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Marian Vischer

Marian Vischer

{Day 30} Real Marriage Part 7: Choose Life, Even When It’s Falling Apart

waterlogue bridal

When difficult days come, there are often no easy answers or quick solutions. It’s natural to want to delay real living until things are looking up. I mean, really, how does one go on living and find any joy in the midst of such difficulty?

As we’ve gone through trials in our marriage, I haven’t been all Pollyanna about things. Really, there has been a good deal of mopey-ness.

But life moves on with or without my permission.

In the midst of disappointing days, I had to keep putting one foot in front of the other and not let the days pass me by. I took my kids to our regular places. I smiled and made small talk with friends. I spent time with family. I laughed. I watched movies and read. I took pictures. I dressed up occasionally. I ate Ben and Jerry’s.

And it hasn’t been just a solitary thing. Forging a new “us” hasn’t happened in isolation. Over the hardest days and months, we still talked. We went places together. We joked. We ate dinner. We read excerpts of books out loud. We looked at the stars.

And we did these things smack in the middle of a life unraveled.

I’ve savored the little things in a big way. Only Grace can give you the oomph to do that.

I’m not naturally a joy-chooser but I am naturally a life-lover. At least I really want to be.

In the better moments of my most discouraging days, I knew that progress would be slow. Things don’t come undone all at once and they don’t stitch themselves back together overnight either, not when you’ve been married for any length of time.

If I waited for complete resolution before I gave myself permission to live full, a lot of life would pass me by in the process.

One chapter of Grace for the Good Girl — “Safe, even when it hurts” — is a place I have returned to several times. These words infused my soul with much comfort and clarity:

When things break, something happens inside us. The routine is interrupted by the urgent, and the broken thing becomes top priority. Shake it. Tap it. Turn it upside down. Find the glue. Replace the batteries. Pull out the needles and thread. Return it to the store. Throw it away.

It isn’t natural to just let the broken thing be broken. 

 

It’s not, is it? But sometimes that’s what we have to do. Accepting the broken thing gives way to freedom. Not a happy-clappy, smiley sort of freedom. Perhaps it’s more of a necessary resignation, a letting go.

I simply dropped the heavy load I’d been carrying. I quit trying to manage it. I gave up my job as fixer of my own life.

This heavy load was our swept-up brokenness. I’d surveyed the shards of our a brokenness — a brokenness we’d both made — swept up the jagged pieces, tossed them in bag, and carted them around. It was heavy and taxing and depressing because no matter what I did or where I went, the bag of brokenness was with me.

It was and still is a bit of a process but somewhere along the way, I dropped the bag at the feet of Jesus and told Him that He alone could fix us. I told Him I’d surrender to the process, however long it would take.

I “let the broken thing be broken” and determined to make the most of my days in the process. Because really, we all have broken parts our lives. To refuse to accept them is to refuse to be human.

In the same chapter, Emily Freeman goes on to say this about healing:

 Healing is messy and fluid and often unpredictable. I can’t manufacture my own healing. It usually takes longer than I think, runs deeper than I wished, and involves more areas of my life than I ever imagined.

Can I get an Amen? You can sit around and wait for healing to hurry up already so that you can be happy and savor life again. Or you can choose to see everyday beauty, embrace everyday gifts, and love in everyday ways today, no matter how tangled up life feels or how long the process may take to untangle it.

It will not be easy. There will be days when you pick the heavy bag of broken pieces back up and try to haul it around again.

Keep letting it go.

Keep choosing to live full in the midst of the broken.

Grace and Hope will equip you. And Joy will find you.

 

/////

 

It’s been 30 days. Tomorrow will be my last post in this 31 day series and I can’t believe it. Many bloggers {over 700!} have also written for 31 days. My friend, Richella, is hosting a “Best of 31 Days Linky Party” tomorrow for any “31-dayers” who would like to link up their favorite post. I’m joining in, though I have no clue which post I’ll choose to link. If you’re a fellow 31-dayer, I hope you’ll link up as well!

