Tuesday, August 26, 2025 Be The Smile of God

The first glimpses of fall weather have come: a slight chill in the air, the buzz saw sounds of the cicadas, a few green leaves giving way to red, flowers starting to say farewell… The glory of summer must now defer to the glory of autumn.

On that note, here are a few quotes for you to read and savor:

Faith may dance because Christ sings;
and we may come in the choir
and lift our hoarse and rough voices,
and chirp and sing,
and shout for joy with our Lord Jesus.
Samuel Rutherford

Often, the sweeter the first fruit of a habit,
the more bitter are its later fruits.
Frederic Bastiat, French Economist

How many things have I that others lack?
Can I bring my heart into a quiet, contented frame
to lack what others have?
Jeremiah Burroughs

The way God creates unity
is by making everyone different.
Daniel Ralph

The lesson for fathers (and mothers):
Be the smile of God to your children.
Joe Rigney

Lord, deliver me from the urge to open my mouth
when I should shut it.
Elisabeth Elliot

Enjoy these beautiful days, friends.

I’ll probably say farewell to this post in the morning.

Monday, August 25, 2025 Meanderin’ without a Plan

Sometimes I start a blog post without much of a plan. Those of you who read this regularly are not surprised. I like the challenge of starting with nothing and hoping that something emerges. So here’s what I’ve got today: two photos that have been lurking in my smallified photos file for a few months.


The “little fisherman” is my dad, with his dad behind him. It’s a lovely photo, isn’t it? Toddler Dad looks adorable with his hat and his pudgy little face. Instead of a life jacket, he appears to have some sort of safety cord attached to his clothing, doesn’t he? What I’m really struck by though is the strength and focus of the man behind him. That’s the look of a father who knows how to keep his son safe out there in the boat. We should all remember this, that we have a Father who knows how to keep us afloat and safe.

And that little cutie is me, another little fisherman (fishergirl?) out in the boat. You can’t see him, but I am no doubt under the protection of my father, no longer a toddler, but now the one who kept me safe in the boat. Times have changed (I’m at least wearing a life jacket!), but the job of a father has not.

I’ll probably fish or cut bait on this in the morning.

Friday, August 22, 2025 The Workshop: Tiny Art, Second Part

I did some cruising around on Pinterest for ideas and discovered that there are a lot of tiny art aficionados out there. I copied from them freely. As always, the words are mine. Well, not literally mine. You know what I mean.

I felt strongly that I needed to move past the fruit fly era of my artistic life.

I’ll probably – it’s very likely in fact – there’s a strong possibility – you know what I mean (in the morning)

Thursday, August 21, 2025 The Workshop: Tiny Art Lame Start

I bought a book for making tiny art in recently. Some people gravitate toward large canvasses and big pieces of paper. These huge gaping vacuums of space are intimidating to me, so I tend to work small. When I saw the teeny tiny book with its teeny tiny pages, my imagination was captured. Think of what fun I could have, I mused to myself as I forked over the $15 plus tax. I also immediately decided I could make my own teeny tiny books in the future if this trend catches on with me.

I hesitate to show you what I came up with for the first page, but honesty is the best policy.

Yes, a hastily sketched, poorly colored “Fruit Fly of Doom!”

The good news is that the next one can’t help but be better.

This hastily written teeny tiny blog post will meet its Doom in the morning.

Wednesday, August 20, 2025 Grave Musings 11: The Forgotten Cemetery

Is it possible to lose a cemetery? Is it possible for the graves of several dozen people to be covered by a forest and lost for a time? Yes, yes, those things are possible. It happened just a few miles from where I live.

In 2007, an abandoned cemetery a couple miles east of my fair city was found and restored. A man named Tim Lloyd found it while looking for the burial site of an ancestor of his, great great great grandfather Isaac Barrick, who was a veteran of the War of 1812. His stone was one of the last stones that was discovered as they did the cleanup and restoration of Old Prarieville Cemetery. When I read that story in the newspaper a few years ago, I knew I’d have to visit the cemetery someday. I contacted my two cemetery–loving friends, Lori and Teresa, and we recently set out to explore this old place of rest together.

Old Prairieville Cemetery was established in 1855. The first person buried there was Mrs. Warren who died in April 1855. The last burial was in 1909. In days of yore, if there was a cemetery, there was a church nearby. Traditionally old churches always had a graveyard associated with them and indeed, there used to be a congregational church in that location. The Congregationalist sold it to the Methodists in 1876 and the only thing remaining of that church now is the foundation and part of an old iron fence that surrounded it.

This is what the cemetery look like when it was rediscovered in 2007.

Which makes the recovery work all that much more amazing. That was a LOT of trees to remove!

