Monday, June 22, 2009

BLAH

I've been on the verge of a headache for two days. Aleve, Ibuprofen, Excedrin, Aspirin- All to no avail. The pressure outside is so heavy, so weighty it is pressing my insides. My organs, veins and nervous system are on edge; it's just too much pressure.

Yesterday someone told me I can blame my headache (and moodiness...) on the mold. So, I am. It's rained 20 of the last 22 days in NYC. We're all shriveling up like raisins, wrinkly prune skin and bath-water-feet. And, quite frankly, I'm tired of wearing my raincoat. It's June. Summer is here and I'm wearing leggings. LEGGINGS!

The forecast for this week looks like this:
Monday- Periods of rain. Chance of rain 80%. Rainfall near a quarter of an inch.
Tuesday- Cloudy during the morning; occasional showers in the afternoon. Chance of rain 40%
Wednesday- Rain showers early with clearing later at night. Chance of rain 40%.
Thursday- Occasional showers possible. Highs in the mid-70's and lows in the mid 60's.
Friday- Showers, maybe a rumble of thunder. Highs in the 70's.
Saturday- Partly cloudy with a stray thunderstorm. Highs in the mid 80's and lows in the upper 60's.

Honestly, no matter how you say it: Thunderstorms, Showers, Drizzles, Isolated Storms- IT ALL MEANS RAIN.

I am trying to be an optimistic person, not bothered by my circumstances or surroundings. "My environment doesn't effect me, I am a ray of sunshine." I should be asking myself, "What am I supposed to learn from this?" Instead I want real sunshine- my inner glow is beginning to dim.

Thursday, June 18, 2009

About my Dad- for father's day

When I was born my dad sold his Harley. Or at least that is what I was always told. "I had to sell my Harley because we had you and I couldn't afford both." Now, I think selling the motorcycle was an effort to become an adult, saying goodbye to self indulgent hobbies. Maybe it was a little of both. Whatever the case, over 25 years later he was able to get another one.

When I was three I put nails into the holes of his truck's engine. Helping him work in the garage, I strategically dropped in nail after nail. He fished them out with a magnet tied to a string, like that school carnival game where you throw the clothespin on a string over a bed sheet hung from the ceiling and hope to get a really nice prize. My dad succeeded.

My dad built our house by himself- aside from pouring the concrete slab. He hates pouring concrete. This always amazed me. How could he get the electrical wires to meet exactly where they needed to, install a toilet and make sure what was flushed down stayed down, and get gas to come out of the stove when I turned the knobs? I am still amazed and even more so when I think how he did all this before he was thirty years old. I will be thirty in less than a year and can't even knit a scarf.

I blame my dad for my fair, acne prone skin. My sisters tan easily like my mother; one hour on the riding lawn mower and they're glistening like Peruvian goddesses. I visited the dermatologist for expensive face creams. I have the square Martin jawline and dark body hair; hairy arms and hairy back. It's just intriguing to think about on a woman, isn't it? I was, dare I say delighted, when I saw the same dark hair on my dad's sister's lower back when she bent to pick up something at a family gathering. It's nice to know I'm not alone with this freakish, unladylike trait.

My dad wears long-sleeved wrangler shirts and wrangler jeans. The denim, pearl-snap kind. He has pulled calves, dug ponds, fixed Farmall tractors, cleaned fish and knows how to use a post-hole-digger. He owns a backhoe, a trackhoe and a truck with a boom on the back. (This comes in handy when cutting limbs out of trees.)

On Father's Day, 1996 I was in a car wreck. I had been driving for four months. It wasn't my fault, but my car was totaled and so was the car that rear-ended me without breaking. Her car came to a stop under an eighteen-wheeler. I think about this every Father's Day. How my sister and I walked away from that mess without a scratch. Poor Dad; what a day.

It was in my dad's lap where I found peace when I broke-up with Chris on Christmas Day, 1999. It was the first break-up in a long line of them; our on again- off again relationship that lasted ten years before we got married. After walking in the front door I collapsed in the recliner on top of my dad. I sat there and cried. This was unlike me. Not the emotionally distraught over-the-top teenage drama, but that I was inconsolable. And he didn't ask what or why. He just sat and let me be; snot and nonsense and all. His not saying anything, not trying to fix anything was what I needed.


My dad likes to grill and even lets us girls cook veggie burgers, zucchini and onions, even though he would prefer a "beef only" grill. It's my personal belief that he keeps cows for a hobby and to fully round out his farm. I only went to the sale barn with him once. I've never been out in the flat bottom boat on the pond or even walked the length of the fence line. But I did pick phlox and catch perch and throw rotten tomatoes at my sisters.

I'd take a huge insulated mug of sweet tea to my dad while he was on the tractor, or sitting in the porch swing or standing looking across the land; his focus was on something in the pasture I never saw, but I believe it was real.

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

I Will Remember

Psalms 42 is very melancholy, but that is okay. Sometimes we find ourselves in such a place.
Today I am standing on vs. 4
"I remember this as I pour out my heart: how I walked with MANY, leading the festive procession to the house of God, with joyful and thankful shouts."
and vs. 8
"The Lord will send His faithful love by day; His song will be with me in the night- a prayer to the God of my life."

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

It's Easy...

I haven't made rice crispy treats.... (um, maybe never) unsupervised that is. Seriously. It's been too long.

I avoid all things "cooking" - and I know this is a stretch to even be considered such, but I'm not good with ingredients. Says me. It's a problem I have called Not Trying because God forbid I make a mistake. So, I don't even go there. But these treats turned out well. Honestly, this is the first time I have ever used this huge mixing bowl that Chris and I received as a wedding gift. Travesty. I know, it's pittiful to waste such nice things as Cuisinart blenders, stainless steel mixing bowls and Hamilton Beach spatulas. Oh, well, such is my life. I blame my mother. Doesn't everyone blame their mother for everything... addictions, allergies, lack of height, lack of breasts, lack of eyesight. I don't blame my mother for these things. Just that she was- is a phenomenal cook. And I can't be her so I don't try.

