Category Archives: Personal Stories and Memories

Twenty Years in Love

I remember only bits and pieces. A small, formal couch with burgundy upholstery and a rounded back. Our clothes still shedding cold air from the winter chill. Michael’s tan coat, puffy in a way that rounded his lean figure. The Boyd’s Bear he hid in that coat.

Michael was a junior in college, double-majoring in mathematics and computer science. I was a first-year student pursuing an associate degree in accounting. Michael lived at home; I lived in the dorm. I attended required worships and ate in the cafeteria; he didn’t attend evening worships and his mom still cooked his dinner most nights. Our paths didn’t cross.

Until mutual friends set us up on a blind date—a story for another time. He waited two or three months to ask me out again, to his sister’s New Year’s party. In the meantime, we got acquainted on Instant Messenger. At some point, I confessed my interest in him on a couch in the church youth room. Come to think of it, couches are kind of a thing for us. He asked me to be his girlfriend on a couch, and our first kiss was also on a couch. Anyway, after discovering our mutual interest in each other and going to the New Year’s party, what was next?

Could we formally-informally get to know each other? We decided we’d find times to meet on campus and talk—not formal dates, but an intentional time to get acquainted. At least that’s what I thought. I don’t remember who arrived at our meeting point first—third floor of Kretschmar Hall. Fancy, uncomfortable-looking furniture dressed up the wide space in the hall outside the president’s office. Administrators had gone home for the day and it was quiet.

I don’t remember what I was wearing or what I was thinking. Michael wore blue jeans, a t-shirt, and that tan coat. Maybe I remember the coat because of all the time we spent together that winter, or maybe I remember it because on this day Michael reached inside it and pulled out a teddy bear. “I’d be honored if you would be my girlfriend,” he said, holding it out to me. The teddy bear held a plush heart with an embroidered message, “You stole my heart.”

If I’d known then what I know now, I would’ve grabbed that bear, squeezed it tight against my heart and jumped onto Michael’s lap. Grinning a big yes, I’d have squeezed him, tucking my nose under his ear. But, as I didn’t know him yet, I didn’t give him an answer. I accepted the bear and told him I wanted to pray about it.

If we began dating, he would be my first boyfriend. I’d fastidiously avoided dating in high school—you know, I-kissed-dating-goodbye and all that purity culture stuff. I had been in college only a few months, and other than our blind date, had been on only one other date—and a couple times guys bought me a burger or ice cream. In other words, this was a big deal.

I don’t remember how long we talked, or how long I made him wait for my answer. I prayed about it during Tuesday evening worship in Heubach chapel, an intimate sanctuary across a breezeway from the imposing College Church. It was simple—write your student ID on the leader’s clipboard, pick a pew in the nearly-dark chapel, and sing, or listen to the singing.

So there I sat, near the back, in a sanctuary of song, asking God what She thought of me dating Michael. She didn’t have much to say. In fact, He said nothing. But I took the quiet peace in my heart as a green light. I’m guessing I didn’t waste much time letting Michael know my answer. I’m not exactly sure he asked me on the 21st, but we’ve been telling it that way for as long as I can remember, which makes today just a few a days past the twenty-year anniversary of our first yes.

I phoned my parents with the news and they developed a sudden, intense interest to come visit—an interest that had never occurred before and never occurred again. After all the parents met each other and nothing exploded, we launched into dating with a surprising amount of devotion, insecurity, and delight. Michael was my first and last boyfriend, and I feel for him, being the only one to iron out my wrinkles all these years.

Not that he didn’t have any wrinkles. The first time he took me to his house, he asked me to wait in the living room while he took a broom and dustpan to his room. I’m pretty sure that dustpan was brimming after a hasty sweep. Twenty years later we’re still ironing out each other’s wrinkles, but perhaps more importantly we’ve learned to live with wrinkles. Our foibles have just a bit of charm when we remember to laugh about them.

It’s strange after twenty years of togetherness and eighteen and a half years of marriage to revisit the moment on the couch, the simplicity, the significance. Nobody knows exactly what they’re signing up for with a yes to love. And I say yes again today with equally sparse knowledge about the next twenty years.

But this I know: Michael, I am honored to be your girlfriend, best friend, wife, parenting partner, and annoying roommate. Thank you for asking. Thank you for countless opportunities to say yes to love.

