We were way past due for a storm. This summer Kodiak Island sailed south toward Hawaii. We broke heat records (17 days over 70 degrees! Last summer, one day over 70.) We’ve had very little wind. We woke up every morning sure we were still dragging anchor toward Hawaii. But such dreams always end, as they did this week. Colder, heavy-clouded weather moved back. Rain returned. Wind revived. And most of us are relieved.
I woke at 4:45 this morning to hear the wind clawing the house, to hear the ocean beating the shore. The forecast was NE 40, and it was clearly doing all of that. It’s a fishing day, as are most days of the summer here, and everyone would soon be up and out into that torn-up winded world. So long Hawaii. Welcome back, Kodiak.
I would like to say I was fearful and nervous as I got ready to go out, along with all my strong, above-average fishermen children and husband. But I wasn’t. I’ve been out in much higher waves, harder winds. I've come in beaten, shaking. I’m not brave enough now to go out when I’m scared. And I knew I did not even have to go out. No one was making me. But I needed to go out.
How do I say this? Do you know, too, about needing a storm? There’s something in all of us that needs a storm. We need the howl of the wind and the rip of the sea to remember the biggest truth about us---how small and fragile we really are . .. And to remember, too, how strong we are . .. When you fight the ocean just to stand in your boat, and you brace and rock and still you lean and launch your arms into the sea to grab the net, and though you can’t quite stand still you hold the corkline, and still you pick the fish.
And you take spray on your face and jellyfish in your eyes and you keep going . .. And you feel stalwart in your little boat on the big, big sea. You are glad to be there wrestling the sea and harvesting all she brings to your nets. You are glad to be working with your courageous daughter and your dauntless crewman Nate. (And you are glad you took your camera out, though every wave threatens.)
What is it we crave and need in the storm? Knowing our true size—that we are tiny and fragile, and yet we are able? That we cannot go out alone, but in pairs and groups we are strong?
Yes, and more. We know that we can find a home in this storm. In the shudder and crush, all the rest falls away, our worries and sadness and longings, our fears for the future, our regrets for the past----and we are fully at home in this moment. We are fully occupied in this “now.”
And we are at home in our body as well, calling on every muscle to keep us upright on a heaving skiff floor slick with jellyfish and kelp, marshaling all our strength to haul lead lines, lift taut corklines, pull tangled fish from a maze of net, using every sense to stay alive . .. . Oh! The glory of this alive! The glory of this strength! And can it be that I have been out here 36 summers and still I can do this? Three cheers for me!
These are good enough homes in the storm, but there is a better one. We can find a home in the dark and the wind because there we find God. There we find a truer God than the one I have kept in the wading pool and the garden. I want Him to be a god of roses and butterflies and string beans and bird baths, who showers goodness and light and love on all, as indeed He does, as indeed He is. But this is God as well: the God of the storm and the wind, of the black clouds and the spume, who blasts us from our self-reliance in a breath, who reminds us all, “ I am God, and there is no other; I am God, and there is none like me.”
I remember this in a storm. I remember that God spoke to Job and his friends out of a storm chiding them for all their bluster and made-up words about God, trying to prettify and explain away Job’s suffering.
I know what Job would tell us: He is a God who brings calamity, sometimes inexplicable calamity, and He is a God who delivers from calamity. A God who abounds in compassion and love even in the midst of the storm.
I felt that compassion and love today. I thought it was me, at first. I thought it was my own courage. I thought it was my muscles, my strength, my joy, my ability. I even thought it was my storm for a little while. But it was His. It was all His.
I needed the storm.
I thank Him for it.
And I return it to Him now.
Wow...i had some of these same thoughts....mine did not include bravery...Yes...I do think we are made for challenges...my hubby and I were doing some sprint workouts ....at the end....I was spent....feeling a little sick ....but I told him I love this feeling...I feel alive...maybe it is the way I am wired...and I do think it applies to our spiritual life as well...we need something pressing against us...this is where we build spiritual muscles. So glad everyone is safe...I get motion sick just looking at those pictures :)
ReplyDeleteHi Ro! I was going to post a video (I actually did get about 25 seconds of video) but realized it would make nearly every viewer sick--so I relented. We do indeed need challenges, and that includes physical challenges! I'll take them while I can, knowing I won't always be able to . ... (Thanks for reading!)
