Wednesday

Weak hands and feeble knees...


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...and a foggy brain. I'm a low-energy kind of gal with a bent toward introversion, so when life picks up speed and my energy reserves are depleted, the days often pass in a cloud of confusion (what day is it anyway?) and I'd rather not even answer the phone.
 
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It was a combination of foolish pride and no other options that led me to believe I should host Thanksgiving dinner here on Pollywog Creek - the day after Louis was discharged from the hospital following surgery earlier in the week. 

I was not the "hostess with the mostess." In a bit of a daze, I managed the basics, but I didn't take a single photo. How terrible is that - when Jessi, Mason, Austin, Nick, Kristin and Gavin and my niece Sommer were all here with Louis, Emily and me. Shameful.
 
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In the weeks before his surgery, Louis worked hard to accomplish tasks he knew he would not be able to do for weeks. Fortunately for me, planting zinnias was one of them. It's been so lovely to have zinnias to pick for the house each day.
 
Carrier pigeon

We've had a new visitor to Pollywog Creek this week. A large and banded carrier pigeon spent several days pecking at the grass and then fleeing into the pine trees when I breeched his personal space. I tried without success to photograph his ID band, but could never get close enough. If you know someone who is missing a pigeon, tell them to give me a call. He is large and really quite beautiful.
 
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Isn't the dandelion seed an exquisite design - with details that twirl away in the breeze? Don't you marvel at the creativity of our God - at the tiniest details that usually go unseen?
 
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And what about caterpillars? Gavin discovered this interesting character with his bright red eyes, yellow and white stripes, and black spikes in our back yard last week. I wonder what lovely thing this thorny creature will become.
 
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December's Red and Green on Pollywog Creek


Between trips to the hospital, preparing for and recovering from Thanksgiving, and a general lack of energy, I've rarely been able to delight in long walks these past two weeks. My joints and muscles have been protesting the added strain of long car rides, sleeping on the couch and caring for Louis as he recovers. 

Have you ever put thigh-high anti-embolism stockings (also known as spandex on steroids) on someone? One of my friends acurately described it as wrestling an alligator. My boney, arthritic hands were hard on both of us, so we recruited Emily, with her thin and nimble fingers, to put the stockings on over Louis' feet where he and I could work together to pull them on up from the ankle. Team work.

Caring for Louis as he recovers has been an honor and a privilege. He has and would do the same for me, but it has reminded me of the verse (although taken out of context) that I considered many morning when I was caring for my mother as I asked the Lord to...

"Strengthen the weak hands,and make firm the feeble knees."

Sunday

Advent::First Sunday::Light


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The people who walked in darkness have seen a great light; 
those who dwelt in a land of deep darkness, on them has light shined
 ~ Isaiah 9:2

Wednesday

What did you see today?

For most of the years we were raising a family, Louis was a citrus farmer.
He delighted in spending many long days outdoors, in orange groves and cypress hammocks and on long and winding country roads.
"What did you see today, daddy?" The boys begged to know before Louis could even get out of his boots.
They were spellbound by Louis' stories of tractors and backhoes...
...and alligators and wild turkeys and rattlesnakes and bobcats...
...and they lived for the opportunity to "go to work with daddy" and the possibility of experiencing a creature encounter themselves.
I miss those days of wonder - of listening to Louis' stories and seeing the world through the eyes of my children and finding joy in the adventures of life.
More than once last week, Gavin, who is not quite three, talked about seeing angels. Lots of them. Everywhere. He was serious.
See the angels?

"See the angels?" He pointed Mason toward the cloudless blue sky. "They are all over!"

Maybe I should have been asking the children, "What did you see today?"

"For he will command his angels concerning you to guard you in all your ways.." ~ Psalm 91:11

Thursday

Lovely days...

Yellow.... ...yellow days
...and gray days
...and rainy days
He has made everything beautiful in its time...
DSC09248 How lovely is your dwelling place, O Lord of hosts! My soul longs, yes, faints for the courts of the Lord; my heart and flesh sing for joy to the living God. ~ Psalm 84:1-2
It's a beautiful day... for washing feet... for cleaning house with my beautiful daughter ...for eating, studying and praying with our lifegroup ...and for loving on those little boys that call me "mimi"

Wednesday

Joy...

Naptime

Emily and I had a discussion recently about the dichotomy that is our life here on Pollywog Creek - simple, unassuming, ordinary small-town life versus celebrity interviews and gatherings with dignitaries. One afternoon Emily met the vice president, changed her clothes in a grocery store bathroom and raced home to babysit for a friend. And so it goes. Today I wore my holey jeans and the worn out flip-flips I bought two years ago at Target. The same holey jeans and flip-flops I wear three or four days a week. We cleaned toilets and washed feet. Tomorrow we're off to a fancy-schmancy gala.

Is it okay to admit that I'm much more comfortable in my holey jeans in the obscurity that is our rural home?

Saturday I took photos of the sugarcane fields and the mill and refinery as we drove along the southern tip of Lake Okeechobee. It was not a picture-perfect day, but even under the clouds and through the car window, the dark soil, the bright green fields, and the mill smoke stacks were irresistible attractions.
Speaking of irresistible. How about that Lion King, Diego and baby skeleton? Are they not just too, too cute?
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We were in the local drivers license office yesterday when a young man in his twenties came in and requested an ID card. He was obviously surprised and annoyed when the worker behind the counter told him he needed documentation. "I don't know who you are," she told him. "I'm Pedro Rodriquez." Not his real name, but close. "Okay." She stared at him, and he left. I read a sign on the counter:
"Everyone who comes into this office brings joy. Some bring joy when they come in. Some bring joy when they leave."
Not hard to figure out which "joy bringer" was Pedro, but it sure made me think about which one was me.
Flowerheads