Get To Know the Couple

November 20 marked 30 years since Pastor Bryson baptized me at the Milo Adventist Academy Seventh-Day Adventist Church—my home church. I attended that church, beginning in utero, until I moved away for college at the age of 18. An evangelistic series in the school gymnasium pulled me to baptism in an emotional rush. Less emotional were the pre-baptismal Bible lessons. On a cold day in November, my older sister and I donned baptismal robes and took the plunge in a warm baptistry.

I’ve never looked back. Although today I’m less certain about the words on the baptismal certificate I signed, I’m more certain about the relationship.

To celebrate thirty years with a little fun, I’ve compiled questions from “Get To Know the Couple” games and answered them for God and myself.

Where did they work when they met?
Tobi was a full-time child and God was a full-time lover

How long have they been together?
Pretty much forever

Where did they get engaged?
In the Milo Adventist Academy gymnasium

What did they do on their first date?
Go to church (sorry it’s not more glamorous)

Are they cat or dog people?
Tobi is a cat person, God can’t decide

Who said “I love you” first?
God

What is something they have in common?
A desire to create safe spaces where people can share their inner world, their stories

Who is more high maintenance?
Tobi

Are they morning people or night people?
Morning people, although they can have a good time at night too

Who is the most patient?
God

What is the bride’s middle name?
Danielle

What is the groom’s middle name?
He has too many to list. One of the bride’s favorites is El Roi

What is their favorite type of food?
Fruit

What are their pet names for each other?
Tobi’s current pet name for God is Love, and his current pet name for her is Meadow.

What is their favorite place?
Anywhere still and quiet—especially a chair by the window

How old is the groom?
Nobody really knows, but he still looks good

What is their favorite thing to do together?
Write

Who is the better cook?
Tobi

Who is more stubborn?
Tobi, she hates changing direction

Who takes longer to get ready?
God, he has no idea how to hurry

Who spends more money?
God

Where was the bride born?
Canyonville, Oregon

What does the groom do for work?
Still a full-time lover.

What was their wedding date?
November 20, 1993

What is one thing they want to do together in the next 30 years?
Start a nonprofit writing group

As I mentioned, God has lots of names. Also—and this may seem weird—he doesn’t always look the same. So if you see me out with someone you don’t recognize, or hear me talking about a guy with a different name, text me before you freak out. It’s probably God in one of his other bodies or using one of his other names. He’s a dynamic fellow. I’m honored to be his bride of 30 years.

Freedom! From My Husband

“You have time for everything but me.” Michael spoke with resignation from his side of the bed.

I sat tense on my side of the bed. We’d had this conversation many times, and it always sounded the same. We knew it so well we probably could’ve saved time and argued in our sleep.

Not sure what to say, I listed a few of the times I had spent with him recently—a three-hour conversation Monday night, a date last Thursday, a movie yesterday after the kids were in bed. It didn’t matter. He was talking about his heart, not my schedule.

We have been awkward partners in the dance of intimacy since we met. We were head-over-heels for each other and spent up to sixty hours a week together—every moment outside of sleep, classes, and our part-time jobs on the college campus. Sometimes I wanted space, but I didn’t know how to say that. Since I didn’t ask for space, I created space with busyness or emotional distance. This had the opposite of the desired effect. Whenever I created space, Michael came closer. He wanted more time, more talking, more touching—always more. I generally tried to keep showing up, but when I inevitably created space in an under-handed way, Michael would be hurt and ask for more from me to reassure him that we were okay.

This pattern continued into our marriage. We were happy together, made decisions with minimal drama, enjoyed each other’s friendship and company, and survived many difficult conversations. But the pattern of me moving away and Michael moving closer (until he lost hope and stonewalled) stayed the same, and perhaps became even more pronounced. When kids came along and being alone was my deepest desire and most cherished dream, it didn’t help the situation.

That thing they say about the only way out of your pain is through it?—they’re right. Over the last few years, we’ve had some awful days and weeks walking through our pain. We’ve both had to make peace with feelings of rejection. Michael feels rejected when I move away from him, and I feel rejected when he can’t respect my desire for space. We both feel wrong sometimes—about ourselves, about each other. But it turns out you can’t mechanically fix a person or a relationship.

