Tuesday, April 29, 2008
Lifetime Reading list revisited
From college.
Actually, the date on it is May 5, 1988. Almost 20 years to the day...wow.
Dr. Guillory, (only the most awesome English professor ever!) had us put one together. There are seven categories:
World Classics
English Lit Classics
American Lit Classics
Current Best-Sellers
Science, Tech and Business
Bios and Autobios
Personal Category (dealer's choice)
40 books total.
I got an A- on the list.
What's that?
How many?
How many wha?
OH! How many books have I actually read from my list these twenty years?
Um...just a sec.
Three.
Er...really two and a half...if I'm honest...
Sigh. That's pathetic.
There are some incredible books listed! I've read books over these twenty years...so why haven't I read the ones on my list?
Well, I'll be honest. Part of my list was purely for the grade. I mean, Dr. Guillory had specific favorites of his own...which he shared in class...so I may have *cough cough* appealed to his book love interests strictly for a good grade.
I am not proud of that.
However, tell you what. I plan on reading at least half of these books this summer. I'm going to make it my goal. 20 books in 20 weeks. I think it's possible!
Do you have goals? Are you maybe beating yourself up about a goal you set but haven't achieved for some reason? I suggest you jump in where you're at and start again! Don't let 20 years go by...but if they have...there's still time!! :)
Now...which one should I read first? Walden or The Old Man and the Sea? Hm...maybe Silent Spring or The Screwtape Letters...there's also the bio on Alfred Hitchcock...that looks interesting...
Amazon.com HERE I COME!!!!
Thursday, April 24, 2008
From dusty files come dewy roses...
Today however, I found something I'd written maybe three years ago(??)...and it had an impact on me this morning...so...I'm going to go ahead and copy it here for you to read. Enjoy it...
My Walk With Jesus....
"My walk with Jesus begins with my strolling down the road by the bike path over past Lake of the Woods towards the trailer park. I walked that road a lot when we lived there; either with the kiddos or by myself. It's a good place to be quiet...pretty remote. Most of the people stay on the bike path...I like this road. It is older, and leads to a little patch of woods.
I picked this place (three different places flew through my mind before I landed on this one) because one day I was walking there and I started singing "In the Garden". I used to sing a lot when I was younger while walking home from school. I'd sing all kinds of songs, not just hymns...but on this day in particular I was singing that song. I guess because there were billions of birds singing, and the sun was shining, and it was pleasantly cool. I was by myself at the time and the song just came out naturally. It's one of my favorite hymns.
My Jesus wears blue jeans. Faded, comfortable, broken-in blue jeans. He wears tennis shoes. And his hair is on the longish side. (I've tried to imagine Him with short hair; but too many years of Bible pictures and His "hippie" look have tainted me...and short hair on Him just doesn't 'feel right'.)
Today He's wearing a blue denim shirt. He's taller than me; though I wouldn't call Him a tall guy. He's got the popular goatee thing going on too. Really, you wouldn't look twice at Him if you saw Him in a crowd. I mean, He's not incredibly gorgeous. A little on the lanky side, actually. And His face isn't anything great...but He's got some wonderful eyes. Big, brown and warm. Smiling eyes, sad eyes, angry....even hurt eyes. He doesn't have to say anything verbally, really...because it's all there on His face.
At first I see Him from a distance of maybe, um...100 ft. or so. I know it's Him. In fact, I sense Him before I actually see Him. His hands are in his pockets. His stance is relaxed...yet expectant...like He's been waiting for me to get there, and is anxious to see me...but He doesn't have anything pressing to get to...so He's in no hurry.
I smile hesitantly. He grins. And then I grin. (When He smiles at me, He always makes me smile....even when I don't want to; when I don't feel like smiling...it's annoying sometimes!)
We walk. He falls in step with me. I tell Him why I like this place. Why I didn't picture us on a beach because I hate being hot. He laughs at that and picks up a stick. It's a stick that has bark remnants on it and He begins peeling off the bark as we talk and walk. His hands are always doing something...
