Butter on white bread and he can’t play the fiddle

I was buttering a piece of store-bought white bread when suddenly nostalgia had me gasping for air. I remember eating slice after slice of sandwich white or butter-top wheat at Grandma’s house, thickly coating it with the creamy, pale white butter. In those days, we ate margarine at our house–on dense whole wheat bread. Grandma’s bread was an unlikely feast for the senses. Pale butter against pale bread, so different from the garishly tinted margarine that covered our dark bread. I loved spreading the smooth, counter-warmed butter over the bread. I still can find nothing to compare it to. No friction, no resistance, no struggle to scrape the butter across. Just whisk your knife over the top and the butter magically follows, leaving behind an even path of silken scrumptiousness. It’s an ordinary sort of memory, but it took me back almost 20 years.

I sat on the kitchen floor with my bread and butter, waiting for my soup to heat up in the microwave, reading Laura Ingalls Wilder’s The Long Winter. That in itself invokes memories of days long past. The Long Winter was one of my favorite books growing up, and one of my favorite games to play was “Making hay while the sun shines”–pretending I was hoarding for a long winter of my own.

But I just happened to be reading the 22nd chapter, when Pa is reading to the family and Laura interrupts to ask for a song on the fiddle. Pa tried to oblige, “but every note from the fiddle was a very little wrong. Pa’s fingers were clumsy….’My fingers are too stiff and thick from being out in the cold so much, I can’t play,’ Pa spoke as if he were ashamed.” They put away the fiddle and Ma quietly asked her husband to help her with grinding some wheat in the coffee mill. At least that he could do. When Pa went out to finish the chores, Laura reflected, “The worst thing that had happened was that Pa could not play the fiddle. If she had not asked him to play it, he might not have known that he could not do it.”

In many ways, Pa was defined by his fiddling. Every book is filled with the songs that he played on his fiddle. He used the fiddle to cheer his family, to entertain his guests, and to worship his God. In the same way, my grandpa has been defined by his farming. He told me, not so long ago, that he doesn’t know how a man can farm and not know God. He said he couldn’t think of any chapel better than a field–looking up, knowing that you were completely dependent on God for the soil and the sun and the rain. My grandpa’s a farmer. I remember crawling between the wires of a barbed wire fence while my aunts struggled to pull the wires apart further. My grandpa always stretched the tightest fence in Northeastern Nebraska.

Within the last year, my grandpa’s many health problems have conspired to keep him from farming. Arthritis has stiffened his joints and made them uncooperative. Diabetes has made him dependent on insulin and caused him to lose most feeling in his feet. Heart disease means that he can’t keep up the pace he used to be able to. A stroke means that his body no longer immediately obeys his mind’s commands. Like Pa’s fingers, clumsy from the hard winter, my grandpa’s body can no longer do what it wants so much to do.

I think of it all, and I wish I could could go back and freeze time, for Grandpa at least. I wish that my grandpa could be forever worshiping from the middle of a field–a 7 day a week Christian who stretched tighter fences than anyone. I wish that my own children could see Grandpa taking joy in his work and in his family most of all. It’s not that he’s any less of a great man, or a great grandpa than he ever was–it’s just that he doesn’t seem to realize it. He’s discouraged, depressed, cast down by the weakness of his body. It’s not so much that I miss the fiddle, I just wish he didn’t know he couldn’t play. ‘Cause it’s so hard to see him weak.


Last but not least

I’m going to guess that most of my readers have heard of the ten commandments. I’m also going to guess that most of you think that the ten commandments should be kept.

So how about this one: “Thou shalt not covet…” (Ex. 20:17) According to the American Heritage Dictionary (found online at dictionary.com), to covet means “to feel blameworthy desire for that which is another’s.” Envy is the most common synonym. Envy is defined by dictionary.com as “a feeling of discontent or covetousness with regard to another’s advantages, success, possessions, etc.” Desire for something that does not belong to you, discontent with your own circumstances.

That’s a hard one to swallow. “Thou shalt not covet…” Does that really rank up there with “Thou shalt not murder”, “Thou shalt not commit adultery”, “Thou shalt not steal”? After all, coveting is something everyone does, right?