Mainly we talked, we listened, we cried, and we felt a lot of pain we had been avoiding. Michael slowly came to believe that I like him and I’m not going anywhere, even though sometimes I crave space. I slowly came to believe that Michael likes me and will still be my friend even if I move away from him. I think this is called trust.

Earlier this month, as Michael was preparing for a work trip, I kept reminding him to give me his flight times so I’d know when he would be leaving and getting back. The info was on his work computer and never handy when I asked. One evening when I brought it up again, I handed him my laptop and asked him to put the info in my calendar. He still didn’t have it nearby. Instead of flight times, he blocked out four days with the heading “Freedom!”

While he was away the following week, I chuckled each time I looked at my calendar, and every time it felt like a small miracle that we could joke about me enjoying some alone time. What used to be a trigger, a subject so dreaded that we tiptoed around it, is now an open conversation and a relational dynamic to laugh about. Oh the joys of setting the thermostat however I want and having the bed to myself.

I can’t tell you how it happened, and I guess that’s why I use the word “miracle.” Yes, we walked through our pain, we went to counseling, we fought and cried and believed lies about ourselves and each other and had to pry those lies up with a crowbar to find the truth. But then there was an element of magic, a change in the weather, a glimmer of hope that turned into quiet trust. And that is something no amount of work can bring about.

Freedom!

It’s Me! Run!

It’s Me! Run!

Reflections – week 2

Welcome to the second week of reflections inspired by my current small groups. Together with some of my favorite women, I’m exploring these books: Father’s House: The Path That Leads Home, and The Whole Language.

This is week two of eight. I’m finding joy here, and I’m pleased you’re with me on this journey.

The Paddle

When I was a child, a wooden spatula was the “paddle” at our house—used for spankings. I chuckle now, remembering the occasional days when my mother would carry the paddle in her back pocket. How well I know those kinds of days now that I have kids of my own.

I have two specific memories of spankings, one of which must have happened when I was quite young, I’m guessing preschool age. I don’t know what brought it on, but I had a meltdown of epic proportions, involving kicking, screaming, and the works. My parents put me on my bed to spank me, but I was kicking so violently they couldn’t paddle me. To solve this conundrum, one of them sat on my legs and the other spanked me.

As this memory accompanied my growth and development, it grew into a belief: the proper way to handle big feelings is to punish myself for them. Or better yet, try not to have them at all. I’m certain that’s not the lesson my parents intended. They probably figured they were enabling me to grow up and behave like an adult. (No one appreciates a 30-year-old who still throws epic tantrums.)

Fear of Self

Week two in Father’s House is about being lavishly loved. The authors write, “To live as a fully loved and accepted daughter in your Father’s House, He’s inviting you to let go of your former identity. You are no longer bound to your past, what anyone else has spoken over you or even what you say about yourself. As you journey Home, saturate yourself in who your Father says you are.”1 (emphasis added)

As I read and wrote through each day of the study last week, fear of myself emerged as a common theme. Starting as a young child I learned to fear myself, to fear my emotions and desires, my imperfections, my capacity to make mistakes. The religious community further intensified this fear by teaching me that I was sinful and needed constant spiritual supervision to avoid indulging the unforgivable person that I was. I became afraid of turning away from God. I figured He’s pretty nice—you know, amazing grace and all that—but if I intentionally, or unintentionally, turn my back on Him, He will be pissed off.

So there I was, internalizing my parents’ responses to me, into a belief that my emotional experiences are unacceptable; internalizing the religious community’s sin-message into the belief that I am a walking liability; and what did all that do? For twenty years, nothing. I was so good at being good that these fears lay dormant. It was unnecessary to face them when I managed myself exceptionally and performed well for every person in my life who expected something from me.

If you’re familiar with my story, you know when the upheaval began: stay-at-home momming. Suddenly, with loss of sleep and the demands of parenting, I was reacquainted with my emotional self in the most savage way. My best efforts to control and punish myself weren’t working. Anger, frustration, fear, and emptiness consumed me, and—given my beliefs about emotions and mistakes—it’s not surprising that a dark shame enveloped me.

