Posts Tagged ‘passion’

50 things to do before I die

October 25, 2012

“If  you want to know what’s really important to you, make a list.”

The following is an article by Wendy Swallow Williams I clipped out of a Readers Digest in the late 1990′s.

This article changed the quality of  my life.

This morning as I was catching up on what my fellow bloggers were posting,   this  long term life goal jumped off the screen:

“lots and lots of land for gardens, orchards, chickens and room to breathe…” 

  I told this young blogger , she had just described my life to a T.

I can trace the course  of my life the past 15 years  directly back to this short  article.   Since starting the habit of having a “list”  there are literally dozens of things I’ve  checked off.

To say it has enriched my life immeasurably is an understatement.  DM

____________________________________________________________

A few weeks ago, I followed a friend into an art-supply store.  I found him picking out tubes of watercolor paint, which surprised me because he’s not an artist.

“I signed up for a watercolor class, and it starts next week, He said sheepishly.  “I don’t really have time for it, but it was on my list of 50 things to do before I die, so I went for it.”

This sounded interesting,”What else is on the list?” I asked.

“All kinds of things, ” he said.  “Every few months I look at the list and decide what to focus on next.  Before I had a list, I moaned a lot about what I was missing in my life.  Now I just do stuff.”

“Can I see your list sometime?” I asked.

“I don’t know,” he said.  “It reveals a lot about me.  Write your own list, and you’ll see what I mean.”

So that night I did just that, and he was right.  The list revealed a whole lot about what was important to me.  It also revealed how hopelessly behind I am at getting to the things I really want.

Just writing the list helped me sort through priorities.  I filled up the first 20 blanks quickly, but then began to think carefully.  Eventually I added items I’ve thought about for years, dreams I’ve carried with me since I was young, and things that resonated when I first heard about them.  When I reviewed the list later, some entries surprised me.

First, I want to travel much more particularly now that my children are older and can go with me to see the world.  There are ten trips I would like to make with the boys- from biking through Denmark to camping in the Canadian Rockies.

I was also surprised to find some things on the list that need to be done soon.  If I’m going to learn to Rollerblade, for instance, I’d better start before turning 50.

Some items, though I can put off until I’m older.  I would love to grow flowers,  to really garden, but while I”m raising kids and working I don’t have time for roses.

I would love to do volunteer work in a hospital nursery someday, rocking crying infants and giving them their first baths.   I would like to work with teen-agers,  leading youth groups or helping at the local high school.  If I’m going to do these though, I may need to reconsider running the bake sale for the school fair each year.

A few of the items are intimidating because they mean a serious commitment of some sort.  I would like to publish a novel before I die, and I would like to get a Ph.D, in English literature.  I also would like to learn to draw and play the piano with a string quartet.  If I’m going to accomplish these things, I need to start writing every day and polish my piano skills.

I may not make it through the list.  Some things may just be out of reach, such as New Zealand, and other ultimately may not work with the rest of my life, such as owning a horse.  Yet I see that I already have built the framework for many of these pipe dreams, and that if I make them goals, there is no reason I can’t find a way to taste at least part of that reality.

Like my friend, I now have an alternative do complaining.   When I’m bored with my life, I take out my list.  Maybe I’ll send off for travel brochures or take my pencils out in the back yard and doodle around for an  hour, trying to sketch trees that look like trees.

I have no idea how the boys and I will get to Africa, but if it’s important enough, I’m sure we’ll find a way.  One of them might grow up to be a zoologist, or I might become a nature writer and get sent on assignment or maybe we’ll just save a few dollars every week till we have enough.

I had a cousin who accomplished an amazing string of interesting things.  She once told me the key was preparing so that life could work in mysterious ways. “If you want your ship to come in, you must build a dock,” she said.

Thanks to my list, I’m working on some big docks.

Wendy Swallow Williams

____________________________________

I (DM) will close with a few pictorial highlights off my list….

hosting  concerts in our home and barn.  When Katie Sawicki came to visit we also sponsored a songwriting workshop.

Yep, we went white water rafting in 2010 (that’s my wife in the boat on the right clocking the guy in the other boat with her oar. )  She said it was an accident.  :-)

Had a pet pig I named Winston.  To tell you about that pig would take a whole blog post in itself. :-)

Our orchard started out as a wish/ and idea on my “list”

_____________________________

So tell me, do you have a working list of sorts?

Care to share any items you have yet to check off but plan to  sometime soon?

Someone has said the older we get, the less action oriented our goals become…. What do you think?

What type of relationship goals could be on a list?

My spiral into Depression

August 26, 2012

I learned at CCEF  ”almost anything can be at the root of depression: a recent illness in which you get behind in your work, hormonal changes, a reversal of fortune, the consequences of simple negligence, guilt over a particular sin, self-pity arising from jealousy or a disadvantageous turn of events, bad feelings resulting from resentment, worry, etc….the important fact to remember is that a depression does not result directly from any of those factors, but rather comes from a cyclical process in which the initial problem is mishandled in such a way that it is enlarged in downward helixical spirals that eventually plunge one into despair.

