Thursday, February 6, 2020
Snow-calm
After sitting in conference sessions (good ones!) all day, I needed a walk and fresh air. So, for dinner, I got directions to some restaurants about a half mile from the hotel and headed out.
It felt good to be outside. The sun was going down but it wasn't super cold. The air was refreshing, and I was glad to be outside, even if it was going-home traffic instead of the sounds of nature I enjoy in my walks at home. I walked briskly, checking out two different shopping areas, eventually found a place to eat, and then started back to the hotel after I was done.
By now, it was dark, and as I started walking, snow started falling. At first the snowfall was so light that I almost didn't notice it. A flake here and there finally caught my eye. Then, more and more fell. While I waited for an interminable light to change so that I could cross a wide, busy street, I realized that it was snowing enough that I would be snowy when I got back to the hotel--especially if the light stayed red much longer!
But the light did, eventually, change, and I was able to get to the hotel before the heavy snow came down and turned me into a snow-woman. Still, white flakes were sticking to my black coat, and, staring at them, I realized that I usually don't walk during a snowfall anymore. I have in the past, especially growing up in Alaska, but I can't remember (specifically) the last time I did it. I love to watch the snow falling while I'm warm inside my house. If I am outside, I usually hurry through the snowfall to the car or the house, trying to get out of it as fast as I can.
But tonight it felt very good to be out in the start of a snowfall. I felt like lingering. The world seems to settle and quiet when snow falls--and I felt the same quieting in my soul. The stresses and worries that we call carry around with us seem to melt away when the snow begins to fall. I wonder how the world might be better if we all walked for a few minutes in the quietly falling snow more often.
Monday, January 20, 2020
returning home
I was born and raised in Alaska. My children were all born there. In many ways, Alaska is in my bones and heart and soul. It's usually good to go home, where you feel like you can breathe in what makes you you from birth. It is good to see old friends and people who knew me as I was growing up. To drive the streets that are almost part of my DNA. There's China Garden, still. The Tastee Freeze on the corner by our old house. Still. So much sweet. But this trip was bitter, too.
I went for the funeral of my oldest friend who had died suddenly. We had spoken by phone on the day she died, and she asked me to speak. I said I would, but I struggled all week in coming to terms with her death and the task of talking about her life and the plan of salvation. I had been trying to be more present in my daily activities--and now I was divided: part of me doing what I needed to do but part of me grieving, my chest constantly aching with the pressure of holding in my sorrow.
So, I returned home to send my friend off to another home. We had agreed to attend our high school reunion this coming summer together. Neither of us wanted to go, but we agreed we could go together for mutual support. Now I will attend without her. She has a different reunion to attend.
So much was familiar. The weather was cold--but it had been colder the week before, so the trees were gorgeous, robed in thick fleecy ice, starkly beautiful against the bright blue of the sky. This was my welcome. My breath made clouds every time I breathed, and my nose tickled when I inhaled the cold air: ice crystals forming.
I remember the long days of summer and the long nights of winter, but I found that my inner clock wasn't adjusted to that rhythm anymore. I attended the 9:00 meeting at our old ward building, a building where I taught seminary on early mornings, where we spoke in sacrament meetings, and where our children were blessed. It was 9:00, and this is what it looked like: pitch black as night.
I went for the funeral of my oldest friend who had died suddenly. We had spoken by phone on the day she died, and she asked me to speak. I said I would, but I struggled all week in coming to terms with her death and the task of talking about her life and the plan of salvation. I had been trying to be more present in my daily activities--and now I was divided: part of me doing what I needed to do but part of me grieving, my chest constantly aching with the pressure of holding in my sorrow.
So, I returned home to send my friend off to another home. We had agreed to attend our high school reunion this coming summer together. Neither of us wanted to go, but we agreed we could go together for mutual support. Now I will attend without her. She has a different reunion to attend.
So much was familiar. The weather was cold--but it had been colder the week before, so the trees were gorgeous, robed in thick fleecy ice, starkly beautiful against the bright blue of the sky. This was my welcome. My breath made clouds every time I breathed, and my nose tickled when I inhaled the cold air: ice crystals forming.
I was driving to visit friends when a large moose walking beside me along the road startled me. This photo of a moose in the airport has to substitute for the one I saw as I couldn't pull off the road to take a photo of the one that was much bigger than this one. No need to take a chance and risk its wrath. Or to identify myself as an outsider. When I mentioned the sighting to my friends, they nonchalantly said a large one had just been in their yard. "They are really around a lot this year with the deeper snow." Oh yeah. I remember that.
