Finding Home: Life is NOT an Emergency

Slow never killed time, only the rushing and racing, the catching up that tries to catch up to time, this is what kills time. Why keep wounding eternity?

Ourselves?

-Ann Voskamp, The Gift We Can’t Afford to Refuse, June 11, 2011

When I finished up my post yesterday, I clicked over to my Reader, and wouldn’t you know? Ann always seems to put words and thoughts clear and true to what’s circling around in my head.

This is the lesson I keep speaking to myself, over and over and over again. This is the lesson of my year. Hard lesson, this. It goes against everything I know.

About this time last year, I began working full time for a company in the publishing industry. I started this job for many reasons. I’ll explain why in subsequent posts. It’s supposed to be a perfect fit kind of job; I work from home, make my own hours, and they support both family and homeschooling. It is okay for those things to come first in my days, so long as my work is done well and on time. But the nature of the beast when it comes to publishing? Everything is an emergency. There is always a deadline that is not being met. There is always a crisis of some sort or another. Emails race constantly regarding this issue or that problem. All of our resumes should read: good at thinking fast and solving problems in a creative way. On one hand, the rush of figuring things out is half the fun; on the other hand, you never take a breath. By the time one issue is to the printers, we’re already ramped up on another issue, piecing out the puzzles.

It was a deadly development for me. I have always tended towards overclocking in my personal life, never knowing when to slow. The skill of slowing is a learned one, valuable, and elusive. It requires perspective. An ability to see both what is ahead, and what is behind, and find the balance in the middle; where time is held loosely in both hands and treasured for what it is. One of my biggest struggles is in vision: I either see the forest for the trees or the trees for the forest. I will go racing like a madman towards one or the other and get shocked when I am utterly, totally lost, because I was never sure of my bearings in the first place.  In some ways, that’s what makes me good at what I do- latching on to an idea and running with it, exploring all the posibilities- what would happen if people didn’t do that? We’d still eat by candelight. Creativity thrives on innovation.

November came. I was thirty six weeks pregnant. The company was smack in the middle of a promotion, one that required long hours and careful attention on my part. Thanksgiving was days away: my family was coming, my house was trashed, and I was exhausted. How in the world was I going to get it all done? As if things weren’t stressful enough, everybody got sick with a cold, miserable as could be. Little Mrs. Overclocked was not happy. I cared for them with a begrudging heart, coughing myself, running around with kleenexes, to the computer in my office- sidestepping box after box for the promotion, stuffing envelopes- back downstairs again to the kitchen (which in the barn house was completely disconnected from everything else–a very big hassle in our large family). Not pretty. I cringe when I think about it now. I had latched on to the publishing way of life: crisis. Emergency. These Things Matter More than This. While it may be true for publishing, it is not true for my life. That I ever confused the two breaks my heart.

By the time the weekend dawned, I could not stop coughing. I had heard someone sounding like this before: my husband. His asthma attacks took the form of coughing fits- he’d begin to cough, and unable to stop, would no longer be able to speak. If he went much longer, he’d start turning blue around the mouth while his breathing took on a belabored whistle- still coughing. In my typical way, I noted this development. I was Highly Annoyed. I had Work To Do. Forget my family at this point. I could’ve cared less about that. The only thing in my head was crisis, crisis, run, run, run. By Sunday evening, I was taking a turn for the worse: I popped the meds in the nebulizer, blaming the dust cloud I had walked through earlier that day for my bad breathing, even though I myself had not had an asthma attack in over ten years. I was reading some spreadsheet while I sat with the neb; the numbers began to swim.

Monday came, and I could no longer be in denial. I literally could not breathe. I couldn’t speak either. A visit to my doctor meant an automatic admission to the hospital; do not pass go, do not collect $200 dollars. Straight to jail. That’s all I could think. The hospital? Now? I don’t have time for this! By Monday evening, it all didn’t matter. It all faded as I simply fought to breathe. The things that should matter finally mattered- the baby in my womb, the lungs that were struggling to fill with air, the thought of my family, husband, and the final realization that something was terribly wrong.

Why did it take an emergency to teach me that life is not an emergency? Why, in all of my adult life, did I not understand this? Ten years of crazy striving. After what?

Finding Home

I keep thinking about Art. Home. The two intertwine- when I am participating in the act of creating, I feel at home. Peace, joy, and calm come to me; I am at rest. I could feverishly be scribbling lines, slapping paint in thick strokes, beads of sweat forming along forehead, active; but at rest. A strange upending of the laws of inertia.

