It was a bit of a heartbreaking Christmas. We, as a family, were grieving the loss of my grandmother. We also struggled to get our 4 kids the Christmas presents they asked for. Our finances are limited, so the younger kids decided to ask Santa for things we were not in a position to buy. Ugh! I learned what it meant to disappoint my child.
My eldest was given the short end of the stick. In the mix of things, her stocking and presents were pretty bare. The one thing I spent time picking out was the wrong color. "It's like you don't even know me!" Those words hit hard.
Of course, with any expressed emotions, we have the opportunity for discussion. After heartfelt apologies and attempts as making up, I shared my own experience of the same feeling. As I child, I had a very limited palate. I basically ate hamburgers and pizza. In my 20's, my palate expanded exponentially and I came to reject the basic American foods. Yet, when I was late for supper at a fine dining restaurant, my dad ordered me the hamburger. "It's what you always order." Yes, it's what I ordered 10 years ago. Not now.
It was heartbreaking for me to watch my father struggle in his confusion. I am one of those children who always aimed to please, so it was hard for me. In these confusing times, it is hard to find firm ground. It is even harder to recognize that maybe we don't always know the other person. Most parents are not willing to admit they don't really know their kids. Something in that can be very threatening for parents. I'm not sure why. It was easier for me to eat the hamburger with happiness than it was for us to spend time getting to know each other.
This is the same lament that I gave my Spiritual Director one day. I was in the midst of a huge upheaval with friends and I cried "I thought I knew her!". The Nun calmly replied with great wisdom "You knew her at a moment in time, but we all change. You are different, she is too." She was inviting me into a space that allowed me to grow, to change. It is a space that allows other the same opportunity. We humans are not supposed to remain a snapshot, frozen in time. We are ever changing. I think the Buddhists call it the Art of Impermanence.
The conversation following the Christmas debacle was a good one. It was an important one for me and my oldest child to have. I think parents should be invited into a space where they begin again. One of the tasks of adulthood is getting to know ourselves. I'm spending more and more of my time doing this. Who am I?
Today, I filled out a questionnaire for Clemson Alumni. For the first time, I fit into a "choose one" blank. It was as if I was given a signal that I'm getting to know myself better. It felt pretty good. My hope is that as I get to know myself, I also get to know others. I certainly should never assume that I really know another person, even when we live in the same house.
I am proud of a daughter who exerts her growth and doesn't shy away from hard discussions. It took courage for her to confess her feelings. It makes me proud to be her mother.
Thursday, January 9, 2014
Thursday, December 12, 2013
Meme
This is the eulogy I offered at my grandmother's funeral. It has been a hard week, and I helped bury another grandparent with Christmas decorations all around. Today, I found the Christmas presents she had bought for my kids. I see many blessings all around, yet, the grief is deep. I snapped this picture last year because I loved to watch my grandmother's love for my kids expressed in such tender ways. My favorite quote from the funeral was from a prayer my cousin offered about the fact that my grandmother could be 'simultaneously demanding and compassionate'. My oldest child sang a duet for the Lord's Prayer during the service. It was stunning.
Through a very
strange set of circumstances, I found myself in Trenton SC at the exact moment
I received a text to call my husband ASAP. I was informed that my grandmother
was being rushed to the Edgefield county hospital, only 15 minutes away from
me. Now, in my 41 years, I have never been so close to Edgefield hospital
looking at my phone other than the exact moment I needed to be there. It is my
belief that God plays a part in our lives in ways we don’t even understand.
As I tried to walk
with an appearance of calm towards the hospital, the first familiar face I
would see, would, of course, be a Ridge Spring fireman. This is a very special
group of volunteers who serve quietly, ever present when needed. I also found
faces of family and neighbors. Also, ever present in my grandmother’s life.
Many of you know my
grandmothers as Mrs. Householder, or Florence. Her family knows her
affectionately as Tookie. Her grandchildren and great grandchildren know her as
Meme. We’ve all tasted her cakes and eaten her famous macaroni and cheese.
We’ve all known her to offer a ride, a meal or some help. Just last week, Meme
drove two older ladies, in the rain, to the American Legion Christmas party and
someone told my grandmother “Aren’t these old ladies lucky to have you to drive
them around.” She was faithful to her ministry of helping others to the very
end.
In speaking at
someone’s funeral, it is hard to keep from sounding as if the deceased was
perfect. I want all of you to know that my grandmother was far from perfect. But,
I think there is something even better than being perfect and that is being
Human. Meme was human, fully human.
My grandmother was
married to my grandfather, known to me as Pop for over 56 years. This was a
quite interesting marriage. Even after Pop died, Meme saved a seat for him in
church, often admonishing people who sat in that reserved seat “You’re sitting
on top of Bob!”
