The Key

Lilies bloomed with glad abandon along the gravel road. The high sun shone bright and hot, bronzing his neck and arms as he trudged along. Dust, kicked up by his worn boots with every step, hung in the air long enough to cover his jeans with its brief touch. The circular saw buzz of cicadas grew louder, then quieter, then louder again.

He hadn’t decided where he was going. He just knew he needed to leave. He needed new air to breathe, fresh scenery. What was the purpose of life anyway? Not in his work, at least not the work he did. Friendships? Ha. Greetings on the street or at the corner store didn’t prove anything beyond good manners. There was that one old woman at Johnson’s Foods check-out. He’d always waited to go through her lane. She was nice. He didn’t s’pose he had any obligation to anyone. He’d paid his bills. Done his job. Didn’t poke his nose where it didn’t belong. His eyes roamed over the road ahead. It’s undulating path told him nothing of what was ahead.

He kicked an old pop can into the ditch, then stopped. Something was off with the empty sound he had subconsciously expected as the toe of his boot had made contact. Turning back a few steps, he walked into the high grass of the ditch and nudged it with his boot. A lead-like thud answered and a tiny tree-toad hopped to get out of his way. A snake slithered silently through the tall grass. Reaching down, he picked up the can, turned it upside down, and shook it. With a rattle, the noisemaker fell into his hand.standard key wikipedia.org

It was a key. Maybe it was to some vehicle. Probably. He slipped it into his pocket and looked around. An old junker roared past, leaving a trail of dust in its wake.

The man made his way out of the ditch and trudged on. Who would put a key in a pop can anyway? Why not just throw it away or sell it for a nickel at one of those sales so popular in the summer where one person sold old stuff and another one bought it? If it was to a car, where was the car – in a junkyard in some other county? Maybe it fit the lock of a house, but he didn’t think so. Sweat trickled down his temple and he wiped it away with the palm of his rough hand, then jumped. Yanking up his jeans, he saw it perched on the top of his boot. He scooped up the toad with one hand and covered it with the other. Its tiny the-back-of-a-fowlers-toad-frog_w725_h483, public domainpresence tickled his hand and he almost smiled.

“You saw that snake too, did ya?”

He was quiet for a moment.

“Hop. How’s that for a name?” he asked the toad. “You ‘n me, Hop. I got your back. You got . . . you got . . . my hand.”

He reached the next rise of the road when he saw it.

to be continued . . .

Image: http://uploads/2014/07/standard-key-wikipedia.org_.jpg, the-back-of-a-fowlers-toad-frog_w725_h483-public-domain.jpg

End Times Rant #1

Is your favorite part of the day’s newscast at the end when we hear about the weather? Or maybe that’s changed in the past number of years with tsunamis, hurricanes, tornadoes, wildfires, and brutal winters. I think the weather, good and bad, is still easier to watch than what the newscasters report.

I ache for those little Christian girls who were kidnapped by the Boko Haram, dispersed who knows where, enduring who knows what every day. We are at 100 days and counting. They no doubt are prodded and threatened to renounce their beliefs or be punished, tortured, or killed. It turns my stomach. It should turn yours. They were brought up in Christian homes and have been transported to hell. And because it’s so awful to repeat it day after day when authorities appear to have turned a blind or incompetent or cowardly eye to their plight, it no longer makes much news.

I am distressed for the people of Israel who have missiles rained down on them day and night; who don’t know if Hamas soldiers will pop out of a hole in the street from their underground tunnels to whisk away Israeli children from schools or daycare or a walk to the store. At least they have the wherewithal to defend themselves, as they should. I am amazed at the number of people who seem incognizant that to defend oneself from an aggressor is a decent thing to do. Defense of self, home, nation – that’s a good thing. It doesn’t make the defender the same as the aggressor. One is trying to preserve life/property, one is trying to take it. WHY DOES THIS EVEN NEED TO BE EXPLAINED? When did such nonsensical thinking permeate so much of our culture?

