The Rescue of the Lash

I can’t seem to forget you
Your perky, naturally curly
eyelash grins up at me from
the bottom of my tea
It winks at me and dares me
to rinse the cup
one of those behemoth 16-ounce bowls
nearly full, it would require a complete
emptying, all of that love
poured down the drain.

Eyelashes are funny things
In tea, they are tragic, at the very least
with the loss of all that tea, but
let’s not dwell…let us consider
I might retrieve the lash
grasping and likely missing the smirky smile
submerge my less-than-precise fingers down deep
through the still, orange ocean
heat claiming the shea from my hands
spoiling the tea for drinking.

Next might start with a hunt for
tweezers and a rummaging
through drawers and trays, followed by
an executive decision, my being
the only one, here, on a method by which
to sterilize them…
soap, scalding water, fire or maybe
alcohol…presenting yet another problem
rubbing or liquor,  but by any means
one done
the tea would be cold and so
I look to the microwave, of course
but didn’t Deepak Chopra say on television, the other day
that the microwave kills food?
I believe “dead” is the word he carefully selected
and spoke with his impressively impressing accent, oozing with authority
as he proclaimed microwaves unsuitable
and by the way, he doesn’t like freezers, either, or
anything from a can and
everything from a box
which leaves us nowhere to turn but away from our PopTarts to
learn to cook or subsist on raw vegetables and seeds
but I tell you right now…
I am not giving up butter
or my uncured bacon and, I am so, so glad
that you cook for me
even if your girly-curly
eyelashes
fall from your manly lids
into the tea
you make
for me.

~

Where is God’s Mercy?

An essay to answer Patty, @TheVictoryTour, Twitter

The question of questions. I fired broadcast news 2 1/2 years ago because I could no longer manage the result of the stress of these reports and images blaring at me. How can we possibly avoid despair unless we steel ourselves to the facts? There is more than enough food for all, so why do those in need not get it? During the Ethiopian famine, there were reports of food sitting where it was unloaded and not getting to people because of government officials/policies/incompetence/whatever. If this is true, we are our own worst enemy.

Back when Martha Stewart was going through her trials and tribulations, my young son and I were in line at the grocery store, where a tabloid featured a photo and caption of Stewart on the cover.  Back in the car, as we buckled our seat belts, my son said,

“I’m really worried about Martha Stewart.  She looks so awfully stressed.” As he agonized over the plight of Martha Stewart, I did my best to comfort him, but what I was working with was the same boy who saw Stewart in her garden on TV and was upset that she was out there working in it “all alone.” Trying to get a highly sensitive kid like this to adulthood with any semblance of mental health with a mother who is a life-long hand-wringer, herself?  Should I throw in his and his sister’s chronically-ill lives on top of that?  A case of post-traumatic stress? A mother who found herself on the other side of what I call “The Dark Years,” a period of 6-7-8 years of injury, illness, conflict, death of a loved one and living in fear that I was losing my mind?

Should I mention the church? Back then, I was an evangelical, and although my “church family” cared about me, let’s just say that their efforts, well-meaning or not, were largely unhelpful. I quit church. It only added to my pain to have to talk to these folks. This was followed by phone calls, in which one woman recited to me a list of the sins she committed when she “ran away from God.”

“I’m not running from God,” I told her. “I’m running from you people.”

All this to say that I have been cornered with some grim stuff and that’s just what was going on in my home, never mind the rest of the world.  Add to this the reality of history and all of the sins mankind has committed against itself, before Jesus Christ and after him. Jesus, inserted into history to make a difference, followed by people who destroy one another in his name.  Centuries before the Protestant Reformation let loose senseless killing from both sides and plenty of it, earlier Christians had a jump on the violence in the Crusades, which ended up boiling down to power and wealth.

