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Archive for September, 2023

Grace

Dear Lyla,

I was really struggling with the topic for this week’s blog post. Not because it’s been a bad week or a particularly difficult week…actually…it has been a great week! I have accomplished a good deal on my sabbatical projects and have done a plethora of creative work. It is the type of work that energizes me and so I am quite pleased. It has been a long time since I have solely focused on what I needed to do to keep pushing myself forward on my own academic and creative journey. I know in the end it will make me a better teacher, a better colleague, and hopefully a better mom. However, I must admit that I have felt a bit guilty about focusing so much on my own professional development this last week. As you know, I usually have an open-door policy here at Wartburg College.  My office has been a revolving door of students coming in, coming out, sitting on the couch, napping on the couch, sometimes drinking coffee, endless chatter, homework, deep discussions about personal issues, hugs for those who need it and reality checks for others.

While I am still having interactions with students, which I love, my available time has been intentionally limited so that I can benefit from what a sabbatical is supposed to encompass. A time of renewal, a time of rest, a time of newfound intellectual and creative opportunities; and I think I’m starting to get there. I have really enjoyed the writing that I have done this last week. I have been inspired and motivated by the preparation I am doing for the podcast series that I will begin to record shortly with Kate but, the office has been quiet.  I know my students are trying to honor my space, I know they respect me and my time, and I’m grateful for that; but I cannot help but feel just a little bit guilty that I cannot be there for them as much as I was last year and that’s a struggle for me.

I also know that I need to prioritize you and give you the attention you deserve, and I’m so grateful that we have our car rides in the morning (and sometimes at night). I love the time that we spend together, and it serves as an emotional balm for me. I love talking to you, whether it’s you telling me a funny story, or we talk about your music, or your teachers and their funny quirks, or honestly, sometimes even when you just want to vent. Those are special times for me because it means that you trust me, that I am a safe person for you, and that is a priority for me.

I have tried to give that same attention, love, and care to my students too and I think they appreciate it. I know I treasure the relationships that I have with them, but again, this feeling of guilt that arises from focusing on myself inwardly this year rather than giving of myself to others has rooted itself in my psyche. One of the toughest life lessons for me to learn is, if I deplete my own cup I have nothing left with which to fill others’ cups. I know all this intellectually but, as you know I was raised Lutheran, so I feel guilty. However, because I was brought up in the Lutheran tradition, I understand the concept of grace, or at least I think I did.

In my office I have this beautiful word art piece that Sam Pfab made for me a few years ago when she was involved in Dance Marathon here on campus, she gave it to me as a thank you gift. Sam and I had quite a few discussions about grace. I think I am fairly practiced at offering grace to others, but I might not always be so skilled at receiving it from others or extending it to myself. As you know, in the Lutheran tradition, we believe that there is nothing that we can do solely on our own to receive heavenly blessings, it is by grace that we are saved, it is the ultimate gift. Oftentimes I do not think I really believed that the gift was meant for me, even though I preach all the time everyone is deserving of grace. I have repeatedly told my students that there is always room for grace. It is ok if you struggle, it is normal to stumble, and sometimes fall, but all will be well because there is always room for grace. It struck me as I was finishing up some of my preparation work for the podcast with Kate that I have been blessed with people in my life that have extended that gift to me and exemplified what it means to live and walk a grace filled life. I was reminded of that poignantly yesterday afternoon when I had my phone conversation with Kate to coordinate her visit to campus to talk about her life experiences. She was so kind and so supportive, and, in a word, she was gracious in our conversation. She reassured me that I could do this work, that I could do it well, and that I should be proud of my work rather than shy away from it or doubt the talents that I have. I was grateful that in a moment when I needed grace, I received it. So, I guess the point of this letter is to remind you, and myself, that there is always room for grace no matter what. You don’t have to earn it; it is freely given.

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Dear Lyla,

Some of the most vivid memories from childhood feature the kitchen table after dinner during the cold winter months of Minnesota playing canasta with Bumpa, Grandma, and my sister. Back in the stone ages when I was young, we didn’t have cable or internet and the bunny ear antenna that we manipulated to get local television stations was constantly thwarted by the snow in the air, fuzzy lines, and an irritating buzz was all that would emanate from the boxy television in the corner of our living room. With limited entertainment choices and impassible roads because we lived in the country, we turned to reading or playing cards. Our home library and the four decks of cards used to play our nightly games were some of my most important teachers as a child. We started learning how to play when I was seven and Bumpa used it to teach us basic math skills. If you did not count correctly and melded when you didn’t have enough count, he would take 100 points off your score! Some of my earliest arithmetic lessons were learning to add up basic points and the points from the count. I was so little when I started playing, I could not shuffle the cards, I had to put them in front of me and swirl them around to mix them up. Grandma always had snacks for times in between hands and it is one of my fondest memories. I also learned at an early age that I do not like to lose and even the sweetest of personalities can be cutthroat when a game of canasta is at stake.

While you have grown up in a world of cable, internet and you live in a town where you are able to move around freely, not constrained by the chilly winter winds keeping your driveway closed for days on end, you have been given the gift of family card night. When grandma first suggested that she make dinner for us on Fridays followed by a rousing game of canasta I was delighted! You were reticent when we first started to play but it grew on you and now it is a rite of passage; Friday nights with the “Ladies.” I honestly thought as you went along in your teen years that you would be less interested in hanging out with me, your grandma, and your great aunt on Fridays. However, it seems that the opposite has happened. You look forward to those nights and we try to sneak a couple of hands in on weeknights when our busy schedules allow it.

You have clearly inherited the card shark gene, you HATE to lose, and I feel you, me too kid. Grandma and I joked that while you never knew your Bumpa he is ever present at those card games. Some of your expressions and your incredible luck at being dealt wildcards or drawing “just what you need” from the pile are so reminiscent of him. Sometimes even the lilt in your laugh is like hearing him in the room. Oh, and could he smack talk, well you inherited that too. Just a couple of weeks ago your great aunt suggested I replace your toothpaste with super glue. Publicly, I will say “please respect your elders,” privately your constant chatter throws them off and allows us to claim victory, so “well done!” We all become different characters when we play. You boss me around like you have been playing for decades longer than I have, Grandma’s little “tappity tap” on the cards is a dead give away she has a good hand, and when she is winning she makes jokes that only she thinks are funny and laughs so hard she cries. Debbie will lose her filter and say a few choice four letter words. Our walks back across the street to our house where we debrief the game are some of my favorite moments with you.

We are clearly blessed aren’t we, to have this time with each other and with Grandma and Aunt Debbie? To make those memories, to bring Bumpa back to life as the cheeky angel on your shoulder guiding you to card playing victory. And it’s all ours, our time to cherish, a secret language that others who are not privy to the Friday night experience cannot hope to understand. One facial expression or gesture at the card table communicates so much to the four of us as we wait in suspense to see if someone will grab the pile and deliver the final crushing blow to the other team. There is magic in the simplicity of sharing a meal with family, the fickleness of hands won and lost, the laughter so deep it brings tears and the feeling of love in the room and the knowledge that we have roots. Deep, messy, boisterous and strong roots that will live long after old branches wither and new limbs sprout.

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I’m Back?

Dear Lyla,

Love,
Mom

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