If you’re interested in the rest of the posts in the series, click on the “31 Days of Real” button in the right sidebar.

 

 

{Day 29} Real Marriage Part 6: Get Back to Dreaming



What are your dreams? 


That’s what he asked me on a cold, crisp, starry night 18 years ago. We were in Colorado for cross-country camp, a two-week trip where we trained in high altitudes and ran up the sides of mountains. We’d been friends for two years already, but that night, teetering on the edge in so many ways, we ventured into something more. 

We shared our dreams under black-blue sky and dazzling stars. It seemed magical then and it seems no less magical now. 

He was the first one I dared to really dream with. 

We talked about God, shared our hopes, who we thought we were, who we hoped to become.

It’s an intensely vulnerable thing to do. I still can’t believe we had that conversation before we were even officially dating. He’s not like that, not one to open up and share so freely with another. Maybe it was the high altitude. Or maybe we could simply see ourselves inhabiting one another’s future. 

Years went by. Plans detoured and derailed. Babies arrived. Money was tight and the future was uncertain. 

Somewhere along the way, we stopped dreaming and focused on surviving. Dreaming seemed a luxury and I dismissed those early conversations as childish fantasy. What did we know about real life? We were 20, idealistic and full of hope, but not realistic. 

We’ve traversed mountains, valleys, and everything in between since then. Defeat, despair, restoration, and redemption have journeyed with us. 

And for the second time in 18 years, we’re dreaming again. 

A while back we were talking late in bed about the deep and the real, our past and the future. This time it was my turn:

What are your dreams? What would you do if you could do anything? If the money was plentiful no matter what, what would you choose?

I thought I knew what his answer would be. Turns out I was wrong. His answer surprised me. We giggled over possibilities, dreamed about what ifs. I told him that I’ll dream with him, that he has my support 100%, that I think he’d be amazing at his dreamed-up thing. 

Several days later he told me how that conversation changed everything for him, that any sort of change now seems less frightful and more realistic. The future became less of a scary unknown so let’s play it safe. The future is a hopeful unknown so let’s dare to dream. 

Because ultimately our trust isn’t in one another or in some 20-year plan. It’s in the One who brought us together and who has sustained us through the dark and ugly, dreamless years. Dreaming is better when you know you’re not the ones responsible for getting the stars lined up just perfectly and “making it all happen.” 

Entertaining possibility isn’t as nerve-wracking when you know that whatever happens, wherever you go, God is still there. Dreams fulfilled? He’s there. Dreams dashed? He’s there. Often I have to remind myself that He never leaves or forsakes. He is always the safety net. He is always our hope. 

He makes it safe to dream and He invites us to discover.

Maybe it’s been a while, years even, since you dreamed together. Perhaps now is the perfect opportunity to dabble in fanciful hope. Ask him what his dreams are. You may be surprised at his answer. You may even be surprised at yours. 

Dreaming together isn’t entirely about the destination. It’s about the intimacy forged in imagination.

Go dream together…and see what happens.  


{Click on the button for the list of all the days 
and topics thus far.}

{Day 28} Real Marriage Part 5: Laugh It Up


I got my funny back. 

That was one of the ways I knew my marriage was healing from the deepest-down place and that change was happening from the inside-out. 

I’ve always been the crazy one. {Which is ironic because I tend to take myself much too seriously.}

My friends always knew I’d pick “dare” over “truth,” the more ridiculous the better. 

My senior year of high school, several of my Jewish friends dared me to steal a plastic Baby Jesus from a nativity scene while we were out one night. I put him back in the manger before the night was over. I may have been irreverent but I wasn’t a thief. “Good” Protestant girl and minister’s daughter that I was, I felt horribly guilty after the fact. At least I wasn’t Catholic. I’d still be going to confession over that one.

But the whole story reminds me that I’m a little nutty. I’m not an obvious clown but those who know me well know I’m all about the laughs. I used to be anyway.

