All posts by Helen C

I finally got into the garden yesterday. I weeded the flower beds and planted the dahlia tubers and gladioli bulbs. Dave mended the fence, mowed the lawn and weedwacked everything else. The results are satisfying — the place looks pretty good. Just in time for us to leave.

As usual there is so much to do before a trip. Already I feel the squeeze of anxiety in my heart. Since this trip spans the payroll time period, I need to prepare everything in advance.

But I also enjoy travel. The actual travel days are a respite from ringing phones and everyday demands. I know that with cell phones and ubiquitous internet access, I don’t really have the same freedom from obligation that the absence of technology used to impose, but I give myself permission to knock off a little anyway.

I usually select a new book for a trip. This time I’ll be traveling with Queen Noor of Jordan. I’ve always been curious about Lisa Halaby, an American woman who just happened to marry King Hussein in 1978. At the time it seemed unfathomable to me for a Princeton-educated woman to make such a choice. But I used to know a lot more than I know now.

Queen Noor’s book is my 16th since January. I doubt I’ll keep up this pace, but it’s been nice giving myself permission to read. Okay so there’s a lot more dog hair not getting swept up, but it’s a small price to pay.

The Things I’ve Done and Left Undone

There’s a point in the Episcopal service that particularly resonates with me. Oddly, it’s the part where we’re confessing our sins and asking for forgiveness.

I’ve had conversations with people who don’t go to church in any regular way who tell me that it makes them uncomfortable to confess sins when they don’t particularly feel they have sinned and that they feel organized religion’s approach that everyone is a sinner, that it’s just the starting point, original sin, blah, blah, blah is a huge turn-off. I’ve felt that way myself.

Sinner. So old-fashioned. So perjorative. So un-pc. Doesn’t using the very label put us in the position of judging when we should not be judging? That’s gotta be some kind of sin, right? Yes, if we are applying it to others. Acknowledging “sin” (and yes, the word still makes me uneasy) in ourselves seems to me simply being honest. Okay, I’m not running around murdering people, but I fall short of being the kind of person I know I should be.

I’ve heard every religion has the golden rule at its center. Do unto others as you would have them do unto you, or the gospel version: Love one another as you love yourselves. Man, it is so hard to do. Just when I’m feeling my most loving and angelic, I’m liable to have an encounter with someone who repulses me, frightens me, or just plain pisses me off. Is it better or worse if it’s someone I love or someone I don’t even know? Neither. It’s all the same.

I group that kind of sin under the category of “things I have done.” The other side of that is the “things I have left undone.” Most of the time, my head is just stuffed full of “I should have done this, I should have done that.” When I verbalize one of these thoughts, Dave says “oh, shoulda, coulda, woulda!” He doesn’t seem to have the same affliction. This prayer helps me let go a little of the regret and anxiety that comes from not quite measuring up to my own standard. It helps me forgive myself just a little.

Cammy at 11

Cammy is 11 years old today. We took her for a walk at Dewey’s Pond, probably her favorite place on earth. It has everything a Lab could wish for — water and room to run. Sometimes she finds dead fish in the shallows, always an occasion for joy. Here she is in action: