Thursday, June 16, 2011

Nuptials!


This would be how I found our bride this past Saturday, when I wandered into the Harvard Club in NYC as an elite member of Yu-Chen's wedding party.

I smiled and thought about how lovely her skin would look on her wedding day.

Little did I know:

Mine was in for the same treat.


Our preparations paid off, and by the time we got to the church 



each and every one of us looked as radiant as the roses we carried,


and as elegant as could be in our delicately flowing lavender dresses.


Yu-Chen and Eric said their I do's during a simple and beautiful ceremony,

and I was personally grateful for the lack of tripping down the aisle--a phenomenon I was almost positive would happen in my rather high 


(but oh so pretty) heels.




We left the church as the drizzling rain wished the couple good luck and the gathered crowd wished them good wishes,
climbed into our limos,









and made our way to Central Park for a brief photo session (umbrella included)
and a soiree at a nearby hot dog stand for the famished bride and groom.

After some fun pictures upon our return to the book-lined halls of the Harvard Club,


it was time to party


(under the auspices of this giant elephant head and his wild-creature friends...),


and so I made my way through the tables laden with delicious food and delectable drink on my rather high (but oh so pretty) heels  in order to find my department friends,
to share in the celebration together.


After some good eating/talking/laughing,
we entered the dining room for more food,
more fun,
more laughter,
more love.

Congratulations to Yu-Chen and Eric--
thanks for a special and beautiful day!

Monday, June 6, 2011

Department-ness

When you are working on a PhD, the key to your mental health is to have a passel of really great people sharing your PhD pain.

It is not a guarantee, however, that you will actually find yourself amongst such a passel when you send in your application materials, which is why I'd like to take this moment to say:

I got lucky.

Yu-Chen and Yi-Ting and I have warriored through many moments of angst and turmoil together, which is why we were happy to have this small little happy hour during this past month with some of our other members
in order to celebrate Yu-Chen's upcoming nuptials.  


(We were also pretty happy about this volcano of oyster nachos...)



And then, 
when Yi-Ting's parents came into town from half-way around the world in order to visit Yi-Ting's American life,
we felt it was imperative that we throw them a truly American picnic. We gathered together authentic fixings like corn on the cob, potato salad, baked beans, 
and MEAT.

And of course, being a passel of PhD-ers means we need to celebrate anyone who actually gets to bear the official title of "PhD", because we all know far too well the looming near-impossibility of the thing.

That would be why today found us celebrating Dr. Beth, upon her successful defense of her dissertation.



(Celebrating in style, that is....)



Take a good look, because I'd just like to say:
each member of this passel of PhD friends is relocating by the end of this summer (leaving me to fend for myself!!!),
and each one will be missed.

Thursday, June 2, 2011

Memorial Memories

Each year as Memorial Day rolls around Heather says to me
--with conviction in her voice--
"You're spending the day with us, right?"

How can I say no to a holiday with my favorite family, 
especially since they have become my family?
Especially when there is such conviction in all of our hearts that spending the day together is the only obvious choice?

I can't say no; I say of course!

Which is why Monday morning found us loading up the minivan,
on our way to Boalsburg.

Why Boalsburg, you ask?

Because Boalsburg claims to be the birthplace of Memorial Day, and is right next door to us.
We wander the streets with the rest of the crowd,
gazing at the many many booths of goods that are offered for gazing and for sale, and then
--when we have had enough wandering and gazing--
we plop ourselves down in somebody's yard
to wait for the reason we go to Boalsburg in the first place:
Pie.

Yes, the Pie-Winning-Contest is our favorite part, because it provides us with
a) pie
and b) the anticipation of pie.

Here's how it works:

Pie-making people make some pie--every possible variety of pie--and bring it to the pie tent to be judged.
Two little old ladies sit at a little table in the shade of some old trees, and sample each and every one, while we watch and greedily await their decision.

Not because we care who wins, but because--once it's made--we are free to swarm the tent with all the rest of the pie-lovers and buy the remainders for a dollar a slice.

(In the enthusiasm of Heather: "A dollar a slice!!!!")

It's a long and painful wait, which is why we divert ourselves with
dramatic picture taking,


peaceful and lazy rumination,

deep discussion,

and
tickle fights.


(Yes, I have bruises.)

But then, suddenly, 

the wait is over and we have our moments of oohs and ahs as we devour (yes, devour) our own pie slice of choice, along with each other's.

Once the pie has happened, we put a move on....

because the only thing more fun 
than waiting for and eating our pie
is being poolside (and being inside that pool as well).


Then, when we've had our fill of the sun, the water, and the joy of being there all together,

we venture home.

