Wednesday, June 29, 2011

imperfect prose on thursdays: the dinner that no one came to



she's a religious girl, the kind that wears her hair in a bun, the kind in skirts and floral print and one of the first things she did upon getting to the shelter was to order herself a new shirt from sears with lace at the bodice and she felt so scandalous and free.

until the shirt arrived torn and she called herself a sinner for the guilt that undid her, for guilt had been beaten into her, in the name of Christ, and it would take years to undo

and we were there because she'd invited us, her goodbye party for she was moving into her own place away from shelter, from family, from abuse, and she'd spent all day cooking

and we sat there, the only guests invited to have come, and tried to make light but it was all across her face, the un-shed tears, the wondering why, the folded hands so worn from unheard prayers and i wanted to run outside and beg strangers to the feast and call those who had been invited and ask, how could you?

but instead i just told her how lovely her blueberry fritters and the bacon bread and the salad and begged the trinity to wrap her tight for there are some wounds you cannot touch, let alone heal



1. link up a post (old or new) that you feel is 'broken' or 'imperfect' or somehow redemptive
2. put the 'imperfect prose' button at the bottom of your post, so others can find their way back here (see button code in right-hand column of my blog)
3. read other's prose, and encourage them!

imperfect prose Participants
1. amy @ to love
2. I Almost Missed It
3. Deidra
4. tinuviel @ crumbs
5. Michelle @ Graceful
6. Kati
7. Stacie
8. A humbling habit @ Lisa notes
9. Southern Gal
10. Craig @ Deep into Love
11. alexis @ finding prose
12. brian miller
13. Deidra M.
14. Beth @ What Embracing Pain Can Do
15. misty
16. kd sullivan @ journey to epiphany
17. Angry Women
18. Rachel
19. to truly see her
20. HisFireFly
21. "Enough" Somewhere a Melody
22. lori
23. Old Injuries @ Dawnings
24. Sadee@aPicturebookLife
25. ELK
26. Lauri
27. Old Ollie
28. Facebook changing Eternity
29. Blue Cotton Memory
30. Ima @ My Life is A Nutcase
31. Bethany Ann
32. Alli 'n Son
33. Bareback Riding @ path of treasure
34. Melissa@one thing
35. Sherri-Dawn @ Tall Tales
36. Shigune Matsui
37. Sheila Moore
38. Reverie
39. Kath @ Listening Space
40. patty
41. Laura
42. David Nilsen
43. kendal
44. Cindy @ 12Tribes
45. happygirl
46. eloranicole
47. Bristol @ Diligent Leaves
48. Smooth Stones
49. Amanda @ wandering
50. Rambling Heather
51. Give me thine heart
52. Sarah
53. Elizabeth@just following Jesus
54. Jadie
55. Linda
56. rain on bleeding hearts
57. Sandra Heska King
58. The Heart is the Key
59. Suzanna
60. Lindsey-Dusting off the Ashes
61. Diana Trautwein
62. Janis@Open My Ears Lord
63. Nicol from LOV

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*print of 'trinity' available here*

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

when you let your husband down







i have a surprise for you, he said at the bottom of the stairs and

the night glowed promise and son, asleep, so we slipped out into air that smelled of fading lilacs and there stood a ladder, a silver-leaning against window against roof and my insides shifted for the height

he held out his hand. "it's our little getaway" and i thought of him propping the ladder there, picturing us on the roof sitting close seeing everything from new angles and all i wanted was to run for the fear

for even though i talk big, i live scared: of dark, of loud noises and sharp edges and anything i cannot control, and heights, the hardest of them all--and had he forgotten? i looked at his beaming boy face and knew, he'd only wanted to gift me, and so i tried

i tried to scale the rails but i panicked when i saw the roof, when my fingers grazed shingle and how i wanted to climb the final steps, to sit with him beneath the sky and overcome, but i began to shake and cry. and he said, "it's okay, honey, come down... i'll take photos, and we'll pretend."

and so he took photos and we pretended but "it's not the same," he whispered. and there was sadness in his eyes for the view we'd missed together and i hope one day i can take those final steps and understand what it means to touch heaven.



