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Moulin Rouge and Moms

“The greatest thing you’ll ever learn is just to love and be loved in return.”– so opens the 2001 colorful, poignant, moving, artistic, movie-musical, best picture Oscar nominee, film Moulin Rouge! 

What I like about the quote is the dualistic calling of love- the two parts- 1. Loving and 2. Being Loved in Return.

Today is Mother’s Day. I sit thinking and typing in the blessing of my life. I am surrounded by a husband, strong and intentional who makes a wicked French Toast and will not let me in the kitchen today, and two children- unplanned, surprise blessings handed to me, from the very hand of God safely and with promise of a complete life change and lots of fun, and with a 19 week old fetus growing inside of me, planned and prayed for, developing with the potential only God’s creative and divine hand could craft- I am grateful and in awe. I’m happy and full.

I’m also thinking about the first half of Toulouse’s line about love. As a mom this past year, I’ve been learning to love without always being loved in return. In the beginning of their lives, there was no doubt my kids loved me- even if the primary way they showed it was by simply and vulnerably NEEDING me. They loved me innocently, freely, without concern for what I did wrong, and never noticed what I knew or didn’t know. When I left them somewhere, they were excited to see me show back up. I sang and sang to them in my terrible singing voice and they listened and cuddled and stopped crying. They were delighted that I fed them, played with them, took them to parks and playdates and brought them safely home to take a nap.

And all of a sudden, last July, everything shifted. Elijah turned 5. He turned a very conscientious,even more curious, deliberate and inquisitive, daddy-obsessed, and memory black-box, kind of 5. Turns out he didn’t need me as much any more and wasn’t delighted as often as demanding to be free of my control over his decisions, actions, and desires. He is an incredibly sweet and kind and thoughtful boy- he is careful to obey most of the rules and respect people- peers and elders. But there have been times this past year when he’s flat out told me he wants to “get me and make me miss” when we play ball, that he thinks he could do better, that he’d rather have Daddy do it, and that he’s ready to go to school next year instead of stay home with Andi and me. And thank goodness- he does have to go to Kindergarten in August!

At church today, both Eli and Andi made flowers for moms with their class. When Drew and I walked in to get them, they were singing with all of their friends, “Thank you God for Mommy’s for Mommy’s for Mommy’s…” which was completely precious. On the brink of tears already, Andi and Eli came running up to hug me and give me their flowers. After I held Eli’s flower for a fraction of a second he took it back and said, “This is for you but I’m going to give mine to Daddy.” Pretty much summing up our year together- the love for me is there, under-girding daily interactions and deep in the security of his heart and soul, but seldomly demonstrated as it was so frequently in the days of his pre-5-year-old youth.

To be honest- I’m learning how selfish and egocentric I can be! I want him to want me, love me, need me and choose me. In desiring his love, I act like a child, get my feelings hurt and have to walk away sometimes. (A quote here from Joan Kerr- Please Don’t Eat the Daisies- “The real menace in dealing with a five year old is that in no time at all you begin to sound like a five-year-old.”) So in my reversion to a 5-year-old myself, I’ve been reminding myself that love is to be given away, not demanded in reciprocation. I have to remind myself I am the adult and that this is the first of many times in his life when he might not like me, or say that he loves me, and that I have to love him without being loved in return.

And for this, I rely on the love God has for me, often given and sporadically returned in my life of faith. Given self-sacrificially, without conceit and concern for self but to uphold and uplift the other. And I rely on the love I have for Eli. For seeing him for who he is, not what he does, for knowing he is mine as a gift and that I receive him just as he is, and do, and always will, love him relentlessly.

In about 11 months and 2 weeks, Andi will turn 5. And 5 years from this October, Baby Booyah will turn 5 and hopefully I’ll be more ready to love whether or not I am loved in return. Being a mom is an astounding calling- one I am being more and more equipped for each day and enjoying the moments of love along the way.

 

My 4 Moms: Memories

I’m a very lucky woman to have 2 moms and 2 grandmas- all alive to celebrate and be celebrated on this 2012 Mother’s Day. This blog is for you Mom, Gayle, Grammy, and Grandma. I love you and here is a very brief, eclectic, and spontaneous explanation of why!

