Turning, Spinning, Falling into Fall

I walked to our vegetable gardens to see what we had still growing.  The sun still blazed high in the sky on one of those crisp-warm autumn afternoons.  I looked around, counting the heads of my children playing around the yard, noting the time and mentally checking the evening’s schedule.  “Why not?”  I wondered.


A few minutes later my fingers were wiggling inside my gardening gloves, the pair I’ve used for so long that there’s now a hole at the tip of one finger.  Spade in hand, I bent to pull my first weed — the first of many hundreds that need attention.   At first I was honestly swamped with more important tasks, but now avoidance is only that, the act of ignoring what seems unpleasant to deal with even though it will only get worse.  So I dig in, because part of happiness is simply doing what needs to be done.

I started with the tallest section of weeds, the section most pregnant with seeds ready to drop into my waiting soil and provide me with years of battles.  There is something heartening about feeling your way to the bottom of a weed, pulling carefully, and feeling the root come slithering out of it’s hole.  This time, however, the weeds seemed to be mocking me.  My every touch, while removing thousands of weeds from opportunity’s path, also sent hundreds of tiny seeds flying.  A little while later I glanced at the sleeves of my cardigan to discover haphazard seed decorations clinging to me.  (And why must I always begin weeding spontaneously, without pausing to consider what I’m wearing?  A white cardigan, Jennifer?  Really?)  Most of the weeds came willingly but a few required all my strength.  Gardening, I thought, is not for the faint of heart.


Eventually I found a nice rhythm to my work, and as my hands did their job my mind turned from the weeds in my yard to the weeds in our lives.  I thought about some of the weeds growing in the lives of my children and ways to pull them out.  I thought about how we don’t pull weeds only to clear space, but to fill space with better things.  It’s so easy to wish to root out a problem in behavior without remembering that it must be filled with something better, some skill or substitution that can take over that little plot and keep the weeds at bay.   My thoughts wandered father, going from detached observation to the place of worry and weight, then coming out on the other side as they became a silent prayer.

A large weed dislodged, my movements sending a group of garden spiders scurrying in search of a new home.  I pondered the idea that the weeds in our lives often give shelter to other problems.  Sometimes we let the weeds grow to cover the problem; other times the problem just moves into the comfortable quarters we’ve prepared for them.


My daughter joined me.  We decided to pick the gardens clean in case the weatherman was correct and temperatures would, indeed drop enough to destroy our plants.  I went from weeding to basking in the dazzling paradox of the gardens in October.  There they were, side by side, growth and decay.  There was brown where some herbs had already given up next to blossoms on the pepper plants.  The next box held tomato plants, these sprawling vines that become so ugly in late summer and yet were so heavy with new fruit it made me sad to touch them.   I admired their defiance as they continue to produce fruit as if in doing so they can hold back the clock.  I particularly loved my cherry tomato plant, how there was always a perfect cluster of little circles with one or two ripening early while the others held back in some shade of orange, yellow and green.  I love the heirloom purple tomatoes I planted from seeds.  They made it, against all odds, and I felt myself rooting for them, almost believing that if plants looked like this then the sun could hold still in the sky for them to ripen.


I realized I felt a lot like them.  I don’t have time for fall yet; I’m too deeply engaged in warm-weather activities.  The soccer seasons are only half over and nothing about my daily schedule is ready for these early sunsets.  I still need warm, still need light, to see this family comfortably through the next month.   I cast my lot with the tomatoes!  The thought made me smile.

Then I remembered feeling the same way last year, and walking away, leaving the tomatoes and hoping the weatherman was wrong.  He wasn’t, and I felt like I had let them down when I threw away all those mushy balls the next morning.  So we picked.  We got another basket and picked more.


I went back to weeding, making my way to the flowerbeds.  I weeded around my dianthus, which haven’t stopped blooming for a single day since I planted them in early summer.  I smiled at my Jacob’s ladder with it’s tiny purple bloom on top, newly opened to the world.  I leaned in to take a long, deep breath of the heavenly scent of honeysuckle, noting the flowers about to open.   The tomatoes aren’t alone.


Then there they were:  the bright red leaves of my burning bush, already fully changed and ready to drop.  There was the carpet of purple beneath the Russian sage.  I looked to the base of the Jacob’s ladder and saw bright yellow leaves.


