Friday, October 30, 2015

Pieces of My Heart

If you have loved many, do not say, ‘My heart lay in pieces along the path of my life.’ 

Rather say, ‘my heart has been nourished at many tables; it has been warmed and sheltered in those homes, and has drunk deeply from the wells there.’  

Consider not just what you left at these tables, but also what you brought away.  An open heart will heal, and the warm memories of past feasts will continue to fulfill and nourish you through your lifetime.   

Monday, July 20, 2015

Beer Goggles

The greatest danger from so-called ‘beer goggles’ isn’t the imagined improvement we see in those around us  on the dance floor.

It's the improvement we see in the mirror, as the image of ourselves passed through the goggles twice.  

Monday, July 13, 2015

Summer Rain


The lightest, sweetest summer rain
descends from silver linings,
falling softly upon the shoulders
of those who seek the brilliant shadows below.  

Sunday, June 21, 2015

Father's Day

I love this song, and remember it each Father’s Day.  Maybe because I was a teenager when I first heard it, I still hear it from the son’s perspective.  But the Father’s words also ring all too clearly now in my heart, urging patience to one who feels only urgency, ‘… Take your time, think a lot; think of everything you’ve got.  For you will still be here tomorrow, but your dreams may not.’  

No matter how hard parents and children try to reach across the generational divide, it does not disappear.  Our experiences intersect, but do not fully overlap; sometimes our love is the only touchstone spanning a divide we are not allowed to cross. 

To borrow from Kahlil Gibran, in his chapter On Children, from The Prophet:
“…
You may give them your love but not your thoughts.
For they have their own thoughts.
You may house their bodies but not their souls,
For their souls dwell in the house of tomorrow,
which you cannot visit, not even in your dreams.
You may strive to be like them, but seek not to make them like you.
For life goes not backward nor tarries with yesterday.
…”

Happy Father’s Day to all the amazing fathers I know!


Sunday, March 29, 2015

Ron Shepherd

I’m not really good with names, and Ron’s is no exception. Though I like and admire him, we weren't that close – just friends at church. And because of the way I knew him, there was never a need to know his last name – he was always half of Ron-and-Charlotte, which is description enough. Of the dozens of times I saw Ron, there were only a couple times she was not there. Though they had been married a long time, you'd hardly know it; they were almost always linked by touch; holding hands, or with Ron’s arm around her – so they seemed in a way to be a single entity.

When I met them, Charlotte had already been facing cancer for some time. For a while, it was in remission, but it returned. They faced it courageously; they faced it together. Funny – though she relied on strength from Ron, it sometimes seemed that—in all but her weakest moments—she lent him as much strength as he did her. They were a perfect couple; both of them brilliant; with her discipline a wonderful complement to his flights of imagination.

It seemed that the drive to help her survive and beat the cancer gave purpose to him. And, as much as she wanted to survive for survival’s sake, she also wanted to survive to help him achieve his purpose.

Charlotte passed away three years ago, and since then, I've only seen Ron once or twice. I don’t know if he couldn't face attending church with people like me, who only knew him as part of a pair, or if there was some other reason. But he disappeared from our lives.

You often hear about older couples who have lived their whole lives together, and simply don’t have the capacity to go on alone. I have a number of friends whose parents passed away within months of one another. It’s not something I associate with people my own age – but then I know few people my age who have been married for over thirty years, then lose their partner.

We said goodbye to Ron today.

I will not need to memorize Ron’s last name now. They are Ron-and-Charlotte again, and the embrace in which they shelter one another now will never end.

At Ron’s service a woman performed this medley. She said it was one of Ron’s favorite songs.




Tuesday, February 17, 2015

First-World Problem

I kind of like the new (or at least new-to-me) expression, "I guess that's kind of a First-World problem"; I'm just having a tough time weaving it into conversations without seeming unsympathetic.  

Friday, February 13, 2015

Karma

Karma isn't something that one waits around to receive at some future point, as a repayment of good that one does today. 


Karma is the intrinsic reward one derives for doing the right thing, without any expectation of repayment.  

Thoughts on Approaching Middle-Age

The good news is that 'Sixty is the new Forty'.  


The bad news is that—with all the hormones and other stuff making their way in our water supply, affecting our bodily functions—middle-age now begins at thirty-nine.  

Wednesday, February 11, 2015

A Dream of Maddie

Dear Maddie,

There really isn't much to the dream I had the other morning, but what there is, I want to share with you.  I know you don't like the mushy stuff, so I'm sending this to you in a form that you can't access until after the weekend, when I'm not standing right there.  

You, Mom and I were in the master bedroom at Mom’s house, at the corner of the bed.  I was holding you in my arms—not up against my chest, but holding you out a little bit, so I could see your face—and Mom was standing next to me.  You were about the age you were in this picture, maybe a little younger – but at the same time, you were also the age you are now. 

I was telling Mom how strange it seemed that even though you are almost sixteen, I’m seeing you as a baby, and I can hold you in my arms like this.  I asked her if she saw you the same way, or as you are today.  She didn't answer, but just looked at you with love.  I couldn't take my eyes off of you, for risk that the moment would end; afraid that if I looked away, you’d be all grown up.  In my dream I looked in your eyes and told you that I love you more than I ever knew I could love anybody. You just looked back at me and smiled with that sweet smile you had when you were a baby – and that you still have. 

That was about the time I woke up.  I noticed there were tears in my eyes – not big weepy tears, but soft, light tears of happiness; happiness that baby Maddie visited for that moment in my dream; and that Mom and I have been blessed all these years with you in our lives. 

What I told you in my dreams is what I hold in my heart.  You are an amazing, beautiful young woman; a wonderful human being.  As much as Mom and I would love to take some of the credit for that reality, you have always been very much your own person - creature in charge of her own journey; our role has just been to not get in the way as your beautiful potential becomes reality. 

I do love you, and treasure every moment we share – when we’re happy with one another, and at those times when you're just trying to tolerate my proximity.  I knew I would love being a Dad; but thanks to you, it is much better than I ever could have imagined.  The most treasured birthday present I could hope to receive, I get from you every day.  

Love,
Dad