Thursday, May 10, 2018

deep roots

I fear this blog entry may be a rambling mess as I attempt to organize some revelations I have had that may only make sense in my own head and not translate well to paper (or screen), but I am nevertheless going to attempt to verbalize them because God is good and sweet to me and I want to remember the lessons I am learning.  It starts with Psalm 1, which was the first long passage (whole chapter) of Scripture I ever memorized:

“Blessed is the man who walks not in the counsel of the wicked, nor stands in the way of sinners, nor sits in the seat of scoffers; but his delight is in the law of the Lord and on his law he meditates day and night.  He is like a tree planted by streams of water that yields its fruit in its season, and its leaf does not wither.  In all that he does, he prospers.  The wicked are not so, but are like chaff that the wind drives away.  Therefore the wicked will not stand in the judgment, nor sinners in the congregation of the righteous; for the Lord knows the way of the righteous, but the way of the wicked will perish.”  (Psalm 1)

I memorized it years and years ago and I have since had to go back to remind myself of the exact wording.  But this week I ran across a commentary on the first psalm by Dallas Willard and I felt it so fitting to my life that I decided to “rememorize” the words again.

“The image used here is that of a tree planted by water canals.  No matter what the weather or the surface condition of the ground, its roots go down into the water sources and bring up Life.  As a result, it bears fruit when it is supposed to, and it’s foliage is always bright with life.  It prospers in what it does.  And likewise the man who is rooted in God through his law: in whatever he does, he prospers.” (Dallas Willard)

I so much want to be that tree, the one that can weather any storm and the one that can bear good fruit, no matter the surface conditions, because I am deeply rooted in God’s living waters.  That image speaks to my soul so deeply, so much so that I feel like I need to find a painting of a tree with deep, well-watered roots to hang in my home as a reminder to me of those words and that longing.  I delight in the image of the tree by streams of water and I pray that I can delight in the law of the Lord (his best and good intentions for me) just as much.  And that is where I sit in awe of God this week... 

You see, the verses God put on my heart this year to study and memorize come from the first chapter of Joshua.  Yes, Joshua.  I really bristled at that at first because, seriously, what do Joshua and I have in common?  Joshua was with Moses during the exodus and he was Moses’ right-hand man through the desert.  He is the one who took over leadership of the Israelites after the death of Moses and was commissioned by God to lead the military conquests of the land of Canaan that eventually led his people into the Promised Land.  Exodus, desert, military conquests...  I really have been wondering what I am supposed to learn from this story... But the words God has put on my heart, and right in front of me in some weird and obvious ways, over and over, are the words he spoke repeatedly to Joshua before he began his military campaigns: “be strong and courageous.”  One of my mentors said that God had asked a lot of me and those are fitting words of encouragement.  And another had a vision of a door in front of me and the words “be strong and courageous” as what I needed to hear to enter the door.  I admittedly prefer at most times to sit paralyzed in my fear and insecurities than to approach a door, even a door that is filled with goodness and light.  It that respect, I relate much more to Moses who argued with God about not being the one to be picked for anything because he was not adequate... 

So in the midst of pondering what those words and ideas mean and why being “strong and courageous” is being spoken into my life, I run across the familiar and comforting words of my beloved Psalm 1.  And God is starting to tie things together, in that wonderful way that he always does...  I realized today that some of David’s thoughts in that first psalm compare to what was said to Joshua: This Book of the Law shall not depart from your mouth, but you shall meditate on it day and night, so that you may be careful to do according to all that is written in it.  For then you will make your way prosperous, and then you will have good success” (Josh 1:8).

