Wednesday, August 30, 2017

Junky Heart

So I'm thinking about clutter. Toy clutter, specifically. A few months ago the raging demon of organization within took hold and banished most of my children's toys to the closets of the playroom, with specific instructions that NO CHILD was to open those closets and remove any toys, whatsoever. Sound cold-hearted? Cruel? Probably. I smashed all the stuffed animals into plastic bags, dumped all the 5 million junky little pieces into baskets and made precarious towers in the closets before finally shutting the door and forgetting about it all. Well, forgetting about it until my precious daughter would ask for one of her dolls. I would reply, "I don't know where it is. Probably in the closet," and then go about whatever task I was doing at the time. Yep, heartless. But tidy.

Okay. I truly am a horrible person.

In my defense, I could not take ANY MORE of having every floor, table top, EVERY STINKING FLAT SURFACE covered with knick-knacky plastic pieces that have the nerve to be labeled "toys," thus making them assume some marginal value. Or, in the case of my children, the status of precious objects that must be loved and cherished, but only when Mom decides it's time to get rid of them. Until that point it's fine to strew them everywhere and forget about them.

AGH.

So, into the closet it all went.

And right back out it all came today. What. Was. I. Thinking???

Here was the reasoning behind The Great Toy Exit 2017: 

With cold weather coming (eventually?), I wanted to go ahead and cull through the kids clothes so I could consign the ones that had been outgrown and fund the purchase of the next size up wardrobe. So yesterday my hilariously compliant son tried on about 30 items of clothing for me so that I could determine what to keep and what to toss. With my daughter's clothes it was a bit easier. Tried on two sweaters, hooray they still fit, and then packed up the pile that has been slowly growing in the top of her closet as I stashed items that were too small.

But then that light bulb went off in my head. You know, the one that ALL MOMS EVERYWHERE should always ignore. The one that says, "Hey, you're already in the mode of cleaning out. Why don't you go through the toys, too?" Never, EVER listen to that thought!! Slam your mind shut to it! Hum the latest Disney song! Stream an N*SYNC album! ANYTHING but going through the toys!

Alas, I succumbed to THE THOUGHT, opened the closet doors, and begin pulling out the bags and baskets brimming with banished toys. At first the kids didn't catch on. They know that diving into those closets is a big no-no so they were probably waiting for me to be struck by lightning. But then the truth slowly started to dawn and it was like Christmas morning. In about one minute flat the previously tidy play room floor was littered with toys and looking like Times Square after a ticker tape parade. The declarations of joy and rapture coming from my kids were merely dimmed by the whooshing sound of my sanity flying out the window. 

To deal with all of this stuff I decided to go ahead and get rid of anything the kids completely ignored as I pulled it out of the closet. That took care of a garbage bag full of stuffed animals. Next I exercised some motherly discretion and pulled out a box worth of toys that were pretty much always ignored. Those two culls left way more than I still wanted to have, but one side of my heart was feeling all mushy from hearing how happy my kids were to see their stuff, and I decided that if I could just get it organized and everything could have a home, then maybe it would be okay. That is one big maybe. But I gave it a go, gathering baskets and boxes and bins to try and contain all the tiny pieces. 

Getting my daughter's toys sorted and stored took the measure of strength equivalent to that needed to traverse the Himalayas. That done, I called rest time and betook myself to the couch where I renewed my strength with a bag of kettle corn and a phone call to my mom. And took the time to write this blog. Which isn't really about clutter. At least not toy clutter.

This blog is about a heart that is cluttered with selfishness and idolatry. A heart that has valued controlling the amount of stuff that my kids have access to more than it has valued teaching them good stewardship. A heart that feels smug and accomplished when it should feel compassionate and helpful. 

Not a very nice heart.

Nevertheless, it is a heart that is loved. A heart restored by sacrifice not of it's own. A heart sought, purchased, and won for eternal possession. A heart with a second chance, and a third chance, and a millionth chance to be kind, to be humble, to be selfless. 

So after rest time, I'm going to continue sorting and storing. But I'll do it with a sense of joy, not martyrdom. I'll smile with my kids as they create new games with their newly found toys, and at the end of the day I'll help them sort it all again and put it away. I will love them by allowing them this joy, this cluttery, inconvenient joy.

Because that's the kind of heart I want them to have, so that is the kind of heart they must see.

