Wednesday, September 30, 2020

If 2020 were

 My latest attempt to laugh at the year that keeps giving, is to use Jeff Foxworthy's means of writing about things...I rather think of 2020 as the standard deviation that one throws out when examining data.  It's the 70's plaid bell bottom pants that somehow, people believed other people would want to wear or the crochet shorts.  It's the coffee left in the workplace microwave, with powdered creamer after the last co-worker nuked some fish for lunch.


If 2020 were a food, it would be haggis. --no one even wants to boast of having tried it. 


If 2020 were a drink, it would be warm caffiene free diet coke. --doesn't wake you up, give you energy or taste better than tap.   

If 2020 were a movie, it would be Istar II or Avatar --a block buster that no one really wants to remember, not even a little.  

If 2020 were a candy, it would be a bit-o-honey. They taste horrible, we have no gage of how long they exist, and no one...ever...would want another.  

If 2020 were a book, it would be written by Job.  

Feel free to add your own ideas in the combox.  

    

Monday, September 28, 2020

Over at the Register Today

 I know my blog is getting dusty. I'm still writing every day, but it's for a book so that's taking a lot of writing energies.  Additionally, I am helping to plan a conference and that too, takes up brain space limited by the constant stress of the year 2020.   

Anyway, all of this is leading up to the piece I wrote called "At the Foot of the Cross."

Friday, September 18, 2020

You Were Always to Be More

The other day, while researching a project, I stubbled upon an old article I’d written about my youngest son (who happens to have Down Syndrome) and the blow to support for kids like him when those in roles of leadership, reveal themselves to be injured, sinful, and corruptible creatures (like we all are).   I thought of the words, “you must be perfect, as your Heavenly Father is perfect), and realized the reason we need to be better, is not because God will love us if we are, but that the world can’t see God’s love if we don’t.   One of the comments confirmed this thought with the words, “You must do more.”  

My first reaction was shall we say, less than enthusiastic.  “Lord what now? What was that more? How could there be more to do?”  But the comment resonated deep.  It was a reminder to me, that nothing happens without God’s consent, without God’s permission, and that He sometimes puts things and people in front of us, to help us see what we must confront.  The comment felt like a commission.  I am a mom of a son with special needs. He turned twelve yesterday.  We’ve begun discussing with his teachers what happens next, when he no longer looks like a child, when he isn’t a child, when he needs to live somewhere other than with us.  I thought about how he will need friends other than his family to provide the stuff of life that makes life something beyond the ordinary, the routine and the mundane.  He will need us to start on this hard list of things to do now, if they are to be there for him in the future. Hard things to face in ordinary time, harder in these days.

 “You must do more.” What was the more? My brain rattled off what I saw as being needs in my other children as they grappled with the trials of adulthood.  He would need hobbies. He would need meaningful work. He would need income. He would need a network of support to get him to the doctor or the dentist, or haircuts and to weekly mass. He would need friends.  He would need all these things to be not imposed upon his life but grown into/grafted into it.  His family would be part of this but could not be all or only.

Why did he need all of this more?  Because Covid-19 revealed what happens when he gets the more of company, of peers, of daily interactions and meaningful work.  He’d learned to make his bed, wash the dishes and fold towels. During this time of Covid-19, my son learned how to ride a bike without training wheels, how to pull up Disney on the television for a quick Muppet break in between Zooms, to set and test a shower and take it on his own, and to make his own sandwich –ketchup and Oscar Meyer bologna on white bread, cut into triangles. (I wouldn’t advise it, but he eats every crumb). Part of why he learned all of this, was the gift of extra time having no place to go in particular allowed. Part of why he learned this, was his siblings expected more of him than his mother. His mom would make him breakfast. It was a form of love and service and habit with no ill will intended, but he needed to master more skills. Here was the more.  His older brothers and sisters would say, “Make it yourself, like us.” And didn’t stress if he poured cinnamon toast crunch more full than I would have as long as he finished it.

One of them even taught him how to scoop it with a measuring cup to have better portions. He learned to pour the milk too, even when it’s full. (Though some of us hold our breath when he does the same way I do when a teen practicing driving gets too close to a mailbox).   They wanted him to be twelve, to be like them, more independent. It would make him better than he was, more perfect by letting him do things imperfectly. 

 Every step toward his independence came for me with a list of worries…would he remember each time to do what he needed to do?  Free will and freedom, growing up is hard to do, and I suspect, harder on this grown up.  The more was as much about taking on, as it was about surrendering, dying to the self that gave love through service that now was no longer required so that new service could be given.

“You must do more.”  Seemed like a motto to embrace in this time when all our enjoyments, education, work and ordinary efforts take extra effort.  Willing to do the more requires we both will to do and do so willingly.  When we’re sent from the mass, whether we’ve watched it on television or been in person, we’re sent, commissioned to do this very thing, the more.  We aren’t merely to receive passively, but to respond actively in our hearts and allow Christ to transform our lives.  We will go from being men who fish to fishers of men. We will go from being water to being the better vintage of wine. We will go from five loaves and two fishes to twelve baskets left over after feeding five thousand.  I thought about all the ways in which we sometimes get used to things we should not. Covid-19 taught this through big and little ways.  We shouldn’t have become used to long hours and not having dinner together whenever possible.  We shouldn’t have traded in time in commutes where we served work rather than our families.   The time home also showed me other ways we shouldn’t have, which Paul’s siblings corrected via natural intervention. 