I say something cliche' like, "It's nice to be here walking with You..." and He looks at me sideways for a second. He doesn't say anything, but gives the stick a toss. It doesn't go very far...
He puts His arm around me then and we keep walking in silence together. It's relaxing not having to say something. To just be with Him...moving along together...with a familiar rhythm."
I come to the garden alone
While the dew is still on the roses
And the voice I hear
falling on my ear
The Son of God discloses...
And He walks with me,
and He talks with me,
And He tells me I am His own;
And the joy we share
as we tarry there,
None other has ever known.
He speaks, and the sound of His voice,
Is so sweet the birds hush their singing,
And the melody
that He gave to me
Within my heart is ringing.
I’d stay in the garden with Him
Though the night around me be falling,
But He bids me go;
through the voice of woe
His voice to me is calling...
My friends, I encourage you to take a walk with Him today. It'll be worth it...I promise.
Monday, April 21, 2008
WILLingness to Forgive...
It was good. Altho the comment was made that it's easier for some to understand that they are forgiven than it is to forgive other people.
I dunno. Sometimes I think it would be easier to forgive other people than forgive myself.
I can be really hard on myself and carry stuff around that I don't need to mess with.
"I shouldn't have mentioned that! Why did I say something so dumb? Now she'll think I don't know what I'm doing and I'll be in big trouble! Why am I so stupid?! What's wrong with me?!"
And so on...and so on.
It's perfectionism, I think. The pressure I put upon myself to perform to some standard of whatever. It causes me to question myself and my actions TOO often...if that makes sense.
I'll dwell on my mistakes for days on end...
ugh.
How do you fix that? Well, Aaron talked about what true forgiveness looks like..."choosing to accept the blood of Jesus as full payment for what the offender did...it's not feelings based...and it's an act of will." I'm considering how that applies to forgiving myself...and it falls into the act of will area. I have to replace my negative comments about myself with something else.
That's not easy. It actually WILL take an act of will.
Saturday, April 19, 2008
Like It or Lump It....and then...Love It!
Every so often, a phrase will come into my head...and I wonder 'where did that come from anyways?'
And thanks to the Internet...I can get some very interesting background info on phrases.
Which I dig. Dig like nobody's business.
That's not the phrase, by the way.
I don't care for beets.
That's not the phrase either...because I know exactly what that means.
I. don't. like. beets.
Yuck.
According to my Mom, I've NEVER cared for beets. EVER. Didn't eat 'em as a baby even. Why, you may ask?
They smell funny.
Really...really...funny. Like...'funky shoe smell' funny.
To me, anyways.
Now, I know that over the years, your tastes can change. And so, every so often, I'll try a beet. Just to see if maybe this is the year that they rise above the turnip or radish and become the "Root of My Choice" or something.
Nope. Still don't care for 'em.
Ugh.
Let's change the subject for a second, okay? I gotta get this smell of beets outta my head.
I've had a hard week. This past week has not been a very pleasant one in terms of 'fun for Carrie'. I'm sure that if we took a poll, many of you probably had parts of your week that weren't much fun either. What with tax day and all, it's a given that you encountered some difficult stuff. Maybe some difficult people.
How'd you handle it?
Did you like it?
OR
Did you lump it?
Like it or lump it...is the phrase I've been thinking about...and the phrase basically means this:
(informal) if you tell someone to like it or lump it, you mean they must accept a situation they do not like, because they cannot change it.
Hm....interesting. So, where'd it start?
The two recorded forms date from at least as early as c. 1860. . . . Dickens, 1864, 'If you don't like it, it's open to you to lump it.'
Still...I think that people have probably been saying something similar for a REALLY, REALLY LONG TIME....don't you agree?
So...what's a 'lump' anyways?
Turning now to the Oxford English Dictionary:
: LUMP, v. 1. intr. To look sulky or disagreeable . . .: [Quotation:] 1577 "They stand lumping and lowring . . . for that they imagine that their evill lucke proceedeth of him." : 2. trans. In antithesis with "like": To be displeased at (something that must be endured), colloq.: [Quotations:] 1833 "Let 'em lump it if they don't like it." . . . 1878 "I'll buy clothes as I see fit, and if anybody don't like it, why they may lump it, that's all."
