Sharon McKeeman Blog » Blog

Masthead header

Monthly Archives: January 2013

This was just a moment that happened in our daily routine and I was happy to have noticed and captured it.

12-12 . 24-70 . afternoon window light

 

“They were born of our young and eager love”   –   from the movie The Family Man

They were – they were born of our young and eager love without a second thought. Two sons born before we had been married four years, pressing fast into life. Our love materialized in two souls created.

We didn’t know what we didn’t know and then the hard years came. We pressed on into survival, circling the wagons at night, marching through the days.

And as the fog of all that fell apart has lifted and we are treading an easier path – we have dared to look. To look at where we are and where we might have been.

Every year we watch The Family Man and It’s a Wonderful Life and they feed my soul but never have I taken them seriously enough. I have always just assumed, you get married, have kids, it’s what you should do, what I wanted to do. I assumed without ever really thinking about it – the ups and downs are worth it, we’ve got what it takes, we can handle it, give them a future, and hold this whole thing together. My husband knew better, he has seen more of war in this world than I have and he knew there was a path less fraught with heartbreak than the one we chose in reckless youth. He knows the storms come to every man and we don’t have the strength to keep our steps from failing, our arms and hearts are too weak to hold our family tight enough. And still he chose bravely to trust our Lord and write this story with me, the one full of children and not enough time or money or sleep, the one with full hearts worn where they can easily break, where we are characters known as Mom and Dad and little recognized outside the circle of our family.

This year for the first time I have had the honesty and courage to glimpse what else might have been. To sneak a peak in my minds eye at more education, more success, more freedom, less diapers, less mess, more me, more he, less them. The edge of the glimpse was as enticing to me as Nicholas Cage waking up in a dumpy house full of kids was horrifying to him. But as I walked through what could have been, as Jimmy Stewart walks the streets of Bakersfield turned Pottersville, and dwelt on what really would have been – the dream grew dark and empty of all that brings us joy. Remove what is hard and tiring and confining and our lives would be void of what we hold most dear.

This is hard to confess to even thinking but everytime I say something on this blog that I am ashamed to admit, others tell me I have voiced their secret thoughts. I wonder if everyone gets to a point where they wonder how they got there and if they got on the right train or maybe did they miss their stop? Some buy a new sports car or run off with a new lover and some stop and take a peek and see everything they have ever wanted just looking a bit different than they had imagined. And that is where I am, fallen so deep into contentment after a season of the most serious questioning I have ever done. Fallen in love all over again with a man I have been to hell and back with and three boys who are more magic than we could have ever dreamed up.

Maybe my man and I could carry less scars and fatter wallets, maybe our names could ring out with the sound of success but then we would not know what we know now. We wouldn’t know how Aaron’s spirit blazes fierce as the fire of his hair.  We wouldn’t know David’s sweet smile curling out to the edges of his lips as he offers a helping hand. We wouldn’t be waiting eager to meet our Joshua and run free with him. We wouldn’t smile in speechless awe at the golden miracle that is Jeremiah. There is nowhere I would rather be than reading to three growing creatures round a candlelit table in our humble abode. And this is a good thing to know as certain as the sun, moon and stars, and gravity holding us close together.

12-16-12 . 24-70mm . Our weekly Advent dinner . Images shot by my mister, edited by me . VSCO1 Ilford HP5++

(and yes I have noticed that David is flipping off the camera, purely accidental I promise, he has no idea haha)

I didn’t feel like celebrating Christmas this year.

Thanksgiving itself was hard enough. Once again we were giving thanks and celebrating amidst loss. Nothing like the loss we were suffering four Thanksgivings ago when I choked out the lines to hymns of praise and those words forming above my empty womb cut through the air like sheer miracle. But it’s a long road back from loss and stitching a husband and wife back together and breathing new life and joy into a little family. We have walked that road for three years, holding our breath for the next steps and pushing away things we felt might shatter us. And finally we felt it was time to mend one more broken piece and bring a puppy home. Instantly we loved him and his very presence felt like another shred of redemption, healing, hope

But we couldn’t breath.

