The Lion and the Lamb

I’ve written about spring before.  I do it every year, actually, as I feel so profoundly grateful and moved to share that gratitude by pounding it out on the keyboard.  Thank you, spring!  Thank you, warmth!  Thank you, lions and lambs!  I love you, both, but damn if I don’t feel moved to tears and reflection every year when the lamb overtakes the lion.

It is so unexpected, so David and Goliath, when that lion has a firm hold on you in January and February, to think that sweet, gentle lamb even stands a chance.  You pine for that lamb, but wishing and hoping sometimes get lost in the dark and the cold and the ice and the relentless UGH of the formidable lion’s jaw you find yourself in.

This year, the lamb has arrived early in Chicago. Thank you, Universe!

Spring is a beautiful and profound and sacred return.  It is confirmation that light and warmth follow cold and dark. Always.  Spring is our annual reward and promise as human beings that things do, in fact, get better, even in nature.  As a family who has buried one of our children, this promised and expected annual return to life and growth and hope is so very needed.

As time passes after the death of our daughter, my need to find hope seems to increase. Hope is like food, water, or air to me.  I need it to survive. I need to feel and believe that the bad times subside, that life overtakes death, that even when it seems impossible, we will get through whatever it is we are needing to get through.

Spring is a tangible reminder of that for me, especially in the absence of a religion that assures me of the same thing.  My religion is the growing light, the warming temperatures, the melting ice, the fading cold and dark days of deep winter.

Spring lifts me up when I need it most.  It reminds me that life is a cycle, full of good and bad, both of which pass.  When things are bad, you must hope and trust that good will return.  And when things are good, savor it, enjoy it, knowing that things will shift and you will find yourself challenged again.

Life, folks.  It is what it is.  Sometimes it roars like an angry lion, and sometimes it gently rests in the growing grass, like a sweet lamb.  For right now, I am grateful that the lamb is back, bringing warmth and light and Reese’s chocolate peanut butter eggs with it.

Lion and Lamb 1

Love to you this fine spring day (not technically, of course, but mentally and emotionally, yo).  xox

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If you need another dose of spring, read this beautiful reflection by my fellow ChicagoNow blogger, Amy Litterski DeSario.

Who Are Your Anchors?

When times are rough and the Universe keeps beating you or the people you love up, I have learned to reach out for my anchors.  My anchors are those folks in my life that ground me, love me, comfort me, support me, cheer me — the ones that don’t go away. They are rooted and they root me.

I love me an anchor.  I have relied on them a lot as of late.  As I get pulled and tugged every which way, I reach out, grab me a handful of anchor, and hang on for dear life. Kind of like how Mary Tyler Baby grabs for my hair and pulls it.  Ouch!  Well, not really, but you get the picture.

Do you know who your anchors are?  They might be family, good friends, colleagues, neighbors, your partner.  Sheesh — I hope your partner is an anchor.  If not, you might want to rethink that whole partner thing.  You might have different anchors for different oceans of your life, too.  I know I do.

Long story short, know your anchors.  Use them. Tell them they are your anchor.  And, perhaps most importantly, always remember to be a good anchor yourself.

Anchor

What Happened to My Childhood?

I have a love/hate relationship with “Throwback Thursdays” on Facebook.  I love seeing them, I hate that I have none to share.  For a host of reasons, I have, um, approximately 10-12 photos of myself as a child.  That’s from infancy to early teen years, folks.  I am like a ghost, or a cool super hero known as The Invisible Child.

Part of this is because I am the youngest of four. The novelty of taking photos had worn off for my parents after their second child was born.  But other than that, I can’t really explain the absence of even my annual school photos.  My folks never divorced.  We never moved. My recollection is that the photos were stuffed in a junk drawer in the kitchen, but who knows?

I remember as a kid when there was some sort of family event and my much older cousins were putting together a poster board of all the grandchildren.  I didn’t make the cut.  Instead, a second photo of my oldest sister was purposefully mislabeled with the excuse, “Well, you two look so much alike!”  Pffft.

It stung then and it stings now.

In the big scheme of things, it’s not a big deal.  I am here, healthy, with a safe home, loving husband, full pantry, and gas in my car.  What am I whining about?  Well, sometimes a gal just feels like whining, am I right?  Today is one of those days.

Maybe its because as my sons gets older, I realize they will have little to no relationship to myself as a child.  My Mom died ten years ago. My Dad is aging himself and not one to reminisence about the days I bounced on his knee and he called me “Crackerjack.” To a very real degree, I am grieving my own childhood.  It’s Psychology 101.  And it hurts like hell.

My older boy complains about me and my camera tracking him through his days.  Not every day, but there certainly isn’t a photo op at a pumpkin patch or Santa’s lap or Easter egg hunt that I would ever willingly miss.  Employing that Psychology 101 class again, methinks I am trying to create for him what I myself lack — a visual history, a representation of the where and the when, a visible childhood.

Once upon a time I was a little girl.  I had a mass of unruly curls that my Mom tamed into two pony tails that she wrapped around her finger making long ringlets. The right ringlet always stayed put, but the left one often didn’t. The neighbor kids called me Noodles.  I wore knee socks and yarn bows.

My first best friend was a little boy named Allan.  I didn’t learn how to ride a bike until I was 12.  I got hit with a baseball in the back of the head while on a swing.  My brother always looked out for me.  I loved to eat pancakes and French Toast on Sunday mornings, then read the comics.  I read too many books about Hitler and the Holocaust in the second grade. My proudest day was when I was picked to read in front of the whole school at Mass.

A girl named Lisa always beat me out for the best roles in school productions. I loved to dance and look through my older sister’s yearbooks.  I was a very picky eater. And deathly afraid of dogs. My first crush was a boy named Todd. Math made me nervous. Reading and writing were my favorites.

Miss Kolavo was my favorite teacher at St. Jude’s and Mr. Konkol earned that honor in high school.  I had a favorite priest, too.  Sports were never my thing.  I liked to choreograph dance routines to Broadway musicals and television commercials in the living room.  We were the first people on the block with cable TV.  I liked to watch my Mom and sister dress up and do their hair and makeup.  I was one of the smallest in my class.

Words are the only snapshots I have to give my boys.   They will have to be enough, for all of us. Take pictures, folks.  Lots of them.  And print them out.  And date them.  You will be lucky you did some day.  Trust me on this one.

Childhood 2

Childhood 1

Childhood 6

Childhood 7