story.  The author of this article, entitled “The Love I’ll Never Forget”, is now a professional writer.  His name is Tim Madigan, and he wrote this article for the newspaper he worked for in 1996–and I’ve just realized, looking at the publication date, that this was shortly after our class reunion.  I’m sure the reunion prompted his memories of Gretchen and days long past, reunions have a way of doing that.  This piece was also reprinted the following year in “Reader’s Digest”.  I have edited it to remove any personally identifying information, like specific names and places (other than the colleges mentioned, and information previously included in my own writings), but otherwise it is essentially as he wrote it.    

    “She was elusive and beguiling, and I was dizzy for her, of course.”

    My hometown is a farming community of 8000 people, tucked into the northwest corner of Minnesota. Not a lot extraordinary passes through. Gretchen was an exception.

    For one thing, she was a member of one of the town’s wealthiest families. They lived in a sprawling brick place on the banks of the Red Lake River and spent summers at their vacation home on Union Lake, not far away.

    Despite her numerous blessings, which included great physical beauty, there was nothing snooty about Gretchen. She was among the first to befriend new kids at school and tutored students less able than herself. She moved through the various elements of school society – farm kids, jocks and geeks – dispensing bonhomie to all. Gretchen, the High School Homecoming Queen the year I graduated, clearly was going places.

    I knew Gretchen only enough to exchange greetings when we passed in the halls. I was a good athlete and, in the parlance of the time, kind of cute. But I was insecure, especially around females – creatures I found mysterious and more intimidating than fastballs hurled high and tight.

    All of which may explain my bewilderment one midsummer night when Gretchen and I bumped into each other at a local hangout. I’d just finished my first year at the University of North Dakota. Gretchen, whose horizons were much broader, was home from California after her first year at Stanford University.

    Gretchen greeted me happily. I remembered the feel of her hand, rough as leather from hours in the waters of Union Lake, as she pulled me toward the dance floor. She was nearly as tall as I, with perfect almond skin, soft features and fluorescent white teeth. Honey-blond hair hung in strands past her shoulders. Her sleeveless white shirt glowed in the strobe lights, setting off arms that were brown and strong from swimming, horseback riding and canoeing.

    Gretchen was a poor dancer, I noticed that night. But she moved to the music enthusiastically, smiling dreamily. After a few dances we stood and talked, yelling to each other over the music. By the time I walked her to her car, the street was deserted. Traffic lights blinked yellow. We held hands as we walked. And when we arrived at her car, she invited me to kiss her. I was glad to oblige.

    Summer fun–I never had much purchase on Gretchen’s heart. She was fond of me, no doubt. Two years earlier, she eventually revealed, she had been my “Guardian Angel” – the anonymous benefactor who left cookies and inspirational notes at my locker before my hockey games.

    But Gretchen could be as elusive as mercury. As passionately as she would return some of my kisses that summer and the next, for her I was part of the interlude between childhood and the more serious endeavors of adulthood to come.

    Thus, Gretchen and I rarely ventured beyond the surface of life. She never mentioned the future of in any respect, or any nagging worry or sorrow. She never told me of the time when she was 11 and she broke both legs skiing and for months had to be carried around by her father. Gretchen had to teach herself to walk again after that, and years later her family pointed to the injury as the root of both her compassion and her independence.

    I was dizzy for her, of course, and had a bad habit of saying so. Each time I did, she pulled away from me. These were university summers, not the time for moony eyes and vows of undying devotion.

    A few months passed, one year slipped into the next and on a night like any other, when Gretchen and I were together, out of nowhere she spoke the words that guys in my situation dread above all.

    “Tim,” she said, “I think we should just be friends.”

    I told her I was tired of her games and was not as much of a fool as she thought. And I stormed away. By morning I cooled off. I sent Gretchen some roses that day, and a note offering an apology and my friendship.

    Gretchen and I started dating again about a month after. But this time I had learned my lesson. No more moony eyes. I could be as detached and aloof as the next guy.

    It seemed to work beautifully for a few weeks. Finally, Gretchen asked, “What’s wrong with you?”

    “You’re not yourself,” she said. “You haven’t been for a long time.”

    “No,” I said. I let her in on my ruse, the feigned standoffishness designed to keep her near. For the only time I remember, she became angry. Then she proposed a deal.

    “You be who you are,” she said, “and I won’t go anywhere, at least for the rest of the summer.”

    I was a bargain I quickly accepted. She was as good as her word.

    Not long before Gretchen left again for Stanford, she and her sister hosted a large party at the lake. With all the duties as hostess, Gretchen would have little time for me, I surmised.

    But midway through the boisterous event, she gestured for me to follow as she sprinted the length of the dock, dove into the cold water and set off swimming toward a distant floating platform. I watched her brown arms slice the water with power and grace. I nearly drowned before getting to the platform myself, and she helped pull me up.

