The Massive Nature of This Calling: Parent

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“I’ll get him,” I say, at dark-o’clock
in the morning, rolling slowly out of bed.
I am older now
than I once was, and my body sometimes
creaks like a tired house in a storm.

I walk the hall, avoiding the toys.
“Good morning, you,” I say, lifting Leo and burying
my face into his neck, his cheeks, smelling his warmth.
A one-year-old is still so close to their beginning
you can see their rings expanding, if you watch,
if you pay attention. He looks concerned.
“MaMA?” he asks. “MaMA?”
His voice is like the call of a baby bird. He emphasizes
the second syllable.
“She’s sleeping,” I whisper, kissing his cheek again.
“Let’s get brother.”

We walk the dark hall, Leo and I. We go
into my oldest son’s room. He sleeps spread out
on his bed, a lanky boy-man. Waking him, I
remember when it was only him. Time
is wind through the trees, a spirit you see
only when you do not look directly at it.
“Wake up,” I say, shaking the outline of him,
hills under a blanket.
“Five minutes?” his now-deep voice asks
from deep within a well.
“Five minutes,” I say, and walk out
with Leo.

We climb the stairs to heaven, to the place
my girls sleep. We climb the steep steps and
lean into Abra’s room.
“Good morning,” I say, and her eyes open. She
sheds sleep the way a baby duck shakes water
from itself. She smiles. She sits up. She
stretches.
“Hi, Leo,” she says.
He waves, and the way he waves is by opening
and closing his hands, both of them, as if squeezing
away the night, or clutching
and clutching again,
each and every moment.

We walk into Lucy’s room and I put Leo on the bed.
He crawls towards her. She sighs and rolls over.
“Sleep good?” I ask. She nods.
“Leo,” she says, long and slow,
as if meeting him for the first
time, and he kisses her, and she laughs.
“Time to get up,” I say.
“Leave Leo here,” she says.

I always go to Sam last. He hates
going to bed. He hates
waking up. He progresses reluctantly.
I switch on the night, bringing day into
the room. “Sam-oh,” I call to him, over
that great distance. “Sam-oh.”
He is still as water. He sleeps in the depths, in some
other world, some other universe. My voice
comes to him as deep calls
to deep, travels the paths of comets, around
moons and between distant stars.
He is still so far away.
“I’m coming back,” I say. “You’d better
be up by then.”

When I think of these five lives,
and the sixth sleeping inside Mai, I realize
the massive nature of this calling.
Parent.
Each child, a universe.
Each mind, a fresh field of snow.
The tracks we leave behind cannot
easily be smoothed over.
This can be a good thing
if we tread lightly.

That Time I Met Christie Purifoy For the First Time…Underground

I could tell you the entire story starts in an underground bar in Philadelphia, one that smells of urine and marijuana. I could tell you that it started when we made our way down into the bowels of the city, graffiti on the walls, darkness dripping from the burned out, naked light bulbs.

But you all know me too well. You know my life is not nearly that exciting.

* * * * *

This is how the story really begins: My wife and I had gone with some friends to see one of my favorite bands, Over the Rhine. They were playing a Christmas concert in this unique venue in Philadelphia, a place I had never been before, a place called Underground Arts.

We waited outside in a rather long line to get in, and the rain started to fall. It was a cold, winter rain, the kind that makes you draw up your shoulders and wrinkle your eyes closed, the kind that has you inching close to complete strangers, trying to snag a small dry space under their umbrella. Finally the line started moving, and we shuffled up a few steps, through some large doors, and then, unexpectedly, down. I know – the place is called Underground Arts. I should have seen that one coming.

Down we went, down a winding set of stairs to the underbelly of Philadelphia. To be honest, I had never had much of a desire to see underground Philly. The above ground part is quite enough for me, thank you very much.

But Underground Arts was pretty awesome. We picked out our seats and had the added bonus of hearing Dom Flemons play the bones just before Over the Rhine started up. When I get the opportunity to hear Over the Rhine in person, it’s like being transported into another realm. Seriously. Their music is so beautiful, their lyrics so haunting, that I find myself in some kind of a trance.

But…what I wanted to tell you about came at the very end of the concert, just as Maile and I were making for the door. Our little guy Leo was only five months old at the time, and we needed to get back so Mai could give him his evening meal. As we began meandering through the crowd, someone tapped me on the shoulder.

“Are you Shawn Smucker?” a girl asked me.

Now, for a writer (unless you’re super spiritual or holy or have zero ego), that’s a fun moment, when a stranger knows who you are. Except this was no stranger – we had just never met in person before. It was Christie Purifoy, and we both wrote for the old and wonderful website Deeper Story, and we had both inexplicably ended up at the same Over the Rhine concert.

We spoke for just a few moments, but Mai and I had to run. I told Christie I’d invite her to the writers’ breakfast I had going on at the time, and after that it was back out into the cold rain, and the long drive home.

* * * * *

indexI did invite Christie to the writers’ breakfast, and she came, and it turns out she is one of the kindest human beings out there. She told us all about her book, only in its gestation at that point. This was one year ago. It was that period of time when authors talk about their books in hopeful tones, finding it hard to believe that these precious words might someday be bound up for everyone to see and hold.