I remember the long days of summer and the long nights of winter, but I found that my inner clock wasn't adjusted to that rhythm anymore. I attended the 9:00 meeting at our old ward building, a building where I taught seminary on early mornings, where we spoke in sacrament meetings, and where our children were blessed. It was 9:00, and this is what it looked like: pitch black as night.
I parked in the hotel lot facing south and was reminded of the sun's rotation in winter: the first shot is the sunrise (about 11:30), the sun just above the horizon in the southeast. The second photo is the sunset (about 4:00, since we are a month past solstice) with the sun just above the horizon in the southwest. The winter sun makes a short arc above the horizon for about 4-5 hours this time of year, and there is the start and end of it. My inner clock felt shaky--what time was it? I never could quite feel it. How much of that was the shifting daylight and how much was the difficult purpose of my visit? I don't know.
I gave the talk I had to give, aching and hoping it provided comfort to my friend's parents and children, slid my way on icy roads back to the hotel and cried hard alone in my room. Grief is like that, isn't it? Coming and going like tides. Maybe like the days in Alaska--long at times and then short. Ever present and something we get used to until we aren't used to it anymore and it hits us, makes us feel like a stranger in our own home.
I am home again now. Home to my husband and my life now. Home to remember my friend who returned to her eternal home last week. We will both be home again someday to a place that will feel familiar, I hope, and welcoming.
Wednesday, January 15, 2020
snowman service
I was walking across campus yesterday and saw this little guy, looking a little worse for wear because the weather was warming, but still there. Still bringing a smile to my face.
And I needed a smile. Candy passed away over the weekend. My longest friend. And she is gone. And I am grieving and I needed a smile.
Candy was such a great example of service. I asked her once how she could know exactly what a person needed. I can take cookies or soup or bread--but all my service feels generic. Candy's felt specific to the person and to the need at the moment. How did she do that? I think she just lived really close to the spirit, but she was embarrassed, said she didn't know, and changed the subject. I was thinking about this as I walked across campus. And there was this little snowman.
And I thought: someone built this snowman, probably just for fun. They probably had no idea that, even when it was worn and fading and actually not looking so good (one eye gone, dirt sticking to its body), even then it would make someone who needed a lift to smile.
And then I thought: maybe service can be like that, too. Maybe my cookies or soup or bread, as not-so-specific as they may be to the current need, can still lift someone who needs to know they are loved. And in that thought, I felt comfort and peace.
So, the little snowman, as small and fading as he was, taught a good lesson, one I needed. Thank you, whoever made him!
And I needed a smile. Candy passed away over the weekend. My longest friend. And she is gone. And I am grieving and I needed a smile.
Candy was such a great example of service. I asked her once how she could know exactly what a person needed. I can take cookies or soup or bread--but all my service feels generic. Candy's felt specific to the person and to the need at the moment. How did she do that? I think she just lived really close to the spirit, but she was embarrassed, said she didn't know, and changed the subject. I was thinking about this as I walked across campus. And there was this little snowman.
And I thought: someone built this snowman, probably just for fun. They probably had no idea that, even when it was worn and fading and actually not looking so good (one eye gone, dirt sticking to its body), even then it would make someone who needed a lift to smile.
And then I thought: maybe service can be like that, too. Maybe my cookies or soup or bread, as not-so-specific as they may be to the current need, can still lift someone who needs to know they are loved. And in that thought, I felt comfort and peace.
So, the little snowman, as small and fading as he was, taught a good lesson, one I needed. Thank you, whoever made him!
Tuesday, January 7, 2020
Family
In the week between Christmas and New Year's, I had a good moment, one that doesn't happen all that often: all my children were in the same place at the same time. For about 24 hours, we were in the same city at a family wedding.
The photographer took some pictures of us and then said to be crazy for the next one. I was trying to say, "No! Don't tell this family that!They are already crazy enough!" But it was too late. My kids were already into it and this is the result. I don't know what some of it means, but what I hope it shows is people who like each other and have fun being together.
Being together was a treat; having this reminder of the enjoyment my kids have with each other is a blessing. The best Christmas present of all.
The photographer took some pictures of us and then said to be crazy for the next one. I was trying to say, "No! Don't tell this family that!They are already crazy enough!" But it was too late. My kids were already into it and this is the result. I don't know what some of it means, but what I hope it shows is people who like each other and have fun being together.
Being together was a treat; having this reminder of the enjoyment my kids have with each other is a blessing. The best Christmas present of all.
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