18 Summers—Don’t believe the myth

Another summer is drawing to a close. I graduated my second this spring. I seem to lose a year every time I blink. But still, I long for the more carefree days of summer. I love these days. Even now, when I have three teenagers, two who seem to be gone more than home. The third is nearing those days of being way too cool to hang with mom…anywhere. But for now, I love the days we have. I’m even looking forward to having only one to homeschool in a couple of weeks. There is one thing I dread, though.

I’ve been seeing them for years. The posts. They usually start just before summer break and continue till school begins again in the fall. If you’re on social media, you’ve seen them. I’ve probably made them.

They are all similar. They begin with pictures, often just of current vacations, but sometimes the same sweet face traveling through years in a series of photos. And they’re captioned something like this: “You only have 18 summers. Soak in every moment.” They’re all full of nostalgia. The good old days. Not much time left. What are we going to do?

In a way, I guess it’s true. I understand the premise behind these. Every summer’s end I look back, often not at the fun we’ve had, but rather at the time we’ve squandered.

Did we do enough? Did we have enough fun? Enough ice cream? Enough pool days? Enough sun? Enough summer? Enough??? Did we? Did I enjoy them? Did we spend too much time just being lazy? Did I teach them? Did I spend enough time with the most important thing—did I point them to God? After all, too soon those 18 summers will have slipped away. I’ll have nothing then. They’ll be grown. Gone. Mine no more.

Those posts do always make me catch my breath. But those summers don’t just suddenly just disappear. We don’t go from all in to all gone overnight. It’s a slow fade. Those first few, before we began our homeschool journey, I was one of those moms trying to soak up every day. But since we began homeschooling, I have often felt like the springs-summers-falls run together, one often indistinguishable from the next. There is more fun in the summer, that’s for sure. But still, I have often felt at the end of the summer that I want more. I was never a mom who counted the days till I could bus my kids back to school. Oh, I get it. There have been plenty of days that I’ve wanted that day to come. Plenty of school days that I’ve questioned my decision to homeschool and my sanity because of my decision. But last year was my “last summer” with our oldest. And this one coming up, it’s my “last” one with our middle. But it wasn’t. And it’s not. Sure, summers are going to look different. But really, they’ve been looking different every year, slowly but surely. That slow fade begins with endless days of kids underfoot. Applying and reapplying sunscreen. Keeping a hawk’s eye on them all the time—and at the pool or beach—we can’t even blink. Then it fades into a little freedom, and slowly but surely our days at the pool become more relaxed. More fun. But also, they’re not always under our feet. Most of the time, that’s good. But sometimes we miss it. Then there are no more scheduling play dates and pool days. They schedule their own, and mostly don’t even want you there. They just need a ride. And then they don’t.

But this doesn’t mean it’s the end. It just means it’s different. And different isn’t always bad. The car conversations are deeper. The shopping trips, though more expensive, are more relaxing. There are these real live people who carry on conversations with me about the world, politics, Jesus, love, hate, pain, relationships, and all the things. The lazy days are often spent in five different rooms in the house, but that’s ok. They are all under my roof. For a time at least. And I see the day coming when they aren’t. And that will be ok also. It will be more than ok. Because the truth is, we don’t get 18 summers. We get however many God gives us. We aren’t guaranteed the next one, whether it’s number 2 or 22.

Those posts usually make me tear up a little. But they shouldn’t. I should be thankful for today, not worrying about next summer or last summer. Enjoy the laughter and noise today. Or maybe it’s time to enjoy the silence, the phone call, the car ride, the play date. Enjoy whatever you’re given. To quote one of my faves, “The good old days weren’t always good, and tomorrow ain’t as bad as it seems.” Isn’t this the truth? We often glamorize the past or long for future days instead of enjoying what we have. Right now, I have these three amazing boys/men, and I’m going to do my best to soak up every day—summer, spring, whatever—that I’m given.

So get out there. Enjoy your last few days of summer. Then your fall. Enjoy every day. Eighteen isn’t the end of parenting. I’m finding that it’s just the beginning.

Follow Me

Follow Me

We all like to think we’re not quick to join the crowd. We don’t really care what others think.

We like to think we’ve raised our kids to be individuals. We want them to “be themselves.” “Make their own paths.”

I’ve heard so many people say it. “I don’t care what anyone else thinks.” “My kids are confident enough to be themselves.”

And we all want to believe this. We all want to be the one who steps up. Takes a stand. Marches to the beat of the “right” drum. Stands up for the weak. The oppressed.

But if we’re honest, we’ve all succumbed to peer pressure. I certainly have caved on too many occasions to count. I want to do the right thing. I want to be that one voice in the crowd that takes a stand. But too often, I shrink back behind one of the oppressors, and I am silent.

I follow the crowd. Too many times. Do you?

Jesus says “Follow me.” Not once. Over and over. But Jesus went to the cross.

Luke 14:7 says, “And whoever does not carry their cross and follow me cannot be my disciple.”

Wow. The other times, it doesn’t sound so scary. “’Come, follow me,’ Jesus said. ‘and I will send you out to fish for people.’” But still, Jesus asks us to follow Him. He commands us. And we hesitate. But the Bible tells us in Mark 1 that His disciples didn’t hesitate. Verse 18 says, “At once they left their nets and followed him.” And later in verse 20, after Jesus saw James and John, preparing their nets, and called them to follow Him as well, “they left their father Zebedee in the boat with the hired men and followed him.” I would like to know their minds the day Jesus told them to follow Him. Was there even a hint of struggle? Leaving the lives they knew, the families they loved. Was it difficult, or did they simply just go, without looking back?

