Saturday, January 15, 2022




After going back to my initial post, I recalled my intention to share some of my art on here. I’m not sure it is necessary, but I will upload some of my favorites from work I did this fall and have begun since the first of the year.

First up are 9 of the 30 pieces I did for the Narnia November challenge.  In no particular order, they are: Diggory and Polly exploring, the beginning of the Golden Age of Narnia, Uncle Andrew in his study, forest friends, Cair Paravel, Charn, the Blitz, Fledge, and the outpost from The Last Battle.








Next are some odds and ends from this fall and Christmas:










And finally, some “Woodland Friends.” I enjoyed creating the first 2 so much that I have begun a calendar of friends beginning with January and February:





And that’s all for now. Many of these were done in the wee hours as I am struggling to get enough sleep right now.  Creating in my studio is very soothing and if I cannot sleep, this sort of play time is the next best thing. I highly recommend it!


 

Sunday, December 19, 2021

Treasure in Heaven, Updated, Revised, Shortened





In one of the Anne of Green Gables books, there is a scene where Anne visits a frightened and dying woman. She later observes that the woman must have been afraid to go to Heaven because she had no treasures there. 

This story forms the background for me today as I am preparing to acknowledge the tenth anniversary of the untimely death of our younger son, Patrick.  I want to write something fitting, something that addresses not only our great loss, and the exceptional person Patrick was, but also the sometimes surprising elements of my own personal grief journey and the solid hope to which I cling even on the worst days of missing him and missing my mother who departed this life last spring. 

I have heard it said that  a Christian describing the death of a child should never make use of the term, “loss.” Such foolishness! Of course it is a loss. The fact that I know by faith where Patrick resides now and that I will see him again does not lift my daily sadness that he is not here. There is, in fact, a greater loss regarding my son than my mother, although I am definitely still grieving her death.

There is a language of grief that only we in the valley speak. Learning how to talk with those who are suffering and/or in the midst of mind-numbing grief was forced upon me ten years ago. There was much I thought I knew—but did not.  And, my experience with friends, family, and strangers addressing our loss taught me many, many things not to say and not to do.

Genuine communication of empathy and love is vitally important. Learning how to be present to someone who is suffering is never a waste of time. I believe listening with an open heart is in danger of disappearing altogether due to the contentious world of social media. While I am no expert in communication and am well aware that I fail too often to listen well, I have to say that the last ten years have taught me to listen better and to judge less.

I would add here that being present to someone suffering in grief never includes talking “at” them or speaking for them. This is why I am so careful to reference our loss as a family, but only my thoughts regarding grief or sorrow. I cannot, will not speak for my husband, my father, my children, my siblings, or anyone else grieving the death of Patrick or of my mother. This is a primary and vitally important lesson I learned the hard way ten years ago. Advice, formulas, or any kind of projection are most unwelcome to the suffering grieving heart.

I now experience moments of joy at a level made so much deeper by my personal suffering. Such moments leave me wanting to be ever kinder and ever more gentle with anyone in my path. And so, over these ten years I have found a new sense of fulfillment when entering into the sorrow of another. Having experienced soul crushing grief enables me to recognize suffering in others and to come alongside them if they wish me to do so.

Back to Patrick: I could write endlessly about who he was, to his family, his friends, his Young Life kids, to the communities where he lived, to his church families, and more. If you knew him, you knew the effervescence of his personality, the strength of his convictions, the power of his love. As well, you knew the feel of his hug, the ring of his laughter and the sharpness of his wit. You knew sarcasm and puns, goofball comedy and deadly serious debate, incessant needling and an ever present loyal heart. And if you loved him, you knew his faults and his creative ability to sometimes work on them but more often to debate them away. You knew his stories, his love of Ray Bans and his infuriating love of argument. And, if you loved him, you mourn him still. I know, dear heart. I know.

If you knew him in young adulthood, you also know that Patrick was way too familiar with the darkness of hopelessness, with self-loathing, with physical and mental pain and anguish. You know that he fought valiantly with the demons of alcohol and drug addiction, undiagnosed epilepsy, severe back pain, anxiety, panic attacks, clinical depression and that the battle inside was enormous.  Some knew he was growing quite, quite weary.  I do not know nor do I care whether it was intentional or accidental overdose. The outcome is the same. He is gone.

I cannot conclude without addressing both my faith and that of my son as well as the life-long faith of my mother. I am a Christian and so were they. I believe in the reality of Heaven and so did they.  

Christians do not receive an exemption in regard to mental illness and addiction anymore than we receive one in regard to cancer or diabetes or Covid 19. In this life we will all experience plenty of sorrow and enormous grief. The grace and love of God neither negates this fact nor justifies it. 

Instead, when we are open to Him, God’s grace sanctifies our suffering in such a way that our vision expands and our ability to keep on extending love to others grows as well. As always with God, we have a choice: life or death, hope or despair, sweet or bitter. My choice is this: I will acknowledge the bitter but focus on the sweet.

