Browsing Category

Love

Character, Grace, Love, Patience

Rock. Paper. Scissors. GRACE

“Grace is having a relationship with someone’s heart.  Not their behaviors.”

I believe grace may hold the largest percentage in the make up of love.  It is hidden in all good things.  All of the things we strive to be and have, there grace is… indexed first in the ingredient list.

Love. Forgiveness. Kindness. Acceptance.

In conflict, I’ve often prayed for God to help me see someone through His eyes.  “Help me love them as you do.”

It isn’t a prayer I like to pray.  Most often, my heart has to have been beaten and softened by the waves of life before I resort to trying grace.

And yet, when you pull grace out and bestow it, the peace that covers the situation and the hearts involved, makes one ponder why we don’t use it more.

Right?  That Bob Goff sure is smart. I need grace daily, yet internally – and lets be honest, sometimes externally, roll my eyes when it’s time to bestow it.  Especially when my fairness factor kicks in and keeps sending my brain reports on why grace has not been earned.

When my boys were younger and argued a lot, then the tattling began.  I would tell them, “Be nice to your brother! Extend some grace.”  It had only been uttered 101 times before an exasperated McCray said, ”MOM, I don’t even know what that means!!”

Grace (n): mercy; clemency; pardon.

Truthfully, I think Webster fails to describe accurately.  It’s like a salve.  Better than Neosporin or Eucerin.  It covers a hurt or transgression like an undeserved Band-Aid.  It is acceptance given when we don’t understand.  It is forgiveness given when the action is deamed unworthy.

Shocks and stuns.  A force as startling as the power of electricity.

Turn towards grace.  Flip the lights on.

In the game of Rock, Paper, Scissors….let grace be the paper that covers the rock of “fair”.

Love can be the scissors.

Character, Courage, Faith, Forgivness, Lessons, Love, Patience, Prayer, Renewed

Known for our Fruit…

“…by their fruit you will recognize them.”

If you spent more than a little time in Sunday school as a child you probably recited the fruits of the spirit.

You might have even made a craft, or your kids have, hung on the fridge as proof they are hopefully learning a lesson or two.  Lord knows I’ve failed at teaching mine as much as I should have.

This morning I sat down for some quiet time that usually seems to elude my schedule. I’m not in a current bible study and didn’t want to read any of the three books on my nightstand, so I just sat.  I sat and watched the rain come down outside.  In our back yard sits an apple tree that is on the struggle bus.  I got it for Hubs on our first anniversary to symbolize paper, the traditional one year anniversary gift.  Only we have been so busy watering and caring for our actual relationship and family that we’ve forgotten to care for the poor little apple tree.

I sat looking at the sticks that are hoping to grow apples and the question popped into my head,

“What fruit will you produce today?”.

Yikes.

“What fruit will you be recognized by?”

Ouch.   Stop it already.

Today I would be caught with rotten bananas, like the brown ones in my freezer waiting to be used for banana bread.  Why couldn’t you have caught me on a good day?  I have a couple of those on leap years.

Spiritual fruit cannot grow with an ego in the middle of it.

Someone wiser than I came up with the acronym for Ego = Edging God Out

Which is exactly what it does, it convinces us that we are most important, we deserve this, we earned it, our feelings matter most.  Our egos come in, edge the Divine out, and get our order of priorities all jacked up.

Self?  Let me check the list….Yes!  You go up here at the top, naturally.  Like the star on the Christmas tree.  Look at you shine sister.

Others?  What have you done for me lately?   Hmmmm… Go ahead and head down, third from the bottom rung.

Children?  Y’all are still here?  Good grief, haven’t we raised you already?  Get close to the top, I’ll put you on my shoulders and let you hold my star.

God?  Stick close in case I have a prayer will ya?  Thanks so much.  Also, could you stand where I bask in your glow?  It’s all about the lighting you know.  Did you hear me quote your bible verse from memory earlier?  How about that huh?

Bless.

Here’s the thing about our Ego.  It edges God out, but it also edges GROWTH out.  A fruit cannot grow with an ego in the middle of it.  Want to grow some fruit?  Dump the ego.