    Mine came about due to the death of a  vision.

WARNING: Going to talk about my faith….if that sort of thing gets under your skin….stop now…you won’t hurt my feelings.

______________________________________________________

May 4, 1980 7:48 PM I wrote this in the front cover of a little New Testament:  “I made a commitment to God to live my life for his Glory’

Translation:  Just like a  person entering into a marriage covenant , I entered into a “covenant” with God Himself….as an adult I made an intentional decision to become a believer.

As is often the case,  I desired to be more effective in reaching  out to other people…there was this restlessness in my life.  Looked at 50 different Christian Colleges, trying to decide whether to be a formally trained pastor, or marriage and family counselor…Moved from Iowa to New Jersey in 1985 (with two kids in tow) , enrolled @ CCEF, decided I was being called to be a bi-vocational pastor .   Carpenter by day,  teacher/facilitator when  I could….1990 returned to the Midwest with a strong sense of purpose.  I’d  experienced  5 years of intense discipleship/mentoring  in New Jersey and believed God had brought us home to pass on what I’d learned.

Things were great for the first 2  1/2  years,  then  began to butt heads with  our pastor  In hindsight, God set me up- we had two completely different  understandings for a healthy church.  His was a more traditional model-  I on the other hand craved  deeper relationships  that can’t be cultivated when you’re sitting in rows looking at the back of each others heads.  We had two different models..not wrong/ just different.  I know I  wore him out with our intense discussions.   It finally came to a head in November  of 1995- we left the church-  the hardest decision of my life (till then) – 90% of my closest friendships were in that church/ someone told me later, it felt like a divorce- (it did).

I was confused, I was angry-(I’m not giving you all the details- this would get too wordy)- I believed I would eventually  be a co-pastor that church….instead I was on the outside looking in.

The depression probably started  two years previous, and lingered  another year.  Things  gradually got better since 1996 – here we are 12 years later and there is still a bruise on my soul.  Just this morning, as we’ve been organizing our office, I came across several magazines and books related to mentoring and discipleship-  I pitched the magazines, and am selling  some of the books on e-bay. I have no aspiration or intention of ever taking an active role in leadership in a local church.  I’m no longer depressed :-)    just broken- and there is a big difference.

Have you ever wrestled with depression?  What triggered it?  What brought you out of it? (if you’re out of it?)   What good came from it (if any)?

Have you ever watched your life  goal  die?  What was it and where are you at in the process now?

_______________________________

I originally wrote this in 2008 .  I was interacting with someone this morning about depression, when I mentioned I’d gotten a little taste of it myself, they asked if they could  hear my story…decided to re-post it for my new readers (all 3 of you)  ;-) DM

While you can…

June 15, 2012

“The Greeks didn’t write obituaries when someone died…they just asked one question….”Did he have passion?”  From the Movie Serendipity

50 Things to do before you die

In 1999 I read an  article in Reader’s Digest  that changed my life.   It was called “50 Things to do before you die”

Wendy Swallow Williams, the author  suggested  writing a list of things you’d  like to see happen.

This was 10 years before The Bucket List  craze.

Anything could be on the list.

It revealed much about the person.

As you would write the list, don’t  let money be a factor; just take some time to dream.  Before you die, If God would make a way, what are fifty things you’d like to do?

Maybe you’d like to take a trip…or several trips.

Maybe you’d  like to learn how to play the piano or ride in a helicopter.

Maybe you’d take a 6 month extended trip across the United States and see people and places.

The key was  to take some quiet time and let your mind dream.  Wendy  had listed several places she wanted to visit, skills she wanted to acquire, etc.

I spent some time and identified 25 things I wanted to  do…if you’ve never done this sort of thing before, it is not as easy as it sounds.

__________________________________________________________________-

It’s been 13 years since that first list…here is a portion of  my current list:

1.  Take a cross country motorcycle trip

(I did end up getting an 800 CC Suzuki  Intruder/  got my license…rode it for a couple of years then changed my mind…too many people locally were getting killed on bikes.  I’m not so concerned about dying.  It’s getting into a motorcycle accident and living the rest of my life in a wheel chair...that concerned  me.

2.  Work on a potter’s wheel   (done)

3.  Take a trip to Ireland

4,  Write a book   (done)

5.   Run the mile without stopping

6.  Learn how to swim

7.  Take an extended trip (several months if possible) across the US and see people and places

8.  Record a song  (done)

9. Take a painting class  (done)

10.  Have a Bed and breakfast  (done)

11.  Speak in front of a large crowd  (I’m thinking @ least 5000 ) (I love to push that fear envelope)

12. Take a class in self -defense  (done)

13.  Learn how to make wine

14.  Visit Germany,  the areas of our family’s heritage

15.  Visit New Zealand

16.  Host an outdoor concert among our apple trees (done)…(  and we’ve had 7 of them since I first wrote this list)

17.  Be totally out of debt including our mortgage ( 99% done on this one)

18.  Go whitewater rafting, (done)

19.  Float down our local river until it connects to the Mississippi River.

20 .  Take up kayaking w/ my wife

21. learn to fence (as in swords)

22. sing or perform in a band or music group that sounds excellent

23.  plant apple trees and beautify our grounds (done)

24.  get up close to a gorilla/ look into his eyes.

