"I must try and cultivate an eye for life's mercies...
And life, while it has its ugly swamps, its vile weeds, and its sharp thorns,
has always its fair flowers to charm the eye with their beauty,
or to fill the air with their fragrance..."
Rev. John Flowers Serjeant, 1878

Thursday

Wishing...



Several days in a row I walk to the edge of my neighbor's pasture to admire the glorious lavender pennyroyal blooming under the pines and oaks and along the fence line - just out of my reach.

The long rows of barb-wire keep me and my camera at a distance, and I pout - wishing the fragrant herb with its tiny delicate flowers was growing this abundantly on my property.

Late in the afternoon, a dozen fire trucks respond to a brush fire down the road. I grab my camera and walk to a far corner of our pasture for a closer look.

For half an hour or more I watch as the fire is contained, and as I turn to walk back across the field toward the setting sun, I catch a glimpse of the lavender flowers sparkling at my feet. In my pasture.

They were there all along. I was too busy coveting my neighbor's flowers to notice.




In Rose from the Brier, Amy Carmichael reminds me that when I wish for something, what I'm saying is that I'm wishing "that things were different."

In other words, I'm not content with what I have and where I am when I'm wishing for the gifts - the flowers in someone else's green pasture.

And I'm humbled that Grace places tiny lavender flowers at my feet - when I least deserve them.

Not good enough...

Here comes the sun...


"What kind of camera do you use?"

It's the question I most often dread.

I'm truly an amateur. When I describe my little point-and-shoot Sony set on manual mode, I'm confident that anyone who knows photography is going to scratch me off their list of serious photographers.

"Who do I think I am anyway."

Embarrassed. I come this close to deleting "photographer" from my profiles.


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But I'm quickly humbled. And ashamed.

Am I denying a gift and therefore refusing the Giver?


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Is my embarrassment just another way of failing to acknowledge the all-sufficiency of the Creator from Whom all blessings flow?
"And God is able to make all grace abound to you, so that having all sufficiency in all things at all times, you may abound in every good work." ~ II Cor. 9.1

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Is my embarrassment - my apologies for the weaknesses and failures and lack of knowledge - nothing more than a sad commentary on my pride? A reliance on my abilities and professional equipment?

I realize my arrogance - the foolish assumption that I'm responsible. For the beauty. For the good things.


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"Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father of lights with whom there is no variation or shadow due to change." ~ James 1.17
The ESV Study Bible comments "there is nothing in this world that is truly good that has any other origin than from above."


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I take a deep breath and step out on the faith limb.

"I'm good enough with a Sony point-and-shoot, because it is all good - the gift, the camera, and God is my All-Sufficiency."

What about you? Do you know the gift you have been given and that it is more than enough?

Monday

A golden cord of hope...


Squirrels scampering...

Rejoice with those who rejoice, weep with those who weep. ~ Romans 12:15 ESV


There's tension in rejoicing and weeping for me - in the knowing of pain others are experiencing while expressing my gratitude for the abundance of all that is good in my life. How can I rejoice, when others weep? I wonder.




Goldfinches chirping...


I remember how I felt the day my mother died nearly ten years ago, as though it was yesterday. It was a stunningly clear cerulean blue day - just four days after Easter - and it made me angry. "How dare it be beautiful on the day my mother died." I cried.



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and a little boy playing in the dirt...


It's been a weeping, heart-heavy week of pain and grief and brokenness in the lives of many I love, and yet I kissed the sweet head of my two week old granddaughter and played and laughed all day with her four year old big brother, and rejoiced in the goodness of God that surrounds me. It was perfectly delightful, and I fear my rejoicing wounds the hearts of those who weep even more.



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...on a chartreuse winter day on Pollywog Creek


From the pages of Sarah Young's Jesus Calling, a friend in pain wrote...
"Hope is like a golden cord connecting you to heaven. The more you cling to this cord, the more I (the Lord) bear the weight of your burdens..." 
Of course.
Rejoice in hope, be patient in tribulation, be constant in prayer. ~ Romans 12:12 ESV
I can rejoice when others weep, because I can rejoice in hope...







May the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing, so that by the power of the Holy Spirit you may abound in hope. ~ Romans 15:13 (ESV)

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The End

My turn...

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Though I should have been more intuitive and discerning weeks ago, when my doctor called to give me the results of my lab work, I wasn't all that surprised. "It certainly explains much," I told her, and she agreed.

