Showing posts with label life illustration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label life illustration. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

Guest Post- Ellie and the Weeds

It was hotter than it should have been for that day as my daughter and I were evaluating the state of our lawn. We walked hand in hand, barefoot in the tall grass, and I bent down to pull up a weed. Ellie looked at me with an expression of outrage that belied her age.

“Mommy, why you pull that up?”
“Because it’s a weed, honey.” My fingers reached over and over again into the warm earth as my thoughts drifted elsewhere. I thought about what I was going to make for dinner, what time I needed to wake up the baby, where my lost car keys could have gone, and many other seemingly important questions. I felt a tug at the back of my shirt and shifted my focus.
“Hi, Ellie. What do you need, honey?”
“What’s a weed?” The curious blue eyes were searching me, waiting for an answer that would clarify why mommy was tearing up the yard that daddy had been working so hard on this summer.
“Oh baby, a weed is not a good thing. It is going to try and kill all of our grass.” I tried to read her face to see if this explanation satisfied her. I imagined it would; at the tender age of three and a half, she had already become my rule-enforcer, my child of justice, the one who always pointed out the color of upcoming traffic lights as we drove and corrected children on the playground for using “potty talk.”
Her eyes widened and she crouched down, eye to eye with the killer weeds. An air of righteousness overtook her, as she said in her sternest voice,
“Oh dear. You are trying to kill grass. Naughty, naughty.” She tipped her chin back to look at me, the sun flooding her face, and she smiled the smile that meant, “I took care of it.” I patted her fiery red head.
“Thanks Ellie. Now run along and play.” I watched as she dusted the dirt cautiously from her knees and shifted her hair out of her face. As she started walking towards her twin sister, she announced,
“Abby, those weeds are trying to kill something. We gotta get ‘em.” Abby, more similar to Ellie in looks than moral reasoning, turned briefly and gave a supportive horrified look to show Ellie she had heard the news. Then she went back to drinking water from the sprinkler while doing what looked to be a choreographed frenzy of joy.
The next day, Ellie approached me while I was sitting in the yard, watching the sun set in the trees behind out house. My heart was heavy with the gravity of daily life, and as she always did, Ellie sensed that something was not right.
“Mommy, why you feeling that?” Her choice of words took me off guard; I myself unable to identify the “that” in what I was feeling. Her tiny, sweaty hand ran along my arm and I looked into a deep place in her, replying gently,
“Today mommy is feeling kind of down. It‘s alright, mommy is ok. Just thinking about things.” I didn’t want her to feel my burden, so instead of letting my thoughts get the better of me, I began to tickle her and roll her around in the hot grass. A look of shock came over her and I pulled my arms back, trying to imagine what could have upset her.
“Baby, are you ok? Did mommy hurt you?” Her eyes were looking over my head and I tried to follow her gaze.
“No. I think I see a wicked. I gonna get it.” Arms on hips, she walked a few steps from where we were, her tiny sneakers carving a path of determination. She lowered her body deliberately and pointed at a weed that was towering over the grass.
“Look.” She turned to see what effect her discovery would have on me. Assured that I had seen the problem, she clarified her concern.
“Is that a wicked or a grass?”
Where she heard the word wicked in reference to a weed, I don’t know, but I do know that there was great importance in the elimination of the correct green species in our yard. God forbid she should pull up a piece of healthy grass!
What a funny little girl, I thought, and then I realized something . To the three year old eye, and maybe even to the thirty year old eye, weeds and grass look very similar. Same color, same feeling, same texture.
In fact, I realized that the “wicked” and the grass were only discernibly different to me because I had seen them for enough years to know the difference. I looked down into red cheeks and pursed lips.
“That’s a weed.” She gave a nod of supportive confirmation and turned toward the little green enemy.
“Hmm. You tryin’ to kill something?” She interrogated the weed, either out of a sense of power over it or a sense of unease about what was to come next. She looked at me one more time, waiting for me to tell her, as I do several times each day, that this was not a good choice. My silence must have been translated as permission, and she reached, gently, to touch the weed.
But instead of pulling the whole thing out, she touched the tiny leaves of the “wicked,” and pulled it just enough to remove a sliver. She discarded it quickly and reached in for more. I watched as she did this several times, not at all put out by the fact that she appeared to be doing very little to stop the killer weeds that were threatening our grass as we knew it.
It was at this moment, as I sat beside her in the grass, that I realized God was teaching me more than proper lawn care. I thought about how many times, even in a day, I reach to pull the “wicked” one leaf at a time, and all the while it is growing bigger and stronger all around me. I am seasoned enough in my walk to identify the weeds in my life, and much too tentative at removing them.
I sat and stared at my Ellie, so much like her mommy in so many ways, as she delicately plucked leaf from leaf. I wanted her to learn more from the moment, as I had, and so I put my fingers around hers, noticing that we both had dirt under our fingernails. I moved her hands away and took firm grip on the base of the weed.
“Here, let me show you.” I jiggled it as I went to make sure the root came up as well. Side to side, delicately at first, and then when I sensed it would come up in one whole piece, I tugged it out in one quick motion.
Ellie marveled at the long roots dangling down and the gap left in our ground.
"See how mommy got the whole thing? You want me to help you learn?” She nodded and I pointed to another weed a few feet away. She rose confidently and approached the “wicked” with a new realization: I know your secret.
We spend the next hour walking side by side, saying very little, rejoicing in the holes that were cropping up all over daddy’s lawn. For both of us, there was a sense that they were a small price to pay for the greater good.
We both got better as we went along, learning the way different weeds come up out of the dirt. Some are long and skinny, and those just take one good pull. Others are leafy and the roots are stubborn.. Sometimes you have to dig all around it and tug gently. We became a great team.
As the waning sun looked down on us that Thursday night, I learned something about the boldness we should claim in approaching our sin. We kneel, we face it eye to eye, we clarify that it is not of our Lord, and then, in utter confidence, we grasp it by its strongest point and destroy it. We don’t have to do it alone, and we don’t have to do it in fear.
We are tended to by the great Gardener Himself, whose deepest longings are met as we walk in the joy of gaping holes that He can pour Himself into and raise anew.
I pray that you learn to be bold with the sins you face in your life, not as one who fears the gardening, but as one whose desire to be holy, blameless and pure as they sense their Father beckoning them through the grass.
About the Author
Angie is the proud wife of Todd Smith of Selah, and the blessed mommy to Abby and Ellie (6), Kate (3), and Audrey Caroline, who passed away the day she was born...

