ungrump

do you ever wake up grumpy?
you might not know at first
but as the minutes go by
scrambling eggs and grinding beans
the continual conversation
from toddlers and kids
begins to unravel
what you thought a fresh start,
and your partner’s dumb shirt
and the dog’s needless whine
and the bill balance size
and the day’s general bunk
make you give up good trust
before 9 in the morning.
do start again
on your knees as need be
because you really can’t bear
16 more hours of grump
and nor can your people
when continual conversation
requires reply
and meals must be made
with some shred of health
and your partner deserves
uncritical care
and a team mate to torchlight
the fact and the truth
that all,
even bunk,
will be well.

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Peace I leave with you; my peace I give you. I do not give to you as the world gives. Do not let your hearts be troubled and do not be afraid. – John 14:27

image: The Bad Mood by Moritz Petz, a go-to book in our house.

Clancy’s

Clancy’s was
a bonafide drug store
from another age,
serving the neighborhood
with pharmacy,
periodicals,
and malts and salty fries.
Chrome ringed swivel stools
bolted to the floor
lined the diner counter,
and aisles of candy,
beauty,
and household essentials
were stocked
for quick pick-up
on errands.
But the remarkable feature
was beneath our feet:
a Real Deal
Top Dog
Toy Store.

Dazzling and accessible,
the basement
was a treasure trove
for kids to peruse,
to touch and to test,
splendidly stacked
with amusement.
After many thoughtful minutes
picking a prize
we’d ascend with our whatnot
or Matchbox or gum,
friendly selections
for fifty cent pockets,
and make our way home
the few blocks,
ever confident
that quarters were endless
and Clancy’s was always.

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For You are my hope; O Lord GOD, You are my confidence from my youth. Psalms 71:5

image: Clancy’s Drug Store & Toy Land, a bit before my time…

sweet again

If we are to lose any thing
let it be severed in summer
when the fall will arrive
with bright breeze
and multicolored maples
to turn our heads
and relieve our grief.
Let football distract
and harvest restore
and mums mend the memory
sweet again.

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Restore our fortunes, LORD, like streams in the Negev. Psalm 126:4

“I am with you and will watch over you wherever you go, and I will bring you back to this land. I will not leave you until I have done what I have promised you.” Genesis 28:15

image: Fall Gray Day on Maliview by Justin Beckett

wind to grace

An inch too short
a pound too heavy
is surely wind and breath
yet futile thought
returns to me
as soon as guard relents
vain and useless
speculation
dulls my morning new
and barmy doubt
dilutes the truth
I too have come from You
my child chops
her long hair gone
without a woe or care
the practical
of play and knots
enough to sway her there
she beams
at her reflection
with favor on her face
so sure as sure
and just like that
I’m beckoned back to grace.

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Turn my eyes from looking at worthless things; and give me life in your ways. Psalm 119:37

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I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made; your works are wonderful, I know that full well. Psalm 139:14

image: Ashes In The Wind by Donna Blackhall

Troy

In these days
your color visits
I see you then
delight implicit
shoulder squeeze
I know it’s you
shock of black
and vital hue
tanned and healthy
sparkled grin
open laugh
to let all in
compliments
and spoken heart
“don’t forget
I love you” cards
your presence made
for merriment
your pallor shined
of sentiment
your Irish eyes
so dark and kind
beautiful
affection lined
beneath a sea
of shooting stars
gentle jokes
and rides in cars
your color visits
my darling friend
I miss you then
again again
no more battle
no more pain
only living
life to gain
A friend remarked,
of losing you,
“unspeakable.”
I know it’s true.

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So do not fear, for I am with you; do not be dismayed, for I am your God. I will strengthen you and help you; I will uphold you with my righteous right hand. -Isaiah 41:10

And he said to him, “Truly, I say to you, today you will be with me in Paradise.” -Luke 23:43

image: Troy

concrete camp

I recently had the honor of being a guest author for Orphan’s Tree, and the following poem was originally published on their blog in May 2014. http://www.orphanstree.org