Don’t know where to start?  Throw out the “should haves” when it pertains to others, no one owes you anything.  A fact I continue to learn daily.  We were not promised a life without bad times.  We weren’t promised a Leave it to Beaver family, or a support system that looks like the traditional one in our mind.  No one comes to earth and escapes alive, or lives a life without sorrow.  Find your joy.  Even the worst of days has some joy tucked in the seams, even if it’s just a perfectly timed cup of caffeine.  Recognize and identify what makes your heart lighter.

Want to know some of what we ARE promised?

One who will fight for you…. Exodus 14:14.  Renewed strength …Isaiah 40.  A companion in fearful moments…Isaiah 41.  Unfailing love….Isaiah 54. Freedom….Isaiah 58. Wisdom.  Forgiveness.  Eternal life. Comfort. Refuge. Deliverance. Peace that transcends all understanding…and so much more.

Peace comes from remembering that only love is real.  Look past the surface and see the underlying truth…everyone is a child of God and filled with love.  It may be hidden behind our egos, but it was put there.  Love is there.  Look for the light within you and others.  Guess what water and light do?  They grow things…like fruit!

If you feel like our apple tree, take hope that God is in the business of growing.  He delights in gardening, ask for help in developing your orchard.  May we be recognized by our sweet fruit.

 

Family, Love, Parenting

Above All Else…

The gentleness of Jesus is always what brings me back to His teachings.  His humility and love, His simple way of looking at things.  On the spectrum of Jesus, I’ve occupied a lot of different spots – a fan, a hopeless skeptic, a follower, a stubborn brat, a believer, a disobedient wanderer, an admirer, frustrated, confused, and in awe of Him.  In my early adulthood, I got tired of trying to figure Jesus out, so I quit.  I laid Him down for awhile as I would a book that was too long or hard to read.  I felt He was too complicated and I was never going to able to please Him.

In the Chris Tomlin song, he describes Jesus as;

Who walks on the waters
Who speaks to the sea
Who stands in the fire beside me”

It is almost too good to believe that One with the power to walk on the water and speak to the sea, would still have the gentle lamb-like humility and love to stand in the fire beside me.  Not just standing beside me, but wanting me to know and believe I have power through him.

What has broken my heart more than anything on my spiritual journey is what has been referred to as the “Christian Machine”.  So much in fact that I have found myself pausing before labeling myself a Christian.  What I will claim is clinging to and learning from the teachings of Jesus.

Please don’t read judgement in that last paragraph, for I have played a part in the legalistic machine as well.  Years ago, I sat with a friend, crying over the death of her mother, and then she asked me if I thought her mom was in heaven.  I mentally checked my Christian Rules and Regulation handbook made by man and replied, “No”.   I completely based this on the way she died.  I had never met her mom, nor did I know her heart.  Such ignorance took the place of love.  Even though I have since gone back to fix it, the posture and judgement of my heart grieves me to this day. I think Jesus grieved that day as well.

As Bob Goff says, “We keep pushing people off of the roofs that we need to be lowering them down from.”  There is enough love for everyone, it multiplies when used, and it never, ever divides.

Above all, love each other deeply…” I Peter 4:8

It’s as simple as Jesus said love.  I have a gay son, and it is well with my soul.  There have been some things we have had to unpack and work out, but God was so gracious to give me a peace from Night One.  (When hard things come in my life, I can’t help but count the days.  My friend Amy says we know we will be okay when we wake up and forget to count.  It’s true.)  It wasn’t a peace that took away the questions, pain, or fear for his future – but it is a bottom line peace.  A peace that says all will be fine because he is mine, perfectly and wonderfully made.  The saddest part about him telling me that he was gay was the first sentence, “Mom, I’m a Christian, but I’m also gay and I don’t know where that leaves me.”  It was a failing report card on exactly what I had taught him about Jesus.  Forgive me Creator.  Jesus said love, so I’ve added His love on top of my Momma love and it is truly well with my soul.

