Thursday, October 19, 2006

Learning to drive!

Let us remember all children and commit ourselves to their growth and safety, their health and education, their uniqueness and their unfolding beauty.
~ Connie Sternberg


Today, on the way home from a parent/teacher conference, my 15-year-old daughter asked if she could drive up the farm lane. She’s only half a year away from her learner’s permit (eek!) and hadn’t been behind the wheel of anything.

More than 20 years ago, I had the pleasure of teaching my youngest brother, twelve years younger than me, how to drive a stick shift. It is a funny story, and it starts all the way back to when I was learning how to drive a stick in my early 20’s. I borrowed (with permission) another brother’s car to drive into town. I’d been riding dirt bikes for years, and understood the concept of shifting, but hadn’t had much practice in cars. My youngest brother was along for the ride, plus my sister, who also didn’t know how to drive stick.

We got to the light in town, and I slipped the clutch a bit too fast. Didn’t know what I’d done, and as we jerked up Main Street, my sister and I laughing hysterically because we had no idea why the car was behaving so bizarrely or what to do to correct it, my brother dove to the floor of the car. This was before seat belts. He shrieked at the top of his lungs, “This is so embarrassing! I’ll never be able to come into town again! Get me out of here!” cowering on the floor.

My sister and I laughed all the harder, which only made him shriek louder, and the circus bucked its way down Main Street until I finally realized I should be shifting into second gear, and the ride magically smoothed out.

When we got home, my brother crawled out of the car, kissed the ground, and vowed never to ride in a car again with me. I was about 24, he was about 12.

Fast forward another four or five years, and he’s driving, and now guess who has the only manual transmission in the family? That’s right, the sister who humiliated him so badly he couldn’t go back into town ever again. He humbly came to me one day, and begged me to let him learn to drive stick in my car. I smirked, and agreed.

My parents lived on the side of a mountain. They lived on a nice back road, the equivalent of the farm lane I live on now, complete with stop signs, curves, and steep hills, all at once, and every 100 yards or so. That long ago trip around the block at the top of that mountain is almost indescribable. If I wasn’t shrieking not to hit the tree, I was cracking up because the car had stalled yet again, or even funnier, was strangely jerking its way up the hill. Sometimes two events at once.

Eventually that afternoon, my brother humbly apologized for that day in town when he dove to the floor and vowed to never ride with me again. He eventually became a skilled driver, unlike my ex who set the parking brake and climbed out of a car rather than risk sliding backward into the car behind him at his first intersection on a hill.

Fast forward another 20 or so years, to this afternoon on my farm lane. This time, it was a minivan, automatic, power brakes, steep hills, sharp curves. No trees, thank goodness. The seatbelt, which I’d wisely put back on after we switched sides, saved me several times from slamming my head into the dashboard or flying through the windshield. Power brakes and panicked 15 year olds are not a healthy mix for passengers, even when they are only going 4 mph! Especially when the handyman roars up the hill in his mud-covered and rather large SUV, laughing like a hyena when he sees who’s behind the wheel in the minivan pulled 15 feet into the field to allow him to pass. Thank goodness they’d just done haying a couple weeks ago. We might have gotten lost in the field…

The “hairpin” 90º curves were a bit hairy, especially because there was one lone tree we had to maneuver around. Accelerating down the steep hill to 8 miles an hour was another occasion to bless my foresight in re-buckling my seatbelt. The cat, calmly watching from across the field was another reason to bless the seatbelts. Thank goodness she hadn’t moved; I might have needed surgery to remove the embedded seatbelt from my belly!

We navigated our way down the 3/10ths of a mile farm lane safe and sound, with only a few thousand miles of life gone from my brake pads, and a dozen or so new grey hairs for mom. My daughter was quite proud that she’d made it without a mishap, and excitedly asked when she could try it next. I took a few deep breaths, and with only a minor quiver in my voice, replied, “Soon, dear. Soon.”

Thursday, October 05, 2006

Moonswept

a soft caress across my cheek
rousing me at 3 am
the house asleep
I hear the whisper of your sigh
as you fade back into my dreams
at the last
soft curling fingers
gently brushing my cheek
your luminous eyes
touching my soul
moonswept

~ Robin Slaw

Wednesday, October 04, 2006

Thunderstorm Haiku




Thunder crashing down
Lightning flickering brightly
Computer off now!

Watching the Blossoming

While we have the gift of life, it seems to me the only tragedy is to allow part of us to die whether it is our spirit, our creativity or our glorious uniqueness.
~ Gilda Radner


I have a friend who is blossoming after a very long dry spell with no love in her life. It’s an amazing process unfolding, like watching a rose bloom in slow motion photography. To hear the joy as she describes a new relationship makes room in my own soul for joy and hope for our world.

