Friday, December 30, 2011

Putting Christmas Away

We put the last of the Christmas decor away this afternoon. We leave for Nashville in the morning to spend the long weekend at the Opryland Hotel, just us. I didn't want to come back into a new year with last year's Christmas things still here and there. All of our decor fits into 1 tote and 1 small box. My friend Donna has 20 totes of decorations, so I think I am doing well to have just one. As I wrapped the few pretty glass ornaments I have in bubble wrap, I wondered, just for a moment,  if I would touch them again next year. The moment passed, but just to be sure the ornaments would survive another trip down the scary pull down attic stairs, I wrote "Fragile" on the outside of the box in pretty curlicue letters. A reminder to whoever brought them down that the box held something precious. A few shiny glass ice cream cone ornaments, testaments of my dear friends' care for me. A gold engraved ornament from 1977, our one year anniversary. A ceramic angel, made by my daughter in elementary school years ago. All have stories, have been touched many times, now finding their way back into the attic. Today we put all that away, because tomorrow we drive into a new year, and a new adventure.

Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Doing the Dishes

My husband had his 11th chemotherapy treatment yesterday. He has more to do yet, but the worst is over.  He has to carry around a little pack that has a pump in it that pumps more chemo into him for 42 more hours, until the nurse comes and takes out the needle and takes the pump away. This does not stop him from doing the dishes for us. We have settled into a satisfactory domestic routine: I cook, he cleans up. I work outside the home, he takes care of the house. We both get tired and sometimes cranky, both get scared and sometimes teary. We both get up everyday and do our chores, because that is what there is to do, and neither of us wants the other one to have to do more. Or less. The routine keeps life normal, even when it isn't normal. Even when you have to watch out for the plastic tubing snaking under your shirt, or the needle poking into your chest. My husband does the dishes for us because he is brave and doesn't complain about those things. He takes care of us this way and one day he won't have to fiddle with pumps and pouches and needles and tubing. He will feel good again, with his thick hair regrown. He is giving me a tremendous gift, the gift of normal, in an abnormal time. He is doing the dishes.

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

To give love

We can be too hard on people. We want them to know us, by somehow picking up every obtuse clue we leave, and read into our hearts and minds. We want them to give us what we want, even when we don't know what that is. Did you get what you wanted for Christmas? Did you get the ipad, the iphone, the cordless drill, the vacation trip to Aruba? Did you get a clean PET scan? Did you get new eyes, new ears, better hair? Did you realize that the gifts you received that you didn't want were because you held back, you were secretive, obtuse, wishing someone would know you better? Did you give similar gifts?  We want others to know us, to give us what we cannot gain for ourselves, to listen to us, to hold us, to cheer us on. We want to be loved, because that is the one gift that does not need to be returned to a store. We want to love, and have that love received in the manner that it is given...freely, without reserve or guile.  All other things will fade and break and become obsolete. Did we get what we wanted for Christmas...did we give what others wanted? Let us give love, and receive love in return. Let this be the best possible gift, the one we always want above all else, let every other thing fade.

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

White Paper

I am reading a book about healing through love. Letting go of pain, and loving others, as the key to better health. I was telling my friend Kristie about it, and then was imagining what would happen if you could let go of this pain by checking into a hotel with a roll of white freezer paper and some Sharpies and spend a day writing down all the emotional baggage you carried in the form of wounds that other people had caused you. Then, I thought, knowing something of God, that it wouldn't be long before you started writing down the wounds you had caused others. Friendships that you had let die, promises and hearts you broke. When you have lived a long time, the clean white paper would quickly fill up with dreary reminders of others and our human failings, our lack of empathy, our neediness, our cruelty. After all the tedious writing, you could forgive yourself and those that needed forgiveness and start new. My smart husband thinks there is a better way to purge the past and move into the future. He thinks it would be better to write down the characteristics that you want to own, and then ask God to show you how to own them. That way, the person of hope and peace and joy would always answer in love and find true healing.