I know what the bible says – so please don’t quote it to me.  For if you do, I’ll gently weed through your rule book and point you to Jesus’s bottom line.  Love.  Above all else.  (On the days I’m struggling to love you, I’ll just point to my “Mama Bear” bracelet. Because every mother has a mission; to love, guide and protect her family.  Don’t mess with her while she’s on it.)

Listen, I’m a front row student on this – and some days back row, sleeping behind my text book.  We all have our quicksand – life is sweet, we are walking along, loving the mess out of life and people…then boom, quicksand.  We step into it without even realizing it and is sucks the love straight out of us.  What’s left is rating and judging. It’s easy for me to love our family stuff, but yours?  Eww.  How about when we feel unloved, yet are still called to love?  What does that look like for you?  Hard. That’s what it looks like for me.  My nerves can be sat on faster than a hot knife through butter.  I believe we all would be happier and more whole if we each had a Love Snuggie.  Our arms would be free to be the hands and to do the love work, while our heart and core would be wrapped in the warmth of a love-snuggie hug.  Just think about it, it might be a great addition to your capsule wardrobe.  Nowadays they come in all sorts of prints and patterns, even leopard.

If none of this sparked a love fire in you, let me come at it from a different angle.  Beauty tips.  Loving and carrying for others reveals the best version of ourselves.  Which means our prettiest, youngest looking version.  Better than any wrinkle cream.  For reals.  Just test it.

Let’s open our hearts, blow out the dust and allow it to be filled with love.  If we are judging, we are not loving.  If we aren’t loving, then we aren’t pointing to the teachings of Jesus.  We may end up in quicksand from time to time, yet we always have a choice to reach for the love rope to pull us back out.  Grab the robe, hoist yourself out and start loving.  I doubt we would ever regret such a decision.

Loving you BIG friend.

*I will eventually share some of my writings regarding our journey with Mason coming out almost two years ago.  He has given me permission from the beginning, I am just choosing to respect and honor the space of what is intimate on this journey.  Until I feel that time is right, my ears and heart are always open for anyone on a similar journey needing a safe place to chat.  Or a hug because life is sweet but sometimes hard.

 

Family, Forgivness, Grace, Lessons, Love, Patience

Pippi, the Indian, and the Lessons throughout

I love you sugar, come see us when you can.”

I can still hear him saying that.  Even though our grandmother had passed on years before, he always ended our calls with “Come see us when you can”, perhaps it made him feel less lonely.  My weekend visits to see Pippi began when I was in high school.  I would take a friend, as I believed the pink brick house in Claude was haunted in ways I can’t fully explain.  It just was.  Later, I would plan my visits around when cousin Monica could meet me there for a visit with our beloved grandpa.  When Pippi passed away, it was Monica that called to tell me, which was fitting, as he was the tie that brought us together in our adulthood.

Monica and I with our sweet Pip

I was older by the time I really got close to Pippi.  He had lost an adult child (my dad) and his beloved wife of 44 years. He mourned for them deeply, but kept living.  He didn’t have another choice.  On every visit, we would have some reason to go into Amarillo – usually to shop, see more family, or for church followed by lunch at Furr’s Cafeteria.  A certainty on these visits, was that on the way home, he would exit I-40, turn left and enter into the graveyard that held our loved ones.  In my younger teenage years, this was weird, but comforting in an odd way.  It was the only time I had to pay my respects to the dad I barely knew and our sweet grandmother, both who left too soon.

Monica and I were very protective of Pippi.  His favorite thing to do when we came into town was take us to the café for breakfast, to show off his granddaughters.  In his later years, the locals weren’t as kind to Pip as we thought they should be.  A few years before he stopped driving, he was put on a new medicine that made him sleepy.  One morning, on his drive to the café, he fell asleep at the wheel, crossed over into the two oncoming lanes of traffic and landed his car into the building that faced the courthouse.

Claude is a small town in the panhandle of Texas, about 30 minutes east of Amarillo.  One of the town’s monuments was a cement Indian that stood out in front of the antique store.  Unfortunately, when Pippi’s truck finally rolled to a stop, it had mowed the sacred Native American statue down.  Thankfully, the non-breathing, cement man was the only casualty of the accident.

