Putting Down Roots

“These are my gardening gloves,” my nephew Tate announced over FaceTime, holding up his colorful wrist-guards. “And these are my knee pads…and elbow pads!” he proclaimed, proudly showing me his blue camo protective gear. “Can’t take them outside, though, ‘cause it smells like barbecue.”

“Yeah, you’re right, buddy. Gotta wait until the air is better, huh?” I replied.

“Yeah!” he agreed. “Here, I’ll put on my gardening gloves. This one is the right hand,” he said solemnly, as he proceeded to place the glove on his left hand.

My sister Lisa, Tate’s mom, came to the rescue when he grew increasingly frustrated about the “gardening gloves” not fitting properly. I laughed on my end of the FaceTime call and wished I could be there with them, helping put on his knee pads and elbow pads, and keeping him engaged indoors while the air quality up in Northern California is just too terrible to be outside for long. 

Poor buddy, I thought. First school is cancelled, and now he can’t even go out to play for a little while. Of course, this time will pass (as fire season always does), and eventually our world will recover from this pandemic — although I suspect things will always look a little different. But this cooped-up cabin-fever feeling is no joke. For three-year-olds and thirty-somethings.

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Power and Privilege in the Kingdom of God

Over the past few weeks, racial inequity and social justice have become powerful currents in our cultural conversation. It feels as though the country is galvanized to action, albeit in ways that at times are diametrically opposed to one another. And as a white woman, I’ve questioned how to appropriately use my voice during this time.

Mostly, I’ve tried to uplift the voices of Black, Indigenous and People of Color (BIPOC) individuals who have lived a very different reality from me. I’ve read and listened and continued to educate myself on the history of racial injustice in our country. I’ve had conversations with family and friends, but haven’t felt like I had something to add to the more public dialogue. And perhaps, I still don’t, but I do know God is calling me to share a bit of what I’ve been learning with the hope that it encourages others walking this path too.

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With Me in the Waves

I turned 34 on Sunday. Not a particularly noteworthy number and certainly an odd time to be celebrating a birthday (or anything at all really). Zoom parties and physically-distanced gatherings are how it’s done these days, and my sweet family and friends near and far showered me with love in all the ways they could.

I did my best to show them all my love and appreciation but it never felt like enough. I wanted to hug my mom, take a walk with my dad, bake cookies with my sister, share a glass of wine with my brother-in-law, and play with my nephew. I wanted to shower everyone with all of my love (with no virus holding us back). And I certainly didn’t want any of the sadness or loneliness I — like so many of us! — have experienced during this time to be misinterpreted as ungrateful. I didn’t want to disappoint anyone by not being 100% joyful.

So, I held it at bay — sharing just a bit of how I was feeling with James that afternoon while we lay out and read in a park. But by the end of the day, when it was just the two of us getting ready for bed and trying to settle in for our night’s rest, I crumbled. More accurately, I went under. It felt like I’d been treading water all day without even realizing it and then a wave of grief hit me, and I was too exhausted to fight it. It pulled me under, and I was lost in my own fears.

This kind of fear and grief is disorienting — it’s hard to know which way is up — much like the time my dad (before he was a dad) was windsurfing and fell off his board. He got trapped under it and was fighting to find his way out. Thank God he did. Not long after that, my mom told him she was pregnant (yep, with me!), and he either sawed his board in half and threw it away or sold it — the ending is up for debate in family lore, but that’s another story all together.

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Finding My Resting State

I’m perched on a large planter box in the middle of our patio, knees drawn up to my chest, bare feet on the cement, as I catch up with one of my dearest friends. She’s telling me about how it’s going with her the relentlessness of just keeping her littles alive and keeping the house running and I’m nodding along, every word resonating. She explains that she’s constantly wavering between feeling like mothering is enough  on its own and feeling like she should be doing more. As she continues to list the things she feels like she should be doing, I say with a laugh, “You’re should-ing all over yourself.” 

I laugh because I do this too. While I’m not a mother, I have my own “shoulds” (and “should nots”) that drift across my mind just when I’m feeling okay about things. I should be writing more, I should not have had that extra cookie, I should have more to show for this time. Sometimes, though, I realize I simply should be kinder to myself.

That’s where I am today. Maybe I’ll have more of a case of the should’s tomorrow, but for now I’m feeling strangely content. Contentment is not our normal at least, not the normal I hear from friends or see on social most of the time. More often than not, we’re longing for “more,” which, actually, can be good. As C.S. Lewis puts it in Mere Christianity, “If we find ourselves with a desire that nothing in this world can satisfy, the most probable explanation is that we were made for another world.”

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Love (and Loss) in the Time of Coronavirus

It’s hard to know how to characterize this period of time we’re all living in. “These uncertain times”, “our new normal”, “this unprecedented time”, “the weirds.” That last one is my personal favorite (thanks, Kumail Nanjiani and Emily V. Gordon!), although it doesn’t fully get at the intense grief and loss we’re all experiencing on some level.

This Harvard Business Review article — That Discomfort You’re Feeling Is Grief — has made the rounds in the last month and helped kickstart some of the conversations about grief I’ve been hearing and participating in lately. In it, David Kessler says that “we’re feeling a number of different griefs…. The loss of normalcy; the fear of economic toll; the loss of connection. This is hitting us and we’re grieving. Collectively. We are not used to this kind of collective grief in the air.”

I see this collective grief in the masks hanging from the dashboard of nearly every parked car I pass on my walks. A clear sign of how our world has changed. And of course, I see it in the eyes of my masked neighbors as I move to the street to give the space, while still waving and saying a muffled “hi” through my face covering — my attempt to establish some sense of the human connection I’m missing so much. The loss of jobs and lives hangs heavy in the air. We’re inundated with news and updates and statistics and it’s all just too much. But it’s real, and we’re faced with the choice of acknowledging our griefs so that we can actually live in them and through them. 