Even now I know that this is not a good excuse because my middle sister is pretty good at holding her own in the kitchen, making meals and baking birthday cakes- she can follow a recipe. My youngest sister creates her own recipes and is considering being a chef as a profession. I can't follow a recipe and usually buy the wrong ingredients: baking power instead of soda, sweetened condensed milk instead of evaporated (which tastes much better from the can!) and chili powder instead of paste. If a recipe has cream of tartar- I put it back, requires a double broiler- I throw it away, uses the word baste, caramelize, or spring-form pan- I look for an easier way out.

It's a problem with me, I know, not my mother. It's this perfectionism thing I have. It's ruined me for too long. So, I decided to start easy- Rice Crispy Treats. This is one step up from my coke cake recipe which is only two ingredients. (If you don't know the coke cake recipe, you should. 1 box of cake mix, 1 can of soda- beat and cook. Voila! Cake!) It is the one thing I do know how to cook well. That, nachos, and a mean omelet.

In the Midst of it...

You know how people always say, "I think God is taking me somewhere new" or "Things are about to change for me, I can sense it." But, are we ever willing to admit that we are in the middle of it all. I think I am smack-dab in the middle of my growing. Since last November I have really been giving thought to what this is all about. I've heard people say that they were never really grown up until they were in their thirties, and then they really started living life. And I'm thinking, should I just stay in bed all day until the next March 23rd rolls around? I am still overly dramatic and out-of-control like I was at seven, only now my husband has to rationalize with me, not my mother.

My husband will be thirty on Friday. I have known hims since he was seventeen. I never would have imagined our lives turning out this way- it's much better than anything I dreamed of then. So, what am I going to do with it all? With my experiences and my city and my talents and my time.... It's too much to think about.

I prefer going day to day. I recently read that during the Enlightenment the Christian perspective got "beaten up." The world and life itself became a machine to be understood by reason and science and less of a mystery. Too many times I am trying to solve the problem or figure out the right equation instead of relying on faith and divine revelation. Not to say that if I just become a hermit or wait forever amazing things will happen, but I am only supposed to be who I was created to be. It will all come in his timing. And it may never, ever make sense.

"The real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking new landscapes, but in having new eyes."
Marcel Proust


Monday, June 8, 2009

We Lift our Hands

Yesterday was our Spring Worship Event/ Concert/ Audience Participation Driven/ Congregational Praise Thingy at church.  Instead of a spring concert, the choir sang/ led worship for the entire service.  It rocked.  Yes, I think God can totally rock.

I love it that if I allow it to, a song can mean, to me, what it did when I first experienced it.  The prayer set to music doesn't have to get lost in the melody.  Some songs take me back to those places of brokenness or despair and some take on an entirely new meaning, even though I may have been singing them for years.  This reminds me that I have grown. This always feels good. 

I love worshiping the only true God, the only one worth living for. (And yes, sometimes I do forget that.)  Yesterday, our church was full of totally free people.  Free- even though we had baggage and sin and messed up lives.  We worshiped.  People waved their arms in the air, jumped up and down- like a kid in a bounce house.  Some people sat. Some stood. Some cried, some were silent at times.  And God loved it.  

I wanted to bottle this sweet aroma and splash it on myself when I am home alone and feel like pouting and that no one cares.  I want to invite the dancer over to perform for me when I am acting like a brat and can't think of one good reason to try any more.  Her free flowing gestures and pulsing limbs, waving and bending, would remind me that I am beautiful and have something to give.  I wanted to hug the tiny, frail Spanish woman on the second row.  I wanted to invite the two busty soul sisters to come and sway and clap for me when my burnt lasagna, terrible haircut, and dying house plants are making me very angry.  

When I get (another) letter that begins "Thank you for your submission and interest in our publication, however..." I want my dear friend Sheppe to sing in my ear like she was from the row behind me.  The lower notes resonating from deep within her- somewhere warm and familiar, like the smell of home.  Or if I could just watch the pianist pound out those jazz chords, her feet tapping and shoulders shaking .... Gosh, I think I would feel a whole heck of alot better about the day ahead.

I looked around and saw love, I experienced life.  We were all unified, part of something larger than ourselves.  But better than hollering at a Yankees game or singing with 50,000 other Dave Matthew's fans, we were pouring out who we are for our King.  And it was beautiful.

There are lots of ways to worship.  Even through writing. 

Monday, June 1, 2009

When the City was Ours

There is a small window in time that New York City actually belongs to those who call it home.  I would argue that from January until about today, June 1st, New Yorkers can live in their city.  The thing with that is from January - March I, quite frankly, find the city unbearable with it's freezing temperatures and blasting winds.  And that leaves us with April & May.  

I have loved April and May.  The days are so long and I find myself waking up at 6:00 when our apartment is filled with sunlight.  I walk everywhere.  Restaurants pull out their patio furniture and sidewalk seating is once again available.  I've noticed trees that I've never seen before, now that they are all full and in bloom. And it's not too hot yet (it's still in the 50's this morning, but it's going to get up to 72).

Spring has been great.  Last night Chris and I noticed some beautiful fireworks going off somewhere along the East River (Roosevelt Island perhaps?) This was not an amateur show, theses were big colorful explosions.  I don't know the occasion, but for me it marked the end of Spring.

"Happy May 31st," I said to Chris. "Tomorrow the city becomes the tourists."