The folks of Claude handled this news hard.  The grief-stricken people had a funeral for the Indian and buried him.  Let me be clear for those in the back – they buried a CEMENT STATUE. When travelers driving down highway 287 started asking the locals where the antique statue went, they dug the cement Indian back up, pieced him back together as best they could, and stuck him in a wheel chair for all to see and enjoy again.  I kid you not.  Creepiest looking thing ever.

Visiting the Claude Indian. Poor McCray wouldn’t even stand by it. They even laid his cement fingers in his lap. Grief makes you do funny things.

It was after that incident that the locals weren’t as kind or patient with Pippi, and his granddaughters didn’t like it one bit.  Breakfast wasn’t as sweet when we were dodging the looks of disappointment and judgement.  Sometimes I think they thought that our Pip might have talked too much, which is exactly when Monica and I would really ramp up our interest in the story that we had already heard seven times before.

Pippi was a patient man who loved at all times. We chose to take his teachings and reciprocate the love back to him.  They say grace is like working a muscle, the more you work it, the stronger it gets.  The love muscle works the same.  I never saw Pip lift a weight or run a block, but boy did he exercise the right muscles.

Once, we had a family reunion in Irving, three of us cousins took our grandparents car to the store to get bread. Our grandmother, Tootie, didn’t want to lose their good parking spot at the hotel we were staying at.  It was right in front of their room, so you can see why this spot was coveted. So, she had sweet, obedient Pip stand in the parking spot while we drove off to get some white bread. (Pippi may not have had a t-shirt stating, “Happy wife, Happy life”, but he lived by the mantra. Smart man.)  On our quick trip to the store, we made several detours, including dropping by to see a friend of Monica’s. You should never trust a new driver to make a quick trip, two hours later, we pulled into the hotel parking lot to find Pippi still standing in the good parking spot.

Now that I’m an adult and a parent to a driver, I can’t fully put into clean words the irritation I would have with my kiddos had it been me standing in the good parking spot during a Texas summer, for several hours. But Pippi didn’t show any anger, he wiped the sweat off his brow and simply asked if we got the bread.

Two things warm my heart about that memory. He stood there in the Texas heat to keep Tootie’s good parking spot, because…happy wife, happy life.  Secondly, the three teenage granddaughters who needed to be reprimanded, were instead gifted with patience and grace.

Pippi loved at all times. He loved when it wasn’t convenient or easy. He loved at times when others weren’t loving or lovable. He extended love and grace. He provided a safe haven for so many of us.  In a complicated world, he was not.

Nowadays, we speak of love languages. And I’m fairly confident that Pippi covered all of them. Quality time – he was always happy to offer to all of us. Words of affirmation – he was never shy about sharing how much he loved us. Physical Touch – there was never a shortage of hugs.  Acts of service – he spent years protecting his country & providing for a family.  And the final one, Gifts – I think all of us cousins would agree this was covered by consistently providing sugar cereal to the grandkids, and in later years, breakfast at the cafe in Claude.

Love is patient, Love is kind, Pippi not only understood this, but created a life around it.

And his granddaughter is still gleaming from his example.

 

*My apologies for those offended by my use of the word “Indian”.  Since I am one, I deemed it okay to use it in my blog post.  I normally use the term Native American, but that is not the name of the statue in Claude. It’s name is “Indian”.

 

Christmas, Family, Love

Let every Heart prepare Him room…

Till he appeared and the soul felt its worth.”

I’ve had a form of that thought on our Christmas cards for the past three years.  As crazy as this season can get, I want every friend who reads it to pause, feel and know the worth of their soul.

I love Christmas with every molecule in my body.  I could live in the North Pole and would willingly be Santa’s helper –  even accepting payment in candy canes.  And yet, as much as I love it, I’m the second to admit that the traditions created under the holiday of the Jesus’s birth have gotten a little out of hand.  I think Jesus would be the first to admit it. Please don’t misunderstand me, I want to celebrate His birth.  I also want to adorn the seven themed Christmas trees in our home.  I love traditions, and I think he is okay with us having secular traditions at his birthday party, because truthfully, he was probably born in March. Or September?  I don’t know, but it’ll be in my top 86 questions to ask when I get to walk and talk with Him in the garden.  When was your actual birthday Jesus?  What zodiac sign are you really?  Which of our Christmas trees was your favorite?  (I’m betting He says the champagne colored Chrismon tree with my grandparents angel on top.)

