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An indecent grief
Posted on: February 13, 2010
Tonight I sat down with the latest issue of World Magazine covering more on the Haiti quake. Honestly, I didn’t read the main articles about the relief efforts, the pain and destruction that has taken place (and still taking place). I just kept to the lighter side of things. Not that I am not still concerned with what has happened, and is happening, but that bearing the pain of it seems far harder than I am willing to do.
And then I saw it.
A picture, right in the middle of the page, of a small, no, tiny baby, hardly 5 pounds. Dead. The article is titled “An indecent grief“, written by Mindy Belz. As I read it, I was struck by how accurately the woman pin points how quickly I wish to “bandage” this pain, this hurt, this sorrow. When, in all actuality, I need to embrace the grieving period. Pay tribute, real heart breaking tribute, to these hurting and broken people.
Below I have included the article, along with the picture.
***Beware the picture is heart breaking, decide now whether you want to continue reading.***
Just off a transatlantic flight from covering the 1999 Izmit earthquake in Turkey—which killed over 17,000—I ordered coffee at Starbucks. I was dust-covered, unkempt, exhausted. I had come straight from the quake zone, watching all-night rescue efforts lit by generator-driven spotlights end in grief.
The barista set before me one of those really tall coffee concoctions, and I couldn’t pick it up. The cartonboard cup with its creamy white cleanness assaulted my senses. It was an affront to the dust-laden, broken-up, shaken-down cityscape I’d inhabited the past week. Coming out of it—back to where rebar held to concrete, where buildings stood with glass intact, where china and stuffed animals stayed on their shelves and children slept in their own beds—felt like a betrayal. I stood frozen at the Starbucks counter and wept.
We Westerners excel at getting on with it, at binding up wounds and fixing what’s broken, or paying others to do it for us. We do less well with pausing to grieve, feeling the pain long enough, letting the pain be pain and do its work.
“Pour out your heart like water before the presence of the Lord! Lift your hands to Him for the lives of your children, who faint for hunger at the head of every street,” lamented Jeremiah (Lamentations 2:19).
The list of Haiti’s needs, while brutally long, can be named and numbered. So can and should its lamentations. A death toll from an island the size of Massachusetts to rival a tsunami that spanned an ocean and 14 nations. Ten thousand quake victims per day dumped without name or record into mass graves. Thousands beneath the rubble awaiting a rescue that did not come. Each is an individual sorrow and together an unfathomable calamity.
“Oh that my head were waters, and my eyes a fountain of tears, that I might weep day and night for the slain of the daughter of my people!” (Jeremiah 9:1).
Jeremiah knew a “pain unceasing, an incurable wound, refusing to be healed.” The prophet himself lived a life full of indecent grief, a persistent heartbreak the men of Judah found obscene, excessive. They derided him as the “weeping prophet,” God forbade him to marry, and he died a captive in Egypt. Yet he wrote not from base self-pity but because he understood the risk: If we fail to see the depths of pain inflicted by disaster, we will fail to bind up the wounds properly. At the same time, the pain is a powerful reminder of our limits. We must not fail to see like Jeremiah that ultimately the wound is incurable and the pain unceasing. In this life all binding and curing is temporary.
So beware the man with quick answers: Pat Robertson dismissing the calamity as part of “a pact to the devil”; Rush Limbaugh declaring that we gave already. Beware the man with wrong answers: Max Beauvoir, Haiti’s high priest of voodoo, telling Haitians that the quake’s unexpected deaths only disrupted the normally peaceful transition from one life to the next. “We believe that everyone lives 16 times—eight times we live as men, and eight times as women. And the purpose of life is to gather all kinds of experiences,” said Beauvoir. Or the team of Scientologists, who went from makeshift shelter to makeshift shelter claiming to heal through touch. “When you get a sudden shock to a part of your body the energy gets stuck, so we reestablish communication within the body by touching people through their clothes, and asking people to feel the touch,” said one volunteer.
Comfort that treats the bereaved as pets or as losers is no comfort. Comfort designed less to empower than to ease is short-lived. The old English defined comfort as “strengthening, encouraging, inciting, aiding” while the Americans refined it to “soothe in a time of distress” (see Oxford English vs. American Heritage dictionaries). Haitians, made in the image of God and like His Son sorrowful even to death, need strengthening comfort, the kind that fathoms both the depth of the loss and the length of the work ahead.
Haitians amid the rubble have a better sense of this. “Dye pi fo,” some sang out from the shelters. “God is stronger.”
Let us not merely over look what has taken place, ignoring the pain we feel, the pain we have when we see others hurt. Let us take time to “bind up our wounds” and allow God to heal.