I’ve been slowly coming to discover that covetousness is a huge stronghold in my life. It seems almost every day I find something new to covet. I covet my neighbor’s husband and children. I covet the house she owns. I covet her car, her hair, her garden. I covet my neighbor’s artistic ability, or her athletic ability. I covet her three piece suit. I covet her job, or her assistantship. I covet her schedule, or lack thereof. Today, I covet her deep freeze.

Yet covetousness is not something to be taken lightly. Romans 1:29 lists envy among the sins that people who are “filled with all unrighteousness” commit. I Corinthians 3:3 describes envy as being a carnal behavior–one that mere men commit (not those who are filled with the Spirit of God). Galatians 5:21 lists envy as one of the evident works of the flesh–and states that those who practice such things shall not enter the kingdom of God. James 3:16 says that “where envy and self-seeking exist, confusion and every evil thing are there.” Envy is not some sort of “little white” sin. It’s a big deal, capital offense, capital letter SIN.

Yet I tolerate it so often. I rationalize sin in my mind. “You’re just coveting her husband–it’s not like you’re lusting after him.” Uh. No. That’s not the way it works, Rebekah. Sin is sin. “How could you not covet that life?” Scripture says that God won’t give you temptation beyond what you can bear.

What is the antidote to covetousness? Philippians 4:11 “I have learned in whatever state I am, to be content.” And how do I do that? Philippians 4:13 “I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me.” Lord, strengthen me, that I might say with Paul: “I know how to be abased, and I know how to abound. Everywhere in all things I have learned both to be full and to be hungry, both to abound and to suffer need.” (Philippians 4:12) Help me to learn–whether single or married, whether a student or a working woman, whether young or old, whether fat or skinny, whether well-dressed or with nothing to wear–to be content.


I wish you could videotape dreams

Every so often, I see a really good movie–one that I want to watch over and over and over again. Unfortunately, there’s no way for me to watch it over again, because it’s a dream. If only there were a way to video tape dreams so that you could replay them. That’d be just amazing.

The first time I remember having a movie-dream was sometime last year. It was the most spectacular movie. The opening scene was this teenage boy and his dad fishing in a river when the boy suddenly sees a woman who looks like his mother going over some rapids. This is significant because he’s been told that his mother has been dead for years. Seeing the mother in the river sparks off a huge quest to find her. Unfortunately, as exciting as the plot was, I can’t remember how it ends. The mother must have been in some kind of witness protection program, or maybe she was a spy or something. The problem is, I just can’t remember.

Last night I had another great movie-dream. I tried to write as much as I could down as soon as I awoke, but it faded more quickly than I could write. It was about a woman living in Mexico who goes to visit her next door neighbor and finds herself in the midst of a huge family drama. The bottom line is that a baby girl’s mother has been killed (or taken hostage–I don’t remember) and the baby’s life is in danger as well. The woman and the next door neighbor’s son make a break for the border to get back into the US, where presumably, the person who’s trying to get the baby can’t get to them. They go to live with a couple in the woman’s extended family, but the extended family gets really suspicious about the whole thing and basically holds the couple and the baby hostage too. It was really a great dream–an incredible movie. The movie had a lot of tension, not just because of the obvious plot tension (kidnapping, murder, running away, etc.) but because the woman and the next door neighbor’s son didn’t know each other before they went running off to the US trying to get the baby away from whoever the guy was that wanted her. So there’s all sorts of relational tension too. The problem is that all the connecting factors are lost in my mind–which makes the movie seem completely ridiculous in the retelling. But really–this was a great movie. It was one that I forced myself back to sleep so that I could finish it–it was that good.

Man, if only I had a video recorder that could record dreams!!


Mexico Monday (a day late): 10 years ago

Ten years ago, I made my first trip to Mexico. We traveled to Jaumave, where we painted a village church. A few years later, a massive storm sent water running through the wooden structure, causing the wood to rot. This is a picture of the rebuilt church.
church with block foundation

Ten years ago, on our way down or up (I can’t remember), we stayed at a place called “Way of the Cross”. I remember sitting in the white benches outside the building.
white benches outside building
I remember singing our trip theme song “Down at Your Feet, O Lord” around an electric piano in the chapel.
chapel
When we stayed at Way of the Cross on our way back up to Laredo this time, the chapel and other buildings had sustained damage from Hurricaine Dolly and were in a state of disrepair.

