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Wednesday, 11 November 2009
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In case you were wondering...
... opening weekend for Fiddler went very well...
... I may be getting a job soon...
... we finally hung our pictures on the walls of our new house...
... and I have nothing entertaining to say. Apologies.
Friday, 02 October 2009
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Kite Day
As I walked to the library today, the clear sunshine and cold playful breeze provoked strong memories from my childhood. I am left with a thought: today would be a perfect Kite Day.
Every website result for "Kite Day" comes up with spring dates often sponsored local elementary schools. But in my mind, Kite Day takes place in the fall. Or maybe the very early spring. I'm going off of foggy childhood memories and a single picture which resides in my first picture album, a peeling white floral plastic object that maybe holds 20 photos total.
It's a shot of my mother running. My dad is standing behind her at a distance. The flat, grey Michigan sky looms overhead, a mirror to the close-mown brown field underfoot. Both of my parents are bundled in poofy coats and slightly hunched against a biting wind. They both clutch kite strings, but with my childish photography skills I couldn't get the kites themselves in frame.
I thought Kite Day was a national holiday when I was young. It isn't. It was an annual church event that my Dad came up with. My memories of it are murky - murky and cold. I know that I was very bad at keeping the kite up in the air, that my little fingers were always too cold and too painful to work the strings like my parents managed. I know I must have become sullen and tired very quickly. But I remember the strange delight in just watching my parents run across the field and seeing the bright diamonds of plastic follow overhead. It always seemed strange to me, parents running. It seldom happened, so I liked to watch.
Years later I was in college when my boyfriend picked me up for a "surprise date." He told me to bring a sweater and prompted me to guess what we would be doing.
"Are we flying kites?"
He was silent for a beat, looked over at me, and began to laugh. "How did you know?"
I couldn't explain how I had guessed. Maybe by that point I could already read Ryan's mind. Maybe it just seemed like another Kite Day to me - that floating personal holiday that returns every few years.
We drove to a secluded park on the other side of town. I was still very bad at keeping a kite in the air - apparently that's not the kind of thing that improves with age. Still we ran across the field until our noses were numb and our backs were sweaty. We laughed as we tried to figure out the physics of which direction we should run in to keep the kite in the air the longest. I grew tired and my fingers numb, and before long we just sat in the car talking.
I think it's time for another Kite Day.
Tuesday, 25 August 2009
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Delighted
I think I have to tell you a story.
Sunday was busy, and much as I tried I couldn't get my heart rate to slow down reasonably before walking in the back door to our local community theatre at 5 pm. Should I just forget this and go to church? I think I parked in an illegal spot! What if they make me dance? I haven't done this in two years, am I nuts? I picked the wrong song, I know I did!
Underneath the hubub of my self doubt, I was deeply thrilled. I love the theatre, in case you didn't know that about me. Something about the process of putting together a play or (my heart sings) a musical makes me feel as though I have come home. This would be a different experience, to be sure. My first time in a theatre not run with a Churchy/Educationey mindset. But Fiddler on the Roof is a safe show, right?
Of course right! I filled out the appropriate paper, remembered my number, kept to myself, and paid attention. The end result was a mixed bag - my vocal audition was distinctly mediocre. And they did make us dance, but I suprised myself by doing a decent job of following the choreography. I left relieved, but completely unsure of my chances of a callback - and completely unsure of God's word on the matter.
See, I've been praying all along the way. My first prayer is one I've prayed since high school shows: Lord, at least let me feel like I did a good job. My second prayer is a more recent addition: Lord, only open this door if it is in your will. The third prayer is one that God laid on my heart in church that very morning: Lord, only open this door if it will help Your Kingdom go forth - if I can show love to others by being in this production.
I was delighted, suprised, and still very sleepy when I got a call the next morning to come back and read for call backs. I thought this would probably be the kind of theatre where you have to pay your dues before getting an actual part. As I bided my time, did my devotions, and cleaned the kitchen, a sort of fatalism settled on my soul. I'm so excited, but this is supposed to be a sort of ministry, right? I'm not doing this for me.
Lord, I want this really badly, and not just for the opportunity to show love, although that's something I've committed to... I want this because I just really love to perform.
That's okay, you're allowed to find joy in the acting. I created you that way.
So... following your will is allowed to be fun? I had to laugh at my own stupidity. When did I become so morose as to think that God wants us to avoid all happiness?
So callbacks - another mixed bag. I read very well, but sang rather poorly. I was the oldest, the tallest, the only married one there reading among the young women. But I felt at peace: if nothing else, it was a learning experience right?
This morning I got a call letting me know that I recieved a part - the role of Tzeitel, the eldest daughter. I whooped like a maniac and jumped around the living room for five minutes. I feel so loved right now. Yes, I will look for opportunities to show God's love - I want to do that. But for now I am so blessed that God delights in my delight. That sometimes His plans include things that I actually love to do.
We serve such a generous God.
Monday, 10 August 2009
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Worry
I have been running on fumes for the past couple weeks. Paint fumes, gas fumes, the fumes of my own very dominable spirit. I've had this pervading sense of weariness... and wariness.
I feel like things are calming down, settling in. This is good, but for some reason, I am ill at ease. Have you ever felt like you have come through a Storm into a time of relative calm only to find your Spider Senses still tingling "beware?" I don't think there is more struggle to come. I feel that God has delivered us, and blessed us, and we ought not worry; but I suffer from aftershocks.
It's as though there is a gnome in my head shouting at my feminine intuition: "Don't let your guard down, Jamie! You can still struggle more! Suffer more! Just wait! You don't seriously think you can find PEACE in your life, do you?" I denounce this gnome as a nusance. And a false prophet.
Even as I sit here, I have to check the furrowing of my brow, the tensing of my shoulders. But I hear two gentle voices echoing in my head. The first is the voice of my mother, from approximately two years ago when Ryan and I were first starting out on our own:
"Jamie, when did you learn to be a worrier?"
"Huh?"
"Well, this isn't the first time in your life you've had to walk by faith. We've been doing it as a family since you were little. God always provides, and we can always trust Him. He is with you now, sees where you've been, and has planned out where you're going. Don't worry!"
The second voice is that of our Lord and Savior:
So do not worry, saying, 'What shall we eat?' or 'What shall we drink?' or 'What shall we wear?' For the pagans run after all these things, and your heavenly Father knows that you need them. But seek first his kingdom and his righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well. Matt. 6:31-33
Now that I think on it, I have been running on the fumes of last week's devotional times. I shall seek His kingdom, trust in His provision, and rejoice in His blessings.

Currently
Doomsday Book
By Connie Willis
see related
Sunday, 02 August 2009
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Homeowners.
I've felt for some weeks now that I should probably mention the house we just bought/moved in to/have been painting for the last several weeks. However I've always been too depleated to make any kind of meaningful (or even coherent) post on any subject.
Not that anything's changed between then and now. If anything, I'm even more tired than usual. We have a good portion of the painting left to go. We've busted our budget and our revised budget. The hot water heater does not work, and we still can't find the garage door opener.
But I am blessed. And I feel very grown up. And I still have peace that passes understanding. And blue paint in my hair that I can't get out because of the lack of hot water.
I also love my empty kitchen cabinet - it's nice having more space than stuff.
lesingebizarre
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- Name: Jamie Aline
- Member Since: 12/2/2003
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