Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Changing the Guard

Happy Graduates!
Dear friends,

It seems my adventures as a Jayhawk have passed for the time being. 
May brought graduation, and with it a move for Hub and me to South Bend Indiana where we are going to spread our wings in the world of industry and Catholics and snowy winters. 
If you care to follow this new adventure, check us out at:
Living With the Studebakers

Let the new adventure begin!

-Ann

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Love Song for a Lady


I wrote this during the spring when my grandma had just been readmitted to the hospital. After I wrote it, I saved it to my computer where I found it tonight and I thought I would share. In the words of my sister Beth: "Marie Lenora Freeseman, you were a hero and I'll miss you more than I can say."

This afternoon I experienced the kind of woman that I hope someday to be. She was experiencing pain so intense that sometimes it was all she could do to focus on not being overcome by it. She has watched a parade of people pass through her room crying over saying goodbye to her, and tenderly she has shared her strength with them all - - she, the one who is actually saying goodbye - - has been doing the comforting. With a brush that paints grace and love she has painted us a picture of her love for us and her complete faith that we are going to be fine. She has given us the liberty to say our awkward “I love you’s” and “I’ll miss you’s.” She has encouraged us that life is for the living and that she won’t fault us for laughing at a funny movie or enjoying a beautiful spring day. Never once has she complained that she doesn’t get to enjoy this spring day, or that her turn to laugh over these things is coming to an end. In a moment where our heart’s desire is to love her, it is she who has loved us. It was her, not me, who did the comforting tonight. It was her, whose love was poured out. It was me who benefited. This is what I will miss. It is this strength and this beauty and this courage which has taught me and moved me and inspired me, and it is this towering strength which I will miss the most when we say goodbye. For now, I want to say: “thank you”. Thank you for letting me share this with you. Thank you for letting me be the one who is weepy. Thank you for giving me the grace to say the wrong thing. Thank you for being the woman that you are. I love you in ways I don’t know how to express. Thank you for understanding where my words fail.

Friday, January 27, 2012

Reflections

A year ago I went out to coffee with a handsome guy with brown eyes and awesome questions. Six months later that guy was my best friend. A week from tomorrow he'll be my husband.

Coming soon: adventures of the nerdy newlyweds.....

Thursday, December 15, 2011

Sunsets


Right now I'm sitting at my kitchen table. I have a quasi-cold cup of coffee and ten pages about Emily Dickinson that need editing. The to-do list got so long this week that I stopped adding to it and I've been capitalizing on the newly-engaged status to win neck-rubs for stress knots. Seems like a bad moment to get back to blogging right? Or not.

I'm sitting facing the door of the Cran. In the backyard behind me the sun is setting--which in Kansas means its beautiful and pink and wintery. There is a little girl in a pink and purple coat running around the backyard and with her is her overgrown, quasi-awkward father. They have sticks. Her stick is short and proportional to her body. His is longer. They go to fight dueling sword style but she gets frustrated and makes him break his stick so that their respective weapons will be equal. The moment that he goes to fight with her she squeals and runs away. Now they run over the yard laughing and yelling and I find myself giggling because I remember doing this with my dad. In this moment as I'm giggling I have just an instant of crystallizing awareness: life can be so stressful and given enough stress I start to have tunnel vision--all I focus on is the to-do's and making sure I'm not forgetting or offending or slap-dashing. I don't know about you, but if I do this for very long, I stop having fun and everything in life starts to become one giant to-do list to be crossed off.

But wait a minute. Right now, literally in front of me, a little girl is squealing and giggling over a stick and her father's love. No trappings, no trimmings, just straight joy over relationships. That's pretty nice to remember.

Thursday, September 22, 2011

The one where she blogs about blogging

Yes, it's a meta-post I'm making. This week in a class o'mine we had to write a "literacy narrative" which is a fancy way of explaining how we learned to read, why we like to read, and why we think reading is important/why we're English majors. Yes, my major is hard. We had to turn this narrative in as in digital form (as a blog) and incorporate digital aspects into it (that's pictures for you more technical folks who might be getting impressed.) I enjoyed this assignment thoroughly and I thought I'd share the finished product with you all.

keepthelightsburning.weebly.com

Thursday, September 15, 2011

The One Where I Lived the Dream



When I was a little girl, one of my favorite books of all time was a James Harriot story called "The Christmas Day Kitten." In this story, a little kitten shows up at a lonely lady's home on Christmas morning. I was always drawn to the way how sad both the lady and the kitten were at the beginning of the book and how happy they made each other at the end. I think I thought it was cool that they were able to help each other and make life easier.

This week. Yesterday to be exact. I actually watched this story take place FOR REAL. I was walking from Murphy Hall (music building) to Watson (library).... no wait, back up. A few weeks ago, I was sitting on campus outside enjoying the day when I was certain I saw a kitten go running by. I dismissed it though because, well, why would there be cats on campus? Back to real time. Yesterday as I was doing my late afternoon walk, I saw a very old lady sitting in the middle of the sidewalk next to a bush. I was confused at first. Then I saw her take food out of her bag and push it into the bush. Naturally I stopped. What could she be doing? I wondered.

I perched myself next to her on the sidewalk and asked her this question. She laughed and pointed into the bush. There I saw, not one, but four cats. A huge, lusciously white tom cat. A small, prim, gray tabby. And two beautiful, sleek kittens. They stared back out at me with as much astonishment that I had found their hiding place as I had in seeing them.

How long has they lived here? I asked. And then Carol (our cat-rescuer's name) began to tell me about a winter ten years ago when she was walking around campus on Thanksgiving. During this particular walk, she noticed a little calico cat following her crying. Upon closer examination, she realized that the cat was pregnant, and so very hungry. So she carried the kitty, which she named Lady, home to feed and care for. And so began this process which has led to ten years of carrying food and shelter to these tiny cats who, instead of living ferral homeless lives, have found themselves the most loving and compassionate mother imaginable.

I Started Lookin For Excuses


I have a confession to make to you friends. I have been putting this post off for multiple reasons.

First. MAN I don't want to have to account for the past five months of my life outside of this

Second. I have been lacking vision for what to write about. Let's shoot for more than just random words which we throw up on the screen.

Third. It was summer. And let's be real, summertime is not the time for sitting introspectively in front of a computer screen. It's the time to be laying in a field full of grass dreaming about cloud men and the future and doing greatly enormously amazing things with our lives. Summer is a time for dreaming, not for doing. And friends, I dreamed this summer. I also did stuff, but mostly, I climbed onto the lazy river float and just went with the current. It was a delight to stop paddling for a while and to let the river carry me.

But now we're back. It's fall. I have been overcome by the desire to drink hot apple cider and to eat pumpkin pie. I have broken out the sweaters and jeans. And I have jumped out of the lazy river and into the big kid pool -- you know, the one with high dives and crazy older kids who know how to do cool backflips. This metaphor is breaking down, but you catch my meaning I'm sure.

So since we're jumping into new things, why not jump into some new blogging? Let's share this fall and enjoy the passing of seasons and days together. I promise to write you long epistles about the cool books I'm reading and happenstances, and you can promise me to send me long epistles about your fantastic adventures. What fun! If summer is the time for sprawling and dreaming, then fall is the time for energy and color and delight as the air gets crisper and the world comes alive with brilliance for one last Tango before winter.