There have been many changes in the ten years since I first visited Mexico. Some have been good, some have been bad. One thing is certain, Mexico is in need of still more laborers. Pray that the Lord of the harvest would send laborers into His harvest.


You wouldn’t believe me if I told you

Those of us who grew up in the internet age also grew up hearing warnings against the use of Wikipedia as a reference source. Most of us routinely ignored this advice from our high school teachers–choosing instead to use it surreptitiously, not citing our source or using it to find other sources of the same information.

As we entered college, we heard the same warnings. We still used Wiki–just not for formal purposes. Instead, we used it to look up stuff we read about in the newspaper or bands or expressions or whatever. Wiki is pretty much irresistible–despite how much teachers complain about it.

So guess who suggested the use of Wikipedia today?

I doubt you’ll guess. My graduate Research Methods professor suggested using Wikipedia as a source for a definition of energy drinks. Her sentence was something like “You’ll need to come up with a good definition of “energy drink”. It shouldn’t be hard to come up with–you could check the American Marketing Association or Wikipedia.”

I about fell out of my chair. Did she really just say Wikipedia? Yes, she did. Apparently, once you’ve reached a certain level in your academic career, Wikipedia becomes an acceptable source of information.

I can’t say I mind.

Disclaimer: Dr. Driskoll was suggesting that we use the Wikipedia definition in the survey we are developing to ask college students about their energy drink consumption. She was not suggesting that we use Wikipedia as a source for a definitive explanation of say, the Hygiene Hypothesis.


Two Year Anniversary: The Stats

I have a file named “A Catalogue of all I’ve read since September 5, 2006” on my hard-drive. In it, I have listed every book that I’ve read since, well, September 5, 2006. Two years ago. I don’t remember the precise events surrounding the formation of my goal, but for whatever reason, I decided to attempt to read every book in my local library (Eiseley Branch). In order to track my progress, I created that file.

Periodically, I tabulate the number of books I’ve read and record them at the bottom of the file–just so I can see what I’ve read, where I’ve been. I’ve written about it before, so I won’t bore you with the details. Instead, without further ado, my 2 year numbers:

TOTALS as of 9-5-2008 (729 days-2 YEARS)
Juvenile Picture 86
Juvenile, First Read 24
Juvenile, Chapter 71
Juvenile Fiction 126
Juvenile Nonfiction 49
Young Adult 10
Juvenile CD 4
Juvenile DVD 15
Juvenile Video 1
Fiction 175
Nonfiction 325
Audio Cassette 2
Audio CD 34
DVD 24
Periodicals 30
Total 976books
1.34 books per day

I’m pretty proud of my progress–although bummed that my average has dropped (by almost a tenth of a book per day) and that I fell short of 1000 in my first two years. I mean, seriously, I was 24 books short. I could have easily exceeded that had I finished all the books I started but took back to the library before finishing when I left for Mexico. If I didn’t have the “do one project” rule for craft books, I could have exceeded it on quilting books alone. (And we’re talking read. As in, every word of text. Not just looking at pictures. I have another file that tells which craft books I’ve read and has pictures of potential projects to do out of them.)

When was the last time you checked up on a goal? Take a little time to assess your progress. Celebrate how far you’ve come. And grab another book (or pick up your quilt or take a walk or whatever that goal might be) and keep going!


Snap Decision

I woke up this morning to a frantic phone call from Harper Dining Service’s Secretary. Turns out my fellowship is dependent on my being solely a student. I can’t get the fellowship and work at the same time. Which means I had a decision to make.

My decision, ultimately, was $2000 for free versus $4500 that I have to work 26 hours a week for. I worked up the math quickly in my head, and decided to go with work. Why?

Good question. I didn’t have much time to work it–this morning is Thursday, the last day of a pay period. I needed to decide today. So I didn’t have that much time to work out all the details.

But the main thoughts going through my head were as follows: I’m taking out fifteen thousand in loans for this year. I need all the money I can get to keep from taking out more. I need new glasses, which I’m going to get through the eye insurance my work pays for. I have a staff parking permit that I’d have to give up if I’m no longer staff. I enjoy my work–and I’ve given my word that I’m working this semester. Janet has been wonderful, working with me so far as benefits and Mexico and everything else is concerned. I can do my part by keeping my word this semester. I’m the Saturday manager–it’d be very difficult to fill that role at the last minutes–especially as I’m gearing up for Food Safety training this weekend. Marilyn generally relies on me as a Friday closer.

