Faith & Life

A Deeper Family :: tipping the scale.

The day never holds enough minutes and moments. It never seems enough; the effort given, the time split, the little sacrifices made here and there, the want for more quality time, all feel like sand slipping through fingers.

Life.

It always moves faster than we think in the moment.  One day we are holding a tiny newborn nearly too nervous to even move with them in arm.  The next we find ourselves chasing them as they pedal their bike down the sidewalk and reviewing rules when readying them for sleepovers at friends’ houses.  And before we have time to be fully ready, they will be driving themselves around, shaving their faces or their legs, or both and be talking of college, career, dreams or even marriage.

Time doesn’t wait, not for you to learn how to get parenting and family right nor for you to grow unselfish enough to see or catch up to opportunities fleeting.  Like sand sliding through the skinny of an hour glass, time is constantly going.  And so are the days with it.

I had this terrible thought recently.  I only have about 8 years until my oldest daughter moves into the world off to college or work, chasing dreams and meeting love.

Continue reading my new post at A Deeper Family...

unicorn hopes and an always better day.

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...and I hope that You help everyone in the world who needs you tonight ...and I hope that You help us sleep so good and have sweet dreams ...and I hope that we all have better days tomorrow ...and I hope that we have fun tomorrow ...and I hope that we have everything we need ...and I hope You make my friends play nice ...and I hope You give food to the people who don’t have food like we do ...and I hope that we have the funnest dreams tonight and that we’re not so tired for school ...and I hope...

 

Her little list continues to build for some time until I open my eyes and smile at her.  She smiles back, “Okay, Amen.”

Chloe’s five and far more secure in God and tomorrow than I seemingly am in my strongest hour.

I doubt. She dreams. Her little mind still floats in fairy tales and forevermore where unicorns exist somewhere and so do dragons and elves and her mommy with God.  The world that Chloe knows exists in parallel but very differently from mine.  We wake up around the same time each morning.  I read quietly about parenting or theology or creativity in order to understand more.  She daydreams fuzzy eyed in twilight still moving from dream to day about good overcoming bad in some way.

Our expectations for the day are just as different, too.  Mine, to just make it to the end and bring home all that I can as provider.  Hers, to have fun and squeeze every second from another day given her.  She trusts in goodness.  Questions and conversation readily pour out of her as she lays her head down and resume the moment of her rising again.

For all she knows, she is limitless.

Some days I’m convinced that I learn much more from my young daughters than they do from me.  I use words shaped in intellect, reason and experience, in an attempt to model how and who and what they should be while their language bends holy and hopeful, always.  They don’t search for answers and solutions.  Hope resolves all in their lives.

Even at the darkest, they were the first to speak of how our lives would be good again.

They get something that I’ve forgotten. Soon they will forget, too.

We loose childlike wonder and learn to sit up straight, intellectualize our questions and bow to time demanding more and less.  Something sacred happens, or is lost, or maybe even stolen.  We land, closer to the ground, feet planted in the dirt of earth and reason and forget how it feels to fly, our wings clipped by the thought that people don’t fly.  We grow up and childlike faith is stolen by explanations and the independence of making our way in the world.

What I’m simply learning, yet steadily confounding me still, is that my children exist closer to God than I do.  But I can explain Him better.

As far as Chloe’s concerned, God feeds the unicorns just as He gives us better days.  One day, she will know that the world operates despite the absence of unicorns and that fairy tales are stories.

But what she must know and not lose is wonder.

I think a chief goal in parenting is preserving wonder, for it is the seedbed of hope, faith and trust persevering in a world standing apart defined by boundaries and limits.  Our effort should be given less in drawing lines, boundaries not to be crossed, and more in drawing expansive circles for them to grow in.  This is not to suggest that we blurry truth to an ambiguous something, but rather, expand and preserve wonder through their maturation.

My girls present some of the grandest, unfettered prayers I've ever heard.  In simplicity, they live though each new day pushes harder against them.  Explanations will be accepted.

Wonder can always be preserved though as I invite them to explore God and realize that life in each day is always a beginning, never an ending.  There’s no need for me to rush them along into greater understanding.

For now, the unicorns still fly in Chloe’s world.  And I love that they do.

a life bigger than little.

Dying in waves all feathers and wax floating apart, the sun always greater than the miracle of flying itself.   Is it not enough just to fly?

 

There is no way of living life other than here, now and present.  All else is dreaming of was and will be.

