Not as it seems… Part I

Mom knew how to take the initiative, even as a little girl. Born in 1912, she was only four years old when on a stifling summer day her mother entertained several women from their church. Little Evelyn loved having company and had helped her mother prepare the parlor for their guests. When the women arrived, Evelyn was cordial, greeting each one with her best smile.

Knowing she enjoyed being mama’s helper, her mother asked if she’d like to bring a glass of cool water to each lady as they chatted together. Evelyn was delighted and hurried off to comply. Running back and forth to the parlor, she carefully delivered one glass of water to each appreciative woman.

After the guests had gone, Evelyn’s mother expressed gratitude for her willingness to bring so many glasses of water to the company.

“It was easy,” Evelyn said. “I just got them out of the toilet.”

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Things are not always as they seem. Those cool glasses of water wouldn’t have been quite so refreshing, had the truth been known. Just like the ladies in the parlor, all of us size up situations based only on what we see rather than waiting for all the facts.

As an example, quite a few people have assessed my living situation in Michigan to be an isolated, lonely arrangement unsuitable for a new widow. But the fact is, I’m living here as a result of God’s decision rather than my own.

My first experience with summers in Michigan came long before I met Nate. My parents, along with an aunt and uncle, purchased a small cottage only six blocks from the one I now live in, back in 1946. Mary, Tom and I, along with four cousins and countless pals, made memories in that little three bedroom house until we were bursting at the seams with seventeen children between us, several in-law children and the beginnings of grandchildren. It wasn’t difficult to decide we needed a second cottage!

Nate and I bought our current home ten years ago, continuing to enjoy the same childhood beaches and neighborhoods but adding more space (and especially beds) to the mix. Basing in Chicago, we wished we could spend more time in Michigan and had talked about retiring here one day, away from Chicago traffic, high taxes and the hurried lifestyle we’d always known.

Putting our Chicago area home on the market in 2004, when the real estate bubble was still rising, we hoped to sell quickly. But not many buyers were interested in a 100 year old farm house when new homes were being built on every street. A year passed, then two and three, without a sale. Although we did have several contracts, the economy was tanking, and potential buyers couldn’t secure financing.

Meanwhile Nate’s back began to flare up, and he found himself working less and less. In 2008, we decided to put the Michigan cottage on the market, too, eager to sell one house or the other, unsure of what his health future would be. The outcome would be in God’s hands, and we were willing to live in whichever house didn’t sell. (See Part II, tomorrow.)

”My steps have held to your paths [O Lord]. My feet have not slipped.” (Psalm 17:5)

Hi, neighbor!

I learned of our friend Paul’s cancer the day before my flight to England, by way of an email from his wife, my good friend Becky. We lived next door to each other for 22 years until our family moved out of state a year ago. Their three children and our youngest four grew up playing in adjacent yards, forming happy friendships in the process. Separating from these great neighbors was the most difficult part of our move.

Becky and I shared a love for being stay-at-home moms and found our school commitments were twice as fun if we did them together. Paul and Nate had much in common, too, owning their own businesses and working hard at them. Both men put their families ahead of themselves and also enjoyed neighborly conversations about politics and the economy.

When Paul and Becky learned he had cancer, they also learned it was everywhere inside of him, and except for radiation, nothing would help. Their sons rushed home from their colleges, and their daughter stayed home from high school. They camped in the master bedroom, spending as much time together as possible, which turned out to be just three weeks.

Paul was a spectacular dad who loved orchestrating good times. He flew planes, rode motorcycles, drove SUVs before they were popular and wore cowboy boots every day. He also had a heart for the down-and-outers of society, alcoholics, abandoned women, the homeless. He was generous in his giving of time and money, and Becky has heard one story after another about his selfless help.

In Paul’s last days, he found comfort in the words of John 10, which Becky read aloud to him again and again. He especially loved the part about the Good Shepherd speaking to his sheep and the sheep recognizing his voice. Today Paul has audibly heard the Shepherd’s voice and has followed him through the gate and right into paradise. Amidst the many losses, this one great gain brings his family deep comfort.