(shared with one stop poetry)

Sunday, June 26, 2011

how to teach your child about death








my son how do i teach you, amongst hollyhocks and swing-sets, of death in a way that complements the life that fairly bursts from your tiny limbs, and how do i teach you of sadness that falls so often from mommy's eyes because her heart is of the softest kind but it's nothing to be frightened of, for soft makes way for seeds to grow?

how?

when you, fresh from heaven's cradle, see everything with eyes of wonder, and how to keep this wonder, to make it stretch like bread dough when the world keeps punching it down? to rise in the heat of the oven and emerge as food for a hungry world? to be served, willing, on a platter, so others might be fed, and how? when all i want is to hold you close and let no one near for fear of them wrecking you, for fear of your innocence being stolen but unless i let you go you'll never know what it means to live, and in this, i teach you about death even

as your little finger tries to pet a fly, crushes its wings and you look at me, and laugh a little, because that's how babies deal with shock... and i scoop the fly into my palm and say, it's okay, and i say the word "dead" and you nod. and it's easier than i thought. because death is a thing that falls daily in the garden, you helping me prune the brown from the green, making way for more beauty, and i tell you again, "dead" and you nod again, and there's no laughter, now, just nodding, for it's not shocking anymore.

i want death to be nothing more than a gateway to life. i want you not to fear, for fear is worse than death. fear is a cage, but death makes way for fullness, for celebration, for heaven.

so let's sit here on the swing, my son, amongst the sun and the trees and let's hold each other as often as we can and rise to the sky, fearless, for the love that binds life and death and all that's in between

"none of us, in our culture of comfort, knows how to prepare ourselves for dying, but that's what we should do every day. every single day, we die a thousand deaths... we go through the valley of the shadow of death every time we say no to our selfish desires. when we say yes to the grace of God, we are learning how to die." (joni eareckson tada)
with ann:

411. a week of catching up at home
412. a day of washing and folding little kasher's clothes, and prepping his room for his arrival
413. an evening with friends learning a new card game and old laughter
414. planning camping trips
415. completing assignments knowing soon, vacation
416. encouragement from publisher and agent
417. a family that believes in communication
418. a husband who believes in me
419. a son who knows he's loved
420. forgiveness

Friday, June 24, 2011

Guest Post: Corinne @ Trains, Tutus and Tea Time




For as long as I can remember I’ve hard a hard time saying Jesus.

His name rarely came up in my childhood, as I come from a believer who didn’t really talk about his faith, and an atheist. So I didn’t grow up knowing Jesus, or His Father. Or knowing what to capitalize when talking about Jesus and God and Heaven and Christianity in general.

I still have trouble with capitalization.

But I can say Jesus. I can talk to Him. I can talk about Him and not roll my eyes or question my sanity.

It’s a weird thing to believe in God and Jesus and the Bible and Heaven.

The only way that I could believe in Him, to start to get to know Him, was to get out of my own way. To realize that He is bigger than me. That I don’t have the answers. That the things that happen... there are reasons for them.

And once I stopped trying to just trudge through things, head down, never looking back, I could actually see my life. Once I stepped out of the way, I could see my life through His eyes. And then, only then did I really see me.

You kind of have to see yourself in order to see Jesus.

Or, rather, you have to be able to see reality in order to see Jesus.

And to see him at work in your life you have to actually see your life.

And to do that, all I had to do was ask. To pray. To tell the sky above that I was ready. And since then I’ve started a relationship with Him. I’ve been able to see Him in every part of my life, and the world around me.

His name now rolls off my tongue, and leaves me with a smile. Always.


(thank you, lovely Corinne, for this beautiful post... for helping us to see ourselves so we can see Jesus)

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

imperfect prose on thursdays: the girl with the cat



she was six. six years of bone and skin and nothing could make her eat. they stuck her in a straitjacket this girl of six and her mouth like a bird's and they shoved food down her beak, but still, nothing. so they called him. this doctor who loves God, they called him, and he answered and he and his counselors got down on all fours and entered her world. no food, just them and her in a room, her skin so thin they could see her soul pulsing.

a few days and this doctor's driving home, and he's praying, for she still hasn't eaten, and then, a sign: "free kittens." he pulls into the drive, asks for the runt, and the owner hands over a scruff of fur, an eyedropper, says, "it won't live long." the doctor says, "perfect."

he turns around, drives back to the place he founded, the place with the room where the girl sits alone, and he gives her this kitten and tells her, "it's your job to keep it alive."

she rubs the fur off the kitten, and one day later, she asks for food. the counselor who had been on all fours, exits the room and stares at the doctor and says, "she's asking for food. what do i do?" the doctor laughs. "give her food. give her whatever she wants." she wanted pop-tarts.

she fed the kitten and she fed herself and the doctor found this: for some reason, her body hadn't been producing growth hormone. but then she began loving on the kitten and her body began to grow.

in saving the scruff which went on to produce grand-kittens which saved other little children, the little girl saved herself, for love is this: the hormone that gives us appetite to live. without love, we die.



