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Archive for June, 2011

     Last year our youngest decided that he wanted to play baseball.  So in the early spring he and his dad went and signed up…committing our evenings and Saturdays to being at the ballpark.  Player evaluations were held and teams were selected and we received a call from a coach telling us that child number 5 was to be on his team.

     Our boy didn’t know anyone on his team because he went to a different school than his teammates…but that didn’t matter…the boys welcomed him with open arms and new friendships were made.  The team’s colors were orange and black and so my laundry began to be dotted with very dirty orange and black baseball socks and baseball pants and baseball practice shirts.

     Since child number 5 had never played baseball on a team before, new equipment had to be purchased…and lots of sunscreen and bug spray for the player and the family members who would occupy the stands.

     Practices began and our boy began to work on his baseball skills.  He worked hard.  He would have 2-3 evening practices during the week and practice for 3-4 hours on Saturdays.  THEN he would come home from practices and ask his mom or dad or brothers or sister if any of us would throw a ball with him or help him with his hitting…and we did.  On several Sunday afternoons our entire family would be out in the front yard with baseball gloves, throwing pop flies and grounders.

     And when mom or dad or brothers or sister didn’t have the time or energy or desire to practice with little brother, he practiced anyway with his pitchback or just throwing balls high in the air and catching them.  He was committed to this new sport…his whole heart was in it.  He worked and worked and worked throughout the spring…at practices and at home…and all of that hard work began to show results on the field.  By the end of the regular season, child number 5 was a much improved baseball player.  His coaches lobbied hard for him to be selected to our town’s all-star team and selected he was…all because of his hard work…all because his heart was totally in it.

     I am still proud of our son’s diligence and hard work and commitment and courage to do something he had never done before and give it everything he had.  It inspires me.

     Commitment like that, whole-hearted devotion like that is great.  It’s admirable, even if it’s only for a season.  But what about long-term whole-hearted devotion, isn’t that even more admirable and impressive? 

     The last couple of days, as I continue to read through the book of Joshua in the Bible, I’ve been reading about a man name Caleb.  Caleb was a contemporary of Joshua…I think they were probably friends.  The two of them were among the 12 spies that Moses sent to scout out the land that God had promised to Israel.  Caleb and Joshua came back from their reconnaissance mission encouraged by what they saw in the new land.  Sure there were enemies, but God had said that He would take care of those.  They were ready to gather the troops at Moses’ command and conquer the land.

     But the other 10 spies didn’t see things the same way.  They saw the giants in the land and their hearts melted with fear and they convinced the rest of the Israelite people that they should be afraid also.  Result:  they spent the next 40 years wandering in the desert under God’s discipline until the next generation was raised up to go in and conquer the land.  Only Joshua and Caleb would get to be a part of the Israelites that would eventually claim God’s promised victory.

     In chapter 14 of Joshua, Caleb comes to Joshua and reminds Joshua of God’s promised inheritance that was to go to him, because he had followed the LORD his God wholeheartedly. 

     Caleb’s heart had been in everything he did for God…the spying out of the land, the waiting 40 years to receive his promised inheritance, the fighting to take the promised land from enemies.  That’s a lifetime of whole-hearted devotion…that’s commitment…that’s incredible.

     Caleb was 85-years-old when he received the reward of God’s promise to him…WOW!  Now that’s impressive! 45+ years of whole-hearted devotion…his heart was definitely in it!

  At the end of my life, and I may not make it to 85, will there be anything that others can look at and say, “She was whole-heartedly devoted to that.”  Is my heart fully committed to loving God and loving others, to serving Him with an obedient heart?  That’s what really matters.  That’s what mattered to Caleb.

Is my heart in it?