I am sick that an ordinary flight ended in death for folks who had no other plans than to visit family or friends, or do something business-related, or go on a vacation. Pro-Russian rebels didn’t buy their weapons at the corner store. Russia provided the weapons and approval and encouragement to the Ukrainian anti-government forces, and every person on that flight; every mother who spent the night before worrying over her family’s packing, every business person who stuffed their necessities into a carry-on, every little girl who twirled in front of the mirror before she left and every little boy whose heart beat a little faster when he saw the captain of the plane; every single person might as well have been shot in the head by Mr. Putin, himself. I’ll say this much: their families feel like they’ve been shot in the heart.

I am disheartened that the rest of us don’t seem to know what to do. We voice opinions – and by opinions I mean those who actually have an opinion and actually choose between right and wrong, one side or the other, rather than those who use a lot of nice-sounding words to say mostly nothing in order to continue to be liked – but does it help? We don’t even seem to have the courage to stand up and say that because God says something is right, it’s right; and because He says something is wrong, it’s wrong. It’s not unloving to do that, by the way. Saying the hard thing is the most loving thing to do. Just ask any parent who’s watched their child sink into some life-altering trouble. The people, and I include whole churches, who fail to do so will face a judgment the likes of which will make these recent events pale in comparison.

I think it’s wonderful that people all over the world do their small part. They dig wells for clean water. They come up with amazing agricultural support in developing countries. They offer start-up money for small businesses. They produce decent movies, Christian movies. They sell things and give the profits away. Maybe sending money would make us feel better, but no amount of money in the world would cover the needs of oppressed women (in this case, girls) and nations and victims. Yet we can’t cover our eyes and ignore recent news. The news, the bad news we are seeing and hearing about every day, is not going away. It’s going to get worse.

We’ve run out of time. There isn’t any more time for straddling the fence, for trying to fit every viewpoint into your theology, or for waiting for the next guy to be the hero. Here’s where I stand. I am on God’s side. My short, inadequate, weak self is on God’s side. Whatever I understand to be right according to the Holy Scripture, I stand for. If we disagree about what the scripture says, I say “continue to work out your own salvation with fear and trembling”. And to the evil organizations and people in this world, andgoodfreephotos.com11 Satan, himself, I say this. You can wreak all the havoc you want, because there are unseen multitudes on their knees right now. You’ve had plenty of warning. We’re at the end of the newscast. That lightning you see in the distance, that rumble of thunder? That’s the only other warning you’ll get. Jesus is walking toward His white horse right now, and God isn’t going to wait much longer.

Photo: goodfreephotos.com; Quote: Philippians 2:12

It Was a Dark and Stormy . . . Well, You Know (conclusion)

I backed up and stepped on the threshold again. It creaked. I took little baby steps along the width of the entry. The old hardwood yielded slightly underneath my weight and creaked slightly every so often along the boards.

I walked back to where I had stood at the window and looked at the threshold. Was there something amiss with the lines of the house? Maybe what I had imagined was actually a bulge here and there. It was an old house, an old neglected house. I willed the spot I had peered at earlier to bulge. It didn’t.

I let out a deep breath. I wasn’t the kind to be spooked. I was probably just tired. It had been a long, empty week for so many reasons. The relationship that had prompted my escape from what was familiar as an adult to what had been slightly familiar as a child was without a doubt behind it. I had done everything I could, hadn’t I? Tried to change myself, him, and past arguments to no avail. Tried to make him see things my way, myself to see things his way. Tried. Tried. Then tried to just forget it all and found instead mice nests and cobwebs and dust enough to make another galaxy in making this house inhabitable again.

I always said I believed in possibility more than probability, but maybe that wasn’t exactly true. Maybe what I believed was that if I managed something enough – problems, relationships, dreams – I could move them from one column to the other. Anyone who didn’t believe Henley when he said, I am the master of my fate, I am the captain of my soul, was a fool. I filled the teapot, then jumped and nearly dropped it as I placed it on the stove. Whoever designed the jangle of the old phone here should be arrested! Who in the world would be calling since no one in the world knew I was here?

“Hello?”

“Oh yes! I had been trying to change it when the power went out.”

“Um, what?”

“Proof of . . . oh. I will come in person then. Thank you.”

