window sill in winter -full of sprouts and cuttings |
I'm listening to Christmas music while packing
up scarecrows and leaf art, eating dinner from paper Easter egg plates, and
growing cuttings of lilacs and roses; not even sure what season it is. Moving confuses you; mixes up your life, your sense of time. It is a tyrant worse than a long holiday to-do list.
Was it a season like this …when everything
seemed mixed up...when Christ came?
It’s unseasonably warm here. Makes me feel like planting garden instead of cleaning out the beds and borders in preparation
for both winter and moving in the spring.
Moving requires reflection on how you gardened
in the past, how you may want to redo things at the new place. It forces your
family to reflect too. My grandson, Jude, helped us strip the garden and yard of Nana's
treasures – bird baths, statues, and whimsical cement animals- to take to the
new house. He picked up shells, rocks to load in the truck. Suddenly, he called
with an urgency that made us all turn from our tasks to look at him. His knees and
arms were wrapped around our tiny weeping cherry tree; he was grunting with
effort gasping at us to help him pull this out! The little tree, surrounded by Irish moss is part
of my cancer survivor garden, and his treasure, since he played under it. Poignant moments happen daily, in this season of
pulling up well entrenched roots and relocating.
Was it a
season like this …not here-not there...when Christ was born?
So many things still hold my heart here. I feel
like a pioneer women tucking into the ‘wagon,’ flower seeds gathered from dad’s
hibiscus and grandma’s 80year old prim roses. Oh, and I must bring shoots of black
raspberries that my grandchildren love!
My insides do not
match the Christmas cheer being thrown around everywhere. My soul holds
snapshots of sad eyed refuges. My husband and I are choosing to uproot; we are
dreaming and happy about the move, yet the goodbye-ing is brutal. How much more so, if war or men with machetes chased us out?
Was it a season like this …the world a mess, horror upon
horror...when Christ was born?
I read social media posts of friend and family
celebrations, happy homecomings, gorgeous decorations, while writing this in my
journal:
Someone is coming to buy our grandson’s toddler bed. Jude's, toddler
bed. I want to cry; I can’t watch it go. Granddaughter, Avery writes me notes
saying how much she'll miss me after we move. I'm a mess these days. I’m a split
personality; one side laughingly eager to live our dreams, the other side overwhelmed
with grief.
Hallmark movies always have happy
endings. In reality, Mopsy is still not
flying out of the lagoon. His ‘Maybe’ mate left him for a mallard that
could fly away with her. I may move and never see him fly.
My mate, my hubby’s shoulder surgery and
recovery is delaying our packing up. Frustration
mounts as I try to do too much myself. Moving, like other stresses, often requires much vulnerability and letting
go. Just a few months ago I led a women’s retreat and spoke boldly about
learning to accept what is. I even co-wrote a book about having a spacious
heart.
What a fraud!
My heart is not always open and accepting. Some days it’s
curled into a fetal position or shaking a fist, shouting “enough!” All I can do is observe with compassion, talk
to my spiritual director to laugh and cry as together we witness and honor what
is presenting in my life.
This
morning, I listened to an ON Being podcast while packing books into boxes. What
a fun interview of Martin Sheen, a beautiful soul! ( http://www.onbeing.org/program/martin-sheen-spirituality-of-imagination/8257) I was soon laughing with him, with interviewer Krista Tippett, as Sheen quoted Thomas Merton
on the birth of Christ:
"Into this world, this demented inn,
where there is absolutely no room for him at all, Christ comes uninvited."
Sheen said this is his favorite Christmas quote. With a raspy belly
laugh, Sheen adds: "THIS IS CHRISTMAS!! --- Into this world, this demented inn, He
comes uninvited. We all think we are seeking, but in reality
we’re not." We choose comfort over stretching. Ease over vulnerability. "This is the deepest spiritual practice - accepting the cup as offered, not as it is altered." When Sheen receives
the cup, he always wants to ask, “can I have it less full? Or with some extra sugar?”
Ah, I recognize myself
in him. Into my chaotic world, into this demented
chaotic world, Christ comes. Love comes. Hope exists. This truly is the deepest
level of spirituality, to love deeply in spite of being human.To be grateful for our humanity, for life. To accept graciously the work and discomfort that is waking up, opening, deepening and change. To risk being vulnerable and human.
We are all just doing our best to cope, to live as fully as we can. Including me, including you.
Christ came as a human. Into a demented inn, a chaotic world. Chaos comes before new birth, before creation, before transformation. Hope exists. I hold that in my soul, too.
So, it was a season like this…
Sold our home of 40years -OregonViewFarm |
new home in VA! |
.....when Love came....
Merry Christmas!!!
Poignant, as always!
ReplyDeleteThanks for reading, Sylvia, and thanks for your support!
ReplyDeleteSo many things to grieve and celebrate all at once! Your post reminds me of a favorite John Green quote: "the world may be broken, but hope is not crazy."
ReplyDeleteI like that, Stephanie! Very fitting quote.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful soul, beautiful words.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Dee!
ReplyDeleteWhat a lovely read! I just love you and your words! Never think of yourself as a fraud my beautiful friend...you are far from it...we ebb and flow, like the tide...your intentions are of a spacious heart, and even when you feel low, and pushed, and tugged upon, your heart is huge! Enjoy every moment of this transition, there are treasures hidden within it! <3
ReplyDeleteThank you Heather! Yes to hidden treasures within this change. We have already found many!
ReplyDelete