I'd felt awful for months, but the last three or four had been particularly difficult. When you live with chronic pain, it can be difficult to recognize or assess new pain. I think that's part of what happened to me. Because I had learned to push past pain and couldn't bear the thought of disappointing loved ones who needed me, I minimized my current struggles. I was determined to endure. "My knees always hurt," I explained - limping out of the car, stiff and unsteady. "I just need to work out the kinks."

But the days passed and the kinks only worsened. A flight of stairs loomed before me like Mt. Everest every day, I coughed constantly, my hands and feet were swollen and painful, and I struggled to muster enough energy to drive to the store. I could barely write, even typing on the laptop was painful, and I couldn't lift my right arm high enough to dress without excruciating pain.



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Worst of all, mornings - those first delightful moments of every day I'd always greeted with joy when the house was still and quiet and sunlight blew out the darkness - became my daily dread.  Getting out of bed and down the stairs was an overwhelming obstacle that followed a less-than-restful sleep.

Though I tried to hide my discomfort, my stiff and gimpy gait betrayed me. I promised Louis that as soon as I was released from "mimi duty" I'd see the doctor, but one weekend when I was home, he caught me struggling to stand and unable to walk after getting out of bed. That's when he said, "No more."



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The days following Thanksgiving were clearly the worst. It was all I could do to move from the bed to the bathroom or a chair in the living room - a triangle of space within which I lived for days. For a few years, I have been delighted to be able to help an elderly disabled friend once a week with a few small chores, errands and other tasks she cannot safely accomplish alone or at all. Though she still needs help, she has improved considerably and no longer uses some of the handicap equipment she once needed. It was truly humbling for me to need to borrow some of that equipment now stored in her garage. 

For a variety of reasons, I decided to change primary doctors, and though it meant waiting until the first of December before I could see her, it was most likely one of the best decisions I could have made. She was very thorough, and though she carefully considered my past history, she examined me with a fresh perspective.

When she called to tell me the results of my lab work, I was not surprised. I had seen my orthopedic surgeon about my knees the same day I had blood work drawn, and I told him I suspected there was something systemic going on that was causing me such distress. We discussed at length the various options for treating my knees, but he agreed that I needed to be healthier before proceeding with anything more than a cortisone injection.

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"It's a bad disease, you know." The rheumatologist was kind, but honest. "The good news is that we know much more about how to treat rheumatoid arthritis today than when your mother was living."

My mother. Yes, my mother. I see my mother's face in mine when I look in the mirror, and for a moment it takes my breath away. The same hairline, brown eyes and pink cheeks.

"It's my turn," I tell myself and the image in the mirror, as if it really was my mother. "You always did tell me growing older wasn't for sissies."

It was no coincidence that I wrote this toward the end of summer. I believe it was prevenient grace - that it would soon be my turn to honor my mother's legacy and face the trials ahead of me with a merry heart and the grace and humor she sweetly displayed.





Pollywog Creek is not going to become a journal for my ongoing health issues.* Lord willing, I'll soon be back to those leisurely walks around the pond and down by the creek and through the pasture with my camera. After all, this life is not about me.

In fact, inspired by the penny royal I spotted growing along my neighbor's pasture, I felt well enough to slowly make my way through our pasture this weekend - where I delighted in warblers and rusty lyonia and the green that was sprouting through the frost-bitten grass. It was a sweet taste of God's goodness and grace.



For the LORD is good;
his steadfast love endures forever,
and his faithfulness to all generations.
~ Psalm 100:5 ESV




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Six day old Addisyn...



a grand afternoon
...and a grand afternoon.


*I'm going to chronicle this RA journey of mine in an invitation-only blog. If it is something you sincerely care to read or follow, just drop me an email at pollywogcreekporch(at)gmail(dot)com and I'll be more than happy to send you an invitation.

Saturday

Still here....

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To my faithful subscribers and those of you who keep stopping by, hoping for something new, thank you for your patience.

Pollywog Creek will be down for a few days and a much needed face-lift. (UPDATE: Guess I'm back up sooner than I thought, but please excuse the dust...we're still at work.)

Hopefully I'll be back up by Monday with a new, cleaner blog look, another peek at our new granddaughter, and a little insight into why I've been so quiet in this place.