    The two of us lingered there for a long while, toeing the small waves and watching the throng on shore. I thought it a very nice way for her to acknowledge our friendship in front of the crowd.

    Those weeks seemed golden, a bit unreal. One time as we said goodnight, I discarded the final wisp of my caution and told Gretchen that I loved her. She only smiled.

    In early September I left for university. Gretchen and her friend Julie drove over from our hometown and surprised me in my dorm room, hauling me out dancing.

    I came back to see her off to Stanford in mid-September. While Gretchen packed, I absently shot pool at her father’s table. When she finished, we took a last walk around her family’s horse pasture in the gathering September chill. I thought of how dramatically our lives were about to diverge and was saddened. But more than anything, I felt gratitude for the fine, sunny times we had spent over the last two summers.

    Gretchen planned to find work in California the next summer. For her, the serious part of life beckoned, and I knew what that meant.

    “Good-bye,” I said.

    She replied. “Say ‘See you later.’”

    Back at school, emboldened by my experience with Gretchen, I began dating a student in the journalism department. Gretchen fell in love with a ruggedly handsome center on the Stanford football team.

    The evening of October 9, I called her in California to wish her a happy 21st birthday. She thanked me for calling but sounded distracted. A loud party was obviously in progress. I quickly rang off.

    The last of the autumn leaves were falling on October 13, but the sky was a cloudless blue, the air crisp and invigorating. Classes were done for the day, It is rare when happiness and contentment consciously register with a person, but they did that morning for me.

    The telephone rang the second I stepped in my dorm room. I recognized Julie’s voice on the other end of the line and my heart soared. Julie was to be married the following month, and maybe Gretchen would be returning home for the wedding after all.

    But hearing the uncharacteristic quiet scratch of Julie’s voice, I knew Gretchen was dead.

    The previous morning, Julie told me, Gretchen had collected one of her birthday presents from a friend: a ride in a small plane. Shortly after takeoff, the craft lurched out of control and pitched into a marsh. Gretchen and her friend were killed instantly.

    “Gretchen’s parents wondered if you would be a pallbearer,” Julie said.

    “I’d be honored,” I replied.

    The word sounded strange even as it left my mouth. Honored? Is that what you felt when you helped bury a friend – a smart, sun-kissed beauty queen who was going places? I left my dormitory and walked aimlessly. I am told I sought out a campus priest, but all these years later I have no memory of that.

    Back home that afternoon, I knocked on the door of my high school hockey coach. He took me out for a drive. As we talked, I thought it strange that people should be concerned with such trivial matters as buying groceries when Gretchen was dead.

    How does a person grieve? I wondered, puzzled at my lack of tears.

    Saturday night, I drove out to the family place, past the horse pasture when Gretchen and I had walked together. The grieving family took me in as one of them. At one point Gretchen’s mother left the room and returned with a photograph of her daughter and me, taken a few weeks before. I was squinting, my arm lightly around Gretchen’s shoulder. She was smiling broadly, her teeth so white against her almond skin.

    “Gretchen was very fond of you, Tim,” her mother said.

    The night after the funeral, Joel and I sat in his Chevy Vega outside the restaurant where Gretchen’s mourning friends planned to congregate. At school Joel and I had been teammates and best buddies, spending countless Saturday nights cruising the country roads, talking about sports or school, or love, or what the years might bring. Seeing him now was the beginning of both my pain and my consolation.

    In the yellow Vega, as Joel spoke of Gretchen, his voice briefly failed. That tiny catch in my old friend’s voice dissolved whatever stood between me and my sorrows. My torrents of grief were unleashed.

    The next morning Joel and I joined a procession from the family’s lakeside summer house into the nearby woods. Gretchen’s sisters took turns carrying a small urn that contained her ashes. It was cool and sunny, and the fallen leaves cracked underfoot.

    We came to a lone birch tree, its magnificent white bark standing out among the surrounding brown maples. Many years before, Gretchen, her father and younger sister had discovered the tree and carved the date and their names in the bark.

                                                                    

    Someone said a prayer. Gretchen’s father placed the urn in the ground below the birch. Above us, wind rustled through newly barren branches.

    I was among the last to leave. I emerged from the woods that day into a different world, an adult world, where memories of first love linger, but summers always end.

