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Vacation 2020: All I Ever Wanted, But Why?

Photo cred: The sweet professional photographer who volunteered to take our pic on her day off because she couldn’t handle our incompetency. Thank you!

What began 54 years ago as a honeymoon retreat in Wautoma, Wisconsin, for my mother- and father-in-law has grown into an annual week-long gathering of more than 30 people, two wiener dogs and a Yorkipoo living under two roofs. That’s eight couples, 18 grandkids, and one newborn great-grandson–like Grandma’s plaque reads–“All Because Two People Fell in Love.”

This year was our best family reunion yet, and I want to analyze why it was our best. Leadership expert Andy Stanley says, “If you don’t know why it’s working when it’s working, you won’t know how to fix it when it breaks.” So I’ve compiled a list of things we did right–sometimes after decades of getting it wrong.

We were grateful. Among countless other lessons, 2020 has taught us to not take meeting together for granted. We were grateful that families drove for twenty hours across the country or ventured out with a week-old baby or flew in masked and slathered in hand sanitizer to make this happen. We were thankful that couples loaded up their cars with Costco hauls to feed and clean up after our tribe. Most of all, we were thankful that God preserved the health of our parents that they could live to see another family reunion. We don’t take any of these things for granted anymore.

We were gracious. The best families are made up of the best forgivers, and sharing close quarters gave us many opportunities to forgive or simply overlook irritations. It helped that we kicked off the week with a worship service including a celebration of Holy Communion. Confessing our sins, sharing in the joys of forgiveness, and singing with every bit as much enthusiasm as when we’re at a karaoke bar while we sat on the screened-in porch overlooking Silver Lake was one of my top memories of the week.

Good sense makes a person slow to anger, and it is to his credit when he overlooks an offense.

Proverbs 19:11 EHV

We soaked in the beauty of creation. We could not have had better weather: Sunshine and gentle breezes, low humidity, and one Midwest rainstorm to quench my desert-dwelling heart. During quarantine, I think we’d all had our fill of being indoors, Netflix, and the constantly running news feed that does nothing to feed our souls. Instead, we greeted the lake each morning with arms open wide, filling our lungs with fresh air imbued with the scents of algae, of boat engine fuel, of bass who have passed on from this life, of sunscreen and the ashes of last night’s campfire. When it was time to call the kids into shore and their bodies would sway from the waves’ imprint on their muscle memory, we knew it had been a good day.

We paid attention to love languages. For example, my dear brother-in-law shows love by sharing whatever he happens to be eating or drinking. Jovially he will shove a fork or glass in my face and declare, “You must try!” While I am normally quite careful about what I eat, I chose to take a bite or swig or at least an appreciative smell because doing so would fill his emotional bucket. (And this is after last year when he unknowingly fed me rotten pickled sucker fish. A good family is good at forgiving. See above.) We saw love in action in the uncles who drove countless circles on the lake as they pulled skiers and tubers, the aunts who washed a counter full of dishes sticky with BBQ sauce after meals, older cousins who drove the little ones to the overpriced candy story for $3 mystery bags, and in grandparents who stayed up way past their bedtime so that they wouldn’t miss out on conversations with their teenage grandkids playing Settlers of Catan and Jackbox games. We loved well.

We didn’t try to fix people. I can’t tell you how much more relaxing it is to just listen, empathize, and affirm someone’s story without feeling the need to direct the course of their lives. It is positively liberating. In fact, this revolutionary idea of not fixing people was so effective on vacation that I am going to make it a habit the other 51 weeks of the year. Imagine that! Quite possibly, this is one of the best souvenirs I could’ve brought home.

Wouldn’t change a thing about these participants in our annual Silver Lake Talent Show

While our family might be unique for keeping a 54-year tradition going, we are prone to the pitfalls that are common in all families: selfishness, grudge holding, score keeping, and pride. But we’ve also gotten really good at forgiveness, grace, and gratitude. God willing, we’ll keep learning and growing and continue to make beautiful memories on Silver Lake.

