Time is a Gift

Desperate, I throw myself on you:
you are my God!
Hour by hour I place my days in your hand,
safe from the hands out to get me.
Warm me, your servant, with a smile;
save me because you love me.

(Psalm 31:14, 15 The Message)

I’ve always had an interesting dance with time. Some moments feel endless and like I have too much time. Often time feels like I might run out of it. How can that be when each day contains the same amount of hours, minutes and seconds?

As we enter Advent and winter, I was dreading more time inside, more time watching the clock. Time was annoying me so much that I put most of my decorative clocks in a drawer. Then today, as I was getting ready to face a “long” day, it occurred to me time is a gift.

And as a reminder of that gift, I pulled the clocks out of the drawer, reset them and placed them in various rooms as reminders.

Time is a gift. How will you embrace it this season?

Rest

“Are you tired? Worn out? Burned out on religion? Come to me. Get away with me and you’ll recover your life. I’ll show you how to take a real rest. Walk with me and work with me—watch how I do it. Learn the unforced rhythms of grace. I won’t lay anything heavy or ill-fitting on you. Keep company with me and you’ll learn to live freely and lightly.” (Matthew 11:28-30 The Message)

Rest is not my default language. I am a goer and a doer. Yet I am learning once again, rest is not always what I think it is. It doesn’t necessarily mean sleeping or doing nothing. The dictionary definition and some synonyms of rest shed some light on the topic for me.

According to the Oxford Dictionary rest means “to stop working or moving in order to relax or recover strength.” Rest is a time to pause, to cultivate serenity, to regain perspective. Pondering the list of synonyms for rest, brings relief and comfort: repose, relaxation, leisure, time off, sleep, slumber, break, interval, interlude, intermission, lull, respite, breathing space. Ah…..and more words of rest (the verb form): relax, unwind, put your feet up, take it easy, sleep, take a nap, doze or lean on.

Just reading this list ushers in a mood of calm and peacefulness. Words have a way of refreshing the soul, spirit, body and mind.

As I enter this season of rest, slowing down and pausing…I’ve learned a couple things about myself:

I don’t have to finish a task all at once.

I get bored.

I like naps.

Walking slowly is a form of rest.

Yoga relaxes me. I’m learning to breathe deeper.

Each day is different, and that’s good.

How are you seeking rest this season?

Cereal Bowl Series

a weekly series of fiction to enjoy with your bowl of cereal

Igor and Spank by Kel Rohlf

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

I felt like cleaning. I started in the family room. I pushed the furniture to one side of the room, after dusting all the furniture. Then I vacuumed and mopped the hardwood floor. I pushed the furniture back to the other side to repeat my routine. As I mopped, I thought about rearranging the furniture, so I could put up the Christmas tree. The thought surprised me. Why would I want to put up the Christmas tree? That was something Jack and the boys did because I never felt like participating. Christmas was a dark time for me. After Thanksgiving, I would spiral down with the gray days, dreading the holiday hype. What gifts to get? Where to put the tree? The first few years of our marriage, I pretended to be excited and help Jack. He loved Christmas. He would always get me extravagant gifts, like jewelry or the most expensive sweater or a year membership at the spa. I never knew what to get him. I’d ask what he wanted and he would say I was his priceless gift. I always cringed inside when he said that.

Ever since I met Igor and his family, something was shifting inside me. I thought I might actually be missing my boys, not in a guilty way, but in a hopeful way. Maybe I could be a good mother. Maybe I could put up the Christmas tree and invite them home, instead of me going to them. Just as I started to applaud myself for such a bold idea, I was startled back to reality. Someone was ringing my doorbell. I stepped over the vacuum and made my way to the front door. It was Igor and Spank.

I opened the door, and boy and dog rushed into my house. Igor grabbed my waist and was sobbing, while Spank sniffed my feet. “What in the world? What’s wrong Igor?” I asked while trying to gently unattach him from me. He clung tighter, so I patted his back. “I’m here, it’s okay.” After a bit, he calmed down, but was silent. Spank sat quietly nearby watching us. I offered Igor to sit in the family room with me. I explained that I had been cleaning, but we could still get to the couch. He sat down and took a deep breath. I didn’t know whether to ask what was going on or just wait for him. He finally blurted out, “They took momma and Georgie!”