 

 

My All-Star

 

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Laundry

I knew it would happen…eventually.  I have a husband and five children, who aren’t all children any more, but are right now living in this house and so that makes them fall into the category of “children” for blog writing purposes.  All that to say, I have a lot of laundry in my life.  As I was folding a load of whites while the washing machine and dryer were humming in the background, I thought that maybe I should write down the thoughts gently floating into my head as I try to figure out whether or not the man’s medium-sized t-shirt belongs to child number 1 or child number 4.  Yes, I resorted to sniffing the shirt and I think I figured it out.  (Child number 4 just told me that I got it wrong.  Shirts have been switched to proper owners.)

So here are some random thoughts about laundry.

Way back when there wasn’t near as much laundry to do…but I thought there was a lot because I had younger children and didn’t understand that younger children grow up to be teenagers who have work-outs and laundry increases exponentially…back when ignorance was bliss.

In those days, the laundry room in the house we lived in had a soft light green color of paint on the walls and a bright white trim…soothing colors for a room where I spent a lot of time.  I used to separate the laundry into piles and sing “Climb Every Mountain” as I tackled the mountains of clothes to be washed.  It was inspiring.

Recently…that means in the past few months…I was playing the game “Whoonu” with a few of my children.  This is a game where players choose what they think might be another player’s favorites among the item cards they are dealt.  I love this game.  Anyway, while playing a round of “Whoonu,” it was my turn to be the “Whoozit,” the player for whom the others players guess your favorite things.  When I looked at the cards that were chosen for me to rank, “Laundry” was one of the things chosen.  It made me giggle when I saw the card…it made me laugh out loud.  Once I had ranked my cards as to my favorites, I asked the child who had given me the “Laundry” card why he picked that as a possible favorite.

“I thought you must really like ‘Laundry’ because you do it all the time,” he responded.  He was incredibly sincere in his answer…he was serious.  He truly thought that I just hang out in our laundry room for large portions of my days because “Laundry” is like a hobby for me…something I really like and am trying to improve my skills at doing.

His sincerity warmed my heart…at that moment I could have eaten him up (something moms may say when they are totally moved by their children’s cuteness and sweetness and possible innocence…even when the children are now taller than the moms).

The mountains of dirty clothes have only gotten bigger in recent years…but really I don’t mind.  Like shoes in my living room floor (see earlier post), dirty clothes are a sign of life…and I like the signs of the lives of the family that I love.

 

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Scars

WARNING:  The following is about surgery scars and is not meant to be gross.

I have a three inch scar down the middle of my lower abdomen.  It’s surrounded by four smaller scars, all from surgery that I had a few months ago.  I noticed the larger scar this morning as I was finishing taking a shower.  I hopped into and out of the shower quickly as I got ready for the day.  I remembered how that wasn’t even possible just a short time ago because of the incision that caused the scar.  There was no shower hopping.  There were lots of bandages and tape and stuff and absolutely NO hopping…none, notta, zilch on the hopping.

A few weeks after the surgery, I was wondering if the incision would ever heal.  On the whole my recovery has gone well, but it took that long incision a long time to close.  The healing process was taking place the whole time, but it wasn’t always visible to me.  What was visible to me made me very squeamish.  In fact, for a time I just didn’t look at my middle if I could avoid it…it’s how I survived those few weeks.

But today, there is a nice scar.  (You can call a scar “nice” when it is no longer an open wound.)  The scar is still tender to the touch.  There is still pain sometimes, but nothing like there was.

Scars are reminders of injuries and hurts.  Some hurts and injuries are planned, like my surgery.  The injury was necessary so that a greater healing could occur.  But some injuries aren’t planned…they just happen…and they might leave deep scars.

Around the time of my surgery I had been reading a lot in the gospel of Luke about Jesus choosing to die on the cross.  After Jesus died and rose again, the scars from his wounds were visible.  There are a couple of places in the Bible where he told his followers to look at his hands and his feet…to touch his side.  The people who saw the resurrected Jesus saw his scars…the scars of his planned injury…the fatal injury that would bring much needed healing to the rest of us.

