31 October 2012
Happy Reformation Day
So have yourself a happy Reformation Day, and do something to draw nearer to your Savior.
Labels:
Daily Life,
Hymns,
Making Music
23 October 2012
We Took a Trip
On our trip, we harvested our own garden. Have you ever heard of taking a long trip to harvest your own garden? I hadn't either. But I was oh-so-thankful it was there to welcome me, with all its unexpected, giant herbs.
On our trip, we walked with friends. It was Sabbath, after we had worshiped with friends. It was glorious, it was soul-refreshing.
On our trip, we soaked in the rays of sun, leaning against a wall, petting a cat and a dog (one on either side). We prayed with friends, we talked with friends, we ate with friends, we read morning worship with friends. Sometimes these friend-visits lasted late into the night, everyone remembering how far the distance between us, and longing for that even-farther trip to heaven, where we'll never part again.
Labels:
Friendship,
Gardening
17 October 2012
What I've Been Up To
Hiking. With my husband on Sabbaths.
Hiking. With my new friend on Tuesdays and Thursdays.
Canning. Attempting to finish the apple juice and
start the apple sauce after I get back from hiking.
start the apple sauce after I get back from hiking.
Enjoying the tree next door. It's a flaming torch I can see
from the bottom of our hill, from town, from the peak I hike to.
Enjoying the scenery and socializing at our school's recent barn party.
And while these bikes still hang from their barn perch,
I have released a bird from the basement.
I'm still not sure how it got in the basement in the first place,
but he and I were equally happy when he flew
out the door into the glorious fall sunshine.
Labels:
Nature
11 September 2012
Hello from Virginia
Hi friends!
I know it has been a long time since I've written. I'm spending my days teaching piano lessons, cooking, unpacking, and exploring in my new home state of Virginia. It's wonderful. But I'm not technologically set up at my home yet, and my moments at my husband's office computer are limited.
His select high school choir sang in church last Sabbath. The Lord blessed, and used their voiced to draw people into the worship service.
We received our diplomas in the mail yesterday. I was going to share a picture, but like I said, technology isn't a huge part of our home life yet. Those two pieces of paper sure represent a lot of prayer, hard work, study, and all the lovely graduate school experiences that came along with them!
So. About teaching piano lessons. I love it. I need a lot of help from the Master Teacher every day, but I have great students, each with their own talents and struggles and personalities. I love the process of befriending them and helping them realize the dreams and joys of learning an instrument.
I bought peaches to freeze the first day we were in town here. It was the last day they were selling, so I didn't take my chances to find another orchard after getting settled in the house. I froze them in the school's guest apartment and was grateful that there was a freezer in its kitchen (which I didn't know the moment I wrote the check for those fifty pounds of tasty beauty).
I can't wait to be visited by lots of relatives. Our new house has plenty of space for all of them. And the big garden space in the back will have so many wonderful things growing in it by this time next year. I can't wait--except I don't want the time to pass too quickly now, because I like what I'm doing.
May God's sweetest graces fill your hearts and lives.
Love you all muchly,
Heidi
P.S. More soon, Lord willing.
I know it has been a long time since I've written. I'm spending my days teaching piano lessons, cooking, unpacking, and exploring in my new home state of Virginia. It's wonderful. But I'm not technologically set up at my home yet, and my moments at my husband's office computer are limited.
His select high school choir sang in church last Sabbath. The Lord blessed, and used their voiced to draw people into the worship service.
We received our diplomas in the mail yesterday. I was going to share a picture, but like I said, technology isn't a huge part of our home life yet. Those two pieces of paper sure represent a lot of prayer, hard work, study, and all the lovely graduate school experiences that came along with them!
So. About teaching piano lessons. I love it. I need a lot of help from the Master Teacher every day, but I have great students, each with their own talents and struggles and personalities. I love the process of befriending them and helping them realize the dreams and joys of learning an instrument.
I bought peaches to freeze the first day we were in town here. It was the last day they were selling, so I didn't take my chances to find another orchard after getting settled in the house. I froze them in the school's guest apartment and was grateful that there was a freezer in its kitchen (which I didn't know the moment I wrote the check for those fifty pounds of tasty beauty).
I can't wait to be visited by lots of relatives. Our new house has plenty of space for all of them. And the big garden space in the back will have so many wonderful things growing in it by this time next year. I can't wait--except I don't want the time to pass too quickly now, because I like what I'm doing.
May God's sweetest graces fill your hearts and lives.
Love you all muchly,
Heidi
P.S. More soon, Lord willing.
Labels:
Daily Life
16 July 2012
Farewell
It welcomed us to Michigan almost two years ago, brake-less and fearless. It has entertained children and frightened mothers ever since. But we'll be saying goodbye to it and all its lovely people soon, Lord willing. And we'll miss them, the bike without brakes included.
Labels:
Daily Life
09 July 2012
Sometimes the Sun Comes Out Sooner than You Think
Sometimes after we get caught by storms, dropped off in the parking lot, changed into dry clothes, the sun comes out. Right then. And really, I'm not kidding. It's beautiful, warm, hot, enticing. But instead of going back out to the water, we go to the mansion next door. And first notice God's little house, just across the way from the mansion built for groups of people to occupy at one time.
We enjoy the water made beautiful by blue dye, and reflect that we like to drink only the clear water of life. We can't wait to see that pure river of water of life proceeding out of the throne of God and of the Lamb.
We read the sign, and find that the mansion really was more like a glorified dorm for religious adults, and then later a prison. Or was that the other building down the hill? Either way, it didn't seem quite so dreamy after that. Like some of those things we think are really amazingly wonderful that turn out to be amazingly not-so-wonderful.
Still, it was beautiful, and we were glad they planted flowers to grow next to the pond.
And made a cute little gate that even when it was shut made us want to enter in. And I wonder, since I like this little gate so much, how I will like the big, grand gates made of one pearl each instead of humble wrought iron. Can you even imagine them? Don't you want to see them?
Wouldn't it be worth traveling a straight and narrow path, rather than this curvy, adorable one, just to see those pearly gates?
Here on this earth, even mansions of luxury have places of humble use. Places that look pleasant on the outside, with their cheerful red paint, but that probably really stink on the inside. I hope my heart isn't like that. But if it is, my prayer is "Fix me, Jesus."
When you visit mansions, sometimes there's a moment that tells you how classy your mother really is, and how skilled is her eye for beauty. This time, that was when I saw their potted flowers, planted just like my mother likes to plant hers. With the spikey things in the middle.
If I lived in a mansion, I might just choose a cozy little corner to call my own, like this nook at the top, overlooking the grounds. And then I would just hope the rest of the mansion was filled with people I love.
I'm glad they made the windows big. Big enough to see outside, and to let in the light. I pray my heart is also big and open enough to let in the light from the Word of God, which is the Lamp for my feet, and the Light to my path.
Something tells me these turkeys were just as happy living out in the grassy field as they would have been living in the mansion. I hope I'm content where I'm placed, too, strengthened by Christ.
Labels:
Friendship,
Nature
08 July 2012
Grandpa
This morning, my sister-in-law sent me a video, one with a bit about the family history, the pioneer days in Alaska. It features Grandpa, and you'll see the farm, the butte, the mountains where the little white dots (goats and sheep) live. It'll take you about eight minutes, and it starts about two minutes into the video. I hope you enjoy it as much as we did!
Labels:
Marriage and Family
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