How to Forget

Some things we want to forget. But the more we try, the more tenaciously they grip us. Even if we manage to bury them in busyness or diversions, they can still keep rolling in an undercurrent beneath our consciousness, affecting our lives more than we realize.

One sharp student in a sixth-grade class of mine cleverly demonstrated this phenomenon one day by challenging me, “Don’t think about elephants!”

Elephants? Until she’d said not to think about them, they were the furthest thing from my mind! Afterward, I couldn’t get them out of it!

So how do you forget the bigger, more emotionally charged things? …

IMG_0827

My valentine was different this year. No preprinted, commercially produced sentiment inside. Instead, a blank card created by a local workshop for disabled adults. The buyer was to write his own message inside.

IMG_0824

The one I read when I opened the card gave me pause. At first I didn’t quite know what it referred to.

“Thank you for making what had become a very sad day of the year into a day of renewed hope and joy for me…”

Huh? Very sad day…?

Suddenly, I remembered with a jolt. It had indeed been terribly sad.

February 14th, Valentine’s Day, day for promoting and celebrating marital love, was the day he buried his first wife, after her very tragic death.

“Oh!” I said, looking up from the reading. “I forgot about that!”

Surprisingly he answered quietly, “I did, too. I don’t really know why I’ve been remembering it so much this year.”

I knew. Someone seeking answers about the tragedy’s effects on family members had contacted him recently, and he’d had to rack his brain and go back and relive that time to comb up possible answers.

What seemed amazing now to me was how over the decades he’d come to “forget.”

Of course he hadn’t in the fullest sense. If someone had asked, he could have quickly named dates, even hours: facts filed firmly in mental archives. The sharp, living moments, however, no longer haunted with vivid pain.

Despite the card’s sentiment, my presence alone didn’t heal his trauma. Many eventual, gradual changes—of residence, occupation, church family, even physical environment and social milieu, had removed daily reminders and given new points of focus. Working through the kind of recurring remembrance episodes that sweep in unexpectedly like tsunamis was important, too.

Changing focus and associations, facing and working through resurfacing memories: those all help heal. And if our central focus is Christ and we bring our griefs, and “re-griefs,” honestly before Him to process and place back in His hands, the fierceness fades, as do the haunting thoughts and feelings.

Grief, forgiveness, recovery from trauma, all take time and repeated reworking. I think we try to tie it up it too fast and tidy, snapping, “Oh, it doesn’t bother me!” or “I forgive him!” when we haven’t worked through the process at all. We leave ourselves a lot of unfinished business that will keep popping up later, when we might least expect, nagging us to tend to all those tattered loose ends, one by painful one.

Time only heals if we let it do its finished work. We don’t assuage grief by not grieving. We don’t build something new without picking up the trowel and the first figurative brick. And we don’t effectively forget, in the sense of truly putting the issue to rest, without the effort of adequate remembering.

Most importantly, if our hearts get fixed on something more compelling than… say, elephants… what we tried so hard yet failed to forget in our own power fades from view, as these sweet lyrics attest…

 

            “Turn your eyes upon Jesus,

            look full in His wonderful face,

            and the things of earth will grow strangely dim,

            in the light of His glory and grace.”

 

Freeday Fun

Something new for Freeday instead of Five-Minute-Free-writing this week…

Kel Rolf has been running a whole crazy month of inspiration at Soul Pantry (“29 Days of Seeing New“). One of her dares has been to grab a few pictures from junk mail, magazines, catalogs, what have you; paste them down in an art journal or otherwise on paper, then paint here and there as led, and add words.

IMG_0818

Montage or collage I haven’t done much of, so this is kind of a first for me. But it’s pretty amazing what “just-for-fun” can sometimes result in. My first husband, long deceased, was a graphic artist who did other art creations on the side (award plaques, etc), and often said that “fooling around can create good ideas.”

So I took up Kel’s dare, and incorporated another challenge: Instead of just adding my own words, I did the experiment she gave women in one of her local workshops. It was called “Poetry in Prose,” I think. For it, the women were given printouts  of prose passages in which to circle words that “grabbed them,” then darken over the other words. What resulted was surprising poetry, often custom-fitted to the heart of the woman doing the experiment.

I think the prose they used was already world-class stuff. But I just used paragraphs from out of home/garden magazines.

Yet here’s what emerged. (I typed out the “poetry” beneath the collages, because I couldn’t get a clear enough picture for anyone to read right from it, trying to stay steady while hovering above my raised work table. Phew! I could use a tripod!):

 

IMG_0816

Sway in a gentle breeze

Bow to the will of a stiff wind.

