Alison Hodgson

Expert on the etiquette of perilous times.

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May 4, 2006 by Alison Hodgson 2 Comments

I turned to see the little girl flying through the air and land heavily on the upside down tower of a plastic dollhouse. It hurt to see. I grabbed her just as she started to cry.

“What happened?” I asked, petting and gently jiggling her.

“See pussed me!” was the answering wail.

I turned to see a phalanx of pre-school girls in pretty dresses. Scanning them, my eyes rested on the one in the center with her fists clenched at her side, a belligerent look on her little red face. She was dressed like a mini Catholic school girl: blue plaid skirt, a crisp white blouse, black cardigan, white knee socks, little black riding boots.

My heart sank; I ironed that crisp white blouse. The school girl was mine.

“See pussded me fust!” Was her fierce defense.

I pointed to the closest chair and she quietly sat, elbows resting on the table, her chin cupped in her hands. Still holding the offended I sat down beside the offender. The phalanx repositioned themselves around us.

“Did you push Eden, first?” I asked my weeping charge.

I had to repeat the question several times. Loud crying was the only response.

Eden sat, stony and silent.

Finally one of the watchers spoke, “She pushed her first.”

“Maddie pushed Eden first?”

My informant nodded.

“Did you push Eden?” I asked again.

The crying stopped. A slight nod was the only acknowledgement.

“Eden would you ask Maddie to forgive you for pushing her?”

“I sorry fo pussing you. Woodju fogive me?”

“Yess.”

“Now, Maddie, will you ask Eden to forgive you?”

“You fogive me?”

“I fogive you.”

They hugged and it was done.

I picture my daughter’s fierce little face, her arms rigid, fists clenched at her side, standing her ground, waiting for me to see her, to know her sin – defiant and yet scared too, wondering what I will do. I am glad I didn’t rush in, but waited and listened. I am glad I didn’t make it about me, but kept it about her and the other little girl. I am glad I encouraged her to lead with repentance although she was the first offended.

So many times I have stood, my own fists clenched crying out some variation on “See pussded me FUST!” to justify my own sin, and yet I know that repentance and forgiveness are the opening door to healing and freedom.

Sunday, while taking care of my girl, helping her navigate the entanglement of sin, listening and acknowledging her wound too, some door deep within me was opened, a pain I couldn’t even feel was released. My arms relaxed, my fists unclenched, my face softened and something was gone, done.

https://alisonhodgson.com/2006/05/975/

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May 3, 2006 by Alison Hodgson 3 Comments

Carrying The Bean upstairs at church this morning she pointed at a patch of sunlight on the ground,

“Oh no! Duh Pah tih koes!” she shouted.

“What’s that?”

“Dus Pahtihkoes!”

And then I put it together: dust particles.

Christopher has been waging a one boy war against them the last couple of weeks since the return of the sun alerted him to their existence. I hadn’t realized that he had enlisted Eden in his army.

“We need dah kill dem.”

Isn’t that great? Crazy and violent – what every mother hopes for in her children.

https://alisonhodgson.com/2006/05/976/

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Mayday! Mayday!

May 1, 2006 by Alison Hodgson 3 Comments

I’m not talking about filling baskets with flowers and surrepetitiously hanging them on neighbors’ doors then hiding in the bushes, to wait for them to find the beauty.

That, my friends, is a call for help.

I mentioned a few months ago that I began to track the days where I want to quit my job, i.e., mothering my children. It didn’t take long for a pattern to emerge. These days usually occurred at the zenith of my hormonal cycle, during an absence of the chidren’s father from this country and the seeming absence of the sun from the earth, but they tell me it was just Michigan.

Today Paul is in the country, however it is Monday, a grey and drizzly Monday and I am the teensy weensiest bit hormonal.

Did I mention of the last seven days, six have been plagued by headaches?

I approached the day with caution, walking gingerly and moving slowly.

We made it through the morning amicably enough and then the big kids started to claw at each other. Lydia was prickly and Christoper was poking sticks at her and getting distracted during exercises meant to help him focus. I gave them separate work to do and continued regular and deep breathing. It was only when the girls were shrieking at each other in their room and I discovered that it had taken Christopher ten minutes to do HALF of one problem where he only wrote two numbers and one of them was a backwards three that my head began to throb. It was at this point that I called Paul and asked him if he would be willing to work on math with Christopher after dinner before he left for rehearsal. He agreed and then said, “I sent you an e-mail…”

Now I know it is better to just listen to people rather than fly ahead mentally and finish their sentences. I have been told this but I can’t seem to stop myself from leaping into a millisecond’s pause and imagining my own conclusion, or several hundred of them. If I simply listened I would be spared devastating disappointments of this nature:

I did not hear:

…I’m coming home early.

…I’ve decided to educate the children in my spare time, freeing you to stand around looking pretty when you are awake and not reading.

….Watch for the florist’s van – I sent you flowers!

…I found a $1000 bill.

…I’m coming home right now.

