The sun knows what it's doing and where it's going, with intentionality and brilliance, but it is in no hurry. And along the way, some later lilacs are just arriving to the spring party, and a very small rabbit says hello...
It's a quieter step into June this morning.
The past thirteen days since the Victoria Day Weekend have been something of an all out sprint, pressing from one big thing to another, with days of meetings, preparation, packing and unpacking slipped into the betweens.
Time to stop all that good and honorable nonsense.
I flip over the calendar and welcome the new month with a soft sigh.
Today, this first day of June, if I get to the end of it feeling more rested and clear headed -- that will have been a satisfying and successful day. And even now, over the next few days in this first week of June, I'm keeping the volume on low in keeping with the obedient, rather relaxed expectations I have of myself for right now.
June.
And then there's the thing about June holding so much remembering. Just in this first week, these first few days of it, there is the marking of five beloveds who left us. Years have past but their absence remains. And it gathers like a misty aching that I need to leave room for.
Then, my birthday. This one is 69, and I'm amazed. How did I get here so fast? And how is it that life continues so abundantly upward, despite the rather persistent covert messaging of it all being downhill from here? Not for me. Not at all. Steady on we go.
This is just a quick post to check in mid point in a two week high-gear press of goings on.
After a deliberately calmer March and April, May has proven to be the catch all month, with these last two weeks particularly packed. Can't complain. Love everything I'm doing. Just hope I can keep up with myself.
Part of the 'all things' was opening the cottage over the weekend, with the help of our strapping younger family members who love the place enough with us to wrestle with the plumbing. It was rainy and cold, but we cozied up by the fire, got almost everything up and running, and enjoyed one of the best games of Rummoli I can remember!
Also, there are a LOT of blueberry blossoms over on the other property in a patch I don't remember being so productive in the past. If things stay wet enough....it's looking pretty good so far.
Okay, that's all I've got for right now. Except maybe for this shot of a blue jay having breakfast.
So I will fully embrace the robust energy of this coming week....and eagerly anticipate what's in store for this summer by the water.
Happy Tuesday, wherever you are.
This is the perfect time of year for a sunrise walk.
I can get out there and get back and still start my day in good time. In a little bit, say, closer to the end of June, the sunrise will happen a bit too early, even for me. Although...I am so looking forward to getting out in the kayak on that flat misty water that mostly only happens at the crack of dawn.
Meanwhile and either way, I remain that annoying person who is most alert, awake and alive as the day begins. It's fresh and full of potential out there! And of course, with the heat we've been having these past few days, it really is the best time to do any form of activity.
I think by now I have approximately a bazillion pictures of sunrises. Here's one from this morning. It begged a Bible verse to go with, so I started looking. Just in Psalms for now. And here's what I came up with, all of them singing praises in the morning. Perhaps David and the other psalmists were morning folks too?
Interestingly enough, I've listed them in order, and it's the last one, Psalm 143:8, that seems to caption this picture best. But I'll just leave them all here and let you decide.
However and whenever your day begins, hope it's a great one.
In the spirit of using what you already have at hand, our son has set up a good-sized garden plot to the side of our yard by the fence, using sections of one of the trees we lost in constructing our new little house.
This is where a garden existed in the pre-construction era of the property. And, to happily remind us of that, the rhubarb made its way up through the straw bed to help get things started.
What I'm loving about the look of it, though, is how David, like I said, has taken sections of one of the trees we had to chop down to becomes the walls of the garden box, as it were.
This is the second spring season for us here. So it's fun to see the morphing of ideas and effort and creativity in using what we have on hand, and the different skills, and passions, and resources we bring, as we build our lives together in this space.
And it's deeply satisfying. And not a little surprising.
Our family's story is complex, and, if you know it, you know that a lot of grace has been granted to us to make this work. So many answers to so many prayers are spread out around this yard. Having just come through another Mother's Day and its usual ordeal of all the self-evaluative reflections, I am ever so grateful we are who we are, and that we still get to grow together. I know I don't deserve this.
I should make it clear; the garden is all David. One of the values we are owning here is that we make way for those who know what they're doing. Hence, I am staying well away from the vegetables. I'll stick to making our little front porch pretty. And there are more plans underway for the space directly behind the house, which includes the original shed. Of course, there's the ramp to build along the side of the porch up to our main door.
Lots to look forward to.
Lots to grow into.
That's from Isaiah 50:10. And this first part I like well enough. Sounds so reassuring to have God right there, guiding me along when the way isn't clear. It's the next bit, though, that reads a bit rough for me. Verse 11 goes on to say:
Not every time, but sometimes this Mother's Day thing feels awkward.
What I want to tenderly ruminate about is all the warmth and goodness of my own mothering experience; to encourage and inspire Moms who are in the thick of it right now; to celebrate the nobility and dignity and strength of what it means to be the feminine parent; to honour the memory of my own Mom.
All that stuff.
Like what's in the Mother's Day cards.
And sometimes I can do that.
Sometimes, though, I feel the weight of all the legitimate and deeply regretful mothering mistakes I made, and what seems to me such an unfair system where you get handed a vulnerable human being that you're not only supposed to keep alive, but are expected to raise into a competent, thoughtful, contributing member of society. I want to register a complaint somewhere because it seems ridiculous that, when my body was best suited for childbearing, my life experience was sadly lacking. But if I waited until I was wise enough to actually know how to raise a child with minimal damage inflicted, my physical self would thwart all those good strategies. Awkward.
Sometimes Mother's Day is awkward because of the absence of a child. Due to loss, the gut-punch likes of which my family has experienced first hand. Or due to infertility or other life circumstance, a soul-sinking pain carried by friends, and you can't help but feel it with them. Especially on awkward days like today.
Then there's the unique awkwardness of sorting out the complexities of my own little girl story, and what it was like to be raised by a Mom who, through absolutely no fault of her own, had suffered a traumatic brain injury as a child, the effects of which brought both blessings and challenge, and also contributed to the oldest (that's me) being shaped into a parentified child at a very early age. Those blessings (such a gentle, sweet, never-said-a-bad-word-about-anyone-until-dementia-set-in woman) and challenges (assorted and nuanced and not necessary to describe here) followed us in our relationship until her passing, now more than 10 years ago. That was, even at the very end, so awkward, since I was half a planet away.
I will most certainly not get hired by Hallmark for writing this post (although I have often thought there should be a section in the card racks entitled "Honestly Speaking," but never mind). And I run the risk of spoiling it for readers who are actually having a perfectly lovely Mother's Day. Sorry about that. Please enjoy your day.
I have already been lovingly and appropriately remembered by my children, and even my husband this Mother's Day. So none of this is coming out of any sense of being overlooked as a Mom. Not by any means. They give me far more credit than I deserve.
But these feels were really feely this particular Mother's Day. And I wonder if anyone feeling similarly awkward might just need to know that they're not alone.
Which is probably the best gift any Mom in any stage and any situation can be given. It takes a village to raise a child....and to help lessen all the honest awkwardness of motherhood.
However it's going for you this year, keep it real. And I hope you get whatever your soul needs to mark this day.