Thursday, September 29, 2016

Fireflies

It was dusk, on a warm August evening. The boys were piling out of the car after a trip to the local ice cream shop up the road. The sky was a deep shade of indigo, with streaks of hot pink and royal blue hovering over the horizon. The air was still, quiet with the sound of crickets chirping and birds singing their final adieu until morning. A tiny flash of light in the distance caught my eye, and then another, and I quickly grabbed Sammy out of his car seat and hollered for Jack and Gabe to follow me into the back yard. We ran through the dark shadows under the trees, straight for the open expanse of bean fields that bordered our yard. "What, Mom? What is it?" Gabe asked, eagerly. I simply looked out over the soft bean plants, a smile spread across my face. Jack and Gabe followed my stare, and after a long moment, gasped.

Like a blanket of Christmas lights draped over the entire field, thousands of fireflies danced and darted before us, twinkling in the failing light. The boys giggled and tried to catch some, stumbling over branches and pine cones in the yard as they reached for the tiny disappearing acts. Sammy kept his hand extended out, perhaps anticipating that one would finally come to him. It delighted me to watch my children as they laughed and reveled in this magical moment. Trying to catch a firefly is no easy task, they learned. They had to anticipate where it was going to reappear, and be ready to clasp it. As they jumped and bolted towards the blinking lights, I breathed the whimsy and merriment in deeply, like highly oxygenated air - so pure and necessary and cleansing.

Harvest is in full swing, and Eric is working long days out in the golden fields. I take dinner out to him in the evenings, so the boys can see him for a bit each day, but this particular season is so draining on both of us as parents and spouses - time is so limited with each other. I find myself in "high speed Super Mario" mode from the moment I pick up the boys from school. Unload book bags. Snack. Homework. Cook dinner. Pack up dinner. Bring dinner out to Eric. Eat dinner. Get home 30 minutes later than planned (because, of course, tractor rides too). Rush through bath time, story time, prayers, lights ou- oops, forgot to go over Bible verse memorization - run through that real quick, then lights out. Clean up messy kitchen. Throw the wet clothes that have been marinating in the washing machine for seven hours into the dryer. Realize all the phone calls I forgot to make and texts I forgot to return. 9:30 pm. Tomorrow, then... Whew.

I was recalling our firefly adventure the other day and my heart yearned for that moment again. I crave those precious little blips of time, where nothing else exists but the present moment and the joy that is overflowing from it. Every year this season gets the best of me. The heightened responsibility that I place on myself as a wife and mother takes a toll on me by the third or fourth week of harvest. I'm determined that this time around, it will be different. I'm teaching myself how to savor - time, moments, opportunities. I'm learning that there is, in fact, a pause button on life. I have the remote in my hand and I absolutely have the authority to push that pause button. I'm exercising it liberally.

Last week, on a Tuesday afternoon, the boys were settling down with their post school snack. The house was unusually dark and dreary. Jack came to me and said, "Mom, it looks dark outside. I hope it rains. Can we pray for it to rain?" We long for the rain during harvest season for one reason - the rain brings Daddy home. We stood in the kitchen and Jack asked Jesus for the rain to come. It rained a short time after that, and within the hour, Daddy was home for the night. It certainly was somber outside, but inside the walls of our little house, a different story was unfolding.

Dinner was underway. I was trying out a new chicken and dumplings recipe. My hands were covered in flour as I rolled out the dough on the counter. Eric opened a bottle of red table wine we had been saving since our trip to Door County. I dusted my glass with floury fingerprints as we made a toast - to a rainy night in. Sammy was munching on some shredded chicken as he sat in his high chair in the center of the kitchen, in the middle of Eric and I as we danced our favorite dance - the one where we cook together. I cut the dumplings on one counter as he sliced open the spaghetti squash on another, then we high fived and exchanged knives as we switched spots. The Kitchen Waltz warms me from the inside out - not only because I am moving in rhythm with my favorite person, but that beautiful dance feeds the souls and tummies of the ones we both love the most.