But they were human, and even having walked with the living, breathing Jesus Christ, they too followed the crowd for a time. I love Peter. He was all in from the beginning. He had no doubts. He truly believed that he was stronger than the rest. In Matthew 26:33, he says “Even if all fall away on account of you, I never will.” Jesus must have snickered inwardly. I would have. Jesus knew. It is so easy sometimes to say it, but then it is so difficult to actually do it when push comes to shove. Peter was quick to follow the crowd when things got tough.  

It is so difficult to not follow the crowd. We have a longing, a need even, to belong. Our need to belong is unfortunately sometimes misplaced on the wrong things. We want to be in the group, the club. We want the relationship, the job, the friendship. These things will always leave us woefully unsatisfied. But still, the need to belong persists.

The crowd always gets it wrong. Look at our culture. Our world. Slavery. Holocaust. Gold Rush. Crusades. Hate. Riots. Crucifixion. The crowd always gets it wrong. It may look pleasing for a time. Or it may temporarily solve our problems. Or we may look “cool” for a moment. But the crowd always gets it wrong.

On Palm Sunday, Jesus entered Jerusalem humbly on a donkey, a sign of peace, with a ragtag group of followers. The crowd cheered for him, shouting “Hosanna! Hosanna!” (Rescuer, savior). So maybe the crowd gets it right sometimes. Or maybe not. Maybe they were right for the wrong reasons.  The crowd wanted someone to rescue them from their bondage to the Romans. They didn’t understand. They should have understood. Jesus was perfectly clear. Jesus came, lived, died, and rose to free us from bondage. But not from the Romans. Jesus wanted way more for us than that. He came to free us from ourselves. At the end of the week, the crowd thought that Jesus hadn’t delivered. Truth is, He delivered so much more than they imagined.

Less than a week later, that crowd was shouting, “Crucify him!” They hated him more than they hated Barabbas. They wanted his life more than that of Barabbas. And where were his loyal disciples? Matthew 26:56 tells us that when Jesus was arrested, “…Then all the disciples deserted him and fled.”

And the leader was too weak to lead. Pilate believed Jesus to be innocent, but he followed the crowd also. Mark 15:15 says, “Wanting to satisfy the crowd, Pilate released Barabbas to them. He had Jesus flogged, and handed him over to be crucified.” He followed the crowd.

Lots of people are going to tell you to follow them. Uncle Kracker says, “Follow me/Everything is all right/…/And if you want to leave I can guarantee/You won’t find nobody else like me.” Everything won’t be all right. And there actually are lots of people like him. People who will lead you in the wrong direction. Or maybe the right direction for the wrong reasons. Either way, don’t follow them. There is only one worthy of following.  And it will be down the narrow path. The path of persecution and suffering. But the path of a Love like no other.

I’m not going to try to analyze Frost’s poetry here. His most famous poem is often greatly misinterpreted by readers. But let’s just take the couple of lines (the most famous lines) and assume the role of the narrator, thinking of taking the road he deems less taken. “Two roads diverged in a wood, and I,/I took the one less traveled by/And that has made all the difference.” Frost doesn’t seem to have been pondering a theological question of what would happen if he followed Jesus instead of the crowd. In fact, I would seriously doubt that question was on his mind. But if we read these lines of “The Road Not Taken,” we can certainly use them to see that Jesus is the road less taken, and it will make all the difference. It won’t be easier. There will be brambles and weeds and all the other pitfalls and entanglements of a road less traveled. But in the end, it will make all the difference.

So follow Him. Follow Him to the cross and to wherever else he leads. And know this. When you mess up, and you will, He will be there to pick up the pieces of you and to put them all back together, better. Peter, so quick to tell Jesus he would never leave him, was also so quick to leave. Three times after Jesus’s arrest, Peter denied that he even knew Jesus. Then when he made eye contact with the arrested Jesus and remembered that Jesus knew Peter’s weaknesses even before he knew himself, Peter “wept bitterly” (Luke 22:62). But in John 21:19, after Peter’s betrayal, Jesus said to him, “Follow me!” Follow Him

A little about me…

I am a daughter of the King, a wife to an awesome husband, and a mom to some pretty amazing boys.

Why a blog? I honestly have no idea. I have felt for years that God is calling me to speak. And though I talk a LOT, I think I usually speak best through written words. So I am starting here. Today. With this.

I am not sure where it will go. I have always wanted to write a book. But life is busy. And honestly, I guess I am lazy. Or just not motivated. Or it’s not the right time. But for today, I am being obedient to what is on my heart. We live in a broken world. It seems to be splintering more each day. Maybe something is on my heart that will help or encourage you.

We chose several years ago to homeschool our children. Some days will be about that. Some days may just be words that I feel should be shared.

But even more important than why I am here…why should you be here? I am smart enough to realize that I will honestly have no words to help you. But sometimes, I believe God gives us little nuggets along our journey that can help others. So, I will be sharing what He gives me for the day when I write. I mess up a lot. So maybe you can laugh with me. Or at me. Either works.

Maybe I’ll write again tomorrow. Maybe next week or month. Maybe never. Stay tuned. Just like life, we’re all in this thing together.