Windy,

Or sunny,

Or hot…

In “real dirt,”

Undaunted,

Thoughtful,

And meticulous,

Yield an Eden.

          ~

IMG_0813

A gardener takes a clay pot–

Molded sticky red earth,

Fired brittle,

Dusty, bone-dry new…

Ticket to adventure.

                ~

These undoubtedly custom-fit my heart, especially this time of year, when the cold and being stuck inside on ice and slush days rev up my eagerness to get out and garden as soon as it warms (please hurry up!) The first collage shows the parallel universes of gardening and art, and the second clearly reveals my fingers’ pre-spring itch.

Stuck inside too much and getting bored yourself? Try this at home. You don’t need paint, either. I used markers instead.

Have some fun reflecting the Creator’s image!

~~~~~

The Camera We All Forget

“Oh! I wish I’d brought the camera!”

Yesterday I said that again.

IMG_1814

IMG_7179.JPG copy

IMG_3258.JPG

It was still sitting back there on the kitchen table, where I’d decided to leave it when the weather had turned from icy-cold-wet to downright drenching and increasingly foggy. No sense thinking of picture taking now, especially if it meant leaving a warm, dry truck.

I had figured I’d drive alone to the allergist, then afterwards hunt up railroad tracks and maybe old stations to capture in pixels. (There’s a reason for this.) But the slop that was supposed to have melted by seven still lay, a great mass of tire-tracked muck on our back road by noon.

The predicted rain had come, but the thermometer wouldn’t budge, so those downpours just made the driving more treacherous. I couldn’t even take the few steps across the patio to the garage door, my feet had so little traction. Husband’s shoes had some (better than none), so I clung hard to his offered arm and slid my way over rock paving.

My eyes weren’t working well, either—hadn’t been for a few days now. So if he hadn’t generously offered to drive, I wouldn’t have gone. I even proposed turning back and canceling once we started fishtailing and wiggling around on our road with its many embankments sans guardrails and with water raging below. I’ve already done the airborne truck adventure, and once is enough, believe me.

No, no, he insisted, and chugged along, as I now clung to the door’s arm rest and did some silent praying.

This man has a long history of driving out to where the snow plows live so the roads can get plowed and sanded for us normal humans. My long history includes rejoicing in school cancellations and snuggling down, safe and warm inside on “snow days,” with a free day off from teaching.

So if I do go somewhere, I don’t usually plan to muck about in ankle deep gush, just to take some photos I could get more clearly on a better day. Therefore, the camera on the table instead of in my bag.

But how soon I regretted this! As we shushed our way along the more-traveled, less-slippery road our home road dumps onto, I began to see spectacular sights: Big hulking fog clouds lying at ground level, and, rising above their fuzzy edges, dark curves of rolling hills and mountains. Single long strands of cloud hovering just a few feet above the ground. Scenes like out of Lord of the Rings rolling out right beside me, one after another, each potential photo more dramatic than the last.

If. I’d brought the camera.

Well. At least I captured those views with my eyes and brain.

And that got me thinking about the internal camera we all carry around everywhere–but mostly forget anyhow. Or we don’t bother with it because we’re missing the spectacular around us. Too busy fretting. Or planning. Or checking our inner list. Or just in a bored-with-life stupor.

Here, today (in my warm, dry house), my memory’s enjoying those pictures my mind captured yesterday. But meanwhile, what potential amazing “captures” might the moments offer, even here?

Or there, wherever you are, today?

“He who has eyes let him see.”

Lord, let me open my eyes and see, and snap those mental photos–and maybe a few with a camera, too.

~~~~~

Linked to

Sharing His Beauty

A To-Do List Worth Doing (A Dare)

I purposed when I first sat down to slow my going, to savor line by line, to make Selah pauses to soak up words, and muse…

IMG_0801

And so I did, and as I moved from phrase to phrase, suddenly I saw the psalm in front of me as never before, as a magnificent piece of wise instruction!

And I uttered, right out loud there, by myself, in my supposed quiet space, “Wow! What a To-Do list!”

 

Sometimes…

Psalms are songs…

Sometimes psalms are prayers.

Sometimes psalms are hallelujah shouts of wild exuberance,

Sometimes words to voice our griefs, permission to sob and moan,

Sometimes balm to a bruised, battered soul.

Sometimes psalms are epic recollections of the wonders God has done.

And sometimes, sometimes, psalms are guides–to life more abundant and vibrant,

Step by beautiful step.

 

Psalm 105 is one of these last gems, in its opening lines, capped off by its final three words.

Just for joy, imagine it this morning as your to-do list for the day.