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Invitations

It seems to be a season of invitations at our house, especially for our firstborn.  This spring has been the first wave of classmates and friends of his getting married.  The invitations have been beautiful, each one different, reflecting the style of the brides and grooms who sent them.  It’s nice to get invitations.

We attended the wedding for one of those invitations this past Saturday…it was beautiful.  The bride was beautiful, the attendants were beautiful, the mothers of the two getting married were beautiful, the grandmothers were beautiful, the decorations were beautiful, the cake was beautiful, and on and on.

As we participated in this wedding celebration, I realized something, we were participating in the joy of the bride and groom and their families.  It was a joyous occasion.  Witnessing the young couple pledging their lives to one another brought me joy.  Remembering my own wedding day and thinking about my husband who had his arm wrapped around me throughout the ceremony brought me joy.  The joy of the event and all of the feelings it conjured up has remained the past couple of days.

I was thankful for the invitation because of the joy I got to share in.

What a perfect picture of the invitations that God sends my way…your way…our ways.  God invites us to share many occasions with Him.  He invites us to share in His salvation.  He invites us to come to Him often in prayer.  He invites us to trust His provision.  He invites us to join Him as He carries out His kingdom plans in the world around us.  He invites us into times of suffering sometimes…not to hurt us, but so that we may have an even deeper understanding of intimacy with Him.

And with all of these invitations come opportunities to enter into His joy.  God isn’t a killjoy, He is just the opposite…He is the definition of joy.  He created it…He gives it and He sustains it.  His joy that He wants to share with us is so worth saying “yes” to His invitations.

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Twenty-two

Twenty-two.  It’s my youngest son’s favorite number.  I’m not sure why it’s his favorite number, but it is.  It was the number on his baseball jersey last season, which was nice…because it was his favorite number.

Twenty-two.  It’s now one of my favorite numbers also…at least for the next 365 days.  Today, my oldest child turns twenty-two.

Lots of memories can pile up in twenty-two years.  Lots of smiles…lots of laughter…lots of firsts…lots of adventures…lots of time spent getting to know someone.

I remember twenty-two years ago…the days before he arrived…waiting to meet him…our firstborn.  I looked so forward to seeing him face to face…instead of just feeling the hard kicks within my abdomen.  I remember wondering what he would look like…what color would his eyes be…what his personality would be like.  Twenty-two years later…I know…and I couldn’t have come up with a better idea for a firstborn son than the one God gave to us.

“Gift from God,” that’s the meaning of his first name, Matthew.  We knew, even before meeting him, that he was a gift to us.  He was appropriately named…he is a wonderful gift to his parents and his family.

He didn’t really want to be born on that Monday…two weeks after his due date, when my doctor said it was time for this baby to come on out into the world.  He is to this day; a procrastinator and I guess it began way back at his birth.  And once he did arrive, he liked to keep his mom and dad up late at night…he is still a night owl.  I guess some habits begin early in life.

He was a happy little fellow and that’s still true today.  He was the leader of his siblings…teaching his sister the alphabet and numbers and deciding what make-believe places they would travel to for the day.

We read so many books together, watched so many movies and listened to so many hours of radio shows…we still quote lines from them all.

Sometime today I’ll probably pull out picture albums and relive some of those memories of our little boy growing up.  I’ll show the photos to his brothers and sister and talk about how much our youngest looks like our oldest.

We spent so much time together…him and me, and I’m so thankful for all of those minutes that before you know it has added up to twenty-two years.  And the boy is now a man…a wonderful man, whom I’m proud to say, is my son.

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I went for a walk with my daughter yesterday…well, kind of.  It was a walk of sorts.  I had mentioned to my children who were gathered in our kitchen (their favorite place to hang out) that I was going for a walk.  But it was damp and wet out, from thundershowers, so I decided that getting on the elliptical was a better way to go.  My daughter piped up, “Oh, I want to go with you on a walk.”  I explained to her that I was actually going to spend some time on the elliptical, but she followed me to my bedroom anyway, and plopped down in the rocking chair that sits in a corner as I turned on a cd that she had recently made for me.

