peace in the disappointments...

THINK

“And in despair I bowed my head;

"There is no peace on earth," I said;

"For hate is strong,

And mocks the song

Of peace on earth, good-will to men!"

 

Then pealed the bells more loud and deep:

"God is not dead, nor doth he sleep!

The Wrong shall fail,

the Right prevail,

With peace on earth, good-will to men!”

--Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

 

PRAY

We wait and watch and hope and pray and Christmas comes and invariably, there is a disappointment. Something is not just exactly as we’d hoped it would be. But you are, Jesus. You always are. Help us to hear the bells that peal the good news.

  

ACT

There is someone in your life who is very vulnerable today. Perhaps he is disappointed. Perhaps he has disappointed you. Love him well.

~*~~*~

I chose these quotes as Advent was beginning. I sifted and sorted and prayed that they'd all land in the right spots. When I write these short devotions, I sketch out what I'm thinking in advance, save as a draft, and then I go back and tweak after I've run. I'm not running this morning. I've got an injury that may sideline me for awhile. This has me disappointed in a big way. But I'm sitting in the quiet and looking at today's "act" and thinking how God found me with it. There is someone in my life who is disappointed. It's a disappointment I didn't anticipate at December's beginning. But there it is. And if I were running today, no doubt I'd be begging God to turn it all around and bring the happy back. Instead, I'm sitting. I'm hoping and hedging, but I'm also knowing that what I really want is His will. And the grace to be happy with that. If the Holy Spirit nudges you today and all this comes to mind, would you pray for my special intention, please? 

Say Yes.

I hear them whispering in the kitchen as I fold laundry in a room nearby. I can tell they are setting her up. Sure enough, she toddles in, carrying a box of brownie mix, so very proud that, despite her tender age, she has been entrusted with the mission.

 “We make brownies, Mama?”

 I hesitate for the briefest moment and then I’m slayed by the most charming two-year-old smile and big, brownie eyes.

 “Yes,” I reply, hoping the joy on my face mirrors hers, even just a little.

 She goes back to report, yelling “She said ‘yes!’” And the phrase rings in my ears.

 She said, “Yes!” It’s a phrase often associated with the Annunciation. The angel Gabriel appears to Mary and asks her assent to being the mother of God.  Mary wholeheartedly embraces God’s plan with her fiat. She said yes. Her “yes” set in motion the salvation of mankind. It also set up mothers everywhere to work like crazy people for the first three and a half weeks of December.

 We have our lists, our errands, our planning and packaging.  We do it all for these dear people whom we love so much. But in the doing, do we forget the loving? The active loving? Do we say many more “nos” than “yeses?” Forget advent, I am pretty sure I am guilty of that all year ‘round.

 But it wasn’t always like that. We have a home video of me with my firstborn. He was not quite two. I had just turned 24. We were both had a tendency to wholeheartedly go for the “yes.” Outside of the deck of our little house, we spread butcher paper. And we fingerpainted. With our feet. There was much giggling and much smooshing of paint through our toes. My husband, behind the camera, asked why.

 “Why, exactly, did you feel the need to do this? Make this mess? Haul out this stuff?”

 “Because we can,” came my reply. “Because it’s fun and we’re playing with colors and we’re creating art (of sorts) and it’s an absolutely beautiful day out here. Just because we can.”

 “Works for me,” came the reply and he continued to tape.

 That is the last videotape we have before I was diagnosed with cancer. “Because we can” rang in my ears for the next year. I promised myself over and over that if I survived I would be a “Yes” mom. I wouldn’t be too busy, too grownup, too preoccupied to get to “yes.” I’d find a way to connect, to create, to cuddle, to care in a very active way. By golly, I’d do it because I’d be just so very grateful if only I could do it. I’d live each day fully and I’d seize every opportunity to actively live love.

 And that’s the way I’ve lived, mostly. I think most folks who know me would agree that I’m pretty into my kids. Over the years, though, I have become more sedentary, a bit too likely to delegate the playing with them part, and far too likely to think twice before letting them make a mess or better, yet, making a mess with them.

