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We'll be loading up early in the morning to head to Trinity to mourn a much beloved friend.  I sat down at my computer just a few hours ago to type a more positive note to leave here for the next days.  And as I sat down I received another call.

Another tragic call.

Another friend has left this world.  Another one gone too soon; it seems to us.

Today, Hallie's little friend from Trinity was tragically killed in an accident. 

So I sit. And the positive doesn't come easy.  It's stuffed way back. 

I was working on putting up a picture here when I got the call. I was fondly remembering the flock of pelicans that visited each fall down at the marina just a mile from where we lived in Trinity. 

I loved them.  The sight of them brought me such joy that many days after teaching I would drive a mile further and make a loop by the lake just to see them.  Now that we have moved away, it's one of many things I dearly miss. 

Can there be anything good about missing something or someone?

I think the picture fits.  I know it's the best this broken heart can do for tonight.

 

God is our refuge and strength,
an ever-present help in trouble.
2 Therefore we will not fear, though the earth give way
and the mountains fall into the heart of the sea,
3 though its waters roar and foam
and the mountains quake with their surging.

Psalm 46:1-3

Please pray for Ashley's family.

 

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I sat on the ledge of the fireplace Wednesday night; a large huddled mass of a broken girl on my lap.  I had shared the bad news.  A dear friend of our family, who was also Rylie's Pre-K teacher and teacher at church had passed away unexpectedly. 

So we sat by the fire and I did my best to explain what I don't completely understand myself.  I carefully thought out my best words, though there were none. 

"She never let me down, ......she never let me down," Rylie yelled.  "It's not fair". "I want her to be here with me now".

She and I rocked back and forth by the fire.  Her words were angry, and I let her be. 

 None of us wanted to lose our dear friend.  Deep down I knew her words were more true than mine; mine so proper. 

My heart and my words didn't match.

 There was both warmth and consuming pain in the fire at my back last night. Hope and despair. 

In the words of Shakespeare, Parting is such sweet sorrow.

I was reminded by Rylie that it's ok to be broken out loud.  Just as I knew and understood Rylie's pain, God knows ours deeply.  He doesn't always need us to put on a brave face and proclaim his glory through right words.

In glory we recognize that God is in control.  We recognize that Crystal is in a better place, even if we want her here.

Sometimes glory comes small. 

 Sometimes glory comes through tantrums; might I be so bold as to say begrudgingly.   Crystal's passing is not our way, but we know that God's ways are higher than our ways.

And so we concede.

Rylie wrote a letter.   It was addressed to God and Ms. Emmons.  My broken girl, in the midst of her sorrowful fit and confusion, knows who is in control.  She knows who Crystal is with.  And she trusts him even if she doesn't like it.

God loves "us adults" with our words of comfort and brave smiles, but he loves us too as broken children who don't always like his will.  He brings healing; sometimes  that means crawling up in his lap to cry a while. 

Psalm 147:3

 -He heals the brokenhearted

 and binds up their wounds.

A grace-full, faithful friend with a most gentle spirit, Crystal Emmons, you are gone but not forgotten.   In the words of Rylie, "You can pop up in my dream any day......"

 

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Written by Alison Howell

 

I move your golden tendrils out of your sleeping eyes,

And a whirlwind of emotion takes me by surprise.

I pause and kneel beside your bed and try to guess your dreams.

Your small frame curled tightly; your look peaceful and serene.

 

I inhale slowly, then exhale as though I feel the weight.

This little life depends on me and the choices that I make.

Then just as tears begin to well and my heart begins to race,

I close my eyes, bow my head and take my rightful place.

 

For every night, my precious one, I surrender my control

To one who loves you even more than we could ever know.

He knit your inmost being with a perfect plan in mind,

Lovingly creating you with a purposeful design.

 

So I ask for Him to lead me as I raise His little girl

And hold my hand as I hold yours to guide you through this world.

I pray that at a tender age, you learn to call Him “Lord”

And trust in Him, your Source of Strength, when life seems cold and hard.

I ask Him to reveal Himself in the choices that you make

As you hunger for His righteousness and always seek His face.

And on those days your way seems dark, I pray your soul is well

Because you hold to the assurance that His promises won’t fail.

I beg your days of serving Him are fruitful and are many,

That you fulfill your heart’s desires, and His blessing number plenty.

 

I begin to feel the peace He brings and know in you He finds delight.

I wrap my arms around you and kiss your head goodnight.

And as my weight is lifted by the One who holds the world,

I thank Him for giving me this chance to hold His little girl.