That may not seem strange to anyone, it is of course God’s instructions to us - to meditate on his law day and night.  It is for our own benefit and it is the way our roots soak into his tender goodness.  God spoke that wisdom to both David and Joshua, just as he urges each of us to also soak in his law so that we may prosper and thrive in and through anything.  But what really struck me was that this verse from Joshua - the one that mirrors my beloved first psalm - is sandwiched smack in between these words in verses 7 and 9:

“Be strong and courageous... only be strong and very courageous... that you may have good success...” (verse 7)
“Have I not commanded you?  Be strong and courageous.  Do not be frightened, and do not be dismayed, for the Lord your God is with you wherever you go” (verse 9)

Is it not a weird thing that the “paraphrase” of my favorite psalm (about meditating on God’s law both day and night so I can be a prosperous tree and one with good success/good fruit) is sandwiched in between the words “be strong and courageous,” on both sides of it?  I mean I read that verse, verse 8, several times this year as I struggled with those “strong and courageous” lines before and after it, but I didn’t really dwell on it.  Then I read Psalm 1 this week, with Willard’s commentary, and see it right smack dab in between.  

I love love when God ties things up in neat little bows because I do badly need obvious and tangible signs to teach me.  I am still struggling to understand why and how I am to fulfill the be “strong and courageous” that is being spoken into my life in this season but I know any strength or courage in my life will flow forth like fruit on a tree that has been rooted deeply into the living waters of God’s law.  I delight in that process.  

Tuesday, May 8, 2018

May 8th

Seventeen years ago today I married this guy.  Today is my second May 8th without him.  Below are some pictures from when we were engaged and during our first year of marriage, 2001.  I think the part that makes me the saddest is that the details of these memories are starting to fade, his face is starting to fade, and the one other person who knows the stories behind these memories is not here to remind me of them and laugh and share them.
Hawaii 
Arkansas
Hawaii 


Disney World Florida

Disneyland California
San Simeon, CA

Friday, May 4, 2018

transition

I think I have realized that I have an unique way of dealing with grief and I am not sure it is “right,” but in this journey there really seems to be no “right” or “wrong,” there is just what is.  In the past my “griefs” have always had to do with transitions, usually specifically moves.  I remember grieving the end of high school when all my best friends and I scattered to different colleges.  That grief felt like fear, fear of the unknown as I left home.  I remember graduating college and grieving the end of that period of my life.  I cried as I cleaned out my college apartment and said good-bye to college life.  And then each military move brought some level of grief - I have many memories of a moving van pulling away from a now-empty house and trying to be excited about the new home we would set up or new adventures we would have, but usually accompanied by memories of just sobbing as I stood in an empty house hugging dear friends, hoping time would slow down.  When we left Florida, I cried all the way to the Alabama state line.  When we left DC, a snowstorm (and a lost cat that had to be retrieved) delayed our move a day, leaving me happy to have “one more day” with friends but knowing I was just delaying the inevitable good bye (or “see you later” as we would comfort ourselves with!).

But regardless of the grief memory, the coping strategy was usually the same for me - avoid thinking about what I lost, focus on what is ahead, and give it all enough time to not feel so raw and painful.  So after leaving Florida, I focused on settling into DC.  But the pain of that transition left such an imprint on my soul that just seeing a picture of the gorgeous gulf coast shore left me aching inside.  I kept pictures of Florida hidden from my view.  A mention of a friend from there sent me choking back tears.  So I distanced myself a bit.  I just avoided all thought and picture and idea of Florida until I felt settled in DC.  Then sometime around six months after the move, I could begin to look back at our time in Florida with a fondness that rivaled the pain.  And by a year out, I could look through pictures of my little children splashing in the waves with their friends and genuinely smile because my mama friends and I spent hours each week sitting on those sands, talking about life and children and homeschooling and hard stuff, while our children built sand castles and envisioned sea life aquariums and dodged jellyfish in the warm gulf waters of our backyard.  I treasure those moments! The process was the same for leaving DC, etc... Initially upon arriving in Texas, the picture of a cherry blossom or a TV show that took place in downtown DC would easily send me into waves of grief, missing my “home” there and our many brave field trips navigating DC traffic with other mamas and their kids so we could see Smithsonians and monuments and sites full of history, beauty, significance, and fun.  And, again, about six months in, I felt more settled in Texas and could begin the process of looking back at our DC memories again.  The places and the people and the circumstances have changed, but my coping strategy has obviously been to put the loss (and any and all reference to anything associated with the loss) out of mind, focus on my new situation, and after six months realize the pain would not be raw anymore.  By a year out I would be able to revisit my memories with a tender and sweet remembrance that was no longer blinded by pain.