And then, more than imagine. Make it your list. Start with the first, move on to the second–or switch their order–and slow as you go. Put yesterday’s gifts into the first, your present day’s plans into the second. Do the third, and fifth, wherever you happen to be, even in your home. Tell yourself if there’s no one else to tell. Maybe even copy out these lines and check them off. Maybe again and again.

I dare you. (smile)

To Do Today:

-Give thanks to the LORD!

-Call upon His name;

-Make known His deeds among the peoples!

-Sing to Him, sing psalms to Him;

-Talk of all His wondrous works!

-Glory in His holy name;

-Let [your] heart rejoice [as you] seek the LORD!

-Seek the LORD and His strength; Seek His face evermore

-Remember His marvelous works which He has done, His wonders, and the judgments of His mouth,

-Praise the LORD!

Psalm 105:1-5,45 NKJV

I dare you to try these as you go about whatever you go about today. And I dare say they need not hinder any legitimate to-do list, but, woven in and out of it like threads of light, more likely will just enhance it .

Will you take the Psalm 105 Dare?

Jesus’ “Firsts” and the To-do List

Oh, time! And time use! The topic returns to me this morning, re-echoing in today’s Psalm 90 reading. There rings again the reminder of human life-span’s quick, short run, and the plea for God to “teach us to number our days, that we may gain a heart of wisdom”!

IMG_9170.JPG

So my mind returns to that aid we use to try to manage time, the good old To-Do List.

Too often, however, it mismanages time! How quickly it fills with trivia and non-essentials! And Christ’s highest priorities that rightly should have top billing may not even make a showing there at all!

Often absent also, our Heart’s deepest desires. And truth is, the deepest desires of hearts truly aligned with Christ will “naturally” line up with His priorities, far better than will any average human list of To-Do “musts” and “shoulds.”

The problem is where we’re getting our cues, what’s making us jump and run.

My spirit knows this, but under “the tyranny of the urgent” my mind’s knee-jerk reactions to the latest barked commands (from who-knows-where) can eclipse my spirit’s greater wisdom, my heart’s deepest desires, and Christ’s highest priorities, all three.

So here’s a reality check: results of a scripture word search for “first” as Jesus used it to show one focus or action more important and pressing than another.

As you read this loosely organized and incomplete share, consider how His priorities have influenced your list making, and living—or not. It may turn your list, even your life, upside down! Or, it may affirm your list-making and triage techniques…

 

 JESUS’ HIGH PRIORITY TO-DO’S

The highest priority aim in life to have:

Seek first (meaning primarily and foremost, not just first in the day, then forgotten): the kingdom of God and His righteousness (rather than financial security and physical necessities, even food and clothing, and other treasures on earth) (Mt 6:31-33).

(Actually the whole context of Matthew 6:19-33 is worth rereading)

The highest priority rule to follow:

The First and Greatest Commandment:

Love the Lord your God with all your heart and soul (and mind and strength)and flowing right from it the “second”: Love your neighbor as yourself” (Mat 22:37-39;Mk 12:29-31)

(Do you see the “three loves” there? Someday I must write about them…)

First things first Jesus said to do (i.e., “Do this prior to that”):

Attempt reconciliation before presenting offerings (money, goods, or services, including those seemingly important capital-M Ministries and heady “high calling” ideas. Such “sacrifices” can actually short-circuit our love for both God and others, eclipse the apologies we should have made for stepping on others’ toes, and drive us to use those folks like things, to accomplish our desired achievements “for God”) (Mt 5:23-24).

Remove the “log” or “plank” in your own eye before looking for specks in others’ (i.e, Fix yourself first before trying to fix your neighbor) (Mat 7:4-5; Lk 6:42).

Clean the inside “of the cup” before polishing up the outside (Mat 23:25-26).

Count the cost first before making the commitment (Lk 14:27-31)

The most important gain, worth all that it is going to cost:

The Kingdom of God–

worth selling all you have to “buy that field” or that “pearl of great price” (Mat 13:45-46),

worth pursuing at the cost of losing all that’s nearest and dearest to you, even family and friends (Mat 10:35-39; 19:29).

worth the loss of whatever causes you to sin, even your right hand or good eye (Mat 5:29;18:8-9; Mk 9:47).

About wanting to “be first”:

Don’t do it!

Many who are first in this life will be last in the Kingdom—or barred from it! (Mk 9:35;10:31;10:44; Lk 13:30).

People priorities He warned against:

“First let me bury my father”

“First let me see to my real estate.”

“First let me take care of my marriage” (Lk 9:58-61;14:18).

I imagine there’s more, but that gives us a pretty good idea of where our priorities really need to lie. So, happy list-sorting! (But maybe the to-do list items aren’t the most important consideration, but our motivation and spirit in deciding to do them. More on that in some later post.)