Friday, October 25, 2013

BLOOMS AND BUTTERFLIES

Fall has finally arrived in my neighborhood.  Thank goodness!  I, unlike many of you, do not have a love of hot weather.  I can't even wear turtlenecks anymore in the winter because I stay fairly consistently warm.  I guess there are worse things.

With the fall has come some photo opportunities for me.  Both fell in my lap quite accidentally but turned out to be some of the most enjoyable times of photo taking I've had lately.  The first set of photos was taken last month when it was still warm; however, the roses were taken just this week on Wednesday, a windy and cold day.  It was amazing to me such beautiful flowers could continue to grow in those weather conditions.  I'm sure there's a sermon there somewhere but for now, I'll just share the photos.  Enjoy!















Tuesday, October 15, 2013

PRAYERS AND PIANOS


Missed me?  I haven’t felt well for the past week or so.  Draggy.  Sick-feeling. Sleepy.  Not-so-perky. I just couldn’t quite put my finger on it.   After going to the doctor this afternoon, I discovered I had a nasty sinus infection and potentially a kidney stone still in my kidney.  (Maybe it will stay there quietly.)  At least I can look forward to recovery sooner than later now that I have medicines.  Can you believe that it has come to a time in this society when a person has to show an ID to get Mucinex DM at the store?  Really?  Sad.  What I was getting to with this story is that I have felt so not perky that I went immediately to sleep on the couch when my head hit the couch pillow and have just woken up.  And yes, now I have to get sleepy again.  I did not stagger off to the bed in my sleepy state as I would have liked but woke up wide awake and nauseous.  Since the other one who lives in my house is not wide awake and the house is very quiet, it seemed a good time for a blog post.

I spent my morning at the church while the piano tuner tuned two pianos there and then at The Girl’s house waiting while he tuned her piano.  I listened as the notes clinged and clanged during the tuning and eventually just kind of “tuned” them out, you know?  When the tuner is finished, he always begins to play to “test” his tuning skills.  Let me tell you, The Tuner can play the piano.  I mean REALLY PLAY the piano.  I just close my eyes and listen.  With my ears and my heart.  After he finished the first piano of the day, I began to look forward to his finishing the second.  And the third just so I could hear him play.  It was beautiful music to my ears.  I told The Tuner today that I could play like that.  In my dreams.  He chuckled. 

I am often reminded of my piano playing history and thought it might a good time to share that story.  As you all know if you are a regular blog reader, I am a PK (Preacher’s Kid).  When I was nine years old, the church where my daddy pastored lacked a pianist.  My daddy bought a piano for our house—maybe he paid $75 for it which back then was a large amount to pay for anyone but especially for us who were not rich.  Just in case you wondered, we still are not rich.  It was an old, very large piano and I was quite taken with it.  I’m sure that my being quite taken with it was a result of prayers my daddy prayed that the Lord would provide a piano player for the church.  Really.  I kid you not.  Ask my daddy.  My mother purchased me a Thompson-learn-to-play-the-piano book.  It had pictures of the piano keys along with where to put your fingers for that particular key along with the lines and key signature.  In the meantime, I sat and played that piano a lot.  With one finger.  I learned that I could actually play church songs.  With one finger.  Then I got smarter and learned that if I looked in the old Red Back Church Hymnal with shaped notes and found a song that had the same key signature as that particular page in the Thompson book and if I played those shapes of notes, it worked.  I would tape the shapes on the correct keys of the piano either with Scotch tape and paper or masking tape.  I kid you not.  Those piano keys with those hand written taped on note shapes were unusual to say the least.   I learned to play just that way.  You might think I was pretty smart as that sounds very hard.  I will tell you that I loved it but most of all it worked because my daddy prayed.  And when my daddy prayed, the Lord provided.  I could go on and on but will tell that as I learned all the key signatures I could and applied them from that Red Back Church Hymnal, my musical ear got to working with it,  and I learned to move my left hand in time with the music.  That little church with no pianist began to sing with my piano music.  Granted we sang the same song or two every Sunday until I learned more.  I can’t say for sure, but I imagine my daddy was smiling the whole service.  Remember?  He prayed.  The Lord provided a need for that particular time in life that has continued to be a joy to me even now.

Close to 50 years later, I still can’t read round notes on lines and spaces. I need squares, diamonds, triangles, and circles.  I can’t count time.  It amazes me that The Girl and others can play the piano by reading all the round notes that sit on different lines and counts the time and knows all about music.  I will say that when The Girl began to “play by ear” at age five, I put her in private piano lessons so she, unlike her mother, would know what she was doing.  And she can play beautifully whether she reads the notes or if she plays by ear.  I would like to think she got that talent from her mother’s side of the family.  I try to imagine how it would be for her if her mother had prayed like her granddaddy prayed.  I can transpose and play songs that I do know in whatever key you want as long as it’s not over five “b’s” or more than one “#”--pound sign.    I can play the organ choir music that is all round notes and looks the same to me  by ear.  I just look like I know what I’m doing and no one is the wiser.  Until now.    Admittedly, my mind works a lot slower now than it did when I was nine so some days it’s a challenge. 

That’s my gift from the Lord, I guess.  I remarked this afternoon during the daily-routine-after-work-talk that The Husband and I do now that I so loved hearing The Tuner play his music at the end of his tuning session.  It made that three hours worth it somehow.  I mentioned how I missed that sound of music in this house since The Girl moved.  The Husband remarked that I still had that with my old piano here and my fingers and he was right.  I might only sound like The Tuner in my dreams but when my heart and mind are willing, I can sit at the piano and play for the Lord and sound just as good as Liberace.  You see, God listens with the heart and His Spirit makes all the difference in how something soothes the heart in times that comfort and joy is needed.  I figure even the most simple of music can sound beautiful and  reach the heart as long as it's touched by the Spirit of the Lord.  I'm thinking, too, that doesn't only apply to pianos and music but to other efforts aimed to please the Lord.  A touch of the Lord's Holy Spirit always makes a difference in everything.

So that’s my story and I’m sticking to it.  It’s almost midnight and I will be tired come 5 a.m. so I need to head toward my pillow again.   

I’m thankful that God answers prayer, aren’t you?

“Make a joyful noise unto the Lord.”  Psalm 100:1