I knew I had to bake a cake and be present to the past. It was not at all what seemed possible on these busy few days before the holidays. Everything within me wanted to stay disconnected from the weight that was creeping into my “to do” list. And the last thing I needed to do was add a fifth dessert to our feast. I was attentive to the aisles of the grocery store and the rhythm of finding each item on the list; I had thought of way too many things to tackle, and of all things…. I kept thinking of my mother’s apple cake. I instinctively found the cream cheese for the frosting and the walnuts that were conveniently packaged in a center aisle. In my head I kept saying, “This is nuts, I have too much to do!”
I am not sure if I had ever actually baked it by myself, but I remember helping my mother peel and chop the apples and walnuts. I remember the delight our family had enjoying her culinary artistry in our “sixties” kitchen with aqua appliances. I can see her with a white and orange terry cloth apron and hear her ask, “Did you cut three circles of waxed paper for the cake pans?” I smiled at the fact that I didn’t have three nine inch round cake pans and she did. Of course she did. And somehow, I knew in my gut that there was healing to be found in the baking of this cake.
I drove home on an unexpected sunny November day on our island and felt tears come to my eyes. How many holiday meals did I even spend with my family? Once we moved to Colorado summers were the only time we returned home. In a quick calculation I gathered that I had only been around for thirty Thanksgiving meals with my family and the first twenty years were usually at my grandparents’ home in South Charleston, Ohio. Subtract the years Dan and I lived in Florida, Pennsylvania and Michigan, where coming home for Thanksgiving was not possible, there could actually have been only six short Thanksgiving meals at my parents’ home on Oxford Drive!
I parked the car and began unloading the cedar garland, terra cotta pots of Paperwhite sprouting bulbs, and greenery of various kinds of eucalyptus branches for napkin nosegays, and for the center of the table: flat green leaves.
The forest smells of our backyard and misty, slanted, shining sunlight highlighted the glory of each grocery bag strewn throughout the car. My ears heard each footstep I took on the gravel and tears once again sprung to my eyes. I did not want to succumb to the weight of feeling so much: “Jesus, please help me not to feel so much of what is now and what is no more.”
I sat down on a rod iron patio chair and picked up a bunch of boxwood branches that I had reclaimed after backing up too fast last week. I decided to wrap them into small wreaths for each place setting. I put them to my nose and began to breathe in for five counts, hold, and breathe out for five counts. I put my feet on the brick patio and closed my eyes. I remembered a quote from Jean Masukevich’s last Red Tent entry: “The wound is where the light enters.” by Rumi. I lingered and searched for the wound. I felt the rhythm of my heart beat and I even heard the beautiful sound of an eagle’s wings as it soared above our garage! Stunning!
I chose to be still with the reverence that comes whenever I see an eagle. Eagles remind me of my dad. And then, I honored that young girl of so long ago. I honored that “almost teenager” who found life with her friends. I closed my eyes and remembered some of the priceless few photographs of myself in the sixth grade. I took time to remember Judy, my older sister, in her mid calf flannel nightgown, who carried my apple spice birthday cake to the family room at my slumber party. I remembered each friend who had come and I tried to recall what we might have done together that evening. I wondered where my dad and Tom, my younger brother, had been in the house with all the squealing twelve–year-old girls would have made with a television and stereo to themselves. Such freedom and joy was had at that party.
I sat feeling full and so alive and so thankful. It was an extravagant thing to do during a very busy day. My heart literally ached with the remembering.
I got up and carried the groceries into the foyer and placed them on the white farm house bench we bought after selling our Queen Anne dining room furniture and the twin lens camera I used for my photography course at The Ohio State University in 1972. We sold most everything to live in a depressing garage apartment while Dan got his Ph.D. at Michigan State when Annie was eighteen months old. I took off my Sorel boots and put on my Ugg slippers and walked to the kitchen. I opened the pantry door and began unloading the groceries. I saw a taped quote from a church bulletin I had forgotten about. Not sure if I had liked the photo or the quote and, unfortunately, I had cut off the name of who had written it : “The people who related to God best–Abraham, Moses, David, Isaiah, Jeremiah–treated him with startling familiarity. They talked to God as if he were sitting in a chair beside them, as one might talk to a counselor, a boss, a parent, or a lover. They treated him like a person.”
