Today,

Today, we washed out the bed of Dad’s pickup truck with the hose. The water ran down the street in a tiny river, hugging the curb. The boys and I followed it, splashing with bare feet.

Michael brought an old broom from the garage and used it to splash the running water over buckles in the concrete. We decided to see if it got all the way down to the storm drain.

We stopped to make dams out of sticks, and watched as they forced the water farther out into the street. We snatched the sticks away and watched the water surge ahead, a valiant and insignificant trickle. Nothing mattered but the blue sky, and the warm sun, and that trickle making it to the storm drain.

Today, we were ragamuffins, jeans rolled up, ankles dirty, shoes anywhere but on our feet.

Today, we got amused looks from the neighbors.

Today, we were straight up Huck Finn.

We swept the water along, taking turns with the broom. We reached the storm drain and watched the water fall headlong through the grate.

I didn’t get the boys home in time for dinner, but I got them out of the street every time a car went by. We came home with our feet and hands dirty.

Today, the world felt a little bigger, and I felt a little smaller.

Today, we chased our goal and reached the journey’s end, and tomorrow I’ll fall headlong into a new adventure, refreshed from today’s stream–just enough water to trickle to the storm drain.

Like a Crocus

When we moved into our current house, we didn’t know what was planted around it. The next spring, we were pleasantly surprised to find crocuses bursting through the soil right outside the front door. White, yellow, purple; faces trustingly open to the sky.

Shortly after this revelation in our front yard, I read Isaiah 35 and found this (v. 1-2a):

“The desert and the parched land will be glad; the wilderness will rejoice and blossom. Like the crocus, it will burst into bloom; it will rejoice greatly and shout for joy.”

At the time, I was mostly struck by the fact that God cared enough to talk about something as small as a crocus.

This spring, the crocuses came up again. After the Landscaping Apocalypse my parents had inflicted along the front of the house, I was now struck by their resiliency.

The desert and the parched land. . . the wilderness. . .

. . . will rejoice and blossom.

My world has been turned over again and again in the last few weeks. But in the parched wilderness, joy can still unexpectedly spring up–bright, lush, and shocking.

I’m standing with my face trustingly open to the sky, waiting for it to rain again.