A Simple Life – hard work and steadfastness

My second post of 2019.  I’m spending the week with my Dad in Michigan, and I’m surrounded by memories. 

It’s a long way from the mountains of West Virginia. Mom and Dad, shortly after they were married in 1955, moved to Michigan to find work and build a life together. Dad’s dad made him promise not to get a job in the coal mines, because he wanted a safer life for his son. My Papaw had been injured in the mines and ended up retiring early from his disability.

Dad, who didn’t graduate high school, dropping out in his eleventh year because of a disagreement with the teacher, worked hard at his new job, and worked even harder improving his chances for advancement by not only receiving his GED, but taking classes at night to become an electrician for General Motors, working many long hours at the shop for over 30 years when he retired.

In his lifetime, he’s built three houses, remodeled many more, bought and sold real estate on a small scale, and, coupled with his conservative frugality, has always had enough to provide for his family and comfortably live on.

Life, as we all know, is full of lessons. Some lessons are expressly taught us by our parents, while some are taught by observation, and others are learned by watching the things we don’t want to repeat in our own lives.

I can still hear Mom telling me to brush my teeth and make my bed, pick up my clothes and finish my homework.   I can hear Dad telling me to think things through and get good grades. I watched them both and learned about the importance of hard work and living within my means. I learned about honesty and faithfulness. And I learned, from watching Mom hang on to anger for years, to let go of hurts and have a forgiving spirit. I learned, from watching Dad, to be more adventuresome and not to be afraid to step far outside my comfort zone.

That’s not to say the lessons I learned I learned perfectly and always follow them, but it does mean I recognize when I’m veering from the path, so I can correct my trajectory before I stray too far.

Dad’s doctor appointment yesterday yielded encouraging news. His Parkinson’s is progressing very slowly, and the medication is doing what it was designed to do. We are thankful. At eighty one years young he can still drive, and walk, and take care of himself.

Mom’s been gone now for about 2 ½ years, and Dad’s reaching his stride. The house was always Mom’s domain, and her personality, for such a small person, filled the house so that her moods and wants dictated what happened there. What was on T.V. had to have her approval, and every conversation whether face to face or on the phone was open to her prying and prodding questions. She needed to know everything about everything whether she understood it or not.

Now that she’s gone, Dad can finally just be himself. He can watch what he wants, buy the food he wants, go where and when he wants. It’s strange. Some couples who have been together for 60 plus years, when one dies, the other follows soon after. I don’t see that with Dad. After the initial grief, he has rallied and for the first time in his life, has no one who is second-guessing his motives. That’s pretty liberating I would think.

Not to speak ill of the dead, as the saying goes, because I loved my Mom. But I also know what it was like growing up under her thumb, and microscope. She was a product of her own upbringing, becoming a mother at only 16, with three small children by the time she was 20. Dad worked long hours, so it was up to her to keep her babies fed and clean and safe and the house clean, too. She did her best. I’m convinced of it.

And she loved her grandchildren and great-grandchildren with the fierceness of a lioness. Watching her shower love on my children and grandchildren helped to alleviate and heal some of the hurt I had carried with me for many long years.

And Dad, he just kept providing for and remaining faithful to us all. Even when times weren’t good. Through the tough times and the even tougher times, he has stood strong, always doing his best to give wise counsel.

In the end, it’s not one good thing about us that makes us remarkable, but the whole package. The steadfastness and faithfulness in the face of disaster. Hard work that never takes a day off when others are depending on you. It’s staying the course and never giving in.

I read somewhere once that, when children grow up, one day they may forgive their parents. I guess that’s because we reach a point in our own growth where we see their flaws. But that’s what we humans are. Full of flaws. But we love each other anyway because love is a powerful leveler.

As the Apostle Peter says in I Peter 4:8, “Above all, love one another deeply, because love covers over a multitude of sins.”

May I extract the best parts of my parents and focus on making those my legacy.

Sunlight in the Forest

I haven’t posted in several months, and, for 2019, I made a commitment to be more disciplined in my writing and publish one post each week.  Here’s the first one for the year. 

The early morning sunlight illuminated the lower trunks of the trees, leaving the upper branches still shrouded in twilight’s gray. The forest floor was silently alive as the gentle breeze made dust motes and bits of detritus dance in the air, winking like fireflies as the sunrays played on their faces. Plants on the forest floor twinkled with diamonds of dew as the last remnants of fog dissipated into the bluing sky. Drops of water slowly slid down green stems only to encase tiny insects on their way toward the ground.

