It’s the last week of January and our Christmas tree still stands. She loses an ornament here and there on her skirt that’s scattered with the needly greens. And I don’t plug her in first thing in the morning like I did in December. Just every so often in the afternoon, I’ll let her light, play some music, light a candle.
And that last Tuesday before school started this month we sat by her with our chips and salsa to enjoy her light while we played Old Maid, listened to chipmunk songs and silent night and bid farewell to Christmas break.
And whenever it’s time to say goodbye to something for a while, whether it’s the Christmas tree or something else, I most often tend to linger in the transition. Stepping on from yesterday is not something I’m quick to, in so many ways. I don’t think I ever will be quick in that. Yet it always becomes apparent at some point that I can’t live in two seasons.
One year I left the tree up until April and a friend couldn’t help but point out to me that
it was spring. And I really do just love the spring. I especially love that my birthday lands right at the time when everything here in Texas starts turning green and new. But somehow, I hadn’t gotten around to making room for spring in my house yet.
This year, I’m about at the place where I’m so ready to have the cleared space back that I won’t be too sad to take the tree down. Because I’m starting to daydream of cleared space and the feels of February with fresh flowers set in pinks and reds to cheer us on to March.
Isn’t it easier to part with something for a while, when you’re also saying a new kind of hello? Even a sweet and simple one that might have room to grow.
Somehow I can feel like I’ve lived most of my life without paying much attention to the journey through the four seasons. Maybe more of what I mean is that until more recently, I hadn’t found any of my own little ways to acknowledge each of the seasons as they came along. The last couple years, it has started feeling like a lifeline though, for it can feel so grounding to pay attention to how the earth is slowly changing and find tiny ways to gradually participate with the change.
As if somehow, participating with the journey of the four seasons, can give us yearly walkthroughs of what it could mean to journey through the different kinds of changing life seasons that we are always finding our way through.
What is spoken in the turning from fall to winter, or in the turning from winter to spring, is not something that we can speak to each other with words. Yet it is something that has been established by the Word of God that moves the world.
The Word of God moves and every season has its time.
Christmas will come again even while we wait to see how she’ll be different from the last time we saw her. And the coming spring will be her same familiar self, even while her coming invites us to see the truth. There are places inside us that have changed since we felt the spring before. The invitation to newness will breathe on us in new places.
The four seasons turn slowly, continual.
They honor the pace of our souls that need time and space to adjust.
We'll continue to slip along into spring, to summer and on. What it most helps me feel is the gifts to our hearts that help us gently and slowly come to terms with the truth of change.
Always the seasons are inviting us to feel what it means to gradually find and grieve the truths of what it specifically is that is leaving us for the time, even as we use that same truth to gently make space for what is coming.
To make space for what is coming. And
what is coming?
It will always look different, but maybe at it's basis...
Around the corner is coming a new season to participate with, to find joy in, to do good in and to take pleasure in our labors.
And around the distance these seasons are moving us along to our truest home, the fulfillment of the seasons that our hearts are ever hoping for.
“He has made everything beautiful in its time. He has also set eternity in the hearts of men, yet they cannot fathom the work that God has done from beginning to end. I perceived that there is nothing better for them than to be joyful and to do good as long as they live; also that everyone should eat and drink and take pleasure in all his toil - this is God’s gift to man.” Ecclesiastes 3:11-13.
“These all died in faith, not having received the things promised, but having seen them and greeted them from afar, and having acknowledged that they were strangers and exiles on the earth. For people who speak thus make it clear that they are seeking a homeland. If they had been thinking of that land from which they had gone out, they would have had opportunity to return. But as it is they desire a better country, that is, a heavenly one. Therefore God is not ashamed to be called their God, for he has prepared for them a city.”
Hebrews 11:13-16.
A prayer:
As You are Lord of the seasons, be Lord of my heart.
Where my heart longs for a home it cannot find, grant my homesick heart the faith to greet it from afar.
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