Mom, April:

  • You were overjoyed that I was born
  • You would rather play and pay attention to us as kids than do anything else: work, housework, or hang out with your friends- but still managed to keep a healthy balance as a working adult with good friends and a hospitable house!
  • You pack a great cooler and made camping trips full of good food- biscuits and gravy, spaghetti, cookies for dessert etc, etc..
  • You were the last one out the door on the way to church- we would all sit in the car and wait while you curled your hair- unfortunately it took me 17 years to realize it was because you had worked hard to feed everyone else and get our hair curled and left yourself for last.
  • You make signs to welcome us home or to celebrate our weddings or graduations
  • You allowed us to choose our own friends and gave us the foundation of morals and confidence to make decisions in navigating the trenches of adolescent social life
  • You cooked dinner 6 nights a week even when we complained it was “Roast again?!” or “We don’t like these potatoes” and always made homemade cookies.
  • You came to Kansas City and helped me in the tender first hours and exhausting and life shaking first weeks of both of my kids’ lives
  • You listen to me and love and support me no matter what

My mother-in-law, Gayle:

  • You welcomed me into your family when I was a stranger
  • You keep track of everything and have supplied me or my kids with a graduation cap and gown, a sombrero, a Space Jam CD, a flashlight and much more when we needed it. 
  • You are patient and positive
  • You have always given your kids a united and friendship filled relationship with your husband- providing the security and stable love in which your boys grew up
  • You show up to cheer your kids on- even me at my  half-marathons and seminary graduation and still now your grown boys’ coaching jobs and adult tennis leagues
  • You love fly-overs, dark chocolate with caramel, cotton candy, and the circus and make adventures happen for my kids weekly
  • You’ve allowed me to go to school and work by providing a safe, fun, and generous tradition of Monday GG Days
  • You took Drew out on a Valentine’s Day date in college when I was crushing on him and completely scared me into thinking he had a girlfriend already- instead I found out he had a loving mom who would invite me on the Valentine’s Day lunch date a year later!

My Grammy, Dee:

  • You introduced me to ramekins- the small dishes that make applesauce, cooking prep, and butter table presentation pure bliss
  • You have a positive attitude, a curious spirit, and a desire to truly learn about people that made many of my friends feel special when they met you
  • You cheered me on and showed up to all three of my long graduation ceremonies!!
  • You have a great sense of style, are a very classy and beautiful woman
  • You made family gatherings beautiful with your attention to table presentations, homegrown flower arrangements, and centerpieces- you hosted special brunches and gatherings all through my life.
  • Despite the antiques, breakables, and beautiful things in your neat home- we 9 grand-children have always been free to play, explore, and manipulate the knick-knacks- and along the way, we’ve somehow learned to respect and take care with beautiful things!
  • You are strong and will not be slowed down- we have fun playing tennis, cards, croquet or farkle with you still today despite tough heart and lung struggles and your 80 plus years of age!
  • You love my mom well

My Grandma, Marion:

  • For the special memory I have of my solo airplane ride to visit you and Gpa in San Jose when I was 6 years old. For our time at the mall together shopping for Swatch watches and my California Raisin diary and for the kind way you tried to help me fix my hair which was difficult for a mom of 2 buzz-cut boys.
  • For the traditions you introduced and carefully upheld for our family- Swedish Christmas meals, Swedish decorations and prayers, having a guest book, the importance of family reunions, and reading the Bible story aloud before we open presents
  • You took my Dad camping which led to his taking me camping which has led to me taking my family camping and lots of wonderful memories from every trip. You bravely took 3 and 4 grandkids on camping trips in your late 60’s and survived our bringing 100’s of moths into  your clean camper with grace!
  • You played with us (Rummikub and hide the red truck) and have always been ready to have toys ready for my kids at your house
  • You pray for me and write back to my prayer e-mails supporting my calling to ministry and reminding me that I’m blessed to be a blessing
  • You have demonstrated faith, trust and strength in the last 10 years that show me how great and trustworthy God is

What a fun way to think of you and how much my mothering is inspired and influenced by the mothering and grandmothering you have given to me! Love you all!

 

 

Weeds and Winning

Today the weather outside is my favorite. Crisp, cool, sunny, no wind- a 55 degree morning that will evolve smoothly and generously into a humidity-free 72 degree afternoon. Ahhhhh. Missouri- sometimes you really do yourself proud.

Also- bountiful beauty is in full bloom in my front yard. I'm gonna knock you out beautyThese are “knockout roses” (I’m pretty sure that’s their name in common people plant vernacular) and they generate all of that beauty on their very own. No watering, no new soil, in spite of the van almost running them over on the days I back out too crookedly and quickly, and without thought, care or attention on my part. The plants I so carefully tend to and procure with money, time, and attention are the wee ones barely poking their green/bud-less heads above the pot in the back of the photo. The roses are a gift- a spring blessing that come just because, and make me grateful every day just to be here, now.

