Running, running, and running, running

brooks running shoes running after God listening and obeying

Running, running, and running, running.

I’m running. The sun is starting to rise, I can just make out all the silhouettes of the trees in our forest lined neighborhood. The sky is a dusky blue and pale pink and the temperature is a comfortable 42 degrees.

It’s just after 7 in the morning and I check my watch to see that I’ve almost ran 3.5 miles. That’s good, right? I mean, no one could blame me for turning left into my driveway right now instead of running past it to get to a solid 4 miles this morning.

I keep going straight though. Why? Like I said, no one would say anything negative about a 3.5 mile run. They’d probably say, “That’s so awesome you did that!” or “I don’t even run at all so good on you.”

But I’m not doing it for them and I know myself better. I know I can make it to 4 miles. In fact, that was my goal in 2023, to get over my 3 mile hump and make it to 4 miles (as well as get under a 10 minute mile when I was closer to 11 minutes per mile). I reached both of those goals very, very slowly throughout the year. I struggle more with speed in the summer when it’s hot and I struggle with distance regularly because I got my 30 minutes of exercise and I can go home now… 

It’s really easy to talk ourselves into doing less when we compare it with what other people are doing. Whether they’re doing more than us and we feel inferior or they’re doing less than us so we’re already superior, comparison is the catalyst. The same goes for the tug in my spirit to make changes or talk to someone or pray for something specific. No one could blame me for dismissing the urge or the thought. There are so many reasons for bypassing it completely and so many distractions eager to oblige.

But I know myself better. I’m not living life for other people and I certainly don’t want to look back and say, “Well, I could’ve done more but I was really busy (or distracted or worried or concerned about what others would think).” No. When I am staring into the eyes of God Himself, I will wish I’d done more. Just like when I come home from a run that I willingly cut short, I wish I’d gone the extra half mile. Because I knew I could. I knew it then and I know it now. I could always do more and what I can do has nothing to do with what anyone else does.

Help me do the more now, God. I don’t want to regret it later. 

Pay careful attention to your own work, for then you will get the satisfaction of a job well done, and you won’t need to compare yourself to anyone else. Galatians 6:4

Dad’s Memories from the Vietnam War 1968

Garry Dean Singleton E4 United States Air Force Vietnam Veteran

I find myself desperate for more pictures, videos, or memories of my dad. I can’t create any new memories and so I search for the old. I have a hard drive of photos and videos that got fried and I’ve been searching for someone to fix it because Dad might be in there. In fact, I know he is. I made a mug with pictures of him on it so he could go places with me (the quality was disappointing but the pictures are still Dad). The wallpaper on my phone is a picture of him and I together. His smile reminds me that he lived, he loved, and he was loved.

I still can’t quite get my head around his death. Grief is a part of my everyday. I don’t look for reasons to be sad about it, I just know it is. He’s gone and my brain doesn’t recognize that story.

memories with dad

Henri Nouwen said, “We celebrate their life and death. We think about them every day. We have their pictures on the wall… They continue to send their spirit and their love to me. They continue to tell me what life is about. The more I hold on to their memories, the more active they are in my heart and in my life. I need them to help me live my life just as they needed me when they were with me. They continue to teach me something about who I am and where I am going and to Whom I belong.” (From Spiritual Formation: Following the Movements of the Spirit)

This quote comforted me so much, reminding me of the “cloud of witnesses” that surrounds us all. I know dad is in that cloud and I wonder who else is there as well? How much do they get to see?

Until I can figure out how to get my fried hard drive working and recover more of my dad memories, I decided to share some memories he shared with us about his time in Vietnam. He had a photo album from his time in Vietnam and my husband made the valid and wise point that one day there would just be this album and if we didn’t know what the pictures were about, we would be missing a piece of history. Together, we went through the pictures, letting him make the captions for them. 

Maybe you know or knew someone who was in Vietnam. Maybe they would enjoy this peek into history. My dad was in the United States Air Force and served in Vietnam doing radio communication. The pictures are from Vi Thanh, South Vietnam IV Corps MACV (Military Assistance Command Vietnam) from 1968. These are some pictures he took and his own commentary on them.

I can still see him sitting on the couch by the window typing out his captions for the photos, a glass of red wine on the windowsill, chuckling to himself. When I read these words, I can hear his voice trying to add details verbally that I insisted he type instead. His sense of humor and sarcasm are evident in so many of the captions.

He lived. He loved. His life has value. So does yours.

Vi Thanh, South Viet Nam IV Corps MACV (Military Assistance Command Viet Nam)1968
United States Air Force
Garry Dean Singleton E4

Moving Day: Moving Through Grief

Moving Day. Moving Through Grief. Grieving the Death of a parent.

I don’t remember much about moving to California from New York. I was in kindergarten, sharing the back of a station wagon with my older brother. In the back of the gray Datsun B210, I did all the school work my teachers gave me and sometimes convinced my brother to play Barbies with me. Our family rented a house in Fremont before eventually moving to Tracy and buying our own home. When the moving truck drove away and all was unpacked, my training wheel was missing. We had one, just not the other.

“It must have been left on the truck,” my dad said.

I learned to ride my bike leaning to the side that had the training wheel, which only made learning to ride without training wheels harder. I kept leaning and leaning, falling over, scared of falling over.

“You’ve got to overcompensate for that now,” my dad said. He held onto the back of the bike and let go, over and over. “Find your balance.”