Amid the lavender was a single stem of autumn leaves.  One leaf in particular caught my eye for it held all of autumn in it’s spectrum.  Green at one end, then changing subtly along it’s lines until the very tip was a crimson red.


I realized that my yard was as mixed up as my heart!  Plants conceding the season next to plants fighting the change.  New growth next to red leaves.  Every plant and tree in my yard is on it’s own schedule, regardless of the fact that today is the same October day for all of us.  I thought of that timeline again, the timeline of life which is shadowed by the timeline of my heart and how rarely the two match up perfectly.  All my silly thoughts about not deserving Fall yet because I haven’t done enough work, all my wishing that summer will stay longer, all of it is part of the season, part of the change.  Some days my heart rushes to greet Autumn with arms stretched out wide.  Some mornings I want pumpkins and sweaters, yet I’m smiling with gratitude for the heat of the afternoon sun.


A breeze rustled the leaves of a nearby tree, sending some twirling, tumbling, spinning, falling to the ground.  The chorus of a favorite hymn came to mind, “When true simplicity is gained, to bow and to bend we shan’t be ashamed. To turn, turn will be our delight, till by turning, turning we come round right.”

For me, movement from summer to autumn isn’t something gained in a single step, like walking through a door from outside to inside.  It’s a process of bowing, bending, turning then turning back.  All of a sudden I felt like those leaves spinning through the air, knowing that I would yet spin some more in my heart.  I’ll still have moments as a tomato cheerleader even when we’re raking piles of leaves to jump in.  I’ll turn, spin and fall into Fall until one day we’ll all be tucked in, come round right, ready for winter.  It struck me that watching your children grow up is a lot like an October afternoon in the garden.


The sky began turning pink as I picked up my tools and headed around front to call the children.  Surveying the vast work yet to tackle made me push back emotionally — again — against the calendar.  My neighbor stood nearby and we chatted for a moment, ending on the subject of the experimental tomatillos we grew this summer.  There we stood, the harvest all around us, talking excitedly about this year’s successes and sharing lessons learned for next year.  Spring is yet a long way off, but it will come, as surely as the sun will rise tomorrow.

Turning, spinning, falling.

I smiled as we all went inside at the close of the day.

Welcome Autumn.

Blooming Late and Life Skills

My flowerbeds are in desperate need of attention.  In fact, they have been for a while.  I guess I’m putting them off so I can do one big push before winter, get everything cleaned up, bulbs in, and move on.  Really, I love gardening, but this just hasn’t been my year for digging in the dirt.  I should have removed the spent gladiolus a few weeks ago, but if I had, we’d have missed this:


A single, tall, perfect gladiolus graced our home last week.  It was incredibly late, the last week of September, and yet it bloomed.  Partly because it was late and because it was the only one, it was perhaps the most beautiful of them all.

The arrival of this lovely flower brought company to thoughts I’ve had a lot lately.   If you really think about it, growing up is all about learning skills.  Some of us grow up and are taught healthy skills which we use to deal with our problems.  Others of us grow up learning ineffective skills which take many years to replace with effective ones.  I call these lagging skills.   Most of us are a combination of those two categories, partly due to our upbringing, partly because of life’s journey, largely due to our own personal set of strengths and weaknesses.   We’re never really done with the process but a very important stage of that process happens in our childhood.

And so, effective parenting can be boiled down to this one thing:  teaching skills.  Over the weekend we had a number of situations, all part of daily life, but which revealed different lagging skills in various children in our home.  I started the day with a long list in my mind of the coaching that needs to be done to help each of them learn an effective skill for dealing with the next occurrence of the specific situation/feelings.  In some areas I see my children, all of them vastly different from one another, with skills that awe me.  In their own way, they’re all light years ahead in some things.  In others (their personal weaknesses) they struggle, as do I.   When they’re little, the skills are so simple.  They learn to walk, feed themselves, get dressed, and then to read and write.  When they get older, the skills can be more complex, like learning how to deal with people you don’t like but can’t avoid.  There’s also a large dose of self-discovery and awareness required for us to recognize the problem and identify the skill we need to work on.  When self-awareness is one of the weak areas, teaching skills can be very difficult.   I’m also learning that I have great skills for teaching certain children in certain ways, but there are other children in our family whose needs really challenge MY skills, making it more difficult for me to effectively teach them healthy skills.  It’s such a fascinating thing.