Thus, on this tenth anniversary, I remain confident and full of hope. What is lost will be found, “for nothing good is ever lost.” (Rosamunde Pilcher) There really is a happily ever after. I know this.  I live in the light of this truth. It is who I am. And indeed, it is who my son—and my mother are today. To God be the glory.

“ …now at last they were beginning Chapter One of The Great Story which no one on earth has read: which goes on forever: in which every chapter is better than the one before.”
~C. S. Lewis, The Last Battle, Book Seven of The Chronicles of Narnia

Wednesday, December 9, 2020

Hard

 I used to tell my children sardonically “life is hard.” Then I would silently continue the sentence to myself:  “and then you die.” 

The passing years have caused me to reflect on the truth of the whole phrase.  Life IS hard. Everyone DOES die. But that is not all.  I have come to see that the phrase brings both comfort, and hope.  If you reach my age (65) without experiencing that life is hard, I wonder about your relationships and indeed your heart. And if you don’t know that we all die...well, I’m not sure you are even alive.

2020 has surely pounded the reality of hard things into all of our hearts. And indeed we have seen many die.  While my family has yet to lose anyone to Covid 19, our Christmas Card list is riddled with crossed out names and our prayer list for those who are suffering grows longer by the day.

All of this causes me to reflect yet again on what I believe happens when we die.  My Narnian focus teaches me that good and wonderful things happen; that all of life here on earth is only the title page of my story; that I have an eternity of joyful celebration and service ahead of me.  And especially important to me, Narnia teaches me that death is a doorway through which I will find beloved friends and family.

Of course, I am writing not only as a Narnian, but as a Christian.  Narnia informs my faith and fires my imagination, but it is the Word of God that brought Truth into my heart years before I “met” C.S.Lewis.

I have written for almost 9 years now about how hard it is to celebrate Christmas when grieving the loss of my son. It is still hard and I would not be honest if I wrote anything other than how very difficult it is. What I want to say this morning is that Christmas is all about hard. Read the story in the gospels and try to put another focus on the pregnancy of Mary, the reaction of Joseph, the journey to Bethlehem and the birthing of a child in a stable.

And yet, Elizabeth’s child within leaped for joy as Mary approached, God revealed Himself to Joseph who then chose to do the right thing and in so doing, was gifted with knowing Mary as his wife and Jesus from the moment of His birth. The angels arrived with tidings of both comfort and joy. These tidings came in the midst of a world dominated by the cruelty of the Roman Empire. 

And that empire was preceded and followed by multiple empires of great cruelty and the horrid reality of war upon war upon famine and plague.So where, exactly is the comfort? And where is the joy?  My studies of the entirety of the Bible have led me to believe that the comfort and joy come from knowing that—in Jesus, God is working out His plan to restore the earth and to place His beloved children once again in the Garden of Eden. Another way of putting it is that the stable led to the cross. And the agony of the cross created the doorway onto Life Everlasting.

The holy mystery of suffering and joy being laced together in the great act of redemption is reflected over and over in individual lives. As the anniversary of Patrick’s death relentlessly approaches for the 9th time, I find myself pondering this mystery again. We resist the idea of death—particularly the death of those as young as Patrick or even younger. We are appalled by death.  This is because, as Jack Lewis explains, because we were created to never experience it.  So every death feels too soon. Every death feels final. And the pain of loss is so very very real. Christians know that this is true, and that denying the pain of death brings no real comfort at all.

What does bring comfort is the certain knowledge that the cross turned death into a doorway.  The cross strips away the finality of death and promises life—a good life in every sense of the word to all who look into the face of Jesus and believe. I have looked and I believe. Thus, I can go on. I do not know if those who read this have done so. I do not know the depth of anyone else’s personal suffering.  However, I believe that everyone will have the opportunity to look into those incredible loving eyes and at that point, each will know that they are loved and cherished and that a better life is just through “that door.” 

Yes. Life is hard and then we die. And when we die, we find ourselves at the Great Feast, celebrating new life without pain and hardship and reunited with everyone we love.

Another writer I enjoy is Rosamunde Pilcher. In “The Shell Seekers,” Olivia states that she thinks her mother did not believe in God. The minister’s response is classic: “I would not be concerned about that. I’m pretty sure God believed in her.” And there it is, the comfort and joy of Christmas: God believes in you. You are loved and cherished and understood better than you can imagine.  Your story will have a happy ending. Everything will eventually work out in a way that blesses you and blesses the world. 

God is big enough to handle your lack of faith, your unbelief, your anger, frustration and grief. I am not precisely certain why I woke at 5 today with this message bubbling up in my heart. I only know that I feel compelled to share these things.  The reason why Jack wrote to his godchild, Lucy Barfield,  “one day you will be old enough to read fairy tales again” is simply this: he knew, as I now know, that living happily ever ever is not a fairy tale at all. It is, simply put: the truth.



After going back to my initial post, I recalled my intention to share some of my art on here. I’m not sure it is necessary, but I will uploa...