Go Where There Is Good

Dear Friends,

I know.

I know how hard it is to hear of another tragic event happening in our world. I know what it’s like to be struggling with why right now. I know what it’s like to be hurting. I know what it’s like to question your Faith and your God and to wonder if there is anything kind left on this planet we call home.

I know.

There are days where it all falls on top of you and you have to be the bad guy at work or at home or with your spouse. There are days when you turn on the TV and turn it right back off again because you just can’t take the media bickering and the catastrophe of bad news.

I know.

I know that there are social media bombardments for you to pick a side, to take up arms and fight, to shout out your opinion as loud as possible so everyone can hear your outrage.

I know.

Not too long ago I struggled with these things too. I felt like I was drowning in the sea of negativity that is constantly swirling in our world. There were difficult times before Hugh’s diagnosis of Type 1 Diabetes, of course, but his diagnosis was almost more than I could bear. The fact that my young son was diagnosed with such a cruel and un-forgiving disease was confirmation for me that the world was bad, and more specifically, out to get me.

I was angry. And everywhere I looked, for those first few months, I saw bad and evil and wrongs. Through my eyes blurred with tears and through the fears in my heart, I only saw the worst.

But I just couldn’t stay there. Maybe it’s the way I’m hard-wired. Maybe it’s the copious amounts of coffee I drink. Maybe I’m just goofy from lack of sleep.  Or maybe, just maybe, I had to go where there is good.

My grandparents own a farm in rural Mississippi and even though my grandfather has passed away, my grandmother still lives on the farm and we visit her often. Our Mississippi family has now spread out all over the country and spans the globe, but at any given moment, there is a house full of relatives and friends spending time on the farm. There are doctors and teachers, preachers and bankers, architects, engineers, nurses, therapists, students, and young children mingling around. There are people from different races, ethnicities, and countries, people who speak several languages, people who are Baptist and Methodist and Catholic. There are people who grew up in poverty, people who grew up in privilege, people who were educated in the best institutions in the country, and people who were educated in the rural schools of the South. When I wake up in the morning, there is usually already a group walking to the small pond, someone going fishing, a deep conversation happening on the porch, and there is always, always something wonderful cooking in the kitchen.

The sky is bigger there. The food tastes better. Colors are more vibrant and the stars are endless. The smells are a mixture of pine and grass and sweet potatoes roasting in the oven. And there, right there, in the middle of nowhere, there is good.

A few months after Hugh’s diagnosis of Type 1 Diabetes, we took the kids to visit in Mississippi and for the first time, I felt like I could breathe. As I looked around the kitchen table at the odd assortment of people who call each other family, I remember thinking “This. Is. Good.”

And do you know what? It didn’t matter that Hugh had been diagnosed with Diabetes. As painful and difficult as that was, we were still there, eating biscuits sticky with syrup, reading the morning paper, laughing over a story together. The goodness was there and it always will be.

For decades now, people have been loved and nourished around that kitchen table. It didn’t matter what language they spoke, what their background was, who they voted for or what country they voted in – they were all welcomed and accepted. When I think of God’s love in human form, I often think of that table with my grandmother serving food and loving generation after generation, NO MATTER WHAT.

Dear friends, listen to me closely. There is so much good in the world. Sometimes I get weepy just thinking about it. There are people sacrificing for each other. There are families saying I will love you despite our difficulties and fears. There are thousands of volunteers every day feeding the hungry or advocating for children or giving their time and money for no other reason than it is the right thing to do.

So what do you do when the negativity seems to overwhelm you? When all you see is anger and fighting? I think the answer is very simple.

Go where there is good.

A rural farmhouse in Mississippi is not the only place where there is good. Step out of your box. Go serve a meal to the homeless. Sit on the back pew of a church somewhere and listen to the words of an old hymn. Volunteer to help children with special needs. Park yourself on a back porch with friends and laugh until the sun goes down.

Go where there is good.

Visit the sick in the hospital. Offer to sing at a nursing home. Invite all of your friends and your kids’ friends over for a night around a campfire. Share a meal with your family and for heaven’s sake, TURN OFF THE TV and PUT DOWN YOUR PHONES.

Go where there is good.

Remind yourself that there is still  good in the world and that it is all around.  But if you still can’t see it, come with me down a country road to a place where I know it exists. We will give you biscuits and a little bit of cornbread and black-eyed peas, and a whole lot of God’s love. And that might just help you open your eyes.