During my Dark Years, my faith had only the slightest pulse. The death of my loved one was unexpected and in a way, destroyed me. I simply could not go a step further with God. I was angry I’d been abandoned.  I’d been given some pretty major blessings, or, one, anyway, in that I’d been told I would never have children of my own followed by the birth of a daughter 14 months later.  This only added to my sense of guilt as I cold-shouldered God. I could not make any sense of what was happening, none, and to try to figure God into all of this pain? The only thing I could come up with was that he was the author of it.  I remember saying,

“I know you are there, but…” in other words…don’t come any closer. I’d been following God, I thought, and my life still came to a place of ruin, on many levels. I ended up moving hundreds of miles away to the wilds of northern New York in a little place a mile from a main road where I watched the deer and sunsets for a year. Eventually and slowly, I learned that life was about more than loss and that I didn’t have to necessarily pick up all of the pieces. I lost some.

God is not  a vending machine. God rearranging events to make my life easier wasn’t going to necessarily make it better.  He could snap his fingers and turn the sky into roses, but…I would never have to grow.

I liken this to doing everything for my children. Everything.  Let’s say I do their assignments, even.  I think you see where I am going, here.  My son was rattled when he was always coming home with complaints and tales of “teacher troubles.”  Eventually I sat down and looked him dead in the eye.

“Listen. I love you. No one on this earth loves you more than I do. I, however, am not going to protect you from teachers and what they require of you.” I felt so incredibly mean in that very long moment where his breath caught and he wiped tears from his eyes, took a deep breath and answered,

“Okay.”

The kid needed to learn to follow direction. No matter how much your mama loves you, the fact remains that life is full of challenges and what we think is fair doesn’t exist WITHOUT CONSTANT INTERVENTION ON THE PART OF SOMEONE FORCING OTHERS to BEHAVE THEMSELVES. We live in a world where some people are okay with bullying, abuse and even enslavement and torture of others. Those of us that can have to stand up to this evil on behalf of the ones who can’t. God could be the big, divine, shiny behavior police in the sky, but…what would the world be like without free will?  Rather meaningless, I’d say.  We wouldn’t care about God of our own volition, which God values most of all, and we wouldn’t have to care about much of anything else.

Jesus came to tell us things which were not naturally occurring to us.  God loves us.  God is merciful.  God wants us to love one another and pass mercy on. Simple concepts which we like to take and spin into complicated philosophies which sound pretty good to us or confirm what we want to believe.

Do we really think Jesus is okay with us using our time arguing theology? Really? Arguing, debating, trying to prove to one another that Jesus loves us best is not filling people’s bellies and freeing slaves. We need to pry ourselves off of our backsides and carry on Jesus’s work, as Teresa in Avila wrote nearly 500 years ago:

Christ has no body but yours,

No hands, no feet on earth but yours,

Yours are the eyes with which he looks

Compassion on this world,

Yours are the feet with which he walks to do good,

Yours are the hands, with which he blesses all the world.

Yours are the hands, yours are the feet,

Yours are the eyes, you are his body.

We need one another. We are our brother’s keepers. In his last words to his followers at the Last Supper, Jesus said,

“Love one another as I have loved you.”

If we follow this direction instead of isolating ourselves from the hard facts of life, the world would be a much different place. The world needs more empathy, a good thing to pray for. God’s mercy comes through us, when we allow it.

~

Christmas Calls

Christmas calls
my commuter mug
of tea shivers with anticipation
or is that laughter since I only commute
from the kitchen to my desk
No matter, it can laugh all it wants
here for a limited time only
the perfect revenge

Christmas calls
as I round the corner and
the tree comes into view
tall, majestic, covered with
too many ornaments, say my children
now adults, who think I care
about their judgment of me
in matters such as these
and consider it payback for those teenage years
and, by the way, those Christmas cookies, people?
unbeknownst to you, they will be gluten and dairy free
any more crap and they will be paleo, too

Christmas calls
as I wince at the pulsing
color-changing lights we thought
were a good idea
after admiring their marquis-like scroll
across a house down the road
too big for a tree, really
but I didn’t want to suffocate
my husband’s rare spike
of pure joy over 7 hours of preparation
for the epileptic-banned remote-controlled light show

Merry Christmas, darling.

Christmas calls
as leftover ornaments, the boxes they came from
and wreaths still in their cases stacked to my hip
litter the room all the way to the fireplace
where the oak mantle
holds out the creche
the nativity set
pieces thoughtfully arranged
with love
angels suspended
star of Bethlehem above
waiting for Jesus to come.

 

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