Thursday, September 20, 2007

for Alison, who wanted life to be fair

It is seven thirty at night. Michael is finishing up the bedtime routine with Mason and Matthew. Mead went to sleep without a whimper. He should have since he was up every two hours last night teething. At three thirty a.m. he fell asleep on Michael’s chest watching the sports channel. Today I have prepared three breakfasts, seven lunches, changed three dirty diapers and many wet ones, gone to Kindermusic with Mead where we waltzed and floated scarves and banged on drums, dressed three children, washed one load of clothes, pushed swings with children in them, screamed at a rubber snake placed strategically in the grass, mopped up spilled chocolate milk, visited with Alison as we sat watching the children, including her son Aidan whose smile lights up the world, play in the backyard, washed dishes, sat with three small boys and Michael at the Liberty restaurant in a booth eating supper, drove 11 circles fast and tight in the back of the Food Lion grocery store to keep the children laughing while Michael bought limes for the gin and tonic I needed to complete my evening. The crowning glory of my day is the suspicion that my cortisol levels, upped by stress, are causing me to gain weight even though I am eating less. Life is not fair. I should be losing weight… a pound per day… fashionably thin at the end of this week. Instead I suspect I shall have new signs of wear and tear… dark circles under my eyes, a crick in my back from waltzing with a fourteen month old boy, new sags in my jaw line, new weight gain from absent mindedly munching kid snacks.
The Bible reminds us life is rarely fair. It is always a gamble. Sometimes we win, sometimes we lose. It wasn’t fair that Sarah’s son was born after Hagar’s. It wasn’t fair that Jacob had to work an extra seven years for Rachael. It wasn’t fair that Mary’s son Jesus was executed by of a corrupt religious/political system. It wasn’t fair that my sister’s struggle with depression preceded the advent of the wonder drugs. It wasn’t fair that my friend’s child died in a freak automobile accident or that my friend Judy died in her forties with ALS. Children are born into a country where famine rules and war is the norm. The accident of birth can place you in a loving home or an abusive one. If it is justice and fair play you expect in this world, you might as well crawl under a rock and wait for the end. If not justice, what can we expect from this terrifying gift of life?
We can expect love… undeserved and sometimes unsought love that comes in odd packages…a starving stray dog that places his head in my lap… friends whose intuition leads them to call me out of the blue because something told them I needed them… hearing a piece of music that takes my breath away with its beauty… a fawn standing still in the pasture behind my house looking at me with its beautiful eyes… a family whose imperfection is a creation of love and joy and grief and faith… love for my mountains dressed in autumn’s palette of red, gold, orange, brown and green.
We can expect guilt, guilt that overwhelms us and weighs us down, guilt that comes from things done and left undone. In the early morning hours I can remember so clearly every occasion for guilt. Sometimes my list, which begins with snitching on my sister when I was eight and ends with being gone on my mother’s eighty first birthday Tuesday, can paralyze my soul. I should have known my sister was lost in despair. I should have spent more time with my parents as they were aging. I should have managed money more wisely. I should have gotten a full time job. I should have insisted Adam keep up with his cello lessons. I should be getting better at living life in an organized fashion… and on and on and on.
We can expect grace to show up anyway when we are not looking… grace in a friend’s tears that match your own… grace in Aidan’s smile that is the echo of his mother’s… grace in forgiveness offered and received… grace in getting the steps right the first time to a dance… grace in hospitality extended by those who are very different from me… grace in a Spirit filled, tongue speaking, Cherokee church who remembers me from forty one years ago… grace in my daddy’s old English Shorthorn bull named Ferdinand who likes to have his back scratched… grace in the recognition of my life full of life, moving into the final movement of my symphony here.
We can expect God to be with us. God is in our beginning, our living and our dying. There is never a time when God is not present. Sometimes we cannot find our Way or hear the Voice or see the Evidence or feel the Presence but always, always God is with us. When life is not fair, grief or guilt tear us apart, grace lifts our spirits, love holds us in a warm embrace, God is there. In the dry, cold, hard times that try our souls, God is with us. In the lush, abundant, warmth of blessedness, God is there. Like King David in the Psalms, I can call out to God… Rouse yourself! Why do you sleep, O Lord? Awake, do not cast us off forever. I can also be a green olive tree in the House of God, trusting in the steadfast love of God. Both and… not either or… that is the gift and the curse of the Garden of Eden. Life does not come in neat, tidy bundles but in messy exuberant loud noisy angry sad joyful explosions. I wonder if God had an ADD moment when Creation was taking place ? Thanks be to God for all of life… all of life… ready or not, fair or not, here it comes.

3 comments:

Misha said...

As always, Nana, I revel in your words. They inspire me-a mini sermon on the day that I read them. You often write about guilt, and I ponder this theme. Are we too hard on ourselves?? Perhaps.

Misha said...

Sorry, I'm late to this blog. Who is Alison???

nana said...

alison is my middle daughter.