For their 50th
wedding anniversary, her brothers and sisters threw a big party out at the
family home. My grandfather had bought a very nice ring for her. When he gave
it to her, I saw such tenderness in his eyes and her face flushed. It was a
special moment for me because I got to witness the deep love they had for each
other. There were other tender moments scattered throughout the years
especially as my grandmother spoke of her brothers and sisters. One of those
stories that stands out is the story of an angel that visited her when her
sister Hazel was terribly ill in the hospital. Meme always wore a guardian
angel on a chain around her neck after that.
I was also
privileged to witness her stubborn streak on more than one occasion. Just a few
weeks ago, my oldest daughter laid the claim of being the only person in our
family to win an argument with Meme. Alena went on to say that we are all very
stubborn people in our family. She proclaimed “We all have a piece of Meme in
us.” Wouldn’t we all be so lucky. I am
ever grateful that all of my children were able to experience four generations
on this earth. Meme took special care of
them, always making their birthday cakes.
One day, she was walking off hand in hand with Carter saying that she
just walked better when she had a child’s hand in hers.
Our worlds is
quickly loosing this generation that started out without all of these modern
conveniences. They knew a simpler world where you took care of your family and
neighbors; they grew up growing their own food and always make cakes from
scratch. They know what hard work is,
and they don’t take anything for granted.
To all of you who
are missing Florence Householder today, I offer my heartfelt condolences. I
miss her, too. She never complained or ever wanted anyone to feel sorry for
her. She just wanted to figure out what she could do to help out the next guy.
I hope that you find comfort in each other and comfort in knowing that my
grandmother died doing exactly what she always wanted to do, serving others.
I am reminded of
the passage from Matthew 25 verse 35. “’For I was hungry and you fed me; I was
thirsty and you gave me water; I was a stranger and you invited me into your
homes; naked and you clothed me; sick and in prison, and you visited me.’”
I can say that my
grandmother obeyed the command in Matthew for us to serve others and she did
that her entire life. I believe that when she meets her God, The Maker will say
to her “Good and faithful Servant, Well done”
I say, well done,
indeed. May she rest in Peace and Rise in Glory! Amen
Friday, December 6, 2013
Control
There was a time in my life where I thought I had control over things. If I do this, then this will happen. I had decided to take things and FINALLY be in control. Then an event happened, and I realized that any sense of control I had was simply a perception. I had perceived control, but not actual. My life has been better since that event. I'm glad that I don't have to carry the weight of my world in my control. I am learning to be a part of the world, not someone trying to control things. Although, my desire to control things does bubble out. I think it always will. I think controlling things is how we control our own anxiety. I'm sure there is some psychological basis for that.
Over the dinner table, I heard a friend talk about friendships. She admitted that she is great at doing things with people, as long as she had control. It took me to another conversation with a someone a while ago. I was asking her why it is so hard for our children to get together and play. She went into a litany about how busy she is, needing to schedule things. Finally, she just admitted "It has to be on MY terms." I responded with "EXACTLY". It was an enlightening moment for me. You see, I had been naive to the fact that I seem to invite this sort of dynamic in a relationship. I was happy for the other person's terms, so long as we were friends. I've grown a bit since then.
This seems to be a bit of a life long lesson for me, and I'm not exactly sure why. I know that I was raised in an environment where controlling kids was the whole purpose of everything. Sometimes, I think people try to control their children, because everything else is so out of control. I try to exert my own control over things. I'm probably at my worse within my own marriage. I guess I get to start rethinking all of those things.
The sad part for me is that I don't know how to make a friendship survive when the other person needs control. In the past, I've ended up rebelling against it. Whenever I rebelled, the other person rejected me in the most ugly way. I could give you a pretty long list that goes back to 4th grade. Recently, this came to light when my best friend in that grade posted a picture on facebook that I was in. Of course, you couldn't see me because she scratched me out.
Over the past few years, I've learned a great deal about relationships, healthy ones. I know in order to be in one, you have to healthy yourself. So, my focus goes on to myself, wondering what I need to learn. I know I want ones that give and take. There has to be a relatively even flow of things between two people. There has to be a surrender of that perception of control. I guess for me, I've got to surrender my tendency to be the one controlled. There was a time where I was desperate for any sort of friendship or attention from another person. I was lost to who I was and needed people to be around. Now, I'm not so needy in that area. I'm understanding who I am and I know I'll be ok.
Life seems to be giving me some gut-checks right now. I pray that I am surrendering to those lessons.