When I lost Ryan, however, I knew my old coping mechanisms were just not going to work.  This was too big.  I could not possibly transition from a life with Ryan to a life without him by simply ignoring any and all memories of our life together and focusing on my new reality.  This is because there was nothing positive about my new reality.  With each new move I was grasping at the making of new friends, the settling into new routines, and the exploring of new areas to distract myself from my grief until I could feel comfortable and secure enough with my new life to revisit memories of my old life.  When Ryan died there was no “new life” that could rival my “old life.”  So I just waded through the grief, reaching the six month mark and realizing I could still breathe and I was making new routines.  Reaching a year and realizing I may actually want to move forward, since the alternative was to stay stuck in grief, and then working to figure out how to do that.  By eighteen months, I realized I had indeed successfully put together a new and functioning little life with my kids and I, here in California, with roots and new friends and school and somewhat happy routines.  And now, as I approach two years (next month) I realized I am looking back at my life with Ryan with fond memories that are beginning to rival my pain...  I did not think that was even possible.  After two years, I can look at a family picture and genuinely smile.  I can tell a story about something Ryan did or said and genuinely laugh.  The pain and the sorrow are still there (they always will be) but the “rawness” has largely softened.  It happened gradually, without me realizing it.

There are still certain things that will occasionally trigger a raw wave of grief - these are usually in the form of unanticipated surprises at an unexpected time - but my every day memories and thoughts of Ryan bring me joy mostly equal to my sorrow in a way I never realized would happen.  Or could happen.  In fact I think trying to talk about Ryan during the last two years has felt forced and difficult, but like something I just had to do.  It made me uncomfortable in that I either had to choke back tears or that I really was not truly being authentic.  I think I simply was not ready.  I was in that “first six months after a move” kind of space where I did not and could not think about our previous home because it was too painful.  But I think I felt like I had to keep trying because I did not think I would ever get to the place where I felt transitioned into a new life without him.  And yet here I am.  I almost feel sad to be in this spot because it means I have indeed transitioned into a life without Ryan.  And it is not a life I ever wanted.  But because it was forced on me, here I am.  I am in a new place.

And I think it has been a few surprising “firsts” that made me realize the transition.  After Ryan’s death, there were a few things I said to myself that I would never do or visit again.  Most of them small and silly things, but significant to me.  One example was to make homemade pizza.  Ryan used to make homemade pizza and he would tweak the recipe each time, trying to get the perfect crust.  And his pizzas were always delicious.  I remember unpacking the pizza pans after our move here, thinking that I would never see those used again.  But somehow last month I had a craving for homemade pizza and Charlie, still being on his “chef” kick, was willing to help me make the dough.  So we made homemade pizza!  And it was a lot like Ryan’s and we ate it, remembering Ryan, and it was a good evening.  A year ago I would have cried salty tears into the dough if you had asked me to take out Ryan’s pizza pans and make his pizza recipe.  But I have transitioned into the kind of person who can make and eat Ryan’s recipes with equal amounts of joy and sorrow.