25. ride 1 day @ least in RAGBRAI  (it is a week long bike ride across Iowa)

26. not be overweight and keep it off  (I dropped 35 pounds 2 years ago/ got too thin/ I’m just 5 pounds above where I’d like to be currently)

27. complete a Narnia display  on our property complete with a wardrobe and false back door leading into the woods

28. learn how to play fiddle

29.  scuba dive with tanks

30.  get a really good camera w/ a zoom and close up lens so I can perfect my picture taking abilities

31.  grow 75% of our own food

32. learn how to butcher a large animal

33. visit Muir Woods

34.  Ride the train from Saint Paul to  Seattle too see friends

35.  Take a road trip down the coast of Oregon from Seattle into California

Hopefully you’ll not come away with the thought I’m advocating  a ‘health, wealth, and prosperity gospel” because I’m not.  On the other hand, some of us have gone to the other extreme, thinking it would be nonspiritual to have such a list.

As much as anything, my bucket list has enriched my life 10 fold.  It has allowed me to channel my energy (passion) for life and see tangible fruit.

My mother-in-law was in her mid 60′s when she passed away.  She told me just a few years before she died of brain cancer not to wait until I was her age to travel and do those things she’d always wanted to do but never seemed to find the time or money to pull off.   Her husband (my father-in law) and already died @ this point..he was in his early 60′s when he’d died….so at the time of my conversation with her, she was planning a trip to Ireland with a girl friend…

      “Doug, she said, do those things  you want to do while you can…there  is no guarantee you’ll be able to  later….look at me..Jack and I planned to travel and do these things when he retired…we never made it….”

That conversation gave me permission to pursue my life with even more passion, if that is possible…

 Someone with passion

I am Ostfriesland

August 20, 2011

I never  thought much about my  Low German roots until a few years ago when a friend of mine (who happens to be from Germany) explained to me the distinction between High  and Low German ( Plattdüütsch)

High German is the language of today, spoken by pretty much anyone who says they are German.    Low German   (depending on who you talk to)  would be considered  slang,  spoken by the  uncultured, back woods poor peasant types).  My Grandpa (Opa) came from Low German stock, where as  Grandma (Oma) came from the city, was  more refined and spoke both.

There should be no shame in having  Low German roots but just between me and you, ever since hearing the distinction, I’ve  felt just a wee bit second rate….until this week.

      I’d  heard growing up  that my ancestors came from the Northern part of Germany called “Ostfriesland” (pronouned  Aush-Freeze-land)   ( or the Freeland).   This week I’ve done some reading…

It seems that way back in the time of the Roman empire,  the people of Northern Germany lived in freedom and did not want to submit themselves to the bully called Rome. The area they lived in was in fact called ”The Free lands”     Rome decided to conquer these farmers,  instead, they (the Romans)  got their butts kicked in the  Battle of the Teutoburg Forest  (A.D.9)   The peasants knew there would be hell to pay  and there was.  It resulted in 7 years of bloody conflict, but in the end, Rome never was able to completely subdue them.

I told my wife this morning, the Ostfrieslanders  were too busy fighting off Roman soldiers to care how many spoons you needed to formally set the table.   :-)     And yet, as I’ve read more about my ancestors this week,  I also learned they were not the brute savages you might think.  Taticus (Roman historian) mentions they were fiercely monogamous.

I say all of this to tell you, I embrace  the fact that there is “Freelander” blood coursing through my veins.  It gives me a rich heritage I didn’t realize I had.

If you want to know more…check out this link:

Ancient German people


(I reposted this one by request)  DM

the meaning of (my) life

August 19, 2011

He was standing on the tracks, listening to death’s locomotive whistle, and he was very clear about the important things in life……….

______________________________________________________

I (DM)  want to introduce you to one of my mentors.. Morrie Swartz.

What follows  is an excerpt from a book of Morrie’s distilled wisdom.

“the first time I saw Morrie on Nightline, I wondered what regrets he had once he knew his death was imminent.  Did he lament lost friends?  Would have have done much differently?  Selfishly, I wondered if I were in his shoes, would I be consumed with sad thoughts of all that I had missed?  Would I regret the secrets I had kept hidden?

When I mentioned this to Morrie, he nodded, “It’s what everyone worries about isn’t it?  What if today were my last day, on earth?”  He studied my face, and perhaps he saw an ambivalence about my own choices, I had this vision of me keeling over at my desk one day, halfway through a story, my editors snatching the copy even as the medics carried my body away.

“Mitch?”  Morrie said.

I shook my head and said nothing.  But Morrie picked up on my hesitation.