Love, Sally

P.S. Wallace Stegner writes in his book Crossing to Safety of a large family – “Happily, eagerly, they expanded their circle and let us in. Professors, diplomats, editors, bureaucrats, brokers, missionaries, biologists, students, they had been most places in the world and loved no other place as they loved Battell Pond. Their loyalties were neither national nor regional nor political nor religious, but tribal.”

The farm in Mississippi is my Battell Pond and the tribe is based solely on the fact that we know we are loved. I hope you have your own Battell Pond and that you feel God’s Beautiful Love when you are there. Find your place. Go there often – but don’t stay there. Go back out and share that goodness with others. The world is so desperate for it. 

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Why I Chose to Say No This Summer

If  you are familiar with reading music, you know that there is a symbol for rest that means no music is played on that beat. The Merriem-Webster dictionary defines this symbol as a rhythmic silence in music. Musicians know that the rests are just as important as the notes when playing a piece of music. Without the rests, the music would not be the same. We need the silence to hear the melody.

This is my Summer of No.

I know what you’re thinking. That’s right, I name my summers.

I have had the Summer of Peurto Rico. One of my favorite summers of all time, that summer was marked with not only a vacation to the beautiful island, but lots of Latin music in our home, many attempts at food and drinks native to Peurto Rico, and days spent daydreaming about how I could move there permanently.

There was the Summer of Oh Yes We Can Do That, which was the summer after Hugh’s diagnosis of Type 1 Diabetes. I made sure we took a beach vacation, participated in all summer activities, and did everything we normally would do just to prove that we still could. It was overwhelming and exhausting at times, but I knew we needed that summer as a family to prove to ourselves there were still happy times ahead.

I have had the Summer of Fun, where I planned secret missions and exciting outings for us to do every week. I hid notes around the house with special instructions or an itinerary for the day. Since the kids were still young, it wasn’t anything too outrageous – the anticipation was the most fun of all.

But this Summer? I chose to name this summer THE SUMMER OF NO.

Last summer (which was the Summer of Adventure if you’re interested), I felt it necessary and absolutely essential to cram every single week with something for my kids to do. Travelling, camps, lessons, paddelboarding (ok, that one was for me) – if my kids were interested, sign us up please. Even if they weren’t interested, go ahead and sign us up anyway. What other way is there to learn and grow if we don’t try it all?

I’m sure some of you can guess what happened at the end of our summer. We were exhausted and cranky. And of course, we all got sick the week before school started. The Summer of Adventure had almost killed us.

At the end of the summer and amidst two sick kids, I remember looking out our kitchen window toward the pool and thinking, “How many times did we get to swim together this summer?” Eight, maybe ten times total. One of our favorite things we enjoyed doing in the summer as a family, and we hadn’t even made time for it. We were too busy to be together.

As the kids entered their 1st and 3rd grade school years, and I entered my 11th year as a teacher, we were all unhealthy, tired, and had very little tans. We continued with health problems throughout the year, and I felt like I was always playing catch up. We ended the year drained, and all I could imagine doing was sleeping for 48 hours straight.

That’s when I decided we needed The Summer of No.

I committed to only three activities for this summer that we felt like were essential for the kids and our family. That’s it. There was not one more thing I put on our calendar that we absolutely had to do.

And let me tell you, it was not easy. I said no to a lot of things we normally would have said yes to. But what I didn’t realize at the time was that by saying no to these things, I was saying yes to a lot more.

No to lessons, but yes to friends and family coming over on almost a daily basis.

No to camps, but yes to spending lazy afternoons in the pool with my kids.

No to extracurricular summer activities, but yes to having the time to read a book and actually finish it.

No to competitions, meets, and events, but yes to exercise and eating healthier.

No to obligating ourselves to one more party or one more trip or one more meeting, but yes to rest and restoration.

I have had the time to cook meals for my family. Amelia and I have made old-fashioned desserts together like lemon icebox and buttermilk pie. She joins me in the kitchen almost every morning for breakfast. Sometimes, if she’s lucky, I let her drink coffee with me and we take all the time we need together.

We have delighted in watching our small garden grow and flourish, and have had fun passing on the bounties of our harvest to friends and family.

We have lingered over long suppers with good friends at our dining room table, discussing our futures as we watch the summer sky fade to night and our kids run in the soft grass of our front lawn.

Scott and I have taken scenic drives with the truck windows rolled down and the music turned up.

I learned how to French braid Amelia’s hair.

I have washed approximately 352, 000 loads of beach towels and swimsuits.

