Wednesday, September 30, 2020

"Are You Ready?" - The Princess and Curdie



· Now, Curdie, are you ready?" she said
· Yes, ma'am, answered Curdie.
· You do not know what for.
· You do, ma'am. That is enough.
· You could not have given me a better answer,
   or done more to prepare yourself, Curdie.

[from The Princess and Curdie by George MacDonald]


To hear a short sample of my free audiobook recording 
of The Princess and Curdie, click here.
The entire audiobook can be downloaded for free here.

This book is a sequel to The Princess and the Goblin 
- a lifelong favorite of mine that grows better every time 
I read it. Make sure to read that book before Curdie! 
A British gentleman did a lovely job recording that 
free audiobook - available here.

Saturday, September 26, 2020

A Cup of Tea



"You can't get a cup of tea large enough
or a book long enough to suit me."

· C.S. Lewis
__________

This tea-cup which holds more than a pint of tea
is keeping me company as I try to work through 
some piled-up computer tasks. And when away 
from the computer, a book (27 hours of audio!) 
is keeping Elsa and me company during long
hours and days of extra chronic pain and fatigue.

We love autumn! But it doesn't do us well these
years. It is sad to have to seal up the house as 
harvest dusts and molds and wildfire smoke make 
our pain and inflammation skyrocket. 

Oh, for a breath of fresh, clean air again!
But, as C.S. Lewis also said:

"It must be good for my soul when there are things 
I really like for dinner and I mustn't have them!"

I can echo that regarding food allergies (which also
get worse as the body is fighting harder at this 
season), and I can pray it becomes true regarding 
all involved in this season of extra suffering.

Thursday, September 24, 2020

Come Through the Gloom of Clouded Skies



"Come through the gloom of clouded skies,
The slow dim rain and fog athwart;
Through east winds keen, and wrong and lies
Come and make strong my hopeless heart.

"Come through the sickness and the pain,
The sore unrest that tosses still;
The aching dark that hides the gain
Come and arouse my fainting will.



"Through all the fears that spirits bow
Of what hath been, or may befall,
Come down and talk with me, for Thou
Canst tell me all about them all.

"Come, Lord of life; here is Thy seat,
Heart of all joy, below, above!
One minute let me kiss Thy feet,
And name the names of those I love!"


Poem by George MacDonald as found in his biography by Michael Phillips 

Wednesday, September 16, 2020

September Harvest 2020



Along with bags of peppers in the freezer and many quarts of canned and frozen tomatoes, we spent two afternoons this month getting purple fingers from elderberries.





The frozen berries are now ready for another year 
of snacks for Elsa - the only one in the family who 
has developed a taste for this health-packed berry.


Then came the beets. To add variety to our beet preparation (usually steamed in cubes or baked whole), I started peeling, cubing, and roasting them tossed with olive oil and salt. Fresh beets take over an hour at 400 degrees to roast to our liking.



The fascinating lines exposed on a peeled beet make me want to add it to my nature journal.



Applesauce and baked apples have already fed us well from just the windfalls of our Red Baron tree.


Saturday, September 12, 2020

Lemon and Chamomile Recipes

Whether blended as a homegrown tea...



...or diffused from essential oils...


These make a lovely combination!

Herbal Tea:
1 part chamomile flowers
2 parts lemon balm, dried and crumbled

Essential Oil Diffuser Blend:
5-7 drops Lemon EO
1 drop Chamomile EO

Saturday, September 5, 2020

Looking Up

After years of blogging I can't remember things like "have I used this favorite quote before?" That makes the search feature in my blog-writing dashboard so helpful! Many times a quick search turns into an encouragement as well - as I once again read what was blessing me in the past.

There is not currently strength to keep up with new posts, so why not repost something I needed to hear again today?! Even if you read it back in 2016, I hope it can bless you again too.

---------------------

As we traveled more than 5 hours to the doctor again recently there was plenty of time to listen to a story from Focus on the Family Radio Theatre's wonderful production of C.S. Lewis' series of allegorical fantasy, The Chronicles of Narnia.


The Magician's Nephew tells the beginning of the story - including the creation of Narnia. There are insightful parallels to Genesis here, but what struck me most this time was a comment about the Jesus-character: a lion named Aslan.

To give a little background, an English boy named 
Digory arrived just in time to watch Aslan create a perfect new world. This powerful Lion could surely heal his dying mother back in London, Digory realized!

Alas, an evil character had accidentally arrived in 
Narnia along with Digory - brought by him (not without fault) from another world. When he approached Aslan about healing his mother there were other things that had to be taken care of first.

"But please, please - won't you - can't you give me 
something that will cure Mother?" Up till then he had been looking at the Lion's great feet and the huge claws on them; now, in his despair, he looked up at its face. What he saw surprised him as much as anything in his whole life. For the tawny face was bent down near his own and (wonder of wonders) great shining tears stood in the Lion's eyes. They were such big, bright tears compared with Digory's own that for a moment he felt as if the Lion must really be sorrier about his Mother than he was himself.

"My son, my son," said Aslan. "I know. Grief is great... 
Let us be good to one another. But I have to think of hundreds of years in the life of Narnia..." (chapter 12)



As this part of Aslan's (actually, Jesus's) character played out on the CD, the tears came to my eyes as well. Here Elsa and I were after two full years of intense doctoring and treatments - riding down to yet more appointments. 

I have always known that God is powerful. He could 
heal us instantly if He chose. Yet as I have waited and entered one new trial after another, too often I find myself just looking down at His great powerful "feet" and "claws." 

Suddenly on this drive I looked up with Digory and saw 
God's tears. For a moment I realized He really is sorrier about my pain than even I could be. He created this world to be perfect. He wanted to give me a perfect body to live in a perfect world - in perfect communion with Himself. But evil and sin entered to mar it all.

But we are not left without hope. Aslan told his new 
creatures that evil would come, but "I will see to it that the worst falls upon myself." And Jesus did just that on the cross.

And yet, we are still ill. We ask God for His healing. 
And we still have to wait.

Digory also had to wait; not knowing if Aslan 
would ever heal his mother. And Digory had to act - to fulfill a challenging assignment to help protect Narnia from the evil one. He had to pluck a special apple from a certain tree far away and bring it back to plant in Narnia.



Once successfully planted, the tree that grew was 
to keep the evil character away from Narnia. Since she also had traveled to the original tree and had stolen an apple for herself, Aslan explained, 
"...that is why all the rest are now a horror to her. That is what happens to those who pluck and eat fruits at the wrong time and in the wrong way. The fruit is good, but they loathe it ever after."

Oh, how glad Digory then was that he had resisted 
the strong temptation to eat one himself, or even to sneak back to his mother with it instead of bringing the fruit back to Aslan!

But what about his mother? Did the waiting ever 
come to an end? Did Aslan really care about one or two hurting people in particular? For those answers, I'll let you read (or listen to) the story for yourself. :-)

And what about my illness? 
And what about your pain, loneliness, loss...?

Let's keep trusting and obeying, knowing that God h
urts over it even more than we do. 
And we'll know the rest of the story... one day.



(Photos from the HarperCollinsPublishers hardcover edition of The Magician's Nephew)