- In: Life
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In college I loved Sex and the City. It was quite normal to have SATC marathons with my girlfriends that lasted to the wee, wee hours. The last season aired during my last year of college. On Sundays, my girlfriends and I would grab dinner and then watch SATC. During that season, the main character, Carrie Bradshaw, lived in Paris. One episode she was walking through Paris, absorbing all the city’s grandeur, and she was wearing this:
I fell in love.
Since that day, I’ve been on the search for a wonderful dress that draws on Carrie, Lucille, and Audrey.
Then, about a month ago, I came across this wonderful Etsy store. There I found, and feel in love with, a beautiful dress:
Jonathan and I talked about waiting until my birthday, in late March, to buy it, but I just couldn’t wait, since there was only one dress in my size and the dressmaker isn’t doing any more. So, last week, with fluttering in my heart, I bought my dress.
It arrived last night.
And is every bit as dreamy as I imagined.
It will be perfect for my Parisian vacation.
Food for my Northern friends
Posted on: February 10, 2010
- In: Life
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Friday I made version of Minnesota Chili with pasta. When I think of chili I usually think of the South, so I was pleasantly surprised to find a chili named after a Northern state. Turns out, it’s not only super easy to make but quite delicious. Plus, it would work great in a crockpot.
My ingredients: ground beef, onion, garlic, chili powder, diced tomatoes (one can with chilis), red kidney beans and pasta.
Step 1: Brown and drain your meat. Helpful tip: rinse your meat in water to clean off any excess oil. Works like a charm. You could also boil the meat for the same effect. For my vegetarian friends – I think you could use lentils very easily in place of the meat.
Step 2: Dice onions. I’ve really like onions, especially in chunks, so I tend not too dice them to small:
Step 3: Add meat, onions (along with other vegetables you plan to use), garlic, chili powder and tomatoes in a 5-quart Dutch oven, bring to a boil then simmer for 2 hours:
Step 4: About 10 minutes before your chili is complete, add kidney beans:
Step 5: Cook pasta. I used 2 cups, but that was not nearly enough to feed 8 people. I’d suggest 4 cups. The pasta is a “filler” to help the chili go farther. So, the more people you have, the more pasta you should use.
I made a double batch of cornbread to go along side this dish:
Here’s Julia, my little helper, doing her part for the cornbread:
Once the meal is complete, serve pasta, then chili in a bowl with cornbread and green beans on the side. Top the chili with cheese and plenty of Louisiana hot sauce:
Bon Appetit!
Jonathan thought y’all might like some more personal pictures of me and my kitchen helper.
Julia modeling her shoes. Gotta admire a woman who cooks in heels. 😉
Hannah doing what Hannah does best – supervising the production:
And then me:
- In: Life
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Why, oh why, do companies make small, losable toys for kids? Do they just revel in the pleasure of seeing mothers deal with 2 year old tantrums?? This was our most recent culprit:
I have yet to find that star. Blerg.
Reading Rainbow
Posted on: February 8, 2010
I love reading. It might be one of my all time favorite pastimes. However, since having Julia and Hannah, I’ve laid aside any active reading; taking up to two months to complete a book. Despite my slow and sporadic “pleasure reading”, I’m finding that my love of reading is rubbing off on Julia.
I’ve made it a point to read to Julia daily (or at least every other day) since she was a small infant. She didn’t start really enjoying “reading time” until she was about a year. Now, she asks “read book” and if you’re not careful, she will have you read to her for well over an hour. This is especially true before bedtime – as a means of delaying having to go to sleep.
Over the last couple of weeks, whenever Jonathan tells her to grab a book so he can read with her, she always replies “Mama read book”. When he insists on reading, she says even louder, “Mama read book!”. I’m not gonna lie, that makes me kinda happy. 🙂
There are few things I feel I do “well” as a mother. There are few things I feel that Julia doesn’t prefer to have her “Papa do”. So, to have her continuously say “Mama read book” makes me thrilled. It’s usually the one time in our day that it is just Julia and me; a time for snuggling, loving and reading.
I love our reading time.
*Julia’s face is so shiny because she has vaseline all over it to help with some major dryness and chapping.
Coffee is GRRREAT!
Posted on: February 6, 2010
- In: Life
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Thanks to Molly Piper, I found this awesome cartoon on the origin and history of coffee.