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Friday, October 22, 2010

The Truth About Elvis

I wrote this several years ago, but it's still one of my favorite quirky stories about myself...Note to self: remember to add this to my quirky facts list. I wish I could say it's a made up story, but it's not...what can I say? I was a creative kid.




When I was eight, I married Elvis.  No, not the singer... but he did come complete with the black leather jacket, slicked back hair and chops.  He even smoked at the tender age of ten and a half.  He was so very cool. 

We were married in a simple ceremony on the back fire escape of the Episcopal Church on Morningside Drive in Hopkinsville, KY. It was a beautiful fall day; the leaves had just started to turn fiery red and amber gold.  He wore his best leather jacket (it had zippers every where) and his good jeans, the one's without the holes in them.  I wore my Easter dress and my white patent leather shoes. 

I had a fourth grader help me with the marriage license.  It seemed only proper to have a marriage license to make the whole thing legal; after all, this was the man of my dreams, and the one I would live with for the rest of my life....after I graduated from elementary school, of course.  I was pretty sure one wasn't allowed to buy a house of one's own until you were at least in junior high. We hand wrote the marriage license in ink, the writing utensil of permanence, on Red Chief writing paper (you know, the writing tablet with the lines...I wanted everything to be straight and all.)

Once the legal document was prepared, we talked one of the altar boys from the church into officiating the ceremony and marched up the fire escape to the sounds of my friend, Elizabeth, humming the wedding march.  The altar boy said some very official sounding stuff about "sickness and health, life and death, richer or poorer (I just knew we would be some of the richer though)" and then, "husband and wife...you may (insert snort and snicker here) kiss the bride."  Elvis leaned over and laid a small peck on my cheek (my first kiss) and it was all official.  We were married.  I was thrilled.  My parents, while they indulged my overactive imagination, were not nearly as happy with my chosen husband as I was.  I didn't understand. 

You see I had chosen the son of THE prominent figure in our town.  He was a Grand Wizard! Of what I didn't know or understand until later, but at the time it seemed such a very big deal.  Everybody knew who Elvis' daddy was, and were, on some level, afraid of him.  I thought it was a great match.  Everybody knew my daddy, too.  He was the Parks and Recreation Director- a public figure of great importance in a town the size of Hopkinsville.  It was perfect. 

For three weeks, I lived in wedded bliss.  Elvis would walk by my house on his way to school to "pick me up."  He would carry my books for me, and sometimes even hold my hand when no one was around.  I was simply mad about him.  In return, I would buy him cigarettes at the local Jiffy Mart when Mama sent me for groceries.  We would meet on the BMX track behind our houses and trade:  a peck on the cheek for a pack of Marlboros. 