This is that book. It comes out today. It’s called Roots and Sky, and it’s every bit as good as I expected it to be. If you like quiet memoirs, beautifully written, that pack a heavy punch, this book is for you.

When Christie Purifoy arrived at Maplehurst that September, she was heavily pregnant with both her fourth child and her dreams of creating a sanctuary that would be a fixed point in her busily spinning world. The sprawling Victorian farmhouse sitting atop a Pennsylvania hill held within its walls the possibility of a place where her family could grow, where friends could gather, and where Christie could finally grasp and hold the thing we all long for–home.

Check out Roots and Sky HERE. Thank me later.

 

Listening For a Heartbeat

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Photo by Mayur Gala via Unsplash

“It’s going to be fine,” I said.

Winter is a strange time of year. One night you spend far too much time staring out the front window, watching the snow fall through the angular light. Less than a week later you’re driving thread-thin country roads, the fields white and heavy, the runoff wearing ruts everywhere. It’s life, I guess, the cold and the sun, the clouds and the blue.

When Maile and I drove out of the city to a birthing center for Maile’s first midwife appointment, the tension was all around us. A January day that felt like spring. But the tension was also inside us. There was the normal excitement of going to the first appointment for this baby. There was also apprehension, the memory of two prior pregnancies where the first appointment didn’t go so well: missing heartbeats, dark circles where a tiny baby should be, miscarried hope.

“It’s going to be fine,” I kept saying, and Maile kept nodding her head on autopilot.

“It’s going to be fine.”

* * * * *

We sat in the examination room and waited. The clock moves slowest in examination rooms, of that I’m sure.

“Is that my uterus?” Maile asked.

I glanced at the desk beside me, where Maile was looking, and there was an almost-life sized plastic model of a woman’s reproductive system. It was kind of strange, seeing it all there in 3D. It was rather…informative.

“I don’t think it’s yours,” I said. “But yeah, I think that’s a uterus.”

“Huh,” she said.

The midwife came in and asked all the normal questions. Yes, this would be baby number six. Yes, this was pregnancy number eight. No, we wouldn’t be taking another copy of the healthy baby book. We had a few extra copies at home.

“You look nervous,” she said.

“It’s just the heartbeat,” Maile said quietly. “I’ll feel better once we hear it.”

“In that case, let’s find it right now,” the midwife said, smiling a kind smile.

* * * * *

How many times in life do we find ourselves on the cusp of something great…or something devastating? How many times do we have to wait for an answer, or a diagnosis, or an outcome? How many times will we sit in the unknown, the terrifying, with nothing to hold on to?

I think the hardest places to hold on to hope are in those arenas where our hope keeps turning out fruitless. When we so desperately want a child, but the months keep coming and going. When we so badly want the cancer to vanish, but it keeps showing up somewhere else. When we keep coming around to the same submissions, the same proposals, the same promotions, and we keep getting passed over.

Every. Single. Time.

But wait. Because even in those times, even in those disappointments, hope was not fruitless. Hope was not pointless.

Even after our last miscarriage, we buried what remained in a small box, and on the lid of that box was the word hope. Even after my last long spell without work, we regathered ourselves and put one foot in front of the other, hoping things would turn around. Even after we lost our way, we kept hoping we could find that path again.

“And now these three remain: hope, faith, and love. And the greatest of these is love.”

Yes, perhaps love is the greatest, but hope came first, and I think that’s saying something. Sometimes, hope is all we have, but it makes a firm foundation for whatever is coming next. Or whatever is not coming next.

* * * * *

Maile climbed up on to the table, paper rustling, and the midwife pulled up her shirt, exposed Maile’s rounding belly. She put some gel on the little wand and pressed it down on her skin. We didn’t even have time to worry. We barely had time to wonder.

Thump, thump, thump: 159 of them per minute, life racing around inside of her. The occasional Thwamp! when baby kicked. It was like radio waves coming from a distant planet, an entirely separate universe, yet that universe was right there in the room with us.

“There it is,” the midwife said. “Baby’s heartbeat.”

Maile teared up. She looked over at me.

“It’s going to be fine,” I said. “It’s going to be fine.”

Slow Dancing On Pizza Crusts and Avocado

If I go missing, it's because Maile got rid of me for putting this picture of her on the blog.
If I go missing, it’s because Maile got rid of me for putting this picture of her on the blog.
“Seven o’clock,” you say, along with something
about disappearing days, and then you lean
against the kitchen counter, sigh, a cloth in your hand.
I nod without saying anything,
cleaning out the sink, because what can anyone say
in the face of time, passing as it does, a thief
and a giver?

I’ve grown tired of traveling alone

Tired of traveling alone
I’ve grown tired of traveling alone
Won’t you ride with me?
“I always think of you when I hear
that song,” I say, and you smile bashfully,
sidle up alongside me.
Before I know it we are
slow-dancing in the empty kitchen, you still holding
the cloth, me stepping on
a slimy piece of avocado Leo
dropped earlier in the day.