“Mitch.” he said, “the culture doesn’t encourage you to think about such things until you’re about to die.  We’re so wrapped up with egotistical things, career, family, having enough money ,  meeting the mortgage, getting a new car, fixing the radiator when it breaks- we’re involved in trillions of little acts just to keep going.  So we don’t get into the habit of standing back and looking at our lives and saying, “Is this all?  Is this all I want?  Is something missing?”

He paused.

“You need someone to probe you in that direction.  It won’t just happen automatically.”

I knew what he was saying.  We all need teachers in our lives.

And mine was sitting in front of me.

Fine, I figured.  If I was to be the student, then I would be as good a student as I could be.

On the plane ride home that day, I made a small list on a yellow legal pad, issues and questions that we all grapple with, from happiness to agin to having children to death.  Of course, there were a million self-help books on these subjects, and plenty of cable TV shows, and $90 operhour consultation sessions.  America had become a Persian bazaar of self-help.

But there still seemed to be no clear answers.  Do you take care of others or take care of your “inner child”?  Return to traditional values or reject tradition as useless?  Seek success or seek simplicity?  Just Say No or Just Do It?

All I knew was this:  Morrie, my old professor, wasn’t in the self-help business.  He was standing on the tracks, listening to death’s locomotive whistle, and he was very clear about the important things in life.

I wanted that clarity.  Every confused and tortured soul I knew wanted that clarity.

“Ask me anything,”  Morrie always said.

So I wrote this list:

Death

Fear

Aging

Greed

Marriage

Family

Society

Forgiveness

A meaningful life

This list was in my bag when I returned to West Newton for the fourth time, a Tuesday in late August when the air-conditioning at the Logan Airport terminal was not working, and people fanning themselves and wiped sweat angrily from their foreheads, and every face I saw looked ready to kill someone.”

From the book Tuesdays with Morrie by Mitch Albom

_________________________________________________________

I (DM) love love love this book.  I remember as my grandma was getting older, she refused to have her will made out because somehow in her mind it might hasten her death or bring her bad luck.   My wife and I on the other hand love strolling through a local cemetery, looking at the old tombstones and learning  the stories of people buried there .   It comes down to perspective.

I think that’s one of the reasons I have enjoyed this book so much. It gives me added perspective on life.

I told someone yesterday I love being the age I am now….. 53 .

Inside I still feel like a 23 year old,  just now I have  30 years life experience under my belt…

what

a

rush!

:-)

Rereading this post I realized this is just a teaser to the subject at hand (the meaning of life).  Since I am not one to jam my “stuff” down anyone’s throat, I will stop  here.  If this is a topic you’re really hankering to find answers to, I’ll make two suggestions.

First,   get a copy of the book.  It will slake your thirst like nothing else.

Secondly, if you’d like my thoughts on a specific issue, ask your question and I will do my best to reply  in the comment threads.

DM

If you get bored….

July 18, 2011

“Now let me tell you about Larry Walters, my hero.  Walters is a truck driver, thirty-three years old.  He is sitting in his lawn chair in his backyard, wishing he could fly.  For as long as he could remember, he wanted to go up.  To be able to just rise right up in the air and see for a long way.  The time, money, education, and opportunity to be a pilot were not his.  Hang gliding was too dangerous, and any good place for gliding was too far away.  So he spent a lot of summer afternoons sitting in his backyard in his ordinary old aluminum lawn chair – the kind with webbing and rivets.  Just like the one you’ve got in your backyard.

The next chapter of this story is carried by newspapers and television.  There’s old Larry Walters up in the air over Los Angeles.  Flying at last.  Really getting UP there.  Still sitting in his aluminum lawn chair, but it’s hooked on to forty-five helium-filled surplus weather balloons.  Larry has a parachute on, a CB radio, a six-pack of beer, some peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, and a B B gun to pop some of the balloons to come down.  And instead of being just a couple of hundred feet over his neighborhood, he shot up eleven thousand feet, right through the approach corridor to the Los Angeles International Airport.

Walters is a taciturn man.  When asked by the press why he did it, he said; ” You can’t just sit there.”  When asked if he was scared, he answered; “Wonderfully so.”  When asked if he would do it again, he said ; “Nope.”  And asked if he was glad he did it, he grinned from ear to ear and said, “Oh, yes.”

The human race sits in its chair.  On the one hand is the message that says there is nothing left to do.  And the Larry Walterses of the earth are busy tying balloons to their chairs, directed by dreams and imagination to do their thing.

The human race sits in its chair.  On the one hand is the message that the human  situation is hopeless.  And the Larry Walteres of the earth soar upward knowing anything is possible, sending back the message from eleven thousand feet: “I did it, I really did it.  I’m FLYING!”

It’s the spirit here that counts.  The time may be long, the vehicle may be strange or unexpected.  But if the dream is held close to the heart, and imagination is applied to what there is close at hand, everything is still possible.

But wait!  Some cynic from the edge of the crowd insists that human beings still can’t really fly.  Not like birds, anyway.  True.  But somewhere in some little garage, some maniac with a gleam in his eye is scarfing vitamins and minerals supplements, and practicing flapping his arms faster and faster….”