Over the dinner table, I heard a friend talk about friendships. She admitted that she is great at doing things with people, as long as she had control. It took me to another conversation with a someone a while ago. I was asking her why it is so hard for our children to get together and play. She went into a litany about how busy she is, needing to schedule things. Finally, she just admitted "It has to be on MY terms." I responded with "EXACTLY". It was an enlightening moment for me. You see, I had been naive to the fact that I seem to invite this sort of dynamic in a relationship. I was happy for the other person's terms, so long as we were friends. I've grown a bit since then.
This seems to be a bit of a life long lesson for me, and I'm not exactly sure why. I know that I was raised in an environment where controlling kids was the whole purpose of everything. Sometimes, I think people try to control their children, because everything else is so out of control. I try to exert my own control over things. I'm probably at my worse within my own marriage. I guess I get to start rethinking all of those things.
The sad part for me is that I don't know how to make a friendship survive when the other person needs control. In the past, I've ended up rebelling against it. Whenever I rebelled, the other person rejected me in the most ugly way. I could give you a pretty long list that goes back to 4th grade. Recently, this came to light when my best friend in that grade posted a picture on facebook that I was in. Of course, you couldn't see me because she scratched me out.
Over the past few years, I've learned a great deal about relationships, healthy ones. I know in order to be in one, you have to healthy yourself. So, my focus goes on to myself, wondering what I need to learn. I know I want ones that give and take. There has to be a relatively even flow of things between two people. There has to be a surrender of that perception of control. I guess for me, I've got to surrender my tendency to be the one controlled. There was a time where I was desperate for any sort of friendship or attention from another person. I was lost to who I was and needed people to be around. Now, I'm not so needy in that area. I'm understanding who I am and I know I'll be ok.
Life seems to be giving me some gut-checks right now. I pray that I am surrendering to those lessons.
Saturday, November 9, 2013
To be humbled...
One of my least favorite nursing instructors left me with a few nuggets of wisdom. I still wonder why I didn't like her. She talked about a patient, almost making a mistake and being humbled. She says nurses need to be humbled often. It keeps us honest.
Today, I was sitting at the chiropractor's office and telling my third grader about the time my dad forgot to pick up his big sister from school. I laughed talking about how bad my dad felt and the cheesecake that he bought her. A little while later, I heard my phone ring. I looked at the clock and gasped. "I FORGOT TO PICK MAX UP! I FORGOT, I FORGOT! I'm on my way!" My husband was calling to let me know that he was on the way to pick up our middle schooler. I felt horrible.
I can give a list of reasons why I forgot. His sister usually gets him, I worked last night, I'm tired, I.....
I sat out in the drive way worried about how Max would greet me. He just sorta grinned and said he wanted to text me "Forgot something?", but he didn't have wifi. He wasn't upset. He found out a long time ago that I'm fallible. Quite frankly, I learned the same thing. I guess it was good to get a reminder.
It seems to me that most people in this world use being 'better than' to differentiate themselves. They point their finger at someone else's folly. They pretend that they are not capable of making the same mistake. Somehow this makes up feel better.
Well, I've come to accept that my next humbling moment is right around the corner. I'd better not get too comfortable.
I still owe a middle schooler a milk shake. We'll get one this week.
Today, I was sitting at the chiropractor's office and telling my third grader about the time my dad forgot to pick up his big sister from school. I laughed talking about how bad my dad felt and the cheesecake that he bought her. A little while later, I heard my phone ring. I looked at the clock and gasped. "I FORGOT TO PICK MAX UP! I FORGOT, I FORGOT! I'm on my way!" My husband was calling to let me know that he was on the way to pick up our middle schooler. I felt horrible.
I can give a list of reasons why I forgot. His sister usually gets him, I worked last night, I'm tired, I.....
I sat out in the drive way worried about how Max would greet me. He just sorta grinned and said he wanted to text me "Forgot something?", but he didn't have wifi. He wasn't upset. He found out a long time ago that I'm fallible. Quite frankly, I learned the same thing. I guess it was good to get a reminder.
It seems to me that most people in this world use being 'better than' to differentiate themselves. They point their finger at someone else's folly. They pretend that they are not capable of making the same mistake. Somehow this makes up feel better.
Well, I've come to accept that my next humbling moment is right around the corner. I'd better not get too comfortable.
I still owe a middle schooler a milk shake. We'll get one this week.
Friday, November 1, 2013
The Day of the Dead
All Saint's Day is probably my favorite church day. It is the day that you remember all that have gone before. It is a day to gather some grief and place it before your community. I remember it as an important day while growing up in the Lutheran Church, and later as an Episcopalian. Since we now attend a Methodist Church, we don't recognize the liturgical calender. I think this is what I miss most.