 

I’ve grown tired of traveling alone
Tired of traveling alone
I’ve grown tired of traveling alone
Won’t you ride with me?*

I remember dancing with you that way
when we were still teenagers on the brink
of our twenties, on the edge of a life
unimaginable. Before we were handed a life
with five kids and one on the way. This life.
This crazy, mundane, adventurous life
where you dance without putting down
the dish cloth, where I step on
an old pizza crust
and it doesn’t even phase me.
(Jason Isbell, “Traveling Alone”)

The Spiritual Discipline of Clearing Snow From a Parking Spot (In Five Parts)

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The snow grew deeper, and we wondered if it would ever stop, and by Saturday afternoon I decided I should begin the gargantuan task of digging out our Suburban. Our four oldest kids joined me, though they were clearly on the side of the blizzard, throwing snowballs into my shoveled pathways and jumping from pile to pile, causing avalanches to fill in the trails I had so recently cleared. I was part snow digger and part scarecrow, waving my shovel, frightening them off.

Saturday night was filled with movies and popcorn and long spates of time spent staring out into the swirling, blowing snow as it fell through the light on James Street. This is the blessing of storms: they make us stop. They take our schedules and shred them and ask, “Now what will you do with your life?”

2

We ended up with just under 30 inches of snow. On Sunday afternoon, I finally finished disinterring our vehicle from its icy grave. The snow around it was up to my chest. I sent Abra and Sammy on to the roof of the truck to clear it off. After about five hours of digging, it was nearly free, and there was a path to the house. My job was done.

Late Sunday afternoon we drove to my parents, breaking free from the parking spot I had spent so long clearing.

Heavenly Father, I prayed out loud as we drove away, please make that parking spot invisible to anyone who is looking for a space before we return. Amen.

I was mostly kidding. Maile laughed, but I’m not sure if she was laughing at the prayer or the chances of the space being empty when we got back.

3

More fun, more snow, a little football, some time holding my sister’s twins, and then we were driving home, around 9pm. I’m not sure what I expected to find…one lone, empty space still sitting there? Would every single person on my street looking for a space see that empty gap along the sidewalk and think, Someone spent a lot of time clearing that, so I’m going to leave it for when they get back?

I doubted it.

As we came up James Street, there it was: some kind of small, four-wheel drive vehicle snugly (it felt more like “smugly”) parked in the spot I had spent so much time and effort clearing. There were no open spaces on the block. I sighed. I dropped off my pregnant wife and our five kids, drove around the block to the parking garage, parked on the fourth floor, walked down three flights of steps, slid my way back up the hill to our house, and walked down the sidewalk (part of which had not yet been cleared by the neighbors, in spite of the city’s snow-clearing policies).

I pushed the bitterness down as best I could but it still got to me, sort of the way you try not to throw up when you’re sick but still feel the burn in your throat.

4

I’ve spent far too much time thinking about this fairly minor episode in my life. At least it feels that way. I’ve certainly spent enough time thinking about it to realize that the way we handle snow clearing here in the city is reflective of the way we view the ones Jesus commanded us to love: Our Neighbor. It’s so easy to think of these common spaces, the ones we spend so much time clearing, as our own. It’s so easy for me to stake my claim to small or large pieces of this world and say, “This far but no further!”

I wonder though. I wonder about the questions I was asking on the drive back into the city Sunday night, before I knew if someone parked in the spot I had cleared.

What kind of a person steals a spot they haven’t cleared?

What kind of a person rides on the back of someone else’s hard work?

Why didn’t I stick some furniture in the space, blocking access to it?

I think the questions we ask ourselves when it comes to these kinds of things not only reveal our hearts – I think they also proactively create who we are becoming. I want to ask better questions. I really do. Questions like:

Wouldn’t it be great if someone who really needs a good parking space finds mine empty?

What can I do to help an elderly person or a sick person find my spot tonight when I’m gone?

5

This is the blessing of living in the city, of living in community. No matter how much we want to, we can never completely isolate ourselves from our neighbor. No matter how hard we try, we cannot claim these public spaces as our own. We have to learn to live side-by-side, to offer grace, to think the best of one another.

This is a gift, this snow, these “stolen” parking spaces. Trust me. This is a gift.

 

 

 

Some of the Best of the Web This Week

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Mr. Jay is always greeted with respect.  He’s got rock star status and he loves it.  He enjoys hearing children chant his name as he drives down the mountain road.  But the truth is Mr. Jay is all smoke and mirrors, pay no attention to the man behind the curtain.

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Our school peers were typically mocking of my siblings and me, with our foreign names and ways.  The smell of kimchee streaming from our pores and breath probably garnered us no leeway.

* * * * *

Today, my family is confronted by a terrible grief and a great absence. My brother-in-law, my sister’s husband, is missing at sea.

* * * * *

I read this morning that they’ve stopped actively searching for any survivors of last week’s Marine helicopter crash off the coast of Hawaii.

* * * * *

Check out this awesome Haka performed at a wedding: