Showing posts with label Life Happens.... Show all posts
Showing posts with label Life Happens.... Show all posts

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

a scent story


This poor photograph is a bit ragged,
but the cherubic cheerleader in the center would be me, circa 1972.

I'm at the YMCA this morning.  The sun is not up, neither am I, really.  I begin pedaling, plug in earphones, stare out at the dark north Austin street.  Inhale, exhale, inhale. I daydream I'm in high school again, entering the gymnasium, cinder block walls painted in two colors.   The smell is a mixture of rubber and body odor. Three sounds mingle with the remembered odors:  the sound that sneakers make eeking across a polished floor, the creak of metal bleachers, the buzz of the always-flickering fluorescent lights overhead. Just outside the double metal doors someone's choosing a Coke out of the machine and the can clunks down the chute.  Someone's leaning over the porcelain drinking fountain, slurping water, wiping drips of drink and swat with the collar of their cotton T-shirt.  

My grandmother tells the story of a time I, younger than five, took a nap at her house.  As the story goes, I sprang up mid-slumber hollering DE-FENSE! I guess I've loved a thriving gymnasium since I was the toddler cheerleading mascot of the basketball team my daddy coached, to the years I sweated my face crimson cheering for our school's team (go, Cougars!), to the years I sat in the bleachers as the coach's wife, making my own toddlers behave and trying to ignore the parents grumbling each decision my husband, the coach, made. 

All this reminiscing because I caught a whiff of body odor and sound of sneakers slapping floor in the Y's basketball court.  And, maybe also, because it's September reminding some dormant inner clock that it's time to hit the gym.

How about you?  Tell me about a scent that transports you to another time and place.

Saturday, August 17, 2013

upon 2 years in Austin [a week late]

I wrote this on Sunday, August 11 and kept trying to find time to edit all week. Finally deciding to just go ahead and publish with my apologies for a teensy bit of naval-gazing.

House #1

Two years ago today, August 11, 2011, we drove the last stretch of a 1,650 mile trek from upstate New York to central Texas.  For three days our two-car caravan -- parents driving the front vehicle, sons driving the back vehicle -- zig-zagged west across the southern tier of New York state, south through the wildflowers and Bible-thumping billboards of Ohio.  After a leisurely lunch in the Over the Rhine neighborhood of Cincinnati, we wheeled across the Ohio river into Kentucky, sleeping in Louisville one night and Memphis the next.  Our last day, August 11, we drove over the Mississippi River from Memphis into Arkansas.  Other than a few moments around Little Rock's skyline Arkansas was 500 miles of rice fields and trucks.  We almost missed the signs announcing we'd crossed over into Texas, our new home.

The several times we've driven this route, we've built up an unexplicable loathing for that bridge carting us from the streets of Memphis to the rice fields of Arkansas.  Today I wonder if that's because leaving the Tennessee border leaves behind the last vestiges of landscape that feel even mildly familiar to our northeast.  New York doesn't have blue grass, but it does have rolling green hills, doesn't have the Mississippi delta, but has the Hudson and the Susquehanna and the Chenango and the Delaware and the St. Lawrence.  New York doesn't have one single flat landscape.  Not one cactus, scorpion, longhorn steer or cloudless sky.  New York does not have brown grass and neighborhoods that burn down from drought-induced fire.  Cross the stark state line from Arkansas into Texarkana, Texas  could have been leaving planet earth for all our experience of 100+ degree temperatures, limestone and brown fields.  If it weren't for the ubiquitous McDonald's greeting us on I-30 nothing about that state crossing would have been recognizable to me as "home".

Even now, I feel silly saying so.  But in two years living in Austin, I know my best moments of my best days have been the ones I could close one eye and squint at a landscape and make it look familiar.  In the fall, it's the days I walk a sidewalk and find enough fallen brown leaves to crunch under my shoes.  I can close both eyes then and just hear home.  In winter it's the days my husband allows me to crank up the air conditioning so we can light a wood fire, close the blinds and pretend we're getting warm from some ghost of a howling wind.  Then I can close both eyes and feel home. Summer is unspeakable; we drive out of Texas like a mess of Austin's infamous Mexican free-tailed bats.  


field of April bluebonnets, Belton, TX

Ahhh, but spring.  Spring in Texas I wander around wide-eyed at the wonder of non-humid sunshine and squares of wildflowers quilting the entire sorry landscape with simple glad beauty.  Spring wins me over.  Spring keeps me here.  