Well, there you go.
You don't have a choice. I mean, it claims that you have a choice...you can choose to like it or not....but the situation itself is not changing...so...you're stuck with the lump.
'Stuck with the lump' is fun to type. Even more fun to say aloud. Say it with me...'stuck with the lump'.
You know what?
My husband likes beets. There are several people close to me that like beets. And you know what I do?
Each Christmas I will make Harvard Beets for the beet eaters in my family. I don't enjoy it...but I lump it. Because I love them and respect their beet-likin'...no matter how inconceivable it is to me that anyone could like beets.
Another thought: (please bear with me...like I said, it's been a rough week!)
Not everyone likes me.
As hard as that is for me to believe...I mean, c'mon...it's ME for crying out loud! If I am anything, it's likable.
So what's wrong with people that don't like me? (all three and a half of them)
Nothing.
I'm just a beet to them. That's all.
I'm someone's beet.
(snort! That's fun to type as well. Even more fun to say aloud. Say it with me: I'm someone's beet.)
heeheeheeheeheeheeheehee
Okay...so...where are we?
Like it or lump it....we're stuck with the lumps...and I'm someone's beet. Right. Got it.
Now...hopefully, those whose beet I am...while they may not like me...will still treat me with respect because they recognize the fact that someone else likes me...maybe to someone...I'm their 'root of choice'.
Do you do that with your beets? Do you respect them...recognize that Someone likes them...and therefore acknowledge them...at least once a year?
Yet another thought: (I really apologize about this lengthiness...but I have been seriously thinking about this for the past week now...and I think it's starting to make more sense to me.)
I got an email from someone today. A forwarded email that said, "Love the people who treat you right. Forget about the ones who don't...because life is short."
Hm. What if I altered it a little? So that it read: "Love the roots who treat you right. Forget about the beets...because life is short."
That doesn't sound like what I trying to do. As much as I'd LOVE to 'forget about the beets'...my beet-eatin' family members remind me about them every so often.
You know what else it says? "Love".
Now, I don't "love" turnips or radishes. I like them. But I don't know that I love them.
Hm...love. I've been seriously thinking about love lately. Unconditional love.
Why?
Because some of the things that have happened this week have made me consider it. And so I ask questions. Do I conditionally love? Or is my love unconditional? Do I like everything that happens to me? Do I like all the people I have to interact with? How do I love them when I don't even know that I like them? What am I supposed to do?
Hm....hard stuff to consider. Especially difficult when I get what seems to be conflicting answers.
Like it...or lump it.
BUT....is that it?
I think...as I mentioned...that we don't have control over the situations that come our way sometimes. THAT'S what we have to "lump".
But that's not all. That's not the end...there's more.
We don't have to like something...but we do have to love it.
Like my beets.
I don't like the beets. But I can see their value to others. I can see that they have a purpose for being here on Earth. That because there are people I love that like them....then I can love them based on that love.
Does that make any sense? Therefore, I don't like beets. BUT I love them.
The beet is not important to me...but it has importance. So I need to treat it that way.
Thankfully, there's Someone I know who loves each and every beet.
Like it or lump it...
Monday, April 14, 2008
Enough
It's one of those $26,238 ones that you know, you get from the hospital when you've been a patient there. My Mom got it last year and I like it because it's numbered (like a measuring cup) with ounces and metric something or other than means pretty much nothing to me...but lots to those hospital folks.
I like seeing how much I've got in my glass. It's a 32 ounce cup and right at the moment that I glanced at it...the water line was at 16 ounces.
Yep. Exactly halfway.
EXACTLY!
Like Goldilocks...it's 'just right'. Not too much. Not too little. Balanced. Even.
How often does that happen??
Like never!
At least, it seems that way to me sometimes. I don't know about you, but I get tired of fighting the constant battle of ENOUGH.