1. link up a post (old or new) that you feel is 'broken' or 'imperfect' or somehow redemptive
2. put the 'imperfect prose' button at the bottom of your post, so others can find their way back here (see button code in right-hand column of my blog)
3. read other's offerings, and encourage them!

imperfect prose Participants
1. Elaine
2. Craig @ Deep into Love
3. happygirl
4. tinuviel @ crumbs
5. elizabeth@just following Jesus
6. Develop the eye @ Lisa notes
7. Jen: Always Almost
8. mountain mama
9. Ruthiey
10. kendal
11. Ima @ My Life is A Nutcase
12. "Through it all" SuzyQ
13. HisFireFly
14. Cindy @ 12Tribes
15. Old Things
16. David Nilsen
17. Lauri
18. Qumran
19. Julie @ OnePennyJumblePacket
20. lori
21. Deidra
22. ELK
23. alittlebitograce
24. Sarah
25. Father's day, a different perspective
26. Beth @ Fill 'er up!
27. Smooth Stones
28. william joiner
29. april
30. Shaunie Friday @ Up the Sunbeam
31. AWIP (Peace and Vegetables)
32. Laura, NH, USA
33. Rambling Heather
34. Tamara @ Living Palm
35. relationships and other drugs
36. recuerda mi corazon
37. Debbie Young
38. Courtney Walsh
39. patty
40. Linda
41. Blue Cotton Memory
42. teen church girl @ path of treasure
43. Journey Towards Epiphany
44. Christy@ The Margin Fading
45. Melissa S
46. Nancy @ Alleged Mind (corrected link)
47. Middle Thoughts @ Great Brain Idea
48. Amanda @ wandering
49. Capturing This Lifesong
50. Shigune Matsui
51. reverie
52. Old Ollie
53. I gotta go!!!

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*original and prints of 'sunrise' available here*

Monday, June 20, 2011

what it means to give birth







“the rush and pressure of modern life are a form,
perhaps the most common form,
of its innate violence.
to allow oneself to be carried away by a multitude of conflicting concerns,
to surrender to too many projects,
to want to help everyone in everything is to succumb to violence . . .”

~thomas merton


they don't warn you. they don't tell you that you're giving birth to your heart. that labor is more than a few hours in a sterilized environment. that it will rip you open, womb and soul, every day of motherhood and that no one will know how to stitch you up. they don't tell you that there is no tool to cut the umbilical cord, not really, and that no matter how far the child runs the cord drags mother behind.

they don't tell you that your dreams become your child as you stare into the face of someone so small, so asleep, and see the profile of your grandfather in their bones and your husband's lashes on their cheeks, and that you would die a thousand ways so they might live. no, they don't tell you this.

and they don't warn you that the first time you let your child down--that you truly, truly let your child down--that you will cry for hours and kneel by his bed and trace the curl of his 19-month-old hair and beg forgiveness, for in giving birth to life, you give birth to death. death of self.

and they don't tell you this as you sob to your husband between the sheets where love conceived life, as you tell him you failed and he promises it's okay and all you can think of is the future and the chance of your son going through worse pain and "i will break," for the thought of what the world can possibly do to the heart you gave birth to.

and he'll tell you to stop, in a stern kind of voice that reminds you, you are not God and you need to stop crying for you are a mother now and someone is feeding from your cord.

and they don't tell you there is a fine line between being mother and being martyr and you cannot be everything for everyone and the best thing you can do sometimes is fold your hands. for it's in folding that peace is birthed and in peace that life is protected and in life that sticky kisses and little-arm hugs make it possible to die.



(i've been asked to host loni's "in other words" this week... the quote is thomas merton's above; if you have thoughts you'd like to share on this quote (for it can be interpreted a number of ways depending on where you're at in life), include them, or a link to your post in the comments... blessings.)