I rode every single stinkin’ rollercoaster ride at Disneyland just so my kids could remember the summer when their mom did everything with them (I hope they remember it too, because I’m done forever with rollercoasters).

I have taken naps in the afternoon heat and stayed up too late and when I feel the urge to get busy and accomplish something, I stop and do a gut check. Am I rested? Yes. Am I healthier? Yes. Am I yelling at the kids or rushing off to another obligation? No.

And the kids? Well, Hugh has decided he is going to write a book. He has started several, but can’t quite finish them (a trait he has inherited from his mother, I’m afraid). Amelia has made friendship bracelets and practiced make-up techniques and designed a million different outfits with matching accessories. They have spent an abundant amount of time with their grandparents and cousins, have had friends over to play, made forts in the backyard, and have told me they are bored on more than one occasion.

Please don’t think that I am implying we have had the perfect summer – the kids have fought with each other and gotten mad at me and I have threatened to go on vacation without them. But overall, we are rested. We are well. And we are happy.

I am not naïve enough to think that all our summers will be relaxing and carefree. I realize that as our kids get older, they will be involved in more activities, and summer is the perfect time for them to hone their skills in certain areas. I am already trying to think of next summer and what I can name it. The Summer of Kitchen Renovation, perhaps???

And truthfully, I am a doer by nature. I like to set goals and then tackle them one by one. Part of me has felt a sense of urgency since Hugh’s diagnosis of Type 1 Diabetes to do it all and to prove to him that Diabetes can’t slow us down. One of the hardest things for me this summer would be when I would scroll through social media and see all the great things other kids and families were accomplishing. I would instantly think “Hugh could have done that” or “Did Amelia miss out on something important?” When I would run into friends around town and they would talk about how busy their summers had been with all the activities, I would have to swallow hard and resist the urge to exaggerate at how busy we had been.

In the South, summers can be competitive, and I would often have to remind myself that busyness was not a ribbon I needed to win.

Without the rests, the music would not be the same. We need the silence to hear the melody.

And so it is with life. We need the silence to hear the melody. The Summer of No has given me the rest I needed to hear the music in my life. My music sounds a lot like children laughing, crickets chirping in the cloak of night, splashes of water in the pool – your music might sound different, but I bet if you pay attention to the rest, you will be able to hear yours too. And if all of us listen very carefully and strain our ears to hear, our music might just be reminding us that this life we have looks an awful lot like the life we always wanted.

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My Faith is Broken

 

For years, my Dad has made small wooden cutouts of words during the Christmas season. He generally chooses a word for each year, such as “hope” or “home”, and makes hundreds of these little cutouts to give to friends and family. I have collected many over the years, of course, and have displayed them in different ways. Somehow, in the rearranging or dusting of the words, the word “faith” has gotten broken. Part of the “H” has fallen off and lays pitifully beside it. I dutifully try to wedge the “H” back into its proper place, but it always falls down again. My intentions are to glue it back together one day, but until then, my faith is broken.

It’s funny, but I usually say that to myself as I am dusting or walking by the words.

My Faith is Broken.

And do you know what? It’s true. Not just the word sitting on my shelf, but the faith that I walk in day in and day out.

My Faith is Broken.

It was broken when Hugh was diagnosed with Type 1 Diabetes. It was broken when I had two miscarriages. It was broken when we lost family members too soon. It’s been broken so many times I can’t even count and I’m sure it will be broken many more.

My Faith is Broken.

That’s the thing about faith. It keeps getting broken over and over. And I guess I could throw it away at any point. I could let the “H” fall off, and then the “T”, and then the “I”, until all the letters have crumbled away. But I don’t. I keep working at it and wedging the “H” back in place. I prop it up and display it proudly. I know it’s broken, and I’m ok with that.

You see, I don’t really think we can call it faith until we have seen it broken. It’s in the moments of our greatest despair, when we feel like God has abandoned us and we are all alone, that our faith becomes what it is. Stronger. Bolder. Forged together in hope and love.

My Faith is Broken.

We are all broken, dear friends. Some are hiding their brokenness. Some are moving on. Some are in their darkest moments of a broken faith.

But that’s also the beautiful thing about a faith that is broken. Once it happens in your life, you begin to recognize it in others.

My Faith is Broken.

And maybe yours is, too. But that’s ok. We’ll help you wedge the pieces back together and display it proudly. There’s no shame in a broken faith –  Only God’s Loving Hands, using His Grace to help us glue the “H” back in place, as many times as we need.

 

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