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Beauty on the Backroads

Stories of grace for life's unexpected turns

faith & spirituality

These trying times

September 18, 2018

Last week felt like a heavy one where the burdens and needs were plenty. Weeks like that are overwhelming for me because I feel deeply the hurt and pain of others, when I don’t close myself off to it. I can easily bury my head in the sand and pretend all’s right with the world, but sometimes, it is harder to ignore.

As a hurricane approached the East Coast, we watched the news, a limited practice because all of us are affected emotionally by what we see and hear on the television. Sometimes we just need to turn it off. Watching the preparations, I could feel the fear mounting, but what brought tears to my eyes were the people preparing to help. A parking lot filled with emergency vehicles and the Cajun Navy headed to the area made my heart swell with hope. Trouble was on the way, but so was help. And along with the help, hope.

This is the thing that makes all trouble bearable, or at the very least endurable: the hope and the help. And I’m not talking about well wishes (although that can be hopeful) but the actual practical hope that shows up in bodies.

I have not given up on the goodness of people yet.

Photo by Nick Fewings on Unsplash

I watched on television this week as firefighters gave every effort they had to save a family whose house was crushed by a tree, and I cried with them as they grieved when they could not bring the rescue they had hoped. My heart bent with compassion toward those who were stranded in their homes when the rain and flooding came. I may have once wanted to criticize their decision to stay, but I know better now. I know that evacuating comes at a financial cost and maybe there is no place to go. And I believe that no life is more valuable than another. We do not abandon people to a dismal fate because of their choices, whether made in ignorance or poverty.

Humanity shows up for each other. It is what keeps our hearts soft and makes us more human.

—

I can never decide if hospitals are extraordinary places or ordinary places. I feel like God is near when I’m there, but I know how easy it is to avoid them. Hospitals are crisis points, usually, and every patient a reminder of how frail are these bodies. How easily they break, how one day they’ll fail us in the most basic of ways.

At the veterans hospital where my husband receives care, these feelings are magnified as every patient has a common thread, a story that runs deeper than the surface. I’m aware of this and sensitive to it but not always prepared. When I’m there with my husband, we are often on the low end of the age range, although not as much anymore, and sometimes I think this means I should have more strength or availability for people, but last week my capacity was low.

My anxiety was simmering under the surface from the start, but within minutes, we saw two people we knew from our former years living in that area, and one was present for the duration of my waiting room stay. I had planned to spend the waiting time with books (I brought three because you never know!) and writing. Hurricane coverage blared from the television and I tried to find a quiet spot to refill my tank, but I was soon joined by two men who were waiting for one of them to be called back. I tried to subtly turn away but I am no good at rudeness. (Or boundaries with strangers. I hate conflict of any kind, so it is often my M.O. to squash my own needs when someone else’s presents. Please don’t use this against me.)

When the man with the appointment left, his companion started talking to me about what I was writing, and he asked me a billion questions and told me all about his life, and I saw my “me time” sliding away gradually. He needed to talk, I guess, and I am like a magnet for people who need to talk. There must be something about me that lets people know I will listen, and I am not really sorry that I’m this way, but I wasn’t prepared for it this day. I excused myself to get some coffee but went to talk to my friend at the desk. I asked her if I should move my car from the front of the building to the parking lot closer to where we were, and she encouraged me to leave and take my time.

The chatty fellow sitting next to me caught on, though, and he also needed to move his car, so he walked with me. I must have been giving off some vibes because he asked if he was being a pest. My heart squeezes tight at questions like this because I never want to make a person feel bad about themselves. I told him, as honestly as possible, that he was very talkative and I wasn’t prepared for that and my own worries were elevated which makes me less patient. Or something like that.

We parted ways in the main parking lot, and I sat in my car for a few minutes, taking deep breaths. I did not want to go back to the waiting room and listen to what felt to me like idle chatter, even though this man was a two-time cancer survivor who started a writing group for other survivors. (If you think me a horrible person while reading this, I will agree!) I circled the parking lot a few times and then pulled my car into a spot reserved for the department we were in. And I breathed a sigh of relief when I didn’t spot my new friend in the waiting area. I made myself a cup of coffee and sat down with a book, still shaking a bit from the stress of it all.

