**Deeeeep breath**
What a crazy couple of months or so it has been up here in the FT.
Sometimes I feel like my life is moving so fast that I wake up some mornings and I can't remember the day before or what day it is or what I have on the docket for that day.
Sometimes I feel like I'm simply going through the motions and that I have forgotten why I am where I am, and why I'm doing what I am doing.
Sometimes I have so much to do, that I just can't sleep. I can't turn off my brain.
Sometimes I just want to disappear into the North Woods and simply be and be with my God...I haven't been the best daughter of late.
Sometimes I think I forget to breathe...
But I do know that I am still breathing...and right now that's about all I feel that I can do.
This semester is proving to be busier than I could have ever imagined. Courses are proving to be heavier than expected (by myself and SW...she's just as surprised as I am, thankfully); the to-do list regarding my research seems to be growing daily; I have loan specimens coming in from all over North America on just about a weekly basis - and, processing them is extremely time consuming; forming a committee is turning out to be quite trying; getting prepped for my first committee meeting means I have to have a bunch of stuff written up about myself, my research, etc.; the whole department is getting ready for the ESA-NCB meeting in March - which means we have to get our abstracts written and submitted by then end of this week, and then actually preparing our posters/talks, a number of us students are busy studying and practicing for the Linnaean Games (kind of like an ento quiz bowl), and then there's always the general prep that comes with hosting a meeting (yay...); we are about to be busy getting ready for the prospective student "Welcome Weekend" the end of March; there are number of outreach opportunities coming up that we students will be busy with; oh, and fellowship/grant applications are all due here in a couple of weeks; oh, and that thing called a social life...trying to keep that one going too; and church is getting busy in the best possible way (we start small groups this week!!). Whew! As a result of all of that, I feel like I have been a neglectful daughter, sister, student, friend, girlfriend, etc. The days leave me so incredibly exhausted that all I want to do is fall into bed and sleep, but I simply do not have the time to do that, and even when I do finally let myself fall into that dreamy bed of mine I find no rest. I'm tired. I'm spent. As Bilbo Baggins would put it, " I feel... thin. Sort of stretched, like... butter scraped over too much bread." I'm ready for this semester to be over. Even though I am so incredibly happy and blessed here - so incredibly blessed, I cannot even begin to explain. I am simply ready for the "lazy" summer (haha...funny joke) to arrive so that I can go home for Mak and Wes's hitching day, play with my moths and actually get research done, make another trip home for when Jake and the Stones come home from Africa, head back up to the FT to do MORE research (!!!), go to Arizona to learn about collecting and prepping leps for a couple of weeks (!!!), help Panda get settled in (he's been accepted here at the U!!!) and hopefully do the same with Jake, maybe take a few museum trips with SW to look at type specimens, aaaand go camping and collecting (!!!) with RH and Frenatae amongst and between the other events of the summer. I'm just ready to be done with classes, really.
But! My God is not tired, He is not spent, and I can find rest, comfort, and peace in that promise. He is never failing. Even when I feel like I simply cannot keep moving, He carries me along. How beautiful it is to know that being a daughter of the King means that even when I fall down (which is quite often) He is always there and ready to pick me back up again and help me dust off my hands and knees, pour peroxide and rub ointment on the scrapes, and bandage them up for me.
I love my God and I love that He loves me unconditionally...scrapes, bruises, scars, and all :)
Speaking of scars, I've been dealing with some of those lately...old experiences/memories/heartaches have been floating above my head and lingering there. It's frustrating at times, but forces me to stop and remember how much I have learned and grown through those experiences and how blessed I am to now have that wisdom and knowledge that I probably would not posses otherwise.
What funny things scars are. I don't think you can really ever forget where one came from. It's interesting to me how different scars are from bruises. You can find a bruise and have no clue how it got there, but the deep wounds that result in scars are incredibly difficult to miss. I find it funny, too, that scars don't have to be, necessarily, tied to a bad experience. Some of my scars remind me of awesome runs on the mountain bike trails, or running around llama farms as a kid, or some of the best performances from my ballet days; while others remind me of running into things or wrestling with kittens at the vet clinic (kittens are eeeeevil!!! Cute...but eeeeeevil!!!). Now, those are all physical scars of the flesh, but I think the same can be true for emotional/spiritual scars. I have scars from mission trips where I saw such unbelievable poverty that pieces of my heart were tugged away, but the experience was so beautiful in seeing people abandon themselves recklessly at the feet of Christ, and seeing myself and the other people on the trips with me grow in their faith and relationship with the Lord, that those scars remind of beautiful things along with the heartbreak. And, of course, other scars are simply reminders of heartbreak. Can't be helped. But, I digress.