Trisomy 21 means the child has a little extra, a little more.  His needs mean we need to do the little extra, the more his siblings have done with and for him, helped him to do more with and without them.   He could do more.  I should do more.  We should do more. Why? Because it has always been God’s will for all of us, for each of us, to be more than we planned, and do become more perfect even as we go about the business of living this life imperfectly.

 

Tuesday, September 8, 2020

There Was a Lack, Just Not What We Thought.

 Having endured Zoom in the Spring when we did triage teaching, having a virtual classroom in the Fall is not significantly different.  Time grinds to a halt in terms of the give and take of lessons or conversation.  At the same time, when work is required, time superaccellerates and by the end of the day, no matter who you are, you feel aged.   

I view this time of long distance education as preparation for that day when we opt to leave this planet.  We will have to endure long spans of hours without variety, in which strenous exercise and getting out is not a serious reality.  I have learned if I wasn't already sure, that I will be staying here.  

Food therapy has limitations and we've met and exceeded them.   
No amount of mindfulness, stretches or fun videos substitutes for the sheer variety of going somewhere else.   

There is one possible bright spot from this now six month long haitus from actual reality lived out in the actual world...we may shed our addiction to screens because they bore us as never before. 

Every day, I'm picking up a book and reading, going outside and walking, and art and writing with a pen holds a greater alure than the keyboard.   The reality is, we want a reality we're not having, even when we're doing boring things like bills or errands.

We want the tangible part of life we've had removed.  What we're all keenly aware of, is the lack.   
Wearing a mask is necessary, but it's the visible reminder of the lack.   Social distancing is necessary, but it's the physical and social reminder of the lack.  

Driving to get a little something for my youngest son, he reminded me to put on the mask in the drive-thru. He also punched in the phone number when I gave him the digits one by one...and I realized, these sort of moments wouldn't happen outside of the Covid-19 restrictions.  For him, this time with all of his family has meant he learned to ride a bike, to check out groceries using the self checker and bag them, to use the computer to mute and to show video on Zoom, to play video games with his siblings like Brawl, how to take a shower all by himself, how to wash his hair.  He's learned how to work with his Dad in the garden, and how to set the the table or clear it, and load or unload the dishwasher.  He's learned to feed the turtles and how to get out the ingredients for grilled cheese or for scrambled eggs.  He's become fully potty trained, and he knows how to make a bed even if he doesn't always do it.   He can hang a coat on a hanger.  He can operate the television better than me.  He takes down the garbage and can bring out the recycling.  All these ordinary skills came from having spools of uninterrupted time, where we couldn't exchange the present for efficiency.  

Perhaps it wasn't the lack that was missing, but us from the present.  

Thursday, September 3, 2020

Where have you been?

 It's September 3rd and I haven't posted anything since the second to last week of August.  

I haven't quit writing, but I have been doing other things...like trying to fight the internet.  I'll wait while you tell me how stupid that is...like I don't have the emotional lumps to prove your point.   

I've also been prepping for the beginning of a new school year which meant intensive training on new technology and getting 12 people ready for back to school when we will be going to school in a way we never have before.  It's daunting and we need to as a nation recognize that we are experimenting on our children about how they learn, but doing it with literally no will to actually allow for experimentation. We've all become first years in this scenario, with no experience to back it up because there is no experience to back this up.   

This is as of yet, an experience none of us have experienced.  

In other writing news, I pitched a book and they said yes, so I'm the dog that caught the car, and thus now have to finish writing it....so naturally, I'm blogging instead.  This is my nature, always spiraling out, getting to some, needing to get to other, and thinking always, what should I be doing, why can't I muster the will to do that?    

I understand the worry, because we are wilful but often about the wrong things...see prior paragraphs.  However, they should let us have the opportunity to try, because this quarantine has taught us a lot about ourselves.  

What have I learned? 

Covid-19 reveals what we will and won't do, and what we value.   I've learned I love to cook for my children, it's a joy for me that when I don't do, is a sadness.   
Motherhood for me must include cozy times of reading together and chocolate chip cookies. 
I've also learned to schedule driving practice or it doesn't happen. 
Ditto for anything else that needs to happen.  Write it down or it isn't happening.   

I've also been grateful for all the stollen time with my family, every second is precious.   

What do I hope as we begin to try and pick up the pieces...I hope they find screens less enchanting.   

I want my kids to pick up a book and read, get on a bike and ride, and play games with each other.  I think if they did every class for 30 minutes with 30 minutes after break, they could have every class every day and people would feel far less frustration or confusion than they do now.   I want all of us to learn, we didn't need to do all those errands that ate up the day...much of it can wait.   

Learning to recognize people by their eyes might be the greatest lesson.  We tend to not see or recognize people, but having masks means we must and that's a good thing.   

I've also learned, I use writing as a stall against dealing with laundry, dishes, bills and bigger projects I need to tackle, but I've run out of words about this...so I'd better get to work.   

Leaving a comment is a form of free tipping. But this lets me purchase diet coke and chocolate.

If you sneak my work, No Chocolate for You!