Yeah, it’d be nice to be just a student–to live a luxurious life of a couple of classes and a lot of free time. And I could probably swing it. But I have to think beyond the here and now. I have to think of how I’m currently enslaved to the federal government via student debt. I have to think of my testimony within my workplace. It’s a snap decision, but I’m glad that I chose the way I did.


Without Consulting Me

Lincoln City Libraries recently had the audacity to do this without consulting me. Yes, they changed their hours–and didn’t even notify one of their most dedicated users.

Yes, I’d been gone for a month and only visited once since I’ve been back–but I still don’t think that’s sufficient cause for giving me the cold shoulder. I worry that perhaps they misunderstood my absence, that thinking I’d forsaken them, they decided to forsake me. I can see how my actions could be misconstrued. I return all my books–for the first time in years, I have nothing checked out. Then they don’t see me for another month? To the uninformed, those actions certainly look suspect.

Maybe I should have let them know I’d be gone, or sent them some e-mails from Mexico. It was just that I didn’t have much access to the internet–and when I did, it wasn’t free like it is at our libraries here in town. I had to pay for the service in Mexico–and so I failed to keep in touch with my good friend Eiseley.

So today, when I got done with classes at 8:20, I dropped by Eiseley for a chat–only to discover that he was closed. Without the least bit of warning, he changed his hours to close an hour earlier. Which means that there will be no more leisurely night-time rambles through the stacks, no more catching just a few more paragraphs before the lights turn out. I rarely get done with my evening activities before 8, so the night library visits have ended.

If we are to continue our relationship, we must redefine our terms. Tuesday and Thursday mornings before classes? I suppose we can sneak a few hours between other appointments every now and then. But I worry that the inconvenience will mean an unavoidable shift in our relationship. You never come and visit me–I always have to visit you. And now you’ve rearranged your visiting hours so that they rarely coincide with the hours I’m free to visit.

I know you’ve introduced some new features–free holds and the like. It’ll make it more convenient. I can just run in and pick up my titles and leave. But I’ll miss our conversation, the long-standing relationship we’ve had. I really wish you would have thought to consult me. ‘Cause this change makes me really sad.


Mexico Monday: State of the Unions

Several years ago, while I was praying, I saw a vision of walls surrounding the church. The walls were broken and crumbling, threatening to fail completely. God spoke to me that the walls represented marriages in our church–and that I needed to intercede, to literally “stand in the gap” for the marriages in our body. By God’s grace, many of the marriages that had been struggling during that time are now strong and many of the gaps have been rebuilt.

During my month-long stay in Mexico, I had an opportunity to “survey the walls” so to speak. I discovered that, at least in Jaumave, things are not well in the church, because things are not well in many marriages. Mexico is greatly in need of people who will stand in the gap for marriages.

While I was in Mexico, Jim and Caroline spent many hours counseling and praying with Manuel. Manuel’s wife, Lupe, recently took up with another man and has been threatening to leave Manuel for the other man. She has used the threat of leaving as a way to control her husband–if he attempts to discipline their daughters or enforce any boundaries whatsoever, she tells him she’ll leave. As a result, Manuel and Lupe’s five daughters run wild–the older ones introducing their very young sisters to much older men. The entire family is in turmoil. Manuel struggles with giving up hope. He struggles to be head of his home. Lupe openly rebels against God and her husband. The daughters pit father against mother, and do whatever they please. The church–seven individuals–is in peril because of the breakup of a marriage. Manuel and Lupe need people who will stand in the gap and help to rebuild the wall.

Tonio, the sixteen (now seventeen) year old boy who lived with us, was married via a shotgun wedding at age 14. He hasn’t seen his wife in at least a year, hasn’t seen his baby girl grow up. He’s growing in Christ–and that means he’s in a really tough spot. He alternates between crying over his wife and his baby girl and claiming that they mean nothing to him. He’s not sure if the marriage was legal–but he’s not sure that it wasn’t. He’s a sixteen year old boy–he gets crushes and has girls with crushes on him. He’s also married. Or at least, he might be. Tonio has to wrestle with what he is to do about his past, with what was done before he became a believer. Tonio needs wisdom to know how to proceed–how to mend his section of the wall.