Welcome to our humble abode
Posted on: February 5, 2010
- In: Life
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We are entering the second month of our stay with our host family, the Abdos. They have graciously given us full rein of their basement and Julia is slowly claiming her rights to the main floor and their living quarters. And she’s also done a pretty descent job of wrapping their boys around her finger. 😉
One of the best things about living here, is seeing how much everyone loves on the girls. It’s made me realize, that the quickest way to a mama’s heart is to love her children. The Abdos do an fantastic job of showering Julia and Hannah with attention and affection. It makes me love the Abdos even more (which is saying something, because we already love them a ton).
Jonathan and I have joked that our area is very European. If we had a little kitchenette in the laundry room, we’d be all set to live in France! After we packed all our things into storage, there was an amazing weight lifted at realizing just how little we can (and should) be living off.
Here are some pictures of our humble abode:
A glamorous lunch
Posted on: February 3, 2010
- In: Life
- 5 Comments
Yesterday I made a variation of Linguine with Tuna and Sun-Dried Tomatoes from the February addition of Southern Living. Sounds pretty glamorous for a Tuesday afternoon, right? It is my new favorite “easy dish”.
Cook linguine until done, but still firm.
I used cherry tomatoes, cut into quarters, rather than sun-dried tomatoes.
Cut olives into quarters. And for you olive lovers – go ahead and help your self to some while you cut, I know I did!
Have your canned tuna on hand.
In skillet, saute minced garlic in olive oil.
Add tuna, stirring to keep from browning, but heating through.
Add tomatoes and olives. Heat through.
Drain pasta and add.
Finished product:
I made some simple garlic bread, using Nature’s Own Double Fiber bread (only 1 Weight Watchers point for 2 slices! :)).
I scored an amazing deal at Fareway on fruit (just one more reason why I love them); added a salad and presto! a delicious but easy lunch.
On a side note: Shirley got this new Pampered Chef can opener. I’m sure it’s amazing, but I have yet to figure it out. This is what I continually do to every can:
Which means, I’ll be sticking with the trusted camping opener, until my blonde brain can figure it out.
Bon Appetit!
Nutella, how do I love thee?
Posted on: February 2, 2010
- In: Life
- 3 Comments
About a week ago, I mentioned to Shirley, our host “mom”, that I love Nutella. Like, can’t get enough, love it. In fact, while Jonathan and I were traveling through Europe after college, I stocked up on tons of Nutella packets and stored them in my backpack to bring home. They didn’t make it back to the States. Pretty sure they didn’t make it through an entire train ride.
Imagine my excitement when I opened the cabinet on Thursday to find this:
Oh yeah. Just in time for after-nap snack.
I spread it on some graham crackers to make a “sandwich”. One word – delectable.
Julia’s thoughts?
I think she likes it.
Thanks Shirley!
- In: Life
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It’s a new month and a new week. I love when months start out at the beginning of the week. Makes it seem easier to start something new. It’s Monday. It’s February. So guess what, I’m starting something new.
As I mentioned before, I have a love of New Year’s Resolutions. While I’m not technically doing any this year, I am slowly chipping away at my 30-before-30 list. In January I wrote about saving for Paris, #10 on my list. And I began learning piano (no easy task!), #6. This month I am starting three new endeavors; training for my half marathon, #1, learning to make crepes, #28, and sharing the Gospel with those on my prayer list, #24.
That last one is no easy task either, for me that is.
The first person on my list is my younger brother, “FP”. FP lived with us for nearly 15 months, during 2008/2009. He graciously went to our church, allowed us to be involved in his life and was actively involved with us as a real part our family. We spent most Saturday mornings eating breakfast and sipping coffee for hours. This was always the favorite time of the week for all of us. During his stay, FP saw the Gospel lived out, not only in our lives, but also in the lives of the people around us. He saw us stumble, sin, ask for forgiveness, rely on grace and get back up again. We shared the Gospel with him continuously.
And then he left.
He moved back to Tennessee last May. That was a very hard time for me. Life in the house was becoming strained. FP was 18 in every sense of the word – ready to spread his wings, make his own choices, and explore the world on his terms. I played the role of a mother well – sad to see him leave. Although, I was glad to let go of some of the weight of tough responsibilities. One of the hardest parts for me in watching FP leave, was knowing that he had never given his life over to Christ.
In the past 8 months we’ve kept in close touch with FP. Last week I asked him if I could pray for him for the entire month of February. Specifically, that God would reveal Himself in new and moving ways. He said yes.
And so begins my February Challenge. To pray for FP every day. I’ve set a timer on my phone for the same time each day. I expect to see God and something amazing in my life and in my baby brother’s.















































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