"I haven't got enough time to clean my room!"
"I've had just about enough of that backtalk from you, young man!"
"There isn't enough flour to make the banana bread. I'll have to get more."
"There's more than enough banana bread! Please! Take some with you!"
"Is there enough gas in the Jeep to get to town?"
"I've spent enough money on gas for the Jeep this past week!"
"My swimsuit from last year isn't big enough for me now."
"Have I got enough days to diet before summer starts so I can fit into that swimsuit?"
I think you get the picture.
Too much. Too little.
We are so interesting. We want more than we need. On the other hand, we'll fall short and not have an adequate amount of something...whether it's money...or time...or flour for banana bread.
We are not easily satisfied. Sigh...
It's hard to deal with enough sometimes. We want so desperately to have more than we already have...and then again...perhaps we've dealt with something for so long that we are more than ready to get rid of it. It's too much. Like five loaves of banana bread. If I eat another bite...I'll explode! I can't take anymore.
I've. had. enough.
Hey, wouldn't it be cool if we were all marked like my water glass? It would be easier to deal with each other, wouldn't it?
"Oh...look. She's at 24 ounces right now. She can handle a little more."
"Um....is she running way over 32 ounces?? Maybe I shouldn't bother her right now. Looks like she's got enough to deal with."
Enough.
Hm...
There's Someone who knows all about enough. And guess what? His grace is exactly that...
Wednesday, April 9, 2008
Would you like fries with that?
Uncle Billy lowered his head for a moment. When he looked up, there were tears in his eyes. "Thank you, Preacher."
"No, Uncle Billy, thank you. I believe the Holy Spirit has shown me a sermon in your predictament."
The disciples had been repeatedly instructed with one simple word: Ask. Uncle Billy, like much of the rest of humanity, had spent precious years worrying instead of asking.
-Jan Karon's At Home in Mitford
In the early days of my relationship with my husband, I recall a time where he witnessed me asking someone who was going out for lunch to please 'buy me some french fries'.
"Did you just ask Joe to buy you french fries?" Steve asked.
"Yep." I responded cheerfully.
"You don't think he's really going to buy you fries, do you?" Steve said, furrowing his eyebrows.
"Well," I remember saying, "It doesn't hurt to ask, does it?!"
Later, while I munched on my free french fries, I had to admit that it did not hurt to ask. In fact, it was very pleasant, thank you very much!!
However, (all too often it seems sometimes!) we do not ask. Instead, we assume.
And that can be a very bad thing to do, can't it? Assuming can cause us to worry, like Uncle Billy, or keeps us angry for three months straight...avoiding people...all because we didn't do one simple thing: Ask.
Leads me to the question: What are we afraid of? Why don't we ask more often?
We spend a lot of unnecessary energy worrying and being angry...over things that...if we just asked...might not require that anger or energy from us.
Assuming...and not asking....keeps us in the dark. Without french fries. If I had assumed that Joe wouldn't buy me fries...I'd be without them. Asking gave me better odds. There was still a chance that he wouldn't buy me the fries...but...I left that control to him, didn't I?
You know what I think? I think it's our pride that causes us to assume. We can tend to think that we're so important....(or so unimportant) that we can't ever have this or that or we deserve this or that because of our 'importance'...and we're disappointed when we don't get what we assume for. (yeah....I said "assume for"....instead of "ask for").
You will always be disappointed, my friends, when you assume for....instead of ask.
I don't know about you, but I don't like pain. So why cause myself additional pain by assuming something...instead of asking?
Think about your assumptions today. And don't forget to ask Someone for help.
Oh, and if anyone's going past a Mickey D's today....could you get me some fries? Thanks!!
Tuesday, April 8, 2008
I'll Fly Away
Monday, April 7, 2008
Words are made of letters....letters are made of words
And a love letter is a wonderful thing.
Text messaging is very convenient...but nothing says "I Love You" like writing "I Love You" on a good ol' piece of looseleaf. You can look at it again...and again...and again.