Monday, October 29, 2007

Suburban Blues

If you had a dear friend who also happened to be a professional therapist then you would also be informed that it is normal to have a little, shall we call it transitional depression when you move. I mean, honestly, everything with the move is fine and all, but it's just different and it takes getting used to.

I think the biggest change is the quiet neighbors. Everyone just keeps to themselves. There are houses for sale across the way and I am hoping and praying and praying and hoping that some families with kids move in. Really loud kids who keep knocking at our door, bugging us wild all day and night. I miss that. When I realized that we were not going to receive cookies to welcome us to the neighborhood, I brought some hello truffles to the families next door. Not sure how impressed they were, but what the hey, I couldn't stand it. Yesterday the kids and I followed another "for sale" sign down the street, with the hopes it would lead us to another potential new family. We saw a mother and son raking leaves in the front yard. We consumed them with over-eagerness. Hi! We're the Speirs! Do your kids like pizza? What school do y'all go to? You're from Nigeria? We love everyone from Africa, each and every one. Can we be friends? Want to come over for coffee? Do you like soccer? We have a big yard, want to come over for soccer? Actually, they were very nice and accepted our enthusiasm with much grace.

Pathetic.

But that is the suburbs, I suppose. I know that acquaintances and friendships can form, they just take longer. And there is something inside me that just can't understand all these plots of yards divided by dog fences that each have their very own riding lawn mower. I mean, can't we simply share? It just seems silly. We are taking the Lonn approach -- letting the grass grow as long as the neighbor's can stand it. (Well, that's not really the Lonn approach, but he came up with that for a great line once.) Victory for today: we figured out the local sanitation procedures.

Anyway, I wanted to post this picture of one of our garages that has potential of transforming into my pottery-barn-garden-center-art-cottage.

For now I am thinking that the best remedy for the transitional depression is to adapt, starting with alarm clocks for all. Mama panda got the deluxe one with nature sounds. Because we must get out of bed in pitch black morning and I started this crazy thing of cooking hot breakfasts for the kids before school. Am working on putting other lights around the house on timers because I can barely make it to the a.m. kitchen for the blackness.

If you had a dear colleague who taught middle school for 15 years then you would believe her when she tells you that this picture is normal. You would breath a sigh of relief when stuff like this makes her laugh. You would think how pretty it is that your son colored his creation perfectly inside the lines. Now you see why I call Aidan my cute little Donald Rumsfeld? By the way, as of today I've been informed that I cannot kiss or hug him in public. We agreed on high-fives.

As always, I am wondering why I am blogging when I am so tired and it's time to turn on my ocean sounds and go to sleep.

Thanks so much, friends, for logging in. You're the best. You really are. And I so much appreciate your thoughts and prayers.

With love, T

Saturday, October 27, 2007

When in Brooklyn

If you could jump into this picture, walk out onto the street, and look in the same direction -- you would see New York Harbor and practically the Statue of Liberty. This is in front of the Speirs-Mansour house where Bob et. al. grew up. And where now a cute pair of twin nieces grow.

As I said before, Brooklyn is like never leaving because you can so easily fall into your old patterns. I couldn't believe how many people I knew just walking along the street. "Hi! How are you!" Kiss, kiss, along the side of cheeks.

One nice change though is that Amanda came along with me on a really long walk. 88 blocks. In the past she would ride cozily in her stroller and sleep most of the way. By the end of the outting she was longing for those days. I thought about the blessing of a little baby who grew up willing to walk with her mother for hours, arm in arm, hand in hand.

I did not cry at the ordination even though it was the most perfect event you could imagine. I took many pictures but then realized that not everyone in the world wants their face posted on my blog, and I did not think to have people sign release forms, so anyway, I'm playing it safe and will not post the people tour. Trust me, it was a glorious collection of friends and family.

I *did* cry when we went out to Gino's the next day. A former Italian pizzeria turned into Italian restaurant. The Speirs have been eating there for two decades. It was another thing that does not change. I wait in line while Bob finds a parking spot. We see the same people, order the same food. Bow ties in vodka sauce. Chicken parmesan. But it's all better because the kids are older and this time we have dear friends from Minnesota with us, Harry and Martha Mueller. We looked for the unhappy couple (a reference from the care page, later I'll bring it back). It was like I blinked my eye, 15 years had passed, and now Bob is ordained, etc, etc. So I cried over my pasta.

Anyway, I wanted to show you four of the reasons why we love Iowa. The call committee chair, the church council president, toi, moi, the senior pastor, and a youth group representative. Friends, can you believe that this delegation from St. John's in Des Moines joined us for the ordination!! Along with the Bishop. It was so fun to have them with us and to tour them around Sunset Park. It was just too short. And now you get an idea of what future parties at the Speirs house in Des Moines might look like.

