This last month, I hunted down old houses. Cabins, really, no—shacks. What’s left of places people carved out of wilderness near our island.
One was tiny—but it had a loft. We dared to lift our heads into the darkness, hoping to find a relic of the past. But no, just spider webs and acrid piles of guano . . .
Down the beach, Russian Dick’s cabin perches on a bank that will soon slide it into the ocean. I have watched the bank erode year by year. It will not last much longer.
Russian Dick escaped from
Russia during the Bolshevik Revolution in 1917, an officer in the White Army.
He fled to Alaska, making his way out to a remote beach, to a bank over a rocky
beach, an inhospitable beach, where he mined for gold (unsuccessfully), raised
cattle and chickens, rowing the milk and eggs 9 ocean miles to the nearby
village to sell.
It is said that he killed his
Alutiiq wife, pushing her off an icy cliff in winter. It is known that his son
shot two people to death near our island. He went to prison. Russian Dick is
said to have taken his own life.
The stories of other men and women who fled towns and cities and countries to make a home out here in the Alaskan bush-----we have lost most of them. But the ones we know are grim. Alcohol almost always plays a part; and wives running for their lives, fire, and for some, a slow slide toward madness. Henry Landberg, who owned the cabin my parents-in-law bought some 50+ years ago, lived alone. He fished now and then, drank a lot, tended a few cattle and wrote letters. We found some of his letters, complaining that someone was rowing to his island and sawing steaks off his cows.
This same week of exploration, I received some
emails that broke my heart. The letters,
from some I knew and some I didn’t, took me through empty houses---divorce, a husband abandoning
his family, a mother in the hospital with cancer. And one in particular, full of sadness
and---almost anger. At me. “This life
you are living, I cannot live. There is so much sorrow here and so much happiness
there. Sometimes I cannot read your words.”
She told me the story of her
present life. I am cut, dashed. I want to sit with her in the ashes . . . We write back and forth. I am grateful to
have heard her, to be given the honor of entering her own lonely house.
And what have I to offer back?
When I bring only myself, this one small self, I bring little. I can only ghost
through her rooms (and yours) as I haunt mine----a destructive wraith of a spirit, who can
bring no substance or flesh or change or joy or hope.
I have no hope of my own to
give her---or you.
But I can give you what has been given to me. The hope that has mended windows, fixed hinges, shooed the bats from my attic. The hope that comes in the body of a man who came and lived among us, who opened the crooked door and settled at our kitchen table, to bring food, wine, a merry heart and the promise that such company will never end.
Hope that promises “In my
father’s house are many rooms. I am going there to prepare a place for you.”
It is place where there are
no more fires or fleeing wives or graves of whiskey bottles under the house.
And in that place God will
dwell with us, and He will be our God
and we will be His sons and daughters … and
we will eat and laugh and sing and keep the doors open for all who would join
us.
This is what I want: to invite
you here into my own house where the Holy haunts and fills my rooms, my table.
The table is set for you.
And if you come, and you
cannot see or find Him,
when you see just a wraith at an wrecked, empty table, and there is no place set for you-----have mercy. Write me. Invite me to your own God-haunted house, that I may be fed the Hope that dwells with you.
when you see just a wraith at an wrecked, empty table, and there is no place set for you-----have mercy. Write me. Invite me to your own God-haunted house, that I may be fed the Hope that dwells with you.
I am as needy as you.
And so, this way, dearest friends, let us serve one another.
And so, this way, dearest friends, let us serve one another.
Let us forgive one another.
Let us Holy-Spirit haunt one another .
Is it too much of a cliché (and pardon the unintended pun) to say that this is hauntingly beautiful, Lesley. Almost crushingly so. From ramshackle leftover cabins to the Father's Mansion. What a wondrous gift God has given us in our Savior.
ReplyDeleteThanks for helping me think about these things this afternoon.
Tim
Or I could have spelled your name as Leslie!