Today I’m heading to a good friend’s house to help her manage the weeds that so enjoy complete take- overs of her enormous flower beds. She lives on multiple acres of land and has oodles to do in the ways of tending, mowing, weeding, planting, wild animal impeding, and swimming pool maintenance. She is generous enough to let me work for her at my convenience to help with miscellaneous yard work. It’s too beautiful of a day today not to go pull weeds for a friend. Said friend also lets my kids and I frolic about in her backyard pool all summer- weed combat is the least I can do for her.

The day continues to get better and its only 10am! Drew just texted me to let me know he renewed the license plates for our van ONLINE. Instead of having to drive to the DMV and wait in unpleasant lines, he took care of it at his desk in 2 minutes. All for a $1 on-line processing fee. Hopefully this news helps you win your next DMV encounter.

Another gas saving, van mileage reducing win came as my good friend Carol called to say she’d take the kids to preschool today- saving me 50 minutes round trip. They were excited for the change of pace and I was grateful. We sat by the roses as we waited for the blue-VW bug-blessing to arrive- again, Ahhhhhhh.

Only one thing remains- termites! They continue to swarm inside our basement. Please termite guy, call me back today with good news that you’ll come treat one more powerfully fatal time! Otherwise, I guess I’ll just spend more time outside, with the roses and the sunshine and get over it.

 

 

 

I didn’t really want to but…

Spring is good- its a new start for the earth. The flowers, trees, grass and dirt get to rejuvenate, re-germinate and regrow- throwing off the winter weight and coming out of hiding. As I look around, I see the outdoors returning to its best- not in its winter sheltering or its summer wilting but in its truest beauty, strongest form. Spring is always pushing flowers, plants, trees, grass and dirt to move- to change and grow up into what it is meant to be at its creative and creation heart.

I think sometimes being pushed by something outside of our choosing is exactly what we need to grow.

There were two instances late this past winter that have pushed me into a small amount of growth and change through the early part of Spring.

First of all, Elijah got a Lego helicopter set for Valentine’s Day. A few days after the candy was gone, Eli became very interested in trying to build the helicopter. It was a Wednesday morning when he really started asking if we could do it. The thing about Wednesdays this year is that it’s the one day that Eli, Andi and I stay home and spend the day together. School, GG day with grandma, and my work usually break up Tuesday, Thursday, and Friday. So when Eli wants something on Wednesday morning- there is no escape. No one else is around- its just me and his whims, requests, great ideas, energy and pleads.

I can’t explain why I didn’t want to build the helicopter, why I thought it would be a project better suited for a Daddy/Eli evening than a Mommy/Eli morning- didn’t he want to read a book or help bake something instead?

Despite my reservations, we broke open the box and began to build. Turns out there are step by step instructions to these Lego sets- I am such a newbie! I was pleasantly surprised, and together we cruised through the construction of a pretty awesome helicopter. We worked together for almost an hour, side by side, helping each other decipher pictures and fit small pieces together. The time spent together was the best part but the actual process of Lego construction was much more fun than I thought it would be. I should not have written it off so flippantly.

Legl Helicopter- built by Eli and Mommy Feb 2012

The second winter springboard came late February in the build-up to Oscar night. Drew and I have grown to be Oscar fans- enjoying the award show and the push to see good movies. We were gifted a date night around Valentine’s day. Seeing a movie was a given that night and the choice came down to: “The Vow”- a Rachel McAdams rom-com or “Hugo”- the Oscar nominated film by Scorsese. If I was honest, I wanted to see the easy, romantic, emotionally coddling, beautiful actor filled “Vow”- it was Valentine’s season after all. However, I knew come Oscar night, I would really be wishing I had seen “Hugo”. Drew felt the same- not dying to see “Hugo” but interested definitely in what it might be. We bought tickets to the 8:05 show and were immediately blown away.

“Hugo” was a magical, beautiful, thoughtful, moving, compassionate, and adventurous piece of movie eye-candy. Beyond being so fun to watch, the themes of redemption, identity and purpose, living a good story, hoping for dreams to come true, believing the best about people, finding yourself despite failures and loss, and the beauty of a child’s power to change the world made it such a good movie. I was moved to see deeper, to hold on to hope more earnestly, and to believe in the power for people’s lives to be redeemed by compassion, inclusion, and the letting go of prejudice and fear. Again, I would have missed so much if I had given into my first, more natural inclination, to see a different movie. I didn’t want to see “Hugo” but did anyways and now cannot recommend it highly enough.