Later, after we were home, I messaged my actual friend who worked at the desk and thanked her for her effort. Having someone in my corner made it more bearable. And that was just the beginning of our weekend. Friends stepped in on all kinds of levels to help us through this minor trial. They showed up at our house early on a weekday to get the kids ready for school so we could make the drive to the hospital. They showed up on the weekend to take one or both kids so I could get some rest from all the caregiving. They showed up in texts and messages asking how we were doing.

And our story isn’t an exception. I’ve watched from afar as a friend’s family struggled with difficult news this week and how people have surrounded them. I’ve watched people in North Carolina take care of each other. And I’ve watched people on social media offer their help and experiences and homes to people in need.

These are not small things and they make the trying times better.

Photo by Matt Collamer on Unsplash

—

I am old enough now to know that we cannot escape the trying times. They will come, sometimes with warning, like a hurricane, and sometimes not. And for any of us to get through them, we will need other people.

I’ve been thinking about all the help we’ve received from people over the years, and I’ve concluded that we are so far in debt when it comes to kindness received that we can never pay it back. We will only ever pay it forward with no expectation of return.

Because there’s no predicting where the next trial will be, where the next needs will be. All we can do is vow to be the kind of people who show up when it’s our turn and do what we can, whether it’s something obviously heroic like rescuing people from flooded houses or subtly heroic like keeping someone’s kid for a couple of hours so they can rest.

We can all ease each other’s burdens, especially if we take turns. I cannot always shoulder someone else’s burden, but when I can, I will. And I will look around to see who can be there for me when I need it most.

This is how we go on when the world and its problems overwhelm.

Filed Under: faith & spirituality Tagged With: helping each other, hurricane florence, personal trials

In search of the good

August 13, 2018

Years ago, my brother and I started playing this game while traveling (separately) mostly in airports called People You Meet While Traveling. Mostly it was a way to cope with the (usually) annoying humans we encountered in security lines or at the gate or while boarding. We would message/text/tweet each other about the person, to whom we gave an unflattering name like: “Those who think they’re too good for TSA PreCheck like standing in lines makes you a better person.” (That one’s my brother’s candidate.) Or this one I’m not proud of: The Assholes. “Oh I’m sorry. Did the four of you and your suitcases want to ride the elevator with the two of us and our bags? Too bad. We’re going to mean mug you while the door closes and not even acknowledge that you’re standing there.”

Photo by Yolanda Sun on Unsplash

I’ll be honest: it was a mean game because we thought we were funny and were laughing amongst ourselves at someone else’s expense.

We picked up this game again this summer in Florida. It started while my brother was flying to meet us there and continued in person on one of our family vacation adventures. It was bringing us down in a way I didn’t notice, and that’s when my brother suggested that we change our game. Instead of looking for the people who were annoying and had the potential to ruin our experiences, he said maybe we should look for the people we would want to be traveling with.

Let’s be honest: there are WAY more candidates for the first category than the latter.

But I won’t say this often: My brother was right.

—

I cannot explain how easy it is for me to see what’s wrong. With a situation, about an experience, in a person, in a written correspondence. It’s like my brain automatically shifts to look for the mistake or the failing, and I’m not even trying to be negative (at least not all the time). I think, at the heart of it, I want to make things right and good. Pointing out the negative is believing there’s potential for improvement. (If only I were this good at pointing it out in myself!)

But it’s a total drag on my mood and emotions. Finding what’s wrong is the easiest thing ever. Looking for good is hard work.

When my brother suggested we change our game, I felt a little bit of shame at the way I’d latched on to the previous idea, how eager I was to make fun of all the people who I thought were behaving badly. I took his words to heart and the next day I made a list of the people we’d encountered up to that point in Florida.

