Sunday, August 11, 2019

New Found Feelings

I am sure there is a post on this blog about laundry. I'm positive. I haven't looked for it but I'm sure it's there. I am equally as sure that it is not a happy post. It is a complain-y one. Bet your bottom dollar on that, my friends. My loathing for socks is well documented.

Today, my feelings are very different. I love a good laundry day. I love that my laundry days are Monday and Friday. I love emptying the hamper. I love hanging the clothes on the drying rack. I love the smell of the detergent. I love walking past the clothes and giving them a quick turn and check. I love the ease of folding them straight from the rack. I love the smell of fresh, clean sheets. I love putting them away.

But most of all, I love being at home long enough to complete this process and having the space and time for it in my life.

Gone are the days of a full load of laundry EVERY. SINGLE. NIGHT. I finally got into a habit years ago of the kids throwing their dirty clothes in the wash every night at bedtime. I would wash, then throw them in the dryer before I went to sleep. The morning would start with them folding their outfit and pj's. But mostly, I hated it.

I hated the sorting, folding, putting away.

That's probably because there were so many clothes. So many socks. So little time. My life was one long rush from one task to the next. It never ended.

My how different my life is.

I know you may be expecting me to say, oh how I miss the days... nope. I do not miss the laundry. Or the weird objects in the pockets. Or the torn door gasket from the pencils, etc. Or the constant pain of finding sock pairs. Not even a little.

Y'all. I even stain treat now. It's amazing.

I am adjusting to this new phase of life and finding the small joys in it.

Friday, March 22, 2019

Another List: Part 2

Gracie was looking at my blog for the first time today. It goes all the way back to 2005. She's never looked at it before. She read this one to me and I didn't even remember writing it! It's a Bucket List. I have completed 7 of the 10 and removed one from the list entirely. I think it's time to strike the last 2 off the list, don't you? And maybe make another list?

Things I want to do before I die:

1. Learn to Tango. Can't be with my husband, he giggles too much when he dances.
        Ty, my oldest son, taught me. I am terrible at it. 
2. Go to Europe: Paris, castles in Germany, Pompeii, etc.
         Ireland, England, France, The Netherlands, and Italy. Prague and Germany coming up in Nov.
3. Make a documentary of my Dad's life. He's very interesting. Does anybody have a really good movie camera I can borrow?
        Haven't done it and NEED TO DO THIS!!!!!!
4. Have a book published.
        Check. Amazon. Crissy Jones Sharp, The Green Glass
5. Write a book. This should've been #4 I guess.
        See above.
6. Learn Spanish.
        This is the one I have lost interest in.
7. Learn more German. 
         Ich habe ein Buch... and also I practice German on an app every day for 10 minutes at least.
8. Plant and cultivate a good vegetable garden.
         Did this two years in a row and found I prefer the Farmer's Market.
9. Go to the Louvre in Paris. I know that seems like it should just be part of #2 but it's not. I would fly over there for a day just to be able to go to the Louvre.
         I have now, amazingly, done this twice! Once with my friend Ginger and once with my family.
10. Listen to Yo-Yo Ma in person. 
        I NEED TO DO THIS, but it costs like a million dollars. 

I can't believe that I've actually done most of the things on my list. Pretty amazing. I just told Chris today that if you don't have a goal you never accomplish anything. I think it made him tired. He'll be thrilled to know that....

Now I need to make a new list!

Here goes:
1. Ride in a hot air balloon. Doesn't have to go anywhere. I am content to go up and come back down.

2. See a whale in the ocean. (Not in captivity)

3. Go to Iceland and attempt to see the Northern Lights. Ty wants to do this too.

4. Run another 5K. PR.

5.  I want a doll house. With lots of miniature furniture.

6. Build a tiny house. Not like the above doll house, but to live in or for our kids to stay in when they come to visit.

7. Learn to play a song on the piano. Just one. And it will probably be a Gnossienne by Erik Satie. Maybe Brody can teach me.

8. Go to New York City and visit lots of museums.

9 and 10 are reserved for the two items from my last list that I haven't done yet.

Let's check back here in another 12 years and see what's happened!

Tuesday, February 05, 2019

Gus Was A Friendly Ghost

This post was originally written and saved as a draft in February 2013. I don't know why I didn't publish it. Maybe it was too personal? Who knows...

~O~

When Maggie and Ty were in 2nd grade and not too keen on reading, we recorded an audiobook. Not just any plain old audiobook, but one complete with sound effects. Gus Is A Friendly Ghost was their favorite at the time. Ty was the voice of Mouse. Maggie was the voice of Gus. I was the Narrator.

*subject change

Last week I had the flu. I am a great big baby. You may not know that, but it's true. I'm a lot whinier than I like to think I am. So on Thursday, my wonderful sister came and got my two youngest. Then that night, Maggie and Ty left for the Youth Ski Trip. Chris was working. I was alone. I slept a lot. I watched a lot of movies... Stranger Than Fiction, Pride and Prejudice, My Fair Lady, Singin' in the Rain, The Artist, Sherlock (the BBC tv show). I slept some more.

As I started feeling better I noticed that the things I had cleaned were.... staying clean. The food level in the pantry was no longer magically disappearing. The toilet paper roll stayed full. It was quiet. Like, really, really quiet.

Chris and I talked about it. Talked about how strange it will be when the kids are gone from home. There were some definite perks. Money, tidiness, etc. But then we stood quietly and let it sink in. Then we cried a little and were very grateful that it's not time to turn them into the world yet.