Tomorrow dangling like a carrot, promising better.  Effort shimmering on brow, an ache in your knees and burn in your belly.  Success donned by those not waiting to want but chasing life bigger than little for the applause of the faceless watchers whispering hushed fancies, impressed by all that you could become.  Like a lover carried on a symphony, tangled in dreams and desire, tomorrow speaks a language so much more alluring than today buried in its mundane repetition and drudgery.

“For another day, I’d give anything.” I hear those words amidst the dying often cutting through regret and the reversal of the worth of a day piled into years.    But not all long in regret.  Some just want another day lived like the other days behind lived so well.  Just one more.  Working for a hospice, I observe death with certain regularity.  Almost every time I sit with a patient coming closer to the realization of death nearer, I hear those words wishing for more time, another trip, evening shared on the porch or experience together.  In two years, I’ve never listened to someone offer a trade for more money, promotion, accomplishment or accolades.  Always another day lost in simplicity, in life little.

From there, in the hearing of their wanting words, clarity finds me.

There is a lust in my heart for tomorrow, a day warm and comfortable, when my name soars above the story and out of the chaos hovering in the day now.  And in that lust, life grows much bigger than little.

 

“What if you never reach the lover, Tomorrow?”  I hear that echoing sentiment threading through my thoughts sewing worth into every stitch that pulls today and tomorrow closer.  Burden is what the lover becomes overshadowing now and blurring the lines of what matters in the minutes and hours lived in the only guaranteed time given, now.

 

Nothing exists outside of here except memories and want.  The screaming kids do.  So does the pile of laundry and the stories told and smiles stolen before bedtime.  The job and the desk that you set at, the neighbors who live at a waving, not handshaking distance do too, but I miss them often in the hustle of life bigger.

Life bigger than twenty four hours, always.  Ahead.  Behind.  Bigger.

What’s discovered in a gazed life bigger than little are problems standing impenetrable, bigger than life.  It’s a farsighted want rooted intrinsic in the construct of life always almost lived.  One more reach, another late meeting, another deadline honored holy above all else needing attention.  Life leans forward, unbalanced and shallow.

The soil erodes unattended when the little important things are neglected.  Tomorrow will come in all its glory and you will be there when you are faithful to the smallness of today, ready for all that tomorrow brings.

I want the bending fidelity of Job, the blemished honesty of David, the limp of Jacob to live deeply now in both the blessing and curse.  The lover, Tomorrow, will find me.  She was made for me as she was for them, too.

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So I’m telling myself a few things often to size and resize life littler.

NOT A HURRIED PACE but a being; embracing whatever comes with the day.  I’ve learned to pray one prayer in my waking, “Father, thank you for all this day holds.”

UNTIE THOSE THINGS UNIMPORTANT and learn value in what really is important and irreplaceable; writing assignments for projects and my book and blog posts have been delayed and at the mercy of family.  I’d burn every book someday written by me for another chance to watch my daughters smile honestly.

VALUE YOURSELF LESS IMPORTANT in your pursuit of the day; involve others in your life and dreams and pursuit; One of the greatest personal exercises on help and humility was a survey I recently sent out to a few of those who have been close to me asking them to comment on what they see my strengths, weaknesses, inadequacies and shortcomings to be.  The longing for tomorrow was crowding our togetherness today.

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What does life littler than big look like to you?   Gaze upon it and grab it.

 

how cooking saved us.

“I love you, Daddy.” Those four words uttered unprompted and purely spoken from the heart, not simply the mouth, sets my world on ablaze.  Everything is alright then.

No argument is too thick to separate, no struggle too tangling, no misunderstanding too alienating, no hurt too deep; in the hearing and in the give and take of those words, all is set aright, and I’m reminded that we are okay again.

Parenting requires full effort. I should be clear.  Effective parenting demands full effort.

And, of course, prayer ...lots of prayer.

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When I became a single parent, I no longer had a choice in how much effort I’d give.  The girls looked to me for everything.

“Dad, what should I wear?” “What should I get my friend for her birthday?” “Can you do my hair?” “Can we go and get a manicure?” “Can you meet my friend’s mom so she can sleep over?” ...the friend, not the mom:) “Dad, I think I need a bra?” “Dad, what is sex?”

The first few months as a single dad felt like an absolute whirlwind.  I was widowed and they were half orphaned.  Emotions ran deep and erupted frantically at times.  Many of those early days were spent just getting through the day to find any space to feel comfortable in our own family.  An obvious void rested heavy, them motherless and grieving with an inexperienced single father.  Granted, I had the enormous support from my mother who has been nothing short of amazing, but at the end of the day and in the settling dust, I am my daughters’ only parent.  It is both my privilege and responsibility to show them the way, teach them how and lead them into tomorrow.

