I love to think about the year gone past and dream about the
things I want to accomplish and finish in the coming year. I'm always full of
grand ideas in the beginning of January and my book is full of lists. That
doesn’t mean that all things come to fruition but I like to focus on what has.
Also, going ‘home’ for Christmas brings out my analytical
side and I go back to the place that birthed me, the place I became who I am,
with fond memories. So much has changed, but so much has not. I’ve gone full
circle (maybe a few times) with accepting the changes, seeing the good here,
seeing the good there, and just simply adjusting.
Really, my life is so much the same as always. I look out my
window and watch the lazy snowflakes fluttering down. I sit by my cozy
fireplace and watch the flames dancing while I drink my coffee. I have ten
pairs of jeans drying on the upstairs railing and the heaters cranked out full
blast to recompense for the -32C wind-chill. I have bread rising on the warm
stovetop and toys littering the floor and clean laundry that needs folding.
Of course, some things are different as the new year starts.
Colby is taller, has a lower voice and longer jeans. Zach is still a little boy
in some ways but he’s going to be bigger than Colby, broader, maybe. And his
mind goes a mile a minute, devouring whole series of books in one gulp, playing
and collecting every imaginable game and he has enough tenacity to build a full
sized skating rink of his own accord. And probably the biggest change is in
Wyatt who is almost four instead of almost three. I think you can start to tell how hard his
father has worked on his choleric nature. He’s a man’s man. He’s three going on
seventeen and knows a whole lot more than anyone in our household. Sometimes we
sigh and sometimes we laugh and most of the time we try to focus on the future
and where we’re heading with them all.
More changes in our life include Pat’s folks returning from
their one-year stint in Windowrock, Pat selling the welding shop in Delisle
with plans to build again here on our farm, and Trevor & Robins move to
Ontario. These are all rather significant changes in our lives.
So today I sit, thankfully, prayerfully, with laughter welling
and tears brimming, remembering and looking forward, accepting and holding
tightly to the beautiful season of change I’m in.
Love your thankfulness, prayerful-ness, laughter, and tears. So true for this time…
ReplyDeleteLove the boy who devours series of books in one gulp... think him and my oldest girl would def find something to talk about if they got together! Sometimes we suddenly realize it's been hours since we've seen her. We'll find her sprawled across her bed with a book. And the little man Wyatt. I don't even know him but I love him. Maybe cuz we were both wanting and praying for a baby?
ReplyDeleteI love this. It's peaceful and deep and beautiful and real! Love you, sis.
ReplyDeleteI like this too. I like how you portray the awareness you have of your life, the bigger picture and all and your acceptance and gratitude for the blessings amidst the rest. Bless you real real much.
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