Note: After a few months of writing for the Register-Guard every three weeks, I'm back to writing once a month, but still rotating with Bob Welch and Carolyn Kortge. Apparently, readers wanted to know exactly which Sunday they could expect to read each of our columns.
Letter from Harrisburg
Are we all busy, or just confused?
Mostly, I listen
to birds.
A truck shifting
gears far away and an irate dog nearby, but otherwise the
still, early-morning air in this Thailand neighborhood is
full of chirps and twitters and coos. Over there a sharp
choppy caw is answered by another, and a deep-voiced
hammering sounds to the south.
Constantly, over it
all, a loud, clear bird-call seems to come from
everywhere, sounding urgent but kind, like mothers calling
children, with a strange tone that reminds me of bubbles
rising, as though the warm, heavy air were actually water,
and the birds’ friendly calls across the neighborhood were
bubbling upward in the thick humidity.
I sit at a little
round table on a tiled balcony with a white rail. Two
trees — one like an overgrown rhododendron, the other with
fern-like leaves — obscure much of my view, but between
them I see a line of single-story houses with red-tiled
roofs and simple iron gates across the driveways.
Miniature temples sit on elaborate posts in the corner of
the yards, fresh with colorful streamers, giving off a
hint of incense.
The jungle seems close
here, even in town, and one gets the sense that if you
turn your back for 10 minutes, it will take over again.
Trees arch over the fences and far into the streets. Every
untended area looks dense and overgrown — the neglected
yard across the road, the swampy area between fences. Huge
bougainvillia flowering in an exotic purple peeks through
the trees down the street. At another property, snake-like
leaves of a roof-high plant drape themselves over a
5-foot-high wall.
Doves with tiny heads
and speckled shoulders pause on one of the 10 electric
wires going by between me and the ferny tree. A small
bird, maybe a hummingbird, buzzed into the neighborhood
not long ago. Others are exotic black birds with white
shoulders that swoop across the street in pairs or little
sparrow-like birds that burrow with frantic rustling into
the leaves.
Some time ago, when I
felt like I had more going on in my life than I could
possibly handle, someone told me to define what “rest”
looks like for me.
Now I think: It’s
actually happened. This is what rest looks like. This is
how it feels.
Our oldest daughter,
Amy, moved to Chiang Mai, Thailand, last January. She
immediately began taking Thai classes and learning to
teach English as a second language.
Paul and I try to
visit our children wherever they scatter, for both their
encouragement and our reassurance. Paul was asked to speak
at a youth conference in Nepal in October, flying into and
out of Chiang Mai, so it was the perfect opportunity to
spend time with Amy. Since her house is tiny, she arranged
for us to stay nearby in the home of generous friends who
were away for a month.
In the weeks
leading up to our trip I cooked for seven people every
day, hosted guests, canned green beans and 81 quarts of
grape juice, watered flower beds, put a new book together
and got it off to the printer, and took 10 children
camping at the coast, returning less than two days before
we left for Thailand.
I was home alone
for less than an hour between mid-May and well into
September.
Now and then, I
wondered how this happened, this constant rush, the flood
of responsibilities, the default answer of “busy” when
people asked how I was doing.
“The glorification
of busy,” some call it, theorizing that we choose too much
to do because, in our culture, it gives us a sense of
importance.
“Most people that
are really busy are actually just confused,” says my
neighbor Anita, and I suspect that’s the case with me,
since it never feels like a deliberate choice. How could I
have known in June, when I planted a late garden and took
in my dad for the summer, that the green beans would
coincide with grapes and guests and galley proofs of a new
book? Rather, it seems the responsibilities just show up,
usually in the form of blessings and loved ones, and I
could never tell them to go away.
So the way to stay
sane through this stage seems to be in choosing time away,
making it happen, giving it priority. We observe Sunday as
a day of rest, technically, although for a minister’s wife
it’s often as taxing as any other day.
I hunted in the
Bible to see what it says about rest and found it
presented as both a command, to be chosen deliberately,
and a reward, given unasked, which is what this trip has
turned out to be.
While Paul is off
in Nepal I sometimes ride across town on the back of Amy’s
motorbike with the sun burning our arms and the hot wind
whipping by. As we roll past cement trucks and buses close
enough to touch, I think, “I might die, but what a fun way
to go.”
I wander down the
street and buy iced coffee while Amy is in class, and then
we zoom off to lunch at a little open-air restaurant and
go shopping in the garment district with its endless
fabric pieces rolled up on long tubes set upright on the
floor.
Despite the
exhaustion of a day among wild traffic and sights and
smells, I feel my soul unwinding.
But mostly, it’s
the time alone that has proven the sweetest. That first
morning, I opened a door and found this inviting little
balcony, waiting for me.
“Come ye apart,
and rest a while,” it said, paraphrasing Jesus’ words long
ago.
So, recognizing a
priceless opportunity when I saw it, I have been going out
every morning with a pot of tea. I watch the morning light
spread over the greenery and the tiled roofs. No one
speaks to me, no phones ring, no messages beep, no one
knows I am here.
In the Beijing
airport, almost hidden among shiny shops full of expensive
perfumes and thousand-dollar purses, there’s an area,
beautiful but not ostentatious, featuring subdued colors,
two large lily ponds crossed by a pretty angled bridge,
gracious pagodas with little wooden tables and chairs, and
two little tables offering squares of red paper, a bowl of
ink, and two long paintbrushes for practicing your Chinese
writing.
I sat there and
drank coffee and felt nourished in senses and spirit. It
seemed the structure, like my delightful balcony, had been
built with exactly that purpose in mind.
Maybe we busy
Americans need to do this, I thought. Not to disdain our
work, but to see stillness as necessity rather than
luxury. Maybe we each need to create a little place in our
lives for deliberate beauty, for intentional rest, for
bird calls rising, for restoring the soul's capacity to
care and work and invest joyfully in all the people and
opportunities that come its way.
Enjoy your busyness. It is a privilege denied to many. My mom is almost exactly your age, but has ALS. She used to be the hardest worker around. Reading your blog sometimes makes me grieve for the life we used to have.
ReplyDeleteI agree ... the times I take to get away and journal, talk to God and read are definitely rejuvenating! Thanks for sharing this challenge to all of us!
ReplyDelete