Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Baby Kitten, Meet Baby Emma

Sometimes, we treat our kittens like babies. We know they're not, but they're just so darn cute, sometimes we can't resist.

Well, our babies got quite a shock on Sunday when a real baby invaded their house.

Mustang, meet Emma.

They were very curious about her, to the point of trying to jump in the car seat with her, which we of course had to nip in the bud. Then, she started crying, and both kittens mysteriously disappeared upstairs, only returning once she was asleep. We laid her on the couch for a minute or two, and they examined her with the most puzzled looks on their faces.

Get used to it, boys. In a couple of years, one of those is going to live here.

Monday, February 9, 2009

Not Me! Monday

For a few weeks now, I have been following this blog, which has a segment every week entitled "'Not Me!' Mondays". For the same few weeks, I have been wanting to replicate this segment in my own corner of the blogging world. Alas, I have always forgotten about it until Tuesday or Wednesday, and by then, it would just be lame. BUT, today the stars have aligned. So, I bring you . . .

This week, I so did not take the car to the repair shop, forgetting on the way that the 896 bridge is closed and so making the trip 20 minutes longer than it should have been. While at said repair shop, I definitely didn't find out that our car needed much more maintenance than we thought and would need to stay the night. After I wasn't told this, I certainly didn't tell them to just keep the car tonight, only thinking about how I could probably find a ride home, and not how I would get back to the shop tomorrow. I definitely did not continue to forget about this unsolved problem until I was halfway home. And all this did not happen because the dealership screwed us over and charged us waaaay too much for waaay too little service. Nope. We would never let that happen. We are informed consumers who always know what's going on and shop around so that we don't get taken.

And that is how "'Not Me!' Monday" works. Join in for a dose of humility. :-)

Welcome to Not Me! Monday! This blog carnival was created by MckMama. You can head over to her blog to read what she and everyone else have not been doing this week.

Saturday, February 7, 2009

The Danger of Complimenting Someone's Writing

alternately titled: poetry from 4 years ago

That's right. The few compliments on my writing that I've received have made me bold (or crazy) enough to regale you with poetry from freshman year. Here we go! (Feel free to laugh.)

Fall

Crunch.
Shuffling along, I glance down
To see the leaf I squashed.
Poor dead leaf,
Skin brittle and brown,
Spirit already broken.

Laying on the hard brick,
Exposed to the world,
To the elements,
To people like me
Who stomp on it willingly.

A girl slowly plods by,
Head lowered, shoulders bent
As if carrying something
Much heavier than herself.

She’s the one
Who brushes her teeth too violently,
Who jumps into conversations
Not her own.

Her clothes a little too out of place,
Hair tangled and dry,
But carefully tied with a ribbon.
Trying too hard.

“She’s the weird one,” whispers my friend.
“Oh yeah?,” I reply. “She looks like it.”
The girl cringes, turns to me
With suffering red eyes.

Crunch.

Love at First Sight

Two awkward strangers shyly raise their eyes
And gaze into a world not yet their own.
Their pulses quicken, hearts jump with surprise
To find their bodies, face, and eyes at home.

He knows that small, coy smile from his dreams.
She recognizes kindness in his gaze.
Both see the other’s thoughts and fears and schemes
As if their souls met in another age.

At last he speaks with halting, unsure words
Designed to demonstrate his wit and skill.
She listens well, but how much has she heard?
Or is her judgement tainted by this thrill?

When feelings new and strange invade our sight,
They block out judgement calls and keep us blind.

Cafeteria Haiku

Why do you insist
On naming it from high school...
“Cafeteria.”

Much more dignity
For those who go every day
To say “Dining Hall.”

Cafeterias
Are marked by milk cartons and
Standardized lunches,

Hyperactive kids,
Screaming, spreading chicken pox,
Flailing limbs and lungs.

“Dining Hall” implies
A sense of culture and taste,
Adult preferences.

“Please say ‘Dining Hall’,”
I tell my new acquaintance,
Who gladly complies.

Armed with my new name,
I read the daily menu........

Cafeteria food.

Lancaster, PA

The sun slips behind the horizon,
Pulling the daylight with it,
It’s the time of day

When electricity takes over,
People flipping switches,
Creating light.

I wait in silence for this moment,
And I keep waiting.
But nothing happens.

Humble little farms stay dark.
People inside content
To let Someone else do the creating.