 That afternoon, when Sarah Anne asked for brownies, I decided that this is the Advent of “Yes.” I did it really in hopes that I could revive an old habit. So, yesterday, when Karoline asked to watch Ramona and Beezus for the bajillionth time, I said “yes.” That was pretty simple. Might even buy me an hour and a half of time to do something productive. Except she had a followup request. “You sit and watch it with me?” 

Me? Sit? For an hour and a half on a Thursday afternoon? I am so not a sitter.  But sit I did. I watched the whole darling movie with my three littlest girls. When it was over, there was a song playing after the credits. 

“Get up and dance, Mommy!” And I did. I twirled and picked my sweethearts up in the air. We joined hands and danced in a circle. They looked at me with wonder. The wonder of “Yes. 

The song? Live Like There’s No Tomorrow. We danced, in part, to these words:

Take a leap and fade and hope you fly, feel what it’s like to be alive
Give it all, what we’ve got and lay it all on the line
And we can find a way to do anything if we try to


Live like there’s no tomorrow, (cause all we have is here right now)
Love like it’s all that we know. (The only chance that we ever found)

It’s nearly Christmas. We have right now. Say “Yes!”

--2010

It's been inked in the calendar since the steamy days of late summer. December 10-14, five days at home with just the girls. Mike would have the younger boys at a four day soccer tournament. The big boys would be in the thick of exams. No driving to soccer. Scaled down meals. Scaled down laundry. The perfect window during which to hunker down and finish preparing for Christmas. Gift making. Gift shopping. Gift wrapping. Meal planning. Baking. Canning. Sewing. All would be ready to welcome everyone home to soft, cozy Christmas on December 15. That was the plan.

Until it wasn't. 

Patrick is scheduled for surgery in Charlottesville on December 17. No problem. Change the plan. I'll go down there on the 16th, be back here on the 18th. Then, we can all be cozy for Christmas.

Actually...

The plan has changed considerably again. Measurably. And I'll tell you all about it later. Just know: I've done about 20% of my shopping. I've baked nothing. My oven still isn't clean (I feel compelled to tell you this because I shared my cleaning aspirations last week). I haven't sewed a stitch since Nutcracker. 

But I heard the disappointment in a voice. And the plan changed. 

I'll get back to you on how that worked out. 

 

Here, Now

THINK

Acts of faith are expressed in two ways.  The first is our willingness to jump into the darkness, that is, choosing to trust in God’s guidance as we venture into the unknown.  The second is our willingness to sit in the darkness, which is continuing to do God’s will when our emotional resources are depleted and life seems hollow, meaningless and absurd.  . . .

These are the worst times in our life of faith when viewed from a psychological and emotional perspective.  But from a spiritual vantage point, they are potentially the best of times.  For when we continue to do God’s will without emotional support, our love for God and neighbor grows and is purified. --Marc Foley, The Context of Holiness

 

PRAY

God, I choose to sit with You. I trust that You are here, now, in whatever darkness I find myself.

 

ACT 

Here's where the practice of gratitude is really helpful. Make a list of five times in your life when you felt alone, without emotional support. Now, note how you grew. Note the blessings that came with reliance on God and obedience to His will.

Joy Journal {Seamless Joy}

As Advent approaches, the binder is taken from the shelf. In it, I find lists, some handwritten, some printed in orderly type. There are gift lists, menus, shopping lists, to-do lists. All the ghosts of Christmas past. These lists are enormously helpful as I look ahead. I set them each out upon the counter and gaze upon the colorful quilt they make there. But I sigh with the longing. I long for the one-piece life my friend Ann Voskamp describes. Ann is an artist and a poet and she reminds me frequently that “I can live a one piece life, an ordinary life that is wholly sacred, because the Holy Spirit resides within, this body now being the very house of God.”

But can I do it during Advent?