I climbed aboard the piece of workout equipment as the latest from “Owl City,” began playing on the stereo.  As I began walking, Amy informed me that when I was finished I could sit in the chair while she took her turn on the elliptical.  That seemed fine with me.

As different “Owl City” tunes began to play, Amy would say things like, “Oh, I like this one.”  Or “Listen to these lyrics.” Or “This one is funny.”  I’ve had that cd for about a week, but hadn’t listened all the way through it, and it was fun hearing my daughter share why she liked this and that song.

I finished my time walking and Amy hopped up and stepped onto the elliptical.  I didn’t sit in the chair, but lay down on my bed instead.  Unable to reset the “shuffle” control on the cd player, Amy had gotten her ipod and plugged it in, so we had even more “Owl City” music to listen to.

Throughout our “walk” we talked back and forth just like we would on a real walk.  And I eventually dozed off as I lay on the bed and she walked on the elliptical…not what would happen on a real walk…but I awoke after a few minutes and she was still going, so we talked some more.

I really enjoyed that time together…walking.  In ways it was a snapshot of our time together over the last year.  Because of problems associated with her epilepsy, Amy didn’t go away for college after graduating from high school.  She did her first year at a local community college close to home…12 minutes from our house…and that was far enough for her to go in her parents’ opinion.

I remember her first day of class last August…a Monday after seizure symptoms on the previous Sunday.  I had taken her and dropped her off for her classes and went back home and spent the morning cleaning anything and everything as I prayed that she wouldn’t have any epilepsy-related problems.  She made it through that first day and we began to make the adjustments to her being in a bigger place, where her health issues weren’t known as they had been at her high school.

She learned how to talk to her teachers and counselors about her health and I learned how to encourage her to do so.  As I write this, she is in her third term and is able to communicate her hard health situation with more ease and even humor.

This past year…this extra year we have had with Amy at home…has been a gift to her daddy and me.  She spent Saturdays working with her dad.  We had weekday afternoons together and many special Friday lunches of fruit smoothies and waffle fries, our “Yay, it’s Friday” treat.  She was able to rest when she needed to and we learned to offer support and begin learning to let go.

So when this August rolls around and it’s coming quickly, her dad and I will travel with her to the school she has chosen and help her unpack her belongings.  I can’t imagine what saying good-bye will feel like.  I’m not going to think about that now.  I’m just going to jump at any chance I have in the next month to go on walks with my daughter.

 

 

 

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All my enemies

It seems my family watches more movies in the summer and this summer is proving to be no different.  The other night, my youngest had a friend spend the night and we watched Disney’s “Prince of Persia.”  It’s an action/adventure story about a royal family made up of a father and three sons, and of course, an evil uncle.  Two of the sons are the biological sons of the king and the third is an adopted son, a boy taken off the streets of Persia because he had a look of royalty.

The Persians are valiant warriors, who vanquish their foes with great courage and skill.  And there seem to be a lot of enemies in this movie to vanquish.  An attack is led by the brother princes on the neighboring holy city ofAlamutbecause its inhabitants are supposedly selling weapons to the enemies of thePersian Empire; a ruse conjured up by the deceitful uncle.

As the story progresses, more and more enemies seem to appear, not all are enemies on the outside, but the biggest enemy is found within the royal family itself. Dastan, the adopted prince, is falsely accused of killing the King and trying to take the kingdom.  There is much killing, much intrigue, much deception.  Thankfully, the truth wins out in the end and Dastan is restored to his brothers and all is set right.