My husband knows this best. I was silly and spontaneous and he was a quirky sort of jokester back in the day. He’s never rolled his eyes at my kookyness and he’s always given me permission to be who I am. Even through the hard times, I knew he appreciated that side of me. 

Sadly, however, there were years on end when there wasn’t much of that side to appreciate. I’m not sure when or why but somewhere along the way I became terribly serious. Terribly. I had plenty to be sad about but still, it’s a real tragedy to lose the comedy in life. That’s what becoming a grown-up and dealing with seriously hard stuff will do to you.

Oh we still had our laughs from time to time but as the years wore on, I laughed less and frowned more. I didn’t look for the funny or try to be funny that often. The sorrow I felt hung around in the depths and instead of a wellspring of gladness, I exhibited a wellspring of negativity. He commented every now and then that I was too serious, that I’d lost my lightheartedness. 

I didn’t want to admit that he was right but the truth was, I missed it too.

This year has been a difficult one. We’ve trudged through more than you care to know. And in doing so we’ve dug deeper, cried harder, talked ’til we were blue in the face, had a fair number of knock-down-drag-outs and finally, finally gotten to the root of so much. 

There’s something about getting to the bottom of things that brings relief. And the relief brings freedom.

And apparently freedom brings the funny back. {Singing has returned as well but that’s another story.}

He’s noticed it too. We’ve both felt freer to be our crazy selves again and together we are having a lot of laughs. It may sound contrived, but I’m actually trying to be intentional about laughing it up. It is so good for the soul. 

Whether it’s getting kids to bed early so we can watch a favorite comedy or belting out an insane song in the kitchen while I’m stirring spaghetti and he leasts expects it, it feels good to resurrect the funny after years of being far too sober-minded. 

There’s something about laughing together that makes a relationship richer. I realize that funny can sometimes be a facade, a superficial mask to keep the real issues at bay. Funny isn’t a cure-all or a telltale sign that all is well. 

But for us, it has been an unexpected sign of love blooming lighthearted again.

…………………………


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{Day 27} Real Marriage Part 4: The Myth of Quality Time


I was not one of those girls who went to college to get her Mrs. Degree. I went to get my actual degrees and it just so happened that I met Mr. along the way. 

It was fine with me if marriage and children didn’t come until later, but love hit us like a freight train and we married the summer after college. We didn’t try to slow it down or delay life together. We said our I do’s and jumped headlong {and clueless} into marriage. 

He knew I was a fiercely independent spirit when he married me, knew I didn’t feel I needed a man. We had a few tiffs about it during our courtship. The thing he loved most, my independence, was also one of the things that made him a tad nervous.

He knew I had plans and dreams of my own, plans for more education and plans for career. He knew I appreciated rich friendships and my own hobbies. 

I didn’t have a husband who pinned me down, micromanaged, or monopolized. For years now, he’s given me freedom to work or not to work. He’s kept the kids while I’ve gone to visit friends and family and even traveled abroad. And all of these years I’ve thought to myself, What a lucky girl I am to have a husband who allows me the freedom to go and do and be.

He thought he was doing the right and good thing, giving me a break and some freedom when I needed it. I thought it was a good and right thing too. We both took pride in our modern, freedom-granting sensibilities. 

But all of this going and doing and being? It came at a price. Time apart is obviously not time together. It’s embarrassing to confess that we never really considered the toll that extreme independence takes on a union. 

It probably goes without saying that individual freedom was both a cause and a symptom of breakdown. Marriage was hard, communication strained. A little freedom seemed like a fine solution, even though it was probably a unconscious decision. 

And it’s okay that we all need a break sometimes. Work is tough. Family life can be stressful. Marriage is complicated. 

Even now, we’re not against individual pursuits of our unique passions.

But too often, we used our precious “free time” to travel along our own trajectories. We didn’t really cultivate activities we could do together. We weren’t intentional about setting aside time in the midst of the daily grind for us to connect in simple but meaningful ways.

