Sometimes, you don't come
home.
When my mom was diagnosed
with dementia
several years
ago,
my family began that inevitable
journey
towards the day when she
would
no longer be able to remain on the
farm.
After two years of
providing
24 hour care for
her
we had no options left,
but to take her out of the
farmhouse
in which she was born 82 years
ago,
and move her into my sister's
home.
And so on
Sunday,
we had a party on her
behalf.
We invited family, neighbors, and
friends
to visit her one last
time
under the big maple
tree
that had housed many picnics &
parties
through the
years.
Then, after the
party,
she was escorted to my sister's
car,
never again to set foot on the
farm.
We experience last times
for many things in life,
this last time just
seemed a little bigger.
The week prior to the
party,
there had been heavy rains and
winds.
The yard was a
mess,
with branches and
leaves
covering the overgrown
grass.
The day before the party, the
unexpected happened....
the sun finally came out and began
to dry the land.
And so I did what any son would
do.
I seized the opportunity and began
to mow the lawn.
When you mow a large
property,
you have time to
think.
And so I
mowed,
and I thought about all the
memories of life on the farm.
Bailing hay on the 4th of
July,
in 95 degree
heat.
Supper at 5 o'clock every
day,
with the entire family sitting
down to table.
Making homemade ice cream with
mom
and taking turns at
churning.
Hosting neighbors and friends on
the weekends,
playing in the creek on hot summer
days.
The bush where I hit my
brother
in the head with a baseball bat
(accidentally)
Putting up with older
sisters'
high school friends who came for
sleepovers.
Birthdays when friends were able
to come over for the entire weekend.
Sitting on the porch in the late
evening
and listening to the
crickets
or watching the
fireflies.
Herding livestock
in
when storms
approached.
The smell of apples on the trees
in the autumn.
Thanksgiving
Days
that began with
hunting
and ended with extended family
gathered around a
table
that had to extend into the living
room.
Summers that seemed to last
forever,
a swing that hung from a large
tree branch,
and sandboxes where we created
entire civilizations.
There were sad times
too.
Deaths in the
family.
Gathering together to
grieve.
Times when the family
was
challenged with disputes and
circumstances.
The day the barn
burned,
and watching the helpless
expression on a dad's face.
But there was always a
tomorrow.
Time to rebuild
barns.
Time to heal from physical and
emotional wounds.
Christmas in the early
years.
Taking the tractor out to the
grove
and bringing in a fresh
tree.
A dad who would foolishly climb
the windmill
to place the Christmas star at the
highest point.
Big gaudy Christmas bulbs on the
front yard bushes
And cold
winters,
with snow drifts taller then I
could reach.
Bedrooms so
cold
I couldn't wait to slip under the
electric blanket.
Wood stoves
that made the house feel so
good
when you came in from the
cold.
Easter
mornings
with the obligatory photos in our
new clothes,
always in front of mom's flower
beds.
Croquet & football games in
the front yard.
Graduation
parties.
The smell of manure freshly spread
in the springtime.
Secret trips to the
attic,
just to explore what was
there
and
avoidance of the
cellar,
which seemed so
scary.
When you have a lot of grass to
mow,
you can think about a
lot.
And so
today,
I thought about how much there
was to remember.
How much there was for which to be
thankful.
How within another
generation,
these wonderful stories and
memories
would be
forgotten.
As I turned off
the mower,
I looked at the new home that had
just gone up
on the other side of the
pasture.
A new family starting their
own memories.
Just up the
road,
a home had been recently built
to house those with
disabilities.
Another type of
family,
beginning its
own journey.
Yes, it is
true,
sometimes you don't come
home.
But I am learning that that is
okay.
It's what happens when you are a
part of eternity.
There is another place for
you.
And so as mom was helped into the
car,
for that final trip down the
driveway,
there was
sadness,
but also
joy.
A sadness that recognizes we
are witnessing a close to a season of life.
But a joy that comes in knowing
that there is another season
both for us, and for the families that follow on this sacred
space.
And the greatest joy is knowing,
that God is preparing those who
love Him,
the best home of
all.
In my Father's
house,
are many dwelling
places;
if it were not so, I would have told
you;
for I go to prepare a place for
you.
John
14:2
No comments:
Post a Comment