I had been thinking about enemies before I watched this movie because of something I read in Joshua chapter 10.  Just as there are dangerous enemies in the make-believe movie about the Prince of Persia, there are definite and deadly enemies inJoshua 10.  Five kings join together to fight against Joshua and the people of God, and five kings and their people will suffer defeat at the hand of Joshua and the people of God.  It wasn’t just defeat like, “Hey, we won and we beat you.  We’re the winners and you’re the losers!”

This defeat was the kind where all the kings and all of their subjects, every one in their kingdoms were put to death.  And when the five kings themselves were killed…when the Israelite commanders were told to put their feet on the necks of these kings so that Joshua could present them with a vivid picture from the LORD about what God would do to all of their enemies, it was not a PG-13 scene.  It was violent…it was complete…and it was final.

Joshua told those commanders, “Do not be afraid; do not be discouraged.  Be strong and courageous.  This is what the LORD will do to all the enemies you are going to fight.” (vs. 25)

Whoa…that’s heavy stuff.  I read this chapter cringing.  It seems so harsh.  But, enemies are scary.  The kind of enemies talked about here are not the kind that go away when the movie ends…they are for real…they want to do you harm…they want to hurt you…they want to kill you…they want to destroy you and those you love.

Most of us don’t come into contact with enemies like that, the kind that want to kill us.  How in the world does Scripture like this apply to my life?  That’s what I’ve been thinking about.  And as I have thought about that, other Scripture verses have come to mind.

As a believer in Jesus Christ, the Bible says that I do have an enemy, there is someone who wants to do me harm.  The Apostle Peter names this enemy in his book, “Your enemy the devil prowls around like a roaring lion looking for someone to devour.” (1 Peter 5:8)  And Jesus said that this enemy only wants to steal, kill and destroy.  (John 10)

I don’t like having an enemy like that; that’s bad news.  Thankfully, though, God has some good news regarding His children and our enemy.  Just as God took care of those enemies of His children, the Israelites, He promises to take care of His children today.

I don’t like being in a war, but I believe that there is a war raging between God and His kingdom and Satan.  I don’t feel like a warrior, but Scripture says that is part of my calling as a child of God.

I’m even given instructions about fighting in the book of 2 Corinthians, “For though we live in the world, we do not wage war as the world does.  The weapons we fight with are not the weapons of the world.  On the contrary, they have divine power to demolish strongholds.  We demolish arguments and every pretension that sets itself up against the knowledge of God, and we take captive every thought to make it obedient to Christ.” (2 Cor. 10:3-5)

So this morning, sitting at my computer typing, in my pajamas and robe, I realize that I need to prepare my mind for the battle that’s raging…and put my trust in the God ofJoshua 10, who will take care of all my enemies.

 

 

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Duct tape

I just finished watering the flowers and fruit trees on our property.  The June temperatures in southern Alabama have been unreal…or maybe I should say, much too real.  It is so hot!  And it is so dry!

As I was watering our fruit trees, which are pretty young fruit trees, I noticed unusually dark brown leaves on one of our pear trees.  At first, the sight alarmed me, but then I remembered what had transpired a couple of days ago when child number 5 and I had been looking at the trees.  (The pear trees are just a couple of years old and this is the first year that any of them have produced any fruit and there are several pears on each of our four trees.)

We noticed that one of the trees was so laden with pears that the weight of the fruit had caused a branch to break.  It was hanging by a very thin branch thread to the trunk of the tree.  I raised my hand to touch the drooping branch and it broke off in my hand.  My son carried the broken branch into the house with all of its underdeveloped pears.  We didn’t really know what to do with it.  Throwing it away was the right thing to do, but that was difficult because of all of the baby fruit that was on it…so as I said, we took it into the house.

Child number 1 saw us coming into the kitchen with the broken branch laden with pears.  “What’s that?”  He asked, and we explained to him the sad saga of the skinny branch on the young fruit tree that was unable to bear the fruit it had been blessed with.

“Duct tape,” was his response to my sad story.

“What did you say?” was my response to his response.

“I think we can duct tape the branch back to the tree,” he replied.

