dual personalities

That time of year…when yellow leaves…do hang

by chuckofish

This week I am busy getting ready with joy and anticipation for our out-of-town guests–daughter #2 and her family–who will be visiting at Thanksgiving. I am rearranging things in our four bedrooms to accommodate them more easily. The boy brought our little antique brass bed upstairs from the furnace room where it has been stored for 27 years and assembled it so Miss Katie can use it. I cleaned and polished it and it looks pretty good.

Baby Ida will be sleeping in my office in a borrowed pack-n-play. I hope she will not be overstimulated.

We will be playing musical beds for a few days, but I think that’s fun and it’s great to be filling up our empty house with family.

Some readers may recall that I worked for (almost) twenty years in the field of lifelong learning at my flyover institute, so I found this to be very interesting. “God created his world and inspired his word to display his glory. A well-educated person sees the glory of God in the word that God inspired and in the world that God made. An educated person understands God’s glory and evaluates it and feels it and applies it and expresses it for others to see and enjoy. That outward bent is called love. Therefore, the aim of lifelong learning is to grow in our ability to glorify God and love people. We think the six habits of mind and heart are a description of that process of growth.”

This is a long one from Carl Trueman, but wow, so worth reading. “We are idolaters because we want to be. We are not hapless tools of a system that dominates our individual agency and thus absolves us of any responsibility. Isaiah notes the zeal with which Israel embraces idolatry. Paul links the lust of sexual sin to panting after idols. We want to reject God and create our own gods. Thus, the biblical critique is not only cultural but also spiritual. It convicts idolaters of their personal responsibility for the system within which they operate, a system within which they happily live, even as it contradicts the moral structure of the world God created.”

And this made me laugh–the things people do!

I will also remind you that today is the anniversary of the day Steve McQueen died back in 1980. It is also the birthday of Billy Graham, whom McQueen met on November 3, four days before his death. He’d wanted to meet the evangelist for some time, and on that day, Mr. Graham paid him a visit. The pair prayed together and talked about the afterlife, and McQueen told him how his faith in Christ helped him deal with the cancer. At the end of their meeting, Billy Graham left McQueen his personal Bible, the name “Billy Graham” printed on the front. Inside, he wrote the date, along with a message: “To my friend Steve McQueen, may God bless and keep you always.” He signed his name, along with a reference to a Bible verse, Philippians 1:6: “And I am sure of this, that he who began a good work in you will bring it to completion at the day of Jesus Christ.”

And here’s a sonnet–#73 by William Shakespeare:

We gather together to ask the Lord’s blessing

by chuckofish

Another exciting weekend–mostly for Mr. Smith who went to the bud’s last soccer game of the season. Dogs are not allowed on the playing fields, but daughter #1 smuggled him in in a canvas tote bag. (There were three other dogs there as well.)

He was a good boy. And he didn’t distract the bud (too much)–especially when he was playing GOALIE!

His focus was not exactly razor sharp, but he didn’t allow any goals–the other team hardly made it onto his side of the field. Yes, his team had an undefeated season! I will say the bud always seemed to have the biggest cheering section with at least seven family members in attendance (+ Lottie!). Two grandparents, two aunts, a great aunt, a great uncle, his Mom–I don’t think he even really noticed. But really, I ask, what would you rather be doing than sitting on folding chairs on a crisp fall day watching six-year olds run up and down the field?

After the game Lottie and I went over to daughter #1’s house while the bud went to his team party with his Dad. We unpacked all the dolls and filled up the doll case, which you will recall we had moved last weekend.

I’m sure there will be some rearranging going on, but we had super fun.

In other news I went to a DAR meeting and was brought up-to-date with all the patriotic doings of this group. It is that time of year when we promote Wreaths Across America, where wreaths are placed on veterans’ graves. I always sponsor two wreaths, one each for my father and father-in-law, who are both buried at Jefferson Barracks National Cemetery. Would you like to help us honor and remember as many fallen heroes as possible by sponsoring remembrance wreaths? You can do so here. More than two million volunteers and supporters will gather on December 16 to Remember, Honor and Teach at more than 4,000 participating locations in all 50 states, at sea and abroad. I think that’s pretty cool.