 

Alison Howell has been married to her best friend and high school sweetheart, Lance, for 11 years. They live in Nederland, TX. They have two children: a precious daughter, Mackenzie, who is 7, and a beautiful baby boy, Andrew. She is a stay-at-home mom who spends her spare time writing grants for meaningful non-profit agencies and volunteering at her church, Hillcrest Baptist. But she says what defines her the most is that she is promised to the King of Kings who has gone to prepare a place for her and is coming back to bring her there. And while she is waiting, she wants to make every moment count.

 

If you are interested in sharing your story, send your writing to kristiburden@gmail.com

You'll be glad you did.  I'll be glad you did too.

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She's with me most everywhere I go.

My Awkward friend

She's with me when I trip on that invisible bump in the sidewalk

and when I completely forget the most common words like (cherry).............turnover.

She's no help as I snap my fingers and frantically go through the a,b,c's......I think it starts with "t"

"It's a baked pastry that's filled with fruit, come on....you know," I say.

 

She's been one of my closest companions since I was young.

She was there with me the times my pants would find themselves unzipped in public, the times I dropped my lunch tray, and every time the teacher called on me (those were the times she was with me in La-La Land).

She was with me during every break-up.

Then there's that back-to-school party my Freshman year at my house.  I was so excited to meet my first guests that I ran out the front door only to be caught and yanked back by the screen door.  There I was with a big hole in my new shirt.  Awkward was there too.

My friend Awkward was there every time I air-balled in basketball.

She's there in the silence when my stomach growls loud and long.

She was riding shotgun when we wildly waved at a group of people while backing the car into a tree.

She's been my Zumba partner too as we attempted to shimmy and shake, offbeat and off-course.

And I'll never forget the time Awkward and I were called to the judge's box during Jury Duty.  I knocked over the evidence chart in front of everybody.  She just stood there.

We've been through some rough times, she and I.

But I must say she's taught me some important things.

 She's taught me humility.  Often when I'm high on myself,  that's just when she's back at my side.  She reminds me to cool it.  Right after my embarrassing moment she whispers, "You're definitely not perfect...but that's ok."

I've grown up with Awkward. She's been the topic of some great stories. She's made me laugh a thousand times!   In my most embarrassing times with her, she's even reminded me to pray, so that God might help us through.

We've been through some rough times, Awkward and I

But I think I'll keep her around.

 

 

 

 

I'm in the kitchen looking at the wicker basket overflowing with envelopes; with stray papers and cards sticking out every which way. 

 This basket is one of the places I store the mail and more.  "Store" is a responsible word, sometimes the more honest word is dismiss.  We get mail everyday.  To add to the unending pile, the kids come home with homework and notes outlining events. 

I'm not very organized so I take joy in throwing some mail, like flyers away immediately so that I don't have to deal with it.  Other papers, like the completed cut-and-paste short vowel page and the invitation to play YMCA basketball are thrown away secretly when Rylie isn't looking. 

The abundance is more than I can bear.

Still there are invitations that sit in that basket. I looked just yesterday and noticed an event that had passed.  I had completely forgotten about it.

I skim the basket occasionally to check for urgent papers that need to be signed and for upcoming events.  The items in that basket get deserved attention when I sit in the floor and go through the contents.  I pick up each paper and organize to the best of my ability.

I throw away passed opportunities like the Bath and Body Works coupon whose expiration date has come and gone.

I have a keep pile; like the birth announcement sent by our friends who are adopting a sweet baby girl and the handwritten note to me from Hallie.

Though I take the papers out of the basket....

 my basket is NEVER really empty.

 I have one pile that goes back into the basket like those invitations I don't want to miss.  Important contact information goes back in too.

I haven't been vigilant in this season of Thanksgiving.  I've been thankful, but my thankfulness quite humorously resembles the basket tucked in the corner of my kitchen.

There is a never-to-end list of things to be thankful for.  So great is the abundance that some things are sadly dismissed like the cut-and-paste worksheets Rylie labors over. 

 Do I take time to be thankful for the things which come day after day? 

 Am I thankful for sweet rest that comes every night?  Am I thankful for breath?

Like the mail that is discarded without opening, what opportunities do I miss?  Did I stop to really notice that hug I got Sunday night at church; the hug that held dear meaning?  There are birds singing and wind chimes outdoors tuning in to God's glory.  Am I tuning in or am I missing out?

I've discovered my "thankful" basket is too small to fit all which belongs in it. I realize that there are thankful things I've neglected to put in. Maybe I need to tend to it with much greater frequency.

God thank you that my basket is never empty. The abundance is more than I can bear. I pray that you would enlarge my heart and open my eyes so that I might better acknowledge your greatness.  I pray that I would live a life in light of your goodness. Help my joy to tell of your wonderful deeds.

 

 

Swinging was my favorite playground activity as a child.  All it took was getting the breath knocked out of me from a fall, to scratch monkey bars off the list.  I was a bit too puny for the chin up bars.