Instead, I heard this:

“I have been asked to go to Korea, June* to *.

“OK.”

I went to get the calendar and began to write “Paul/Korea” on the previous Sunday and then acknowledged the wishful thinking, “That means you will be leaving the Saturday before, right?”

“Yeah, this looks like a Saturday to Saturday trip.”

“OK.”

I did not make the open mouthed pleghm clearing sound I favor for registering annoyance. I didn’t even allow myself a sigh.

Paul knew I was exercising restraint and paused for a moment before he told me he loved me and said goodbye.

It ought to be enough: A man tells his wife some disappointing news and she responds like an adult, which she is, feelings of a three year old to the contrary. I tell you, it doesn’t feel like enough. When I act with maturity I want bands to play, speeches made and bouquets tossed onto the stage, but I guess I get to settle for the maturity itself.

I got my kids some lunch and sat down to write what I was committed to – despite everything, to back away from the precipice and to get a break. In the time I have been writing the Tylenol I took earlier began to take effect, the kids settled down and the phone rang. It was a friend.

“What are the homeschoolers doing this dark and drizzly day? Want to come over?”

“If we do, will you unfurl your wings and let your nimbus shine?”

“Yes. Come and bask in the light.”

“May I bring anything?”

“No…not that we’ll have anything.”

“Water?”

“Yes, and coffee.”

“We’re there.”

After I hung up I turned to Christopher who had been whispering pleas about cookies. I started to tell him we didn’t have any and then remembered Paul’s response to begging last night, “We’re saving some.” Investigation of the tallest shelf of the snack cupboard revealed the coveted plastic box. Pulling it down we found two cookies.

Lydia materialized out of nowhere.

“There are two cookies,” I said.

“I’ll give you a couple bites of mine,” she said.

Hers. Shmers.

“How can we EVENLY divide two cookies between three people?”

We decided we could cut them into thirds and each person could have two pieces. I made the cuts and then gave Lydia first pick, Christopher second and third, then Lyida fourth. I took the two remaining pieces.

You might not add all this up and find the sum the existence of a loving God, but I do.

The last year he has been dogging my trail with Himself and he won’t let me escape. All I had was fear and my own delusion of independence. I threw those at him and he gave me grace and love, peace and joy. Words can’t describe it.

God is.

Can you imagine?

He sees me.

Can you believe that?

I have spent years shaking down, my parents, my siblings, my husband, my children, my home, God help me, my laundry room, report cards, the scale, the mirror – you name it – for contentment, my self-image, for my worth, but they can’t give it to me. I have stood on this stage and shook my fists and wept, even screamed at the injustice that no matter HOW HARD I TRY IT IS NEVER ENOUGH.

I am not enough; that is the truth.

And yet there is grace.

Why won’t I take the stinking grace? That is the eternal question.

Today I was determined to receive grace, to stand in the truth that I do not have what it takes to raise these children – with gentleness and strength – without it…without Him.

When I wrote “Mayday” above I was crying out to God and pulling myself aside to wait for him. I busied myself writing this to put myself on ice. And he came, with peace and quiet, the absence of pain, friendship and cookies. With this bouquet he turned this Mayday into a May Day.

This is me hugging the flowers and bowing to lay myself prostrate on the ground.

*I added this photo on May 2, 2012. It was taken Summer 2006 and this post was written May 2006. I wanted you to see how gorgeously messy these kids were, in every sense of the words.

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May 1, 2006 by Alison Hodgson 4 Comments

Oh Kids!

I am so disappointed. I was coming to the end of a good post and lost my connection.

Satan.

Here is the bottom line:

God is.

He is good.

Really, really good.

I will try to re-write between laundry, cleaning and school.

https://alisonhodgson.com/2006/05/979/

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I saw something nasty in the woodshed!

April 29, 2006 by Alison Hodgson 7 Comments

And no, it did not see me…Baby.

It was actually the garden shed. I was puttering around in there Friday night trying to make a path to the wheelbarrow. Opening the door I smelled something peculiar but didn’t really think about it. As I was tugging at a small metal folding table I noted something on the ground a few inches from my feet.

My thoughts were these: How did Ginger (a black stuffed dog Christopher was given while in the hospital) get here?…*tug at the table*actually that looks more like that stuffed cat Eden just got, I thought that was in her closet…*tug, tug*wait, it’s kind of big…*tug*

And then I saw the white feet and began to shriek and tug at the table compulsively. Finally I dropped it, clawed my way past Paul, who was standing right behind me and staggered out into the yard.

Paul, lacking the heeby jeebies from which I suffered, investigated. It was a dead cat. While he went to grab a shovel I calmed myself down and explained to the kids. A mournful little trio stood at attention while their father carried his burden into the woods. Not five minutes later we heard the loud cawing of a raven…and then another…and another. Soon it was a frenzy of cries just yards away. By some miracle the kids didn’t notice.

Only later that night did it occur to me we should have checked with some of the neighbors. We began to giggle, imagining – if we did find the owners – what we could possibly say.

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