Everyone came over to our house for bagels after church on Sunday, even Mr. Smith, who ran laps around the house with the wee twins and their Dad.

Afterward the OM and I went to the kick-off of our friend Liz’s mayoral campaign down at the train station.

It was a busy weekend. I am thankful for family, friends and living in America!

And this babydoll tried on her hand-me-down Christmas dress…

Can you even?

Enjoy your Monday!

How was your week?

by chuckofish

Happy Friday, dear readers. As usual, I don’t have much to talk about it. My first Halloween with trick or treaters was a bit of a letdown. There were lots of kids on my street but not all of them came to my house! I can only assume the old lady who lived in my house before me was cranky. Next year, I will have to make it obvious that I bought a lot of candy. Speaking of, I find it alarming the way kids these days just take handfuls of candy unless you specify. “Kids these days.” Maybe I am the cranky old lady.

Anyway, in cuter news, my sister sent this anecdote about Katie yesterday when they went to the library. Katie was playing with the large puppy toys in the children’s area and she brought one over to the back of the couch near the window so he could watch the street like Mr. Smith. She is the sweetest.

And I’ve been reading some old Calvin & Hobbes cartoons. He amuses me.

Enjoy the weekend!!

Bonds of gratitude

by chuckofish

Well, the actual Halloween, after a full month of build up, was pretty lame and anticlimactic at least from my perspective. Halloween is hardly on my radar anymore and wouldn’t be at all if I didn’t have to drive by the neighbors’ yards full of fake cemeteries, witch covens, giant skeletons, and inflatable dragons. Call me a killjoy, but good grief, Charlie Brown.

I did get cute pictures of all my grandkids, who appeared to enjoy the day as well they should.

As you can see, Lottie (“Mal”) and the bud (fireman) bowed to peer pressure and are wearing store-bought costumes. I hope they didn’t break their mother’s heart too much.

Meanwhile Miss Katie went trick-or-treating with her Daddy for the first time and was nearly beside herself with excitement.

I gather it was a long, semi-frustrating day of waiting. Taking cute photos proved to be almost impossible…

C’est la vie! At least Mr. Smith rose to the occasion and guarded the house from neighborhood hooligans.

Good boy!

Well, now it is November and we are ready to move into a month of Thankfulness! I refuse to put up Christmas decorations until after November 23! It’s pilgrims all the way for me.

Oh blessedness, all bliss above,
When thy pure fires prevail!
Love only teaches what is love:
All other lessons fail:
We learn its name, but not its powers,
Experience only makes it ours.

–William Cowper (read the whole poem here)

A day of small things*

by chuckofish

In the late afternoon of November 1, 1941, Ansel Adams took this black-and-white photo, “Moonrise, Hernandez, New Mexico”. Pretty cool indeed.

Also pretty cool is Lyle Lovett, and it is his birthday today! Happy Birthday, Lyle! Hats off to you–67 years old and still touring.

Today is also the anniversary of the death of Ezra Pound (1885-1972) who was a major figure in the modernist poetry movement. An indulged son of privilege, he was always somewhat “out of key with his time”–another way to say, he never fit in. I was amused to discover that his first job out of graduate school was teaching at Wabash College in Crawfordsville, Indiana, which he considered the “sixth circle of hell”. Well, la di da.

Not surprisingly, he was asked to leave Wabash shortly after starting there.

Anyway, his “legacy” is certainly a mixed one, and he is mostly remembered for his advancement of some of the best-known modernist writers of the early 20th century. All the cool kids: Eliot, Joyce, Lewis, Frost, Williams, Hemingway, H.D., Aldington, and Aiken, Cummings, Bunting, Ford, and Marianne Moore, who became one of his staunchest defenders throughout his controversial career. He lived a long life and is buried in the Protestant section of the San Michele cemetery in Venice. Supposedly Pound had wanted to be buried in Idaho (where he was born) with his bust by Henri Gaudier-Brzeska on his grave. Tant pis. He wouldn’t have fit in there either.