Now that its Spring, there’s a new list of things I do not really want to do…read more Superhero books to Eli, spot clean the carpets, tackle my summer work agenda, learn to cook brussel sprouts and do something with a mango I bought on sale even though I don’t really like mangoes…

However, my winter lesson- what I learned by digging deep into the nourishment of the way-down-there soil, the forced pattern of growing up and out of where I stopped growing somewhere in the busy-ness of the fall, is reminding me that the reward of doing something I do not really want to do, is often a good surprise. A bit of enjoyment, some enlightenment, perhaps greater productivity and a deeper connection with someone I love. I hope to continually submit myself to things I don’t want to do out of a discipline of becoming a greater souled person- more in touch with the world by touching things I wouldn’t choose myself but gratefully receive with open hands and an open mind.

 

Gratitude

I have been crying and complaining and being overwhelmed more often than I’d like to be lately. I can pass most of the blame off on pregnancy hormones and emotional tasks such as: discussing big financial issues for our family’s small budget, registering my son for kindergarten, having my “baby” turn 4, and in general not getting restful sleep.

I don’t want to live stuck in tears, fears, and anxiety. I want to accept Jesus’ invitation in Matthew 11:28-30. As penned in The Message it reads:

28-30“Are you tired? Worn out? Burned out on religion? Come to me. Get away with me and you’ll recover your life. I’ll show you how to take a real rest. Walk with me and work with me—watch how I do it. Learn the unforced rhythms of grace. I won’t lay anything heavy or ill-fitting on you. Keep company with me and you’ll learn to live freely and lightly.”

Freely and lightly…ahhhh. Doesn’t that sound nice?

I think one step towards light and free living, towards hope and love and peace outside of my circumstances, is practicing daily gratitude. Reminding myself of what and whom I have been given, what I get to see, the places and people I am a part of, and the grace that permeates through my life.

So begins my short list of the innumerable blessings for which I am grateful…in no particular order…

-the ability to get pregnant and bear children

-my husband- specifically right now because of his ability to think big picture and play wholeheartedly

-Andi who turned 4 yesterday and her free spirit that leads her to sing, dance, make faces, flip upside down, and care very little- most of the time- what others think of her

-Eli who cares deeply about people and relationships, who has a brain that remembers everything, who cannot sit still and uses that energy to engage life so fully

-friends who share their swimming pools

-that my kids really enjoy swimming and are brave and adventurous in the water

-my opportunities to have traveled to different parts of Europe and Central America and now for the chance to stay mostly home

-living close to people I love

-chances to get to the people I love that live far away because of good flight deals, a work trip to CO, or carpooling with the Bruces!

-a deck that is shaded by a big tree

-summer assignments at Castaway

-when Eli calls me Mommy

-getting to work out at Crossfit Northland

-living in a state that has all 4 seasons

-my church – Jacob’s Well

-working cars

-our house (yep, it makes the list, despite its smallness and its termites and its foundation cracks- I really am grateful we live here, now)

-the recent “invention” of (or my delayed appreciation for) Greek yogurt. Sooo much better than the regular stuff!

-sweet smelling flowers outside

-trails to hike and bike around my house

-family and friends who love and care for our kids

-desserts

-deep breathing

Shoot…out of time…all for now. Feeling free and light and ready to go.

I’m grateful for you reading this 🙂

Termites and the Resilence of the Human Spirit

On Sunday I spoke in front of over 200 people and my opening line was, “This is the Day the Lord has made, Let us Rejoice and BE GLAD in it, let us receive this day as a gift, blah blah blah…”. No really, it was profound and I meant it. I pray most mornings, “In the beginning, God said, ‘Let there be Light’ and there was Light. This very day God has acted. May God’s name be praised”.

Starting a day in such a way should serve to prepare one’s heart and mind, soul and spirit, speech and behavior for selflessness, gratitude and generosity throughout the day. However, my days do not always play out in such a free and light fashion…insert real life example: YESTERDAY!!

