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Ink

August 29, 2014
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An ink stain. On my favorite sweater.  One imagines real writers wouldn’t be bothered. 

Maybe I will wear it when sales people come to the door and I will mutter about needing to get back to work and they will leave immediately, understanding that I must have very important writing to do.

Maybe a simpler plan is to not interrupt the writing to answer the door.  My friends will need a secret knock.

An Actual Conversation: Third Grade

August 28, 2014

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Lady Bug’s first half-day seemed to be a success.  She handed me two routine forms to fill out and announced that she had no homework yet.  “Maybe tomorrow,” she said with that tone only a younger sibling can manage.  Lima Bean growled over her fifty math problems.

Both bears were excited and tired.  Early to bed, I encouraged Lady Bug through the necessary bedtime steps.  After teeth brushing and pajamaing I found a path into her room, but stopped just inside the door. 

-Hey, what are all those papers crumpled up on your chair?”

-What papers?

-All the colored papers over there that look like they came from your school? What are those?

She looked at me like I was the least knowledgeable person regarding third grade mechanics ever.

-Oh, those are just papers to go home. I’ll throw them out.

(I get extra credit for not yelling on the first day of school, right?)

-Dude! I am home! When the teacher sends papers home, that means they are sending them to me!!

How many days until summer vacation?

For Lima Bean on the First Day of High School

August 27, 2014

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You are the oldest and so we learn together. We have had our share of difficult moments and moments of boundless love.  As you go to high school I want you to always have reminders of that love. Reminders that under, around, behind, and through all of the rough times, that love is strong.

I am a beginning quilter. You get the learning end of that too.

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Notice the ripples and pin-tucks across the back and notice the places where the seam is aligned well. Some days come together smoothly, others get a little wrinkly. And still there is love.

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Notice the corners and binding spots I got wrong and where I learned to do it better. You will make mistakes. Keep trying. Love will still be here. Love yourself through it.

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There is a place along the front where my seam allowance was too small and I ended up with a little tear threatening to become much bigger. I mended it with bright green thread. You will get hurt. You will hurt others. The scars may show. Love first and as soon as possible before the tears get too large. We will love you too.

I found guidance from a multitude of people as I made this quilt.  Know your resources. Gather them around you and nurture those relationships. You are loved by so many more people than just your parents.

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You will possibly use this quilt as an emergency napkin or tissue.  It’s all right – you can wash it. Take care of yourself. Be gentle with your spirit. You will do the wrong things sometimes. Clean up and keep loving. Allow yourself to be loved.

Notice that even with the wrinkles and knobby corners and already mended spots that the quilt will still cover you and keep you warm. It does what it is made to do. Even after rough days, mistakes, hurts, and a little dirt you can do what you are here to do. Find it. Live it. Love always.

Love,
Mama

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PS – Now give it back so I can finish the binding!

Somewhere in Starkville

August 26, 2014

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I keep this picture in plain sight at Talarico House.  It used to be buried in a book, but more recently it’s been out.  Sometimes on top of my knitting needle box, sometimes tucked into the top of my jewelry box.  I see it every day.  It is nearly twenty years old.  It may be already that old.

Three of these people carry the memory of the other in their hearts.  As I do.  My senior year of high school, the girl in the hat died.  She had been very ill and while I wasn’t close to her myself, she was treasured by people close to me and, by extension, I loved her too.  Imagine our heartbreak when, the very next year, my sister’s closest friend was diagnosed with the same type of brain tumor. The same aggressive, terrible disease that we had just watched take L. While we tried to be hopeful, the weight of our recent loss was ever present.

I was away at school.  Miles from my family and not finding my place very well at the college, I found myself whisked off on a Habitat for Humanity working spring break trip to Starkville, Mississippi.  No cell phones, no mobile internet devices.  I was cut off and helpless waiting for news of J and knowing I probably wouldn’t hear anything at all. 

The site director made us all laugh.  He yelled phrases that still make little sense to me.  “Don’t worry ’bout the mule goin’ blind, just looooad the wagon!”  My carpentry skills were non-existent, but I was good at picking up nails.  We learned that all of us loved the ka-thunk sound of the nails driving into the concrete straight out of the nail gun.  We slept on the floor of a church and made connections with other student groups and with the members of the congregation.  One night, I couldn’t sleep at all and made my way into the sanctuary just to breathe and to pray.  There were no words. 

The next night I made a collect call (remember those?) to my parents’ house.  As soon as my mother answered the phone, I knew.  My sister was heartbroken. We all were.  I had no understanding, still have no understanding, as to why these things happen.  So much pain.

On our last night there, we had the opportunity to write something on the structure of the house before the drywall went up.  As we ate with the future home-owners and celebrated their joyful future, I thought of all the things L and J wouldn’t experience.  I wrote on the wall, “For LSEA and JSS.  For the homes and families you would have had. For the love we have for you. May this house be full of love and joy.”

I am beginning to look for a house of my own.  My bears are beginning high school and third grade.  I have not forgotten the beautiful young women I knew so long ago.  And so I keep the picture out to remind me.  To help me honor the gifts I have been given and to bravely face the challenges in front of me.

We planted trees near the high school in their memory.  There will be trees for them at my new house too.

Quiet Monday

August 25, 2014

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In the buttery yellow light of my dining room, my sewing machine and I spent the evening.  The last two seams are quilted, the binding is attached, and all that remains is the hand-sewing.  Nearly done!

There are many signals that warn me it is time to stop before a true quilting disaster happens.  Tonight there was a small seam put together backwards and a near miss with the rotary cutter.  Time for bed!

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Things I Love: Breathless Beauty

August 24, 2014

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What is the thing that makes your heart stop, startled by beauty?

Today it was the chorus entering boldly at the end of Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9.  I held my breath through several measures unable to do anything except to let the music flood through me.

Yesterday it was the red leaves shouting amongst all of the green.

If not Beethoven, then what? What brings quiet joy that fills your eyes with tears and your heart with happiness?

Good Friends

August 23, 2014

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A good friend will remember how much you like invertebrates and even though they might think large, beetle-y things are icky and better suited as chicken food they will yell for you to come and see so you don’t miss out.

A good friend will remember that you are cranky without caffeine and take you through the drive-through even though you are both already late for a big concert.

A good friend will share sad news with you and know you will hold their delayed and seemingly broken dreams in your heart without trying to fix it or saying too much.

A good friend will know when you have disappointments of your own and be close, but not too close – patient with you until the words are ready.

A good friend will listen to your thoughts, but make their own decisions.

A good friend will creatively make opportunities for you both to grow and learn and you might not even notice right away that it is happening.

For the record, I am surrounded by good friends.

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(None of them look like this guy!)

Delicious

August 22, 2014

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Tomatoes from my garden, Hillside cheese from Cricket Creek farm, Barilla gluten-free pasta, and a touch of Parmesan. After an early morning start, this is a perfect lunch.

What He Said: Henning Mankell

August 21, 2014

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Every single door inside me was swinging back and forth in the wind, which seemed to be getting stronger all the time. – From Italian Shoes by Henning Mankell

Garden Classroom

August 20, 2014

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It was a rather small carrot. Every Saturday I pull up one more.  Maybe this is the week they will be ready.  Maybe gardening is a small sliver of the universe reflecting back to me one of the hardest lessons: Wait.