I would rather toast Noah Beery, Jr. who also died on this day in 1994. He was, of course, a supporting actor best known for playing James Garner’s father in The Rockford Files. However, he acted in a lot of movies, most notably as a pilot in Only Angels Have Wings (1939) and as a cowboy in Red River (1948)–both directed by Howard Hawks.

So on this first day of November, look up at the sky, listen to some good music, read a poem, watch an old movie, embrace your supporting part.

Amen.

*See Zechariah, chapter 4

“Hier stehe Ich, Ich kann nicht anders.”*

by chuckofish

Today is Reformation Day, which commemorates Martin Luther’s action in nailing the Ninety-Five Theses to the church door at Wittenberg on October 31, 1517. Little did he know how the Lord would use him to ignite a movement that would change the world. This was, indeed, a very big deal–one of those “hinges” in history that we talk about.

Here’s Kevin DeYoung’s take on the glory of the Reformation and the importance of a clean conscience.

I interrupted my October scary-movie line-up to watch Luther (2003) starring Joseph Fiennes (and an excellent cast of British and German actors) as this is my new tradition. I highly recommend it. You can also watch Ligonier’s “Luther: The Life and Legacy of the German Reformer” on YouTube:

Here are 5 Things you Should Know about Martin Luther. And if you thought the RC veneration of relics was a thing of the past, you are quite wrong.

Well, I will drink a beer in honor of old Martin Luther tonight because that seems appropriate.

In other news, we turned on the heat because it turned frigid over the weekend.

I guess fall is (almost) over.

*Here I stand, I can do no other.” (Martin Luther)

So great a cloud of witnesses*

by chuckofish

It was a dark, rainy fall weekend and the wee bud had a bye in his soccer team’s schedule, so you will not be getting my usual repetitive weekend wrap-up. Go ahead and sigh with relief, oh loyal readers.

We did, however, arrange to have my large glass doll case moved from my house to daughter #1’s house and that was my major accomplishment of the weekend. Our friends in the crew at Davis Place Estate Sales obliged us and did the heavy lifting and carrying up and down several flights of stairs. I meant to take pictures, but forgot. But here it is home now in daughter #1’s craft room.

Sunday was Reformation Sunday and we sang “A Mighty Fortress is Our God” in church (with trumpet accompaniment) with appropriate gusto. Afterwards we enjoyed total depravity casserole (with tater tots!) at our house and our first fire of the season.

And Halloween Peeps from Aunt Mary!

And though this world, with devils filled,
should threaten to undo us,
we will not fear, for God has willed
his truth to triumph through us.
The prince of darkness grim,
we tremble not for him;
his rage we can endure,
for lo! his doom is sure;
one little word shall fell him.

(Martin Luther, 1529)

The peace of Christ be with you.

*Hebrews 12:1

Still living our best lives

by chuckofish

Happy Friday from daughter #2, with a little life check-in following our update a few months ago. I am happy to report that we are all still so thrilled to be at home together. Today’s happy routine was hard won — Ida did, indeed, have to relearn how to nap, and Katie had to accept that weekdays are still not weekends. For a while there, the girls only slept simultaneously for 10-20 minutes each day. Before long, though, we got into our groove: Ida takes 2 long naps a day, and Katie has an overlapping “quiet time” in the afternoon. (If she doesn’t fall asleep, she happily performs a one-woman-show of musical tunes for her stuffed animals in bed.) While I had imagined that I would need to plan capital-A Activities to keep us all occupied, that is far from true. We do chores together, we go to the park, we eat meals. We cuddle.

Like a lot.

Months 6-9 have been wild for Ida. She has learned how to sit, crawl, stand up while supported, eat solids, and more. She has also learned how to assert herself. While she once sat contentedly passive while her sister ran the show, she will now shriek her demands. Hold me! Feed me! Let me put your shoes in my mouth! I think it’s a good thing. (The assertive nature, not putting shoes in one’s mouth.)

What is family for if not to teach you that the world doesn’t revolve around you alone? Katie has, for the most part, taken this lesson in stride.