I believed the lies of the tyranny of the urgent. This life does not take time for art, because art is not productive, not practical. It is not worth pursuing because the end result might not be proven. The irony at the crux of it: inertia took over. Objects at rest stay at rest. They don’t move. The journey stopped. The dust collected, the neurons established new pathways. I started driving through life asleep at the wheel.

I found myself in the hoary dark forest, jade green, jeweled undersides of evergreens, lights barely glittering above, a path of wreckage behind me of a life that was supposedly being well lived, absolutely lost as to how I had landed here, so far away from the life I thought I was living…illness at my right hand, confusion and surprise at my left. It was wholly different from the depression I had suffered in earlier years. Depression for me dulls the senses, colors everything over dark like an ink wash left to sit too long. This was a searing nerve-pain of reality like an arm cut off and suddenly the message got to the brain.  Bright red pops of pain fireworking across consciousness.

When art was still a part of my life, those fireworks would play off into purples and golds, chartreuse and turquoise, something beautiful wrought as I processed through the journey- abstract gathering but profoundly meaningful to me. The act of writing would bring me clarity, even if I wasn’t writing directly about a situation I was in. It was as if the act of putting words on page about something I knew would help my brain find the words to describe what I did not know. Poetry would sing to me of other lives, other hopes. Painting, shuffling patterned pieces of paper around, finding the pleasing arrangement- these were all ways that I made sense of things- how I lived my interior life out loud, so to speak. They were my tools for dealing with my reality.

And I had laid them down, my map to me- no wonder I was lost.

I wonder what it is for you, dear reader, that helps you process your world?

For my husband, he fixes. He puts back together for all the things he can’t fix and can’t put back together, all the broken pieces he sees and deals with on a daily basis. Fixing things helps him find his way back to his compassionate center when all he wants to do is give in to the brokenness.

I don’t understand why I refused the gift of art that the Lord gave me. What gift are you refusing because it doesn’t fit practical? I think of Ann, of Tonia, of Elizabeth- dear friends each- what would happen if they laid down their words because words didn’t bring bread and butter? What if Rebecca never entered her studio? What if Stephanie didn’t bring photos and words, pattern and color together in a story of life that makes us all sit up, take notice, appreciate more? What is it you have laid down because it doesn’t fit into practical and useful?

Join me on my journey back to home? I’ll be talking about this for the next few weeks, finishing up with Ali’s A Week in the Life project. I look forward to hearing about what has been on and in your heart.

Conjunction…

Because I could not leave well enough alone.

For LL‘s prompt for Random Acts of Poetry at High Calling Blogs, based on my earlier sketch: A Wander

On the pediment

Stood they

Silent and still

Gazing upon a world changed

White turned grey

And creeping black

The glint of gold

Gash of dirt

Sunbeams dance

Across curve of cheek

Hook of nose

Grasp of hand

Upon shepherd’s crook

Starlit spiral

Wonder of beryl, sapphire

Jeweled crown

Tendril heavenward

Relic of old

Hushed whispers echo

Archaic words

Rim round in word and sound

I stumble upon a stair

Time worn,

Rough mark of stone mason

Etched in the solid face

The dirt covers my shoe

On a path worn smooth

By thousands

And I wonder-

Is faith here?

Or there?

In the grit and the grime

or

the cut glass and gold

or do they

statues, lifeless

know

if it is a

both/and?

(St. Peter’s, Rome)

Love Story: Redemption…

redemption

I was tracing the faux granite strands in the countertop as he was speaking. My finger rubbed across the gash in the laminate where knife had slipped, spilling onion entrails everywhere and permanently scaring the hard-worked surface.

I remember the day well. My eyes wet with false tears from overpowering onion scent, I misjudged the slice and sent the knife flying. It caught in the countertop, thankfully, or it would have gone careening into a toddler girl and boy sitting upon the stools, watching mama prepare dinner. I caught it barely in time. As I attempted to clean up the mess, I brushed eye with hand thoughtlessly. I was blinded. My tears were in earnest now- I could not see for overactive tear  ducts, upset at the slipped knife, worried by the divot in the countertop. I was overcome by the fact that one of my children brushed close with danger at my own hand. It had been a long day of overactive tempers, upset toys, and worried conversations. I lost it, slipping to floor between counters, sobbing, shoving the knife on to the oven to get it out of reach of littles’ hands.