Spring and the whims of an unpredictable God.  

When Brian finished his degree while I took care of four babies at home we predicted he'd get a teaching job in a school we'd stay in forever.  Looked forward to the years our children would pass through his history classes in middle school.  I picked out our first home in that small town of 5,000 neighbors and two stop lights almost entirely for the long staircase banister I could imagine our kids posing for their prom pictures.  At the time they were 4, 6, 8 and 10.  

Now we live in a city with 400 times more neighbors than our first house.  We took prom pictures of our son under the branches of a gnarly live oak tree.   New York state does not grow this tree.  New York's trees are intoxicated with rainwater and never need gnarl themselves around to suck up drops of water from arid soil.


spring flowers growing in limestone, Belton, TX

The first months we lived in Texas, Brian took to quoting Clark W. Griswold: "If I woke up tomorrow with my head stapled to the carpet I wouldn't be more surprised than I am right now." Two years in and this still sounds about right.

At a family gathering when our oldest son was  twelve, he prayed a prayer we've never forgotten:  "Thank you, God, that you are so unpredictable."  Yes, the God who surprises us led us through twenty years of marriage thinking we would be one sort of family and in the last three years has totally upended what we thought.

For starters, I said I'd never marry a pastor.  Now my husband spends every waking free hour completing a seminary degree and various requirements for ordination in the coming year, all while serving as Executive Pastor at Christ Church of Austin. Three words in his title alone surprise me as much as a staple to the head. There's the Pastor title and then there's Christ Church.  I grew up distrusting all denominations, flinging my non-denominational freedoms like some sort of suffragette.  Six months ago I was confirmed in the Anglican communion.  When my husband is ordained he will be an Anglican PRIEST!  Priest was almost a curse word where I grew up.

This is all so hilarious I keep forgetting to laugh.


Brian's confirmation, February 2013

So now we're Anglican and Brian's going to be a priest.  And we live in Austin. For years we lived with a community of people who loved us so well, we still can't believe they don't hang out with us on the weekends.  

Truth is they loved us well, but they could not name us in this calling. It's taken almost every single day of the last two years for me to accept this fact.  One of the men who loved us best laughed the last time I talked to him and asked why he'd never affirmed Brian as a pastor.  He still didn't see it  

Maybe for the same reason prophets get sent to caves to hear the still small voice, we got re-planted on the surface of the sun as a better option.  May our limbs grow gnarly sucking all the life-giving liquid out of this place.  And, in the process, adding to its beauty.

Quercus fusiformis : the live oak at the Alamo, San Antonio


I've struggled these two years feeling like we gave up too soon.  I'm pretty sure some of my closest friends in New York would agree with that statement. We were unemployed with four kids.  Maybe we should have stuck it out?  I'm pretty sure that community of friends and family would have supported us until Brian found some sort of income.  And, maybe Brian would have landed a teaching job -- even though half the degreed teachers we knew were underemployed or facing layoffs.  Maybe that shouldn't have mattered.  Maybe sticking with friends was the most important thing.  Maybe Brian shouldn't have offered up his ministry job on the layoff block when our church budget made a beeline for the red?  Maybe he should have rallied support, forced his way onto the payroll.  Maybe he should have thrown over a few tables like I often begged him to do during our sleepless, late night arguments.  

Maybe so.  Right this moment I'd be sitting in my favorite spot -- at the back of our sanctuary, pleading with God to make Himself known to us in our corporate worship. Maybe then I'd know that lunch would be predictable, our kids' weekend social life would be predictable.  I'd have a wealth of options to help me get them to all the places they needed to be during the coming week -- aunts, grandmothers, co-workers.  I'd be able to pick and choose my own set of unpredictable decisions.  Whose bonfire would we hang out at this weekend?  What cross-country social connection would I make through the amazing unseen world wide web?

Just that one decision. That one unpredictable connection opened the door for us to move to Austin.  I guess we're never completely free from the whims of our sovereign Lord.  No.  We did not give up too soon.  We would have had to slam the door in God's face to stay in New York.  This is the truth of it.  