I’ve experienced grief at a personal level in many ways during the time of coronavirus. Grief over the trip to Europe that was canceled, the lost time with family, the lack of in-person connection with friends, and now the loss of work as I knew it.

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Fire Season

Southern California has had some crazy weather as of late. Intense gusts of wind and chilly days (read: in the 50s) followed by record-high temperatures. At work, the palm trees outside my window have been tossed about by the wind – leaving me in awe of how they can bend and flex without breaking.

But all this wind brings back memories of summer and fire season. That season of bloody noses and perpetually dry skin. Of brush fires and burning hills. Supposedly this is California’s “new normal,” and we’ve even introduced new phrases into our lexicon: “in the fire zone,” “forced blackouts.”

I’m incredibly thankful that James and I have never been in real danger, but this year we had our first real taste of fire season when the hill behind our house went up in flames. We’ve always said we’ll be okay if the hill catches fire because there are more important things to save (read: Warner Bros. and Universal Studios) before the fire would ever reach us. But that didn’t make the situation any less alarming.

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Shine Bright Like a Diamond

I’ve been ignoring it for months—this diamond that’s lost its sparkle. One of 12 small stones that encircle the diamond at the center of my engagement ring, this particular little diamond doesn’t shine like the others.

For a while, I assumed my ring just needed a good cleaning. Surely there was some debris or build-up caught in the setting that was preventing the light from shining through—dimming the diamond’s brilliance. But the professional cleaning only made the dull diamond stand out starkly against its radiant neighbors.

As I handed the ring back to the cleaner to have him examine the stone under his jeweler’s loupe, I knew there must be something wrong.

“Hmm,” he murmured as he rotated the ring under the light of his lamp. “Yes, the diamond is definitely chipped.”

My stomach sank. “But how?”

“See right here?” He handed the ring back to me. “I can even see it just with my own eyes. Right here.” He pointed to the spot where the diamond had chipped, just below the surface. “Diamonds are very hard substances, but sometimes if you hit them just at the right spot…”

“I can’t believe it. I’ve only had it two years.”

“It happens, and it’s more common than you’d think,” he said, clearly trying to ease the guilt I was feeling right then. “Because it’s chipped down here, the light isn’t getting through, and the diamond has lost its brilliance.”

He gave me a quote to replace the diamond and assured me he could have it back to me within a few days. I thanked him for his time and said I’d get back to him.

As I left the shop and stepped out into the light, all I could see was this diamond that wouldn’t sparkle. A diamond without its brilliance.

Some might call this pessimism. Why focus on what’s wrong? Why not just focus on the beauty of the other diamonds? But I see it as optimism. Why leave something broken when it can be repaired? Why not bring this beautiful ring back to wholeness?

This ring still brings me joy whenever it catches my eye. As a symbol of James’ love and commitment to me and a sign of our covenant, it’s a comfort to me when things feel difficult in our marriage.

As a piece of my family history—the center stone belonged to my grandmother, a remnant from a rejected suitor—this ring has new life on my hand and reminds me how God redeems our pasts.

And on top of all that, it is an undeniably beautiful ring. One worth fixing, cherishing, and protecting.

Another Day of Sun

Black and blue clouds shapeshift across the sky. They seem to be threatening rain. But we haven’t had rain for months, and it’s not in the forecast until next week. So while these clouds look like they mean business, I’m doubtful I’ll hear the comforting patter of rain as I settle in for the night. Still, I’m glad to see them.

I’ve needed a break from the constant, glaring LA sun. The relentless heat exhausts me, and I’m convinced that all this squinting into the sun is contributing to the lines that seem to be taking up permanent residence on my. Little pathways—like passages of time—cementing themselves on my body instead of washing away with my makeup at the end of the day. Continue reading

10 Truths I’m Learning in Marriage

After our first month of marriage, I shared 6 things I’d learned in the 30 days since we said our vows, honeymooned in Mexico, packed up my house in San Francisco, and moved our lives to Los Angeles.

  1. It’s okay if things don’t feel different right away.
  2. You don’t have to do it the way everyone else does.
  3. Protect yourself and your spouse.
  4. You’re more selfish than you think.
  5. You have to shed your old skin.
  6. Marriage is for life.

Now 16 months into marriage—which feels like a minuscule amount of time compared with some of the model marriages in my life—I still stand by each of those statements. (Feel free to pause and go back to the original post if you like—see you in a few minutes!) Naturally, though, those truths have morphed a bit and become more solid for me.

It’s almost as though they were a little too faraway before, and now they’re coming closer to me—or vice versa—and I can see them more clearly. Like when you see a familiar face from faraway, someone you think you know, and as you bridge more of the distance between you, you recognize them for who they are.

That’s the first truth of marriage that I’d add to my list from above… Continue reading

Patiently and Confidently

The conspicuously loud crunch of the cracker snapped me back to attention. I’d been absorbed in the lyrics I was singing, although I hardly had to think about them – that’s how familiar these songs have become. With the lights dimmed, I felt my husband James’ hand press lightly against the small of my back as we walked down the aisle toward the station where communion was set up.

“Oh! precious is the flow that makes me white as snow. No other fount I know, nothing but the blood of Jesus.”

I sang these words quietly as we moved forward in the line, this weekly ritual so familiar that it was almost rote. In the darkness, I reached for a piece of broken cracker and dipped it in the little metal bowl filled with grape juice. As I lifted the cracker to my lips, I saw it was a bit larger than I expected and not quite saturated with juice, so instead of being soft and nearly dissolving on my tongue, the cracker snapped and crunched under my teeth. Continue reading