Because really, I can’t help but think being home with Ida and me has only amplified Katie’s own motherly, caretaking impulse. Babydoll and Katie’s animals receive around-the-clock attention, carried to and fro, put to bed in their bassinets, diapered and re-diapered, fed nutritious meals etc. While sometimes this can make life a little harder — well no, sweetie, babydoll does not need the highchair that Ida will sit in momentarily; we do not need to give “real food” to Clown Bear, and actually I do need this $0.36 diaper for the actual baby in the room — I also find it very sweet!

And of course, Ida receives ample care from Katie as well. She has an uncanny ability to guess which toy or teether Ida might like in a given moment (I’m serious! There are preferences at play!). She loves to hold Ida and has even, on occasion, been allowed to hold Ida while standing up — it is a sight to behold, as both sisters are grinning and also look like they must be deeply uncomfortable. And Katie loves stroking Ida’s cheeks just as much as I do, which is to say, a lot.

Well I’m not so much providing an update here as veering into weepy mode…

So I’ll try to wrap it up.

Sometimes I imagine what someone might think if they dropped into our house right in the middle of things — me, a grown woman, singing “Hands are for clapping” in complete and utter earnest; a three year old asking for a “way high boost” and executing a cheerleader’s split jump at no apparent prompting when her father lifts her in the air; two adults discussing a clock as if it is a roommate of the toddler’s with functioning eyes and a genuine sleep routine; a baby army crawling through a room and leaving a Godzilla-style wake of destruction through toys, books, and folded laundry (there’s always folded laundry out). It can be quite a scene. But it’s the best.

Fifty-six years of not blinking

by chuckofish

Recently Sir Michael Caine announced that he is retiring from acting.  “I keep saying I’m going to retire. Well I am now,” he said. Thankfully we have all his old movies to watch (and one more new one on the way). Simon Pegg sums up his career rather well:

I read his memoir a few years ago and he is a stand up guy. So hats off to Michael Caine and a toast tonight to his illustrious career. I think I’ll watch Zulu (1964).

Sigh. We are all getting older. Think of the Rolling Stones and ol’ Mick Jagger who is 80. Good grief. Here he is in 1964 making his debut on Ed Sullivan. He was twenty-one.

O God, from my youth you have taught me,
    and I still proclaim your wondrous deeds.
So even to old age and gray hairs,
    O God, do not forsake me,
until I proclaim your might to another generation,
    your power to all those to come.

(Psalm 71:17-18)

Chin chin. Do carry on with your mudpies.

That we may reap, Great work is done while we’re asleep

by chuckofish

(Wendell Berry)

The days are getting shorter, aren’t they? I hope you are enjoying these wonderful fall days.

Meanwhile, Trevin Wax has been wonderingHow can anyone preach Jesus without mentioning judgment? How do you deal with his parables? With his constant and consistent warnings about perdition? With his either-ors and contrasts? Even if you fashion yourself a “red-letter Christian” who waves off Paul and the other apostles, you can’t miss the red letters that warn about destruction and losing your soul, images of a worm that won’t die and a fire that never goes out.”

I have been wondering about that as well–where do people get this idea that Jesus is non-judgmental? In reality he is the mediator and judge of us all. He tells us not to judge, lest we be judged. But make no mistake, we will all be judged by Jesus.

Along those lines, Anne says, “I am always excessively bemused about so many pastor-influencers who purport to speak about a God they insist cannot be known by his own words. How do they know what it means to ‘Follow in the way of Jesus’ when they will not let Jesus have the last, authoritative, and final Word? How can they possibly say what God is like when they reject his Law, his instructions, his precepts, his version of the story? Why does anyone still listen to this?”

They listen because it is what they want to hear. The truth is too hard. It has always been too hard. I am currently reading the book of John in my daily reading and Jesus emphasizes many of his really important statements by starting off with “Most assuredly, I say to you…”. For instance, John 6:53:

“Then Jesus said to them, “Most assuredly, I say to you, unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink His blood, you have no life in you.”

You will recall that after this long, difficult section in John 6:53-65, “many of His disciples went back and walked with him no more.” Indeed.

Well, consider this your weekly reminder to read your Bible. Get to know the real Jesus.

And here’s a bonus pic of Katie and Ida in their two little bees finery.

The painting is Autumn Roadside, Kentucky by William Forsyth, 1903