I replaced the receiver with slightly more force than necessary. Really? Proof of my existence? Maybe their so-called policy should be put in a time capsule along with the old black phone. I stared at the old phone, my mouth going suddenly dry. My eyes darted to the cell next to it, the one I had placed there when I’d lost contact. I slowly picked up the receiver and listened. There was no dial tone. I clicked the little knobs up and down. How in the world . . .? I picked up my cell and tried turning it on, but it remained black. It probably needed recharging. I plugged it into the outlet and laid it on the kitchen counter.

The house still held my dead uncle’s furnishings, a good thing since my few possessions fit into the back of my pick-up truck. I eased into his soft, dusty armchair, sipped my tea and stared out the window. I found myself wondering where they had found him – my uncle who’d been dead a week before anyone knew it.

I must’ve dozed, for when I opened my eyes, my cold tea pooled on the floor and the slightly cracked cup lay beside it. The storm had died and left behind a damp stillness. I felt a slight, cold breeze filter from the direction of the kitchen and shivered. The day’s light had truly been stolen by the storm and by this time the trees blended into the starless night.

I grabbed an old quilt and wrapped it around my shoulders while I went to start the By Tom Murphy VII (Own work) [GFDL (http   www.gnu.org copyleft fdl.html), CC-BY-SA-3.0 (http   creativecommons.org licenses by-sa 3.0 ) or CC-BY-SA-2.0 (http   creativecommons.org licenses by-sa 2.0)], via Wikimedia Commonswater boiling for a cup of tea I hoped this time to finish. As I waited, I scanned the bookshelf replete with my uncle’s old books, selected one, and took it with me and my now hot tea to the armchair. The story was benign, really. It was of a silly girl whose efforts in controlling everything and everyone around her irritated me. I was beginning to tire of it, when the pace picked up slightly. She finally encountered a situation that resisted her efforts and wandered away into the night. Two weeks later the few who cared enough to search were on the brink of finding her. I turned the page. The next chapter would finally give some satisfaction! She would get her comeuppance or learn the error of her ways, though I doubted the latter. The page was blank. What? I examined the book. Nothing appeared to be torn out. I turned the next page and the next, suddenly frantic to know what happened. There was nothing. What cruel trick was this?

I turned toward the sound of a sudden creak and felt a slight, cold breeze on my cheek. Then the lights went out.

Image: By/Tom/Murphy/VII/Own/work/GFDL/http://www.gnu_.org/copyleft/fdl.html/CC-BY-SA-3.0-http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa-3.0-or-CC-BY-SA-2.0-http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/sa/2.0/via/Wikimedia

It Was a Dark and Stormy . . . Well, You Know (continued 1)

I was just beginning to think I could make out the form of a person standing in the entry of the kitchen. It was slightly taller than I and lacked the rigidity of the doorframe. It seemed like a person, but that would be crazy, right? It wasn’t really all that clear, after all; just a nearly transparent image – more of an outline, one that I could easily be, for who knew what reason, imagining. The dark made it impossible to actually see anything anyway.

There it was again. Another creak. The form, or whatever it was, hadn’t moved. It was as still as the wall, itself. Maybe it was just my imagination after all. I glanced out the window again. Lightning danced across the sky momentarily revealing some downed branches and an overturned lawn chair. I loved that chair! I’d rescued it from the dumpster of my apartment building the summer before and replaced the ripped nylon webbing with heavy muslin in a chili pepper print. I hoped it wouldn’t be carried too far before the wind died.

I turned to check the kitchen doorway again, and my heart, which had begun beating more rapidly since the last loud thunder, seemed to be of two minds because now it stopped completely. There was no form any longer; only the faint outline of everything that had slowly been growing familiar over the past week of my living there. So had I seen something?

The lights flickered on again, though the storm raged on outside. My eyes surveyed mywikimediacommons.com 450px-Sugar_and_teacup creative commons lic. surroundings. Nothing had changed. All was well. Tea. Tea would be good company for such a night. I started over to fill the teapot. I would have at least two cups, and who cared if it was caffeinated on the edge of evening? The floor creaked just as I stepped on the threshold of the kitchen.

to be continued . . .

