Tuesday, November 15, 2016

snapshot (noun): an informal photograph taken quickly; one that captures a small moment out of a string of moments that are maybe bigger or brighter or flashier, but one that you want to remember anyway, if only because it is beautiful, somehow, in its smallness

It’s cold again. My body remembers it so well: this falling toward winter, this time of afternoon light stretching shadows long. The wind sharpens, making my cheeks blush and my eyes tear up, and there’s a part of me that clenches up tight, tries to shrink away from the cold and the coming winter. Spring’s excited whisper is long gone, and the clinging heat of summer has faded, replaced more than a month ago by the snap of early fall. And it was beautiful, wasn’t it? All those trees, setting fire to the mountains like they’d been waiting all season to do just that? The tart juice of a just-picked apple, sharp and delicious on your tongue? The warmth of sliding into a sweater again, for the first time in months?

Beautiful.

But now, it’s November. Now, the bright colors and the newness of the season are gone, and when the evenings come early, the last of the sunlight is fractured as it sinks into a net of stark, leafless branches. The former glory of the trees, fallen now and fading to brown, is scattered beneath them, dry and cracked and dead.

And it’s cold again. I tug my jacket more tightly around me, my steps wandering, following the most gnarled of the leaves just to hear them crunch under my soles. I’m not really dressed for a walk in the woods today, but the nature preserve is right on my way home from work, and there’s still plenty of light left for a short walk down the trail and back. It’s long and low, that dying golden sun, and something about the slant of its rays draw out colors from the drab November woods that I hadn’t noticed before. How many shades of grey are there in an oak tree’s trunk? More than I know names for, certainly. And how had I not seen that the backs of those leaves I’d been happily stepping on a moment ago aren’t bronze like their fronts, but silver-white?

I turn to leave, walking slow with eyes wide. This subtle loveliness is so easy to miss after the vibrancy and exuberance of October, and while I remember the cold of this time of year, I seem to have forgotten it’s beauty. My mind tends to jump from one obvious grace to the next: the moment that first burst of fall color begins to fade, I’m already looking ahead to those falling snow-kisses, their elegance piling up and covering the dark branches of the trees.

But I shouldn’t. There’s a beauty here I’m missing out on if I charge blithely on. I reach the edge of the woods and pause, looking back through the trees, and maybe I’m seeing them—really seeing them—for the first time. In the spring, the hinting green buds lend them an air of promise, and in the summer, they hide behind the bright green of healthy growth. Early fall is maybe their best moment, when they light their leaves up and burn, but what now? What now, when there are no buds or leaves or even snow, just the slender trunks crowned by interlaced branches?

They are stripped bare, and I can see the shades of color—white and black, grey and silver, brown and bronze— varying from tree to tree. I can see every knot, every snapped-off branch, every crack breaking in deep through the bark. I can see the graceful arc of branches lifted to the purpling sky above them, like raised hands. Like they’re shrugging quietly, “This is all I am. Can you call this beautiful?”

My breath catches.

I walk back just a few steps and press my hand against the craggy bark of the nearest tree: an oak. I look up, into the lacy web of branches high above my head, and I do: I see the beautiful here, in this imperfect tree gripping the earth and reaching for the sunset sky. In this November woods. In this almost-gone day. And as I do, I realize that this is something I want to remember. Not the cold of this season, or the glory of other seasons. Just this.

Because it is beautiful.



Friday, May 27, 2016

response (noun) – a reaction to something (it can be knee-jerk or it can be deliberate but usually it’s somewhere in the middle, some kind of mix of both, and you know what, that’s just fine)



Hey,

You were saying on the phone the other day that you really appreciate words from people, because you sometimes feel like your confidence is all bluster; that inside, you’re less self-assured than you let on. So words of assurance from people who know you and love you helps.

(I don’t think you’re alone in that, by the way.)

So I could take a lot of time right now to describe how great you are, and how flat-out amazed  by you I am. And maybe I’ll do that later, or by text or Snapchat or something. But I want to say something first: something you can consider a long-distance hug.

This whole situation that you’re going through… it really, really sucks. You’re not going to find an easy answer, either, because this is your “one wild and precious life”, and nobody else, for all their experience, has been in your exact same situation. They can and probably have been in shoes similar to yours… but not exactly the same. And so nobody, for all that they’ve lived and loved and cried and laughed, can predict what will happen if you make one decision over another. Some people take wild chances and risk the world as they know it, and other people live out dares to protect their corner of the world, and who’s to say which was the right decision and which was the wrong one… if there even was such a thing? And I’m not talking about absolutes and morals and truth with a capital T here: I’m talking about those everyday decisions you have to make.

The subtle ones.

The ones that aren’t black and white.

The ones that stack up eventually into a life.

That’s so much pressure!

