I took a sick day today. I don't have a temperature or a cough, but I didn't sleep well last night and my emotional well-being is pretty fragile. So here I am. At home. Looking around the almost-empty rooms. Grieving the end of 16 years in a place where we laughed and cried and fought and played. A place where love flowed through the rooms and out the doors onto the porch and patio.
Where teenagers gathered round the table to eat quesadillas at 11pm or smoke cigars and drink wine around the chiminea on the old brick patio. Where friends and family joined us to make hundreds of cookies, the children trying to outdo each other with the most outrageous icinged offering. Where we played scrabble and spades in front of the fireplace, eating popcorn or homemade cookies. Where people ate hamburgers and hotdogs at graduation parties, or finer foods at Jubilee's famous backyard dinner parties.
Where a colorful garden of bee balm, daisies, cone flowers and bright yellow yarrow, complemented by the addition of annuals carefully selected by my daughters at the greenhouse, brightened our small backyard. Where the children hung out in the kitchen while I made breakfast, and then sat with me around our table to eat and talk and talk.
A prospective buyer noted that the woodwork needs to be painted; it does. But I remember all the painting that we did. The dining room, where we thought we were so creative painting one solid wall a different color. April's room in two different colors of her choosing. I hired someone to paint the deep red walls in Jubilee's room, not wanting to leave it two-toned or streaked. Maybe the next person will see past the chipping woodwork to the possibility and the joy of making it their own.
Hard times came and went and lingered within these walls. Sickness and suffering of a different sort brought family and friends into our lives with empathy and shared tears and embrace. Words of comfort and encouragement entered our conversations, and our hearts were broken and mended and stretched and sometimes broken again. Children left and came back and left again. The times of return always bringing joy to my heart, with pride in their accomplishments and youthful wisdom.
So many people passed through our doors, slept in our beds and ate at our table. We were blessed to have best friends live next door for ten years, forming a mini community that included taking down the fence between our back yards, and shared meals of mac and cheese and sloppy joes or pasta dishes and wonderful salads. Family from the south came, sometimes unannounced (to me at least), and we ate collard greens and potato salad and sweet corn. Friends came and visited and we reminisced and laughed and cried together.
So here's my desire for people who walk through our house as prospective buyers. May they feel the warmth and love that permeated these floors and walls. May they hear echoes of the laughter and conversations that are part of its fabric. May they sense the hearts of love that offered invitation to everyone and provided comfort and respite on shabby couches and chairs. May they see beyond the necessary cosmetic fixes to the character and solid foundation, where they can begin or continue their own stories in a wonderful place.
Thoughts and musings from my daily life of working, parenting and life among others. Some of my publishings will be from things I experienced in the past, while others are from current thought and experience.
Monday, July 20, 2015
Wednesday, July 1, 2015
Mystery
What will you do?
Hmmmmm
Will you write? Will you work?
Hmmmmm
Will you like living in the country
Where it's dark at night?
Won't you miss the sounds of passing cars
And neighbors passing by?
Hmmmmm
Won't you miss your solitude?
What if you and Maggie disagree?
Will you have your own space,
And will it be enough?
Maybe I will learn to meditate
Spend early mornings in a yoga pose
Maybe I'll find a job at Starbucks
Or at a small bookstore or as
A greeter at Walmart.
Maybe the moon will shine brighter
And I'll see new constellations
In the darker nights
Maybe I'll hear new bird sounds
And maybe I'll walk new paths to meet new neighbors
Maybe Maggie and I will find even deeper
Love and respect for each other.
Maybe we'll teach one another
And maybe space will be more fluid
And we'll be surprised at where it happens
I look forward to newness and
Hope to embrace what I don't now know.
I've seen the sun rise off the deck at Maggie's house
And watched it set in splendor from the front porch
I've heard and watched new birds
And reveled in the gorgeous flower beds
I've even met new people who await my coming
With words of invitation and friendship
I've seen my space and the possibility of
New and different spaces
Questions don't need answers when you
Move toward people and things you love
There's mystery in the moving
In the arriving and in the living
I love a good mystery!
Hmmmmm
Will you write? Will you work?
Hmmmmm
Will you like living in the country
Where it's dark at night?
Won't you miss the sounds of passing cars
And neighbors passing by?
Hmmmmm
Won't you miss your solitude?
What if you and Maggie disagree?
Will you have your own space,
And will it be enough?
Maybe I will learn to meditate
Spend early mornings in a yoga pose
Maybe I'll find a job at Starbucks
Or at a small bookstore or as
A greeter at Walmart.
Maybe the moon will shine brighter
And I'll see new constellations
In the darker nights
Maybe I'll hear new bird sounds
And maybe I'll walk new paths to meet new neighbors
Maybe Maggie and I will find even deeper
Love and respect for each other.
Maybe we'll teach one another
And maybe space will be more fluid
And we'll be surprised at where it happens
I look forward to newness and
Hope to embrace what I don't now know.
I've seen the sun rise off the deck at Maggie's house
And watched it set in splendor from the front porch
I've heard and watched new birds
And reveled in the gorgeous flower beds
I've even met new people who await my coming
With words of invitation and friendship
I've seen my space and the possibility of
New and different spaces
Questions don't need answers when you
Move toward people and things you love
There's mystery in the moving
In the arriving and in the living
I love a good mystery!
Changing
Sitting on my porch in the sunlight safety
Drinking my familiar morning coffee
Change is happening
I'm jumping off the edge of all that is known
Into the next step of my life
A step I've planned to take for a long time
That now feels like it's coming too fast
Will my new porch be as inviting?
Will I find friends as willing to accept me
As those ones I'm leaving behind?
Will the moon shine just as bright
And bring me joy in the seeing?
Will I find a rhythm that feels
Fresh and yet familiar?
Change is such a mixed bag
Of sad and strange
And eager and exciting
Of leaving and longing
And tears and joy.
I bravely open wide my arms
To all that lies ahead
The trust I have in my Father
Is the rope I hang on to
His hand, His wings' embrace
Remind me of His love and faithfulness
This movement forward
This leap into the future
Is written in my book
I walk on in the words of a beloved saint:
All shall be well, and all shall be well
And all manner of thing shall be well.
Drinking my familiar morning coffee
Change is happening
I'm jumping off the edge of all that is known
Into the next step of my life
A step I've planned to take for a long time
That now feels like it's coming too fast
Will my new porch be as inviting?
Will I find friends as willing to accept me
As those ones I'm leaving behind?
Will the moon shine just as bright
And bring me joy in the seeing?
Will I find a rhythm that feels
Fresh and yet familiar?
Change is such a mixed bag
Of sad and strange
And eager and exciting
Of leaving and longing
And tears and joy.
I bravely open wide my arms
To all that lies ahead
The trust I have in my Father
Is the rope I hang on to
His hand, His wings' embrace
Remind me of His love and faithfulness
This movement forward
This leap into the future
Is written in my book
I walk on in the words of a beloved saint:
All shall be well, and all shall be well
And all manner of thing shall be well.
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