*subject shift

Tonight, all my kids were home again. We sat around the table after eating our spaghetti and talked for hours. Maggie and Ty told stories from their trip. Gracie told stories about Kim and Nana. The youngers drifted off to their rooms and devices. Maggie and Ty, Chris and I sat and spoke of faith, leadership, servant's hearts, Springville Church. Ty said, with tears in his eyes, that he really loves Springville church. (a balm and blessing to this mother's heart). Maggie talked about sharing the gospel with a couple of girls and asked advice.

After dinner Ty helped we clean the kitchen and then we got talking about books. The book we're reading now for school (Heart of Darkness) and what we should read next (The Old Man and the Sea?). We talked about books we studied/read over the years. His favorites were Danny and the Dinosaur, Ferdinand, and .... Gus Was A Friendly Ghost.

I pulled out that old cassette tape and tape player while Ty grabbed the book. Before we were three pages in, the whole family was standing at the kitchen counter, listening and laughing. It was precious and wonderful and one of those rare, beautiful, perfect moments.

They asked me to read them a bedtime story (Sylvester and the Magic Pebble). Now they are all tucked into their beds. And they are happy.

I am grateful. Grateful for the today we've had, but also so thankful for the precious time that I spent with them as little ones. The hardship, tears, trials, exhaustion, selfishness and fears have faded away into a haze and on nights like tonight, all I know is that it was worth it.

~O~

I read through my old drafts tonight, of which there are 40. This one was the most complete and the most nostalgic. I used to blog about my kids all the time. And about motherhood. I don't much anymore and I've been asked why. For the longest time I didn't know why I quit blogging about my kids and about motherhood. I think it's because my kids got older and it became an invasion of their privacy. As they got older, their struggles, questions, relationships, well... everything got more personal and the chance of shaming them or betraying them was more than I wanted to risk. Even now, the things they talk to me about are too... what's the right word? Important. The things they struggle with are oftentimes someone else's secret or their own private struggle. I could never share that.

As my family has gotten older life has grown exponentially more complicated. Money is tighter with college and cars. Relationships are harder to navigate. Decisions become life-altering. Mistakes can easily lead to shame apart from the gospel. Making the transition from the mother of a child to mother of an adult is daunting and awkward and confusing on both sides. Sometimes I feel as unsure of myself now as I did when my oldest was a baby. Maybe even more.

I am thankful for God's faithfulness to me. He is still faithful to me as a mother and as a wife. He shows kindness to me through my children and when I see their faith maturing I feel such joy and gratitude








Marriage

What does it mean to be one flesh? Marriage, I know, is more than just a legal contract. More than a committed agreement between two parties. More than the cultural view. Scripture calls it "one flesh", but what does that mean?

Chris and I are coming up on 25 years. I could type out the banal thoughts that flow into my mind, but I'll spare you. Yes, it's flown by. Yes, it's hard to believe. Yes, we've been through so much together. But it cannot be just the passing of time that brings oneness. If it did then you would never see divorces after 15 or 20 or even 40 years. There is something else.

I look at couples who mentored us and walked us through the early years; they've been married 35+ years now. I look at my in-laws who were married for over 50. I see a sweetness that I never knew possible. There is a depth and camaraderie, a knowing and liking. When I ask them about this, they shrug and profess themselves amazed at the mystery of it as well.

...

Chris left his food in the fridge on Friday morning when he left for his two days at the hospital in Anniston. I didn't really have much going on so I drove it up there. It's about an hour away so I don't go there often. Plus he stays super busy so he wouldn't have time to see me even if I did. When we were first married, and even after the first two kids were born, I would sometimes drive up there for lunch. It's been over a decade since I've done that. ... there is something altering about seeing Chris in his medical element. It's a side I don't ever really see.

Chris-at-work is different from Chris-at-home. And seeing him there, in that work setting, sparked something in my heart. When he sees me standing on the porch waiting when he drives up the driveway, or when he walks in the door while I'm rushing around getting ready for work, I visibly see something in him relax. Like all the tension just drains away.

When his Daddy was dying, he needed me beside him, not because I'm good at medical things or have encouraging things to say, but because my presence gives him strength and stability. He tells me this a lot.

Sometimes young married women remark on my marriage and chalk it up to me being an amazing wife or Chris being this perfect husband. I've known for a very long time that that cannot be it. We're both selfish and grumpy and willful. And I've been trying to figure out what makes this marriage of ours so beautiful.

I wonder now if it's because we've become each other's safe place. To know that this other person, this man, has seen me groaning with the pains of childbirth and crying with the confusion of a mother with mental illness. He's called me out when I have lost my temper with our kids and been bewildered by my wildly fluctuating hormones. He's endured 15 years of tedious homeschooling and my whining about a million dumb things. He's fought and screamed with me, loved and laughed with me. And he's died to himself over and over and over and over and over and over...

That's it. That's the thing, isn't it? It's not the experiences; it's our response to them. It's not that he's seen me at my worst; it's that he's seen me at my worst and then responded to me with faith. He's humbled himself and given up his felt needs in order to serve me. He's forgiven me, truly forgiven me, time after time. And it's not just on his part. I have forgiven him over and over, and extended grace to him when I just wanted to demand my rights.

This "one flesh" business is hard work because it goes against everything fallen in us. To crucify my flesh is, by its very nature, a bloody business. It's not excusing him. It's not forgetting about it. It's a concerted effort by faith to forgive and "let love cover a multitude of sins". It is repentance, individually and as a couple. It is hard.

My friend June says of a mutual interest of ours, "Don't tell people it will be fun. Tell them the truth: it will be hard, but it's worth it."

All truth is God's truth. Marriage is hard but so worth it. And sometimes it really is fun.

Now, ask me again in another 25 years, if this theory of mine holds true.


Grateful Introspection

Sometimes when a person is expressing gratitude, others call their words a "humble brag". Ty explained this to me. The person is a...