Photo: wikimediacommons.org-450px-Sugar_and_teacup-.jpg Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License

 

Footsteps of Great Men

Today we take a break from my scary story for a stormy night and welcome guest essayist, Brian Pease. He is the Historic Site Manager at the Minnesota State Capitol for the Minnesota Historical Society. He has been interviewed by local media about Minnesota history, the Minnesota battle flag conservation project that he led, the Capitol, as well as the present work that is being done for its repair and restoration. Brian recently toured Civil War battlefields in Pennsylvania, Maryland, Virginia, and Tennessee. He also likes Dr. Pepper.

**************************************************************************************************

I was walking in the footsteps of great men. These were not famous men who achieved success by political or business gain or created something people would marvel over as cutting edge. The course I trod was well paved, the feet of thousands before me led me on my way. I was just following.

As I moved to my destination – a gradual rising hill on the horizon –  the trampled grass exuded a fragrance of fearlessness, bravery,  courage and honor, but it also smelled of fear and was littered with loss so overwhelming it was hard to comprehend. Yet amid the debris and odor, these men went with one goal ahead of them, the same hill I was walking toward.

As I stepped around and over the bodies of the fallen of Pickett’s Charge at Gettysburg, I was trying to absorb what had happened  here – why men would pursue such a course that would end with such a result. It was obvious they were told to do so, so through obedience they followed orders. As they gathered in rank and file, standing shoulder toIMG_2544 shoulder, they saw they had to cross open fields the length of a mile while at the same time, continuous artillery rounds exploded above or crashed into the ground around them. They knew that once they crossed the road and clambered over the fence rails, thousands of enemy rifled musket balls would whizz over, around and through them. From experience, these men realized it was folly and the outcome doubtful but they held out hope the enemy would run before them.  As they started with a steady walk, then a jog, and finally a sprint with fixed bayonets the last yards, more importantly they knew with each step their life could end in an instant. Yet on they went.

My conclusion was they were not only fighting for the man next to them but because they chose to believe in something provided to them by previous generations – the rights of freedom and liberty. Others before them had sacrificed on different battlefields, their lives to declare their independence from another country, create a united nation that was guided under a Sovereign God. The contentious part of this moment in time, why men from the same country were fighting each other and drenching the land in blood, was one side wanted liberty, the other side believed that the pursuit of liberty was as a united nation and freedom was for all people.

Each place I went, whether at the sunken road at Antietam, the stone wall at Fredericksburg, the entrenchments at Spotsylvania, or the thick underbrush of the Wilderness, I walked in these men’s footsteps both North and South. They were great men because they were willing to sacrifice everything for what they believed was important. I can only hope the footprints I – no, we – leave, whether it be a few hundred feet or even a mile, will be as honored and remembered.

http pixabay.com en eagle-america-flag-bird-symbol-219679

Photo: Cannon at Gettysburg, http://pixabay.com/en-eagle-america-flag-bird-symbol-219679.jpg/ Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License

It Was a Dark and Stormy . . . Well, You Know

“What? Louder! I can’t hear you! There’s something – crackling or something – on the line. What?” The static ceased as did every other sound. I hung up and dialed. No tone. No anything. Maybe the landline would be better. I walked into the kitchen, muttering to myself and picked it up. It was silent. Maybe it was the storm. Beyond the window glass I could see the trees bending in the greenish sky, branches lashing one way and another all at once. The rain had determinedly increased since the storm had begun nearly an hour ago, and the angry sky was gradually changing daylight to dark.

httppixabay.comenlightning-thunder-thunderstorm-1845I jumped at a cannon-fire rumble as lightning flashed just in front of the window. The lights in the living room and kitchen went out at once. I knew flicking the switches would accomplish nothing. I flicked the switch.

It was my way, I admitted maybe for the first time in my life, flicking a light switch back and forth. If something wasn’t the way I thought it should be, I always tried to fix it even when I knew the likelihood of my changing things had somewhere near the same probability of the Kardashians going into hiding.

The truth was I’d always lived my life on the basis of possibility rather than probability. That was the reason I’d been on the gymnastics team in middle school. It was the reason I had graduated from high school even though I could tell my science teacher thought dark thoughts every time I entered his classroom. And it was why I was here in the first place. A relationship, one I valued beyond reason, had soured and, after more than a few unsuccessful, unreasonable attempts on my part to force it back to what I believed it should be, I had run away. At twenty-eight I had actually run away.