*shared also with one stop poetry's one shot wednesday

Sunday, June 19, 2011

when daddy's love is not enough








she is thin, and this, no surprise at an eating disorders conference. we are crowded into a castle in colorado, red rocks scaling blue skies through tall glass windows and dad and i are on stage, and beside us, a therapist. i'm wearing a green dress and black leggings. dad's in his sunday clothes, the ones he preaches in, and todd sits beside an easel on which is scribbled diagrams describing it all.

i've talked about being nine years old and about wanting to please dad and him only wanting to please the church and how this made me starve myself. i've talked about nearly dying at 13 and the nurses telling me i was a miracle and i've talked about now: how i'm still healing and still learning that humans are only flesh.

and she raises her hand, and her voice wavers and she wasn't expecting that. she asks how it felt when i finally felt seen and heard and cherished by my earthly father. how it felt when he began trying, when he opened his office door and noticed the little girl sobbing for his approval.

it's too quiet as i try to find the words. i don't want to hurt the gentle man beside me, but i want to say it true, and so i say this: "it wasn't as fulfilling as i thought it would be."

for all of the healing there are some needs which no earthly person can fill. some cracks which no clay will fix, for i'm emotional and artistic and he's pragmatic and that is okay, because then i tell her about the hug.

the one i received from Jesus the night before, during worship: guitar-strum, djembe-beat and palms raised in a room full of singing sinners.

eyes closed, his beard had scratched my cheek, the cheek of a little girl in a pink dress, and he was hugging me, Jesus, and telling me over and over how precious i was, then looking at my hands, at my feet, at me, saying, "how beautiful you are..."

and then, the next song, and i closed my eyes again hoping to see Jesus once more but not wanting to disturb him for fear of rejection, and he was God, and who was i to want him to hold me forever, and so in my mind, i peered out at him from behind a bush, this little girl in a pink dress, and there he was: looking for me.

God, trying to find me. God, wanting to hold me. God, wanting to be with me. and this, for a girl who never felt her father wanted to be with her, this mended all of those cracks, the ones that mud couldn't fill...

and now, i turn to the gentle man beside me and see him for all of his loveliness and accept his broken way of giving because isn't this all any of us has? shattered offerings?



(home now from colorado conference and eager to visit your blogs dear ones... begging grace as i get all unwrapped and hug on my son and my husband and then stop by your way ...)

Friday, June 17, 2011

What it means to be a good Dad (Guest Post-Duane Scott)

Four days ago, I almost cried.

I suppose you could say the stress of buying and renovating a house has its toll on a person's emotions, but I really don't want to use that as an excuse.

However, I can't explain how many frustrations come along with being...

...a plumber and trying to install a new kitchen faucet. Found out, after I'd disconnected all the water lines and jammed my fingers, that it was the wrong faucet for the sink.

...a painter. I sanded down the kitchen cabinets and started the mundane task of painting all the doors. And now that I'm basically done, I discovered the paint, if bumped or scratched, peels off the cabinet face fronts like a monkey peeling a banana.

... an electrician. The one that almost made me cry. Crouched on top of the bathroom counter, trying not to bump against fresh paint, I held the new vanity light against the wall.

"Just flip the light switch down so you won't electrocute yourself, reconnect the wires to the matching colors, and screw it to the wall with the bracket in the box," my dad had said when I asked him if he'd hang the light for me. "You gotta learn to do these kind of things."

Being the guy who is tempted to flip the breaker before plugging in the coffee grinder, I found it highly exhilarating to touch the bare wires, knowing that the breaker box below was still juicing up all the wires around me.

I read the instructions and started installing, my arms growing tired from holding the light in place.

And I did it wrong. Over and over again.

Then one time, I did everything right, and it still didn't work.

On the fifth time, I bit my lip and tried not to cry.

"Dad," I yelled, trying to keep the waver from my voice, "I think we need to hire an electrician."

My dad lowered his drill and ambled across the kitchen to the bathroom.

"You're doing it all wrong," he said.

"Surely not all wrong," I replied. "I read the instructions. And prayed."

"Oh, the instructions don't tell you how to do it." He untwisted a wire or two, held the bracket in place, and screwed it all together.