Here is a list of things that seek to overwhelm or sink me in a major or minor sense depending on the day:

-changing bunk bed sheets

-having a sick kid and not knowing for sure if a doctor visit is necessary

-neighbors in my backyard who are bothering me, my kids, my newly planted grass with their language, behavior, muddy shoes etc…

-bugs inside my house

-unmet expectations and plans being changed or cancelled (especially due to inclement weather)

I’m not proud of this list, nor is it an exhaustive list of all that can cause me emotional, physical or mental distress on an ordinary day. It is a bit of the picture of who I am (and probably what I need to work on!).

I woke up yesterday tired from a weekend away and with a slight sickness that made me mildly but constantly uncomfortable all day. I also woke up to a crying and fussy 3 year old daughter. Having been out of town all weekend, I wasn’t sure what had preceded these tears and cries of anguish. Everyone assured me she had acted fine and healthy all weekend. Her discomfort and unease was however convincing enough that indeed, all of a sudden, this morning, she was sick. We called the doctor and had an appointment within the hour.

Sure enough, poor Andi was inflicted with yet another ear infection. Her third in three months which substantiates that something needs to change in the treatment and checking up plan. Poor sister was in a lot of pain and didn’t feel like herself. She got meds (affordable but effective meds) and we headed home. We were home 5 minutes, when she scraped off half her foot while closing the front door. Ouch indeed, and more crying and tears would ensue for the next 4 hours, off and on.

Around 11am, we had friends to play and neighbors randomly popping over. The afternoon was shaping up nicely as we drew on the driveway with chalk. That is until I noticed some bugs flying about. I dismissed them at first thinking they were harmless spring flies…until I turned around. There in the crack of my driveway and garage was a SWARM of not friendly bugs, but TERMITES! A massive swarm, in the crack, all up and down the garage wall and creeping into my house. I ran inside and indeed found them on our downstairs furniture and carpet.

This was terrible and nerve breaking news. This was event number 3, of the day, on the “what breaks Linds” list (forgot to mention that I was washing the bunk bed sheets and needed to remake at least one bed before nap time when the swarm broke out!)

I told the kids and their friends to stay out of the house and we all watched them swarm and fly about on the driveway. I called Drew in a teary panic and with utter frustration. He graciously answered his phone on the busiest work day of his life- the day before tax day 2012! Together we agreed we should be under warranty from our termite issues of last summer (this is unfortunately the 4th swarm I’ve witnessed at my house!). We hung up so Drew could return to the stress of taxes and processing and I could return to the creeping, flying swarming party happening IN and around my house.

My sweet and calming friend Kristin arrived 6 minutes into the panic to pick up her kids. What a gift to have a friend who sat with me and flicked termites off her shirt, assuring me that it would work out, being mad with and for me that they were here, and talking me down off the ledge. All the while, our children smashed and watched the bugs- staying relatively calm and positive about the whole thing.

We are under warranty and should have them retreated in a couple of days. No new swarms in the last 24 hours.

Today I was invited to the “Women Who’ve Changed the Heart of the City” luncheon to benefit City Union Mission’s ministry to the homeless of Kansas City. It was a generous invite from my friend Binny and a privilege to sit in the 500 person room today. The food was great and the presentation polished and meaningful. They honored three women who have changed the heart of the city. One of the honorees was Laura R. Hockaday who wrote for the KC Star for 38 years. She turned the “Society” page into the “Peoples” page and expanded the narrow social news focus to include the good work being done by oft overlooked Black and Hispanic populations in the city. Today when Elizabeth Alex, the emcee, asked Ms. Hockaday what most formed her as she conducted so many interviews with people around the city, she answered, “I learned deeply about the resilience of the human spirit”. She was changed when she heard stories of people’s hardship and saw how they had overcome.

Obviously, my yesterday was not real hardship. Even in the middle of termite vacuuming, I told myself, “This is not that big of a deal…this doesn’t have to consume/defeat you”, and yet I felt drained and defeated at the end of the night. I had very little resilience as I laid myself down to sleep.

Today is a new day, another gift, another chance to screw up and be anxious or afraid, frantic or frustrated, OR a chance to slow down, to notice, appreciate, wonder, forgive, be free, have patience, choose joy, hold onto hope, and restart.

As humans we can overcome. We are strong on our own and have each other and a resurrected triune God who knows us, and holds everything that IS, together. To have resilience in our human spirit must mean getting up when the list of what beats us down has check-marks all over it. It can mean not letting circumstances tell us who we are or what we are worth. Or loving despite not receiving love in return and giving when we are the poorest. I don’t know what it means really but when Ms. Hockaday said that, I realized today was my opportunity to be resilient, and in doing whatever that means, to be gracious, grateful, and good.