“Who? What do you mean took them?”

“Two men in blue suits. I had been out taking Spank for a walk, when I saw a strange car in our driveway. Something inside me told me to stop. I hid behind a neighbor’s tree and waited. Then the front door opened, and two men walked out with momma holding Georgie. She looked like she was crying. I wanted to run to her, but I had a strong feeling to stay behind the tree. My heart was beating fast, and the men seemed scary to me. They reminded me of Carl, except they were wearing suits. I watched them all climb into the car, and back out of the driveway. They went the opposite way of where I was hidden. I started to cry, and just sat down next to the tree. Spank licked my hand.” Igor smiled. I took his hand and squeezed it. “And now I’m here,” he finished with a sigh.

I didn’t know what to say. My mind was racing with possible explanations. Maybe their visas had expired. Maybe Carl sent some men to kidnap them. Maybe Elena wasn’t telling me everything about their story. But now here I was with Igor and his dog. What should I do? Call the police. Call Jack. Then the craziest idea popped into my head. I invited Igor and Spank to stay with me.

“Igor, how about you and Spank stay with me for now? Until we can figure out what to do. I’m afraid to call the police. I don’t know why, but I don’t think I should.”

“Yes, I’m afraid, too. I don’t understand. I didn’t even have a dream about this. Why didn’t my dreams warn me this time?”

A plan was coming together in my mind. I couldn’t explain to him that dreams are just dreams. Sure he had some warnings and some gifts come from dreams. But real life is different. Dreams weren’t predictable. I ignored his question, and pushed forward with my plan, “Let’s go to your house…”

“NO! What if they are coming back for me?”

“Alright. But we need to get some food for Spank, right? You can borrow some of my boys’ clothes for now. They left some things here. You can stay with me, until we sort this out.” Igor hugged me, and for the first time in a long time, I almost believed I could do something right.

Cereal Bowl Series

a weekly series of fiction to enjoy with your bowl of cereal

Igor and Spank by Kel Rohlf

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

I am sipping a glass of wine. The first glass since Jack and the boys left. One of my agreements with Jack before he headed to New York was to cut out the wine. I don’t know why it bothered him. He drank in college, but when we were first married none of our friends openly had alcohol in their homes. It was some badge of honor to look like they were teetotalers, but I figured some of them probably enjoyed wine on special occasions or tropical frozen cocktails when they traveled to the Caribbean for vacation. No one offered us drinks at our dinner parties. To honor the group, and probably Jack, I didn’t drink at all for many years. But after the boys were toddlers, and Jack traveled all the time, I took up having a glass of wine before bed to ease my anxiety of being alone. I didn’t see the problem with a single glass of wine, but it made Jack uneasy. And he said, it was one of the things that needed to change. It was one of the reasons, I chose not to go with him and the boys. That and my severe depression, which at the time I was in complete denial about. I started seeing my therapist about a week after the Jack and the boys moved out.

Therapy helps, but I thought why not be sociable and have just one glass of wine with Elena today. She’s rattling frying pans and checking the timer on her dessert that smells like cardamom and burnt sugar. It’s some kind of flaky honey infused dessert that her family served for years for special occasions. Of course, there is no Thanksgiving Day in Bosnia, but Elena likes to cook, and I like to eat. The Macy’s parade is playing on the television. Igor and Georgie don’t seem that interested, while they build with Legos on the floor. It’s strangely comforting to have the parade in the background.

“Have you ever tried lamb before, Gail?” Elena asks as she lathers the roast with her herb and butter concotion.

“Never interested me,” I reply, “I guess I’m mostly a beef and chicken person. I don’t even really like seafood, except for fried shrimp. But I’m trying to be a little more adventurous these days. Thanks for inviting me to try something new.”