"Uh, dad, we'd like it on the wall."

"I know, I'm putting it all together down here so I don't have to hold it in place and try to thread nuts onto these bolts." He glanced down again, readjusted the bracket some more and continued, "My arms always get awfully tired."

"Oh, that woulda been smart," I said as I rubbed my tiny biceps.

"After you put two or three of these together, you learn a few tricks," he replied. "Except every light is a little different, so you are always relearning a few things."

This time, both of us crouched on either side of the bathroom sink, we held the light in place and fastened it down.

When I flipped the switch and the light brightened the room, I nearly wept.

My dad, having returned to the kitchen, started drilling again.

"Oh no...." I heard him mutter; the louder, "Duane, my drill nicked these cabinets and I tore some paint off."

"I'll touch it up after you're done," I replied, too tired to really care at that moment.

They say being a good dad is mostly just about showing up.

And as a son of a dad who has always showed up, I can't agree more.

But over the last five years, as I watch the gray hair appear on my dad's head, I wonder if I'll have learned enough to continue, when he isn't on this earth to show up anymore.

Or if I'll have learned enough to be a good father someday to a son of my own.

I smile then.

And I can't wait until I get to watch Duane Scott Jr. try hanging his first light fixture.



(Duane Scott writes powerful from his site here. Thank you, friend, for sharing this tender moment with your father.)

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Why women find it hard to love themselves



She got brain cancer, my mum, who once changed behind closet door when Dad was in the room, and she now needed Dad to dress her. She sang off-key while he tender clothed her, and this daughter who used to peek through the crack and cry over the way Mum hid, this daughter now pulled up Mum's Depend’s and brushed her hair as Mum told her over and over how beautiful she was.

(Part 3 of 'What it means to look like God.' Join me over at A Deeper Story today, friends?...)

**Please note, there will be no Imperfect Prose on Thursdays this week, as I'll be leaving tonight to speak at Hungry for Hope 2011**

Monday, June 13, 2011

when you forget who you are






my womb is a ripening mango, pulsing life, and i am more mother than other now. the feet of one boy in my ribs, the other clutching tight my belly where he pokes my button and cries to be held, and husband plays footsy and touches this flushed skin of woman when all i want is to cry "sanctuary."

longing for a space to call mine. this, being a woman being a mother being a wife, but what do you do when you forget who you are? what do you do when the hands beg to be held and the noses wiped and the mouth kissed, and it's no longer just a peripheral thing, for the calling is swallowing up your insides? it's everything?

but it's life, and what else would i want to live? sometimes i linger hands in dishwater staring into lawn into trees into sky pretending i am an artist in europe with a long purple scarf that has no spit-up or baby kisses or dinner prep wiped in its length. i carry canvas instead of diaper bag and i meet love under the bridge in the moonlight but suddenly, my womb aches, and the dishwater grows cold, and there is someone crying, a little voice crying and i realize it's me. for i don't want that, no, i just want a bath and a glass of wine and a long night's sleep.

and that's when sanctuary happens. this glimpse into life without the little arms that wrap my legs or the husband's feet that beg for mine or the laundry piled high for the skin it will cover. i am granted grace to see beyond the spit-up and the stretch marks, the grace to see life for what it is. and this is what it is. a miracle that enfolds you completely.

Sunday, June 12, 2011

the gardener's prayer



"farming brings us face to face with the fact that we are poor; that we have to work for the things we need, or do without them.” (catherine Doherty, 'apostolic farming')

soil fills black my fingernails, and i touch God's face when i'm gardening. we're bowed low in tilted evening light and the air is full of bird-song and lilacs. we're cleaning up the rows, all corn and potato and onion, and there are callouses of prayer on our palms, the prayers of the hard-working, and this, the truest form of prayer.