If you’re gearing up for vacation, you might enjoy some of my favorite lines from “A Liturgy for Leaving on Holiday”:

In our days away let us play together. Let us laugh together.

Let us be moved to speak such meaningful words as ought to be spoken among family and friends.

Let us linger long at tables and drink deeply of one another’s company, enjoying each for who they are with the steady pressures of our ordinary days now lifted.

So help us also, in this time of our vacation, to carve out spaces merely to be,

to be with You,

to be together,

to be refreshed.

Ah, how we long for that fierce freedom for which we were created!

Let us taste of it here in our travels.

Every Moment Holy by Douglas McKelvey



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Hummingbird Life Hack

Calliope (possibly?) hummingbird hovering beside our Texas Red Yucca (as identified by a reader — thank you!)

Near the bench on our back deck where I watch the sun rise, a stalky plant with bell-shaped pink flowers attracts a new hummingbird every morning.  Today’s hummingbird zoomed right to work, plunging its long, curved beak into the floral nectary.  After a second of super-efficient slurping, he flitted to the next blossom and checked it for nectar.  No nectar?  No problem.  Just zip over to the next blossom. 

I’ve been watching these guys for a few weeks now, and I have yet to see one hummingbird paralyzed with self-doubt about what to do next or beating himself up for stopping at a flower that was empty.  He just does the next right thing, which for him is to check out a different flower.  He knows his super-speedy metabolism is going to burn through his energy stores in half an hour or less, so there’s no time to dwell on past mistakes.  If he had a bumper sticker, it would read, “I’d Rather Be Flying.”

Oh, little hummingbird, how wise you are!  Teach me your ways because I have a lot to learn in this department.  Last week at my daughter’s graduation I had a brief conversation—scarcely longer than it takes a hummingbird to clean out a nectary—with someone I respect, where I managed to say something cosmically stupid.  It took two days for me to let go of the embarrassment.  Instead of shaking it off and moving on, I rehashed the event in the unforgiving echo chamber of my mind.

That’s why I love the Bible accounts of Peter.  He had a habit of saying stupid thing—and Jesus loved him, giving him second and third chances.  Just hours after declaring he would never desert Jesus, Peter swore up and down he didn’t even know the man.  After his third denial when Jesus looked at him, we are told that Peter went out and wept bitterly.  Do you think he might have spent the next two days rehashing events and kicking himself for his failure?

But Jesus didn’t leave him reeling in embarrassment for long.  Shortly after Jesus rose from the dead, he appeared to Peter on the beach and asked him one question three times: “Simon (Peter’s given name), do you love me?”  One question for each time Peter had lied about his relationship with his Savior.  Peter got a one-for-one do-over.  By the third time, Peter was hurt that Jesus had to ask, but Jesus didn’t back down; he was doing this for Peter’s catharsis.  He wanted Peter to fly light and free, unburdened by his mistakes.

The account in John 21 could have ended there with Peter’s renewal of his vows to the Lord, but immediately after his beautiful testimony, he said something stupid again.  Peter, my man!  We are kindred spirits.  And what was Jesus’ response?  He could’ve thrown up his hands in exasperation and shouted, “Oy vey!”  But he didn’t—Jesus actually made him a leader in the early church.  After Peter’s career of dedicated ministry (and a few more mortifying missteps), Peter was crucified for his rock-solid confession of his faith in Jesus.  

Hummingbirds are fascinating creatures.  I highly recommend watching this 5-minute PBS video on the structure and function of a hummingbird tongue.  (Spoilers: It’s forked and moves even faster than his wings.)  Amazing!  What else I find amazing is how much I’m like Peter, a disciple born with his foot in his mouth.  If there was hope for Peter, there is hope for me.  Thank You, God, for imperfect role models who perfectly model their need for You.  Keep me from camping out in my past failures and instead lead me to the next flower of forgiveness You’ve prepared for me.  Let me drink deeply and move on because I’d rather be flying.