From the book All I really need to know I learned in Kindergarten by Robert Fulghum

________________________________________________________________

We like many of you are in the middle of a killer heat wave.

Don’t feel like doing much of anything.  So, to pass the time, I will sometimes pick up Robert Fulghum and read a story or two from one of his books, out loud to my wife.

Thought it would be fun to share one of them with you tonight. DM

dark horse

July 10, 2011

Preface

“Why don’t you write a story about Ron?” she said one morning after breakfast.  My wife often has song ideas for me.  It’s a hit and miss kind of thing.  Her own identity is strong enough that she’s not afraid to miss.  This idea was definitely a hit, even though I fought it for a moment.

  “I don’t think it would work.  Who would relate to a song about someone they didn’t know?”

       “They could relate to your relationship.”

  “Perhaps.  No, I don’t think it would work.”

“I know,” she said. “Make it allegorical.  If Ron were an animal, what would he be?”

Pause.

      “A stallion, an Italian stallion,”  I joked.

     “That’s been done.”

“No.  He would be a black stallion.  A dark horse…that no one could ride.  You know, I think you might have something here.”

An hour later, the original song,”Dark Horse” was born…..

__________________________________________________________________

I (DM) came across the story Dark Horse  in the mid 1980′s   Of all the books I’ve ever read,   this one as much as any of them has shaped  my spiritual journey.

______________________________________________________________________________________

Chapter 1 Night Flight

For as long as I can remember, I had always wanted to be a white horse.  I wasn’t all white, but my good ancestry had left me more white than most horses I knew and fortunately, in the most important places.  Most of my face was white, and the white of my right front leg ran up to my shoulder so that if I stood at an angle…with my good leg out… and my head slightly cocked ….all you could see was white.

It was a good sign, I was told, and the mark of a leader.

It was for this reason when I came of age, I was sent to a special ranch where they trained horses like me to think, walk, and prance like white horses.  We learned how to make the most of our white parts; even how to pose so as to show the most amount of white (without looking unnatural.)

This was harder for some than others.  I remember one horse that had a beautiful white rump and tail and one white streak between his eyes.  His unfortunate fate was always having to present himself backwards – not to mention the strain on his neck from twisting over his shoulder so that the white on his head could be seen.

Life at the white horse ranch was very ordered.  We spent most of every morning exercising on the track – our muscles had to be developed to their fullest for a more impressive display.  Then, after a brief rest, we were washed, brushed, and groomed by our trainers for posing sessions.

Posing sessions were boring, but the preening and doting associated with them was something to which any horse could easily become accustomed.  During these sessions, the owner of the ranch would often come by and comment on our progress.  I was proud to be “one of the most promising animals he had seen in some time.”  (I often wonder now if he meant that, or if he told the same thing to all the horses simply to build up our horse pride.)

True or not, the words worked on me.  I began to form quite an attachment to my own whiteness.  I found myself more and more aware of it, almost as if it were glowing with light of its own.  But of course it was easy to become white – minded at a school where everything revolved around being white.

My favorite part of the day was after the posing sessions when we were led into a large pastured area, fed from long wooden troughs of hay, and allowed to run free in the late afternoon sun.  During the spring there was even real grass to pull up with our teeth.  I marveled at its sweetness and at the strange appeal of the gritty dirt in my mouth.

From the fenced pasture we would occasionally see small bands of wild horses moving across the plains in the distance.  Seeing them always gave me a curious, restless sort of feeling.  Like sniffing a spring wind that’s blown across distant fields of clover.  Almost in spite of myself I would move to the fence and watch them prance and canter on the horizon.

  What would it be like to be….out there?

Part of me was drawn  to the adventure, the freedom.  But another part was full of questions.  How would I be assured of food?  Who would keep me clean?  And – most important of all- what do they know of being white?  What do they care?  It was always this question that would shake me from such foal-ish daydreams and remind me that I was destined for a  “higher calling.”  Whiteness could not be important on the plains;  it would be impossible to maintain.  I was obviously dedicating myself to the true glory of horses – being white.

For this reason, the highlight of each year was when a white horse show came to our ranch.  It was the one time we were able to see real white horses in all their splendor.  Men would come to these shows in great numbers to see the bright spotlights reflect off these horses’ magnificent heads, powdery white manes, and rippling, muscular flanks.  I used to dream of being in that spotlight, because I knew with its help, even thought I wasn’t I could still look like a white horse.  All of us at the ranch shared that one burning dream – to one day join a white horse show.

It was during one of these shows that I first met him.  The shows always came during the first warm evenings of spring and this night was crystal clear, making the resplendent white horses appear unusually bright.

  “Have you ever seen a white horse?
The nicker came from behind me – so softly that only I could hear.  I turned my neck to lay eyes on the most startling horse I had ever seen.  Wild as a prairie storm.  Dark as the night plains.

   “Who are you – and how did you get in here?”

“I am not new to you.”