The only noise is the rumble of our truck
And the distant rhythm of hooves,
Soon not so distant.

We pass the proud horse, the little buggy.
I strain to see faces
But they are hidden from me.
They are hidden from the world.

Content in their simplicity,
Not wanting anything more
Than to be left alone,

To blend in,
To wear simple black,
To till the earth.

Instead, they have become
Tourist attractions
For a flashy world
Who wants to believe
That simplicity still exists.

Son of Man

A tiny baby, in a stable born.
To save mankind from sin is why He came.
The Heavens open up to praise His name,
His purpose known before the earth was formed.
This child soon grows up to be a man
Like other men, but perfect, right, and good.
He heals the sick and gives the hungry food,
And dies and rises to fulfill God’s plan.

How do you tell the story of this life?
How can you tell someone his sins are gone?
God penned the letters of His son through men;
We added them to ancient texts of scribes.
The prophesies all pointed toward the One.
A Book was made, unlike the world had seen.

The Process

The old carpenter picks up a log,
Brushes it off, examines it.
He feels the rough bark,
Notices the knots, the imperfections,
Turns it over in his hands
And gingerly sets it down on his workbench.

He pulls out a saw,
A great, shining, terrifying thing,
Designed to cut through hearts,
To remove any trace of rot.
And he joins the two,
And the wood groans as he slices it away
Bit by agonizing bit.
It cries sawdust where he breaks it.
The remnants of its other life.

Once he has broken it,
The master begins putting pieces together,
Driving tiny nails through resistant wood.
Reshaping, correcting, measuring, lining up.
Something begins to take shape.

The carpenter grips his creation,
And it splinters him.
So he selects the right paper,
And begins to sand,
Slowly wearing off the roughness,
Scraping, rasping, hours of work around the edges.
More sawdust falls.

One thing more it needs, the master knows
To protect it, preserve it,
Allow it to be useful.
He coats it with layers of paintbrushed liquid,
His own special mix,
Ages old. He saturates the wood until
It can hold no more.
Until it will soak up none of the world around it.

The master carpenter lifts this creation,
This plain wooden cup.
He examines once more, then pours.
The liquid holds.
His own wine
Held in this simple cup.

Sunday, January 25, 2009

Chocolate, Midnight, and Amish Ice Hockey

Well, I'm finally posting about the Marriage Conference . . . and now some of the details are a little foggy, so bear with me as I reminisce . . .

We got lost on our way up, to the tune of about an hour's extra travel time. Part of it was Google's fault, and part of it was human error. Adrian felt terrible about it . . . but we still arrived 1 1/2 hours before the first session started, with enough time to check in (free chocolate bars!) , get our stuff together, and grab dinner. ($9.00 panini sandwiches in the hotel's coffee shop; I wish I could say that that was the last time we ate there.)

The next day should have started with breakfast at Skyline Diner (20 minutes away), but we had a bit of an early-morning problem . . . so the next day started with breakfast at Friendly's (20 seconds away).

It was a great time, so I really couldn't have asked for more, and Adrian handled the last-minute change of his best-laid plans like a pro.

As a matter of fact, meals like this were probably my favorite part of the conference. Yes, the messages were amazing, and getting away for a weekend was great, but it was so wonderful to be able to hang out with all these couples without the constant interruption of children. After the last session on Saturday night, a bunch of us went to the hotel's sports bar and talked until midnight. I feel as if Adrian and I benefited as much from our interaction with all the wise, godly couples around us as we did from the messages.

On the way home, as we were remarking about how great it would be to live on a farm in the Pennsylvania countryside, we saw this:


Can you tell what's going on here? Let me give you another view:

Yes, this is a crowd of Amish boys skating on a frozen pond, a homey and quaint little scene. But look closer . . . these Amish people are playing hockey. They've set up goals, and they have pucks and sticks. It just made us want to live in the country more. *sigh*

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Varied Responses to a Historic Day

Yesterday, America's first African-American president was sworn into office. This represented an historic moment for people of all races, creeds, and nationalities, especially those who have been oppressed.

But you knew that already.

What you might not know is how those here in town reacted to this historic day. I spent a good portion of my day interacting with various people of all different *ahem* shall we say, opinions?