Not just some sniffles or a stuffy nose. We have never before had this problem with any animal but we were full on allergic to him, breath catching in our chest, wheezing through each moment that we were near our fuzzy golden bundle of joy. And so what was supposed to be an early Christmas present to our little boys longing for a puppy, a dog to call their own and love, had to be taken back to his sweet mama after a week of us falling head over heals for him. And I just shut down. I was angry at the Christmas decorations and carols ringing out already. I didn’t know how we were going to redeem the holiday for our children this year, much more so because we asked the breeder to keep our payment for the puppy and use it to provide a good life for him. We had already talked about simplifying this Christmas and finding joy in frugality but now the month ahead felt bleak and empty. Each new day was filled with tears streaming down little faces as they cried for their Remi, days that I thought would hold little boys snuggling with their new pup. Looking through photos of my boys meeting their puppy amidst red and green decorations secretly put up a month too early, I felt Christmas had betrayed me and also maybe God had. It seemed silly to feel this way when so many are struggling through so much more. But still I nursed my bitterness . . . we have been through a lot . . . why not a puppy? why couldn’t this simple gift for our children just work? why not? I missed our wiggly little ball of fluff and rehashed everything I thought could have been but I put on a brave face for the kids . . .

and December 1st even though I didn’t want to we began Advent just as we always do – with little gifts in the calendar every morning, Christmas stories and a devotional every evening. We turned on the carols, put up the tree and taught them again of His birth into this broken world. We retold the age old story, struck even more so this year by how hard the whole thing was. I know we have all heard it, how Mary was a teenage mother ostracized by a strange story about immaculate conception before her wedding day, how they made a long journey at the end of the pregnancy and had no place to lay their head, no home or room to birth the son of God in. Maybe this season because I was bitter, regretful, feeling sorry for myself, maybe because of all that I was able to ride with her on the donkey feeling the weight of the baby pressing down painful as the animal rocked back and forth for what seemed like forever. Until she arrived not to a bed and a warm fire, but to hours of labor in a cold dark stable, surrounded by animals and no one but the one man who was standing with her in this crazy story. Maybe because I wanted to look at my life through the lense of everything that has gone wrong instead of the usual holiday merriment, maybe because of my dreary, fearful attitude I was able to flea with two young parents as they ran with a child they have been told is the key to everything, to run with them as they escape the most powerful empire that had ever been known to man so that their child’s blood would not be spilled with all the other boys slaughtered helplessly before their mother’s eyes. And somewhere in this grand and humble epic I lost myself and all my petty grievances. Faced with hardship and courage greater than any I will ever know, I was left without a complaint to voice, left only with three beautiful sets of eyes staring back at me – my boys enthralled with this Christmas story, filled with it’s magic. God had filled their tearful hearts with joy and shone it right through them to me.

We joined hands each Sunday around our simple advent dinner and our hearts drew close as each week we lit another candle and spoke quiet in it’s light of angels and new stars speaking. My questioning soul fell silent and was filled with more joy and contentment than I have ever known. I was again the little girl rejoicing just to see the tree glistening amidst our family revelry. We bought them some simple toys as did their kind grandparents and uncles, we baked cookies, ate ham and mashed potatoes and though it was less than other years it was so much more than plenty. And one of the most joyful times of all this season was the day my boys spent playing in a cardboard box and wrapping gifts they had made for each other in front of our Christmas tree, their hearts full to overflowing with kindness and generosity.

I have read a lot of articles, blog posts and such over the years about how we should handle Christmas, giving gifts to our children, how we consume, how we give etc . . . Good words, written from seeking hearts.  Most of them seem to move into one of two camps – to treat yourself and those you love well so that you can be healthy and happy enough to do good for others – or – to give it all up, give it all away, get rid of the clutter of consumerism and excess, purge in order to purify spiritually and support others economically. I was hit this year with all the ways we are sucked into to what we “should” do especially around the holidays and this year I opted out. If something felt too far a stretch to do and keep the days and nights full of peaceful time together, then it just didn’t happen and not a second thought was given. Whenever I felt the slightest twinge of guilt over this I reminded myself of what I had found in the story, that the first Christmas was all about people not doing what they “should” do but instead doing all the things that are thought impossible in this world. It’s not impossible to purchase enough to make you feel better for a time, it’s completely possible to buy almost anything in this country, it’s within the realm of possibility to bake a perfect cookie, win the best Christmas card of the year award, dress your house and family to the nines. But what is always escaping is joy – peace – contentment. None of that can be bought and joining hearts together in love often feels like the biggest impossibility of all in this world. And this, no more, no less, is what He came to give us. What He longs to give us. What I found as my whirling thoughts and emotions settled into a quiet month of waiting to see His coming. I think He is far less concerned about our getting or even our giving than wether or not we receive from Him. He longs for us to receive from Him. I can not express all I undeservedly received from Him this season.