Without even realizing it, we’d begun to believe the myth of quality time, the idea of creating “better time” to make up for lost time. 

But the occasional date night, vacation, or movie night on the sofa can’t make up for conversational intimacy cultivated day to day. The occasional anything can’t settle down deep next to habit.

A couple of months ago an older, wiser woman talked to me about this issue and I’ve been thinking about it ever since. She told me that it takes spending all kinds of time with someone to really know them. All time is quality time. 

It’s true. You can’t cram the richness of the accumulated mundane into a capsule labeled “quality time,” swallow it whole, and then expect a relationship to flourish. 

Relationship takes time together. Not fun time, not special time, not romantic time. Just time.

For us, independence created too much space and distance. It may not be the case for everyone but it did in our situation. 

Though we’ve endured real crises, we believe that a key battle was lost in the everyday. It’s why we’ve become vigilant about protecting our time together more than ever. 

Yes we can still spend time with friends. Relationships and community are vital. We still have hobbies. But we’re spending more time together with others and we’re becoming more invested in one another’s passions and pursuits. It doesn’t mean that we cease to be who we are as individuals. It simply means that we take this “one flesh” thing seriously, creating disciplines and practices so that the theoretical becomes real life. 

We’ve also become careful about the things we say yes and no to. In the past, we simply didn’t consider these realities. Now we know that we can’t afford not to. 

This is not the way of our culture. And it’s a whole new way of living for us. We’re not against pursuing one’s dreams. But we’re learning that these things all have their proper place and time. One can’t say yes to everything in every season. 

But saying yes to the best thing casts a new light on other things. Pastimes and practices that once seemed super fun and important now feel very, very optional. 

As we say yes over and over again to time for us and simple everyday transactions, we marvel at the new connectedness rising up out of ordinary life. We’re learning that quantity time makes quality time. 


{Click on the button for the list of all the days 
and topics thus far.}

{Day 26} Real Marriage Part 3: On Little Things



I made collages for him. Yes I did. 

Bits of typeface, paper hearts, glitter and photos. It was painstaking but it didn’t feel that way…a labor of love that only scratched the surface of the overwhelming everything for this guy who made my heart pound and gallop like a racehorse. 

My love poured out freely and lavishly in the form of words, affection, sacrifice and wild, unabashed joy. 

I didn’t have to work at it. Neither of us did. Like a wild roller-coaster flying along its tracks, romantic love did the work for us. We were simply along for the ride.

And then marriage. 

Slowly but surely, what once felt like Disney World became more like the local roller rink. Oh it was still enjoyable, wonderful even, but it became predictable and routine. Comfortable. 

The languages of love that once flowed effortlessly began to feel unnecessary and sometimes even laborious. 

I’ve learned the hard way, however, that those supposed little things of the early days are monumental.

While regular date nights, marriage conferences and weekends away are all fine and good, they are serious luxuries for many of us. 

Is it possible that rich marriage blooms out of the fertile soil of the everyday? Conversely, neglecting the simple opportunities to feed and water one’s marriage relationship will eventually kill the thing. 

I write to remind myself. 

It probably goes without staying that I became neglectful over the years. We both did. {But for now, I’m simply telling my part.}

Strange how you have to relearn that which used to come effortlessly. Be encouraged that the more you practice simple expressions of love, the more they return to you and begin to flow freely again. 

No, I’m not still pasting collages together or making mix tapes. But I’m appreciating more, taking less for granted, making him smile and reminding him of my affection and admiration. 

I want him to know that I’ve missed him during the day and not just missed his help.

I want him to know I appreciate his hard work and not just his salary. 

He doesn’t implicitly know that I still find him strikingly handsome and charming. I have to tell him and show him.

Never underestimate the huge impact of the little. 

Sprinkle love often and liberally. With simple, repetitive nurture, that which was dormant breathes life once again. 

