Showing posts with label advent. Show all posts
Showing posts with label advent. Show all posts

Monday, November 28, 2016

A Tiny Home, a Large Storage Shed, and Advent

A few weeks ago, we went to a Tiny Home Festival.  It was both really awesome and really boring.
 There were SO! MANY! PEOPLE! and lines everywhere, for everything.  But it didn't feel crowded.   A study in contradictions, really.



Then we came home and I tackled our "bonus" room, which currently functions as a storage unit.  Well, started tackling it.  Got rid of a few boxes of stuff, to a St. Vincent de Paul store and to the garbage.  Put a few more books on the shelf.

Then I found a three inch binder:  a photo album from my college graduation.  THREE INCHES! I huffed and puffed to myself, sure that an event 20 years ago, no matter how momentous, was not worth a three inch album (especially considering there's more memory books buried in there).


I opened it to the first page, and saw my godmother and her daughter, who surprised me by driving from NJ (after flying from FL).  She wouldn't miss it, she said.  Then I saw my independent-minded brother, and remembered when I was just a kid and we DROVE around the Gulf of Mexico to attend his graduation in New Orleans.  There were my parents, looking more or less the same as I think of them,  Even though they looked... younger.    The next page was both of my brothers and I - with my oldest brother having an uneven haircut.  And then I remembered- this was only a few months after he had fallen off a staircase and cracked his skull about halfway across.  He recovered quite well, except his hair hadn't yet recovered from the surgery scars.  And then I realized the first few photos, of my family in the chairs, waiting for graduation to begin:  all that was because of Steve.  He was the rabid photographer.


That's when I realized I was attached to my stuff.

The Winnie the Pooh book in Scots is so much fun to read aloud (almost impossible for me to read silently).  It reminds me of the trip we took, the people we met, the culture(s) I began discovering.   The three inch album says more than the photos inside:  it reminds me of the brother who's since died, and the irrepressible joy for family that he had (he sparked a few other irrepressible emotions- we were siblings, after all).

It's not all that emotionally laden, of course. And there's a few tough decisions I can make about paring down the over-abundance I have.  Now that I'm in my 40s, I've got a bit more history behind me.  But I've realized a lot of what I own is about what COULD be:  what kind of life or hobbies I could have, what kind of person I want to be.  I think letting go of that and accepting what my life currently would be a giant step toward the simplicity I crave.

I don't generally think of Advent as simple...  It's generally a little frantic and a little overwhelming with the preparations, the fun stuff, the church stuff.   Daily devotions feel more like an "ought to" instead of a "inspiring" habit.  This year, I was trying to psych myself up for all that, as usual.

Then I realized the family devotional I bought only has 4 WEEKLY reflections.  And the first Sunday was about all the empty spaces in Advent:  empty stockings and trees, and homes not yet decorated.  And how that emptiness is really about HOPE.

So that's what I'm focusing on.  What can I empty from my stuff, in a way that gives me HOPE for new life?      And maybe even a tiny home with a big storage shed nearby :)

Sunday, December 1, 2013

It's Chri---- Wait!

It's Advent! Which has become one of my favorite seasons.  Even if half the world ignores it.  Even though "wait" is one of the most frustrating responses to my prayers.  Even when I rush through it and forget all sorts of things, or when my plans downshift suddenly and disappear.  There's something... comforting about this kind of hopeful waiting.  All the church-y songs have such a great wellspring of hope in them...


 

This will be our first Christmas without my brother Steve.  Which seems unbelievable, really.  It's amazing how much I miss him, when we didn't *see* each other regularly... but we did talk often.  And he loved Christmas.  A few weeks ago, Kaden asked us, "Remember when Uncle Steve drove his motorcycle to see us for Christmas? (pause as we say yes, and he gets a faraway look in his eyes)   That was nice."   It was, buddy, it really really was.  And the memories are nice, too.

Today I found out a friend of mine lost her younger brother.  He died unexpectedly due to heart failure...  at 34. I didn't know him well, per se, but I knew he was one of the good guys.  My heart goes out to their family... and another person goes on our prayer list.  It's really odd to have so many friends who have lost brothers- at different ages (late 20s to early 60s) and in different circumstances (most accidents or undiagnosed health issues)... none of them were expected.  Not a club I imagined joining.

Today (yesterday, actually 11/30) started the St. Andrew Christmas Novena.  In the past, I've never been big on novena prayers.  But I just finished one for our new-to-us parish namesake, St. Catherine Laboure, and I've missed it the last few days.  So when I heard about this one (again), I thought- this is the perfect one to do for all the brothers who've passed.  (St. Andrew being the brother to St. Peter).  Although, honestly, I'm not aiming for saying the short prayer 15x a day, but rather 3x (at meals) (actually, that might be 5x daily, given my pregnancy habits).  If you have any intentions you'd like me to remember, just send them along (email, fb message, comment below- however :).


For Steve, Rick, Chris, Andy, Vince, Jim S. and Henry...