on growing up...an unfolding path

These days I find that my questions outnumber the answers. The terrain is far more complex than what it was 20 years ago. There are days when circumstances overwhelm me.  Landscapes of social media and technology are changing faster than I can keep pace. I hear words like stories, streaks, and tea or shipfeels, and slaps and quickly realize that these words have been reinvented and I am lost. Relationships are continuously evolving as we cross into new fields of adult children, aging parents, faith journeys, sensory processing sensitivities, and the familiar but still perplexing teenage angst. The questions stretch me and lead me to the borderlands of my soul, uncertain of what to do or where to go. Author Wendell Berry wrote, “It may be that when we no longer know which way to go that we have come to our real journey.” I believe this journey in life is one of growth and creation.

There are nights when it seems that Jacob goes to sleep in pajamas that reach generously below his ankles and by morning he awakes wearing a pair of capris. Though I wish it would slow down a bit, growth is something I expect from my children  – in fact, I think it’s line item number 3.2 in our parent-child contract which states: “Parents will help children grow.” I recently discovered a lesser-known sub-line in this contract, which reads, “Growth is lifelong, even eternal and both parents and children will need guidance and support throughout this process. Both parties are in a constant state of growing up.”  Somehow I missed that part and have spent the better part of my adult life believing I had (or should have) most of the answers. That of course my children were growing up, but I (a grown up) had phased out of that stage. I believed that once my shoe size and height stopped changing, my growing up was done and yet my soul kept outgrowing its skin. 

Nature turned out to be my great teacher once again. High atop Mt. Yassur, an active volcano on the island of Tanna in Vanuatu, I witnessed the earth growing up and creation occurring before my eyes. As the sun went down, we watched in awe (with a healthy dose of trepidation), as the earth spewed forth molten lava in a dazzling display of fireworks. Earlier in the day we had seen lava fields, where boiling liquid rock had poured out to blaze new trails and literally create new earth. Some newer patches were still charred black and desolate, while older fields were home to lush flowers and verdant forests. It was a sacred moment for us, nestled between a crater of bubbling molten earth and the Milky Way painted across the ever-expanding night sky. We were right in the middle of it – creation and growth on an epic scale. I had not considered the fact that the earth in all its splendor and great capacity, was still growing and being formed; that there were yet new lands and passageways to be discovered, never before seen. The earth, my children – are not so very different than me. We are all growing up. 

My questions seem to usher in a life force from within that breaks forth into new pathways and dimensions that help advance me toward the greatest vision God has for me and my family. We are not only transformed in this life – we are actually growing and continuously part of creation. When the path seems to end and the ground beneath me starts to rumble, I know to hold on – something new is emerging. And while at first these new lands may seem dark, dreary and uncertain, I am reminded of the wisdom of Rilke who wrote, “…the point is, to live everything. Live the questions now. Perhaps [we] will then gradually, without noticing it, live along some distant day into the answer.” The questions point the way to new lands rich with needed light and wisdom. And the new growth provides space for me to hold greater capacities for compassion, kindness, and love. 

Pajama pants are in high demand this year – I’m going to see if I can catch some good sales…

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messy family pictures included

It was going to be in front of a beautiful old barn. Reds, tans, denim…true Wisconsin style. To show how we had come to love where we live. The best family picture ever…

But alas…no picture was ever taken. No photo shoot as we ran through golden fields of wheat or playfully swung from tree swings.

As I went through the pictures we did have, they all seemed to come up short. Yet I was continuously drawn to one. The most imperfect one of all! This picture would never have even been considered in years before. Oh no no no! Just look at us-Jacob and Kate are covered in paint, we are not matching, our hair is crazy weird, and our backdrop is a paint tarp, a metal chair and a worn out little school. There is no barn. No sun setting in the background. And I certainly wouldn’t have wanted this to go public!

But I was drawn again and again to our little imperfect family covered in paint and sweat and smiles. Life, I am learning, can be messy and complicated and imperfect. If you had asked me 15 years ago what my family would look like and where we’d be – I would have shared visions of perfectly coiffed children, clothes without holes, wrinkles or stains. Healthy family dinners where everyone sits at the table and speaks pleasantly to each other. No rushing and huffing and temper tantrums. But life had other plans.

I sometimes get depressed and feel utterly defeated when life doesn’t turn out as planned. That I have failed - had I only read more parenting books, if only I had played more classical music…if only I had fed them organic food since birth…But really I am beginning to see that imperfection is part of the package and it’s not going away – it is part of the process - it is real and it is who we are– the good, the bad and the ugly.

If you look in this picture you will see a family filled with messy ponytails and bad hair days, pants that keep needing to be patched (Haley!), dinners where someone is usually crying (me or the girls) and another is running around and under the table (Jacob). I am late to most everything, it is a treat to have a hot breakfast, we have been known to eat our fair share of processed foods and my pajamas function as a second wardrobe.

But this picture also shows the same family with an oldest sister who takes time to run and play with her little brother almost every day. You can see a little blond girl who does magnificent cartwheels and a brunette whose tender heart gives me numerous hugs a day. There is also a little boy who prays everyday for friends who are sick and there on the left you might notice a boy and a girl who love each other deeply and spend most nights talking late into the night eating ice cream.

Our family today is not quite what I envisioned those many years ago, but I am not trying as hard to control or change it – but rather embrace it. This is who we are and it is good and beautiful and perfectly imperfect. I am reminded of the many who flock to see the Mona Lisa and her “imperfect” smile. And the Leaning Tower of Pisa would lose most of its appeal if it no longer leaned.  I think back to that Holy night so long ago when a baby was born and laid in a manger…no crib for his bed.

And so our story continues - a day at a time, trying to see the good and improve upon the bad and embrace and enjoy the quirkiness and craziness of it all – messy family pictures included.

I still want the picture in front of the barn – perhaps we’ll try again next year…

 

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