Daily Grace, Presence

A Better Story

April 20, 2024

Write a Better Story

(especially when I know nothing, which is honestly most of the time)

I dropped some bags off at Goodwill the other day. Our local Goodwill store accepts items at the rear of the store. There’s a door there and workers who wheel out big bins and hand out receipts. They also tell you when they do not want your items, which is necessary, I guess, but sometimes a little hurtful. They will not take clothes hangers. Lightbulbs. Even the not so terrible golf clubs that I was offering up the other day. Because the worker said, apologetically, that they had some in the store already that were in better shape than mine.

Anyway. At this Goodwill, you pull into a single file line, one car at a time, wait for the car in front of you to unload, then drive up and drop off your items. The car unloading in front of me was a newish SUV with a specialty license plate that said something like “Grammers,” which was a cutesie way of saying “Grandma,” I decided.

Grammer’s car was full of boxes and bags. The woman unloading that car did not look like a grandma. At all. She hefted the boxes and bags into the Goodwill’s wheelie bins. Then, as she neared the end of the load, she reached in and carefully pulled out a large doll. It was close to the size of a toddler boy. He was wearing overalls and had a fishing pole in his hand. He also had a straw hat that fell off when she took him out of the back of the SUV. She set the doll down on the pavement, carefully put his little hat back on his head, and drove away.

This ruined me.

I had an entire movie running through my head as I pulled into the loading zone to drop off my bag of linens (a gently used pink blanket that my daughter didn’t need anymore. Also some nice sheet sets, because how many sheet sets do you need when you only have one twin bed in your house? Really! You do not need five sets of twin sheets for one bed! And the golf clubs! But I had to take those back home, because apparently they were not up to Goodwill’s standards.)

The woman who gently (lovingly!) set down the doll with the straw hat was clearly too young to be a Grandma, so I figured that she was probably the Grandma’s granddaughter and Grandma had passed away so she had been delegated to drive Grammer’s car to Goodwill to unload the cherished possessions that nobody in the family wanted. Sad! Grandma loved that little fishing boy doll! It reminded her of her son! It reminded her of her youth! But nobody else had room for it. So away it went to the Goodwill.

That’s the story I made up.

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Daily Grace, Presence

Easter Shadows

April 6, 2024

I’m a little glad that we got past Easter last week, because I wasn’t feeling Eastery before the actual day, and I didn’t feel Eastery on the actual day, and I haven’t started feeling Eastery in the days since, either. Apparently, I am decidedly in an un-Eastery frame of mind. Is there such a thing as being Scrooge-ish about Easter? Bah humbug to the bunny cakes and jelly beans, marshmallow peeps and egg hunts. Humbug to it all.

I am trusting that Jesus is not shaking his head and sighing because I did not work myself up into an appropriate state of rejoicing last Sunday. It is a relief that Jesus loves me anyway, even if I am crabby on his special resurrection celebration day. Not that Easter wasn’t a nice day last week. My son was still home for spring break, and his Dad joined us for lunch at our favorite Indian buffet for our special Easter meal. We had naan and butter chicken, chai and chana masala. It was delicious. Later that afternoon, I went to a belated birthday party for my good neighbor with tea, chocolate cake, almond cookies, and three kinds of ice cream.

Yes. It was a fine day.

I love Tony Campolo’s “It’s Friday. But Sunday’s Comin'” sermon. I’ve heard it many times. Some years, Easter has dawned that way, a miraculous day when everything is finally made right. Hope blows in on a fresh breeze, and I can smell it, almost even taste it. Maybe the years when I found out around Easter that I was pregnant and would be having a baby when the New Year rolled around. That was a brighter season. Or the years when my Mom and Dad were alive, and we would have family Easter dinners together after church and take pictures in our new Sunday dresses in their front yard by their blooming rhododendrons. Continue Reading…