“My pleasure, we love lamb, right boys?”

“Yes, Momma! Especially with greens and rice.” Igor answers and Georgie chortles some kind of agreement.

“Yum,” I say taking another sip of wine. “Elena, can I ask you something?”

“Sure, what’s on your mind?”

“Do you ever see Carl anymore?”

“No, why do you ask?”

“No reason, really, I’m just glad you’re not together anymore, he sounded creepy.”

“Carl was…not nice at times, and yet I am thankful he was part of my life. He helped me become stronger. Before Carl, I didn’t really know how to stand up for myself. Sure, I “bravely” came to America, but I really didn’t have any other choice.”

“But Igor said that Carl yelled at you a lot.”

“That’s none of Igor’s business, he shouldn’t be telling you these things. Carl never hit me, and he was always decent with the boys. Brought them candy and even would play ball in the backyard occasionally with Igor.”

“He was not nice! He’s a liar! And he was probably going to hit one of us, if you hadn’t kicked him out!” Igor was standing by the counter now, obviously upset by what he overheard. He was also giving me a look that pleaded for me not to tell his mother about the nightmare about Carl that he had several weeks ago.

“I’m sorry.” I felt bad that I had brought up the subject. “It wasn’t my place to ask.” I took a gulp of my wine to finish off the glass. Elena had moved around the counter to console Igor. Spank and Georgie had joined the audience. I started to get up from the stool to leave, “I shouldn’t have come, I always ruin everything,” I mumbled loudly, as I tried to hold back tears of frustration. The familiar frustration with myself for never really knowing how to be in social situations.

“It’s okay, Gail, stay,” Elena encouraged, “no harm done, Igor just didn’t like Carl, that’s all. Carl was a broken man. Igor and I will talk about it more later. Let’s just get back to making dinner. Another glass of wine?”

“No…” Igor untangled himself from his mother’s embrace, and took my hand.

“Please stay, Gail, I like having you here. I’m sorry I got upset, it’s just Carl infuriates me.”

“Wow!” Elena interjected, “Where did my boy learn such a big word?”

“At school, it was on our vocabulary list. When I read the definition, I decided it described exactly how I felt about Carl. Just thinking about him burns me up like a fire inside me, and I just want to make him go away forever. Sorry momma, but I just wish we never met him. He used to taunt me about Papa being dead.” Tears were welling up in his eyes. Elena grabbed him up in her arms again, and I had to look away to wipe the tears that were trailing down my face. So much pain, and my capacity for absorbing it failed me once again. I willed myself to stay on the stool, and not run out the front door back to the safety of my own house. Elena squeezed my arm, and continued to hug the now sobbing Igor.

After what seem like an awkward half hour, which in reality was only about five minutes, Igor pulled himself together. He looked at me with his forlorn eyes that seemed to recognize my pain, when I should have been consoling him. Elena directed the boys back to Legos, and let Spank outside. When she returned, she washed her hands at the kitchen sink, then resumed preparing the lamb.

The rest of the morning went smoothly. We talked about the chill in the air, and the colorful leaves on the trees. The boys cheered when Santa and his sleigh ended the Macy’s parade. In the evening, Elena brewed us some decaf coffee, and we sat quietly at the table eating a second helping of her gooey, honey cake. The boys had gone off to bed after Elena read them their favorite bedtime story, Goodnight Moon. Georgie curled in his momma’s lap, and Igor snuggled next to them on the couch. I listened from the rocking chair mesmerized by the scene.

How did she do it? I always felt awkward when my boys wanted to cuddle. Jack always read the bedtime stories to them in our bed, while I watched from the doorway. After reading time, he sent them to me, and I herded them into their own beds. They learned to not ask me to read to them, I guess. I would watch them climb under their covers, and each one would say, goodnight, mommy, we love you! I’d blow them a kiss and turn out the light, gently closing the door, as I left to retreat to my evening glass of wine.

At the table, I asked Elena, “How do you do it?”

“Do what?”