He found me there, crumpled and broken, like so many days before and so many since. He  grabbed clean kitchen towel and gently dabbed at my eyes, blowing at the ducts to remove the offending allergen. My eyes began to clear, my sobs turned into airy, shuddering sighs.

“Why can’t I get anything right, beloved? It seems I am always at odds, always dropping, always broken or breaking something or someone else.”

He wordlessly wrapped me in arms, much like he had done this fear-filled morning, and reminded me of truths I always seemed to forget. And he ended with the question he always asked, and I always sidestepped and danced away from: “Why, Angel, are you so very hard on yourself? Do you not remember that you are mine? You are His?”

His statement this morning was the same variation of the battle cry. You need to remember redemption.

I struggle in the grasp of the obvious watch care and love of both my husband and my Lord. I want to turn away, want to slump shoulders, turn tail. I do not want to go into battle this day, face my fears. It would be easier to stay in the drowning deep, head barely above water, than emerge into the glorious air of redemption, gasping at grace. Because in between the deep and the air is the wrenching wave of pain, detritus of life slamming about.

Why indeed?

It was hard to stare at it, bald-faced like that. My husband stood in quiet, loving patience. Waiting for me to process, waiting for me to speak.

Why indeed?

Why give in to the yellow-faced Fear? Why give in to the mangling tentacles of bitterness?

Had not my Lord and Father proved more than faithful, more than worthy of my trust?

I eyed Fear, standing off beyond my husband’s left shoulder, elbow leaning casually on clock as if to say, you don’t have time for this. My gaze returned to my husband, feeling for his hands as I began to speak.

Battle lines were going to be drawn this day. No going back. No retreat.

“He is good. Our Lord is good, beloved. How can I deny it? How we have seen His hand moving in our lives together over these months! The strain of new paths to mark out is difficult. I will not deny that. But you are right. I need to remember His gifts.

“First, the house and place to live. How unsettled I was when we decided to put the house on the market, four days after Christmas, with no job, no leads in sight. It felt as if I was tearing my heart right out when we did that. I trusted, trusted, big gulps of grace filled air, leap of faith, that you were right, that we were right, that it was a wise decision. I tried not to worry. What would happen? How would we provide? How could we know? And you reminded me that we couldn’t know for sure, but that we would trust.

“The realtor came. She mentioned the eye-popping number that she would offer it for sale, meaning that our equity in the house had more than tripled in the intervening time. My brain could hardly wrap around this, considering the economy, the collapsed housing market, the lost jobs. How could I not consider these things, having lived the roller coaster ride this year and a half past? I remember thinking it would truly be God-given if someone actually bought the house for that price- I could not fathom the entire affair. We had a showing within hours.

“A few days after that, the phone rang. It was a normal every day sort of day. The laundry was flipping in dryer, the kids were squealing and talking in playroom, you searched out job leads on the computer as I sat nursing Josiah. We had been talking, worrisome conversation that was growing stale as we puzzled out just what we were to do with the reality we were faced with. It was the job you had interviewed for the past November. We had all but given up hope on the company, for we had heard nothing, not a peep, in the intervening time of three months. It was a job you had dreamed of doing, the reason you had gone to school; but we had despaired that you had not qualified. You quickly stepped out of the playroom into the frigid garage, so as to hear better. When you came back in the room, your face had a surprised and hopeful look. An interview, by phone, was set for later that week. We found all this strange. When the interview happened, I confess, I was upstairs, pacing floor, praying soundlessly, not daring to hope. You finally came upstairs, almost lunchtime. You were truly perplexed at this point, as was I. We had no idea what would happen- the interview process had been so different from anything we had been used to.

” It was late. The kids were already in bed, some drifted off to sleep; the phone rang and you disappeared into the depths of the basement again, after debating whether or not to answer the unfamilar phone number at such an odd hour. I could tell as soon as the basement door cracked open and you mounted the stairs. The lift of your step was all different; you fairly flew up the stairs as if they weren’t even there. The joy in your face was palpable as you told me the wondrous news. It was more than we dared hoped for, more than we had dreamed. You started the new job soon, and it was just far enough away from our current house that we would have needed to move. We just sat and stared at each other for a while, unable to speak. Then the joy overcame and it was all we could do not to shout, restraining ourselves lest we woke the children.

“How could we have known that the timing of putting our house on the market would have been crucial to the new job? We simply couldn’t have. Only God could have known.