It was a fair deal, I thought.  Until I got caught.  My Mama was so mad at me she made me go to my room and sit in the dark for the whole night.  I thought about running away to live with my husband's family, but I couldn't get my window open, so I just sat there, miserable, dreaming of my knight in black leather.  


I wasn't allowed to buy groceries at the local store after that.  Mama had called the owner and told him to, under no circumstances, allow me to purchase cigarettes (I had been telling him they were for her...believable story; she did smoke at the time).  Without the cigarettes to bond us together, Elvis and I could find nothing in common.  Our relationship disintegrated.  He stopped walking by my house in the morning, or looking at me in the halls when we passed for lunchtime, or stopping to say,"Hi" when we were out riding on the BMX track.  I went back to the fourth grader to file for divorce.  We drew up an official document, signed in cursive and everything, but I had to have the fourth grader "represent" me....Elvis wouldn't even come to the door when I tried to serve him with the papers.  I was devastated. 

I later discovered that Elvis had been forbidden to see me shortly before our divorce.  You see, my daddy had built a basketball court on the “colored” side of town.  Elvis' daddy, being a Grand Wizard of the KKK and all, got upset and burned a cross in our yard. I didn't understand what burning crosses had to do with basketball or marrying Elvis, but it did open my eyes to a very cruel reality:  people, in general, if left to their own devices, will, eventually, break your heart (especially really cool guys in black leather). I still don't know for sure if Elvis really loved me (and we were torn apart by his parent's bigotry) or my cigarettes (and we were torn apart by my parent's discipline), but I did finally figure out why my parents had discouraged our star-crossed union.

I still have those "official" documents.  Both neatly printed on Red Chief tablet paper.  The marriage license in ink, supposed to be permanent, forever.  The divorce decree in pencil, I didn't want that to be permanent, in case Elvis decided cigarettes were less important to him than his young wife.  Both signed in the shaky cursive of a third grader.  One forged with all the innocent naiveté of a girl who had not yet begun to truly understand people and ulterior motives.  One written with the desperate hope that some terrible misunderstanding had taken place and would all be worked out in time.

But both taught me a very valuable lesson:  If you have to trade cigarettes for kisses, don't write anything in ink.    

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Go Pluck Yourself



I grab the tweezers and lean in close to the mirror.  Bracing for the pain, I stretch the skin taut and take a firm hold on the stray hair- and then *pluck*!

OWWWWW! Man..that one smarted!

Let me just say before I jump into the life illustration, the woman who told me “the more you pluck, the thinner and less likely your eyebrows are to grow back” lied through her teeth!  But I whole-heartedly believed her because, well, she was one of those women who so obviously had suffered a vicious waxing/plucking accident losing any trace of brow in the process and overcompensated by drawing a crazy-high arch in the middle of her forehead with a pencil that clearly was not in the range of natural hair color.  But I’ve been plucking for years and so far, no luck in the “not growing back” department.

This morning when I was jerking short, fat-follicled hairs out of my eyebrows it occurred to me that habits-good and bad- are quite like my eyebrows.

1)      I have sparse, but super-long eyebrow hairs for the most part. I’m consistently doing the eyebrow version of the bald man’s comb-over. Kind of like the good habits I have, I’m often found stretching them, fitting them in places where they don’t necessarily belong in an effort to hide the places there is a lack.

2)      I have a uni-brow.  It’s tragic, but true.  I have tons of eyebrow in places where I clearly don’t want them to be (think soul patch in the middle of my forehead.) Like bad habits and sin, I have to regularly pluck these lil devils- sometimes daily- to keep them from cropping up where they are not wanted.

3)      Sometimes good ones have to be trimmed or plucked for the good of the overall brow.  Every now and then there are a couple of hairs that are normally well-behaved, that just won’t conform to the comb-over. Most of the time I trim these, in the hopes that they will continue to grow in a way that works with the whole brow- but sometimes the good ones have to be plucked out to make room for an even better one to grow.  Much like habits, sometimes you need to change even a good, successful habit in order to make room for an awesome one.

4)      Plucking hurts. Sometimes it makes my eyes water and leaves a red mark.  Sometimes I barely notice it.  Most of the time, the hairs I have to pluck over and over again are less painful to weed out.  Just like behaviors and habits and sin that have to die each day as we grow and change and groom ourselves to be beautiful reflections of God’s image, those things we have to pluck out each day become less painful in the long run.

So there you have it- life lessons from eyebrow plucking.

What about you? What habits do you need to pluck out today?