Suddenly it came to me.  He was the dark horse I had seen earlier outside the pasture fence.  He had been the only wild horse to venture close to the ranch.  Once he came near enough for me to strike up one of my more impressive, rehearsed poses.  I had imagined this heathen horse would gasp with awe and gape in astonishment.  But he didn’t gasp or gape at all.  He simply chewed on a mouthful of grass and looked me straight in the eyes.  That look – I’ve never been able to erase it from my memory.  It had a piercing clarity that seemed to burn even from a distance.

And now, up close, that look was making me every uncomfortable.  It was as if he were looking right through my eyes into my very thoughts.

“Have you ever seen a white horse?”  he repeated.

“Well of course.  Isn’t this a white horse show?”

      “But have you ever seen a white horse?”

  “I see the white horses that come in the show.  And some of us here at the ranch are almost all white.”

        “Have you ever walked completely around a white horse?”

Now he was starting to rattle something in my thinking.  True, I had only seen the real white horses from a distance.  When they were through showing they were whisked away to the separate stables where they were always quartered.  And then I thought of all the horses at the ranch, none of which were all white.  I thought of all the hourses I knew and had to admit.  I had never walked completely around a white horse.

  “Look at that horse right now in the spotlight,”  He said, “Do you see all of him?”

“No.”

“Of course you don’t.  And watch – when he’s through posing he’ll walk off in the darkness.  Do you see?  The light only shines on the pose, not the real horse.”

I was bewildered.  Couldn’t find the words for an answer.  Who was this dark horse?  Where had he come from?   Was he some kind of cynic?  An enemy, perhaps, trying to discourage me from my calling?  And how could one with no white on him seem to….well, shine the way he did?

I turned toward the stage.  I had to find relief from this wild horse’s scrutiny.  I had to collect my thoughts.  But as I stared at the staging area, something looked different.  After looking at the dark horse, the stage lights looked – somehow lesser – more diffused.  The light on the horses was a frothy glow, reflecting back a surface sheen…. but the light in the eyes of the dark horse flashed with pinpoint clarity and burned deep as a branding iron.  I watched the horses come and go in the spotlight, striking their poses with casual grace.  They’d all been through this many, many times before.

Suddenly it all seemed so hollow.  Useless.  Lifeless.

And then with the new light that was already illumining my thoughts , I saw in an instant the folly of this whole procedure.  How foolish that it had never occurred to me before!  I wasn’t going to get any whiter by being at this ranch - only more clever at appearing white!

I looked back again at the dark horse and his eyes were dancing with excitement.  He knew what I was going through.  Without even speaking he was willing me to ask the ultimate question.  But who could ask such a question ?  To speak those words would be….horrifying.  It would undermine everything I’d ever learned about the glory and purpose of horses.  It would alter the whole course of my life.  But it was no use holding back.  The question had already asked itself in my mind and there was nothing that could keep it from falling out of my mouth.

  “Do you mean to tell me….there are no white horses?”

      “No, he replied. “There is one.”

      “You mean the White One?”

     “Of course.  He is the only white horse there ever was or ever will be.”

    “Aren’t we to be like the White One?”  It was another horse from the ranch speaking, for there was now a small group listening in on our conversation.

“Yes,” said the dark horse. “But whiteness is not on the outside.  It is in the heart.  White isn’t what you look like, it’s what you do when you follow the will of the White One.  You cannot change a hair on your body, but he can change your heart and shine his light in your eyes.”

As I stood there the whiteness of my leg and face began to tingle as if it were glowing – not in a good way this time, but in an embarrassing way.  Suddenly it seemed like a thousand eyes were focused on that small area of whiteness I had cherished for so long.  How insignificant it became.  I wanted to hide.  The whiteness had been the focus of my trust, not the White One.  I was ashamed.

I asked another question, trying to get the attention off myself for a moment.  “Why then do we have white horse shows?”  I asked.  What’s the point?”

      “That’s the point…. there is no point.”

He was becoming restless as if my question had finally brought our discussion to  the conclusion he was seeking.  He pawed the ground, tossing his great head up and down with anger.

There are thousands of horses out there who have never heard of the White One and there is an enemy afoot – crouching at the door – while you waste your time comparing whiteness.”

At that he reared back and his cry was a mighty thing.  “If you would follow the White One, then follow me!”

Just as quickly he was gone – vaulting two fences and galloping hard toward the open plains.

There was now no small commotion created in the white horse show.  The air was choked with dust.  Horses  panicked and whinnied- people panicked and cried.  The thunder of the bolting dark horse seemed to echo and reecho from the stable walls as the spotlights turned off their subjects to search the crowd for the cause of the disruption.  And a few of us who had heard the words were stamping our hooves in an agony of indecision.  Even as  I watched, the eyes of two of my companions began to flicker and flame.  And in that instant I knew.  It should have been a hard decision.  But it was not.  The truth was too clear.  The challenge was too compelling.  The alternative was too costly.  There was a choice, but there was no choice.