“the apostolic farmer … deals with the mystery of life," says doherty, a catholic woman from russia who founded st. benedict's acres near ottawa. "he touches God all the time in the mystery of nature and so can easily give God to others — for he is familiar with him. there are in the world two people who really touch God. the priest touches God in his very essence. the farmer touches God in his creation as it comes from his hands.”

he's kneeling over the peas, cleaning their stems so they can stretch tall around the wire, produce unfurling pod. "i can't wait until we can eat them," he says with a boyishness that startles the quiet. and i think on how all of life is wrapped up in single moments: how you can know this moment so full because of the others that have seeded, bloomed, and faded. right now, husband is boy is teacher is man is father, is disciple learning at the hem of God's cloak here in our backyard. perhaps this is life eternal? the gift hidden inside a thousand boxes?

the rows tidy and the soil sifts through skin and peace, here, for poverty of spirit. bowed over a world we have no control over.

and i cannot find the words for all of the ways my friends are hurting: for one, who lost her mother; for another, who held her blue baby by the side of the road waiting for the seizure to end, wondering if it ever would, and i have no words, and so i garden, hoping somehow by this bent-over act he'll hear. knowing this is where i stem from, this place of bulb and plant and weed, and to this, i will return. and does it get more holy?

“slowly our farmers have begun to understand Genesis,” says doherty. “that we really were given the earth to preserve and to restore.”


thankful this week for:

401. thunderstorm on friday, rain washing the dry away
402. playing cards on our deck while the rain came down
403. preparing for trip to colorado this week for hungry for hope conference
404. having family/maternity photos taken by friend
405. staining the fence full
406. seeing my flowers open
407. sitting, just sitting, and having that be enough
408. the promise of new
409. the comfort of old
410. popcorn and movies and afghans


*please note, friends: there will be no 'imperfect prose on thursdays' this week, as i'll be speaking at the conference. all my love...*

Thursday, June 9, 2011

For Daddy, Because She Needs You (Guest Post-Jennifer Lee)




It was the way our girls pressed into you while you put up fences. They leaned on you, our strong man.

I missed it at first – all that tender, windblown love pressing into steady, certain love. I took two dozen photographs in the garden that day. But I only saw the real beauty later, after I uploaded the photos onto the computer. I spotted the two flowers standing next to you. You know the ones: those pink, blooming girls of ours.

They wait for you to drive up that country lane, kicking up a dusty welcome. They chase you like you’re the hero come home. Because to them, you are.

The girls are well-scrubbed, and lotion-scented. You smell like the barn. But they want to be near you anyway, Daddy. And you let them.

In the photograph, you are working with strong hands. I can see now that it was hard work, pounding fence posts into stubborn soil.

You could have shooed them off. But you let them stay close, and without words, your actions told them they’re valued and beautiful.

In the photograph, you’re putting up fences because you want to protect what we’re growing on this farm. There’s always something lurking in the shadows, wanting to devour what we grow.

Sometimes, the thief in the shadows consumes not with teeth, but with lies.

I fear that the thief has been whispering into the ear of our oldest daughter, age nine. She blooms on a slender stem. She’s the skinniest girl in her class, but she said last week that her legs are “chubby.” We looked at each other wide-eyed because we know where this can lead. I didn’t say it out loud right then, but I remember what the lies did to me back when I lost my coveted title as skinniest girl of the eleventh grade. At 100 pounds, I went on my first “diet.”

But you, good man? I hear you speak louder than the lies. I hear how you tell her she’s beautiful – sometimes with actions, but often with words. She needs both.

I remember when our oldest daughter’s hair kept breaking off three years ago. The doctors said there was nothing they could do. We cropped her hair above the ears, and she cried, and you told her how pretty she looked. We prayed, and her hair grew back, and you loved her with long hair, too. When she said her teeth were crooked, you told her how much you adored her smile.

And when she leans in close, you let her.

You can’t buy them beauty, like a pair of designer jeans or a salon pedicure. And you can’t leave it to me. I can tell them they’re pretty, but they need to hear it from you.

You’re a farmer. You plant seeds in soil and in hearts. And I know the roots go deeper in a well-tended garden, even if the fences don’t hold.

(thank you, dear Jennifer... please visit this beautiful writer at her space, here)

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

imperfect prose on thursdays: the moment in our arms




Soup, and it’s dripping down her chin and I wipe it as a mother would her baby—only I’m her baby, and where are her pills? Lined up neat by my father in a green tray, I find the ones for Lunch and she cannot swallow, and it’s one of those days. She’s staring at a robin pecking birdseed outside the kitchen window and her head is bobbing, eyes as blue as her sweater and her pants.

(join me over at The High Calling for the rest of this story? and if you feel inspired, leave a comment there? thank you...)