Monday, August 21, 2017

Greater Light

I'm just going to come right out and say it: The eclipse freaked me out a little bit. Maybe it's because I didn't have themed snacks, or a nifty viewer. I just had my son and the view from my front porch. But as I watched the shadows of the trees swallow my lawn, and the quality of the light dim to the point where the very air seemed to be effected, I confess I only felt a sense of unease. I shake my head at myself. I am a self-professed space nerd, and even aspired to being an astronomer in my youth (back when dreams weren't determined by the number of math credits I would need). But for some reason I just couldn't hop on the train this time, and the excitement everyone else seemed to feel over the eclipse just rolled right off me. 

But it wasn't a completely lost experience for me. Because, like so many other things in my life, it brought me back to Jesus. He's the greatest light. He can never be eclipsed. He never wavers. His Father is my Father, the Father of lights who is never shadowed, the Giver of all good gifts. Even freakish and unnerving eclipses. So maybe I wasn't excited about it, but I'm thankful I experienced it, and even MORE thankful that the same God who created those massive bodies and governs their paths through space, is the same God who created me and guides and protects my path on earth. Although I aspire to reflect His glory now, like the moon does the light of the sun, I hasten the day when I am fully swallowed up by His holiness and awesome purity, when I am remade and may dwell with Him forever. Amen and Amen.

Thursday, March 2, 2017

A Late Tribute

(At the time I wrote this, I just couldn't get the words right. It all came together today. I hope you enjoy it.)

My husband's grandfather passed away last week. In black and white that doesn't look like much, but it was. He was old, and sick, and weak. Well, his body was. But his spirit was still strong and vibrant, and every inch the man that my husband grew up loving and admiring. The man whose eyes glittered with life, and whose voice rang out strong with a warm welcome to "Come in! Come in!" The man who stood up in the pew at church and clutched a closed Bible to his chest because he knew the words by heart as he gave them forth to the congregation. The man who was born on the same day as my daughter, 89 years earlier. The man who inspired respect and admiration, not just for the years he had lived, but because of how he had lived them. This wasn't just any man. This was our BoBo. And we miss him.

To pay our respects and remember his life with other family members required a trip to southeast Missouri, to the town where my husband lived his boyhood, where his grandparents are living their last days. We've been back to visit several times since we married, and though I always enjoy the time we have with family, I've never particularly liked the journey to get there. But this time was a little different. Maybe because my heart was tender and my eyes were a little red with grief, or perhaps because life has been so busy lately that the monotonous hours in the car finally allowed my mind to be at rest, for whatever reason, I found reasons to smile, and admire, and wonder along those many, many miles. 

We traveled many county highways and country roads past fields upon fields of toasted corn stalks and verdant soy plants. The farm houses, with their tidy yards and soaring silver silos never grew old to me; the orderliness of it all had it's own kind of beauty. Most of the fields were uniform, either the dry corn plants, stooping in the sun, or the low and lush soy. But one set of fields defied the norm, with rogue corn plants sprouting like undiscovered geysers from the surrounding soy. Those corn plants were still green and straight, unwilling to bow to the cycle of farm life. That's perseverance for you. And downright rebellion. And hope.

Along the way we stopped at a place I've visited only once before, a tiny state park nestled in a sliver of Illinois. On my first trip to Missouri, on a very cold day in December, my future husband and I stopped and took our picture here. I was in awe at being in the very place where the Mississippi and Ohio Rivers meet, and wanted to document the fact that we were there. It remains one of my favorite pictures of us. 



This time when we stopped, we were joined by our two children, and it was a fresh experience. The rivers were full of barges and noisy tugboats and everything about the landscape seemed to have changed. We found some beautifully sun-bleached trees that the kids climbed on. My son, as most 5 year-old boys, enjoyed throwing rocks in the rivers, lamenting when he missed because I wouldn't allow him closer to the water. I pointed out the spot where you can see the currents of the two rivers meeting, to convey some of the wonder in that moment in that place, but I'm not sure it worked. No matter. That's the magic I find in that place. Perhaps his magic was found somewhere else, in the soil beneath the rocks he pried free, or the heft of those rocks in his hand, or the arc they made as they traveled down the overgrown bank. 



On this trip to honor the dead I was reminded again of all the humor and grandeur and beauty that comes with living. Whether it's roguish stalks of corn or mighty rivers meeting or my children's hair shining in the sun, there is so much to see, to wonder at, to be thankful for in this life, even in the face of death.