If I think too far ahead, these lagging skills can really get me down.  I begin to worry and stress.  Yet there has also been something very liberating about learning to identify the challenge in terms of skills.  My own emotions, my fears, can fly right out the window when I think in these terms:  I can learn skills.  My child can learn skills.  I can learn how to effectively teach each child the skills they need.  This goes right along with the whole idea that “You don’t feel your way to better behavior.  You behave your way to better feelings.”  For example, instead of letting a certain student’s academic performance eat me up, we can identify the skills that need to improve in order to fix the problem.  Is the lagging skill simply the habit of doing homework daily?  Is it the habit of turning homework in?  Is it the habit of writing assignments down?  Is it the habit of managing time wisely?  Once the skill is identified, then we can go to work on it.  It really doesn’t matter if a child hates doing homework right up until the day she graduates from college.  What matters is that she DOES the homework.   In like manner, it doesn’t matter how I feel about the situation either, what matters is that I teach them the skill they need to learn.  That’s my responsibility.

I’m learning that if I make a timeline of my life and mark certain events on it, I can make another timeline right under it to track the feelings of my heart.  Sometimes my heart keeps time with the actual events.  Sometimes my heart is racing ahead of the event timeline, perhaps even influencing it.  Other times something will happen, and my heart is delayed.  Perhaps the reaction is delayed, or my heart gets stuck somewhere while life keeps marching on.  We do need to take good care of our hearts; I’m not preaching that they should be disregarded entirely.  But sometimes we have to just live with the life timeline and not worry too much about where our hearts are, at least where habits go.  Does it matter that I love or hate exercise?  No.  It matters that I do it, regardless of how I feel about it that day.  The same goes for laundry, cooking, cleaning, paying bills.  For my children, it applies to doing homework, speaking respectfully to others, and so forth.  I expect my children to do the right thing, even if their hearts don’t “feel like it” in the moment.  I believe God expects the same of me.  And the thing about doing our duty, choosing the right thing, using effective skills to deal with our problems, is that eventually we feel GREAT about what we’ve done.  Our feelings catch up.

As a mother, it’s so easy to compare our lives to others, to compare our children to the children of our friends.  Of course, we’re always comparing the inside of our lives to the outside of theirs, but we rarely remind ourselves of that detail.  It’s easy to worry if it appears our child isn’t “blooming” like the others.  Sometimes we wonder if we will ever “bloom” as parents, too.  But sooner or later, if we keep working, we all bloom.


In recent weeks I’ve seen evidence of emerging skills that I’ve been focusing on in some of my children.  It really doesn’t matter to me how long I’ve waited for it, what matters is that it happens.  And perhaps the wait makes it all the sweeter.  I’m grateful to my flower for giving me the analogy I needed to pull some thoughts together, remind me of my plan of action, and train my heart.  What an amazing education motherhood provides, and what a kind Heavenly Father we have who provides beautiful lessons for us daily in things as simple as a late September gladiolus!

Quiet Morning

Around 4:30 a.m. I heard the click of my front door closing as my parents left for their journey home.  Two hours later I was quietly getting my oldest two students and husband out the door for the day while the other children slept.  They have no school today.  The house was so still… the only noise being the breeze making it’s way through various open windows throughout the house.  It’s a cloudy, cool morning.


My life is loud most of the time, so I chose to sit quietly in the stillness of the morning for a bit.  From the living room couch I watched the curtains flutter in the wind as I tried something new:


I’m finally caving in to the hand quilting trend.  It was kind of nice to snuggle under the quilt I was working on while being productive!


It lasted long enough for one stitching line in one small area before I heard the sound of footsteps upstairs.  Then came quiet voices and a “Mommy!” from the three year old.  A few seconds later there was an eruption of sound and my real day is officially begun.  I’m off to do laundry, pay bills, clean the house, prepare food, organize play dates, and so forth.

But there is also this single running stitch to smile about.


A beautiful start to a gray but happy day.

HH

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