The other thing I have noticed that makes me think I have transitioned is my feelings toward military life.  I am done with it.  Just done.  After Ryan’s death, I was so glad we lived near a base here in California because my entire adult life had pretty much been living on or near a military installation.  The rhythms and routines on base are familiar to me - and to my kids.  We shop at the exchange and the commissary, where we see service members in uniform.  We know the language of a conversation about what it means to stay in a TLF during a PCS or a TDY.  We identify as a military family.  And I was comforted by that in the early months after Ryan’s death.  I know my kids were too.  And I am, and will forever be, so thankful for the military family that has been there for us during these times, from my amazing CAO to the support on base to all my military friends who check on us from across the miles.  I am full of gratitude and love for each of you all.  But I am ready to say we are not a military family anymore.  We were, and I treasure those memories in the deepest ways.  But I have transitioned out of that role now.  I noticed it in little things, like choosing to shop off base or not feeling an interest in engaging in base events (the community and church events seem to be where I gravitate now).  Again, I have slowly felt that for awhile and am just realizing it.  Today confirmed it.  Today I went to the base library for the first time - we use our community library and just have never had a reason to go inside the base library.  Today being May 4th (Star Wars day), the library on base had a children’s event that my sister invited me to (she is a civilian who works on base).  My kids were interested to go see anything Star Wars, so we went and they, being avid bookworms, of course found a few books they wanted to check out.  I went to the counter while my kids were looking at books and I inquired about what information was needed to check out books.  And I was reminded that military library accounts are always under the active duty members’ name.  So I filled out the library form as best I could but of course had to leave the fields for “squadron organization” and “duty phone” blank.  When I turned in the form, the librarian kindly said I could check out books today but I would need to come back to give her my husband’s squadron number and duty phone.  I sighed.  And I told her I could not do that because my husband is deceased and I asked what the policy is for dependents without a sponsor.  I had not had to have that conversation in a very long time.  The poor lady immediately was very uncomfortable, mumbled something about being so sorry, and then would not make eye contact with me.  She said of course they would make me an account without that information.  I smiled at her and said thank you and then there was a long awkward pause as she struggled to figure out how to input me in her computer when the system is clearly not set up for my situation.  I don’t fit in the system.  She was uncomfortable and I felt bad that I caused her uncomfortableness.  And I realized I am done.  Just done.  I am done with being a piece that does not fit in the system any longer. And I am okay with that.  I did eventually get my account set up, my children checked out their books, I wished the frazzled librarian a good day, and she looked relieved that I was not upset or impatient.  And I was not upset or impatient at all, I mostly felt awful for having caused this lady’s obvious uncomfortableness at my situation and I just do not want to be the military widow any longer.  It was this kind of situation that made me realize I do not “belong” on base anymore because I do not want that identity anymore.  No, no one on base is telling me I do not belong - if anything, they all go out of their way to accommodate for me.  But I think it is kind of like walking around my old high school or college campus - I have memories there and I am always welcomed back as an alumni, but I don’t “belong” or am not active there anymore.  I think I feel that way about military life now too.  I do not mind the occasional memory or event, but my life has moved forward and is different now.  I want to form my own new identity now.  I kind of surprised myself to realize how true that is.  When people ask if we are a military family, I answer with, “we were.”  And that feels right now.  And now I get to define what kind of “family” we are or what kind of person I am.  My situation does not define me.  That is huge for me to embrace. 

The final bit of change I have felt recently, that goes with the idea of forming my own identity, is the feeling of hope that had not been present before.  I have spent almost two years going through the motions of life because I have had no choice.  And I have had joyful moments mixed with sorrow, but all of it with a kind of numbness of knowing that “someday” things would be okay and non-numb again.  Maybe it is kind of like when I would move to a new duty station and make just the beginnings of a connection with another mom or I would see my kids begin to settle into making friendships - those actions gave me hope that we were making a new home in our new place.  And the hope encouraged me forward to pursue the new friendship or activity or to want to build new connections.  For the first time, I feel that kind of hope.  I am looking at my future with a few ideas and dreams in mind, instead of just a deer-in-headlights stare at what will happen next.  In just three years my daughter will be off to college, my son in high school, and I have a desire in my heart to plan what my next season of life will look like.  It is almost a little exciting to think about and that glimpse of hope is driving me forward in action to do new things.  Ryan had said in his final letter to me that he hoped that after the stages of grief that I would live for myself.  My reaction to that at first was anger - how could I ever live for myself when half of me was ripped away and gone and the other half engulfed in sorrow??  There was no “self” capable of living.  Well, Ryan obviously did not understand that stages of grief do not pass away as the sorrow of his death is forever carried with me, but he did understand that I would one day be comforted by him cheering me on.  I can almost picture him proud of me as I make decisions about my future and actively “do” things to live my life.  God is so good to comfort me in all this too, often with little glimpses of Ryan smiling at me or shaking his head at me in quiet laughter when I so obviously mess up.  I do not mean that in a literal way, but just that I have thoughts of Ryan guiding me and cheering me on that I think is God touching my heart in a way that comforts.