Love returns. 

…………………………..

{Click on the button for the list of all the days 
and topics thus far.}

{Day 25} Real Marriage Part 2: When You’re Struggling


Perhaps marriage is a real struggle today, harder than you thought it would be. 

Perhaps it feels impossible. 

Perhaps you know that there are issues, real problems. But you feel like you just don’t have the emotional energy right now to work on things in a way that’s really going to make a difference. So you wait. You ignore. You minimize or rationalize. 

But do you know what? All of that putting off takes emotional energy too. Hiding and pretending, deferring and under-the-rug-sweeping? It sucks the life out of you. It’s a slow and steady drain that in the long run is more taxing than the hard work of dealing with the junk so that you can finally move forward. 

I know it’s hard. Sometimes it just seems easier to pretend that the problems are normal and therefore not that worthy of attention. Or maybe you think that you’re problems are anything but normal. You’re believing the lie that nobody else has experienced what you’re going through. 

Maybe help feels ridiculous and impractical during this season. I get it. 

Life is work without the troubles that come with marriage. Jobs are stressful. Kids have needs. There are bills and soccer games and sickness. Decisions are waiting to be made and doctor visits are waiting to be scheduled. 

Who has the time for the gut-wrenching work of marriage when dinner needs fixing? It’s a classic example of how the immediate takes precedence over the important. 

But let me gently speak some truth here. 

You don’t have to solve it all right now. But start somewhere. 

I’d suggest prayer. 

Maybe you can’t remember the last time you breathed a prayer about your marriage.  Why not today? Why not acknowledge that you don’t have what it takes or know what it takes to see this through, that you’re desperate and scared and “just please, God, help.”

He hears the cries of the desperate. He looks on you and your desperation and He is filled with compassion.

And then, assuming you’re able to pray and quiet your soul for just a bit, maybe it’s time to speak about things. Speak the first word of the first conversation that may put you on the path to help. 

And that brings me to the subject of help. 

I’ve found that the hardest part of getting help is simply taking the first step. 

Find a counselor, a pastor, a wise and trusted friend, maybe someone you know who’s also sought help. Don’t let shame stand in the way of healing. 

Here’s what I’ve learned. We all need help. We’re simply prone to hiding it. 

My husband and I, we see a counselor. But we also have friends who know our story and love us anyway. We have others in our lives who encourage us, pray for us, and ask the necessary questions. We now have a “network” of help and we realize that this is really the only way to live–real, honest and needy. 

And as we’ve begun to live needy, we’ve begun to see that we’re not alone. 

Marriage is hard. It’s okay that it’s hard. So many people are struggling, far more than you know. 

If you’re in a difficult place, don’t stay there. Take the first step. And know that you’re not alone.

{Click on the button for the list of all the days 
and topics thus far.}

{Day 24} Real Marriage Part 1: Am I Really Doing This?


I’ve swung like a pendulum over how to start this series of posts on “Real Marriage.” 

A sane and rational person wouldn’t dare write about something as sacred and monumental as marriage without having an armload of thoughtful conclusions and expert advice. 

Apparently I am neither sane nor rational. And I’m definitely not an expert.

I am simply a real girl-turned-woman who met the love of her life and said yes to his proposal 18 years ago and I do 2 years after that. I married for love and I meant it to last forever. I had not a shred of doubt that it would.

Today I am just a real wife who is still married to the love of her life…

But only because of Grace.

I know now that I hadn’t a clue about love and marriage, sacrifice and compromise, grace and forgiveness. Neither did he. 

Our story is a beautiful mess. 

And it’s only beautiful because it’s being redeemed by the One who called us to one another 16 years ago and called us to Himself before the foundations of the Earth. 

So why am I scared half to death to write these posts? After all, everyone loves a good before-and-after story, a tale that was once harrowing but is now happy. 

To be honest, we are still somewhat limping off the battlefield. But instead of battling one another, we’re now a united front.  Weary? Yes. Hopeful? Absolutely. Still healing? Very much so. 