“Really?” was my spoken response, as my mind thought about his solution.

I had flashbacks to his childhood.  Child number 1 had always loved duct tape.  He had found many uses for duct tape in his growing up years…some good…some not so good.  He was convinced that duct tape could fix anything.  Evidently, he still held to this belief, and out the door he headed with a large roll of duct tape and child number 5 following along behind, still carrying the broken branch.

I remained in the house, hoping against hope that perhaps the duct tape just might work and a miracle would occur and the branch would become grafted back onto our tall, but skinny pear tree, and child number 1 could look at me with a grin and say, “See, I told you it would work.”

Fast forward to the day that I’m watering the fruit trees and looking aghast at the tree with the dark brown, dead leaves.  “Oh, it’s that tree,” I realize and walk over to get a closer look.

When I get to the tree, I find an expertly executed taping job connecting a dead branch to a skinny pear tree.  It was a good try, a marvelous attempt.  I applaud the effort…and now I have to figure out how to remove the heavily duct-taped dead branch from my skinny pear tree.

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Welcome home

I just waved good-bye to my three men:  Bryan Darling, child number 1, and child number 3.  They won’t be gone for long…they are just going on a bike ride.  It’s not a parting that’s a big deal.  I’m just feeling very thankful right now, having watched them drive off in my husband’s truck, with bikes in the back and plenty of water and ice in cooler  jugs.

Bryan Darling just got home last night, after being gone for 2 weeks serving his Army reserve duty.  He had a long day of travel…driving an hour from the Army base to the airport, where he discovered his first travel delay, which meant that his flight at the connecting airport would also be delayed.

That last flight, the one that was supposed to bring him to the airport that is about 10 minutes from our home, where I was going to be waiting at the gate with children numbers 1-5, was cancelled.  He tried getting on other flights to other close-by airports, but to no avail.  He tried to rent a car to drive the rest of the way home, but that didn’t work either.  He was stuck on stand-by, waiting to see if he might win the “you-get-a-seat-lottery” on a late night flight.

All of our little “welcome home” plans got scrubbed…and my heart shrunk at the knowledge that he would not be arriving in our town at 5:39 central standard time.  I had been waiting for 5:39 p.m. central standard time on Friday, June 17, 2011, for two weeks now.  I think that maybe I was waiting for this specific time for a week before he left.

And I came face to face with what I know is true, but can usually mask as I go about daily routines and taking care of kids and house and phone lines and blogs and stuff…I miss him terribly when he is away.  My heart aches when he is in one place and I am in another.  I find myself having to get outside in the evenings to let God’s creation quiet and still and refresh my thoughts when it’s around the time that he is supposed to be coming home.  I really, really, really love him…and I can’t really separate who I am apart from him.

So this morning, I’m thankful that he won the “you-get-a-seat-lottery” and he walked through the airport gate at a later time last night.  I’m thankful that he told me “good-night” in person and not over the phone.  And I’m thankful for the sheepish little-boy look that I got this morning as he was watching his sons filling their water bottles and hefting their bikes into the back of the truck.  He looked at me as he remarked to them, “I would go with you, if your mom didn’t mind.”

“You should go,” I replied.

A smile spread across his face as he went in search of old athletic shoes to wear, since his are in a bag somewhere in the deep recesses of the Atlanta airport.

“Welcome home,” I thought as I watched my men drive away, on this lovely Saturday morning, where I’m pretty certain that the sun is shining a little brighter and the sky is definitely a more brilliant shade of blue.

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Phones…old school

We had a thunderstorm last Sunday, which I am very grateful for because our area is under drought conditions…it may be under “extreme drought” conditions officially…I don’t remember exactly what the 6 o’clock news said.  Anyway, we got some much needed rain, and along with the rain came thunder and lightening.  All of this…the rain, the thunder, the lightening came while I was away from home for a short time.  When I arrived home Sunday afternoon, child number 5 asked me, “Did you hear that lightening?”  (Lightening is not the part that can be heard, but you know what he meant.)  “It was REALLY LOUD,” he continued.

