Tuesday, December 12, 2023

Dreaming of a black Christmas


Today I’ll share a December excerpt from my memoir, Please, God, Don’t Make Me Go: A Foot-Dragger’s Memoir. The scene takes place on a mission center, Lomalinda (pretty hill), in South America, during our family’s first December there. 


But first, review Your Christmas stories need sensory details, and then notice those that I included in my excerpts, below. (Sensory details: What do you see, hear, taste, smell, and feel?) 


Lomalinda was into the dry season with clean cerulean skies and hardly a wisp of a cloud. Daytime temperatures rose to over a hundred degrees in the shade—cruel, withering. The green scent of the rainy season had given way to the spicy fragrance of sun-dried grasses. Immense stretches of emerald disappeared, leaving grasslands stiff and simmering under unrelenting sun.

      Muddy paths and single-lane tracks turned rock-hard and, with use, changed to dust. Yards and airstrips and open fields turned to dust, too. 

      From sunrise to sundown, a strong wind blew across the llanos, a gift from God because it offered a little relief from the heat. On the other hand, we had to use rocks and paperweights and other heavy objects to keep papers from blowing away. Dust blew through slatted windows and into homes and offices and settled on our counters and furniture and in cracks and crannies and on our necks and in our armpits and up our noses. . . . 

      During rainy season, sometimes laundry took days to dry in our screened-in porch, but in dry season I hung laundry outside and, after pegging up the last garment in the laundry basket, I took down the first pieces I’d hung—the hot wind had already dried them.

      Dry season gave homes and furniture and clothing and shoes and photos and slides a chance to de-mildew. Roads were easier to navigate, no longer gooey with mud. The parched wind gave us a break from the profuse sweating we endured in the rainy season so, in that way, it was a friend.

      But dry season could also be a foe. One sizzling afternoon, Dr. Altig hollered at our door, “Call for help! We have a fire!” Across the road behind Ruth’s house, flames leaped and smoke billowed. . . .



That year, our family’s first there, we learned December traditionally was a time of wildfires in and around Lomalinda, leaving acres of black ashes. Shortly after that day’s fire, the following happened:


One December day I walked a sun-cracked track while that celestial fireball cooked my skin and the smell of charred grassland swirled in the breeze. The school principal puttered up to me on her red motorbike. “It’s beginning to look a lot like Christmas!”

      Pris watched me for a few seconds and then laughed—my face had betrayed my thoughts. I had to bite my tongue to keep from saying, “This looks like Christmas? You’ve got to be kidding!”

    To me, Christmas looks like frost-covered evergreens, and snowflakes, and frozen puddles. Heavy coats, scarves, mittens, boots. Runny noses. Sledding. Ice skating. Swags of cedar and pine and holly tied with red ribbons.

      I learned a lesson on that hot, dry December day. “It’s beginning to look a lot like Christmas” means different things to different people. To most Lomalindians, especially kids, Christmas looked like a bleached landscape, charred fields, hot wind, and a whiff of ashes in the air. Folks enjoyed saying, “I’m dreaming of a black Christmas.”


What are your memories of unique Christmases? 

  • Did you spend one Christmas fighting a war overseas? 
  • Or did you celebrate the holiday in Hawaii one year? 
  • Or did you take a trip to the Holy Land?


What about traditions you enjoyed

  • Playing fun games 
  • Serving Christmas Eve dinner at a homeless shelter
  • Going to the Nutcracker each year
  • Watching It’s A Wonderful Life or Rudolph, the Red-Nosed Reindeer
  • Christmas caroling in nursing homes


What memories of traditional Christmas food do you have?


If you have a Nordic background, you might have traditions around smörgåsbords with

  • lutefisk, 
  • pepparkakor, 
  • gubbröra, 
  • liver pâté,
  • vörtbröd, 
  • pickled herring, 
  • pinnekjôtt,
  • glögg, and
  • julekaker.


If you have a Scottish background, you might have 

  • haggis 
  • tatties and neeps, 
  • black pudding, 
  • Cock-a-leekie soup,
  • clootie dumpling, and 
  • Yorkshire pudding. 


Have fun remembering Christmases past.


This is a super busy time of year, but if you keep a pencil and paper handy, simply jot down ideas for now. When things settle down after the holidays, you can spend more time on a rough draft.