The next events happened so fast that I only remember flashes and pictures.  But those pictures will always stay vivid in my mind.  The flying dust, the easily – vaulted fences, the pounding hooves, the sweat and dirt mingled to mud and caking on my white leg, the faint outline of the other horses – black against the night sky.

Racing into the darkness, we had only the stars for light.  That, and the light of the White One, shining through our eyes, driving us across plains we had never run, towards mountains we had never seen.

__________________________________________________________________________-

If you’d like to read the rest of this allegory you can get a copy of the book here

I’ve sometimes secretly wondered…..

February 26, 2011

I’ve sometimes secretly wondered if there wasn’t something a little “weird” in our marriage.

(Not to worry…I told my wife this on Thursday) :-) ….after reading the following article.

Here’s what weird:  we’re coming up on 32 years of marriage  this April and we  still experience  lots of romantic feelings for each other.

  I am not lying. 

 The “sizzle” is still there.

Not going to get all TMI  on you here.

But after reading this recent column by Andree Seu  I felt a lot better…

(I’ve reposted it below)

________________________________________

Superlative Song

Scripture has a powerful response for those who think God dislikes romance

The  Song of Songs stands through the centuries, as an immovable testimony of God’s intention for man and woman.  It is a rebuke to our tiny loves, a constant goad to our lackluster marriages.  It calls drifting and depleted couples back to the Creator’s ideal: Do not settle for less than joy.  It is far from a manual, and yet in its poetry it shows how the secrets of connubial bliss are found in the readily available commodities of openness, verbal affirmations, playfulness, occasional getaways, committed oneness, and working through trials.

      We thought we had made too much of love when we had made too little of it.  We thought our songs too charged with passion when they had fallen short.  Our honeymoons are a mere two weeks when God had suggested a year:  “When a man is newly married, he shall not go out with the army or be liable for any other public duty.  He shall be free at home one year to be happy with his wife who he has taken.”  Deut. 24:5

     The ancients, embarrassed by the Song, stripped it clean of scents and touches.  It is no shabby proof of divine inspiration that when the smoke cleared on the canon in the mid-third century, the Song was still there.  Cyril of Alexandria (376-444) made the two breasts of the Shulamite the Old and New Testaments.  The bearded ones were right that the Song is about Christ, but it is about Christ via the erotic love of husband and wife (“This mystery is profound”- Ephesians 5:32)

Painting by Domenico Morelli depicting the Song of Songs

     For some of us, the Song is not only helpful but essential.  It gives permission to be as in love as you want to be.   It destroys the notion that God grants romance as a concession but holds His nose.  It debunks the notion of love sickness as a brief biological agitation for the prosaic purpose of perpetuation of the species.  If your marriage passes from intoxication into humdrum cohabitation, it is not God’s idea.  Put away from you the fatalists who say, “Romance is a flame that dies but companionship is its consolation. ”  Put away those who believe that “letting yourself go” after the ring is on is normal.  Not from heaven does such counsel come.  “At your right hand are pleasures forevermore.” (Psalm 16:11)

      The Shulamite brings warning:  ”I adjure you, O daughters of Jerusalem….that you do not stir up or awaken love until it pleases. ”  (vs2:7, 3:5, 5:8 8:4)  She is so very much in love with this man that she doesn’t want her friends to forfeit this experience by forcing love prematurely, by taking matters into their own hands.  (also note the emotional price tag for love- 3:1-5; 5:2-8.)

     The “daughters of Jerusalem” are cheerleaders, for our sakes.  This love affair enjoys the approval of objective onlookers and is not some tawdry tryst that must keep a nervous lookout for men and from the light.

      Tend your marriage, even if you think it is too late.  There is wonder-working healing in a touch, a look, a word, an unexpected embrace.  Nor is it artificial to work on love.  C. S. Lewis reminds us that a garden is no less beautiful for needing to be weeded and fussed with (The Four Loves)

      “Catch the foxes for us, the little foxes that spoil the vineyards.”  (2:15)   What are the little foxes but our inconsiderateness, laziness, resistance, hard-heartedness, and above all unbelief?  Believe in love, for love is of God.  Everything in the universe is arrayed on its side.

     The world has had many songs since the world began, but this one is the Song of Songs.  The Hebrew construction in the superscript indicates the superlative.  Tell me what is more superlative , if you know.  Whatever you propose, the daughters of Jerusalem will spurn it and will say:  “Set me as a seal upon your heart, as a seal upon your arm, for love is strong as death, jealousy is fierce as the grave.  Its flashes are flashes of fire, the very flame of the Lord.  Many waters cannot quench love, neither can floods drown it.  If a man offered for love all the wealth of his house, he would be utterly despised.” (8:6-7)

Andree Seu February 26, 2011 World Magazine

Brandywine

August 8, 2010

 

Picture of  my first Brandywine

 We are in the thick of  the tomato harvest. 

Do you want to hear something funny? 

I don’t even like tomatoes all that much. :-)

What I do like is  all of the stuff that goes on behind the scene to produce this tomato…..