“All this, cook, keep house, work all week and then have energy to read a bedtime story?”

“I just do. I keep at it one little step at a time.” Elena shifted the conversation, “Can I ask you question?”

“Sure.”

“Do you believe everything they say in People magazine?”

“That’s an odd question.”

“I know, it’s just that on my break at the salon, I usually read the articles about the stars and famous people. And I wonder how much of it is true.”

“I’m pretty sure the magazine tells the story that they want to tell. It’s okay. No one ever knows the whole truth.”

“I guess you’re right, but one article sort of got my hopes up…about Samuel.”

“Really? What do you mean?”

“The article told the stories of Bosnian women who actually found their husbands alive after the war. The article claims that the identity of many of the men who died were not accurately documented by the Serbian or Bosnian factions. In fact, some of the Bosnian men faked their deaths in order to escape to Pakistan or other nearby allies. And some even made it to America, assuming new identities. If this is true, Gail…maybe…”

“But you said Samuel died in a fire at the building where he met secretly with the others in your town.”

“I know, but what if that was a decoy. Maybe they had a plan to escape, and that’s why Samuel told me to trust him.”

“I don’t know, Elena, I wouldn’t get my hopes up.” I remembered the dream Igor shared recently of the Christmas reunion with his father. Maybe dreams set us up for disappointment, or maybe they could reignite hope. Silence fell upon our conversation, as we sipped our lukewarm coffee and savored the cake. I looked up to compliment Elena once again on her delicious cake. Her face was glowing, and her eyes brimmed with hopeful tears despite my discouragement to the contrary.

Cereal Bowl Series

a weekly series of fiction to enjoy with your bowl of cereal

Igor and Spank by Kel Rohlf

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Jack called last night. Just to say that the boys really wanted to see me. Would I consider coming to New York for Christmas? He was very matter of fact. I cringed inside when he asked. I was feeling better, had actually been enjoying life a little more, especially since I met Igor and Spank, and Elena and her sweet little Georgie. But I still had days when I didn’t want to get out of bed.

Like today, I didn’t want to get up. I cried most of the night, thinking of how the boys wanted to see me, but deep down I can’t face them. I abandoned them. I’d probably just be another disappointment in a long list of disappointments. What kind of mother doesn’t even talk to her kids on the phone, when they live hundreds of miles away? And why Christmas? Doesn’t Jack know by now that the holidays always put me over the edge? Why do people put so much hope in holidays? I have never been able to live up to the expectations. My mother was the holiday queen, every single month she decorated for the season. Even May Day! Flowers everywhere, craft table filled with paper cones and tissue flowers attached to green pipe cleaners with felt leaves. She would stay up all night on April 30th to finish her masterpieces, and then before the sun rose, she’d wake me and my brother to help her secretly deliver the flower bouquets to the neighbors on our block. It was so embarrassing. The only bonus was that I didn’t have to get dressed in a matching outfit with my brother, like all the other holidays. On May Day, we stayed in our PJs, and if it was chilly, we wore our spring jackets and rain boots.

I would love to stay in my PJs today, but it’s the Wednesday before Thanksgiving. Elena and her boys invited me over for a traditional Bosnian meal tomorrow. Thankfully no traditional American trimmings. I needed to get dressed and be at their house today by 8:00 am to watch Georgie and Igor while Elena works at the salon. I guess people still need their hair cut or styled on the day before Thanksgiving. She has tomorrow off, and says I can help her cook. I may just watch and indulge in a glass of wine.

“Hi Gail!” Igor greets me when I arrive. He seems super excited, which is a lot for him because I have noticed that he runs on high octane most of the time. “Come in, me and Georgie are watching Rugrats! Do you like Rugrats?” I shrug; not really. But he takes me by the hand and pulls me toward their living room couch. Elena hollers from the back of the house that she’ll be out in a minute.