And so as I go into May, which includes what would have been our 17th anniversary, Ryan’s 41st birthday, Memorial Day, and then the anniversary of his death in June, I am not consumed with sorrow.  I am not the person I was a year ago and I surely am not the person I was two years ago.  There have been transitions, some abrupt and devastating, some slow and sweet, but here I am, still breathing, still learning, still grieving, still journeying, and also still transitioning, but with a hope that I pray sticks around and continues to grow. 
City of arts and flowers
flower fields near my house 
cherry blossoms in my yard 
cherry blossoms in my yard 
homemade pizzas  🍕  
Pictures with friends in Florida:

 

 

 



 Pictures with friends in Washington DC:




 

💕

Spiritual formation
🌻 
Delphinium

Thursday, April 26, 2018

fog

So I grew up here on the Central Coast and throughout most of my childhood the mornings would be quite foggy.  A thick and dense marine layer often rolls in here, either at sunset or sometime during the night so that most springtime mornings I remember waking up to clouds reaching down to my back fence.  I would usually layer a sweatshirt over my shorts and t-shirt, put on some flip-flops, and head out, knowing that even with the damp and cold start to the morning, it would only take and hour or two before the sun would peak out, the fog would begin to retreat, and it would be a warm, sunny day.  I grew up with that pattern and I remember complaining about the damp and cold mornings, especially when I was on swim team and had to jump into the outdoor pool at 6am.  And yet somehow it never occurred to me that the fog was familIar... until I left and came back.  I left home for college in 1997 and then left California in 2001.  And of all the places I lived, those locations never experienced that coastal marine fog I grew up with.  I did not miss it.  In fact it was so far from my mind of missing those foggy mornings that I remember one rare day in Washington DC (probably in 2013) that a fog settled over the Potomac River and my children noticed. asking why the clouds were so low.  I realized I had not really seen that familiar fog of my childhood in years. Then of course during the summer of 2016, the kids and I moved to California.  And that first year my mind was all over so I guess I did not really notice the fog.  But it is springtime again here and late spring into summer has the foggiest mornings.  So it has been quite foggy most mornings recently.  I find myself waking up slowly, as one does when the sun is not beckoning the eyes to open.  And I feel a sense of comfort as I open the blinds and see the fog blanketing my entire yard.  I feel a sense of familiarity as I hear my teenager complain that it is damp and cold every morning but then gets hot by lunch - words I remember saying.  I feel a sense of awe of knowing there are hills in the distance, that are usually in full view, but they are all completely hidden in the cool stillness.  I guess I am really “noticing” the fog in this season right now and there is something so beautiful in it to me. It really feels like an embrace of familiar comfort and security in a world that has often felt non-embracing and unfamiliar and uncomfortable and not secure.  The fog makes me want to curl up on my back porch with a blanket, a cup of warm tea, my study Bible, and just sit in the clouds, praying, listening, feeling isolated, and yet feeling safe, like the fog is a secure place to just wander through my thoughts, process my feelings, and sit for awhile.  I have noticed that when the late morning rays of sun begin to peak through, I almost feel disappointed, like the sunshine that is about to come out full force is disrupting my peaceful solitude or may be harsh and exposing.  Which is such a silly thing for me to say because I love the sunshine!  I love love the sunshine so much!  But the process of watching the morning fog retreat as the mid-day sun emerges has recently been stirring something inside me that makes me bristle.  I guess in this season, here and now, I will enjoy the gift of God’s peace and embrace the security of the blankets of fog.  Maybe I desperately need the visual reminder that God is near, nearer than those low clouds.  My prayer had been that God “remind” me, in very tangible ways, of his presence because I am a creature that SO often forgets.  Thank you, God, for blanketing me with your presence in this season when things feel frighteningly wide open.