Becky and I spent Sunday afternoon together, sharing our sorrows and identifying unnumbered similarities in the last weeks of our husbands’ lives. Because earthly death was in God’s plans for both Paul and Nate, widowhood was in his plans for Becky and me. As she was seeking God’s sustenance in the days immediately following Paul’s death she said, “God called each day ‘good’ in the Bible, and I believe he wants me to do the same. So every morning I wake up and say, ‘This will be a good day.’ ”

Paul had not been afraid to die, despite great pain. Even as  breathing became a struggle, he rested in the knowledge of where he would wake up after his final breath. Nurses testify that patients without a relationship with the Lord hang onto life at all costs. For Paul (and also Nate), the assurance of an afterlife with Jesus dispelled all fear, and neither one of them resisted death when it arrived.

One of Paul’s boys told me, “Our two families will have a stronger bond than ever now, having gone through such similar trials. And even though we don’t live next door to each other anymore, Paul and Nate have become neighbors again… in a much, much better neighborhood.”

“I am the good Shepherd; I know my sheep and my sheep know me— just as the Father knows me and I know the Father—and I lay down my life for the sheep.” (John 10:14-15)

Gratitude at the Gravesite

Our family has spent Memorial Day at Chicago’s Rosehill Cemetery for many decades. Not once have we been rained on… until today.

Standing under umbrellas in a downpour, several people shared thoughts from their hearts. Although we usually talk about the lives of those buried there (the first one 99 years ago), today our sharing was all about Nate. It’s been nearly seven months since his funeral, and he’s the seventh family member to be laid to rest in this plot.

As we stood in the rain, I knew my shivering had nothing to do with being wet and everything to do with missing Nate. Bervin quoted Romans 12:12, “Be joyful in hope, patient in affliction, faithful in prayer,” describing ways Nate had modeled this in front of all of us. Mary shared his favorite Scripture from Hebrews 12 about Jesus enduring his suffering, knowing joy would come later. She commented on Nate’s suffering being over, and the joy he now knows.

My nephew Luke told how much he appreciated Nate’s knowledge of history and the fact that he knew something about everything, an interesting person to talk to. Another Luke, like-a-nephew, mentioned talking with Nate last Memorial Day on this spot, realizing for the first time how great his back pain had become. He admired Nate’s not having taken a pass on the cemetery event but choosing to be present and participating, without complaint.

My brother Tom described how he’d known Nate well after sharing office space with him for 19 years. He’d watched him go through ups and downs in business and personal finance, sometimes becoming discouraged but never giving up. Having met each of Nate’s law clients since his death, Tom reported how much respect they all held for him and shared positive client comments. He also described a giant box of “show and tell” items he’d brought to share with us over lunch.

When it was my turn to talk, I read a verse from Ecclesiastes that compares controlling the wind with controlling the arrival of death. Neither can be done. Thankfully the control of both is in the flawlessly capable hands of Jesus Christ.

While crying, part of me was thinking, “I can’t believe my husband is dead and buried!” But the rest of me was feeling lifted and loved by the words being spoken. Mary finally said, “The weather is weeping, too, but we know this rain isn’t an accident. Maybe God knew it would be a sad Memorial Day and is helping us keep it short.” We moved to the cars and headed for our picnic, indoors at a local McDonald’s rather than our regular park location nearby.

Tom’s box contained Nate’s leather jacket and personal items from his desk and file cabinets, including unnumbered family pictures, artwork from our children’s grade school years, framed degrees and Elvis paraphernalia.

Two phone texts came through in the middle of our day together, one from Nelson in Africa and the other from Linnea in Florida, both promising Memorial Day prayer and describing strong family bonds that reached across thousands of miles. An email from Hans and Katy had accomplished the same. So, all of us were present and accounted for, including Nate… via sweet memories.

“No man has power over the wind to contain it; so no one has power over the day of his death.” (Ecclesiastes 8:8a)