Igor settles me on the couch, and I try to focus on the characters on the screen, and older girl is taunting the babies. Why do they draw cartoons like wacky shapes? I miss Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck. I sigh, and Georgie snuggles closer to me with his thumb comfortably resting in his mouth. Igor bounces next to us on his spot. I guess he really likes this show. Elena walks in the room, hair pulled back in a ponytail and a salon jacket slung over her arm, wearing skinny jeans with trendy books topped with a cute flowered blouse. I tell her she looks nice.

“Thank you. I really appreciate you coming here to watch the boys.” Elena smiles at us camped out on the couch. She comes closer to tousle Igor’s hair and to tell Georgie to take his thumb out of his mouth. “Babies suck their thumb, Georgie, not little men.” He resists her, and then she tousles his hair and gives up easily. Georgie scoots closer to me again. I shift to let him settle in next to me.

“We’ll be fine. I have your cell number if we need anything.” I reassure her. Elena nods, and turns to leave. At the door, she turns and reminds Igor to let Spank back in the house.

“Ok, Momma,” he replies eyes glued to the action on the screen, “I will.” She opens the door and leaves. Igor stays on the couch. I start to remind him to let the dog in, but instead wriggle free from Georgie, and go to let Spank in myself.

I get to the back door, and Spank is waiting patiently on the back step for someone to let him in. I open the door and dog quietly ignores me, and heads directly to the couch. By the time I get back, the three of them are on the couch, and Spank curled up in my place. I stood there for a minute a little miffed, but decide to sit in the rocker next to the couch. So much for babysitting, I’m probably going to just sit here all day, until they need lunch. I try to tune into the story on the screen, but the bigger girl is now yelling at the babies. I think about suggesting a board game or something, but it would take too much energy, and why disturb the peace of electronic lullabies. I close my eyes and just rock gently in the rocker, while the trio on the couch remain engrossed in their world.

A commercial comes on, and Igor mutes the television. “Gail, Gail! Are you sleeping on the job?” Igor teases me. I open my eyes.

“No, silly, I was just resting my eyes.”

Igor starts quietly bouncing on the couch again. “I had another dream,” he tells me obviously busting to share it. I venture to find out more, even though a chill comes over me, because the last dream was about Carl banging around this very house, trying to harm Elena and her family.

“What is it a good one?” I ask. He jumps off the couch and comes to my chair.

He leans toward my ear, and in an excited whisper tells me, “I dreamt that my father is alive!” His eyes shine, and he fixes an expectant stare on me. I don’t know what to say, so I readjust my seat. “What do you think of that? Isn’t that amazing?” Igor asks.

“I can hardly believe it,” I reply, “Were there any more details?”

“Oh yeah! He was alive and here. Right in this room. Momma was hugging him in front of the Christmas tree, when Georgie and I came in the room. They heard us, and invited us into a happy group hug. In the dream, I almost felt tears in my eyes, but I didn’t cry, because I wanted Papa to know I was a little man now. Then Georgie peed his pants, and we all had to pay attention to him.” He paused from telling the dream to explain, “You know, Georgie is potty training. Make sure you ask him to go or he might pee on the couch and that would be gross.”

“Of course,” I start to address Georgie, but then think to ask if anything else happened in the dream. “Did anything else happen in the dream?”

“Nope. That’s how it ended, all of us paying attention to Georgie’s accident.”

“Oh, should we check on him now?” I whisper to Igor.

“No, I’ll remind you later. What do you think about the dream?”

I hesitate, “It’s …pretty amazing…but Igor, you know…”

“I know, Papa is dead, but it was still nice to see him in the dream. Don’t worry, Gail, I don’t think this dream will come true. Not all dreams come true, you know. I just thought you’d like to hear about it.” He walked slowly back to the couch, sort of deflated. He unmuted the television, and returned to the Rugrats world. The rest of the day was uneventful. I encouraged Georgie to use the toilet, and he was successful. We ate cereal and milk for lunch, and watched Nickelodeon all afternoon until Elena returned home. She asked how it went, and I told her fine.

On my drive home, I couldn’t stop thinking about Igor’s dream. And I wondered if it was true that not all dreams come true.