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Archive for October, 2009

Oct 22

Good Grief

cemeteryHave you ever sojourned through a season where loss seems to be the anthem of your cadence? This has been my path these last few weeks.  And while I have not lost anyone in my closest embrace, I have of late witnessed those I love and many more I know by acquaintance suffer great losses: the expected, yet still piercing deaths of old saints, the bittersweet relief of death after the carnage of cancer, even harrowing unexpected deaths of young fathers, of children.

I have heard it said that death comes in threes.  Perhaps it’s more likely that when we suffer loss, we become more aware of those around us who are grieving, and wrap their loss into our own sorrow, until loss and grief seem as much a part of our day as the laundry that needs folding or the phone that keeps ringing.  This has been one of those seasons.

People often refer to the time surrounding the loss of a loved one as a fog.  A cloud of malaise settles around us, and although our feet are moving forward, the details of the scenery and the direction remain unclear.  Yet, paradoxically, in grief certain things become palpable.  The gravity of death causes the frivolous details to disapate  into the background, and those things that are left standing in the face of utter grief are reborn with greater value:

The laughter of my children.

The opportunity to stop nitpicking, and instead nuzzle into the crook of my husband’s neck.

The constancy and faithfulness of Scripture.

The sweet and silly stories from my mother’s childhood. And her mother’s. And her mother’s mother’s.

The gift of warm sunshine on a crisp fall afternoon.

The promise of a love that conquers death, and life beyond the grave.

Oct 16

Think Fall…

Hope it’s full of crisp fall air, the smell of some kind of appley goodness baking, and the laughter of friends!

fall_leaves

An Autumn Evening by Lucy Maud Montgomery

Dark hills against a hollow crocus sky
Scarfed with its crimson pennons, and below
The dome of sunset long, hushed valleys lie
Cradling the twilight, where the lone winds blow
And wake among the harps of leafless trees
Fantastic runes and mournful melodies.

The chilly purple air is threaded through
With silver from the rising moon afar,
And from a gulf of clear, unfathomed blue
In the southwest glimmers a great gold star
Above the darkening druid glens of fir
Where beckoning boughs and elfin voices stir.

And so I wander through the shadows still,
And look and listen with a rapt delight,
Pausing again and yet again at will
To drink the elusive beauty of the night,
Until my soul is filled, as some deep cup,
That with divine enchantment is brimmed up.

Oct 14

Bread Box

At the risk of sounding like the children’s literature critic that I desperately wish I was, I would like to suggest that if you are not familiar with Rosemary Wells, you have a gaping hole in your literary life.  My daughter and I believed we had exhausted our library’s collection of Wells’ Max and Ruby series, a favorite of my sagacious three year old, when we stumbled upon Max Counts His Chickens in the Counting Collection section of the picture books. (Sneaky, sneaky!)  All this to say, Max’s sister, Ruby, finds her ninth chicken (the marshmallow peep variety) in the bread box, which began my pondering the topic of bread box altogether.

Not that I haven’t considered the subject before.  Every time I pass them in the Ikea marketplace, I wish they had a selection that tipped the functionality vs. style scale a bit more to the latter.   But Rosemary got me itching for one, so I began my search, from a surprisingly small pool of options, if you rule out the plain wood and metal lunch box variety, which didn’t suit my taste.  Here are my top picks:

breadbox

{a} Summergirl Breadbox:: nothing but breadboxes by the Summer Girl Shop, on Etsy $50.00 USD

{b} Vintage Blue Painted Bread Box::  by Royal Oak Cottage, a lovely Etsy Vintage Shop $45.00USD

{c} Vintage Enamel Ware Breadbox:: by McCune’s Sporting Collectibles, not the most 2.0 website on the planet, but some pretty nice finds in their Kitchenalia & Household Bygones section $175.00

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