1. link up a post (old or new) that you feel is 'broken' or 'imperfect' or somehow redemptive
2. put the 'imperfect prose' button at the bottom of your post, so others can find their way back here (see button code in right-hand column of my blog)
3. read other's offerings, and encourage them!

imperfect prose Participants
1. I Live in an Antbed
2. Kati
3. suzannah {ShoutLaughLove}: fragile
4. the shadows of morning and the luminous night
5. Nancy @ Alleged Mind
6. Laura, NH, USA
7. Old Ollie
8. Ramblings by Carol Nuckols
9. Kath @ Listening Space
10. Elizabeth@just following Jesus...
11. tinuviel @ crumbs
12. Craig @ Deep into Love
13. Bethany Ann
14. eloranicole
15. kendal
16. brian miller
17. Whose weapon? @ Lisa notes
18. Watching Bad TV Shows
19. Bristol @ Diligent Leaves
20. Rachel
21. Winsome Woman
22. Emy
23. "Making Space for Joy"
24. Jen Ferguson
25. happygirl
26. Rach@squigglyrainbow
27. Anna @ Wayside Word Garden
28. Lauri
29. Loni
30. Beth @ Affairs - First Order of Business
31. lori
32. Ima @ My Life is A Nutcase
33. Cindy @ 12Tribes
34. Amanda @ wandering
35. marlece
36. reverie
37. Jenny
38. Smooth Stones
39. gloria
40. AWIP (Voice Recognition)
41. HopeUnbroken
42. The Best Position
43. Melissa @ Frugal Creativity
44. Changing Lanes
45. patty
46. Alive by Kelly
47. Tamara @ Living Palm
48. Raining Silence
49. Kim @ From Doing to Being
50. David Nilsen
51. Debbie Young
52. irish jesus @ through this lens
53. Melissa S
54. Linda
55. Karmen M. Caught In The Thorns *updated*
56. Hanging By Grace
57. melanie@Our Journey Home
58. wretched sinner@ meadows speak
59. 6512 and growing
60. Ruth V
61. april
62. Katherine @ My Journey
63. The Sweet Life
64. Jen
65. Melissa@one thing

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Image by Kelly Sauer. (http://www.kellysauer.com/) Used with permission.

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

when God sings over you








he's a silent man who moved across the yard when he got married, who spends winters hunting for antlers and summers skipping rocks across the creek in his land.

he is a farming man who talks tractor and crop, a meticulous man who pulls dandelions from lawn and harrows perfect garden rows.

and he cries, when his cows die,

and he sings to his grand-babies, the four little boys who crawl across opa and eat oranges from his palm and give him kisses. and

i used to be afraid of him. not knowing what to say, not knowing what he thought of this girl with the piercings who wed his son but then i heard him scratchy-sing, "i'm so in love with you," to the one-year-old in his lap and



i heard the quiet creator



singing love songs in secret


to those who would listen




the LORD your God is with you, the Mighty Warrior who saves. he will take great delight in you; in his love he will no longer rebuke you, but will rejoice over you with singing. (zephaniah 3:17)



(shared with one shot poetry)

Sunday, June 5, 2011

the man i want to be like













the ordinary becomes the container for the divine and safely holds what was uncontainable. the transcendent is disclosed in what is wonderfully familiar: bread, wine, fire, ash, earth, water, oil, tears, seeds, songs, feastings and fastings, pains and joys, bodies and thoughts, regressions and transformations. (gertrude muelller nelson)


he doesn't say much, but he says what matters, and tonight we visit the garden because these are the things trent tells me are important. "let's hold hands and walk along each row and see how things are growing," he says, and we're both in our pajamas and we touch palms along the soiled path.

he puts me in the moment, fully alive here, and he breaks me open so i really taste the watermelon and see the way the light makes green our son's eyes and hear the oriole outside our window and hold love in a way that says, i adore you.

we broke up for two years in university, me chasing philosophy's men and all the while missing him, with his farm-boy smile and long legs and his simple way of loving God. this crew-cut kid who'd kissed me hard after six months of holding hands and then, made me a thank-you card from marker and paper, a card tucked into my Bible for it was sacred.

we broke up until the day i saw him in church singing. standing beside a boy no one else liked, for that's the way trent was, the way Jesus said we should be, begging zacchaeus down from tree because he knew what it felt like to have his lunch money stolen. he sang even though he couldn't carry a tune and his eyes were so fixed on heaven all i could see was the man i wanted to be like. the one who'd carry me to God.