I’d known about this old run-down place for many years. It had been my uncle’s old house, one he’d lived in and died in. That he’d actually been dead a week before anyone knew it was something we didn’t talk about. No one in the family wanted the house and no one in the world wanted it either, so it had sat alone and ignored for the eleven years since he’d been gone. It was four miles beyond the edge of a dying town: one of those towns that has a gas station; a church with twenty pews, one for each parishioner and a few to spare; a bar with the same customers every night; and no police force.

I’d been here exactly one week, arranged for the utilities to be turned on, a surprisingly easy thing to do, and had unpacked all my earthly belongings. And swept. I had swept the building from bottom to top to bottom again. There was a lot of dirt. I’d been in the process of changing my mailing address when the phone had gone dead.

I hadn’t gotten a job yet, the nearest job being the factory ten miles south, but I wasn’t in a hurry. I had some money stashed away. It was in a manilla envelope under the silverware in a drawer in the kitchen.

As I stood peering out the window, I heard a creak; but it was different from the storm-related creaks and groans the old structure had been emitting for the last half-hour. I turned my head slightly and squinted into the dark.

to be continued…

Photo: http://www.pixabay.com /enlightning-thunder-thunderstorm-1845.jpg Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License

All In

A fine mist fell, illuminated by the lights surrounding the football field. It was the beginning of the fourth quarter and the game had been one of those contests that was a enwikipedia.orgbattle from the very start. The stands were packed, faces tense, as the teams hustled back onto the field from a timeout. The tight end ignored his pulled muscle, the halfback rolled his right shoulder and the quarterback breathed slowly and deliberately, anticipating the snap. From the sidelines their coach called to them a phrase they repeated to themselves at every practice and every game. “All In!”

The student stood looking over the faces of her philosophy class. The professor was a persuasive fellow, likeable, handsome, and hateful of Christianity. First she had made an effort to gently question a few of his barbs. He was not one to back down, though, Pixabay public-speaker-153728_640and the class had continued day after stressful day until it had reached the week of their final presentations. She didn’t know what made him think and feel so strongly, but he did. A few times she had asked herself if it was worth it to refute someone who appeared to be as immoveable as a boulder. Then she asked herself how she could sit and watch the face of Jesus be spit on one more time. As she took the podium, she whispered to herself, “All In”.

The mortar fire had been relentless. Company C had been reduced by a third, but the little town must be protected at all costs. They would keep defending while ten men drove out of the opposite side of the town and looped around to approach the aggressors from behind. They pushed every thought from their minds but one: All In.

They asked her one more time. Refute your faith in Christ or be whipped and hanged. Leave your children motherless, your husband a widower. Such a simple thing. Merely words. She looked back at her captors and said, “I will not”. The prayer she had prayed over the brutal weeks and months echoed in her mind. All In.

He laid on the bed, his breathing difficult and rough. He’d known this was coming as had his family. He’d known, but all the knowing didn’t make it easier, didn’t make it better. He’d lived his life as a Christian. He was by no means even close to perfect, but he was redeemed and that counted for everything. One other thing kept him calm and httpwww.publicdomainpictures.nethledej.phphleda=sunrisebigstockphoto.com--1403176023Jk7determined and curious. What was it really like on the other side of the curtain called mortality? He looked at the faces around him. Then he smiled and with his final breath said, “All In”.

 

Photos: enwikipedia.org_.jpg Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License; http://www.Pixabay.com -public-speaker-153728_640.png Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License; http//www.publicdomainpictures.com nethledej.phphledasunrisebigstockphoto.com-1403176023Jk7.jpg Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License

Graduation

Graduations always make me cry. At some point in the ceremony, whether it’s during Pomp and Circumstance or pictures of graduates on a video presentation or the sight of parents craning their necks to see their grad and maybe a whispered “There he is!”, I start to feel my eyes burn.