This morning, I caught up on the news from Lancaster, the incredibly sad story of the young girls who were shot by a man ravaged by his past, in senseless brutality. I cried as I read the names and ages of the girls, and saw that sisters had died. I cried for the lost innocence of a people who try to inure themselves from the violence and waste in our society, choosing to live in simplicity and community. It’s a place where the people don’t feel the need to lock their doors. It’s a place we all wish we could have in our lives.

I mourn my own loss of yet more naiveté. There is no rhyme or reason to when or how violence can enter our lives. My children attend the equivalent of a one-room school house. It has a few more rooms than one, but there aren’t metal detectors at the doors, there are no police or security guards on campus. Nor do I want that for my children. I want my children to live their lives free of fear for a little while longer.

I noticed the difference when I went to an observation at another local elementary school. The front doors were locked; I had to buzz the office to be admitted. What does that do to the soul of a child to have to ask permission to enter your school? What does it do to the soul of a teen to have to pass through a metal detector to enter your school? I am not ready for my children to fall into distrust of the world. I want them to continue to believe that if they work hard enough, they can make a difference; make the world a better place.

I want to retain that innocence myself. I’m not ready to admit defeat; I’m not ready to admit that the world is inherently evil and a bad place. I’m not ready to give in to fear. I refuse to allow myself to believe the worst of people. I still insist that there is an essential goodness that we can build in people with kindness, caring, acceptance, and love. We can still choose to live in joy rather than fear.

So I continue to read the news from my friend who is living in pure joy in her new relationship. It’s wonderful to watch her unfolding, watch her learn to trust again, watch her blossom into her beautiful whole self. It brings me hope, because I can still see joy in the world.

My school is still not locked, and the children run out at the end of the day, still joyful because they took a walk or saw a new bug or planted their seeds for the coldframe or greenhouse.

Life goes on. We can still choose joy.

Monday, October 02, 2006

The Worst Fear Ever

Last night, I received the kind of phone call that wrenches your gut, spins your mind into a maelstrom of what if’s, and breaks your heart into a million pieces. A friend called to see if we’d seen her 13-year-old daughter, she wasn’t home. It was past midnight.

We live on property that abuts their property. The daughter, J., used to walk over to see my daughter A. when they were in girl scouts together. The state police and the father and older brother were out searching; the mother was calling everyone she could think of who might have seen J.

As a mother of three daughters, I know that fear. It’s a heart-stopping surreal fear for someone you love more than life itself, and when you don’t know where they are, or what’s happening to them, life as we know it goes into something resembling an Escher painting more than life as before.

This is the kind of situation that challenges us to our very highest self. How do we continue to function without dissolving into constant puddles of tears? How do we not let our fears take over our mind, filling it with negativity and drawing to us the worst of our fears? How can we continue to picture a child returning healthy and safe, when we don’t know where she is, what’s happening to her?

Please join me in envisioning J. safe at home, surrounded by a loving family. And go find your children, hug them, tell them you love them, and surround yourself and your family with visions of safety and joy.


God, make me brave for life: oh, braver than this.
Let me straighten after pain, as a tree straightens after the rain,
Shining and lovely again.
God, make me brave for life; much braver than this.
As the blown grass lifts, let me rise
From sorrow with quiet eyes,
Knowing Thy way is wise.
God, make me brave, life brings
Such blinding things.
Help me to keep my sight;
Help me to see aright
That out of dark comes light.
~ Author Unknown

Sunday, October 01, 2006

Gratitude Journals

If the only prayer you ever say in your entire life is “thank you,” it will be enough.
~ Meister Eckhart


This month, my covenant group is working on the subject of gratitude. One of the suggestions in our topic outline is to maintain a gratitude journal. Studies have shown that people who maintain a gratitude journal, who take the time each day to think about how they are grateful, live happier, healthier, more productive lives.

I think I’ll start writing down ways I have been grateful each day. It’s part of my journey to live in joy rather than fear.

Today, I am grateful for my children getting up early enough to make sure we could get to church on time. I wanted to hear a specific minister.

Today I am grateful for the grill my sister-in-law helped us buy, that cooked the wonderful steak we ate for dinner.

Today I am grateful for the wonderful afternoon I had with my girls, going to the movies. I’m grateful that someone opened the Washington Theater, so we could go to $5/person movies.

Today I am grateful for the geese who flew overhead as I was cooking dinner. I’m also grateful they didn’t opt to do target practice on me or on dinner as they flew overhead.

Today I am grateful for the rain which watered my plants.

Thank you, life.