Yes, I think so, especially during Advent. In this holy season of hopeful anticipation, every thought can be captured as a prayer and every action intentionally ordered toward heaven. For a moment, it all seems so simple, and then, I open my eyes. I see the bright commercialism of “the holidays.” I can hear the tinny shrillness of “seasonal music” in the box store. I feel the crush of social expectations. It all makes me restless. Deep within, I want holy days, candlelight and sacred hymns.

 

My life feels patched together like a Christmas quilt. There are pieces that are completely secular. The office party, the neighborhood cookie exchange, and the soccer tournaments in the cold rain are all part of my seasonal celebrations. Then there are pieces that are Christian — bright reminders of the season in the Baptist school where my boys played basketball, post after post on inspirational Christian blogs. And finally, there are the pieces that are Catholic. Those speak most urgently to my soul: the feast days along the way, the rosy hue of Gaudete Sunday, the nativity sets that beg small fingers to relive the miracle again and again, the lingering smell of Bethlehem incense, the sacraments in the glorious basilica.

To live a seamless life, I must find the sacred in the secular, and I must be the sacred in the secular. Ann writes: “God intended it all, every breath, to be received as holy. For He bestowed each one. Do I dare take the gift for granted? All might be treated as hallowed, coming down from our Father of the heavenly lights. All might be seen as sacred, pregnant with the possibility of spiritual acts of worship (Ro. 12:1). God wove life to be seamless, a tunic like Jesus’: one piece. For all is in Him. ‘In God…we live and move and have our being’ (Acts 17:28). ‘Where can I go from Thy Spirit? Or where can I flee from Thy presence’ (Ps. 139:7).

“God is everywhere: He is the continuous thread, weaving the world and all that is within it together. ‘For from Him and through Him and to Him are all things.’”

 

In a seamless Advent, we really live the liturgy. Every breath is infused with sweet, holy incense. We see clearly that this is a time of waiting and prayer and fasting. We gaze upon the Blessed Mother, great with child, upon a humble donkey, protected by good St. Joseph, and we know that truly every moment truly is pregnant with the possibility of holiness. The Church teaches that: “[w]hen the Church celebrates the liturgy of Advent each year, she makes present this ancient expectancy of the Messiah, for by sharing in the long preparation for the Savior’s first coming, the faithful renew their ardent desire for his second coming. By celebrating [John the Baptist’s] birth and martyrdom, the Church unites herself to his desire: ‘He must increase, but I must decrease’” (Catechism of the Catholic Church, No. 524).

If my life is to be holy even as I walk among the secular, I must relinquish my every thought, word and deed to the will of God. What would He have me do at that party, in the cold rain on the sidelines, in the gym festooned with scripture verses, in the parish hall amidst sticky faces and donuts? What would He have me do in the quiet of the morning before the busy bustle of the day? What would He have me do as I shop and wrap? What would He have me do as I clean and cook and feed and clean again? How would He have me prepare for the infant God?

What could be more pleasing to God than to use these four weeks of Advent stitching together a seamless garment? How should I spend this precious gift of time?

I shall spend it weaving a one-piece life. I shall spend it learning to say with every moment, in all sincerity, “I seek not my own will, but the will of Him that sent me; for I do always the things that please Him” (Jn 8:29).

 

 

 


In addition to my regular homekeeping notebooks, I have a Christmas Control Journal. Many years ago, I downloaded the FlyLady's Control Journal for Christmas and put it in a binder. I photoshopped the cover of Susan Branch's Christmas book and made it say "Foss Family Christmas Planner."  I put all our lists and recipes in it. I'm sure I did this, because I also made one for my friend Megan. This book is not a figment of my imagination. Would you like to see it?

Me too.

I can't find it.Not only that, the electronic version went "poof" when lightning struck my computer. This is proof positive for me of a theory I've long held to be true. [If you are a diehard FLYLady fan, please hold your rotten tomatoes.]:

There's no such thing as a control journal.