Loving Christmas runs in my blood.  I’m convinced my grandmother’s middle name was Kringle.  My mom and grandmother would convince me to go to sleep by tucking me in beside Nannymom, my great-grandmother.  While my mom stood at the door telling me goodnight, Meme would swing the end of Santa’s hat over her head for me to catch a glimpse of.  This ensured me squeezing my eyes shut and trying to force sleep to come soon, so Santa would be sure to leave the gifts with my name on them.

When I was seven, my parents decided to stop celebrating Christmas, basically for the reason I stated above.  They now viewed it as a secular holiday with a biblical reason tagged to it.  I get it, I just didn’t love it.  I went from living in the North Pole to simply living in Amarillo.  I informed my grandmother that the gig was up, Santa wasn’t real.  I knew this because my parents had told me the truth.  I felt very grown up while telling her this, but was a little hopeful when she adamantly replied that Santa was the real deal.

From my second grade memory; one random day, close to Christmas, the doorbell rang.  When I answered it, I found two huge, lawn and leaf bags full of presents on the front porch, along with two Strawberry Shortcake rocking chairs beside them.  I shouted to my parents, pulled the bags in and started opening presents in the bag for me. (The other being for my new baby sister.)  They were all from Santa Claus himself, he must deliver early for those who don’t believe anymore.  A few minutes later the bell rang again, with my grandparents on the other side of the door.  What a coincidence.  They stepped in – Meme decked out in her big fur coat, and said something like, “We were just on our way home from dinner and wanted to stop in and say hi.”.   I couldn’t contain my excitement, and began showing them what all Santa had brought for India and I.  Meme replied with a wink, “See, I told you Santa was real and wouldn’t forget about you this year.”

I miss her always, but never more than Christmas time.

That memory always makes me smile.  My poor parents, I’m sure they were furious for several reasons, one being that Ol’ Saint Nick hadn’t remembered them, but they were good sports about it.  Years later, they started celebrating Christmas again.  Judging from the number of icicles that my mom threw on the tree that first year, I think it’d be safe to say she had missed Christmas as well.

This year, I have walked into rooms, forgetting the reason exactly five hundred times a day.  I have wrapped 836 presents and gone through seven rolls of tape.  I’m irritated that I haven’t fit in as many Hallmark Christmas movies as I had planned on.  My kids are tired and cranky – sick of studying for finals and sniffling from winter colds. There have been some attitude adjustments needed and had. Even my roomba isn’t minding me. Getting lost and stuck at every turn. Come on Rosie, how many times have you vacuumed this house?  And you still don’t know your way around?!   I feel like Jessie off of Saved by the Bell, wishing there were more time and looking for no-doz.  On a deeper level, we have friends whose hearts are broken this year.  The holidays making them feel their loss even harder.  Our hearts are burdened and heavy for so many reasons and for so many people.

And then, when I pause to admire the warm glow of the tree, I remember what Bob Goff shared…

Bob also contemplated that he bet the Innkeeper later wished he had made more room than he thought he had for Jesus.

Let every heart prepare him room.

I’m sure there are still things left on your list to do.  There always will be my friend. How about the preparations of your heart?  Have you filled all your margins of time with chores and gifts?  What is left for Him? What if we prepared our hearts as much as we do our homes? There is garland and candles on every open space here at home, but how warm and inviting is our heart?

I love our Christmas traditions, I wait and prepare all year for them.  I don’t imagine this is going to slow down while I’m physicaly able.  It would be odd to keep these Christmas decorations up throughout the year.  You know what wouldn’t be odd?  Preparing our hearts year round.  Daily.  Shall we?  Pick up the broom, grab some candles, and keep some time set aside to nuture that space.

No matter the day of His actual birthday, I cherish this season to celebrate him.  The baby who God sent to find us, because your soul is worth it beloved.

A favorite tradition…Christmas Eve service.