 

 

 

Easter’s Proleptic Hope

Easter is moving to a higher spot on my “Most Favorite Theologically Significant Holidays” list. As I’ve learned more about the church calendar, the liturgical year, I’ve moved away from Advent and Christmas as the high points, towards Easter and Christ’s resurrection as the pinnacle piece of my faith. This move makes sense when we realize the Bible tells the story of the Passion and Resurrection of Christ in all four gospels but the birth story of Jesus in only Matthew and Luke. Keepers of the lectionary and liturgical chronological practices tell us the Resurrection of Christ that one “Sunday” is the reason we worship and feast each Sunday now.  Every Sunday is a mini Easter, keeping us ever in the weekly rhythm of celebrating the power of God in conquering death and the continual reign of the Risen Christ.

In seminary I learned a myriad of complicated and new words. The one word that changed my faith the most, that directs my days still today, is PROLEPSIS. Say it with me. “Pro- lep- sis”

Theologian Wolfhart Pannenberg is most commonly associated with harolding the theological construct of prolepsis. Pannenberg speaks of prolepsis as a way that God reveals Godself and God’s intentions for the world.

Pannenberg’s view on reality was “‘an eschatologically oriented ontology’ that is, a view of reality that is based on a future-oriented history.”[1]

He put forth that all that will ever be revealed about God in the future has already been revealed through the past historical event of Christ’s conquering of death through the resurrection.

Pannenberg explained the significance of the Christ event as central to God’s indirect revelation because the history of Jesus “is the anticipation of the future of God wherein God is fully revealed”.[2] The resurrection of Jesus Christ reveals God’s intentions for knowing, saving, redeeming, and having relationship with all of humanity.

The prolepsis event gives followers of Christ the assurance that we can know what will be because of what has happened in the past. I believe God will eventually rescue all creation out of destruction and death and bring all of creation to a restored fullness and wholeness. Small evidences of this redeeming work happen every day as God works through willing Christian believers committed to carrying out God’s redemptive work on earth until the final consummation of the kingdom comes.

As we sit in the silence of this Holy Saturday, the waiting moments before the resurrection hope is born anew in our hearts through worship, community, meditation, and family gatherings tomorrow, we  have HOPE. A proleptic hope means we can trust God for the future because of what we know God did in the past.  THE FUTURE WILL BE WHAT WE FIND IN CHRIST’S RESURRECTION- the meaningful future is in the past.

God’s most defining reveal was in the resurrection of Christ. When God brought Christ back from the dead, God said, “NO! Everything will not end in destruction, violence, suffering and death. Even death will not have the final word. I AM about renewal, rebuilding, reconciliation, and rebirth and MY purposes will finally and forever reign.”

So, may we be working with God in these purposes and celebrating the victory of Christ’s great sacrificial love over the darkness.

Happy Easter.


[1] Don H Olive, Wolfhart Pannenberg in Makers of the Modern Theological Mind series ed. Bob E. Patterson, (Waco: Word Books, 1973), 100.

[2] Ibid.

Change your life chicken and 3 candles

It all started with what I’ve started calling, the “Change your life Chicken” recipe from Contessa that is a Valentine’s time tradition in our life and marriage. On Feb 18th, Drew and I were cooking together. We put together a pretty great meal for a pretty ordinary family Saturday night. With the table almost set and the the food finishing (roasted, mashed butternut squash, salad and the Parmesan encrusted chicken), Drew said “This is such a nice dinner. It feels like we should be celebrating something.” Eli and Andi were both underfoot in the kitchen and Eli piped up immediately saying, “Are we celebrating? What are we celebrating?!” Drew caught my eye and whispered, “What if we just told them?” I nodded. Eli’s keen eye caught the exchange and he persisted, “What? What are we celebrating? When will you tell us?” Drew lit the three candles we’ve had on the table since Vday (red, pink, and white) and Andi took her seat to speed up the process. Hot food set, anxious children wiggling in their chairs, and parents without a distinct plan-we set about sharing the surprise celebration news. Drew said, “Well…” and I jumped in..

L- “How many candles are lit here?”

E and A- “Three”

L- “Yes. And how many kids do we have in our family?”

E and A- “Four”

L-“Not people. Just kids”

E and A- “Two”

L-“Welllll (drawing it out for obvious dramatic effect), pretty soon we are going to have this many kids in our family-  3 kids like there are 3 candles!”