Things really have been exhaustingly (it's a word...promise...thank you, English language for being absurdly ridiculous so as to allow us to pretty much make any word we want into a "real word"!) wonderful here. I had one of the best birthday weeks I have ever had - it's definitely going down in the record books as one of the best. I was surprised by many of you with little cards and messages and gifts throughout all of that week (THANK YOU!!), and a few are still trickling in! Y'all are awesome. I received some of the most breathtakingly beautiful orchids from Jake...RH made me go pick them up from the office and bring them to class with me, haha...everyone was quite impressed. And, I am very pleased to say, that they are still alive and well in their little vase in the Insect Museum - everyone gets to enjoy them on a daily basis. I really want to try and sprout one or two of the spikes...I need to look into that or run by Linder's and talk to the plant people to get their thoughts and suggestions on that undertaking. Anyways, I was also surprised by the Bug Dork crew up here with a fantastic dinner part at Chino-Latino! I don't think that I have ever been so surprised before. Megan did an awesome job of pulling it all together, and everyone here was amazing at keeping me totally and completely clueless, well done, kids, well done :) Once those pictures get forwarded to me I'll throw some up. We had a blast...though we all paid for it a bit the next morning...it was definitely worth the mid-week late night. That Saturday RH and a number of us Bug Dorks took on the frozen waters of Lake Owasso and went ICE FISHING! We had a great time, despite not catching a thing. So fun. Really...haha. And then, Sunday, of course, we had a rockin' Super Bowl party. SO MUCH GOOD FOOD! It was glorious.
This weekend everyone seems to be catching up from last weekend, haha. We were all rather unproductive on the school/research front.
So things have been busy, stressful, crazy, but wonderful all at the same time. I'll try to post some pictures later on, but for now I need to get back to work. I have grant drafts and abstracts to finish by tomorrow.
Praying all is wonderfully with you, my lovelies.
Shalom!
~MW
P.S. - I promise I haven't forgotten about finishing the new blog layout...it was either work on the layout or write a post this weekend - I figured you would all rather have an update :) I'll get to it...eventually, promise!
P.P.S. - I almost forgot to share this little gem with y'all! This little article about 20 Obsolete English Words that Should Make a Comeback is pretty amazing - and, I vote we start using these words again :) Also, MY BIG BROTHER IS FAMOUS! Check out this little article talking about his new band Shivaree (it talks about some other bands, as well, but Shivaree is the best...of course!). Check out some of their songs - they are way fun...raw recordings, but still awesome :)
7 comments:
Dearest Heather,
I realize at times graduate school can jargogle you.
I hope that you can corrade enough time to deliciate in the wonders of your wonderful bed. Perhaps you can even rest long enough to risk becoming a jollux! Perhaps then you can better police Big Boy's sanguinolency.
I think often back to our ludibrious secondary cavorting and kench to the point of quagswagging. Hearken back on those days of hoddypeakery when the semester ahead seems most malagrugrous.
I know at times you are facing brabbles (I checked, it can be used as a noun) of the most insipid nature, but freck yourself away from them, avoid too many brannigans, though you are SUCH a bibesy and especially avoid perissology (we all should try to be more concise). You should get much practice because I know grad school seems to be a state of constant scriptitation.
I hope you can dispel this case of widdendream and recline peacefully in your illecebrous bed by twitter-light next evening.
I know I was likely rather yemeles with these words, but I do hope it caused you to kench just a tiny bit. Now for your challenge: http://matadornetwork.com/abroad/20-awesomely-untranslatable-words-from-around-the-world/
Seriously, though, know that now, as ever, you are totally allowed to focus on school. We will all still be here when you have time. I love you and I hope you find rest.
oh, sister. hang in there. you'll soon be looking back on this time and laugh, wondering how you got it all done- your 'lazy' summer days are coming.
praying for you now, as you begin your day.
happy monday!
You CAN do all things in Christ, but you do not HAVE TO DO ALL THINGS. If there is a key to living it is prioritizing. Unfortunately, life is a series of interruptions. Plans are good, plans are noble; but as a firm believer in the 50/50/80 rule (if your odds are 50/50, there is an 80% chance you'll pick the wrong one)you can really only control ONE thing in your life: how you react to the situation, circumstance,emergency...interruption after interruption. I personally like screaming and fuming, but it is not well received in the business world, and pouting is such a lost art form that it is almost useless.
Whatever obstacles, mountains or molehills you encounter today, and some may leave a scar, cling to the ones that bring spiritual growth and discard the others.
We are praying for you daily,
Pop and Mom Pry
Oh, my Heather....it seems what I should say is, slow down and smell the roses (or better yet the orchids) but I think I am going to say instead...as you are running by, grab a rose, watch out for the thorns and keep on smiling :-)
Love ya,
Dad
Hi sweet girl. I just wanna say I hope you're not expecting too much of yourself. Do what you must do, but allow yourself some time to regroup and restore...however that looks for you. It's OK to just do nothing or say "no" now and then. Take care of you. :)
Blessings on your week, Sugar.
Love you!
Cheryl
I don't want to overwhelm you even more, but I must insist that you add "go to Houston" to your to-do list. Thanks & Gig 'Em!
BTW, I think you should print out my comment and frame it. I used all 20 of those extinct words.
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