While I write these words I'm sitting on the ninth floor of the same hotel we stayed in when we first landed here. I'm looking at a river green and brown and low.  This morning I walked alongside, straight under the bridge that houses for the summer those million and a half Mexican bats.  My head was down and I didn't realize I was walking underneath, reflecting on the two years we'd lived here and simultaneously trying to figure out why Austin in summer smells like bat guano. 

Kayakers and people standing on boards paddling themselves downstream make colorful slashes in the water.  Weird Austin people who behave like sunbathing in 106 degree weather is nothing.  I am not one of them yet.  Maybe never.  I mean who knows how long we'll actually live here?  Maybe our unpredictable Sender has plans for the other side of the world.  Or New Jersey.  This month He's sending one of my best friends and her family to Africa, via France.  I'm pretty sure she'll be surprised for a long, long time.  




-----------epilogue-------------

The afternoon of our second anniversary in Austin a glorious, mundane Sunday afternoon. Our son and his girlfriend chauffeur us home, with a stop along the way at a local pancake house.  He's returning to Houston for year two of college, eager for new grace in a new year.  We pray blessing over the two of them, anoint their hopes with benediction and lemon poppyseed syrup.


We watch golf. Doze on the couch. Wait out the sweaty sun for our evening walk.  New friends moved into the neighborhood over a month ago and we want to welcome them.  I fill a paper sack with symbolic housewarming gifts:  bread (that no one be hungry), salt (that your lives be full of flavor) and wine (that your work and friendships prosper).  I add a bar of dark chocolate for good measure.  It's a tradition from Jews, Christians and fans of Frank Capra.


We walk the five neighborhood blocks to introduce ourselves, sit until dark on their front porch sipping the cheap wine we gave them, swatting mosquitoes and swapping our "moving to Austin" stories.  


"How long have you been here?"


"Two years.  Two years today, actually."


"And how'd you get here all the way from New York?"


We give the brief version because Brian's got an early morning flight and the mosquitoes are biting.  We include the painful layoff at our former church, the year Brian taught as a long-term substitute teacher knowing he was supposed to be a pastor, the weekend prayer retreat with good friends confirming we would not attempt to leave New York until all four of our children graduated from high school.  The time I just happened to listen to a sermon from my friend's church in Austin, the one where the rector just happened to mention the goal to hire an Executive Pastor.  The sending a resume on a whim.  The moving our entire family to Austin less than three months later. The three houses we've moved in two years.


House #3


Our short answer could have been, "The unpredictable God sent us here."

I couldn't have planned a better two-year celebration.  We hug good-bye, talk about our next get-together -- hopefully soon -- carry empty wine glasses into the kitchen.


And then Brian and I walk home.




Monday, July 22, 2013

Because it's time.



I think I say this every year -- and why not?  We are so ready for vacation.  Even in this new way of life which involves us having to drive a gazillion hours and sleep on couches and floors no where near anything resembling a resort, even with that we are ready for vacation.  For years I've known that sometimes we need to pray more fervently for protection over planned times of rest than any other endeavor.  I believe it more firmly now when planned times of rest include 3,400 miles driving cross country (non-stop, thank you very much) and hopes for sweet reunions with family and friends.

This year's reunions include meeting our new niece Ellie for the very first time.  And for saying good-bye to one of my dearest friends for the very last time before her family moves across the world.  

So, we pause in our packing for prayers.  I'm especially for these words of blessing a friend prayed over our family yesterday:

A Blessing on Someone's Journey
from Celtic Daily Prayer

I bless you, Murphys,
in the name of the Holy Three,
the Father, the Son and the Sacred Spirit,
May you drink deeply
from God's cup of joy.
May the night bring you quiet.
And when you come 
to the Father's palace
may His door be open and the welcome warm.

Friday, February 22, 2013

On having four kids in six years and THEN forming a theology for procreation....