The day began at a local Episcopal school. I volunteered in the library, assisting the librarian with a special "Inauguration Day" schedule of activities. In between classes, she and another volunteer (a mother) began discussing the presidential election. Their conversation went something like this:

"I didn't think we could do it, but we really did!"
"I know; that moment when almost all the polls were in, and he was leading, didn't you just feel this great satisfaction. I mean, we did it! I just turned the tv off and went to bed, satisfied and happy."
"Oh yeah, when the last of the California polls reported and they announced the winner, I was like, 'Yes!'"

These two women seem to feel a kind of kinship with President Obama. They kept saying "we", as if they personally were responsible for the outcome of the election, as if they themselves had campaigned for him. And maybe they did; I don't know. I do know they were ecstatic. Slightly less ecstatic was a little girl who came in moments later, from a kindergarten class. She and her classmates were coloring pictures of Obama, and she began jamming her crayon down on his face as hard as she could, while muttering, "I hate him, I hate him, I hate him!" The librarian, who had not heard her diatribe, told her to "be careful with that crayon," so the girl put the crayon down and began using her fist, pounding our President's face as hard as she could, her little face contorted with rage.

Now, I don't know about you, but I didn't know what hate was when I was in kindergarten. I certainly didn't know this kind of hate, this blinding anger at someone I had never met. Dare I say that this kind of hate has to be "carefully taught" in order to exist in someone this young?

Then I went across town to a daycare that I used to work for and ran into the owner. When asked if his establishment was going to watch the inauguration, he said, "How?" (He had a good point; they don't get tv reception there.) He then said, "And why?" My jaw dropped as a thousand reasons why jostled in my head. "Because it's historic, because it's patriotic, because he's our President, for crying out loud . . ." Sadly, I was brave enough to say none of these. I merely smiled weakly as he continued, "I mean, I don't hate him; I just don't think he's our savior either." Well, neither do I. I have a Savior, and it's not President Obama. But I still found reasons to watch the inauguration of our first African-American President.

Whatever you think about our 44th President, his views, his skin color, his speeches, he is our President. God tells us to respect our leaders and our governments as long as they don't make us abandon our faith, and even then, He never tells us to hate them. I will be praying for you, little kindergarten girl, and for myself, that I would forgive and love my enemies the way Christ taught us to.

Happy Inauguration Day.

Thursday, January 15, 2009

Lots of Links

Congratulations to this wonderful family on the birth of their lovely baby girl! Emma is so beautiful!

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We're leaving for the Sovereign Grace Marriage Conference this afternoon. Hopefully, it'll be a restful, productive, learning experience as we take this "Sabbath" together.

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

A Dangerous Admission

*The proceeding post is designed to be tongue-in-cheek. Please don't take any of it too seriously. I love my friends who love football, and I'm not in therapy for my childhood experiences of it.*

In the past weekend, my husband and our friends have watched 4 football games together. . . and I was there, my nose buried firmly in a book. Now, I will be the first to acknowledge that football parties are a great chance to build friendships and maybe even fellowship a little, but the whole actually watching the game part kind of bums me out. I always knew that I didn't like football; what I've realized recently is that I actively dislike it. I actually find it difficult to watch.

Now, I know that this is a dangerous admission in the Delmarva area. This is a region where half of our church's leadership team shows up on Sunday morning wearing Eagles' paraphernalia, where our pastor's benediction once was, "Go Eagles!", where high school football games take precedence over anything else on a Friday night, and where the advertisement for the local news station declares that "we" in Delmarva "have a passion for sports". More than once at the daycare, I've heard children (and adults) say incredulously, "You don't own a jersey?!?" "You don't know who won last night?!" "You don't even like football?!?". Hello, my name is Meredith, and I dislike football.

Of course, I have a perfectly legitimate excuse for being this way. I was raised in the DC Metro area as a Redskins fan. The Redskins were a decent team for the first 7 or 8 years of my life. Then they went downhill . . . fast. My dad still held to the old alliance, but I grew tired of hearing, "You like the Redskins? Don't you know they're terrible?!" Some of my friends have held fast to their allegiances under pressure like this (Go Orioles!), and I admire them for that, but I just couldn't do it. I just backed out of the whole football scene, resentfully, my true allegiance still lying with the Redskins and my heart slowly growing bitter at having to watch them lose again . . . and again . . . and again. By the time they made their comeback, (can we call it a comeback?), I was too far gone even to appreciate that.

Let it be known: I will watch other sports with the best of 'em. I love going to baseball games, I adore televised soccer, and I am enamored with the Olympics. But I can't watch football. Sorry, Delmarva.