T E N

Today Matt and I celebrate our tenth wedding anniversary.  It seems so surreal – has ten years really gone by already?  Often it still feels as though we are silly teenagers playing house instead of 30-something married people.  I am so proud to be married to Matt Swisher.  He’s thoughtful, kind, loving, silly, intelligent, and pretty darn sexy too!  How I ever convinced him to marry me remains a mystery.

Ten years ago today, we stood in front of our family and friends and vowed to comfort each other, honor and keep each other, in sickness and in health, in wealth and poverty, and to be faithful to each other as long as we both shall live.  The past decade has seen sickness for sure, and even a little poverty at times, but we continue to comfort each other and stay faithful to each other every day.

In a world where marriages are quickly tossed aside and people always seem to be seeking the greener grass on the other side, I must say it has never been difficult to note the lush, verdant nature of the grass on which I currently stand.  Matt’s caring spirit and loving partnership help to make that grass root deeper and sprout thicker and greener every day.  I’m so thankful for him and the lawn we tend together.

God has so clearly placed us together for this life.  I can never be thankful enough for that blessing.  Matt is my best friend and the love of my life.  I can’t wait to see what lies in store for us.

 https://vimeo.com/46337579

I love you Matt!

Memories and Shrapnel

It’s 4:30 a.m., and I have just woken from a dream wherein I was taking possession of my great grandmother’s former home.  I don’t know why – it’s not for sale.  Someone else owns it now – a very nice, older, single woman, I’m told.  I haven’t been there in more than 5 years – maybe even 6. I can’t remember.  The last time I was there was just before the house was sold.  For some reason this dream has caused a wave of memories to wash over me, and I am grieving my grandmother all over again.  These memories feel so fresh – so vivid – I wanted to write them down.  I can’t bear the thought of ever forgetting this woman or her home.

 

Her living room bookshelves were littered with all these little Dutch figurines: Young ceramic children dressed in blue and white, wooden shoes, etc.  I wonder where these are today? When she lived in that home, these little tchotchkes seemed insignificant to me, but now I realize what those meant to her.  They were symbols of her Dutch heritage.  I wonder if they reminded her of her mother or grandparents?  Now that she’s gone, I wish I had little Dutch tchotchkes in my home as well.  A pair of wooden shoe-clad children bent 45 degrees at the waist to meet in the middle for a kiss.  A little Dutch tchotchke I would put in a shelf in my living room.  I would glance at it once in a while, and it would remind me of my little Dutch grandmother, and I would remember her for just a moment.

 

Her driveway was lined with peony bushes.  The back of her house was lined with hydrangeas.  Grandma’s yard was always alive with something, and I miss going to visit and talking about what was blooming.  It occurs to me now that I could have taken cuttings from the peonies and hydrangeas to grow myself.  Then again, I have moved three times since her house became someone else’s home.  It wouldn’t have been practical.  But at this time of the morning – at this stage of nostalgic inundation – it seems altogether irresponsible of me to NOT have these plants in my yard right now.  In the writing of this paragraph, I have actually had to convince myself that I should definitely NOT go to this house in the cover of night to steal clippings from these plants.  If they are even still there.  Please, God. Please tell me that nice, older, single woman kept my grandma’s plants…

 

Grandma had a big window next to her dining room table.  Her table was an old metal thing that made me think of a 50’s diner with it’s formica top and the vinyl seats on the chairs.  A beautiful set, it was not.  But what it lacked in beauty, Grandma made up for in use.  She would sit at that table, look out the window, and point out lovely birds that flew her way.  I remember pointing out cardinals to her – bright and beautiful.  She would look out over her back yard, and tell us about things she had discovered growing, about her neighbors and their Husky dogs, about the squirrels or rabbits or other creatures that had wandered into her dominion.  She would serve us homemade pizza (always with black olives) or peanut butter blossoms or cherry delight (my dad’s favorite), and we would talk and talk with Grandma until our bellies and hearts were full.  It was at this table under this window that my uncle and I talked about baptism when I was 16 and had just given my heart to Christ.  He baptized me that day – in Grandma’s church, with her standing by as our only witness. 

 

Of all the books in her living room, there was always one that stuck out to me.  It was an old, worn, yellow book of children’s stories.  I’m certain it was from the 50’s at the latest.  The first story in the book was about a cocky young rooster and a wise hen who told the rooster not to eat strawberries until they were ripe.  The rooster and his cockiness couldn’t bear the thought of waiting, so he ate green strawberries and got sick.  The wise hen clucked her gentle “I told you so” and all we readers learned a lesson in patience.  I don’t remember any other stories past that one.  I read that story over and over and over again.  Even into high school when we would go visit Grandma, I would reach to that book and read that familiar story.  I wonder where that book is now? I hope someone is loving that book the way I did.  I also hope that someone learns the lesson in patience that hen wishes to impart.  The patience thing never really stuck with me!

