Last week, a late evening, we strolled home under a warm starry night, the city calm in its bustle. We first saw it several yards away, this stirring, this carrying of white petals up and around, to and fro, until it came closer and swept around us completely. Strong in its scent and presence, we could not escape lest we walked through it, and even still the remnants remained. There were petals in hair and on clothes and a somewhat unsettling thought of what this could perhaps mean—it was meant for us in that moment.
This has been a spring unlike many others…an early spring in certain types of expectations. It has been a laboring spring in the tasks before us. Most of all, it has been a full spring in the fullness it has brought and the beauty revealed…constantly reminding us of the necessity to live in this present moment.
Four weeks ago brought the first blooms of those pressing forth from the ground…yellow daffodils and deep purple crocuses. It brought the first wave of very warm weather and this thawing not just of body, but of heart. There is just something about winter for me…it is much easier to fall into fear and doubt, yet spring reminds me that there is life and all things are made new, even as they must push forth from the ground to do so. Four weeks ago brought my best friend to our shores, a reunion after nine months of not seeing one another in person. Those three days were full in all measure: fullness of honesty, of love, of laughter, of community, of memories, of dreams, of hope, of tears, of being fully known. We walked this alive city over bridges, into little pockets, underground, with stairs, and on roofs. On the third day we sat on the rooftop and ate lunch in the warm sun, overlooking the city and water, and in that moment, I was soberly aware of how the fullness of life is through the fullness of God. When fears are confessed, its hold is broken and truth can take root and bloom, bursting forth from the stubborn ground like the crocus in bloom. Blessed it is to do it in the presence of another.
Three weeks ago brought the first major beginning blooming of trees, the visible hint that this world was going to change, though the anticipation had begun a couple of weeks prior. It brought the first venture out of the city for me since we moved here (with the exception of Colorado at Christmas time), on a women’s retreat with our church. We went to upstate New York on charter buses, late on a Friday evening. When we were almost there, the buses made a wrong turn and therefore, got stuck on narrow lakeside roads with hardly any margin to turn around. Early action because of anticipation is much like that, I imagine—instead of waiting and being sure, our actions leave us mired and further behind than we were to start with. We finally arrived and descended the bus’s steps, and I was overtaken with the fullness of the crisp mountain air smell and its stillness. We loaded our belongings into our cabins and went off to worship at one hour til midnight, bodies weary and minds tired. And there—the fullness of God was found—when we are lost to ourselves and left with only a response. In knowing Him, there is overwhelming gratitude and praise. The next day we awoke to thick fog and utter stillness, perfect time to still ourselves, removed from the always-moving city, with a rememberance to rest. There was conversation plunging deeper into the depths from the height of a deck tower above the lake. The fog burned off early afternoon to reveal a vividly bright blue sky and the further enjoyment of the mountain spring. The evening ended with a million stars above us and a fire we encircled around…to remember that both near and far, His light is with us.
Two weeks ago brought the beginning of flourishing of the flowering trees…magnolia trees in particular. Rich, strong, and large blooms stood upright from their branches, all united in stature and glory. I walked the garden grounds with my mother, delighting in this seemingly foreign land’s paradise. A gardener herself, she was the perfect companion for such a jaunt. There was stillness and rest in the warm sunshine that day, with eyes to see and cameras to capture and remember. We walked our neighborhood over that weekend and explored this part she had not before seen, this portion of Brooklyn we have called home since December. There were two hard days in there for me, riddled with fear and complexity of emotion. I stubbornly attempted to keep it down in an attempt to fully enjoy our time together, but as the opening of flowers on trees reminded me, there is beauty in the openness of vulnerability, especially with one of whom’s roots I bear. She is my mother, and though our physical days with each other are far between, she has walked this life longer than I and has known me since I was in her womb. I need not be afraid or feel the need to be strong…and this I need take heed of with my Lord also.
Last week upon my mom’s departure, the trees all seemed to begin bursting forth, one after the other, bringing a new fullness of life and many things to see and take in. My responsibilities seemed to explode also, and the hours of work quickly racked up. I was sidelined at home one day with a fever, and it was then I gained vision for what things can be in the future with work…knowing that this season of busyness and bursting forth is likely in preparation for another. In all that I had to do, it was a constant fight to remember to take joy in what and who was around me at the moment, and in the work that I do, to take joy in it also…You can behold life as all joy or you can believe life is all work. Or you can become the joy in all your work. (–Ann Voskamp).
This week, this holy week, has brought an awakening of sorts, a release of some burden and a fight not to take on others. It has brought a reminder that life is constantly evolving and changing, and God governs it all. He knows when to set things in bloom and when to make them fall away, only to bring new life. As we now walk this neighborhood, beginning to brim with its full canopies of green, I remember the starkness of winter and the apparent shelter walls all differentiated from one another, yet connected. We as humans are like this—we build and hide and forget that we are not alone. Yet, these canopies of green bring us out and knit us together once again.
And by His blood, His redemption, we walk these canopies of life together, knit in the power of his life, death, and resurrection, shown so beautifully in a New York Spring.
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