Temper Tantrum

A few months ago when I went through Father’s House for the first time, during the activation exercise (meditative visualizing and listening), I had a (visualized) temper tantrum. It was just as I remember from childhood, heels hitting the floor so hard it hurt, as I lay on the ground screaming and sobbing out of control. Papa God lay beside me. I was so overwhelmed I couldn’t engage with Him. I could not receive comfort or accept reason or respond to reprimand. Mercifully, He didn’t expect anything from me. When the waves of emotion began to subside, I rolled into Papa’s arms. I was ready to receive comfort, and He was waiting to comfort me.

Papa God suggests there is no distance between Him and me. He is not cooled by the things that chill the people in my life: turning away, having needs, being impolite, tired, sick, stressed, confused, emotional, forgetful. God is warmly present with me when I am out of control. All of me and my experiences are folded right in, received without question or critique or hesitation. No part of me is a liability.

Holy Imagination

“Visualizing your future as a lavishly loved daughter is critical to your life,” I read in Father’s House. “In fact, it helps engage your heart with your head when you involve your divine imagination. Describe what that life would look like in as much detail as possible. What would you be doing, thinking, or feeling?”2 Here’s what comes to mind:

  • My insides will be still (not agitated). I will be at peace with myself, not warring against myself.
  • I will have energy to create and to love (not compulsion).
  • I will take more risks.
  • Forgiveness will come as naturally as breathing.
  • Suffering will fall into my embrace rather than being held at arms length. It may hurt like hell, but it won’t be fragmenting.
  • Pain, anxiety, depression, fear and anger will be experienced with God, rather than as separating or isolating experiences.
  • I will be whole, not fragmented, not always looking for parts that have been forgotten.

Not As Scary As I Thought

I assumed God was in on the idea that I cannot be trusted with myself. I am shocked to discover God trusts me with me. The shame is lifting. The fear is shrinking.

Lie: I am loved and accepted if I reject myself so I can be what I “ought” to be.

Truth: I couldn’t be better. I am loved entirely independent of my level of responsibility and emotional control. Papa received me first, to clear the way for me to receive myself. He invites me to love myself as He loves me. Now that’s crazy!

Gregory Boyle writes, “Ensuring, then, that we are never strangers to ourselves will give us access to our deepest longing.” I have been a stranger to myself, but I am learning to roll out the welcome mat, receive myself with open arms, and explore my deepest longings.

Endnotes:
1Father’s House, page 29
2Father’s House, page 34
3The Whole Language, page 18

Memories

This year I lost three people who are dear to me. I was not especially intimate with any of them, but each had an impact on my life, and I find myself thinking on that impact frequently in the weeks and months after their passing. In the stillness of their absence, there is something sweet about remembering how their lives intertwined with mine, and allowing them to become larger-than-life. I am grateful for each of them, and wish to honor them by remembering in writing a bit of the fullness they brought to my life. [Disclaimer: I do not believe my memory to be wholly accurate, and I am certain those people closer to these individuals will find errors in my recollections.]

My mom’s mom passed away in January. I always called her Grandma Sawyer, but when I had kids she suggested they call her “Grandma Caroline,” using her first name. She always lived in the same house, from before I was born almost until the end. I didn’t get to visit her in the care facility she was in at the end, so all my memories of her are in that house. She rented out rooms, so I remember having to be quiet when we were in the hallway next to those rooms, and we were not allowed to use the restroom the renters used. We were, however, invited to play in her back yard, which was full of the wonderful fruit trees that grow further south: lemons, oranges, mandarins, kumquats, avocados, and more. There were also a variety of flowers, and a shed that contained board games among other things. My sister and I played out in the yard, making concoctions of plant materials, and skipping about on the stepping stones. We made fresh orange juice in her kitchen, watched shows on her tiny television in the dining room, and always went home with avocados and mandarins to enjoy long after our visit.

Grandma always wore her hair the same way, and I imagine there must be a name for the style, but I don’t know what it is. Just that there was a large curl at the bottom, near chin level, and the rest was smooth but thick. My complete lack of fashion knowledge also makes it impossible to describe her wardrobe with any accuracy, but I remember she always wore the same style of flat comfy shoes, and she often wore blouses. She nearly always had a boyfriend, so when our family descended on her house, she would spend her nights at her boyfriend’s house. My sister and I slept in her room (where my sister got flea bites sleeping on the floor), and my parents would sleep in the family room. We took over the kitchen, making our own meals, as my grandma would not have cooked for us even if she had been there. She ate very simply and basically did not cook or wash dishes, a fact which my mother says was true even when she was raising five children. We often found spoiled food in her fridge, and more than once we found a can of orange juice concentrate in the freezer which had been partially used and left to turn a very dark brown shade of orange. One redeeming feature of her kitchen was the drawer containing dates and nuts. And she always had toasted wheat germ, which I thought was a treat.