 

I remember so much about this house: the distinct smell, the bright pink walls in my Grandma Marilyn’s old bedroom, the blue water in her toilet, the treacherous steps to her basement, the bright yellow of her kitchen, the living room furniture – orange and floral, the cacti lining her windowsills, the puzzle books she was always working, the journal she kept by her chair.  I have reconstructed this house perfectly in my mind this morning, but it’s not quite the same.  I reach out to touch something – the rough fabric of the living room chair, the handle to the front door, the wrinkled, veined skin of Grandma’s hand – and my mental construction blows away like vapor.  It’s funny – I don’t seem to get this emotional over the home I grew up in, which my family left not too many years ago, or over my Grandma Alice’s home, which she still resides in.  These other places have always changed though – my parents have lived in a few other homes since that one on Bluff Crest Lane.  My Grandma Alice’s house underwent a major construction and addition about 20 years ago.  Perhaps what makes me so attached to Grandma Jordan’s house is that it was always hers.  Always HER.  Always the same.  The house was sold, a few years later Grandma passed away, and now that house and that woman are gone.  Possibly I grieve the sameness of Grandma Jordan.  She was contstant. Steady. Sure.

 

I’m missing my Grandma this morning.  When we sold her home, it felt as if a bomb had been detonated, and now I am wondering where the shrapnel has landed.  The story book? The Dutch figurines? The journals?  The kitchen table?  I hope someone is loving these items.  Perhaps other members of my family have them, and if that is true, I am thankful.  We should have a reunion of ourselves and Grandma’s things – just to remember. Image

Disconnect on Easter

This post is going to be difficult to write.  A big part of me feels as though I’m not allowed to feel some of the things I’m about to tell you – that I’m supposed to be 100% sure 100% of the time.  That I’m going to be ridiculed for sharing this with you, or worse – condescendingly encouraged.  But share I shall – I’m not typically a girl who lets fears or rules keep her from saying what needs to be said.  And this is my blog after all – I’ll write what I want.

For some time I have felt a bit disconnected from the Lord.  I can’t explain what it feels like – it’s almost as though I had eaten something funny, and my heart just wasn’t settling well or something.  I just didn’t feel good.  A few weeks ago, I finally was able to identify this unsettled feeling, and I quickly talked to Matt about it.  I informed him that I thought I was having trouble really connecting to God in worship.  I’m not sure what it’s from.  I really do enjoy his sermons, and learn from them every week.  I’m not sure if it’s that I’m not connecting with the worship style at our current churches or if I don’t feel I can truly be myself or what.  I just know that something isn’t connecting for me.

Something that might be a huge factor in this is that I am a little too involved in the “doing” of church, instead of the “being.”  We talk about worship planning; I help set up for prayer service; I keep an eye out for visitors or late-comers; etc.  Let’s also remember that my professional life is all about the church as well.  I am surrounded by church on all sides!  Perhaps this constant exposure to it has made me a little callused to church.  There’s not much that can be done about this though.  I’m not about to quit my job or divorce my husband!

Yesterday during Sunrise Service, as I listened to one of the scripture readings, a tiny doubtful thought crept into my mind and immediately derailed me.  “What if this story is just made up?  It all seems so far-fetched, doesn’t it? I mean, of course all the disciples died defending this story, so it must be true, right? Oh my goodness – what am I thinking?” I just couldn’t shake the doubts out of my mind.  This isn’t supposed to be happening, right?  On Easter especially!

Last night I confessed this to Matt.  I was shocked that he admitted that there are times he questions as well.  He then shared that in those times he reassures himself by remembering that even if this is all just a fairy tale, that he’d rather spend his life living as though it were true instead of in the void of it being false.  That’s a great point.

I then admitted that perhaps this is all my fault to begin with.  I mean, my lack of personal bible study and personal prayer time could certainly have something to do with this momentary lack of faith.  Also, I am sadly without a group to study and share with.  When we were in seminary, I seemed to be surrounded by wonderful women of faith who were great for discussions, prayer, study, etc.  When we moved to our first appointment, I locked in with a group of women who knew how to have fun and love the Lord together in very real ways.  I have had a hard time coming up with something here in Veedersburg that measures up to either of those things.  There is a very small group of women that I was meeting with regularly, but busy schedules and complicated life events have really put a damper on our meetings.  Now Matt and I are getting ready to move, and I’m going to have to somehow find a whole new group.  It’s all very exhausting to think about.

After I wrote my last post, I told Matt that, even though we spent hours talking about it, writing a blog post helped me to see things more clearly.  Today I’m experiencing the same sort of clarity.  Somehow writing about this makes it pretty clear that my personal faith isn’t going to just happen.  I’m going to have to put some work into it to deepen it and strengthen it.  Doubts and distance can be dealt with if I would only just devote some time to God.

As I type this, I can’t help but think of an old Nichole Nordeman song, “What If.”  This video is quite terrible, but it’s nice to have the lyrics with it. Perhaps I’m not the first person to think “What If?”

http://youtu.be/G0ScWCfNPpI

So thanks for hearing me out today.  I hope you all had a great Easter!