But then again, it’s not. Not for you and I, right? Even though we don’t know what we’re doing, we’re not the ones with our hands white-knuckling the steering wheel. We’re really just along for the ride. And God (‘cause you know he’s the driver in this super-cheesy analogy, right?) he’s the most amazing tour-of-life guide you could ask for, because he has a penchant for taking all the back roads, the ones we never even heard of, that we didn’t think existed. And he’s beyond excited to point out all the sights we would probably miss otherwise. I can just picture him, leaning across the passenger seat to point out the window—

Hey kid, look! Look at this bridge, at that rushing water beneath us, at the sturdiness of the supports planted against that turbulence.

Look upriver a ways—see that waterfall kicking its heels up, celebrating even as it tumbles past rocks?

Look back at where we’ve come from. That beautiful ribbon-road winding its way down the craggy, grinning mountains? That was where you were afraid of falling, remember?

It’s all mine—all my gift to you. Open your hands and take it.

We’re not a people who hunker down and shove through life just to make it through. And we’re not a people who close eyes and cover ears and say “It’s all good!” as loud as we can to drown out reality. We’re a people of hope. We’re a people who try to see the world as God sees it, not limited by our understanding of the shape of things, and respond in kind, whether that means reacting with tears or with laughter.

Remember when the prophet Samuel went to anoint the next king of Israel? He was looking at all of David’s brothers, and pretty much thought each of them was “the one” God had in mind.

“Aha! You mean this guy, right God? I could so totally tell!”

“Ummm, you could, huh? ‘Cause that’s not the guy… you’re not exactly looking at this the right way.”

“Oh. Okay. Hmmm… got it! THIS guy!”

(Facepalm)“Try again, Samuel….”

And so on, until Samuel thought he’d exhausted all his options. And then God’s like, taa-daa! here’s the next king of Israel! And it’s David… and look at all he goes on to do.

I think the close-up version of this story is God trying to get the right guy as king of Israel, because Saul wasn’t super great. But if you zoom out, you see a bigger picture: David is the great-something-grandpa of Jesus. This one little moment of Samuel going down the line of Jesse’s sons is part of God’s great love story to the world.

But nobody saw it like that. Which is why God had to step in and remind them that we’re working in an infinity here, not in the world as we know it, so hey—let me drive this road, okay, and you sit back and spread your arms wide and take it all in and do whatever you need to do. Cry. Yell. Laugh. Whisper. Whatever.

This moment you’re in, beloved child of mine? The one that’s causing you all this heart-hurt? Open your hands. Trust me.

This is part of my love story for the world. You are part of my story.

So hang on to that, okay? I know you know that you’ll be okay, in the long run: you just wish the long run would hurry up and get here. But wait for the Lord; be strong, take heart, and wait for the Lord. Part of his timeline of grace is learning how to hope.

Love ya lots, more, and most.

-Kate


Thursday, February 25, 2016

science (noun) - the observation, identification, and description of phenomena, which is similar in a way to art (noun) - use of the imagination in the study, practice, and creation of objects intended to be contemplated or appreciated as beautiful



There’s been something really incredible in the news recently. Something so huge, so mind-blowing, that it makes the bitter drama of the political season seem absolutely miniscule by comparison. Have you heard about it, maybe? Heard that people – little human beings—built a tool so precise that it could feel the ripples in space and time? Hear the crash of two black holes colliding lightyears away?

I can’t get my head around it. And I’m not even a science geek.

That might be part of the reason I’m so amazed by this news. I couldn’t tell you the first thing about Einstein’s theory, or how some really, really smart people came up with the idea for LIGO. Gravity waves and black holes are things that I honestly never spent much time or thought on before now, and the minds behind this discovery are all much, much wiser than my own.

But this whole idea is beautiful. And the part of me that loves beauty and seeks it out—in art and poetry and movement—is also drawn to this loveliness.

There’s something to it.

Something about it.

Something about the fact that gravity moves like sound, in waves, and that
it can bend space and time around like playdough
that harmonizes with Genesis.

words, from the mouth of a mind
more wildly open than ours
describing what was, and what still is.

God unlimited
by time and by space
makes perfect sense
out of the mystery of
black holes colliding
and stars being born.

God spoke
and his voice made waves
in space and time:
and space and time
rearranged themselves
and novas erupted everywhere:
bright stars. glowing suns.
Let there be light.

gravity making worlds.

and then—he spoke again.
his powerful, magical voice (with a different pitch this time)
stretched space and bent time and they
burst into  a whole new substance
planets twirling. asteroids spinning.
Let the dry land appear.

and on and on and on and now—
we’re talking about reaching even further:
an observatory in space
to hear and feel Your whisper’s echo
Let there be light!
frequencies from the very beginning of the universe?!
oh, if I were a physicist, a scientist— how could I doubt You?
But—
if I were a scientist,
I wouldn’t be thinking like an artist.