I would slam my feet down in fear and frustration, scared to lean too far in either direction. I knew I’d fall. I couldn’t find my balance.

I don’t remember the details of moving to what would be my main childhood home in Tracy, California. I knew I was getting a cat and starting second grade. It was all blurry. I knew how to ride a bike by then and had moved on to roller skates.

I remember moving away from home to go to college, moving back in when college “didn’t work out”, moving out to live with someone else, moving back in when things unraveled, moving out to my own place, to rent a room somewhere else, to live with a boyfriend, to get a roommate in an apartment, and moving back in whenever it all fell apart.

When my parents moved out of state and into retirement in Arkansas, the safety net of my “home” was ripped out from under me. I had to overcompensate for my lean. I leaned into my own abilities, my responsibilities, my strength and I accomplished great things always knowing I couldn’t lean the other direction anymore. I might fall. Fear and frustration pushed me forward.

Moving to Virginia with my new husband and my very pregnant belly is a moving day I’ll never forget. My dad and I drove from Missouri to Virginia while my husband and his brother made the longer drive together in our car with our pets. We arrived at the empty small home we were renting until we would buy our first home, living out of suitcases and sleeping on air mattresses until our moving truck arrived.

I don’t think anything got left on the truck that day. I think we learned to double check. At the far back of the truck was my childhood piano. My dad, my husband, and our friend helped push that piano up the length of the truck, down the ramp, and eventually up the hill to the side door and into the house. It took so long. It was so heavy. I was too pregnant and banned from helping.

When everything was unloaded and the unpacking began, my dad made his plans for the return trip to Missouri. I didn’t want him to go. I kept making plans. “Let’s go to a store and get some good food to cook and send you off with a great meal!” “Let’s check out that coffee shop one more time.”  I wasn’t done leaning on him, his strength, his stability, the way he made everything okay. Until finally, he drove off one morning for his long drive home.

Starting my “real life” as a wife and mother in a new state, new home, new everything was an adventure, often lonely, often filled with anxiety. I began wanting my parents closer. Their visits twice a year weren’t enough time to spend together, to get to know their granddaughters and eventually their grandson. I wanted their home to be near my home and for “home” to include us all.

Many years later, they made that move all the way to Virginia from Missouri and it felt like a true homecoming. I welcomed them with excitement and joy, determined to help make everything work out. Dad’s body was in pain from cancer spreading throughout it and they left almost everything behind to make the trip easier. It would all work out. I leaned in. I leaned hard. I didn’t care if I fell.

When Dad died only 6 weeks later, suddenly, unexpectedly, and tragically, the funeral home came to move his body. I sent the kids to the neighbor’s house, not wanting them to remember him that way, not ready to tell them he was gone. Surrounded by my husband, mom, brother, and two close family friends, we watched them wheel his body down the hall, down the sidewalk, down the driveway and into the car. I would not look away. I would not let his move go unwitnessed. I leaned in, into the frustration, the fear, and the pain.

In the coming weeks we moved mom into the home they’d purchased together. We heaved boxes with his handwriting on them. We set aside the files he had so carefully labeled. We moved the items he had packed for this move-in day that he wasn’t present for. And it hurt.

We are approaching another moving day now. My mom has bought a house around the corner from us, so close and such a blessing for us all. This moving day is exciting, it’s sad, it’s bittersweet doing it all without him. I can feel him holding on to the back of me and saying, “You’ve got to overcompensate for that lean. Find the balance.”

Balance has never been my strong point. With vision in one eye, my head perpetually tilted to one side, leaning always one way or the other, and zero depth perception, I physically find balancing nearly impossible. In my heart, I struggle with balance as well, swinging widely like a pendulum across the spectrum of emotions (excitement, disappointment, grief, celebration, sadness, hope, hopelessness). I lean one way. I lean the other. I wobble around, unsteady and unsure. But I’d rather continue on unsteady feet than push against the waves of feelings that wash over me, fighting against them with fear and frustration, stamping my feet down to stop any forward motion. I would rather overcompensate repeatedly, feeling all the feelings and knowing the depths of my own pain and the heights of my own joy.

Dad was so brave, so strong in his faith. When it became clear that his heart was failing and he would not recover from the blood loss he was experiencing, he said, “I’m not afraid. I know where I’m going.” He walked such a strong, stable, steady road of faith, loyalty and responsibility. I, meanwhile, am wobbling behind him leaning one way and then the other, but I’m starting to figure this thing out. He lent me his faith on his deathbed and I have leaned on it like the only existing training wheel we could find after unpacking the grief, the busy-ness that comes with death, the funeral, the paperwork, and the memories. Taking the training wheel of his faith off, I put it on a shelf of cherished memories and learn to move forward slowly and even with excitement at times. Mostly, though, I’m tired and it still hurts.

He knew where he was going. He wasn’t scared. I didn’t want him to go. I leaned one way. I was determined to make it all work out. I leaned another way. I would fix him. I leaned forward, willing it all to be okay. I told him to lean on me. And then it was over. And he was gone. He let go and I wobbled off down the road knowing that stopping wasn’t an option. I’m getting the hang of it now, continuing forward knowing he’s behind me, finding my balance even as I lean too far one way and then the other. I know where I’m going now. I’m not scared.

Blessed are they that mourn, for they will be comforted. Matthew 5:4
Grieving the death of my dad. Grief.