Building raised  4 ft by 4 ft garden beds.

Filling the raised beds with  black Iowa topsoil. 

The smell of  damp earth after a long Iowa Winter.

Mapping out the  raised beds into 1 ft squares

Discovering  the mystery of composting.  Watching those early  grass clippings, watermelon scraps,and coffee grounds slowly break down into  organic  black gold.

Enjoying the company of my eldest granddaughter Addy as together we  work in the garden.

This week I decided to save some of the  seed from a Brandywine  tomato.  I want to participate in the whole life cycle of a tomato. 

 Now that  their  fist sized fruit have formed, I want  some of their seeds.

  I already have an LED grow light sitting in the box just waiting……

but that’s another story for another day.  

 As you can probably tell, it doesn’t take much to  entertain me.

Back to the present.  Saving tomato seeds…

You don’t just dig them out and put them away for safekeeping. Oh no, they would just rot.  The little tomato seeds are encased in a jelly like sack:

Cross view of Brandywine.  Seed sack is on the right

 After you dig them out, you mix the seeds with a little water (about 1/4 cup to the pulp of this one tomato)  then  cover the container with a paper towel.:

Adding water to the seeds

 Allow this brew to ferment and mold for 3 to 6 days, depending on  conditions:

Mold forming on top of the “brew”

After the mold forms, (in 3 to 6 days)   skim it off with a fork,  add more water (about 1/4 to 1/2 cup) . 

 The viable  seeds will settle  to the bottom of the glass in  a couple of minutes

Drain off the  water. 

 Do it again.  

Trust me- It feels  just like you are  panning for gold. 

I  set the seeds on a paper towel to blot off the excess water, then transferred them to a kitchen plate. where they continued  to  dry  for 4 days. 

 After the first day, I did   move them around so they wouldn’t stick to the plate.

Here’s what they looked like when I was done:

Closeup of the Brandywine seeds after they’d dried.

I never would have  guessed I could squeeze so much pleasure out of  just one tomato.

Enjoy the little things, for one day you may look back and realize they were the big things.”

                                                                                    Robert  Brault

_____________________________________________________________

As always, thanks for reading my stuff…and even better if you decide to leave a comment     DM

Share/Bookmark

Writing Your Own Bucket List Workshop

March 19, 2010

Bucket list:  Things you’d like to do, see, accomplish, etc before you kick the bucket .

Kick the bucket:   die, decease, perish, go, exit, pass away, expire, pass,  cash in one’s chips, buy the farm, conk, give-up the ghost, drop dead, pop off, choke, croak, snuff it.

      The Spring of 2009 I had the chance to  teach  over a 4 week period my thoughts on writing a personal “ bucket list” at our local community college.  When the advertisement went out for the class, a local business contacted the school and asked if I could come in and do a 2 hour workshop for their employees.    I told them I’d be glad to but  needed  to condense it down from a 4 week class to a 2 hour session….

      I still haven’t made it to that local business, but today my wife and I had the chance  to attend the Beyond Rubies  Women’s conference   and present it in a 1 hour session.   The time flew-  I wish we would have had another hour.

    Here are some of the tips I shared:

1.   When attempting to create a personal “bucket list” you do not have to share this list with anyone although you can.  A Bucket list  (or 50 things to do before you die list)  is a very personal list and does reveal a lot about you as a person

2.  Do NOT thinkg about money when you’re writing ideas down.  Money is not the issue-  you may never be able to do some of the things on your list and that’s OK.  If you always filter your “list” through a grid of “I can’t afford it” it stifles your creative thinking.

3.  You may not be able to always do some of the things on your list exactly the way you want and that’s OK too- but you still might find a way to experience some aspect of your goal  (ie.  might not be able to get your pilot’s license, but how about a 30 minute ride in a small plane for $30.00)- you get the idea.

4.  Don’t wait until you “retire” to do these sort of things-  by the time you get that old, you may not be able to do some of these things, plus there is no guarantee you’ll live that long-   (re listen to that Nickelback song @ the beginning of this post if you need to)

5. Some great places to get ideas for your list include:  The Internet, other people’s lists,  just paying attention as you go through your day- look for things that “resonate”

6.  As we get older, the items on our list may be less materialistic and action oriented though not necessarily  Don’t ignore relationship goals.

7.  Leisure is more than just taking a nap or a 2 week vacation once a year.    As Tim Hansel said in his book When I Relax I Feel Guilty  Leisure is not idleness .  It is a catalyst for new experiences, new ideas, new people and new places.

And finally here are a few quotes I shared this morning:

“My friend gave me the best advice – He said each day’s a gift and not a given right…”

“Against the grain should be a way of life…”

“Live like you’ll never live it twice.”

“Don’t take the free ride in your own life…”

                          Nickelback -  If today was your last day

I mentioned Winston the Pig to the ladies- so just in case someone from the workshop  checks out this blog….

                 Here’s an early  picture of Winston

And here what she looks like today:

If you happened to attend the workshop this morning  I would love to hear from you-  DM


Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 131 other followers