My ordination formal came to me the previous day, direct delivery from Egypt with thanks to my in-laws, Carol and Ragaey. I am more and more amazed at the perfectness of things that come our way. Which relieves me when I have serious second doubts about stuff like, did we buy the right house? Did we enroll our kids in the right schools? All the huge decisions you make with such little time and information. You just have to believe that you were led to places for a reason, right?

It's a Saturday morning and time to make cinnamon streusel muffins for the kids. Bob is at a confirmation breakfast because tomorrow is Reformation Sunday and confirmation. I will find a good picture of Joseph Feinnes, the handsome Irish actor who played Martin Luther in the feature film. While Martin Luther did a great thing by liberating us from indulgences and all, let's face it he's not much to look at. Thank goodness for Hollywood and a new image. Coming soon.

With love, T

Thursday, October 25, 2007

Finding Furniture and Other Things

Hello and welcome to the charmer blog. I wanted to thank everyone for your thoughts and prayers for ordination, which was glorious. Brooklyn fits like a glove. When you're there, you wonder if you ever really left. I've also been meaning to tell y'all that I really have wanted to write personal responses to you when you comment here, but I can't figure out how to do it on this blog site. So anyway, please know that your words and attention are so much appreciated, and I'll keep trying.

Tonight, I wanted to give you views inside and outside my new office, that is our new church, that is Bob's new call. While in the parking lot, I found this shadow of the steeple on the next building. Made the kids wait in the car while I took a ton of pictures because I thought it was pretty.

That's my office window way up on the top floor, above the trees, in the downtown-Des Moines-scape picture. You can kind of see the air conditioner in the window. This is how you open up a deployed office when you work for a non-profit agency.

1. You find space that is cheap or free.
2. You figure out how much office furniture you can mooch from the determined place.
3. You estimate how much you can spend for the rest.
4. You buy the nicest, yet cheapest stuff you can find.
5. You worry that you're spending too many hours assembling said nice/cheap stuff.
6. You profusely thank the people who have helped you secure the space.
7. You attempt to explain to said people in 10 seconds exactly what you do.
8. You look for the balance of fitting in and keeping to yourself.
9. You write this up in a contract and send it to your vice president for finance and administration.

This is what the inside of my office looks like. The pieces are parts of a filing cabinet. A simple filing cabinet. It's driving me absolutely crazy!!!! I am not hard wired to assemble this filing cabinet. I couldn't find a screw driver in the whole 4 floors of the building so it had to wait until tomorrow. I'm giving all my secrets away to my colleagues in Baltimore who are wondering exactly what I do with my days.

Anyway, speaking of furniture, oh my gosh, you must see the kitchen table that came our way compliments of a very special family from the congregation. They didn't know our house. We didn't know their table. We needed a table. They needed to get rid of one. And it fits just splendidly. Perfectly. Spectacularly. See for yourself.

Why am I blogging about furniture when I need to make waffles in 8 hours, all dressed and ready to go?

Thanks so much for coming over.

With love, T

Tuesday, October 23, 2007

Food Tour of Ordination



(Turn your sound on, if you can. If you're still not getting sound, then click the tiny speaker icon on the lower left corner of the food slide show. The music makes the pictures taste better.)

Danish, Italian, Egyptian, Norwegian, Spanish Food.

Catered, home-made, donated, pot-luck Food.

Sweet, savory, buttery, deli Food.

Planned, surprised, hoped-for, delivered Food.

The aroma of waking up to Food being cooked in the Speirs-Mansour kitchen. The Egyptian chef who home-baked and deli ered trays and trays of savory, meaty, buttery Food.

The taste of a midnight female feeding frenzy of home-made frickadilla (how do you spell Danish meatballs?). The Danish chef who suprised the ordinand with a wrapped, edible ordination gift.

It was an international feast at Bob's ordination with thanks to Lorraine, the most amazing financial counselor, friend, sister-in-law, and reception coordinator ever.

A people tour of ordination coming soon.

With love, T

Friday, October 19, 2007

What is Eleven Years?

This what Aidan wore on the plane to NYC yesterday. He's an unabashed Yankees fan, in order to be opposite of his dad, and with thanks to his Uncle Richie. I'm going to NYC today. O my gosh, that poor futon in that poor apartment in the background. If there were ever an image of our lost liver year, it would be that frumpled futon. Whoever was able to sleep, would sleep coiled up and boiling there in the kitchen/living room/morgue.

