It’s a new year; it’s a new decade.
Can I get a Hallelujah?
A few months ago (actually many months ago) a friend reminded me that I had not written a post since February 13. “Yes, I know,” I replied. “I think about it almost every day.” The true question was, “Am I done blogging?” It seems so out of date and self-serving. Can I just say that this world does not need any more self-absorption?
I wrote at least five drafts that bored even me. Then, every time I would sit down to write, the egomaniac who is the current president would do something so ridiculous, so awful, that I would start to rant. And I didn’t need to add to the clamor, the din, the tumult… But that might be just a weak excuse.
Like all years, this past one had its ups and downs, goods and bads: I lost 25 pounds; our beloved Henry the cat died; I planted sweet potatoes and peas for the first time and they did great; the staples of tomatoes and peppers did poorly. We had tons of cherries and pears; we had almost no apples. I retired and had plenty to do; I retired and sometimes felt at loose ends. I read a lot of great books; I stopped writing almost entirely. We finished the beautiful back porch and the lower side of the house; the bathroom is still unfinished and ugly. I read and studied my journaling Bible every day, but truth be told, this year God has often seemed distant. I get depressed reading the New York Times and watching World News Tonight; my faith tells me I must have hope.
So last night just as I was deciding to give it up entirely and not even do a New Year’s post, WordPress sent me a notice that my stats were booming.
An unknown person across the internet somewhere far away was reading my blog posts in order — they had started with all the early posts about the cottage and then read at least forty-five of my 245 posts. And that one little thing changed my mind. So here is my post for the New Decade. It might be the one and only, the first and the last; I’ve no guarantees. After all, I’m retired…
This morning I was reading an article written by James Hatch, a 52-year old former Navy SEAL who is a freshman at Yale. He wrote: “I challenge any of you hyper-opinionated zealots out there to actually sit down with a group of people who disagree with you and be open to having your mind changed… To me there is no dishonor in being wrong and learning. There is dishonor in willful ignorance and there is dishonor in disrespect.” Amen, brother. Let’s stop disrespecting each other. Starting today.
There are two kinds of people in the world:
1. those who would go to Times Square for New Year’s Eve, and those who couldn’t be paid enough to go…
2. those who go out for New Year’s Eve, and those who stay home…
3. those who would rehab an old vacant house, and those who would look for a new one instead…
4. Cat-lovers and Dog-lovers…
5. Savers and Pitchers…
6. Dreamers and Doers…
7. those who believe and those who scoff…
8. those who stay, and those who go…
9. those who love snow, and those who don’t…
10. those who take naps, and those who feel superior to those who take naps…
11. those who love city streets, and those who love country roads…
12. those who look up and those who look down…
13. those who eat their fruits and vegetables, and those who eat their meat’n potatoes…
14. those whose glass is half-empty and those whose glass is half-full…
15. those who work for pay and those who work for love; and those who are blessed to do both at the same time…
16. those who believe santa is a democrat, those who believe santa is a republican, and those who believe santa should just start a third party for the rest of us — the Dempublicans? The Republicrats? (Surely he would get more than just my vote…)
17. Those who love to go shopping and those who would rather eat worms than go to a Walmart.
18. Flitterers and Plodders…
19. Readers and TV watchers
20. Right and Wrong (please God, give us grace for both…)
At different times in our lives, we can be any of these. (Well, probably not too many of us would admit to being that turtle…)
Me? I have been all these — a city lover, a country girl; a scoffer, a believer; an optimist, a pessimist; a cat-lover, a dog-lover; a dreamer, a doer; a shopper and a worm-eater; right and wrong…(Though I would have to be paid a lot of cash to go to Times Square on New Year’s Eve.)
Can we remember this?
Can we remember that our differences make this beautiful world what it is?
Can we let go of our prejudices, our prides, our preconceptions, our disrespect… and just love each other?
May grace, peace, and joy be yours in abundance in 2020.