The dancing was even more fun because of the stellar playlist I had created for the evening. I put "the classics" on... you know, the songs that were on the radio at the time you were falling in love, the genius arrangements and lyrics that moved you to tears in admiration and adoration as you looked into the eyes of your future spouse and knew without a doubt that the person you were going to spend the rest of your life with was staring back at you. I asked my mom what her and my dad's classic songs were - Elvis's Can't Help Falling in Love and anything by the Moody Blues were at the top of their list. Eric and I were singing and grooving in the kitchen that night to "The Story of Us" CD I had made for him back in college. Jack walked in at one point and asked, "What are you guys listening to?" My response was, "Why Jack, these are the classics! This is what Daddy and I listened to when we were falling in love. This is Nelly, kiddo."  Outkast, Fat Joe, Weezer and some remake of Bryan Adam's song Heaven spiced up the love story that was rewriting itself in our kitchen that night. The boys were dancing around, Sammy was head banging in his high chair - what he does when he really gets into a song, and at one point, Jack grabbed his drum sticks and started tapping on the counter in time with the beats. In the middle of the chopping and dicing, Gabe grabbed an envelope from his book bag and handed it to me. Eric and I put down the knives and opened it, reading out loud the beautiful words in the progress report of his first two months in kindergarten. In that moment, I could see them everywhere - the fireflies. They were hovering over the pot of chicken and dumplings, swarming around the children and their dancing, darting between Eric and I as we savored every second in the kitchen that night. Fireflies - the moments in our lives that make our very existence burst with light, excited and engaging and present.

That night was fuel for me. I was able to slow down, pause, and see what was happening around me. And it was beautiful. In the last week, I have been able to slow down enough to witness some precious moments with the boys. The kiddos and I decided to go on a walk after dinner one evening. The sun hung low in the sky, a brilliant display of oranges and pinks and yellows swirling in and around the clouds that stretched over the road before us. I was pulling Sam in a little red wagon behind me. He leaned far over the side of the wagon, grabbing at the wheels as they turned, running his fingers over the spinning tires. Jack was leading the way for us on his scooter. Gabe stuck by me, holding my hand, keeping an eye out for bears and coyotes. We spotted a few shadows that we were extra cautious of, you know, just in case something big leapt out and tried to chase us. And as we imagined and dreamed and pretended... fireflies.

Gabe had a soccer game recently where he scored his first goal of the season. It is one of the most precious and sweetest things to see him score a goal and immediately after the ball rolls into the net he looks at me and gives me a thumbs up. His actions speak, "Did you see that, Mom? Did you see me? Did you see what I did?" His team also happened to win for the first time that night, by ten goals. It was a big confident boost for the players, so we talked about it quite a bit that night after we got home. As I was tucking the boys into bed, smoothing the sheets, applying peppermint and lavender oils to their little feet and kissing their foreheads, Gabe says, "Mom, we are on the winning team." "Yes, I know! You guys played a great game today, buddy!" I replied. "No Mom, I'm not talking about soccer. There is a good guy and a bad guy, and you know what team we are on," he replied matter of factly, with squinty eyes and a closed mouth grin. Bed time in the Heaton house happens to be the instance where most of our deep, philosophical and religious conversations take place. Usually, I am so ready to grab a book and put my feet up to wind down, but I stayed put and soaked up my sweet 5 year old's encouraging and life-giving words. "Yes. Yes, we are, buddy."

Fireflies.

I could kick myself for all the moments that I've missed, due to busyness or agendas or tunnel vision, but that serves me no point. What I am learning is that the fireflies are everywhere, and I can choose to slow down enough to participate in the magic they bring. Sammy had his first ride on the combine with Daddy over the weekend. He pressed his wet nose against the dusty glass window and watched the corn pour out of the auger like a waterfall into the wagons. His eyes darted around, intently viewing the corn stalks being swept up into the combine, and then grabbing at every button and lever within arms reach. Gabe repeatedly honked the horn, attempting to alarm any sleeping animals of impending doom. I've learned that the same season, lived over and over, can be experienced so differently if I choose to participate with a view through a different lens. Instead of embracing Super Mario Mom, I'm pulling the wheels off my skates that enable me to go go go, and simply just slowing down. These days we are plastering ourselves in mud and playing with our food. And I am so very incredibly thankful.

These bursts of light that bring me life and energy and joy are heavenly gifts from above. I wonder, what do such moments look like to God? I have this cliché image of Him, in my limited capacity brain, sitting on a golden throne in elegant, white robes, looking down on me and these precious moments. Does He see the fireflies? Do our lives with all of their priceless encounters appear to him as the bean field appeared to me that night? What if I miss out on a golden opportunity to experience something unique and special with one of my children - is that like a firefly that doesn't light up? What if the only heavenly light they reveal comes through thankfulness of such a moment? Am I thankful, in all things? The new lens through which I am choosing to see is that of thankfulness. If my day is governed by recognizing that which God supplies - not what I demand - I am so much more grounded. Content. And full.






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