We eat picnic leftovers from the day before.

We laze about on couches, with books.

We say, with sun-weary enthusiasm:
Such a good day!

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

What is My Truth?

{My truth is that my life is so beautifully full, 
I don't have time to update my blog! 
But, here, finally:
A bit of what I've been doing, a bit of what I've been thinking, and how it all relates.}

Have you ever thought about the reality of the counterfeit truth?  An insidious little creature, counterfeit truth sits inside of us, speaking to us.  Directing us.  Plunged deep below the surface, secrets we've hidden and realities we've denied sit in a galley of tangled vines, twisted and turned in the shape of lies.  With our permission, steeped in unawareness, those lies appear as truth.  And they shape the way we live. 

In other words, the things we call truth--whether they are actually true or just plain false--are the things that drive us, and are often the things that bind us up while they're at it.

A strange picture, isn't it, to be driven yet bound?

And yet, within the past 6 months or so, God has been very (very) gently putting His finger on the fragments inside of me, saying "Baby? Driven but bound is what you are.  Would you like to be free?"

And finally (oh so finally!) I have said: Yes.

And so, this is how I have found myself on a mission of God, eradicating those counterfeit truths in my own self.  I have watched God open door after door of what I did not even know was there inside of me, saying "Um, you might want to look over here...I'd like to take care of this for you, but I need you to give me your permission, I need you to be fierce in claiming your rights as my child.  I'd like you to step out in faith and see what happens when I fight for you."

In other words,
I have experienced the power of the Holy Spirit to reveal what has been hidden, I have seen the power of Christ to heal and restore, and I have been flooded with the Love of a Father who desires more than to simply accept me as I am--He desires to make me whole.

When you stand in love and power like that, you discover that you are able to speak with authority to those tangles of lies and say:

If you are a counterfeit truth, you are not welcome here.  


You have the vision to say "What is my truth?"  And then, you have the ability to say whether or not you accept it as it is.

Now, speaking the truth to yourself can sometimes be a little messy, and relying on the power of God to show you a new way of seeing can sometimes feel terrifying.  Those vines have roots, after all, and the pulling out of roots can be a dangerous and difficult thing.  That's why you need to have a support system of persons who know you, who will speak Truth into you when all you can see are those nasty lies twisted and tangled inside of you.


Take--for example--the person of Deb, who last week drove to meet me for a 4 hour breakfast at the Honey Creek Inn on her visit to the States from Macau, and who has unusual insight into the workings of that Truth.


And then, take for example Amy and Emily, key members of my Truth-telling-team.

This past week we took a little day trip that involved Cracker Barrel (a must), 
Gabe's Brothers shopping (an inexpensive frivolity),
and these pants.
(Truth telling on this particular day involved raised eyebrows and shakes of the head.  Never shop with people you can't trust.)


We took our time digging through clothes,

trying them on,


and making ourselves giggle.

The giggling is important, because counterfeit truths cannot thrive where giggling is allowed.

Nor can they survive when you throw a bit of chlorine into the mix of the Truth-teller that is Heather,
which would be why the opening of the pool for the summer was a most welcome event over the weekend.

Because here's the thing about truth:
Your truth is your truth, no questions asked.  Your truth, however, sometimes needs to be questioned in order for you to live wholly in Truth, and Truth is the reason that God came down to meet us where we are, and to take us to where we could never see on our own to go.

And what a privilege, 
to put your hand into the Hand of this God and say:

I trust you,
and I trust the persons you've given me to walk it out with.

What a privilege,
to be able to say that this gracious and gentle and powerful God is
--indeed--
My Truth.

Monday, May 23, 2011

Summer, here?

The sun is shining, the air smells thick with thundery rain, the flowers are blooming, the bees are buzzing....

My arms are open, Summer.  Come on over....

Sunday, May 15, 2011

Itty Bitty

It's funny, the things that come out of your mouth when you find yourself an Auntie Lauren holding a little package of an 
about-to-be-all-out-squalling itty-bitty niece.
Phrases like "such an itty-bitty"
--having never crossed your lips before--
are suddenly uttered with utmost sincerity and variance of pitch into the itty-bitty face of that little itty-bitty, 
whether she is suddenly squalling or a
just-as-quickly-dead-asleep bundle of sweetness.
It's funny, how everyone within the vicinity 
of such an itty-bitty can't help 
but touch her,
gaze at her,
rejoice in her.
It's funny how such an itty-bitty can bring her family together,
and fill them up with peace.
And--it's funny--how such an itty-bitty smush of a face can keep her Auntie Lauren sitting on a couch for a solid 2 hours,
just thinking:
Itty Bitty? It is good to meet you.