But the swings, I could do.  I'd grip those chains, scramble backwards and hop on- beginning my ascent.

I'd rock back and forth inching higher and higher.  With some height, I'd lean back and point my toes. My feet surpassed the height of the school building. My toes were mere inches away from clouds.

I also remember truly believing if I pointed my toes high enough as I soared upward that I would reach the ultimate swinging goal of flipping over, making a complete circle.

Before I was ever able to reach that goal, Mrs. Phillips our recess lady, would always shout  "Line up" ceasing my soaring sensation

My rhythm broken , I would leave the playground.

 I remember running back to the swings the next day.

It was in the swing that I reached for the heights.

But more than achieving the heights was the simple enjoyment of the ride.  Though moving with speed, there was something soothing in swinging.  It was in the swing that I orchestrated a playground lullaby; rocking to and fro.

I have recently forgotten how to appreciate the rhythm of life.  Life's been a non-stop chore.  Time has been branded with my personal routine; gripping life's chains- wildly kicking to and fro. I swing back and forth cooking and cleaning, drop-offs and pick-ups.

Sickness this past week broke that rhythm. Being grounded helped me to remember how I missed being in the swing of things.

 Life can be experienced as laborious routine or beautiful rhythm.

I choose beautiful rhythm...................................................................my old familiar friend

Now that I'm back in the swing.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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I've highjacked "A Thursday for Your Thoughts".  I'm slowly getting back into my groove, forgive me.  But don't fret, two awesome women are lined up for the next two Thursdays.  Until then, bear with me.

I sent one off to school today without her homework.  I also sent her to school to face two little girls who have reminded her time and time again that she "can't play with them" and that "we already told you, we're not your friend".  To top it off, her eyes are still underlined with gray from being sick with the flu for six days.

I sent her to school fragile.

 

It's one of the worst things about being a mom; some of the best things being band- aids and warm chocolate chip cookies.  I love being able to give my kids things that bring them comfort and things that put a smile on their face.

I sent her off to school to face possible pain and rejection.  These words which are necessary to growth are like dirty words.  I would gladly shield my children from these experiences if it were in my power.

Rylie didn't have her homework sheet yesterday.  It must have been left on her desk.  I could explain to you why it's reasonable that her paper didn't get home, but reason doesn't change the fact that she's showing up today without her homework. She'll more than likely be sitting out for recess today and "changing her color" which will hurt her feelings terribly as she never gets her color changed.

As difficult as it is for her to pay a consequence without any malicious behavior, what if this experience teaches her that pain is a part of life.  There are sometimes consequences that come from forgetfulness and sometimes from no misdeed at all.

There is pain in this life. Pain seeks comfort and healing; as her mom I want to teach her who brings about true relief.

Rejection is inevitable too.  I can't ensure, though I've racked my brain trying, that Rylie won't ever be bullied on the playground.  I can't make sure that she doesn't swing alone.  Unlike Samantha on the show Bewitched, even if I were on the playground I couldn't button closed unkind mouths with a wiggle of my nose.

I can't always fix it. She will experience meanness and will sometimes be alone.  Sometimes she won't be chosen.

Fragile means being vulnerable and helpless,

but fragile is beautiful.

Fragile is encompassed by care.

My daughter, in her fragile state is cared for.  She's prayed for; and even if she wasn't she hasn't escaped God's attention.

Though Rylie won't escape pain, and I am helpless to fix it- God is all-powerful and ever-present. 

He will hold her hand.

He will teach her.

HE will grow her; not me.

Maybe I need reminding, that's how I'm getting to know God.  In my need.  From rejection.  In the realization of my imperfection.  By being fragile.

 

A Lesson from Lyla

 

Our friends came to visit months ago.  They brought their two precious girls with them.  One of their girls Lyla who was three at the time speaks her mind. In this particular stage of her life she spoke volumes with one word.

WHY?!!!

She would say this when her mother told her to come downstairs or eat a few bites of the bread on her plate.  She would emphatically say "WHY!!!" when told it was time to put on her shoes.

It never really seemed a question.

"WHY!!!" meant "I don't want to do this".  It meant "this is unfair".  Though she said one word, I could tell she was really saying  "I don't like this".

My apologies to my friend, but I loved hearing her say it.  I felt like she was expressing my often mood; boiling it down to a one-word fit.

I have made no secret that my recent days have been trying.  I've found myself screaming "WHY!!!" on the inside. It's escaped my lips a few times too.

I sent a simple text to my friend just this morning after listing my life's injustices.

Text: (In my Lyla voice)  WHY?!!!

My friend quickly responded telling me that Lyla has a new saying.   She said that Lyla, who is four now and  has obviously reached a new maturity level will ask a question but before anyone can answer, she will say

"Oh.  Ok."