And be sure to include sensory details.


Tuesday, December 5, 2023

Offer readers your all-important takeaways to help them move from mourning to thanksgiving

 

For the past couple of weeks, you’ve considered writing stories in your memoir that embrace both mourning and thanksgiving. (Click on What can you offer readers about mourning AND thanksgiving?)

 

You’ve experienced heartbreaks, setbacks,

and devastating losses.

 

But now, years later, you recognize

there’s more to your story.

Something to be thankful for.

 

Not only did you survive, but now

you acknowledge the silver lining of your heartache.

 

You came out on the other side of your sorrow

thanking God for the blessings wrapped up in the hurts.

 

He brought beauty from your ashes:

He gave you the oil of joy—a joyous blessing—

instead of mourning,

and a garment of praise

instead of heaviness and despair (Isaiah 61:3).

 

That’s what you want to put in writing

for your family and friends.

(See Part 2: What can you offer readers

about mourning AND thanksgiving?)

 

As beautiful as the story now is, it isn’t complete unless you include takeaways for readers.

 

Offering people a takeaway means you tell them the most important lesson you took away from a given experience. You tell them how you gained clarity and wisdom, how that helped make sense of your life, and how you changed as a result.

 

Give words to the principle you learned—think of the takeaway as a precept, a saying, a guideline, an adagesomething readers can live by, a principle that can be life-changing for them, too.

 

Your takeaways are the most powerful part of your memoir. They offer readers hopeor wisdom, or courage, or laughter, or a solution, or a new way of living or loving.

 

Your takeaways communicate to readers:

I know this is true because I have experienced it.

I have lived it. It changed my life.

Perhaps it will change your life, too.” 

(Read more at Your memoir’s takeaways can change lives.)

 

Below you’ll find examples of takeaways. I hope they’ll inspire you to share with others about both mourning and thanksgiving:

 

“At first glance, the thought that there is a blessing in our wounds sounds absurd,” writes Julie Sousa Bradley Lilly. She lists memories of “betrayals, insults, abandonments, embarrassments, injuries, pain and loss. . . .”

 

“When I have resisted bitterness and sought [God] in a hard or painful circumstance, He has used it to transform me into a better person that chooses a different path. Betrayals made me loyal. Insults made me kind. Abandonments made me faithful. . . . And injuries, pain and loss made me more compassionate and generous. . . .

 

“Terrible things happen in this life, and I wouldn’t for a second minimize another’s suffering. I only want to offer an opportunity to exchange a label of ‘victim’ for one that says, ‘blessed.’” (Blessings in Our Wounds, Julie Sousa Bradley Lilly, Ragamuffin Warrior)

 

Below you’ll find several other sample takeaways to help you write your own takeaways:  

 

“I’ve learned to embrace change, and acknowledge my fears knowing that no matter what lies ahead, God is ever present and I never have to walk this journey alone. And neither do you. Let’s not forget that although change, closed chapters, and life moving forward may bring us saddened hearts, it also brings us out of our comfort zones, spurring new beginnings and opportunities. By altering our perspective, often without notice, little by little we transform—our hearts, our views, our lives, our faith. We become wiser, stronger, more resilient, and positive . . . . What a gift. One day at a time, we got this.” (Daphne Bach Greer—the Sweeter Side of Grief)

 

The Farm Wyfe, Amanda Wells, offers this: “I’ve done enough living to know there are seasons when life challenges us, when God gives us opportunities to trust him even when the outlook is bleak. Even when exhaustion overrides all else and I’m hanging by a thread, I trust him because I have seen his faithfulness. I’ve experienced God’s hand on my life and I know he will get me through the hard times. . . . because God’s got this even when I don’t.

 

Kaitlyn Bouchillon writes about praying to God for relief from something awful, only to find Him silent . . . for a long time. Nothing seemed to change.

 

“It’s there, in the place where things don’t make sense,” she writes, “. . . that a miracle begins to take place.”

 

She offers this takeaway: “This is the hard but beautiful truth: The ‘other side’ of The Thing you’re hoping for, praying for, daily asking God for . . . it might not end up looking like what you hoped/prayed/asked. It might be that what changes is  . . . you.

 

“It might be that instead of walls falling,

by God’s grace and His strength,

at the end of it all you’re still standing.

That’s still a miracle.

That’s still an answered prayer.

