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Gaiety . . . to Go

by Laurie Klein 49 Chiming In

“Whoa, pull over!” I cry.

Phone in hand, I scramble past the curb. An entire front yard froths with blooms the size of faces — some of the stems six feet tall! — a sea of lavender, white, and magenta phlox, illumined by westerly light.

Dreamer follows me, and their lingering, sunset perfume envelops us, gauzy as spun sugar.

gaiety rules!

A door slams, and a slender gentleman exits the house.

“This is amazing,” I call. “May I take pictures?”

“Help yourself,” he says, with a grin. “Let me call the owner,” he adds. “She’ll want to meet you.”

A moment later a petite woman draped in bright colors joins us. She grins. Silvery strands thread her waist-long pony tail. “Perfect timing! I’m so glad you’re here!” she cries. “Walk through the arch and I’ll meet you out back.”

purple haze, the gaiety of grace

Curious, we turn. A flagstone path beckons. We check our watches.

We were en route to a surprise birthday party — a tad nervous, introverts that we are.

Now, it seems we are stepping right out of time . . . and into a corner of Eden. Birdsong ripples. Sculptural swans and angels peer out between fiery dahlias, towering canna lilies. Snowy datura foregrounds a fence.

A screen door bangs. “Here,” says our hostess. “Put these on. I’m going to take pictures, okay? LOTS of pictures. You’re going to love it! Pick a hat.”

Rakish Dreamer winks, tilting a brim.

“Wrap yourself in this,” she tells me, holding out a vintage sable stole. “And this!” She flourishes a black mid-century cocktail hat. It resembles an oversize mussel shell, pierced with a jaunty feather. “Use the garage door mirror,” she urges. “Get everything just right.”

Seems to me our blithe sprite of a guide, her gaiety both palpable and insistent, must be obeyed.

“Stand here, you two,” she directs. “Beside my sign.”

the madcap wonder and contagious gaiety of long-term love

And I, chronic dodger of cameras, mug for the lens. Picture sweeping gestures. Madcap poses. I inhabit the fur, that fetching hat.

What’s happening here?

Gaiety rises. We laugh amid multiple takes — one, a video, with me proclaiming our 50th anniversary this month.

A cause for gaiety, 50 years together

Feels like she’s waited — all her life — for us.

As if our arrival has always been her dearest wish.

We’ve not even exchanged names, yet we all exude contagious delight.

Will heaven be like this?

“I’m throwing a garden party,” she says. “Will you come? Say yes!”

Welcome to prevenient grace. Anticipating your hesitation as well as your secret longing, prevenient grace “goes before you to prepare a place for you.”*

So here’s to the Spirit, nudging its agents of whimsy, offsetting our post-pandemic habit of fearing others.
And here’s to the startling largesse of strangers.
Long live felicity! — each of us fractionally grasping the prodigal child’s wonder.

Belatedly, Dreamer and I recall the party we’re now running late for . . .

No. The party we’re now prepared for:

Two aging adults, at sunset,
beyond grateful to be together,
graced by backyard felicity,
eager to spread gaiety
to others who may have forgotten
what it’s like to be young at heart,
utterly welcomed. Wanted.

If you’ve been recently nudged toward joy, how is it changing you?

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Meanwhile, let’s watch for the pure in heart, who “may be as shopworn and clay-footed as [we are], but have somehow kept some inner freshness and innocence intact.” —Buechner, Whistling in the Dark

P.S. In the language of flowers, showstopper “phlox represents pure intentions and commitment to a relationship that outlives youthful infatuation.”

author in the garden

You might also enjoy this post on felicity, from the archives

*Praying the Hours, Suzanne Guthrie

Filed Under: Small Wonders Tagged With: 50th anniversary, bodacious botannicals, corner of Eden, felicity, phlox, prevenient grace, prodigal wonder, pure invitation August 15, 2023

Felicity, Schmogg & Roofless Minds

by Laurie Klein 22 Chiming In

Felicity: lately, it’s mostly a memory. For the eighth day running . . . I can’t run. Endorphin-deprived, this grounded-for-now body feels loggy. Wistful. S-l-a-c-k.

A run leavens my day; it boosts the spirits as well as the heart rate.

However, we in the West are beset by hazardous air quality due to wildfires. Step outside and nose-wrinkling, eye-blinking, mood-sinking schmogg assaults the senses. Headache ensues.

Housebound, a wonder junkie may forgo her knack for awe, even overlook nature’s wordless felicity.

And while I’m deeply grateful for the roof overhead and walls that keep bad air out, how does one batten down for safety . . . yet keep the soul propped open, the mind and spirit ajar?

These days, seems most everything—most everywhere—is being turned upside down.

Remember the old Sunday School fingerplay?

Here is the church;
here is the steeple;
open the doors to see all the people.

Motion-wise, unlatching thumbs and spreading the hands inverts the building: interlaced “roof fingers” and palms become floor—complete with life line.

Ergo: one steeple-free, miniature open-air temple.

Ancient Greeks designed temples with an uncovered space that housed an image of deity. This required a new adjective: Hypaethral (hī-ˈpē-thrəl: quasi-rhymes with “Hi C thrill,” for all you dear sopranos, reading this post).

Hypo-, means “under or beneath,” and aithēr, “air or heaven.”

So, fellow homebodies under heaven, with our blessedly non-leaking roofs clamped overhead, how do we as living temples—each of us quietly housing the image of God—proceed?

As the runner’s sole hitting pavement depends on friction, so we embrace the chafe of severe mercy. Hard grace. The whole of this whacked-out world is still a house for us all. A house for God. A roofless marvel of intricate connectivity. Delight, blessedness, eloquence, bliss—felicity still abounds.

Perhaps roofless is a state of mind . . .

Amid wildfires and COVID-19, riots and politics, global suffering and local schmogg, it’s still occurring out there, beyond the glass . . . PRAISE, I mean . . .

As Frederick Buechner says:

“The way Psalm 148 describes it, praising God … is about as measured as a volcanic eruption. … The whole of creation is in on the act—the sun and moon, the sea, fire and snow, Holstein cows and white-throated sparrows, old men in walkers and children who still haven’t taken their first step.

“Their praise is not chiefly a matter of saying anything, because most of creation doesn’t deal in words. Instead, the snow whirls, the fire roars, the Holstein bellows, the old man watches the moon rise.

“Their praise is not something that at their most complimentary they say, but something that at their truest they are.

“Watch how the trees exult when the wind is in them. … Learn how to say ‘Hallelujah’ from the ones who say it right.”

Day or night, barefoot or shod, kneeling or running, may we do no less.

Felicity of an open-air temple

What is the gift being offered us now?

Tell me, what metaphorical footwear might you lace on, in preparation?

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P.S. If you enjoyed my earlier post on racial reconciliation (found here), here’s an excellent book currently furthering my education. White Awake: An Honest Look at What It Means to Be White, by Daniel Hill.

Daytime low-angle tree shot by Veronica Gomez Ibarra, on Unsplash; Nighttime low-angle tree shot by Dave Hoefler, on Unsplash

 

Filed Under: Immersions Tagged With: felicity, grace, hypaethral, praise, running, temple September 19, 2020

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