This was the way my friend Micha Boyett (aka, Mama:Monk) promoted my guest post to her facebook friends.  I loved it.  
"My parents’ parents didn’t talk about sex. My parents began the conversation, but either they weren’t speaking above a whisper or I wasn’t listening. I managed to have my first son three days shy of nine months from the first time I ever had sex. When he was born I still wasn’t sure I’d ever had it. I didn’t care. I flew the kite of that beautiful baby boy for all the world to see." (read the rest)
I'm grateful for Micha's invitation to share my story as part of her weekly series: One Good Phrase.  She has a gift not only in sharing her own words, but in welcoming words from others.  I want to be like her  and have begun dreaming up my own ideas for welcoming your words here.


One Good Phrase: Tamara Hill Murphy (You trust God to keep you safe at night, but you still lock the doors.)






While you're visiting her don't miss the previous entries in the series:

One Good Phrase: God loves you and so do I (Christine Gough)

One Good Phrase: Daddy Loves You (Ed Cyzewski)

One Good Phrase: No Matter What (Joy Bennett)This post had special meaning for me as our kids enter adulthood and I get to practice some of the "no matter what" scenarios on a daily basis.

One Good Phrase: Peace of Christ be with you always (Seth Haines) 


Two little "appendices" to the story:

1.  I mentioned that honeymoon babies were "pretty much legendary" in my family. 

Here's the lineup of three generations:

  • My father was born 10 months and 10 days after his parents were married 
  • I was born 9 months and 4 days after my parents were married
  • Our son was born 3 days short of 9 months after we were married (to be fair he was four days early)

2.  I leave with you this 23-year-old treasure -- proving that during our engagement Brian and I probably spent more time thinking about our pictures for the newspaper than family planning . (and I certainly spent more time on my hair!)





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Friday, January 27, 2012

7 quick takes! a photo diary



For some reason that I haven't determined, writing new posts on this blog has been slow and difficult the past couple weeks.  Not sure why other than my brain is plain old tired out.  And my life is full.  

Here's seven photos from our full life this past week....

--- 1 ---


This is a photo of tonight's dinner sponsored and prepared by our 20-year-old son, Andrew.  Yes, that's a ribeye (the best steak I've eaten in a very long time).  Also, a mozzarella/orzo/tomato salad and a sweet potato/carrot/turnip/almond/parmesan cheese veggie mixture.  Total delciousness!

Every time you hear me complain about Andrew eating up all my favorite breakfast granola, would you please remind me of this photo? K, thanks.



--- 2 ---


Yes, he managed to purchase a steak dinner for a family of six the same week he bought his first car.  It's good to be young and gainfully employed.  Of course, the car almost caught fire this morning so that's where the good part ends and the "welcome to the responsibilities of adulthood" begin.  We take great comfort in the fact that we've met more lawyers than we can count since moving to Austin and plan to remind the car salesman of this fact in case he tries anything tricky on us.  In the meantime, we're trying to find out if Texas has "lemon laws"?


--- 3 ---

We made some changes to the dining room when we put away our Christmas decorations.  It's amazing how much Scrabble playing happens around here by just setting out the board and letters on the dining room table.  By the way, this particular game was being played right in the middle of a weekday.  Just some photographic proof of this strangely wonderful "bonus season" I've been given.

--- 4 ---


Slowly, but surely, the kids' social calendars are beginning to fill up. They might be several years younger, but Alex had the best time hanging out with these guys all Sunday afternoon. Here they are commemorating his first bite of a P.Terry's all-natural burger.  

--- 5 ---

Brian preached his first sermon at Christ Church.  I was given a special sneak preview on Saturday afternoon.  You can see that Duchess is quite convicted (yes, she insisted at sitting by Brian's feet while he ran through the whole sermon).

If you'd like to hear for yourself, the sermon is posted online here.


--- 6 ---


This is Brian putting the finishing touches on his sermon.  I may get in serious trouble for sharing this photo.  As Brian's new favorite saying goes:  It's good to be Anglican.


--- 7 ---


It's also good to be Texan. At least in January.  Like the afternoon the girls and I walked around the Lady Bird Johnson Wildlife Center without needing coats or boots or scarves or gloves.  

We definitely could get used to this....


For more Quick Takes, visit Conversion Diary!

Saturday, October 29, 2011

7 Quick Takes!


I said I didn't have energy to write anything, but 7 Quick Takes should be manageable, yes?
Here we go...


--- 1 ---
I'm learning the advantages to homeschooling an eighth grader as opposed to, say, an 8-year-old.  She can come to my room, sit next to me on the bed and read to me.  