 

Kaitlyn's words, It might be that what changes is you, reminds me of my own experience of transitioning from mourning to thanksgiving, in Colombia, South America, after suffering several months of culture shock at a remote mission center named Lomalinda (pretty hill). 

 

Equatorial heat and intense humidity brought me to my knees. 


I was utterly discombobulated and, in desperation, I refused to unpack and threatened to run away and walk (!) all the way home to Seattle by way of Central America, Mexico, California, Oregon, and finally arrive in my Washington State.

 

But, after a few months of settling into my job and getting acquainted with Lomalinda’s people, to my surprise, I discovered that I loved living there.

 

I wrote in my memoir, Please, God, Don’t Make Me Go: A Foot-Dragger’s Memoir:

 

“In moving to Lomalinda, I had taken a wild-eyed dive of faith and, halfway into it, I wondered where I’d land. And when I did land, I hit the ground hard. That place seemed so alien and harsh—yet that’s where God rescued me from myself.

 

“I had flown into the mission center as a scared, immature, unadventurous, doubting Thomas. God didn’t need me to accomplish His work in Colombia—He could have found someone else to do my job. He did more inside me than He did through me, and I suspect that was His point all along. He knew my faith and I needed to mature.

 

“Through situations, experiences—sometimes derailing, other times almost imperceptible—God expanded my heart and soul and mind and revolutionized the way I would look at life and Him for the rest of my days.

 

“He showed me that despite my fears and weaknesses,

He is strong.

When chaos reigns, He is in control.

When the unpredictable happens, He’s already there.

When I am vulnerable, He is my protection.

Exhausted, God is my strength.

Under that searing Lomalinda sun, God sheltered me,

and my family, under the shadow of His wings.

When I wanted to pull back,

He took my hand and nudged me forward,

and when my grip grew weary,

His brawny hand held on.

He sat beside me when I grieved over

taking my kids away from

their grandparents, aunts, and uncles.

He became my calm in the storm,

my rock when my world shook.

Every moment, every day, every night,

He hovered over my family and me

and calmed us with His love.

Sometimes God even showed His sense of humor,

though at the time I usually failed to appreciate it.

 

“ . . . If I had refused to move to Lomalinda, I’d have missed tarantulas and scorpions and cockroaches and howler monkeys’ breathy howls in the distance and cicadas’ ear-piercing whistles and parrots’ rowdy calls morning and evening.

 

“I’d have missed eating piraña, boa constrictor, caiman, dove, platanos, ajiaco . . . and cinnamon rolls seasoned with dead weevils. . . . I’d have missed drinking chicha, and tinto, and warm bottled sodas, sometimes with bugs inside.

 

“Before Lomalinda  . . . never would I . . . have envisioned myself chopping up a dead pig on the kitchen floor. . . .

 

“But moving to Lomalinda, despite my whines and protestations, took mephysically, culturally, and spirituallyto places better, higher, and finer than anything I could have dreamed.

 

“Glenny Gardner had welcomed me by showing me the coolest thing he could think of—a boa constrictor. In the same way, Dave wanted his wife and kids to experience the coolest thing he could imagine—living in Lomalinda. Rich offered me the coolest opportunity he knew—a trip to La Guajira. And from the beginning to the end, God, too, was offering me the coolest thing—working in Lomalinda.

 

God had allowed what I would not have asked for

to give me what I didn’t know I wanted.”

(Catherine P. Downing, Sparks of Redemptive Grace)


For more inspiration, click here to read Ashley Travous’s takeaways in her powerful post, To the Woman Who Stole My Husband.  

 

You’ll also find good insights from Reflecting on God’s Wonders in Difficult Times.

 

Take plenty of time to craft your takeaways. Pinpoint your message. Clarity is your goal.

 

Your takeaways will strengthen your readers' faith. They will give them wisdom that they’ll take with them long after they’ve read your final page.

 

Your story can offer hope to those in despair. Your story can model courage overcoming cowardice.  Your story can model calm for those tangled up in chaos.  

 

Your story can shine light in the darkness:

 

“At times, our own light goes out

and is rekindled by a spark from another person.

Each of us has cause to think with deep gratitude

of those who have lighted the flame within us.”

(Albert Schweitzer)

 

Who needs to read your story?

Someone is waiting for your spark to rekindle theirs.