Grandma Sawyer liked cats, and for many years she would have one or more cats, but they were usually scarce when we came to visit. I don’t remember her having any toys, but she she lived not far from the ocean, so between that and her back yard we had plenty of fun things to do. There was a bin on her coffee table with scissors and tape and other handy supplies, and her combined living/dining room also held her desk, and a book shelf full of interesting titles like “Eat Right For Your Type.” She was something of a health (read “supplements”) enthusiast, and I remember one drawer in her bathroom contained cups of pills portioned out for each day. I don’t think she was on any prescription, so those large handfuls of pills were all supplements resulting from her own research. She could swallow a whole dose at once, which I found very impressive. She enjoyed travel and learning, and I remember on one visit she told me about the country of Burkina Faso with it’s capitol city of Ouagadougou – I think the primary reason was the joy of those funny sounding words. She didn’t give a lot of gifts, but she did always send a birthday card with money, and I still have a mug she painted with my name on it. She was skilled at beautiful, delicate china painting. She also played the piano, but I don’t think I ever heard her play or saw her paint.

Her memorial was a picnic lunch at a park near the beach, and I think I knew more about her after the brief fifteen minutes of sharing among family members than I did in all my years of knowing her. I enjoyed the descriptions of other family members to round out my memories of grandma: able to converse on any topic; curious; positive, cheerful, joyous, and didn’t speak negatively (or positively) about anyone; loved all kinds of arts; always ended with a chuckle; a feminist; wonderful mother-in-law; original and witty; good mother who was proud of all her kids and grandkids; knew a lot about the natural world, including the names of many plants. I do remember her showing me a gingko tree once when we were on a walk. I think the reason it stuck in my memory is that she told me gingko trees had been around for millions of years, and being from a family of young-earth creationists, I remember thinking she was wrong but keeping silent on the subject. The thing I secretly wished to emulate about my grandma was her ability to dance. She loved to dance, and although I never got to see her dance in public, she did teach me a dance step once, and I’m proud to say I can still do it. She took time to do the things she loved, and although she had strong opinions, she always ended with a chuckle and a twinkle in her eye. I am grateful I got to be her granddaughter.

Not long after my grandma passed away, a neighbor from my childhood also passed away. Her name was Sandra Smith, but we called her Sandy. She and her husband Billy had a surprise daughter later in life who was about my age, named Suzanne. They lived a few miles up the hill from us, where there was no electricity or phone lines, and every so often we would hear their old diesel Mercedes pulling in our driveway so they could make phone calls (we were the last house on that road connected to the phone lines). As far back as I can remember they invited us over for Thanksgiving and/or Christmas dinner every year. Sandy made the entire meal on a wood burning cook stove, and everything was cooked to perfection and served hot. Since my health-conscious family made tofu quiche and vegan pies for holidays, Sandy’s table laden with real turkey, cranberry sauce, mashed potatoes (that undoubtedly had butter in them), pistachio salad, yams (which surely had sugar and butter on them), and every other dish you could wish for at a northwest holiday dinner was a highlight every year. After homemade hard ice cream, fresh whipped cream, and too many pies to sample, we would relocate to the living room where we played the old player piano for hours, talked about Billy’s countercultural ideas, and enjoyed the warmth of the wood stove.

The Smiths were a family living in older times. Billy logged and mined gold to make money off his extensive property. He was proud that he didn’t pay Social Security, held strong views about politics, had a moderate collection of firearms, and enjoyed quack medicine like pycnogenol and frequency-generating “zappers.” It was an odd friendship between our families, mainly consisting of those annual feasts together and their visits to use our phone. I think Sandy was the grounding presence in the family. She was practical, intelligent, calm, and her eyes often sparkled. She wore her gray hair pulled up in up a decorative leather piece with a wooden pin through it. She was always kind. When I moved away from home, she extended an invitation to make a turkey dinner for me when I visited home, even if it wasn’t at the holidays. Her generous offer surprised and touched me. I don’t think I ever took her up on it, but I did get to take my husband to dinner at her house at least once, and I’m grateful I was able to share that part of my childhood with him. Sandy passed away rather suddenly, and I miss her kind presence on this earth.

