The paragraphs below are from a post I started writing in February. It was my last effort on the blog for months. It still represents a big part of what has gone on in my life since that time. There were other things going on in my life that I wanted to write about in February. A few days after this, a series of events began to snowball that changed the path that I thought I had been on. I was working slowly and steadily on getting my house in order, as described below. And then the world became aware of the pandemic. Within a month of writing the words below, universities were closing, businesses were closing, and well...you know. I'll put a few more words from today at the end.
February 7, 2020
I want to take a break from heartache, drive away from all the tears I’ve cried.
I’m a wasteland down inside.
In the crawlspace under heaven,
in the landscape of a wounded heart, I don’t know where to start.
But the wild geese of Mary pierce the darkness with a song
and a light that I’ve been running from and running for so long.
As their feathers spin their stories, I can still cling to my fears,
or I can run, but they come along and we both disappear
just like all…
All these broken angels, all these tattered wings, all these things
come alive in me....
All these broken angels, all these scary things, all these dreams
are alive in me. ("Broken Angels," Over the Rhine)
I'm basking in the joy of a visit from David, my son of 33 years. He has watched me struggle to deal with my boxed up life that goes back for a decade. Some of it got packed up at the end of our children's public school years, at the time we moved to Texas. Other parts of it come from those years in Texas, which were interrupted by the time of Everly's illness and death. Some of it is what I packed up there to move back to North Carolina in 2014. When I moved to NC, I had an initial burst of energy to sort and organize all the gathered fragments of a life that had drifted away. But it didn't last, and I eventually found myself walking the maze of boxes, bins, and bags that I could not face. It has been my hidden shame as I closed myself behind the doors and walls of my house.
God's grace of children comes in many ways, and in this time, it is David looking on his dad and realizing that the parent sometimes can't cope without a loving, helping hand. So at Christmas break, he cleaned the house, rearranged the living room, got rid of empty boxes stacked in the dining room, and began to scheme what it would take to get Dad on his feet in a home, not just a storage building. Then he planned a trip to spend a week with me going through boxes, getting things sorted for giving away, throwing away, recycling, and as a last resort, for keeping. We've been working on that for a few days now.
As I started writing last summer (2019), I had arrived at a moment when it seemed it was time for something new to happen. I could see glimpses of living a life that I had put on hold for almost ten years. There was a book project that had stalled when Everly's cancer took center stage for all of us. I had not seen a path forward, but took a big step in 2018 by working on the missing parts to give as a lecture series at Hong Kong Baptist Theological Seminary. A friend helped me get the book project moving by giving me access to a time share for a week last summer, and I produced a fully organized book proposal. I took other opportunities to work on the project, and will soon be able to send a proposal with several sample chapters for consideration by publishers.
Another part of David's visit has been several very helpful conversations. I had already begun talking with a therapist about my mental and emotional block when it came to the boxes in my house. I had made tiny steps of progress, three or four boxes now and then. But David's wisdom and love is blessing me in ways I could not have anticipated. He commented about the things I was saying, "That sounds like a lot of negative self-talk going on." Dang! That's kind of what a Dad might say to his kid. Of course, it was right on.
The next day I remembered an experience with my own dad. In 1985, W.D. had landed his dream job. Always a good fund-raising pastor, he was hired to work for his alma mater, Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, in the development office. His duties were to work the Houston area, with special attention to the SWBTS satellite campus there. He was loving the work, but his health was not responding well. Finally, his doctor told him that the pollution in Houston was making him sick, and he was on the verge of a serious respiratory condition. The doctor advised him to quit the job if it required him to be in Houston. It broke his heart. I went to visit, only to have him pour out his heart about the sadness he felt about both the health danger and about giving up the job he had wanted for so long. He was 55 when that happened. Now David is helping me through my challenges at age 62. The leveling that comes with maturity has allowed a kind of give and take that I would not have imagined a few years ago. The gratitude in my heart runs deep.
As my regular readers know, I often call on the poetry of song lyrics in these blog posts. I'm not alone in being a person who often finds a soundtrack for my life in the songs of my favorite artists. Anyone who has read my blog knows that Bruce Cockburn, Kate Campbell, Michael Card, Kyle Matthews, Darrell Adams, and Carrie Newcomer have been favorite poets of mine. But in the past few months, the music of Over the Rhine has been on repeat.
A couple of years ago, I think I arrived at the conclusion that Bruce Cockburn's song, "Pacing the Cage" had become the best interpretation of my life.
Sometimes you feel like you've lived too long--
Days drip slowly on the page.
You catch yourself
Pacing the cage.
I didn't see much left for me in life. There were many things I had not accomplished, and I doubted I would ever have the energy to change that. I still hoped there was more life ahead, but I just couldn't see it. I could still get energy in bursts and feel the old drive to work on issues and tasks that I had cared about for many years. I could be happy to be with my family and friends, so don't take this to mean that I hoped to die. But where my life was headed and what it might take to get started on a visionary path were seeming to be out of my reach.
At that point in the blog post, I was trying to find words to describe something new in my life. I thought I had stumbled onto some changes that were revealing a sense of what could be unfolding. One voice had planted a seed in my mind and heart, "Mike, you are good enough." My next step in writing this piece was going to be to explain that I was thinking about how another song from Over the Rhine, "Days Like This," might speak to who I am beginning to imagine myself to be: "Days like this, you think about the ones that love you. All I want to do is live my life honestly....Every regret I have, I will go set it free, and it will be good for me." Six months later, I think it still speaks to my hopes, dreams, and possibilities.
But I was not seeing clearly how things would go and would have soon had to change my assessment of what was coming next. At least I wasn't alone in that. No one was seeing ahead clearly in the budding Ronaworld. Within a few days, my world had turned upside down in so many ways.
As March progressed, I began planning to uproot and go to Texas to care for my Dad, who turned 90 years old in July, so that I could help keep him safe during the pandemic. I thought I would stay two months--so many of us fooled ourselves to think it would be over by summer. I ended up staying three months. I never came back to this blog post until today. I did quite a bit of writing, filling up a blank book with handwritten nearly daily reflections for several months. I had a lot of magical thinking to talk myself out of. Then I stopped that. I spent about a month back at my house in Durham in July, making much more progress on cleaning out old boxes and making the house livable. I didn't finish, but the changes are already dramatic. One person asked me the obvious question during that time, "When do you think you will get back to your writing?" I'm sure I mumbled out some uncertain answer.
Now I'm in Texas in the middle of a planned two month stay. And I'm like lots of people dealing with COVID-19: wondering how this transformative crisis should change the way I expect to live the rest of my life. I know that when and if Rona ever winds down, it's not going to be the same world I was imagining before. It's about time I started writing again.
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