Saturday, December 17, 2011

The Way Made Plain

We can travel the broken road. We can veer off the paved road and enter a place of bumps and ditches and dead ends. We can decide that we are bored with the routine and venture out into the unknown and unsure, looking for adventure, or a short cut. We can get lost. At that point, we then wonder what happened. Where are the signs, the comforting lights, the warm eateries, the gas stations, the cozy bed? Why is there a flat tire, dropping temperatures, empty stomach, empty pockets, sore feet? How do I get out of here? How do I get home? There is a story in the Bible about a man who did this. Actually, just about every story in the Bible is about every person, except one, who did this. Starting in the Garden, we have never been satisfied with the marked way. We think we know better, we allow ourselves to be swayed by thoughts of disobedience, fueled by distrust. We don't realize that the way made plain will take us where we are designed to go. Sometimes the way leads us deep into the valley, sometimes over the mountain. Sometimes through boring deserts, sometimes through endless terrain of exhilarating forests and crystal clear rivers. This way always has signs, always has lights and rests, always takes us home.

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Only God

I was waiting all day for a call from my almost ex-doctor. Somehow I thought he might call, wonder how I was doing, talk about my elevated cancer antigen number, recommend some kind of new plan of treatment. I would be all calm and confident; yes, I know about the elevated number, no I don't want to do any more chemo, maybe I will schedule an appointment in January. But he didn't call, so all my bravado turned to sorrow and desolation. For a few minutes. Then I looked at the beautiful sunset on my drive home and remembered God's word that He would never leave us or forsake us. Our names are engraved on the palms of His Hands. He knows us intimately and cares for us constantly. He is with us in every moment of every day. He calls us and calls us. I would have answered my doctor's call in a breathless second, but God's calls I sometimes miss. Or, sadly, ignore. He never leaves messages. He just keeps calling. Hello, God, this is Amy. I am scared, and sad, and somehow feeling less than wonderful today. You love me? Ahhh, that sounds so good to hear. Don't be afraid? Well, ok I will try to do that. Trust in You alone? Yes, I know, I need to do that too. I will do that right now. I love You, too.

Monday, December 12, 2011

Well Being

A buzz word for current times, the company I work for promotes well being in a myriad of ways. I try to keep up with all the layers the word impacts; emotional, physical and spiritual. The implied intent is for one to be the master of it all, but living takes it's toll. I guess, in reality, well being really means living well, no matter the circumstance. In our culture, living well might mean living with all your needs met, new car in the garage, loving spouse and children, lavish vacations. In my little world, living well means enjoying takeout chinese food, savoring every morsel, giving a tidbit to the waiting cat. It means taking time to finish a book, knit a Christmas gift, wash my dad's clothes. Living well means not worrying too much that the cancer is not going away, it means living as fully as possible for as long as possible. Well being is not taking for granted the gifts that we have been given in the form of faithful friends, healthy grandchildren, a sound mind, a full refrigerator. What I gain in eating more vegetables, walking 3 miles a day, daily communion with God is the strength to live well today. We can't really store it all up, it needs to be spent every day. Well being is being able to start every morning sure that this day will be the best ever.

Sunday, December 4, 2011

Anderson Maxwell Butler

I haven't met you, but I know you. I know your mother. I know she likes to talk, and teach, and she puts 110 percent into everything she does. She has a contagious laugh. She loves to shop and play, she won't stop until she falls exhausted into bed at the end of the day. She loves Jesus.
I know your father. He is smart and dedicated to his family and he puts 110 percent into everything he does. He is clever with his hands, and can build beautiful things out of wood. He is not too manly to buy a sewing machine and learn how to use it. He loves to fly and play, he won't stop until he falls exhausted into bed at the end of the day. He loves Jesus.
I know the One who called you into being, who chose you before the beginning of the world to live a life that honors Him. He has already planned wonderful things for you to do, he has counted every hair on your tiny head, he knows you better that you will ever know yourself. He loves you.
I know you, little one, and I love you, too. When I meet you, I will look into your eyes and see your mother, your father...all those who have preceded you, and those that will follow you. And Jesus.