Anyone who thinks that she can put everything into a notebook and then have some "control" over her life needs to have a few more children. "Control" is an illusion. So, a Christmas Control Journal is a preposterous notion to me. I'm someone who has found the car keys in the freezer because a teenager put them there. I've spent the night before hosting a huge Thanksgiving weekend party in the ER because my baby wheezes. I've lost all my Christmas money the month before Christmas because I was postpartum and sleep deprived and distracted when I hid the carefully saved cash. I'm someone who invested hours into making a control journal. And then lost it. I don't even hold the illusion of control any more. God is laughing at my lost control journal. And He's showing me--day by day--that He is in control and I'm supposed to be looking to Him and not to a management scheme.

That said, I worked diligently at the  Christmas portion of my homekeeping notebook. Semantics, you say? Not at all. First of all, I can't remember anything.I need to write it down, log it into the computer, blog it, take pictures, back it all up. Then, I need to know that it's not going to look like it does on paper or inside this screen. Because something will happen; it always does. I'm going to make plans, but not plans for control, plans for Joy!

A Joy Journal is an opportunity to sit down and think about what's important in a family Christmas tradition and to deliberately set about making it happen, being careful not to miss the opportunities for serendipitous joy along the way and being careful not to let your blessings rob you of your joy. A Joy Journal is a tool towards an intentional Christmas. This isn't a "Control Journal;" it's journey to the heart of Christmas Joy. This isn't a factory-driven management tool. Instead, it's gentle reminder to the heart of the home--it's a reminder to mothers to see Christ in Christmas all the time.

 

When I created my Christmas planner this year, I did it with my oldest daughter, Mary Beth and my daughter-in-love, Kristin. We talked about the practicality of all the things we need to remember and plan. Section by section, we considered what works in our family. Prayerfully, carefully, joyfully, we created a useful tool which will help us focus on the tasks at hand while fixing our gazes on the babe in the manger. A control journal is a task list in a vacuum. A Joy Journal is a dynamic, organic  work of creative art that will reflect the soul of a family and adapt to meet its changing needs.I can clip from magazines,include novena reminders and prayer cards, add graphics, play with the font, and make it all pretty. I can invest some time and thought and reap the rewards of a considered Christmas. I can pray as I create it and pray as I use it.  Here is my Joy Journal. It's all those things I want or need or intend to do. Some of them won't get done. Other things will creep in and I will prioritize in favor them. Some of the dates will slide. No doubt, we'll have a few more visitors come through the revolving door. I know it will change every year, even if just a little. And when it's all finished, I'll make a color copy and mail it to a friend. Who will keep it safe.

Just in case;-)

 Here is my Joy Journal. It's all those things I want or need or intend to do. it will look considerably different by this afternoon. On Saturday, everything changed. Patrick plays in the National Soccer Championships in NC this weekend. Shift it all over, scratch off, make room. And I haven't included our personal family calendar because, you know, weird internet things. Regardless,  I'll be re-writing that today. A lot. Even still, some of it won't get done. Other things will creep in and I will prioritize in favor them. some of the dates will slide. No doubt, we'll have a few more visitors come through the revolving door. Door's open!

Click here for my work-in-progress Christmas plans.

Click here for blank planning sheets.

God poured some of His goodness and love into me

THINK

“Once I surrender the tinsel to have the jewel, then I enter into the mystery of love. I see that I do not love anyone unless he has some goodness in him, or is lovable in some way. But, I see also that God did not love me because I am lovable. I became lovable because God poured some of His goodness and love into me. I then began to apply this charity to my neighbor. If I do not find him lovable, I have to put love into him as God puts love into me, and thereby I provoke the response of love. Now, my personality is restored and I make the great discovery that no one is happy until he loves both God and neighbor.” Archbishop Fulton Sheen 

 

PRAY

Who is my neighbor today, Jesus? Into whom should I pour love? Show me. Provoke in me the response of love.

 

ACT

Deliver a latte and some cookies to someone today. If you can bring children along, all the better.