I say to them often, especially in tougher times when they are hurting or frustrated, “God gave you me and me you.  And he didn’t make a mistake.”

Honestly, I was as lost in parenting as I was in grief.

So I went for a walk and under a starlit sky, glowing alive, I lost that part of me dying and came back a different man.

I wasn’t a dad, and I wasn’t single.  I was, and would be from then forward, a parent, open-hearted to life with my three beautiful daughters through the pain, the hurting, the confusion and the lonely.

The stars just made perfect sense in a whole new way that night.  The way they hung perfectly, positioned precisely and shined brightly millions of miles away, as if broadcasting a message of hope in the endless panoramic expanse of the night sky, whispering order and security and future, raptured me from living as a victim in a day I felt I didn’t belong to.  Instead, I felt closer to God that night standing under the stars, his stars, and asked simply of him to just help me build the family that we, my wife and I, once started together.

Slowly over the next few weeks, we began to grow again.  I wasn’t as concerned with how to necessarily raise three little girls however little girls should be.  I would raise them in the exact context we newly lived in.

I introduced them to adventure to keep their hearts curious and growing.  We attacked our weaknesses together.  I learned how to do a pony tail, and they learned how to fish.  They taught me how to paint nails, and I showed them how to scout a hiking trail.  Our life together will always be my most beautiful treasure.  I absolutely adore it.

Tonight, as on most Wednesday evenings, we continued on with one of my favorite new family traditions: family cook night.  It’s quite simple of a tradition.  We cook, together.

For us, the kitchen is definitely an adventure.  Our measurements are generous, and each of us thinks we really know what we’re doing.  Emily’s a pro at cutting anything; Elizabeth expertly dabbles in everything; and Chloe can stir like a boss.  Honestly, it’s crazy stressful watching it all happen, but the payoff is magic.  Our hearts are open, conversation flows freely, music typically plays in the background and we just go at it celebrating our togetherness in a new family way.

When the kitchen lights are turned off and the sink is full, half of dirty dishes and half clean, those four words find me, and again, I’m reminded that we are all okay.

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Not many parenting techniques will pay off quite like the simplicity of simply being together fully in the moment.  Everything thick and troubling is cut right through.

As parents, time is a commodity that we sometimes don’t have much of, but the more you generously give of the time you have, fully invested into the lives of your children, the greater and more fruitful of a payoff you’ll share in the years ahead.  Together.

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dreams are written.

“Far away there in the sunshine are my highest aspirations. I may not reach them, but I can look up and see their beauty, believe in them, and try to follow where they lead." Louisa May Alcott

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No dream haunting aspiration is a guarantee. Its reality is shaped. In the earning does the dream fade into reality.

And dreams are not pixie dust and floating fairies but days we bleed into existing because of effort, not necessarily perfected ...given.  We give of ourselves today to the future tomorrow and dreams transcend the sky, no longer too big and out of our grounded reach.

Discipline is the measure of dreams materialized.

...words drawn onto pages ...canvas stroked with brush ...hours in pursuit of solution

Some dream dreams that they don't currently belong in. The day and the dream must be pulled, merged together.  Discipline is the pulling.

Let’s be honest, discipline doesn’t naturally find us.  Or better stated, we don’t easily or naturally take to discipline.  But desire, that is an intrinsic emotion threaded into our heart and humanity.  The problem with desire in not having it, but having only it.  Desire shows you the way and points to identify the dream.  Discipline is the vehicle that actually gets you to where you want to go.  Desire without discipline is a mirage clearly visible to the eye but vanishing in the distant landscape.

Dreams unreachable, unreached for.

Just as I believe that everyone has a story (worth telling and needing to be told), I also believe that everyone has a dream waiting to be claimed and conquered.

That dream could be anything: raise a family, race a car, find a cure, write books, start a business, climb a mountain, find love, travel the world, lead a nation or father a son. Whatever it is, it is yours and as personal as you are to the world.

And the world needs you to live your dreams.

Why?  ...because there are too many people half alive floating through life pushed by desire unbridled by discipline.

Discipline is by far the greatest challenge on a daily basis in my life.

...so I write words even when they’re not there capturing a little more each day the dream still too big to talk about seriously at times to friends who ask, “How’s your book coming along?”

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I’m not writing a book.  I am writing a dream.

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inspiration