And because we’re still healing, I entertain competing voices about whether it’s wise to even write on this subject. 

There is the good and safe wife on one shoulder telling me that it would be foolish to “go live” with this one. Wait until you can speak from a place of hard-won wisdom and job-well-done-ness, she urges. 

And on the other shoulder I hear the real {and perhaps crazy} wife telling me to speak now. Wait too long and you may lose the rawness and realness that comes from proximity to pain and struggle, she counters. Some hurting soul may need your hope today. Just speak. 

I don’t have the brilliance, training, or platform that an expert may bring to the table. 

I only have my story. 

And while I’m not really telling our story in its full trajectory and detail, I can tell you what I’m learning as we journey toward healing together. I can write hope. 

There’s a song we’ve sung in church for years now but its words have become “a calling” of sorts for me recently.

Rise up women of the truth
Stand and sing to broken hearts
Who can know the healing power
Of our awesome King of love


From one broken heart to another, I can tell you this. There is Hope. 

Hang on. 

Real Marriage Part 2: When You’re Struggling
Real Marriage Part 3: On Little Things
Real Marriage Part 4: The Myth of Quality Time
Real Marriage Part 5: Laugh It Up
Real Marriage Part 6: Get Back to Dreaming
Real Marriage Part 7: Choose Life, Even When It’s Falling Apart


{Click on the button for the list of all the days 
and topics thus far.}

{Day 23} And on the 23rd day, she rested. Really.


I had several things I’ve tried to write about for today. None of them feel right. They feel contrived and detached and I don’t want to write fake for a series that’s all about real.

So today I’m telling you that I’m tired and full of trepidation. It’s day 23 of a 31-day series and while I’m on the “home stretch,” I feel that the real work is still in front of me.

I’m planning to write for the last week of the series on “Real Marriage. “

You may think that I’m writing on marriage because I’ve been married for 16 years and therefore have all sorts of wisdom about how to create a lasting, thriving, passionate marriage.

The real truth is, I do feel very passionately about marriage but only because mine has met a near fatal end. Twice. Marriage is the hardest thing I’ve ever done, the arena in which I’ve suffered the greatest defeats and experienced the most glorious victories.

In the wise words of the great philosopher, Pat Benetar, “Love is a battlefield.”

Anticipating these posts is making me all clammy and anxious and weary. The writing will be work because the subject matter is work.

So instead of sharing some thoughts today on books or creativity, I’m telling you that I just can’t. It’s not in me. I’m going to take my own advice from last week and rest.

And if you need permission to do the same, let me be the one to give it to you.

Rest and be renewed. 

And then come back this week {or don’t…because I’m crazy nervous} and we’ll talk about Real Marriage.


{Click on the button for the list of all the days 
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{Day 22} A Real “Disorder” {sort of}: Reading Guilt


Life is too short to read stuff you don’t want to read. 

I toiled away for four years as a graduate student studying American history. I read more books and journal articles than I can remember. Obviously I loved history and I loved much of what I read. And what I didn’t love? I had to plow through anyway. 

I learned to read really quickly. So quickly, in fact, that on the rare occasion I was able to read solely for pleasure, I’d fly through the pages out of habit. I literally had to retrain my brain to read slowly and savor. 

Now that I no longer have assigned reading lists, I can read whatever I want. At times I’ve picked up a book and somewhere along the way realized I was not enjoying it. Yet guilt propelled me to finish it. Or I wouldn’t finish it and I’d feel guilty about that.

I’ve also felt guilty that I haven’t read many classics in my adult years. There are so many amazing works of literature I’ve never read. But the thought of reading them makes me sort of tired. 

At some point I realized that I have reading guilt. 

Just writing those words makes me laugh because “reading guilt” sounds like the most ridiculous disorder ever! 

But if you like books, there’s a chance you may suffer from it too. 