And right after the REALLY LOUD lightening, we began having a REALLY LOUD buzzing sound on our phone line.  It was REALLY LOUD and annoying and kept me from hearing any conversations for a few days.  Phone conversations with the REALLY LOUD buzzing sound went something like this:

“Hello.  Hey, ________.  Sorry about my phone and this REALLY LOUD buzzing noise.  I can’t really hear you because of this REALLY LOUD buzzing noise, so can I call you back on my cell?”

End of conversation.

So yesterday, I spent time talking to a really nice person from our phone company trying to diagnose our phone problem.  As we spoke on the phone, she would have me unplug phones and modems and plug them back in to see if we could discover if the REALLY LOUD buzzing noise was an in-the-house phone equipment problem or an outside-of-the-house phone problem.  After the indoor plug testing, she told me that I would need to go outside and check the phone line box.

“Have you ever checked your line from the phone box?” she inquired.

“No,” I replied.

She instructed me to get a flat-head screwdriver and a corded phone for this task.  The screwdriver was to open the box.  The corded phone was to plug into the box to check the clarity of the line.

“You will need a phone with a cord, not a cordless phone,” the nice phone lady instructed.  “Do you have a phone with a cord?”

“Yes,” I answered, and wondered how people without phones with cords test their phone boxes.  I was then very thankful for our green wall phone that we have had for eons.  We rarely use this phone, but now it was just what we needed.

Child number 3 fetched a flat-head screwdriver and child number 4 retrieved the green wall phone with a cord.  The three of us tromped around the back of our house to the gray phone box.  I felt like a phone-company-worker-man…make that phone-company-worker-woman.

Child number 3 opened the box door with the handy dandy flat-head screwdriver and then I tried to plug in the phone…except there was no visible place to plug in the little phone pluggy thingy…I ceased feeling like a phone-company-worker-woman and just felt kinda stupid.

Child number 3 discovered that you can press down on this little place in the box and a cover swings away from a plug-in place.  There are actually two little gray doors that can swing open to the great plug-in phone box territory.

So I plugged in the plug connected to the green corded wall phone and found the connection that provided a dial tone.  I dialed the 800 number that the nice phone lady had given me…feeling a little like a phone-company-worker-woman again…and after a couple of conversations another nice phone person told me that a repair man would be stopping by within the next 24 hours.  He did and found the source of the problem…Yay!…the promise of no more REALLY LOUD buzzing noise was becoming a reality.

So after the nice phone repair man drove off in his big white phone company truck, I was doing some stuff in the house, and when I came in our kitchen/breakfast nook area, I found child number 4 jumping rope with a green jump rope.  I wondered to myself, “Where did we get that green jump rope?” and then realized that child number 4 was jumping rope with the green corded wall phone…holding the receiver in one hand and the wall unit in the other, with the long green cord bouncing up and down in between.  I yelled his name in humorous astonishment and he laughed and said that the phone cord was a great jump rope.  I removed the phone pieces from his hands, the cord in between following right along and placed the phone on the counter.

I left the room and re-entered a few minutes later to find child number 4 holding the wall unit part of the phone and child number 2 holding the receiver end, with the cord stretched way out in between them.  They were pretending to carry on a phone conversation…again humorous astonishment on my part and smiles on theirs.

I left the room again, to get my camera.  They both dropped the phone pieces away from their ears and put the phone back on the counter, as they ran away screaming something about not wanting their pictures on my blog.

They came back though and I did get a couple of pictures.

Child number 4 and child number 2 were thoroughly entertained by this “old” phone.  “Vintage” was a word I heard used.  Child number 2 said that she might even try having conversations on the green corded wall phone because it might be fun.  I no longer felt like a phone-company-worker-woman…I just felt old.

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