And so as our calendar rushes into a new year that we all hope will be full of good and easy on the difficulties, as everyone steps into new goals and ventures . . . I am lingering in a season I did not even want to enter this year. I am lingering in a gentle peace my family found, not striving for the next, just resting in the goodness He has given us. Humanity has pinned Christmas on the calendar during the dark, cold months where our hearts need warming but it is not a season that should come and go or be defined by dates, the waiting for and celebration of his coming is the era we live in, an ever returning loop until He brings us into the next part of the story . . .

12-23-12 . 24-70mm

Sometimes Santa does in fact fly in . . . in this case on a helicopter.

This was our day of the kid’s climbing in the aircraft Dad flies, having epic balloon sword wars, climbing walls, shooting paintballs, eating lots of goodies and of course watching Santa fly in on a Heuy and then sitting down with him for the must have photo op. Baby man handled his introduction to the jolly old fellow pretty well and we all had a blast!

12-8-12 . 28mm . Fuji Superia 1600++

 

Let me begin by saying that I am a dork. You probably already know that but for example…

I hate Star Trek but some of my favorite memories of my first son’s infancy are nursing him in the middle of the night in our big wooden rocking chair while listening to C.S. Lewis’ supernatural scifi trilogy and pushing his stroller around the crazy southern neighborhood where we were living while tuned into a documentary about wormholes and quantum mechanics on my new palm pilot. Although I am terrible at science and math, I’m fascinated by the truths they tell about the essence of the world we live in. Sooo recently I have been reading a book about important equations that have shaped the history of humanity. And it’s been blowing my little peabrain mind.

Apparently there are energy tunnels created by the gravitational fields of bodies in our solar system and scientists and engineers use them like ocean currents, galactic highways to send satellites spying around the planets and such. And there are places where the gravitational fields cancel eachother out, pauses where connections can be made and orbits rearranged, tunnels intersect and comets switch tracks like the flip of a coin or a well rehearsed decision.

And there are resonances. Occuring where and when two celestial bodies return to the same relative position together again and again to dance with slight variations on each other. I don’t know enough to fully grasp all this but I love to tickle my soul with these new found wonders and let them intuitively speak deep into me of those truths I can never quite get ahold of or put into words.

When I was younger I took for granted the marvelous magic of holiday seasons. Christmas was as inevitable to me as the passing of time, as necessary as food, as tangible as the landscape around my home. As I grow older I fear I won’t be able to manufacture what I remember for my children. I learn the histories and wonder at what exactly we are trying to conjure up. And every year beyond our belief in the reason for the season, the Bible lessons and long practiced traditions . . . beyond the gifts planned and purchased to show our love . . . beyond the special food and fun decorations . . . beyond all that I am overtaken by something so much greater than my feeble attempts at merriment and memory making with our children . . . we are swept up into magic and peace and it seems angels come to dwell nearer than their normal course. I can not explain this, but it seems a resonance. A place we have returned to as a human family for hundreds of years, to kneel at His feet and usher in a babe who came to alter the path we are on. A dance we tread with many variations but where we come together united in the quiet awe that a cradle brings, whispering so as not to wake sweet childhood rest. We return yearly after we have marched through all the calendar has thrown at us to reaffirm that life can hold the twinkling stars and hopeful dreams that our young ones still see. And each time we are encircled by this moment and all is calm, all is bright

12-2-12 . 24-70mm . vsco portra 400+ , Fuji Neopan 1600++