So with my heart so full of “love-ache”, I began, “God, thank you for your presence always. Thank you for this present moment that allows me to remember and hold so much. I can hardly take in your goodness to me. Thank you for not answering my prayer to take away all that I thought I couldn’t hold. I can hardly wait to rock one-year-old Grace on Thanksgiving day just as my mother rocked her mother, Amanda thirty-one years ago. Thank you for four-year-old Elsa who will get to help me peel the apples over the sink and make an apple cake tomorrow. Thank you for my husband of almost four decades who will carve the turkey (which will take an extra hour than we calculated). Jesus, be so near to my sister whose husband George is with you this Thanksgiving in heaven. Hold her. Comfort her. And Jesus, be with my brother who I haven’t spoken to in so long. Help me take the time to call him. And Jesus, hug my parents and let them know how I miss them and love them. And Jesus hold me because sometimes being so present hurts and feels so good all at once.”
Becky Allender lives on Bainbridge Island with her loving, wild husband of almost 40 years. A mother and grandmother, she is quite fond of sunshine, yoga, Hawaiian quilting and creating 17th Century reproduction samplers. A community of praying women, loving Jesus, and the art of gratitude fill her life with goodness. She wonders what she got herself into with Red Tent Living! bs
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This is so good, my heart and soul needed this!
Thank you Jacqueline. Those moments….hit hard, but good.
“And Jesus hold me because sometimes being so present hurts and feels so good all at once.” Words my own heart needed to hear. Thank you!
Thank you Robyn…I know you know!!!
Stunning!!!
Thank you Becky for calling my heart to presence in the midst of much to do!
So glad you were able to step out of the fast pace and be present to what you needed to feel.
Book. Time for a book.
Wow…we shall see. Thank you Jan!
Dear Becky, I awoke to my long “to-do” list for today followed by another one for tomorrow. I saw your post and first said to myself…..”no time this morning”. A few moments opened and I took them as time to read your words. How close our hearts travel in the same path of busy, busy. You invited me to stop — STOP — and “breathe in for five counts, hold, and breathe out for five counts.” I was reminded to remember my little girl and the sweet, good places. In inviting our littles into the festivities of Thanksgiving and Christmas, we also invite our little girl to remember the goodness that is there to be savored. Thank you friend for the space your words created for me this morning. Love, Valerie
Dear Valerie, you are so kind. Yep…some mornings it is not right to take time! And I love that you reminded me to invite “my little girl” to the spaces each day. I hear God whisper…”it’s time to be more of a human being than human doing!” Love to you this rainy afternoon on Bainbridge Island!
I agree with Jan. Time for a book. 🙂 A teen told me this week that she wants to be a writer. “We don’t read books to learn about others as much as we read books to meet ourselves.” she said. That’s what you do in your writing – you invite us to meet ourselves. Always, always blessed when you do.
Thank you for your kind words and your “teen” is absolutely right. I had no idea I had anything to say, let alone, so many places that needed healing which has come from writing. That’s a wise teen you’ve got there. And, that is exactly my heart’s desire…to prompt others to remember, feel and heal!
Thank you, dear friend. I am so achy lately….so, so achy. Your words brought tears, and a familiar conversation to me. “Help me, God. I know that you are good. I feel so all alone, so overwhelmed, so unable to hold all you have for me to hold now. Thank you that you carry me when I cannot carry it all.” I’m so thankful for your straight from the heart writing.