” The next weeks were a blur as we had house showings about every other day. I began to get discouraged because it took so much for me to get out of the house quickly with five children; your new job schedrule was a transition and you were hardly home.

“On one of the craziest days of the whole thing, I got a call from the realty company. Could we be out of the house for a showing at 3:45? It was 2:30. The house was trashed, dirty clothes and toys strewn everywhere, dishes littering the sink, cherrios crunching underfoot. I gulped, said yes, and scrambled. We barely escaped the driveway as the prospective buyer turned in. That night, I fell into exhausted slumber, trying not to cry because I was so overwhelmed and was desperately missing you.

“How shocked I was, how amazed we both were the next morning when our realtor called to tell us that we had an offer for the full price! It seemed grace upon grace.”

I corrected myself.

“It is grace upon grace.”

As I had been speaking, I had seen Fear fade slowly, sometimes holding ear as if in pain. Soon white as a sheet, then barely there. Soon, Fear disappeared from sight entirely.

My husband smiled wide, grin wrapping near around head, and I gratefully slid into his arms for a long embrace, full of grace filled remembrance.

” I remember Beloved, I remember. Thank you. Have I mentioned how much I love you?”

His green-gold eyes said everything.

Hallelujah, for the battle is the Lord’s and no other. I will trust in Him.

To read Part 1: And so it begins.

To read Part 2: Morning has broken.

Love story: Morning has broken…

Picture 824

The steam was rising off my coffee in spiral swirls; I had been staring at the airy designs for many minutes, unseeing.

The voice rushed around me with a pop of air.

” Do you really think He’ll come through for you?”

In a whiny insinuating tone, Fear began to recite a laundry list of the many times God had supposedly failed me. It began to take on a droning, bored quality in true Bueller style—and the spell was broken for me.

I laughed a beleaguered chuckle. Addressing the early morning air around me, I spoke aloud.

“You know, the thing I don’t get about you- you seem so much smaller and ever more so annoying in the light of day. And, you always seem to forget yourself.”

” But dear,” the contentious voice responded, “it seems to me that it is you who have forgotten. You’ve forgotten how much you’ve screwed up, face first in the mud. Why on earth would anyone want to touch you, let alone Him?”

I could almost imagine him taking a long drag on his cigar, swirling the mint julep, looking at me like a cheshire cat, thinking that he had just won.

His mistake was calling me dear.

” I write to you, dear children, because your sins have been forgiven on account of His name.” (I John 2:12) The verse from 1 John came to mind, and that was it, the battle was over. I had managed to memorize the book a couple of months ago, and verse after verse cascaded through my thoughts. Can you almost see the surprise in Fear’s face? He must have spit his drink out over his coat, I am sure.

Head cocked to the side, I stared into my now-cold coffee.

“Well, I think we’ve had an…er…interesting chat. But as you have no right to be here, I suggest you get a move on, alright? ”

My husband found me like that, head to side, staring down into the inky depths of my coffee as if it held all the answers. His voice and movement made me jump.

“G mornin’ Angel- how’s it goin’?” His sleepy voice drew down deeper into his slow southern drawl. I smiled inwardly- his voice, his drawl are like elixr to me- I still get butterflies when I hear him. It’s half the reason I fell in love with him in the first place. I must have startled and stared at him a bit too long, because his voice edged with concern- “Angel?”

Trying to recover the moment, I answered over-brightly “Great! Didja sleep well?” Cringing, I took note of the banshee screams in the background of two boys carousing, the angry shrill words of my Lorelei fighting with her brother, and a baby making his needs known.

“Angel, beloved- you sound- uh, not yourself. What’s going on?”

I sighed, a near sob. “Do ya have a minute? I’ve got a long list.” A sad, sardonic smile.

He reached across, taking the coffee cup out of my hands and placing it on the kitchen counter, wrapping me up in his arms.

” I know, my Angel. I know. It’s really tough.”

I couldn’t muster a whole lot to say, other than, “I’m scared. No, I’m terrified. I’m incoherent, unable to think.”

His eyes, green, brown, gold, swirled and flipped and focused as he looked at me. I could see the change in him, the square of shoulder.

He knows my history. He has sat quietly, listened, loved me through the dark days. He was and is my safe place to land, and he knew what my admission meant. I was overcome in battle.

“Well, the only way out is to remember, right? Let’s start the list. Let’s tell His story. Let’s remember what He said.”

—-

To read Part 1: And so it begins.

To read Part 3: Redemption.

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