The quiet was a presence and the serenity was complete.

Sarah’s tennis shoes were wet as were the bottoms of her jeans. No matter. She’d find a place out in the open in the sun when it was a little higher in the sky and sit and wait while they dried. She loved this alone time. She loved the scent of the damp earth, and the way the trees slowly became visible as the sky turned from black to midnight blue then burst into pinks and yellows and reds as the sun crested the horizon only to transform once more to a smiling bright blue with wispy white clouds.

The forest seemed to wake from a deep sleep, and she loved being part of its waking.

Her Native American ancestry and the memories and strength they harbored spoke to her as she walked. Their life forces remained in the earth and the fog and all the growing things. She loved the earth as they did, appreciating its beauty and energy.

This was her time of meditation, where God whispered in her ear, opening her eyes to his creation, grounding her in truth and preparing her for the days ahead.

Often, God doesn’t tell his children the ‘why’ behind things that happen. The heartaches, the disappointments, the tragedies. He does, though, bring us peace in the knowledge that he loves his creation and his children and always has the bigger picture in mind.

The forest, full of life and growth, also embraces death and decay. They work together, death making it possible for more life. The forest floor, covered with dying leaves and broken branches, dead flowers and the occasional dead animal, exudes a reverence that cannot but help bring pause to any heart that enters it with sincerity of purpose, for within the microcosm of the forest, important lessons for life and eternity are given every day when you’re willing to hear them.

“Come away and rest.” Let God whisper to you today.

Dreams and visions

This was written by  Steve Brown in 2016, on a day when he was praying and meditating.  Used with permission.  You can read about his battle with Leukemia here.

I had a vivid dream the other the day, and in this dream I saw a man walking. He was a person like me and you. But then something began to happen to him. His flesh began to melt away, and his body began turning black. His body became all black except in some areas there were holes, and a bright light shone out of them.

As I kept looking at the body the black areas began to turn red and thorns began to sprout out of the red places where his skin once was. Then chains began to form and hooked themselves to the thorns, and the chains stretched behind this man and lay on the ground.

Attached to the chains were blocks of different sizes and each block had letters on it. I could not read the writing on the blocks. The chains and blocks were black and crimson and varied in size and length.

Then a cross began to be etched in the man’s back, but it was only a partial cross, the whole cross wasn’t etched into his body. In his right hand was a book that shone a bright, projected beam of light, but it also had blood dripping from it. Then a bright light shone from the heavens and covered the whole scene.

I prayed and asked God to reveal to me the meaning of the dream, and the next night he gave me the answer. In this dream a man as bright as the sun came to me and said do not look upon me – it is not time yet. He told me this man I saw in the dream was me as I am now. He said for me to listen carefully and to digest every word that came from his mouth.

He said I used to be dark and black with sin but then I was saved and born again by the blood of the Lamb and his Holy Spirit. He said the red areas on my body are his cleansing blood that cover a multitude of sins, and the light shining out of my body is the light of his Holy Spirit that now resides in me.

He went on to tell me that the thorns are my weakness in the flesh I have not been willing or able to overcome. He told me these will to continue to cause me much pain if I don’t pull them out. He said the chains are the attachments that I have to the world and to certain sins. He said I will never be the effective Christian that I’ve been called to be as long as I allow these to bind me.

The blocks, he said, were weights with the names of the particular sins I have allowed to weigh me down, such as lust, greed, and pride. He said there are other thorns, chains, and blocks far behind you on this path that you can’t see, and these are the ones you have overcome by the blood of the Lamb and your testimony.

The cross on you is only partially etched because it hurt, and you could not bear the pain. The bright light that shone from Heaven is the Father’s light that is talked about in 1st John in which you walk every day.

The book in your right hand is the Bible that flows with my blood from cover to cover and the words are a light unto your path. Farther up the path is a new body and peace and perfection you have never known, but just had glimpses of here in your walk.

Then there is also the Father, and I who will be waiting for you. So, put this world and its enticements behind you, cut loose from the sins that so easily beset you. Take up your cross fully. It may hurt but it will only be for a little while, and take my yoke upon you, for it is easy and my burden is light.

Don’t ever forget that you are our child, and nothing can ever take you from us, not even Satan himself because you have been sealed to the day of redemption and your name is written in the Lamb’s Book of Life.

We love you, God speed my child.

Pressing on, Steve Brown