(their faces spread into slow smiles and their eyes literally lit up, their words were few, and after a few quick moments, both their eyes and heads dropped simultaneously to my stomach)

D-“Mommy is pregnant! Do you know what that means?”

A-“That you have to have a baby in your tummy Mommy!!!”

L-“Yes, and do you know what that means for you and Andi, Eli?”

E-“That we’re going to have a brother!”

A-“Or a sister!”

D-“Yes. We don’t get to choose but we will love the baby whether it is a girl or a boy. You will both get to be a big brother and a big sister”

A-“Mommy, are we going to keep it?”

L-“Yes Andi. Of course”

A-“I’m going to play with her all the time. We are getting to have a baby Eli!”

L and D-“It takes a long time to grow a baby in Mommy’s tummy. The baby will not come out until after Andi’s birthday, after Castaway, after Eli’s birthday, and even after you start kindergarten Eli”

E-“Oh wow. That’s a long time.”

D-“Are you guys excited?”

E and A-“Oh yea”

We went on to talk names- Cutie, Sarah, Boo-yah, and various of their friends’ names came quickly to mind. We kind of like Baby Boo-ya for the pregnancy name of this baby. Thanks for that Eli.

The looks on their faces- joy, complete surprise, shock, excitement and childlike wonder brought tears to my eyes immediately. It was precious- where was our video camera?!

Drew and I had known for about 3 weeks that we were expecting a third child. This time was so different from Eli and Andi who’s conceptions were absolute surprises. To have planned and tried for this baby was a new experience and our joy was great. We had meant to keep it quiet and not share with Eli and  Andi until we were out of the miscarriage danger zone or until we were more ready to share with others. However, the mood and moment of that night in February was too good to pass up.

How sweet it was to share this precious news with the ones that will bear the journey and the life with this new life inside me. I was humbled to share with the ones who have first taught me to be a mom , the two who have let me make mistakes and learn from them so that I’ll be a mom who’s grown a little bit for this new little one.

Turns out “Change your life Chicken” was the perfect menu item for such a night. Elijah and Andi’s life will be changed by the news we shared with them at the table, in the candle light, that night. Our family will change as we grow and we cannot contain the expectation and excitement that we feel for this third gift.

Spring Flings and Flies!

Yesterday was the first day of Spring. March 20th, 2012. Words to describe the day that transitioned us formally from winter’s slumber to springs enlivening growth in Kansas City, include: balmy, wet, and seasonal. The temps were in the low 60’s and rain fell in consistent but not drowning drops all day. Despite the rain, the kids and I had three grocery store errands to accomplish. This is their preschool Spring Break week so they came along on my usually solo trek through town.

After running through rain and puddles in and out of stores, we were home again with lots to unload. Increasingly more helpful, they each took a load of food into the house. When Andi came back out, I was still unloading the van. Studying the soaked driveway, she looked up at me and exclaimed, “Worms! Mom, worms. Lots of worms!”

Back story: When Andi was almost 2, in the Spring of 2010, Eli was at school and I felt led to give Andi her first “creation care” lesson. There were worms all over our driveway, flushed out from an early morning rain, that were quickly drying up as the sun came out. I’m not usually a worm fan, I’m actually squeamish, dislike rainy morning runs that turn into worm hopping exercises, and avoid fishing with anything live on the end of a hook. That day however, something in me couldn’t let the worms die on my driveway. I looked around and saw most of the worms had congregated on my driveway, my neighbors were worm free. Seemed like this was indeed our specific divine task in a lowly circumstance.

Important to know about Andi is that she has always had a heart for animals; they delight her. She giggles when she plays with dogs, she chases birds freely and without discouragement, and stops to stare at bugs. She’s a non-discriminating animal appreciator. It was easy on that April day in 2010 to sell Andi on our task: “We need to rescue the worms. They need to get back to the dirt before they dry out. Will you help me carry them to the grass?” I went inside to get gloves and when I had come back out, Andi was already rescuing worm #1. I squirmed my way through and picked them up in a gloved hand while Andi industriously and barehandedly rescued worm after worm.

We haven’t kept up too consistently on this task so I was surprised and delighted when she yelled out yesterday when spotting the worms. She remembered they needed a rescue ride to the dirt but was hesitating yesterday about the sliminess.  Now she’s almost 4 and into princesses and ballerinas as well as animals. She asked for gloves and this time I got brave instead of getting gloves. I picked up the first worm and flung it into the grass. “See…they don’t even really feel like anything in your hand.” And this was true! We went on to pick up and fling the 6 worms on our driveway back to their homes deep in the grass. We really were flinging them, hope they didn’t mind the exciting ride!