--- 2 ---
In a strange turn of events, during this World Series that no Yankees were present, we found ourselves Texas residents flying into Missouri the night of game 7.  We ate at Applebee's in Kansas City and enjoyed watching all the Cards fans (and one or two misplaced Rangers fans) hollering at the televisions.
--- 3 ---
So, we're in Kansas City all week for a Living Waters training conference.  Brian's been putting up with my hacking up a lung all night long at home in our queen-sized bed.  We're now downgraded to a double.  The poor, poor man.  I drove to the nearest Wal-Greens this morning and loaded up my basket with every kind of cough suppressing, sleep inducing remedy I thought I could take together and not die.  Although, that would at least give my husband some peace and quiet.


--- 4 ---
I may or may not have time to blog during this week.  We'll see.  Since the main activity at one of these events is akin to scooping around one's inner organs with a cold spoon, anything I do have time to write should be pretty angsty.  We'll see.


--- 5 ---
While I'm here, I also hope to write a submission for Christ Church's advent devotional.  Only Brian had scheduled activities today so I got all my source books and journal and pens out, arranged them neatly on the desk in the lodge room, took cough syrup and promptly took a four hour nap.  Maybe something of advent -- longing and hope intertwined -- could come from that scenario?
--- 6 ---
My kids spent the day back in Austin handing out doughnuts to strangers on Guadalupe (also known as UT's drag).  When I talked with my daughter afterward, she said it was fun but worried about the diabetics who couldn't eat the sugar.  Hopefully, it's the thought that counts in random  kindness, also?


--- 7 ---
A couple of weeks ago, I told you about the bake sale our small group sponsored to raise money for the Ethiopian mission to widows and orphans, Bring Love In.  The good news is that we raised over $1,100 toward the opening of a new Forever Family home!  I found this video about the mission and thought you'd enjoy it, too.  


Bring Love In from Kurt Neale on Vimeo.

Have a good week!

For more Quick Takes, visit Conversion Diary!








Thursday, October 27, 2011

sick and tired

I've been sick.  Again.  I'd hoped to avoid seasonal allergies and ever-close companion of sinus infection now that we live in Texas.  Since I've been sick three times in two months, it seems this will not be so.  This means I don't have much energy to write. Anything.  Not grocery lists, not facebook statuses (stati?), not article submissions.  Certainly not blog posts.  I have plenty of material to blog, but no energy.  In case anyone is worried, Natalie is still learning and doing plenty of school work.  I'm just not writing about it.

I'll be back as soon as I feel better because I miss our chats here.

In the meantime, here's a quiet little video for you to enjoy.




credit:  The Kid Should See This

Doesn't it make you happy to know that somebody in the world has enough creativity, ingenuity and time to make a lookout tower for their koi?

Friday, October 07, 2011

7 Quick Takes!



Here we go....
--- 1 ---
It feels like I spent almost every waking moment this week either reading books, gathering more books to read, or writing about reading books.  In other words, it's been a perfectly heavenly week.


--- 2 ---
Brian's on his first golf outing since we moved to Austin.  I'm hoping he's having a marvelous time to make up for the fact that baseball season is over for us.  [read here for Brian's ode to NY from last October]


--- 3 ---
Natalie's officially completed her first week of homeschooling, aka The Great Homeschooling Experiment.  You know what?  We had a great week.  I feel really lucky to be able to have extra time together this year.  I'm going to keep posting the daybook posts until I run out of time -- or willpower -- to continue.  Feel free to read or ignore (unless you happen to be one of Natalie's relatives, than I expect you to keep track of every detail of her progress!)  I think the post helps me stay accountable.  Plus, I may be trying to make up for how poorly I did keeping up with Natalie's baby details.  It kills her -- and me--  that I can't remember her first word and that I didn't WRITE IT DOWN!  


--- 4 ---

 I'm keenly aware that this season of having all four kids still under one roof is running out of days quickly.  I'm trying to pay attention to all these moments together, even the annoying ones when my 20-year-old son eats up my favorite breakfast granola and my Alex plays guitar too loudly in the morning. (don't tell Kendra, but I couldn't think of one single thing that she does annoying enough to add to this list!)  I want to be present to all of it. 


