Poems, Prayers, Promises
|
"And
reach for the heavens,
and hope for the future for all that we can be, not what we are " |
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I'm not from the mountains.
In fact in the little West Texas town I grew up in there were days when
you could see for miles in all directions. Maybe that's why the mountains
have always held a special fascination for me. Well, that and John Denver.
Long before I knew about
notes, key signatures, and time changes, I knew about music by listening
to the 8-track tapes my parents had. The one set I was particularly fascinated
with were the guitar sounds of Denver. Too 70's some would call it. Not
country. Out there. All I knew was that I loved it.
There was something
about that music that transported me to places I'd never seen before. That
meant the mountains. According to John, "Life was old there, older
than the trees, younger than the mountains, flowing like a breeze."
To my way of thinking, it sounded like heaven.
When I got married,
we went to the mountains for our honeymoon. It was indeed just as John had
sung about-slower, more peaceful, the definition of tranquility. I loved
it even more than I thought I would.
As wonderful as the mountains were, however, home was the bigger anchor
for me. So we settled down in the Texas Panhandle to raise our family.
In the winter of 1999,
I thought my days of truly enjoying the mountains were over for good. Never
very good on skis but loving the feeling of being out in the mountains,
the peaks of snow encircling me, I had an accident that injured my knee.
I knew with near certainty that I'd never again have that feeling on skis
of being one with the mountains-as close to God as one can get on this earth.
Two years later, my
husband and some friends started planning a ski trip to Angel Fire, New
Mexico. Angel Fire had been one of my all time favorite places to ski. I
was heartsick. With a three-month-old at home I nearly talked myself out
of going. Besides, I figured I had too much to do anyway, and what I didn't
have to do, I could make up as an excuse not to go. By this time I was really
getting into promoting the two inspirational romances I had out, and there
never seemed to be time for anything else.
Nonetheless, a friend of mine convinced me it would be good to take some
time-even if all I did was sit in the cabin and watch movies.
| The first day after everyone left, I decided I wanted some part of that day even if I couldn't ski. Not normally an "outside" person, I pulled on my warmest clothes, put on my coat, and grabbed my CD player with John Denver cued up. |
"I stopped and let God take over the journey"
|
What happened next
is hard to describe. I went out to the snow-packed road and just started
walking. Then I started listening. This time, however, the music wasn't
like music-it was more like going home-not so much to Nazareth but to Heaven
itself. I walked and God, via John's voice, sang about being as close as
we could be and how our time together had just begun. I could feel that
in my whole spirit, God was with me not just on that snow-packed road but
in my life.
Then John sang about
leaving for a time because people wanted to hear him sing. It was one of
the nagging doubts I had been having about making a choice between my family
and sharing the talent God had given me with the world. It seemed to say
that God would show me the right choice at the right moment if I just followed
Him.
The whole walk I had
been searching for pinecones to bring home to my seven-year-old. However,
with the snow piled high around most of the trees, I hadn't had much luck.
Suddenly, John was singing about slowing down and really looking at the
beauty around you.
Something inside struck
me, and all I wanted to do was to see the sky from under a knot of pine
trees. I veered off the road and over to some trees. At the base of one,
I put my hands on the rough bark, arched my neck, and looked up. The gray
sky filtered through the puzzle piece design of the bare, black branches
soaring above me. I breathed in the sight, determined to remember it. Then
I looked down-to a virtual treasure trove of pinecones!
Delighted, I chose a
few and then instead of turning back for the road, I looked farther off
into the trees to where my adventure had taken me. Just in front of me was
a huge meadow. A fresh blanket of snow lay all across it. Drawn to it, I
tromped through the snow heedless of the cold, wet chill crunching into
my tennis shoes. Within seconds I found myself in a place beyond the reality
I call my life. It was then that I knew without a doubt, there are places
of Heaven on earth. As John's voice soared with the song of the eagle about
touching the sky and being free, snow started falling onto the meadow. It
drifted down around me in a cascade of peace.
After awhile it no longer
looked like snow but more like the blessings God has been pouring into my
life. All those blessings that I'm often running too fast on the road of
life to take the time to stop and notice. Blessings upon blessings upon
blessings until they are uncountable. I stayed there in that valley until
the snow subsided, and then I turned back for home. Only when I reached
the road did I remember what had led me to that place to begin with-I stopped
and let God take over the journey.
I don't know if on this
earth I'll ever be granted another day quite like that one. All I know is
that when I get to Heaven, in addition to the streets paved with gold I
really hope there are at least a few snow-packed meadows-with the peaks
in the distance one direction and the trees surrounding it in the other,
the eagle flying, and blessings drifting down all around me.
Something tells me there will be.
© Staci Stallings
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