We were in Paris,
a layover on our way back from the Ukraine,
and we, our mission team, went out to see the city.
I was the youngest member (or nearly),
and I remember detesting the decadence,
the joie de vive,
and the way my team mates, mostly adults,
were able to compartmentalize their grief.
I am dazzled by Paris now,
but in those hours
I found myself hating the way
french fell from local lips,
carefree and lovely,
as if children weren’t starving
for food, for care
elsewhere in the world.
I thought of the Kanev orphans
clinging to each other and to us,
insisting their devotion and affection
into our arms and our chests,
pressing tin toys and warped plastic figures
into our palms,
desperate to be remembered,
daring to dream we’d come back for them,
and that perhaps their lot could be American too.
We walked the Seine
from Notre Dame to la tour Eiffel,
every cobbled step somber,
my legs lead.
I thought of Nicolai, the camp director,
stern and brusk like an army gym teacher.
He was there with those abandoned kids,
and I loved him for it.
I wanted to go back.
Back to the concrete camp
on the green Dnieper River.
Back to the rubbled amphitheater
where Soviet soldiers once gathered
for announcements and programs,
before the buildings broke
and Vodka flowed into young lives.
Back to wide brows.
and brave faces.
18 years later
a few of the kids have found me on Facebook.
They remember too, and well,
the weeks we spent at the camp.
They tell me of their problems and ask for prayers,
but they no longer ask to be my sister or my child.
They mention money,
and for escape from violent government.
They speak of bombed roadways to work
and nights spent in factories,
away from their own children,
when it’s been too dangerous to go outside
after their shifts.
They type, “I love Jesus… but I am alone.”
My world is a city of lights
and they are in the dark.

Occasionally I dream of the concrete camp
and the way the grass grew through it.
The sky is like a western plain’s
with space for clouds to take their shape,
and time to wait for storms to pass.
The sun pierces shadow,
changing the pavement
warming the skin,
and children play all day.

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If you love me, you will keep my commandments. And I will ask the Father, and he will give you another Helper, to be with you forever, even the Spirit of truth, whom the world cannot receive, because it neither sees him nor knows him. You know him, for he dwells with you and will be in you. I will not leave you as orphans; I will come to you. Yet a little while and the world will see me no more, but you will see me. Because I live, you also will live. -John 14:15-21

images: The summer orphanage camp outside of Kanev, Ukraine (taken by me in 1996 & 1997)

Orphan’s Tree Mission: bringing the benefits of family and God’s hope to Russian orphans when they are most alone.
To learn more about Orphan’s Tree & their outreach: http://www.orphanstree.org

hello again!

Friends & family,

Forgive me for abandoning Silver Pennies!
The summer has been filled with moving, transition, work, and recovery.
Funny (and backward) how we often sacrifice what fuels to “make room” for toil…
But I am back and excited to resume my brief writings!
I hope you will join me again,
and for those of you who are new to my page – Welcome!

Blessings, em

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Restore us to You, O LORD, that we may be restored;
Renew our days as of old. – Lamentations 5:21

stolen spring

a blink of may
and humid air
june is near
to curl our hair
just as leaf
arrived to bud
the smell has turned
to grass and mud
flash of yellow
citrine green
never were
at all it seems
and consolation
must be found
in deeper hues
and warmer ground
days of lilac
still to come
balmy winds
at last keep on
and bitterness
can blur and go
with open doors
and wide windows
and I’ll forgive
the stolen spring
if you forgive
each other thing.

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This is what the Lord God showed me:
behold, a basket of summer fruit. -Amos 8:1

image: open window print by Gwen Ratermann

you’re walking

demi feet
and curled in toes
waddle wobble
happy pose
merry gasp
and elbows high
falter, plop
and ever rise
day by day
your eyes grow lighter
midnight blue
to sky and water
as your sister’s
did before you
just as her steps
planted surely
ducky boy
it’s you and she
that show the dim
to lighter be
with every pace
and starry face
your easy heart
illuminates.

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The LORD makes firm the steps of the one who delights in him.
-Psalm 37:23

image: First Steps, Pablo Picasso

break the block

We all have our to-dos,
and there are times
when the tasks feel so many
as to be a steep mountain
too high to climb,
so that even the exercises
that fuel us and free us
instead overwhelm
and cast shadow.
Healing hours
are buried in boxes
of work and deadline
and we are embattled
for their honor.

My husband suggested making a list
to break the block of task mountain.

milk
blueberries
apples
onions
green peppers (2)
avocado (1)
lemon (1)
sweet potatoes (2)
broccoli
salsa (medium/hot)
deli meat (you choose)
sausage loop
chicken breast
reduced fat wheat thins
tomato basil triscuits
sandwich bread
tortilla
drinking straws
something salty
something sweet
AAA batteries
bubbles

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For You have girded me with strength for battle; You have subdued under me those who rose up against me. -Psalms 18:39

image: hightouchmoving.com