--- 5 ---
It's Columbus Day weekend and I'm kind of mourning the Northeast.  I will say that Texas weather has been practically perfect in every way for the past week or so (if only it would rain to make the grass green again!).  But, there's nothing quite like upstate New York in October.  I had to google "Central Texas" + "pumpkin patch" to try to find somewhere nearby for our annual tradition of trekking through the fat and happy gourds of autumn.  To make it a little more tricky, I was trying to find a pumpkin farm en route to meet up with my cousin and his family who live in Temple.  We found ONE location, but it's in Temple!  She told me to not "expect the Northeast" but I figure even if the pumpkins are disappointing, Jared & Natalie's kids are so adorable we won't even notice.  Should be fun.   I imagine I'll be posting some pics here next week.


--- 6 ---
I'm trying to figure out where and when and how to keep pursuing publication.  I'm kind of hooked now that I got to see my name in "print" last week.  Any suggestions??


--- 7 ---
I've been waiting for the right time to post this video and just haven't gotten to it yet.  Figure now's as good a time as ever.  Granted, it's about a half hour long, so it's not for the merely curious.  But for those who consider themselves (a)  fans of my children OR (b) fans of my sons' band Where's Ulysses, OR just plain old (c) addicted to humouring me, spend some time strolling through this video.  Tyler must have spent hours combing footage of the bands last year of shows together, piecing together a kind of farewell/highlight reel.  In my opinion, he did a fantastic job with both audio and video editing -- way to go, Ty! (even if we do have to see your droopy drawers on the screen capture thumbnail)


By the way, in case you haven't heard, you can download their free farewell EP, Surplus, at their bandcamp site.


Happy weekend, y'all!




For more Quick Takes, visit Conversion Diary!

Wednesday, October 05, 2011

bookish rebellion


Pretty much every  morning of my entire nineteen-years living with my parents, I shuffled down the stairs toward the kitchen and walked past my mother sitting in the middle of our living room couch, surrounded by books.  Bibles, dictionaries, journals, prayerbooks mounded from floor to cushion, end to end, cocooning my mom in their sagacious comfort.  With one hand she held a colored highlighter and the other her ever-rewarmed mug of tea, and with her words she welcomed me to the beauty of a new day. There are many things I learned from my mom, many things I've tried to duplicate, but none more than her love for the written word, generally; for the inspired Word, specifically.

My mother instilled the love of all things bookish into me; now I have the sheer delight of passing that along to my own children.  Just last week, Andrew and I visited the main branch of the Austin Public library.  I kid you not when I tell you that I made Drew pull the car up to the curb because we had so many items it took me two trips back and forth from the front desk to get all of our books and music and movies out of the library and into our grubby little hands.  I swear I heard the hippie couple sitting on the outside bench snicker at me when I trudged by, lugging my treasure to the car.  Or maybe they were just disgusted with us for all the carbon gas we emitted into the air idling our car so long at the curb.  Either way, I slammed the door quick and ordered Drew to "Just drive!" so we could get out of there fast.  I think the tires squealed a bit entering Guadalupe.  Drew and I should not be allowed to go to the library together without supervision.

Faulk Central branch of the Austin Public Library

It may be telling to say that the last instance of "corporal punishment" on which I was the receiving end was directly linked to visiting the library.  I had been told that I did not need another library card at the new library we were visiting.  Somehow, I'd managed to pull the unsuspecting librarian aside and go through the whole procedure without my dad noticing.  The justice delivered to my little backside was not because of the card, just the sneaking around and lying to my parents part of it.  I knew I deserved punishment, but I didn't really regret getting the card.

To this day, Brian has to lecture me when I head out the door.  Some women do shopping therapy; I do libraries. I think there's still a library in our hometown up north that has a picture of me behind the counter in case I try to take out more books without cleaning up my late fees.  

I was supposed to be writing about Studying the Word and this turned into a confessional.  I don't have time to write more because a new stack of homeschooling books just showed up at my door....


Thursday, March 03, 2011

a *&(#&*)$& kind of week


Translated:  a terrible, horrible, no-good, very bad week in which I've decided to retreat for awhile, drink beer and watch cooking shows on my television.  I'll be back next week.  If you don't see me here by Monday, send help.
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