Sweet Kelli, you are in a tough place and I still, in spite of this hard place, notice your good hearted spirit still draws others to see and live. Really live. This first year of “the program” is hard, always hard (so I hear from Dan and students over the past thirty-five years!). I can hardly wait for your kids to arrive and be with you. Your presence has made a difference in my life, Kelli. Your love shines. You have caused me to embrace my old hippie self and songs from the seventies that we both hold close to our hearts. You have caused me to be more alive and brave. Thank you.
God created our hearts so alike! “Thank you for this present moment that allows me to remember and hold so much. I can hardly take in your goodness to me. Thank you for not answering my prayer to take away all that I thought I couldn’t hold.” Oh this, this! Sometimes, I feel so much and so deeply that it can be overwhelming and I feel like people think I’m crazy. A few weekends ago I burst into tears celebrating my Poppy’s 83rd birthday because the moment was so glorious and beautiful! I don’t think anyone really understood why I was crying! And there have been times I’ve asked God to take away the feelings I didn’t think I could hold too. Even now, I’m am anticipating Christmas this year with a special ache and anticipation as our ENTIRE family will be gathered for the first time in 14 years – there is joy and sorrow in that, loved ones lost, and so much that has changed in our family over the years. I loved the word you gave to this specific feeling – the love-ache. Yes, that’s the word I’ve been searching for. I need the reminders to step away and breathe and count – I may need that a few times come family Christmas day!
Jenn, thank you for telling me about you…your “love-ache”. How glorious to be together. Both of my parents died when they were 83. I totally understand the glory of your Poppy’s 83rd birthday. Blessings to you. And thank you for taking the time to make me realize…it is good to feel, but many do not understand our tears.
It hurts and feels so good all at once. Yes. Thank you Becky.
Yes…sometimes it all comes crashing down and “hurts so good” intensely.
Such a beautifully descriptive post of the whole mind-body experience here Becky. Your description of presence is a tender invitation. Thank you for staying in there and for continuing to write about it.
Thank you Bethany. I have many of these moments and often push them away because they are not “time efficient”! So, I appreciate your reply.
Becky, I love the way this post touches all my senses. I can see the way the “misty, slanted, shining sunlight highlighted the glory of each grocery bag strewn throughout the car,” and tie that to the words, “The wound is where the light enters.” The ‘shining sunlight’ of God highlights the glory in each of the bags we have had to carry throughout this life and helps us see the ‘wound where the light enters’ so we can begin to heal. Your words hold so much beauty, Becky, so much beauty. Thank you, thank you. With love, Christine
Thank you Christine. Our parents knew so many good lessons that we barely were able to glean. Their lives were so much harder than ours. We had a stronger constitution to be present in our aging years.
Phew Becky, all I know right now is that tears keep sliding down my cheeks. Your friends all sound so wise & insightful too. Yesterday I listened to Tim Keller remind me that we really know others by their words. I feel your warm heart, sensitive spirit, deeply thoughtful mind and caring soul through your words.
May God continue to enable you to share these sweet reflections to help you & others be present in their healing journey. Blessings, Laura
Thank you Laura. I think my spirit saw that in you years …. years ago when we were young and so in love with Jesus. I have never forgotten the wisdom and kindness of sitting at your table. Love across the many miles and many years….
In that day it will be so wonderful to be together again & in our prime no less! Love to you across the miles as well. There may come a day when I will travel to one of your therapeutic writing conferences. I might try to encourage an old friend to join me! Blessings to you & your beautiful family! Laura
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“I did not want to succumb to the weight of feeling so much: “Jesus, please help me not to feel so much of what is now and what is no more.”
Oh, do I ever relate to this, struggling to think about embracing what feels so overwhelming. And yet, when He wisely doesn’t answer that prayer, to see and feel the goodness He brings with the ache. Thank you for the beautiful invitation to stop, and sit and take in all of it – the pain and the beauty! Much love to you!
Thank you Janet. I am learning to not feel so scared that deep feelings will swallow me into a puddle. Jesus is giving me more grace to fall into his care when the ache of life seems to much to bear. Love right back at you!