We've come a long way, baby. :-)

Now that I am in full throws of ordination mode, if you could please allow me this one dispatch of pure, unadulterated, schmultsy, bleeding heart reflection on our road to ordination. In academic terms it's a college bachelors degree and then a seminary master's degree. Although master's of divinity is actually a 4 year program, which is the length of some doctorate programs. And for students with families it usually takes 5 years. For Bob it took eleven years, because he started part time while working full time and taking care of new babies. He began at the New York Theological School in Manhattan. Then he took classes at St. Mary's Ecumenical Center while we lived in Baltimore. And then you know the rest of the story at Luther Seminary in St. Paul, where he finished off. Including a year of experiential education internship with a liver that lost and found it's soul.

But if you count the other stuff -- teaching Sunday school, mopping a flooded fellowship hall, driving the church van, unplugging holy toilets, hosting visiting youth groups, helping with the boilers, organizing trips to the national youth gathering, making mass batches of spaghetti sauce, building trust with parents who don't speak English, opening the church yard for the neighbor kids, serving coffee, taking kids to camp, you know stuff like that -- well then you add a couple more decades to the mix.

But even here and now, today, the day before Bob's official ordination into word and sacrament ministry; I realize that it's all about the people and the experiences. So, the bishop will lay his hands on Bob and he'll get a piece of paper that says he's ordained, and I'll cry my eyes out -- but he was actually ordained a long time ago. By many of you, and the people all along the way who worked with him, taught him, loved him, trusted him, laughed and ate with him. All of you who healed him last year. By the people of St. John's Lutheran in Des Moines who called him to be their associate pastor.

It was the people at his home church at Trinity Lutheran in Brooklyn, who said a long time ago, "Robbie you should be a pastor." And if I could speak on Bob's behalf, I'll say that was pretty much unthinkable to him. He was a quiet guy who liked playing basketball in the park and just helping out a little here and there. He mostly preferred to keep to himself. But the people at Trinity were relentless with encouragement and support, before, during, and after seminary. Even to this day.

So anyway, there you go, a wife's exposition on her husband's ordination. And I'm getting all nostalgic for New York City and all the people and the walking, all that I miss very much. I miss the constant contact with neighbors and the extremely social nature of life there. I heard this interview on NPR yesterday about an Iraqi refugee family who settled into Bay Ridge (our other neighborhood in Brooklyn) and the Iraqi commented how friendly people are there. "I understand!" I exclaimed to the radio. And for a moment I wished I was that refugee and living in Bay Ridge. Oh I know, that's completely ridiculous. Just nostalgic, that's all.

Well, I better get my laundry done and pack so I can head out to the airport. Tomorrow is a big day. I'll try to take lots-o-pictures, if I'm not just in a complete puddle of tears. Be back in a couple of days.

With love, T

P.S. The answer to the question in the title: Amanda.

Wednesday, October 17, 2007

What Wondrous Love is This

Hello everyone and thanks so much for coming over to the Charmer blog. I wanted to take a few minutes to comment on the organ recital that we went to last Sunday. "Our" organist and "our" new church. (Even though Aidan was heard saying that he didn't really want to come back to church again that day; and he was welcomed to the wonderful world of PK's.)

Have you ever been to an organ recital? They projected her image on a big screen in the front of the church. We could see her hands flying all over the multiple keyboards and push/pull controls of the organ.

But it was the feet that really stunned all of us, even Amanda. Our organist's feet moved like Fred Astaire's. She was like a tap dancer, perfectly timed and agile, toes and heels dancing up and down the pedals. She even wore shoes that resembled beautiful yet sturdy tap shoes. That means all her hands and feet were moving in syncopation. I couldn't even count how many rhthyms she had going. She was like a painter producing a masterpiece in fast speed; the orchestral vision coming out huge pipes and filling up a whole sanctuary. You can't imagine that anyone could be hard wired or trained to do that.

"Some people are more than human," said the guy who sat in front of me. "How does she do that?"

I don't know. I had no idea that organists moved their feet in that way.

Anyway, so Bob let me pick out a hymn for his ordination service this Saturday in NYC. By the way, you are all invited. This is such a big deal, and yet we have barely had a chance to plan or send out proper invitations. Once again we rely on the grace of friends and family to pull it all off. I choose "What Wondrous Love is This." I think it's an American slave song. Here's an Irish version found on youtube, with some nice video of Greystones, Ireland.



With love, T

Tuesday, October 16, 2007

Desperately Seeking Something

Good news: I found my drivers license.

Other news: I am truly hating this school transition thingie. Is it really necessary for me to re-live my junior high nightmares? Just a couple weeks ago my daughter was in elementary school. But since I can't broadcast every little privacy of my children, that's about all I can say.

For those of you who pray, can you please pray for my kids, and pray for the magic parent potion to arrive.

Laters, gators. T