ReplyDeleteTim, thankful for your words ... and yes, from this wreckage to a mansion, a place at the table ... (And I want so badly to at least gesture to that place.) Thanks for writing back (and blessing)
ReplyDeleteYes...beautiful...to live with open doors...spacious tables and welcoming hearts...I love this invitation...your space here always speaks love.
ReplyDeleteRo---may your words about love be true ... (Lord, make it so!)
DeleteJust beautiful Leslie. "Holy-Spirit haunt one another." Beautiful. I so want to do this type of haunting. I am blessed to share a table with you. Thank you for these stunning images and words.
ReplyDeleteMy pleasure and joy, Karen. Thank you for receiving so graciously ...
DeleteThank you so much for these words; the Lord speaks to me through them.
ReplyDeleteCathy B
To find beauty and promise in the wreckage of spent lives is a gift. Praise the One who sets a table in a room where there will no longer be heartache and haunting. Bless you, Leslie, for sharing this.
ReplyDeleteIngrid---Our lives as a house --but thankfully there is a better builder than us, who will sweep it all clean and set the table. I'll see you there! (Can I slurp my spaghetti?)
DeleteFilled.
ReplyDeletehttp://inthemidstof.wordpress.com/
We are spending long, lovely days on the Outer Banks. They are a priceless gift after all the weeks of sorrow and pain. You have given me the gift of your prayers. How may I pray for you?
ReplyDeleteDearest Linda---I am so thankful you are having this time of restoration by the sea. (I understand how healing that can be. And so sorry for your loss ....) I have to tell you, your mother sent me the MOST precious package---some hankies s he had crocheted that are way too beautiful to blow a nose on!! (I will use them as doilies under lamps in my living room) and a satin bag of lavender. I was so astonished! Please thank her for me!! ANd yes, prayer. I'm leaving for Dallas today, speaking to many people over the weekend. Please pray that God would make me a clean vessel, that He would use me to speak peace and grace and freedom to hurting people. HOW can God use little us?? I don't know--but it only proves again that HE is God. (Thank you!!)
DeleteThinking of you and praying He will fill you and then pour out words of peace and grace through you.
DeleteI will tell Mom. I have those hankies too and agree they are too beautiful to use. She will be so delighted to think of them in your home.
Next time you are in Texas perhaps we can get together. What joy that would be. Love to you.
This is very moving, and just the right antidote to stave off the hungry ghosts, Leslie. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteAhhh, the "hungry ghosts!" Love that Jo!
DeleteCome Holy Spirit, hammer and nail for all these tattered sashes.
ReplyDeleteYes, the sashes are tattered, the room is wrecked---but all can be meded with just such an invite! Thank you Stephanie!
DeleteLeslie, you are such a blessing!! I sit here bawling wanting to escape this life of mine but only because I am tired of "being the strong one" of my family. Sometimes I think GOD is crazy for thinking I am as strong as he believes I am: I'm not. I know he does not put harships on our plates, but he does allow them. Just wish he would detour them to some other place; not on any person but to the depths of an ocean etc. I am praying for your friend who said she has sorrows while you have happiness. I pray GOD gives her peace and joy and reassures her that there IS a light at the end of a dark tunnel. Thank you for opening your home and heart to us. I am blessed every time i read your stories, even through my tears. Wishing you and your family continues love and happiness.
ReplyDeleteDear Sandra, I am so sorry that your life is so hard right now. It IS indeed difficult when you feel like you're the one holding it all together (I know how that feels!!). And you know, you needn't be strong. Our true state is weakness, and that's all GOd asks of us---that that our weakness would show forth His strength. I pray GOd gives you wisdom to discern what can be let go, what duty or responsibility perhaps you don't need to carry. And that God would fill you with his wisdom and supernatural strength for the things He does ask you to carry (but never by yourself.) Sandra, cling to God. Draw near to Him and He will draw near to you. Know that He cares so deeply for you---so deeply, He went all the way to the cross for you. I pray you can live in that love and that strength this very day. Praying with you, Leslie
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