So, the effort for me becomes bringing these observances into the home. I watched a TV show the other day and they had an altar set up for remembering dead friends and relatives. A few google clicks later, and I realize that The Day of the Dead is very real tradition. I decided to start it.
So, I visited the grave yard today. I looked at tombstones of people I haven't thought of in a long time. I had placed their memories somewhere else, and I was glad to retrieve them for a bit. I've especially missed my grandmother lately, so I placed some pretty Autumn leaves at her grave. I also spent some time going through old photos and found more than I expected. I also placed a hunting knife and old friend gave me before he died.
Grief is a slippery thing. It is hard to really get a hold of, and if you aren't careful you can avoid it. I can see real value in compartmentalizing a time to remember all the souls who are gone. The dark, rainy day certainly added to the effect. Earlier, at the cemetery, it was just windy. I read that this means the spirits are restless. In this time of year where the veil gets very thin, it was a good day. Even if it was the day of the dead.
Thursday, October 17, 2013
In the dark
I went out to my long neglected garden. A wise friend told me that when life starts feeling out of kilter, put your hands in the dirt. My mom had given me some long neglected fall vegetable plants, so I went to plant them. As I started clearing off the enormous amount of weeds, I found something that look different, and green. It was a carrot! I had planted them last spring and they never did anything. Somehow, those seeds planted long ago found a way to grow underneath the weeds.
It is quite similar to a talk I had with my Spiritual Director. I had lamented to her that I didn't feel like I was really accomplishing anything. I'm just doing what I do without any perceived success. Her answer was simple. You never know what seeds grow in the dark. Sometimes the most important fruit comes from that time.
I guess there is a time and place for benign neglect. I also discovered a new crop of red potatoes and two tomatoes growing in my vegetable garden. Still, I have no idea what may come of my spiritual garden. This time seems to be for waiting and seeing what, if anything, will come of my ponderings and prayers. I sense good things. I learned from my carrot today. It was quite small and needed some more time to grow. I should have trusted it would continue to grow into its fullness. I'll try not to make that mistake again.
It is quite similar to a talk I had with my Spiritual Director. I had lamented to her that I didn't feel like I was really accomplishing anything. I'm just doing what I do without any perceived success. Her answer was simple. You never know what seeds grow in the dark. Sometimes the most important fruit comes from that time.
I guess there is a time and place for benign neglect. I also discovered a new crop of red potatoes and two tomatoes growing in my vegetable garden. Still, I have no idea what may come of my spiritual garden. This time seems to be for waiting and seeing what, if anything, will come of my ponderings and prayers. I sense good things. I learned from my carrot today. It was quite small and needed some more time to grow. I should have trusted it would continue to grow into its fullness. I'll try not to make that mistake again.
Wednesday, October 2, 2013
Men working
When I was in grade school, I did a photo collage of this sort of sign and added "Wo" to the men part. I was always a bit sensitive to any lack of acknowledgement of women. When I graduated from college, I went to work in EMS in a large service that had very few women. In fact, I was the only woman on my shift. I was expected to prove myself twice over. I was expected to prove that I could physically and emotionally handle the rigors of emergency medicine. Not all of the men I worked with expected this, but I certainly was very sensitive to it. Although, there remained a double standard. If there were a call for a woman who was assaulted, they always sent me. I remember one night we caught a call out of rotation and it was because it was an assault. It was my 4th call like this in 2 weeks. As I went to hop into the back of the truck, I looked at my partner and said "I can't do this." Fortunately, I was working with a kind hearted guy, and he rode the call. I was very sad while driving to the hospital and actually apologized to the patient as we were unloading her. I felt like a failure because it was the one thing I could do better than my male counterparts. It was the one place I could easily prove myself uniquely useful on this shift, and I had failed. More costly, I felt like I had failed this patient. I drank a good bit that night. The nightmares were coming and the only coping skill I had was in several bottles of wine.
I would learn years later about self care. I would learn that it is perfectly healthy to acknowledge your limits and ask for help. I would learn that I had actually not failed. Most importantly, I would learn that I really have noting to prove.
This picture is of a sign at the gate to our driveway. As I write this, I am listening to a crew cutting down a pine tree. I watched the guy with a chainsaw hanging out of the bucket and realized that, for the most part, that really is a man's job. Very few women would have the upper body strength. Actually, very few men would have it.
I remember my days in EMS fondly. I cringe when I think of some of the things I did or said. I was relentlessly picked on, and developed quite an attitude. Yet, I wouldn't trade those years for anything. I'm glad I broke into a "man's" world for a little while. There are more and more women in EMS and there are more and more men in Nursing. While there is still a small part of me that wants to see the sign say 'people' working, I don't have the energy for those fights any more.
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