     

    I’ll never forget the morning I heard about Gretchen’s death.  She was the first among my circle of friends to die.  There have been more since, but she was the first, and for some reason that seems to have added a certain aura of tragedy to my feelings as I recall them.  I was just leaving my first class of the day…a computer programming class, I think.  My younger sister, who was a freshman at the same college as me that year, met me outside my classroom door.  I could tell by the look on her face that something was seriously wrong.  My Mom had tried to call me that morning but had missed me because of my early class.  Instead she located my sister and told her the news, leaving it up to her to tell me.  When she broke the news to me, I headed for the bathroom just down the hall from my class, where I broke down and sobbed at the injustice of it all.  Why Gretchen, of all people?  The “Golden Girl”….gone.  It really didn’t make sense in my mind.  It took time for me to come to grips with the reality that life does not come with any guarantees.  When I did, it was an important lesson in not taking anything in life for granted.  Each moment is sacred in it’s own way, and sometimes we cannot see that sacredness until much later.  To be aware of the sacred moment–to be aware that each moment has the potential for eternal significance–without fully understanding the exact import of it, is truly one of life’s mysterious lessons.

    “To make the best use of your life, you must never forget two truths:  First, compared with eternity, life is extremely brief.  Second, earth is only a temporary residence.”                           ~Rick Warren~

    “Lord, help me to realize how brief my time on earth will be.  Help me to know that I am here for but a moment more.”  ~Psalm 39:4 (LB)~

    Live in the sacred moment, with an acknowledgement (if not an understanding) of it’s eternal significance.                                 ~Leah~   

April 4, 2005

  • Friends

    “Every person is a new door to a different world.”
    - from movie “Six Degrees of Separation”

    Good Monday morning, Xangaland.

    I had a perfectly lover-ly weekend.  The weather was great for the beginning of April in Minnesota.  The sun was shining all over the place, the air was fresh and on the warm side.  I got to spend time with lots of friends, and I even managed to get a few things accomplished, although I never feel like I’m doing enough…my “to-do” list always seems to grow, no matter how many things I manage to get done.  Thinking optimistically, at least I never have to worry about boredom !

    My friend Sally had the weekend all to herself, how great would that be?!  Her husband took their four kids “up north” (as we say here in the land of 10,000 lakes) to the “hunting shack” (and to hear Sally describe it, it really is just that…a shack…no running water or electricity, one room with a loft, plunked down in the middle of the wild woods.)  She had the house all to herself for 48 hours!  I have some time alone in my house on the days all of the kids are off at school, but to have a full 48 hours alone in my own house…I can only imagine what I might do with such a long and un-interrupted “quiet time”…probably scrap-booking or deep cleaning.  Those are both things I never seem to find enough time for.  Anyway, on Friday night she invited another friend (Heidi) and me over for a girl’s movie night.  We drank those cute little white russian’s in the individual bottles, ate chocolate truffles and watched two movies.  One was very good the other was very….shall we say…NOT good .  The good movie was Shall We Dance? with Richard Gere, Jennifer Lopez and Susan Sarandon.  The thing I liked about this movie was that it was romantic in an old-fashioned way.  There were definitely some scenes with *sizzle*, but nothing explicit.  It was funny and endearing and showed grown-up people going through some challenges and changes in life w/o throwing away the things that matter the most…love, friends, family, joy…they were all valued by the characters in this movie.  The NOT good movie was Closer with Julia Roberts, Jude Law, Natalie Portman and some other guy I can’t think of his name.  This movie was all about people who didn’t value anything but themselves.  They used each other, and just when they got what they thought they wanted, they would throw it away to chase after something else…it was sad, really.  None of the characters were especially likeable.  They were all selfish and vulgar and appeared to think with their genitals rather than their brains. NOT recommended.  The language was deplorable.  What a contrast between the two movies.  We kept watching Closer, thinking it had to get better, that there had to be some redeeming moment, but if there was one, we all missed it.  It’s too bad…I really liked Jude Law in Cold Mountain.   Richard Gere is not really all that attractive, he has a goofy nose and squinty eyes, but he carries himself with such elegance that he comes across as handsome.  I love a man with social grace and charm. 

    Saturday was a day of running…first to choirboys, with a meeting for those of us working on the silent auction fundraiser we are having at the end of this month, along with their big spring concert.  When I got home from that, I had to run and pick up some things for the auction, and also supplies for my Sunday School class.  We started a new “rotation” this week…we are studying the story of Ruth for the next four weeks.  I have the story-telling station for this rotation.  After the errand running hubby and I went to a birthday party for my friend Anne  (pronounced Ann-ie) who is turning 50 tomorrow.  It was a “surprise” party, although knowing Anne, I don’t think she was all that surprised.  She is a pretty smart cookie, and I’ll bet she had an idea that something was up.  Actually, her husband (he happens to be the pastor of our church) planned the surprise, and called it a “We Love Anne” party.  He asked that everyone write something about Anne saying what they love about her.  Here is what I wrote:

                                                                I Have a Friend Named Anne

    I have a friend named Anne.  Anne is one of those rare people with whom you can feel immediately comfortable.  There is no perceived “learning curve” when in comes to knowing Anne.  She is so completely herself, so open and geuine, that I sensed upon first meeting her that here was someone I could call “friend”.  She is warm and welcoming in the very truest sense.  There is no pretense to Anne, no need to be pretentious.