Grief fog
grey still morning, distant hills have disappeared in the fog ☁️
Marine layer
sunshine just peaking through late morning 🌤 
warm afternoon sunshine ☀️

Wednesday, April 25, 2018

widowhood thoughts

A sweet and lovely widow friend of mine has a deep love for Jesus and such a way with words!  She wrote these beautiful notes to me below and I just so love them so much I wanted to share them: 
🏔

This grief journey is like a drive up a steep and winding mountain during a snow storm. You don’t want to, it’s rough, scary, daunting, you feel like you’re gonna die, you feel so dizzy from the snow blowing against the windshield you don’t know which way is up or even if you’re moving forward at all, it’s intense, and sometimes all you can do and think of is the road ahead of you, your steering, and what’s coming next. You’re gripping the wheel you don’t and can’t know how far you’ve gone, all you are is consumed with getting through. So much so that you don’t even realize when the snow has subsided and that you’re now on level ground. But one day, you’ll realize that you “made it”. You’ll look through your rear view mirror at the mountain range you’ve just driven through and you’ll see nothing but how awesome and beautiful it all is and it never could have been done without God. 

I was thinking that if we knew how much God helped us in our everyday, we may just get fat and lazy. I wonder if this is why He sometimes seems so far away. I mean, I know that with all the things that the children are required to do, I do over and beyond what they do. My stuff is more Big Picture stuff, but it’s all stuff we need to survive. Cleaning a room seems daunting to some of them, but if their responsibility was to collect the money for the mortgage, they would never make it! I think in the same way, God provides for us. With and in all things, but sometimes, we’re required to “clean our room” while He takes care of “the mortgage”. 

I’m not sure what I’d do without Jesus. I am so heartbroken for people without Him. How do they manage?! I used to wonder at the pattern I noticed amongst widows. How they all seemed to either be bitter and stuck in their grief or re-married inside of two years. There didn’t seem to much of a middle ground there. I was really afraid. As I’ve travelled through it though, I realize for myself that this thing is no joke!! I mean, the intense feelings of loneliness, despair, hopelessness, confusion, and sorrow. I mean, we feel these things. They are all there. The feelings, the THOUGHTS(!!), are way too real!...... but then, Jesus. And even though the feelings may not subside, they may be just as intense as they’ve always been, we have a reason to hope. We have the trust in our Father who knows exactly how much we can take. And we take it. Because we know we have a brighter future. We know that life is on the way. Or it is here now. In our midst. We just maybe can’t see it through the tears. The sun is shining 365 days a year. Sometimes we cannot see it for the clouds, but it’s always sunny! 
Vandenberg Village
trail beginning of a recent hike

Tuesday, April 17, 2018

invitation retreat

A friend shared this podcast with me today.  It is a meditation on Matthew 11:28-30 and it goes with the theme I have been recently called to of being “unhurried” and “unanxious” in my soul.  If you have 20 minutes to just kind of step away and listen to this in a quiet space, it is a worth the 20 minutes.  Consider it a mini “retreat” from the busyness of the day.

The Invitation Podcast

Josh Banner
view from Gaviota Wind Caves

Friday, April 13, 2018

spiritual formation

I am reading a new book this week for my Renovaré Institute program.  After wading through Brother Lawrence's "The Practice of the Presence of God" and Jeanne Guyon's "Experiencing the Depths of Jesus Christ," I get to return to my favorite author, Dallas Willard, with "Renovation of the Heart."  I am barely into the second chapter and had to pause just to think through some of these insights.  Here are a few notes from my reading that I am sitting with and praying over:

"Our salvation does not arise out of the murky human depths... Jesus moves into and through those very depths, whatever they contain, to bring us home to God."
-This makes me wonder why I feel like I need to put so much effort into acting well, obsessing over my decision, or striving so much.  When in all reality I simply need to surrender my strivings and invite God into my murky depths.  Why do I think it is a good idea to keep him out of that?  Is my "murk" too dark for him?  Do I fear him in there stirring things up?  No, I just am reluctant to think he wants any part of that.  Silly me, because that is exactly what he wants - access to our mess and murk, because there he can do the most good.  This is such a beautiful picture to me, of resting my anxious soul and simply inviting him into my mess - allowing him to swim through all the murk so he can bring me up out of it.  I love love this.