Santiago started coming to church and to Jim and Caroline’s couples’ Bible Study alone. He and his wife were separated–the children lived with her. The group of couples started praying, and one Sunday Monica and the children showed up at church! Santiago and Monica and their two youngest came to visit us during my last week there. I enjoyed coloring with their little boys, but even more, I enjoyed the obvious testimony being played out before me. Santiago and Monica are seeking God together and God is rebuilding their marriage–and expanding their family. Monica is due anytime. By God’s grace, He is rebuilding the wall.

I gave three examples, but the trend reaches far beyond. Broken families abound. A man marries a new woman without obtain a legal divorce from his first wife. Couples move in together without getting married. A woman takes off to a different town with most of her children–she leaves one nine year old daughter behind. Young girls marry much older men as a way to escape the mountain villages. Daughters engage in prostitution. Adultery, fornication, bigamy, abandonment. And this in the church. The walls around the Mexican church are in desperate straits.

May the church respond as Nehemiah did when he received the report that the wall of Jerusalem was broken down. “So it was when I heard these words, that I sat down a wept, and mourned for many days; I was fasting and praying before the God of heaven.” (Neh 1:4) Nehemiah fasted and prayed. He mourned over Jerusalem. Eventually, he went to Jerusalem–to survey the wall for himself and to rally the people to rebuild it. I pray that God will raise up from among us Nehemiahs, who will pray and fast for the Mexican church–and some who will go and help to rebuild the wall. Please join me in praying for laborers to enter this field.


Not in Kansas anymore

I don’t recall the transition from homeschool to high school as being particularly hard. Neither do I remember the transition from high school to college as being difficult. Different, sure. Difficult, not so much. I knew all about the differences; I expected the differences; I dealt with the differences.

Undergrad to grad school, though? The distinctions were never that well determined in my mind. I guess I thought grad school would be like undergrad work–only more advanced. After all, I’m at the same school, in the same department, in the same building even. I’m taking classes with many of the same professors, spending time with many of the same classmates. How different can it really be?

Shows how much I knew.

I received an e-mail from my seminar instructor a week before classes started. She was letting all her students know what our seminar theme would be so we could start working on seminar. Start working on seminar? You mean, before classes start? Before I even know what exactly seminar means? Yes siree. That’s what it means.

Another professor gives us an assignment to interview three faculty members about their research. She kindly gives us a WHOLE WEEK to complete these interviews–since we have a three day weekend and some faculty leave for the weekend. This way the University will be open for three days during which we can do our interviews.

My adviser keeps talking about me doing a project. Unfortunately, she hasn’t said much about what that looks like. She’s mentioned several possibilities. I’m interested in two of them–either studying food knowledge or working on some kind of online modules for her Scientific Aspects of Food and Nutrition class. But what does she want me to do? And when? She hasn’t shared that part yet.

We interns had a meeting before classes started. I learned that I would be doing a bit more than just classwork this semester. For example, we are required to finish four WIC modules before we begin rotations in January. That shouldn’t be too hard, right? But the one module Dr. K printed off for us is a good fifty pages long.

I am a planner, an analyst, a programmer. I like to assess the situation, develop a workable plan for dealing with it, and implement my plan. Ambiguity is not something I’m very comfortable with. But, like it or not, grad school involves a degree of ambiguity. I’m going to have to define my own program, my own role as a student. I’m going to have to deal with the unexpected.

I’m going to have to learn to keep going–even when I chose the wrong textbooks to start reading in advance and the wrong projects to get a head start on. I’m going to have to learn to calm down my expectations elsewhere when I am suddenly presented with a four hour module that needs to be done online–this week. I’m going to have to relax, take things as they come, trust God.

Trust God. That’s ultimately what it comes to. When life isn’t what I expected. When I’m a twenty-three year old single woman working in food service and pursuing a master’s degree. When I’m hungry and crabby because I haven’t been able to eat anything but BRATTY (bananas, rice, applesauce, toast, tea, and yogurt) since I came back from Mexico (without getting sick, that is). When life erodes my facade of control, I must learn to trust God.

Lord, I’m in over my head and my flailing is only making me sink more quickly. Help me. I need you. Help me learn to trust You.