    Anne is not without her complexities.  Life has not always led Anne down the easiest paths, but I sense in her a deep inner strength and a faith that has allowed her to weather the storms of life and rise above them.  She appears to face both adversity and prosperity with equal grace.

     

    Anne’s life has equipped her with a wisdom wrought from experience.  Her gift to others is her willingness to humbly share this wisdom and insight.  Her family is rich because of her generous, loving spirit.  Her friends, this congregation, and our community are better because of her kindness and hospitality.  Her servant attitude is apparent to all who know her.  Her compassionate heart is unmistakable.

     

    Thank you, Anne, for being who you are.  Thank you for being my friend.

     

    Happy Birthday!

     

    After the party another we asked one of the other couples that was there if they had eaten supper before coming (the party was from 5-7 PM, but they only served cake, ice-cream, punch and coffee …I guess that’s what happens when a MAN plans a party, lol!).  They had not, so we went out together to Applebee’s.  We sat around and visited with them for 2 hours!  It was very fun and relaxing.  It’s good to make time for friends.  So often I get caught up in the kids’ activities that my time with my friends gets pushed aside.  My friendships are important to me, though, so I feel fortunate I had the chance to nurture some of them this past weekend.

    Sunday was another busy day.  Yes, the time change made it a little more challenging than usual to get moving.  I had to get to church early anyway to set up my Sunday School classroom.   At least I didn’t have to worry about forgetting to change my clock…for Christmas I got this great alarm clock that knows all about daylight savings time and automatically resets itself–it “sprang ahead” right on schedule!  In October it will “fall back” w/o any help from me as well…isn’t that the smartest clock you’ve ever heard of?  I also had to put in my time at the office yesterday.  Those bills don’t ever seem to stop coming…and they definitely don’t pay themselves!  How nice that my “boss” (hubby) lets me do my job whenever it works best for my schedule, however.  I actually prefer to go in on the weekend when no one else is around.  No distractions–that is the best working environment for me.

    I even managed to catch Desperate Housewives last night!  Hubby sort-of watched with me (he was doing paperwork at the same time) and declared it a “dumb show”, but I think it is hilarious!  A bit over the top sometimes, but that is how it’s meant to be…outrageous.  It’s part of it’s charm.  As long as the TV was on, I continued watching Gray’s (Grey’s?) Anatomy when it came on.  It’s a pretty good show, but not one that I will make a regular habit of watching, I don’t think.  Sort of like most of the shows I follow…I’ll catch it when I can.  Since today is the first day of the fourth quarter of school, none of the kids had homework last night, so I was free to watch TV for a change.  Most Sunday evenings are a little more hectic, finishing those homework assignments that have been postponed all weekend long.  My kids have learned procrastination from me, I’m afraid. 

    My upcoming week will be another busy one.  I really hate to use that word–”busy”.  Maybe instead I should say; “in the upcoming week I will once again be involved in many worthwhile activities”….ummm, nope, that really doesn’t work for me either.  Whatever– you get the picture.  I am excited that on Thursday my long -awaited book club will be getting started.  Sally (of the 48 hour weekend of freedom) is the instigator behind this book club.  We are starting with The Secret Life of Bees, which I know my Xanga friend mommers has just finished.  This will bring the total number of books I am reading right now to four, unless I can finish The Memory of Running by Thursday.  Our book club has eight ”charter members”.  I know four of them very well, two are women I have always wanted to get to know better, and the last one is someone I don’t know at all, but look forward to meeting and starting a new friendship. I am, of course, the eighth member, and I hope after all these years I know myself, although there always seems to be more to learn!

    “When we seek to discover the best in others, we somehow bring out the best in ourselves.”
    -William Arthur Ward

    Remember your friends, and make time for them–

                                                                                     -Leah-                            

    Here are the lyrics from a great song at the end of  Shall We Dance?

    Artist: Peter Gabriel

    Song: Book Of Love

    The book of love is long and boring,
    No one can lift the damn thing.
    It’s full of charts and facts and figures,

    And instructions for dancing.
    But I–
    I love it when you read to me,
    And you–
    You can read me anything.


    The book of love has music in it,
    In fact that’s where music comes from.
    Some of it is just transcendental,
    Some of it is just really dumb.
    But I–
    I love it when you sing to me,
    And you–
    You can sing me anything.


    The book of love is long and boring
    And written very long ago.
    It’s full of flowers and heart-shaped boxes,
    And things we’re all too young to know.
    But I–
    I love it when you give me things,
    And you–
    You ought to give me wedding rings.
    And I–
    I love it when you give me things,
    And you–
    You ought to give me wedding rings.