"We are thankful for whatever truly helps human beings in their desperate life upon the earth.  Nothing else would be compatible with the spirit of Jesus.  The constant love of God is extended to every human being who ever lives, sometimes in places and postures that God himself would not prefer, but still with some good effect."
-This is a wonderful reminder to me that God's goodness is everywhere and in anything inherently good.  God's grace and active love is not limited to just "Christians" or the church or "spiritual" acts of goodness.  Any time that goodness is sewn into the heart of another human, it is God's grace, even in (and perhaps especially in) the unbeliever, the unaware, and in the places we mistakenly think God is not fully present.  I was awakened to the reality this year that God had been acting in and through my life before I even knew him.  That simple reality - that I could look back on my life before I knew the handprint of God and see how he was loving me - just utterly humbled me and left me unglued with tearful gratitude.  For so many years he has loved me and not only did I not acknowledge him, I took credit for his goodness in my life.  'Look at what my wise decisions and caring actions have brought forth in my life!'  And that whole time God was just smiling and blessing me and letting me take the credit...  Oh, please forgive my blindness, precious Trinity, for every good and perfect gift comes from above and every act of love stems from the heart of God, even in places that God would not prefer (because he has better intentions for us) and not in postures he prefers (because he knows we would so brillianty thrive elsewhere), but still he actively enters every place, uses every icky situation - always present, always forgiving, and always abundantly giving, never demanding or asking for credit, just patiently working and watching to see if we notice.  And, oh, when we notice how humble our hearts are to see all the goodness we were so blind to.

And finally, as I delve into this book about intentional spiritual formation, it helps that Dallas Willard begins with the definition of what spiritual formation actually is. 
spiritual formation - the process by which the human spirit or will is given a definite "form" or character
It is a process that happens to everyone.
We each become a certain kind of person in the depths of our being, gaining a specific type of character.
Every human being has been "spiritually formed" by their life experiences, the decisions they make, and the life they have lived.  Essentially we all have a "character" that has formed through conscious and unconscious effects on our spirit (the nonphysical part of our human being).  We talk about "character" a lot when we talk to children about making good choices or being a good person.  We all have a "character" that is formed and we, as parents and adults, hope and pray that our children are forming "good characters."  Everyone has been spiritually formed to have a character though, with a wide range of "good" or "evil" aspects - from Mother Theresa to the serial killer.  Dallas Willard's writing dwells on what intentional Christian spiritual formation is.
spiritual formation for the Christian - the Spirit-driven process of forming the inner world of the human self in such a way that it becomes like the inner being of Christ himself
I am super excited to read more about how I can understand the "character" and the inner world of the incarnate Christ and then use that to intentionally reform or transform (spiritual transformation) the character that has been forming inside my heart for the past 38 1/2 years (today is my half birthday, so that 38 1/2 years is exactly right on).  Really my spirit has been forming mostly unconsciously my whole life, as I just make decisions without really "thinking about my thinking."  The idea that we find joy and peace and contentment when we are intentional about forming our spirits to God (because we were made in the image of God) simply makes sense because it is the exact fulfilment of what we were created for.  God is loving goodness.  And he created us to for goodness and love, we were created for beauty - our souls deep inside need it and crave it.  So many longings and anxieties and the emptiness we often feel are simply due to the fact that we are not being intentional (or did not know we could be intentional!) about fulfilling the inner cravings for goodness and love that our spirits were created to need.  Spiritual formation is really about just easing the tension we feel from our separation from God's love - it is bringing our inner self back to the state it was made in, whether we know it or not, believe it or not, trust it or not.