and as we walk these garden rows, we leave behind the years of anorexia and medication, the nights of him crying for the bones, the questions and the hard, and we kiss in the strawberry patch, fully here, these fingers tangled, this man and woman growing into one, even as seeds unfurl.



thankful:

391. for friends that live two doors down
392. for the smell of bread baking
393. for homemade strawberry jam
394. for a day of true rest (the sit on the sofa, read an issue of Geez kind of rest)
395. for itune cd-gifts from friends across the country
396. for music that makes me cry
397. for interested collaborators re: my book
398. for the quiet of a summer's evening
399. for new-born willows thriving green
400. for a man who loves me

Thursday, June 2, 2011

The Council of Dads (Book Giveaway!)




He’d peed across floor, refusing the snack I’d made him and I’d rushed him to the potty where we’d sat, him squirming on potty and then, up and running in flannel bathrobe with the dog-ears and his little legs while I stayed curled on the bathroom floor.

Nights of no sleep had done this mother in, and for a moment, I remembered: days when we were two. No one else to wake for, and I’d worked at coffee-shop by day, writing novel by night and we’d snowboarded on the weekends. But even as I miss the hiss of the espresso machine I hear him, reading himself a story the ways babies do, and there is no us without him.

Undone and wondering how to balance freelance work with motherhood and another on the way, I cry on the floor of the bathroom, wishing for my own Council of Mothers.

A council defined by New York Times bestselling author Bruce Feiler, who wrote The Council of Dads during his “lost year,” a year in which he nearly lost his leg, and his life, to a cancerous tumor. A year in which he sought to preserve his presence with his two girls by forming the Council of Dads: a group of six men who, together, emanated his character and captured his life experiences.

“These are the men who know me best,” Bruce writes. “The men who share my values. The men who helped shape and guide me. The men who traveled with me, studied with me, have been through pain and happiness with me. Men who know my voice.”

Even though his leg and life were spared, the Council clung, joining Bruce for his twin girls’ birthday party, stopping by for one-on-ones, for spontaneous presents and outings and it became so much more than preserving Bruce’s presence. It became the village that raised a child.

“I can’t believe I was a parent without one,” says Bruce. “One of the unspoken secrets of parenting, in my experience, is that it can be very lonely—especially for dads, who feel the need to be the Answer Man, Mr. Fix It, the Know-It-All… Creating a Council of Dads turned fatherhood from a solo sport into a team sport.”

Aiden’s come to the bathroom, Dr. Suess in hand, and he folds himself onto me, opens his book and looks up with his father’s eyes. I hold him close in a cluster of words and arms and together, we turn the pages.


Could you use your own Council of Dads? I've got a book to give away... Let me know why you want it... And I'll choose a winner in one week.
Read more about the book here.

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

imperfect prose on thursdays: when your child falls in love



we water the flowers every evening, my gardener in his diaper and bare feet with his green watering can, and he holds it ever so careful, the spout, over pansy and peony and he begs for more once the soil's drunk.

but tonight is different. tonight he stands still, watching me water, the green can dangling from little hand and i look at him, and he squeals, his face lighting up like a yellow flower and he runs at me, arms out, and hugs with his whole body, and it's love, being realized by a child.

as one learns to ride a bike, he learns love over and over, this awestruck standing, then pummeling self at me as if he cannot get there fast enough. him, falling into feelings with all of his 18-month body, learning it as he has the curve of the gardening spout, the angle of the staircase, the round of a ball, the slide of a spoon, only this, grasping onto love, is a slippery thing and one that can overwhelm. so much so it sends baby-heart hurtling across the patio.

God descends in the unabashed wrap of dimpled arms. i hold onto my tiny angel and beg love, be good to him.





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46. of music and making love
47. Elizabeth@just following Jesus...
48. Chelsey @ Sowing Dandelion Seeds
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53. Alli 'n Son {correct link}
54. Kath @ Listening Sapce
55. Melissa S
56. gautami tripathy
57. Joybird
58. Joanna @ sosbrandneweyes.tumblr.com
59. Linda
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61. Lindsey - Pregnant with Hope
62. changing lanes
63. Rachel
64. The Gift of Encouragement
65. Why?

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