How ’bout I be the one to give all of us permission to read what we want to read? A reading manifesto perhaps?

  • If you are a grown-up you do not have to finish a book if you don’t like it.
  • You shouldn’t read a book just because everyone else is reading it. That’s just literary peer pressure. 
  • If you get mid-way through a book and it’s positively loathsome, you’re allowed to quit. Even if everyone else you know loved the book.
  • You have permission to read multiple books at once depending on your mood. I usually have a stack on my nightstand of 5-7 books. It results in an embarrassingly low completion rate but the variety is nice.
  • If you love to read but your books haven’t been touched in weeks because your brain is tired and TV is therefore easier, that’s okay too. {Homeschooling and having young children has completely sapped the endurance from my brain.}

Good. I’m glad we’ve gotten that out of the way.

I still love books. The smell of Barnes and Noble is like a drug for me. If I ever worked retail, it would be in a book store. I want to read more books than I will ever actually read. But even something one loves can become burdensome. I don’t think there’s any area of our lives that grace doesn’t need to touch. Reading included.

So what about you? Do you ever suffer from reading guilt? Are there any proclamations you would add to the reading manifesto?

………………………

{Click on the button for the list of all the days 
and topics thus far.}

{Day 21} Real Home: You Won’t Remember, I Promise




We’ve been watching home movies over the last couple of weeks. These audio-visual memories are my most cherished possessions. I tear up every time I hear their toddler voices that I’ve long since forgotten. You think you’ll remember but you don’t. 

I told my husband that I want all of our old tapes put on DVD for Christmas.

My kids have been watching what we’ve taken over the last couple of years over and over again. We have laughed ourselves silly over the ways they pronounced things and how Blondie acts like a troll for the first hour after she’s woken up. Just like her mama.

There’s something else I noticed in these videos. My furniture is somehow arranged differently in every single one and the decor is altered. I guess I am always looking for some new and improved way to make our home feel prettier, cleaner and more spacious. And because I know myself well, that will probably never change. 

But I was also struck by the fact that I don’t remember how my house looked or was arranged on any given day or during any given season of life. 

More importantly, as I watched the everyday moments of the past replay in the here and now, the background matters not one bit.

The only things that matters are their voices, toddler cheeks and baby-teeth smiles. Mussed-up morning hair and fuzzy pajamas on Christmas morning trump a pristine background of perfect-paint-color walls and a non-stained sofa. 

The furniture and background could have been on fire and it wouldn’t matter now. 

The reality is this. Years from now I won’t remember how organized I was or wasn’t. I won’t care how clean my house was on October 21st, 2011. Scuffed-up walls? Weeds around my mailbox? All irrelevant in the whole scheme of things. 

When I think of my own upbringing, I honestly can’t tell you if our house stayed clean and uncluttered. I don’t remember my mom being obsessive over those things. But I have a slew of wonderful memories like popcorn and Coke {enjoyed on the sofa} at night while we watched a favorite show, board games played as a family, vacations near and far even though we had hardly any discretionary income, Christmas traditions, simple birthday celebrations, and countless dinners around the table. 

I’m the oldest of four kids. To this day we’ve got a lot of love for one another and move Heaven and earth to spend time together even though we’re scattered from Colorado to South Carolina. My husband is the oldest of three and we feel the same way about his family. We realize how blessed and undeserving we are in this way.

The common denominator in both of our family experiences is love. Lots of it. 

The atmosphere of home is not determined by its state of perfection and picked-up-ness. It’s determined by the love of its inhabitants for one another, the seemingly mundane rituals of the everyday, and the simple traditions celebrated year after year. 

I still care about my home of course. I long for a lovely haven that my family and I can enjoy. I want it to reflect us and to exhibit beauty. These things matter to me. 

But my home movies showed me that these things matter far less than I think they do. Often my time could be better spent just living and cherishing the everyday moments. 

I’m learning from the past how I want to live in the present.

…………………….

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Marian Vischer

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