Ok @therealmrfrye here’s the new list. People you’re glad to have met on vacation:

— Lisa Bartelt (@lmbartelt) June 21, 2018

The list included a retired Boeing engineer who was telling stories of his work at NASA to visitors of the Kennedy Space Center, an uber-friendly waitress at a restaurant we picked on a whim in St. Augustine, and our bus driver at NASA who stopped to point out crocodiles and other wildlife and seemed to truly enjoy his job.

You know what surprised me about this list? How good I felt making it. Each of these people brought a smile to my face and even now, months later, I can picture every single one of them. Do you know how many people on the other list I remember? I’m going to have to go with “zero.”

I tried this experiment again while traveling with the kids and it was hard. I’d much rather make a snarky comment about the guy sitting in the exit row taking every last minute available to him on a phone call while the flight attendant is trying to talk to him about his ability to perform the role of helper in an emergency situation.

It’s harder to remember the two ladies who quietly gave up their seats so a mother and son could sit together.

—

Maybe there’s some psychological or physiological reason it’s easier to remember and notice the negative stuff than the positive stuff. (It’s easier to frown than smile, right?)

But the negativity is killing me (and it might be killing you, too), maybe not literally but something withers in my soul when I spend too much time on what’s wrong with people.

I do want to be clear that I’m not talking about drawing attention to actual injustice. Focusing on the wrong in situations of any kind of discrimination is absolutely necessary. In a way, calling attention to the wrong is setting things right.

I’m talking more about the minor grievances I have with people who don’t behave like I think they should. I’m talking about the little annoyances I have at the grocery store or the gas station or while driving. These are not injustices, at least not usually. These things are easy to spot, maybe because there are so many of them happening or they just have a way of drawing attention. I don’t know.

All I really know is that it takes effort to look for the good–in people, in circumstances, in the world around us. Watch the news and it’s mostly bad, but occasionally there’s a story of people helping other people or doing something they didn’t have to do. Those things make the news because they are unusual and extraordinary in our day, which makes me sad.

Photo by Annie Spratt on Unsplash

And determined.

—

I want to seek out the good in the world around me and when I can’t find enough of it, to be the good in the world around me.

This applies to my faith experience as well. I believe with all that I am that Jesus is the Good News embodied and that our mission as His people is to embody Good News as well. We can write it and speak it, and we must live it out. If we’re ever going to change the world, or even just ourselves, it’s going to have to start with Good News.

News like we’re loved, period, and that hope is not a futile feeling. News that not everyone or everything is horrible. We have to tell the stories of the good we’ve seen. We have to elevate the beauty, not in place of the disaster but in the midst of them.

At an outdoor concert this summer, a folk group that has become a new favorite of our family, sang a song called “American Flowers.” Take a listen/watch.

It’s a ballad that pushes back the darkness a bit. The chorus goes like this:

I have seen American flowers all across this land
From the banks of the Shenandoah, along the Rio Grande
Do not fear the winter blowing in the hearts of men
I have seen American flowers they will bloom again

This is the kind of Good News we need. Hope and beauty and truth. It is not ignorant of the bad (winter) but hopeful that the season will change and testifies to the spring that is on the way. (Think also of Narnia and Aslan on the move.)

—

When did we stop telling stories of the good we’d seen? When did we shift our focus to the complaints? Maybe it’s always been that way.

It won’t be easy to look for the good but it’s restorative work that starts with the soul of the one who is paying attention.

Are you paying attention? Am I?

Filed Under: faith & spirituality Tagged With: american flowers, birds of chicago, finding beauty, good news, noticing the good, paying attention

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Hi. I’m Lisa, and I’m glad you’re here. If we were meeting in real life, I’d offer you something to eat or drink while we sat on the porch letting the conversation wander as it does. That’s a little bit what this space is like. We talk about books and family and travel and food and running, whatever I might encounter in world. I’m looking for the beauty in the midst of it all, even the tough stuff. (You’ll find a lot of that here, too.) Thanks for stopping by. Stay as long as you like.

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