-the irony pierces my soul and has me tickled at the same time

Lyla has moved on at the age of four.  But me in my three-year old mentality, when things aren't going my way-when things just don't seem fair I get stuck on "WHY!!".

In my impatience and lack of trust I question, and more often I demand an answer.

It's only through time and maturation that we come to the important realization that, "Oh. (it's) Ok." Sometimes it means putting on my big girl shoes and walking through something I don't want to, like the flu, ridiculous behavior by my children or some other struggle.

I've never went through a single trial where God hasn't been beautifully at work. There's never NOT been an answer, even when I haven't been privileged to know it.  God has the answer.  God is the answer.  And it's as simple as that, no matter the deep insinuations my "WHY!!!" holds. 

 I want to be at that place; the place where I don't wait for the answer

-the place where, in trust, I simply say, oh. ok.

I can't wait to be four.

  

 

Even when I walk
through the darkest valley ,

where the flu won't leave

and the dirty dishes stay stacked

where the ice comes out of the freezer

as ice(creamy) because someone hid ice cream in the dispenser

where the floor is still sticky from spilled Gatorade 

-even under the covers where Rylie and I hid

 and cried about bullies yesterday afternoon

where dirty clothes are in heaps in the hallway

where a headache is my close companion

and nap is a stranger

where I sit at the keyboard to type inspiration

but my fingers won't budge

when the grade portal shows stinky grades for my kid

and the consequences leave us both disappointed

when I'm cranky and I know it, and so do my family and friends

when glass breaks and there are more spills

when I dramatically lay my head on the table mocking a fainting spell

when fever and vomit decide to revisit

 

I will not be afraid,

{Though I'm a mess on the outside (and I'm not just talking about my oversized t-shirt, sweats and day old ponytail) }

....I will not be afraid

and I am not alone

even when I'm hard to be around

...........you are close beside me. (-Psalm 23:4)

 

 

 

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 Forgetting is a problem 

Forgetting is also beautiful!

 

 

I forget.

 

I'm not talking amnesia kind of forget. Amnesia typically refers to shock or injury that leads to the loss of memory.  I don't suffer from amnesia, but I have certain gaps in my memory where I have subconciously substituted the spaces with whatever I want; sort of creating false memory.

There is a hole in the door of my childhood bedroom. My sister and I have a memory gap when it comes to the exact cause.  I think we each created our own self-justifying false memory.

There are other times I just can't recall a piece of information that I know remains temporarily locked at an undisclosed location in my brain.  I forgot my zip code for an embarrassing 45 seconds the other day when I was trying to get gas at a convenience store.

The kind of forgetfulness that occurs most frequently is the kind of forgetfulness that suggests inattention or carelessness like the time I forgot Hayden's first driving lesson. 

This kind of forgetfulness happens with one of my children when it comes to turning in assignments occasionally.  It happens with another when it comes to brushing her teeth. We all suffer from forgetfulness.

I'm not as gracious as I should be when I'm the one being forgotten. When someone has failed to remember to call me back, or that it's my birthday I have a tendency to equate forgetfulness with love level.  Let me show you my erroneous equation.

Forgetting= Lack of love, lack of loyalty

Forgetting= not caring,

Of course when it's me who's doing the forgetting, I attribute my not remembering to busyness, airheadedness; I've even diagnosed myself with ADD.  I would hate to think that anyone would feel like I cared little for them because I forgot to do something I said I would do.  In the frequent event that I have "forgotten" I rely on grace.

We are imperfect.

We hurt others though it is rarely our intention.

Saddest is the fact that we forget the One who always loves us, the One who is loyal and cares for us.  I carelessly leave my bible unopened for days on end.  I eat the food in my cupboard forgetting the hands that truly feed me.  While my excuse for forgetting is busyness (I am juggling a thousand chores)-  God cares for me while juggling the planets.

Forgetting is almost not a part of his vocabulary.

He remembers the way I felt when half of my bridesmaids deserted me the night before my wedding to have their own bachelorette party without the bride.  He never forgets my birthday.  He doesn't forget me and he doesn't forget the motherless/fatherless children in Kenya that I think about fondly ever so often.  He doesn't forget about my friend who lost her child this summer who I remember to pray for on occasion.

He remembers.  But there IS something he forgets.

He forgets our sin.

I-yes, I alone--will blot out your sins for my own sake and will never think of them again.

Isaiah 43:25

God's forgetfulness is not the amnesia kind, not the busy kind.  I can remember times when I've been indebted to someone.  They say "Forget about it".  They have CHOSEN to forget; that is the beautiful kind.

Sometimes I forget God.  I forget about his goodness.  He forgets my bad.

God forgets my sin.