In an expected turn of events a person who had largely shaped my career (if you can call it that at my age) became ill and died, bringing him sharply back into my awareness. I quit work a month shy of seven years ago to become a stay-at-home mom, and soon after my boss, Jerry Mason, retired. We were both in our own new worlds, adjusting to life at home after the workplace, and didn’t keep in touch. But this parting of ways in no way lessens the impact Jerry had on my life during my college and post-college years.

I entered college with a job at the Grounds department, mostly because I got hired over the phone and it was an easy in. At that time the department was undergoing some changes, and Jerry had a vision for student leadership that was emerging at that time. I found myself co-managing the department with a few other students a month after I began working in Grounds. Jerry had a way of entrusting me with responsibility with so much confidence in me that I hardly had the chance to stop and think about whether I could do the job or not. His trust, mentoring, enthusiastic support, and hands-off style gave me the incredible opportunity of managing the Grounds department all four years of college (and being awarded the Washington State Student Employee of the Year award in 2007). By the middle of my sophomore year I was studying for a business degree with a concentration in management, so there was a happy marrying of what I was studying to what I was doing at work. I wrote handbooks, wrote interviews, hired, fired, created schedules, purchased equipment, conducted training, and did everything else the job required with the zest and energy only a college student has. All the while, Jerry proudly cheered on us student leaders, paid us a little more than made sense, stood in our defense when problems arose, challenged us when we were heading the wrong direction, and continued steadfastly in his confidence in my abilities.

After I graduated I worked one year in a clerical position, and then Jerry was standing there in front of my desk handing me a proposal regarding bringing the custodial function of the university back in house. In other words, creating and managing a new department that would be under his direction as Plant Services Manager. Again he was handing me much more than I was qualified for, just as confident as could be, eager to give me the opportunity. And as I took the job and went to work for him again he continued to support me in the same generous ways that he had when I was a student.

Jerry was private and shy and had a strong aversion to parties and most social events. He was a straight shooter and didn’t take excuses; short in stature but still slightly intimidating because after all he did have the power to end my employment. But never once was I worried about calling him or walking into his office. He was always kind, friendly, honest, and the best superior a person could ask for. Over the years, he went out of his way to recognize my work and support me – nominating me for student employee of the year, taking me and other managers out for dinner, providing cell phones when they were still relatively rare, procuring a set of two monitors for me to make desk work easier, encouraging and supporting me in attending Leadership Walla Walla, and no doubt instrumental in my recognition as Rising Staff Member of the Year in 2010. I always felt valued, and knew someone was standing behind me.

After I quit work I asked Jerry for a reference letter, as I knew I would be a stay-at-home mom for a while and I wanted to have something to use as a reference when it became time to return to the work force. He never wrote one, but he did give me his email address when he retired, and we conversed briefly about my desire for a reference letter. His reply in part said, “I am working outdoors a ton this summer. Have an old couple across the street I am keeping their yard up. Fun and it keeps me busy.” I was a little peeved that he couldn’t find the time to write one letter amidst all his yard work, but looking back it really was just like him. He always hated writing reference letters, and I also think he was just ready to be done with work. I chuckle over it now. And besides, he did give me a wonderful reference in the form of those two jobs that shaped my skill set, and the opportunity to work with many wonderful people (who would probably be happy to write me a reference letter).

I cannot think about my college experience or my career without thinking of Jerry. He was human, but the best sort of human you can find, and a person who so quietly had an incredibly large impact on my life. I am grateful for all the ways he believed in me.

As I think about these three people, what stands out is how simple their influence was. None of them gave me advice. None of them spent any great amount of time with me. They just gave to me in their own unassuming way. There is power in simply living your life – the moments you believe in someone else, or invite someone over for a meal, or impart curiosity and cheerfulness by living it out yourself – perhaps those are the moments that someone else will be recalling when you are called Home.