A few ideas that Dallas Willard throws out there that will be addressed in this book that really intrigue me:
Spiritual formation done by the Spirit of God AND the spiritual riches of Christ's continuing incarnation in his people including... the amazing personalities of those in whom he has most fully lived. 
I love the idea that God uses community and the uniqueness of each of us to touch the hearts of each other.  We are not all becoming little "Christian robots" that think and act the same, nor should we ever strive for that.  How boring and dull that would be!  Instead, we are given unique and amazing personalities and God actually wants us to become more fully ourselves, embracing the unique personality we have.  As I am "transformed" in my inner character, I get to become more fully and uniquely me, embracing the unique ways my mind and heart were created to function.
The perpetual world revolution through character transformation...
And, again, I love the idea behind this.  The world is full of mess and murk and misery.  We do not have to look very far to see it.  But the world does not need an external clean-up - we do not need someone to come along and paint a smile on each person's face or urge them to strive to "do good."  We need heart renovations.  We need humans to want to invite God into their murk, so God can transform the yuck.  From that all goodness and acts of love will naturally flow.  But our job is not to do the cleaning and the striving, nor is it to tell others how to clean and strive, our job is simply to encourage others to sit still and invite God's love into the mess.  We love others best when we sit with them in their murky messes and invite God into that together.  It is a life of peace and hope, sitting together, holding the hand of the person who is in such despair, whispering that they do not have to strive.  Let's all just sit still, stop striving, and invite God to full access of the character messes that have formed inside of our broken hearts.  Let's stop trying to ignore or cover up the painful and murky messes, but instead open up the horrendous messes to each other and to God - and then we can watch with awe at the revolution that emerges.  This is the gospel my friends - this is the inner world of Jesus' heart. 
Renovation of the Heart
California sunset
Sunday's gorgeous sunset

Monday, April 9, 2018

Air Force song 🎶

It is Monday, which means Charlie is at symphony practice this evening.  He plays the clarinet with a local youth symphony.  I usually use the two hour practice time to run errands or catch up on my homework reading.  And I did spent the majority of the evening doing that but I got to his rehearsal a little early today and the door to the band room is open (because it is 85 degrees outside today!).  So I am waiting outside in the warm evening air just listening.  And I hear the Air Force song begin to play...  I knew Charlie’s next concert was going to have a patriotic theme to it and I guess I even realized he would be playing the Armed Forces Melody song.  But to stand outside and actually hear his group playing the Air Force song tonight on this beautiful evening just had moved me to tears.  The song always has, as I heard it so many times over Ryan’s career.  A mixture of gratitude, pride, patriotism, fear, joy, and sadness.  Music always moves my heart anyway but songs that mean something, even more so.  And to hear my son playing a song so familiar to me.  And they are good, like really good.  The youth symphony is playing this difficult song so beautifully.  I realize how proud Ryan would be of our Charlie’s talent and ability.  It just makes me emotional.  I guess songs are supposed to move the heart and do that, right?  God have mercy if I make it through the concert in May!  Anyone want to bring a box of tissue and attend with me??
🇺🇸 🎼

April 16th UPDATE:  Charlie’s two concert dates are May 6th and May 16th.  I knew about the May 6th performance, but the extra performance on May 16th was just added today.  May 16th is Ryan’s birthday.  He would have been turning 41 that day.  Last year we celebrated May 16th by having a “daddy day” of visiting the cemetery and then eating Ryan’s favorite foods and doing things Ryan would have enjoyed.  This year I had planned to do that again but then Charlie will be playing with the symphony that evening.  I am not sure how I will handle hearing Charlie play the Air Force song and other patriotic favorites on Ryan’s birthday.  It is so weird to me that this extra concert got added on that day!  God must have a purpose for that.  All are welcome to attend either performance with me next month, just let me know and I will get extra tickets.
SLO youth symphony
a picture of Charlie’s group in the March concert last month

grief is loyal

Read this today and it meant something to me.  It is written by Monique Minahan

Grief is loyal.

Grief is so moved when someone dares approach it, speak to it, say its name out loud to its face, without shame, with compassion, that it never forgets.

It is so used to being covered, hidden, shushed, and relegated to closed doors and bathroom floors that when it is invited out into public without a mask it feels a deep wave of gratitude that washes over the heart crevices emptied by death.

They are still empty, but they are touched. They are seen. They are acknowledged. Sometimes for the first time in years.

This is how grief and gratitude meet in the cold, shadowed, uneasy and painful corners of our hearts. Quietly, without much fanfare and even less expectation they lean into each other and breathe.
Inspiration Point
spring hike by this pretty stream in Santa Barbara