DeleteThis is a gift for me today Leslie. We are in the midst of a wild raging storm - fighting just to find footing. He is the Maker of the wind and the waves, and we lean into Him. We are so thankful for those who have held up our arms with love and prayer. And we are ever grateful for His unchanging love.
ReplyDeleteLinda, I pray for you often, knowing you are in this time of wave and wind. May God hold you close, and may you know that nothing, no thing and no person, can rip you from His presence or His love for you. He has good planned for you, Linda. The storm will not last forever. God's love for you endures forever. Peace to you today, dear friend.
DeleteSending you an email Leslie.
DeleteSo well put! I knew there was a weather reason why I thought Southern California was lacking! I still suffer from weather apathy and depth of life that weather brought to my life and soul when I grew up and lived in Michigan. The spiritual analogies are not hard to draw when you have been in real weather! Thank you for your pictures and eloquence. It is a blessing that will go with my heart for a good long while...
ReplyDeleteSuzanne, yes, we just need that kind of "purging". ((I love your phrase "weather apathy!") And we have more weather today--pouring rain and deep fog that looks like it will sit on us for awhile--like 5-7 days. Yuck! But, I am not apathetic about it!! (Thanks for reading!) Leslie
DeleteI am so fascinated by your life, Leslie. It's wild and beautiful.
ReplyDeleteThank you Jennifer. It has always been wild (!) but not always beautiful. I am grateful now, though, for all the storms in the past out here that have brought, finally, so much beauty.
DeleteI had Keith Martinson playing in the background as I was reading post.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9aLZJPZFX3M&list=PLmip-xjUumCsFOIhzVqW1IhCYeXVvtQHH
I'm now done with braving the storm of finishing my first children's story. Oh, to fight the waves of painting each illustration, battling every doubt and frustration.
Will be handing my story over this weekend. After that, I will sit by shore of God's ocean of love. I will be still and know that He is God and that He is in control.
Have a great day, Leslie.
Guia, oh, isn't that true--the self-doubt and frustration?? I hope you can let your work go out with peace .... You KNOW you did your very best in the time that you had. And you gained so many good things in just the work of it. If anything happens beyond that---all for the good. But there is good already! (I am taught this over and over myself, the goodness of writing, all that I learn and discover in the process of writing. People's responses won't always be what we want---but we have grown just in the work of it. Peace by unto you, friend! Leslie
DeleteThank you for your words that remind me He is the God of all...trying to learn to lean into Him
ReplyDeleteLoved reading your book, "Surviving the Island of Grace"...wonderful!
Cathy
Cathy, Yes, He IS the God of All. We needs the storms sometimes to remember this . .. (thank you for reading---and writing back.)
DeleteAnd one more cheer for you. Thirty six years! Wow!
ReplyDeleteI Just finished reading your book, so I understand a little more what a miracle that is. I chose "Surviving the Island of Grace" for our book club this month, and had a hard time putting it down. I know the title should have been a giveaway. ;-)
I love the beauty and wildness of your photos. Though I petted a six foot shark once, I usually I prefer well padded, strapped-in adventures. Glad for the reminder that our lives are wrapped in the Father's arms.
Stephanie Kane
Thank you for this beautiful post, Leslie-- it's truth and it's beauty!
ReplyDeleteOh. My. Goodness. Your words took my breath away. I can relate to every phrase. Thank you for speaking truth! Gorgeous!
ReplyDeleteThank you Heather!
DeleteGorgeous! And terrifying. Just looking at the rough water and the small boats gives me the heebie jeebies. We're home one week now, one week of multiple doctor's visits of different times (no emergencies, just junk), meeting with directees after a month away, etc., etc. And your package came through beautifully. Thank you!! The jams look delicious and I look forward to reading the book. I've a couple in the queue for reviewing, but I will read and review on my blog ASAP. Hope you're enjoying calmer weather this week, even though I think I get that need for the occasional storm, the reminder that we are both frail and magnificent. And Three Cheers for You is RIGHT.
ReplyDeleteLove this: "But this is God as well..." In Tozer's "Knowledge of The Holy," he reminds us that GOD is always all of His atributes at the same time.
ReplyDeleteThat's wonderful, Connie, and so true. We're just limited in our ability to contain and apprehend so many attributes at once ... He is so far beyond us, thank God!!
Delete