I’m not an emotional person. I think it’s that the picture of life before us at that moment is a beautiful one. You think of those kids when they were tiny and everyone smiling at those big, blinking eyes staring out at the world. You visualize their one time toddling boxy shapes holding fingers to help their balance. You see their grade school excitement, their middle school anxiety, their high school angst and over-confidence, and you think how much there is wrapped up in one person. Those persons walking down the aisle to their seat have their own hopes and plans however vague they may be, but they can’t begin to understand the hopes and dreams and love and prayers others have for them. It’s just the way it is.diploma-152024_640 pixabay (public domain CCO)

Here we are in the midst of graduation season. We will congratulate and smile and hug and shake hands. We will send cards. We will hope and love and pray and watch them go. And we will blink back tears so that they only see us smile.

Image: http://www.pixaby.com diploma-152024_640-pixabay-public-domain-CCO.png

The Unimportant Painting (continued 1)

The painting in front of which the two children stood was awash in colors of black and rust, with splashes of red, and was a montage of well-drawn images. In the center stood a man, his foot on a copy of the Constitution of the United States of America. He was dressed in a shirt embroidered with many words, among them, “women’s rights”. He was smiling and waving to five happy men with turbans on their heads as they flew away to freedom. His back was to a woman being lashed one hundred times by a man resembling the ones flying to freedom. A noose hung slightly ahead of the woman. Her small child and newborn baby, held back by others, watched the scene. Over two hundred school girls sitting silently and guarded by soldiers with guns also watched.

In the upper left side was a scene of an embassy, lying in charred ruins. Four skeletons lay at its base. Slightly below that scene were guns, many guns with legs, running fast and furious toward a Mexican sombrero. One dead man in uniform lay between the guns and the sombrero.

Giant forms and tax records had been molded into iron gates to restrict some citizens from moving freely. A pregnant woman with hair the color of snow, each strand banded with jewelry that spelled ‘fear’ was giving birth to cameras and listening devices so numerous that they spilled out of the birthing room, down the hallway, and out the doors of the hospital where she lay. A picture of the hospital she had wanted to use instead hung from her limp hand. A giant eye in the corner of the frame seemed to follow onlookers, in this case, the two children, regardless of the angle from which they observed the painting.

A school building was marred by graffiti, with CC in bulging, garish letters. Tests were stacked neatly on each desk, while textbooks lay scattered on the school rooms’ floors. The school’s entryway held a picture of a gun with a line through it. Two dots on the top and a half-circle on the bottom made it into a happy face.

Reporters in a busy newsroom stood against a wall while a few important looking people looked through their phone records and emails, patiently crossing out whatever did not suit them.

Throughout the painting in small, nearly imperceptible drawings, was something else. 281 Bokeh Free Images on PixabaySprinkled all throughout the scenes was something like golden dust. Tiny images though they were, they drew the children’s eyes to them. A soldier stood stick straight, talking to the few who would listen. A woman bent down to help some fearful children and gave them sweet pieces of fruit with wrappers labeled ‘truth’. Some people were on their knees, their hands lifted in prayer. There were many, many images of many small, good things. It seemed, almost, that the painting pulsated with the golden dust; the tiny pictures growing more numerous and larger at times, then fading again to their infinitesimal size.

And the two children watched while the museum visitors around them toasted the great building’s success.

Image: 281-Bokeh-Free-Images-on-Pixabay.jpg

The Unimportant Painting

Hundreds crowded the steps and spilled onto the sidewalk, waiting. It was opening day at what was touted as the finest art museum in the Midwest. The Museum of Artwork and Vision, MAV, had been six years in the making; from the first meeting of ideas, to argumentative meetings regarding design, to the ground breaking, to more meetings filled with debate, to the final MAV committee private tour. As opening day commons.wikimedia.orgvisitors paused in front of everything from hand thrown pots to busts to paintings, two children wandered from one room to the next. Their steps led them in an arbitrary tour of things that held little of their interest until they stopped in unison in front of a painting. Small and hung in an obscure spot, it had garnered little attention from most in the crowd. It, however, held the twins with an unaccountable pull, as though they could not move from their spot had they wished. The two understood, in that fuzzy place between mind and heart, that the story behind the painting was one that could change a life. The story had at the very least changed the lives of the ones who lived it, the ones who were in the small painting hung in an unimportant spot in one of the finest museums around.

to be continued . . .

Photo: www.commons.wikimedia.org Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License