After we flung the last worm, I realized the side and back doors of the van were still open from the unloading process. I went to shut the side down and was shocked to see a BIRD! frantically flying around the inside of the van! I screamed. It flapped and banged into the windows a couple of times before finding its way out the back hatch. At my scream, Andi had come running to the van so she saw the bird’s desperate flight from the van. She was surprised but mostly completely enjoying the silliness of my scream and the excitement of a creature of nature visiting her car seat!

The rest of the day was more subdued, but by 1pm yesterday, Spring had definitely awakened us and we are ready to participate as we can in the life generating processes of this season.

 

July Transformations

A Castaway Sunset

I was privileged to be at Young Life’s Castaway Club last week. I flew up there for Assigned Team Training, a period of preparation, team introductions, planning, and sharing amongst the 17 or so people I will be serving alongside this July 1-21st. I will be on the Assigned Team as a Summer Staff Coordinator, a shepherding/pastoral type of role, with my good friend and mentor Ray, as the male SS Coordinator. To work with closely with Ray will be an amazing opportunity as he has been on the YL staff for decades, has a DMin and wisdom, experience, integrity, and the spirit of encouragement that blesses and teaches me each time I get around him.  Together, Ray and I will get to foster community, discipleship and service for 40 college-aged students who come to serve as boat drivers, cooks, landscapers, retail associates, climbing wall/zip-line belay-ers, and lifeguards. Last year when I served in this role, I felt the most close to who I was created to be- my abilities and passions so connected with God’s work in the lives of the college students I was so fortunate to serve and serve alongside. Last July was truly a gift.

This July will be the fourth July in a row that the Osborne family has been at Castaway for an assignment. As I sat in meetings last week, I was overcome with gratitude. I am a different person because of the months we’ve spent on YL assignments at Castaway. My family is different as well. Living in community, working day and night, laughing and thinking hard, making new and deep relationships, gleaning wisdom from parenting cohorts and those farther along on the journey, seeing beauty in sunsets, green grass, and lake reflections, my children receiving so much love and caring attention, my children (and hopefully me) giving love and attention to others, Drew being able to work at his YL best…all of these have so formed and shaped me that I could not be who I am without that sacred setting, those people.

When the 2012 team was asked to think about the mark we wanted to make as a team this summer, the impact we would have while we served, and the memories people would have of us after we left, the list of character traits, personalities, attitudes, and postures we wanted to embody was daunting in its breadth but inspiring in its invitation for transformation and service.

The people we want to be, the team we intend to become, will come to be because of the grace of God, extended towards us in Christ and shared with each other in fellowship and community.We talked about intentionality and deliberate focus on submitting ourselves to this calling. Indeed, we will not become who we want to be without turning into Jesus’ Spirit and letting Christ lead our leading.

Our list is below- as a reminder to me and an encouragement to all of us. Let us become people who so look and act like Jesus that the world is different- more loving, more at peace, holding more firmly to hope- because of our being present in a given place, at a certain time.

The 2012 Castaway Session 2 Assigned Team will intentionally seek to be people who (are):

-faithful

-hospitable

-imaginative

-transformative

-peaceful- motivated not by fear or anxiousness

-Christ-centered

-Joyful

-Servants

-Say “Yes-we-can/will”

-Loving

-Have humility

-Are searchlights for those unseen

-Prayerful

-Mindful of the other (focused selflessly outside of ourselves)

-Invisible so that they see Jesus instead of us

-Excellent in order to remove distractions from kids hearing about Jesus

-Generous and extravagant

-Fueled by God

-Laugh

-Redemptive- may the month be a redemptive time and place for people

-Acting as a family that is open to everyone/all

-Say “Yes, you are ok, loved, invited, Yes you belong”

-Sacrificial

We hope to be standard bearers for these as we lead the college students and high school students who will be serving with us for the month. Most of all, we hope to be so transformed into these marks that the ministry of the Gospel goes out daily, uninhibited and fresh. I anticipate Jesus pruning and preparing we as I’m way off the mark of being one who embodies most of these things. I await the transformation and promise to focus in on the hard work and attention required in the months leading up the divine moments in Detroit Lakes, Minnesota.

Amen!