Sunday, September 15, 2013

For Doug

Tonight I’m thinking of my friend Doug, fighting cancer, tumors like conspiring thugs filling his brain and lungs. Ten months of undetected growth. And he so weak when he has been so strong. Mike and I saw him mere months ago, sitting casually in his front room in the evening, the warm glow of the lamp casting soft shadows. The next morning Mike and I would set off alone across the desert to come to Oklahoma. After a long day of packing, I felt overwhelmed and scared, mourning the change, filled with a sadness that I felt no confidence would be filled by the strangeness of our new life. Doug sat across from us in an overstuffed chair, his legs crossed, offering Swiss chocolate for consolation. We talked of the books we’d been reading, and about our families. To the best of my recollection, he told us this story he’d learned about his great-great grandmother who journeyed to Montana in a covered wagon in the dead of winter. When her husband left to get supplies, she lived for weeks with her two small children and a stray Indian boy in their tired and abused covered wagon. One night a storm shook their wagon until most of it had blown away. Left with no other choice, she bundled her children as best she could and they walked through the blinding insanity in search of her uncle’s dug-out, which she knew to be some miles away. The Indian boy took the hand of the two-year old and they forged ahead while she struggled behind with the baby. The small boy and her toddler arrived miraculously at the crude dug-out and a group of men came for and found her lying in the snow. Listening to Doug talk, I felt calmed. I felt like maybe I could be a strong woman who could face my own small challenges. Doug always had a way of doing that. Offering these stories that were gifts to me, making room for hope in the cloudy space of my mind. I mourn for him tonight and for his pain.

This summer our neighbors gave my boys and me several black swallow-tail caterpillars. We watched their green and black mouths devour bunches of parsley leaves like machines. We watched them swell and become fat. And then one day, one caterpillar bowed his head and looked to be in prayer for days. The next I saw him he had suspending his body with a fine silver thread that wrapped around his soft back. A subtle acrobatic feat. A breath of air between his still body and the parsley stalk. Several days later, from his stillness he began to shudder, a rhythmic motion that moved down his thick form. His soft skin broke and then moved in waves down his length, scrunching up like an old sock until it dropped to the bottom of the jar. A sleek green chrysalis emerged, crenelated with yellow, a pod filled with primordial caterpillar goo that would rearrange, cell by cell, into a new creature. A winged thing.

I’m not saying that Doug, whether this cancer eventually takes him or not, will become a beautiful butterfly through his suffering. I’m not saying that life is a process of metamorphosis and change that makes us better or new, that this pain is a purposeful tool that God wields to enact some great change. I frankly don’t know if that is how things work. Though the metaphor is old, I am saying that even though our bodies and minds may be bruised and broken, even though so much can be taken from us and we feel suspended in moments of great and painful stillness, eventually, He who suffered death to end all pain will make us rise again. Like winged things. Our great, colored wings lifting into the warm and dappled sunlight.  

Saturday, May 11, 2013

Home

A week after Mike and I arrived in OK, my parents brought our kids out to us and stayed with us for the weekend. We played and lounged and talked, and the days melted away until they had to leave. It's like they have lives elsewhere or something. Weird. I loved having them here with me in my new home. When they left, we stood on our front porch and waved until we couldn't see them anymore. We went back in and I sat in our front room in sweats and cried like they were leaving me alone in my dorm room on my first day of college (I mean...I didn't cry then...I'm totally mature, independent, and, um...stoic). Jude brought me books and toys to cheer me up, whispering in my ear how much he loves me, smothering me with hugs and kisses (maybe I should be sad more often?). We've lived around family for years and now it feels as if we are alone in the wilderness. But only a few days later, Pete and Meags called to say they had booked flights to come and see us. Friends! In Oklahoma! The weekend was bliss. Mostly, we just played in our yard (we have a yard!), broke in our fire pit (we have a fire pit!), and swung madly on our tree swing (we have a...!). In the evenings, we got wild and watched a BBC series and ate Blue Bell ice cream. Just like old times. With loved ones here, in our space, even though they eventually leave, this place is beginning to feel like home. 

 Ring around the rosy in the mexican food parking lot

 The fire pit!

 The swing!

 Cousin buddies eating S'mores

 Chloe and the S'More

Gabe uses our tornado shelter (we have a tornado shelter!) as a slide and lion pacing ground

Thursday, May 2, 2013

The Edge

Two weeks ago, Mike, the kids and I moved to a new house--a house that we bought sight unseen in a small town in Oklahoma. The town occupies four square miles, a booming metropolis compared to the blips of civilization we passed in blinks driving our moving van through the arid deserts of New Mexico and Texas. The Air Force wives tell me that one starts to feel claustrophobic in days. After two weeks, I began to wonder if I would eventually feel constricted, if I could feel it creeping in even now. So when our errands took us a few minutes rather than an hour because everything is so close, I decided to drive around, and eventually drove west of our house until I hit the edge of town. Only a few blocks away. The kids and I sat in the car starring at the edge of things. Before us spread a dusty plain, whirlwinds of dirt gusting across empty, barren land, some railroad tracks disappearing into a blur of heat, the sky a hazy blue. I've never been on the edge before, never come to the point where something ends, and nothing exists beyond. We sat there in the idling car squinting into the sunlight, feeling strange.