You may ask why it’s so important. Why should anyone care if moldering gravestones stay buried and forgotten? The fact is that we are each of us eternal souls, each one of us made in the image of God, each one of us created and brought into this world for some purpose. The stones are just stones, but the names on those stones represent real people who lived real lives and left real legacies, whether for good or for bad. We may forget them, but the Lord knows them all by name and He knows all their stories.

Gone are the living, but the dead remain
And not neglected, for a hand unseen,
Scattering its bounty, like a summer rain,
Still keeps their graves and their remembrance green.
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow,
excerpt from “The Jewish Cemetery at Newport

Lori, Teresa and I went to this rediscovered old cemetery and did what we usually do – we walked around looking at names and epitaphs, worked out what some of the engravings said – not as easy as you’d think with old stones like these that had been reclaimed by the dirt from which they came. We noted how often in those days the length of someone’s life when they died was given in great detail: “54 years, 1 month and 15 days,” or “76 years, 11 months, 12 days.” Nowadays we just plunk a couple of years on the stone and let you do the math.

So let me share some of these with you, with the hopes that you’ll see beyond the names and wonder about the people they were. My observations and/or notes will be under the photos.

Francis F. Strunk was just 1 year, 6 months and 4 days old when he passed away on October 17, 1865. The inscription on the stone is a slightly altered verse from the hymn “They Are Not Lost, But Gone Before”:

Dear is the spot where children sleep
And sweet the strains their spirits pour
O, why should we in anguish weep
They are not lost but gone before.

Francis’s father, Jonas M. Strunk, had a stone in the cemetery as well. He died at age 57 in 1887, 27 years after burying his son:

Mrs. Eliza F. McRoss, died just a couple months after little Francis on December 6, 1865. Note the hand with a finger pointing upward at the top of her stone, and the words above it: “Gone home.” This is a fairly common symbol seen on gravestones of that era, reflecting the abiding faith that “our citizenship is in heaven.” (Philippians 3:20). This world is not truly our home.

Hattie E. DeForest died on October 22, 1865, just days after Francis Strunk. She was 8 years, 8 months and 13 days old. The DeForests lost another daughter, Clara, about a month later:

She was 10 years and 1 month old. It seems likely that some ill disease swept through the community, taking their children. Hattie and Clara both have roses on their stones, under the same words “Gone Home.” How empty the Deforest household must have seemed with the loss of Clara and Hattie! The parents are only listed as G.L. and S.N. You have to read the grief between the lines.

“Our little Montie.” No date, no age, but there’s a great deal of pathos in those three words. Montie’s stone contains the same words “Gone Home,” but underneath it is a dove, a symbol of purity and peace.

Edward F. Cosert, aged 19 years, 6 months and 10 days when he died in 18__. The stone is too cracked to see the year. The hand with the pointing finger points to the words “My home is above.” His epitaph reads:

To reach the Eternal City
I’ll brave Death’s sullen flood.
My Savior crossed before me,
I’ll triumph through His blood.

Note the weeping willow tree on the gravestone of Julia Bice. The suggestion of sorrow and grief is obvious, but less obvious is that the willow tree also was associated with the gospel of Christ “because the tree will flourish and remain whole no matter how many branches are cut off.” (From Stories in Stone by Douglas Keister.)

Betsey E. Millard. “Sleep, Mother, in Jesus sleep, while we on earth are left to weep.” An open book is shown above, perhaps symbolic of the Bible.

Letitia Engle, daughter of G.S. and E.J. Engle, died July 20, 1870 aged 1 year, 6 months and 4 days. Although it’s hard to tell, I believe that you can see a resting lamb above the name. The inscription reads:

(He?) would not suffer this
Little lamb long to estra
y
So he gathered it young
into his fold.

Similarly, “Our little Hervy” has a lamb atop his stone. Little Hervy Cale died at 4 months old. The inscription below reads “Our little angel has gone to rest.” In our day and age, infant and child mortality is fairly low, but it was a common occurrence not too long ago.

And here’s the stone that started everything, the gravestone for Isaac Barrick and his wife: “Father and Mother.”


When we were done wandering and taking photos, we sat down for a picnic lunch.

Before we left, we signed the mildewing old register that we’d found in the oddly placed Little Free Library. It was in the midst of several books that had been ravaged by time and moisture.


Teresa came up with the perfect Bible verse to inscribe above our names. “In peace I will lie down and sleep, for you alone, Lord, make me to dwell in safety.” Psalm 4:8

Previous post in this series: Grave Musings 10: Denison Cemetery

Start at the beginning: Grave Musings 1 Maple Lawn I

I cannot suffer long this blog post to estray…it will be gathered with its brethren posts in the morning.

Tuesday, August 19, 2025 Books Are People

Quotes for pondering:

Oh, the temptations that men of discontented spirits are subject to! The Devil loves to fish in troubled waters.
Jeremiah Burroughs

The optimist sees the opportunity in every danger;
the pessimist sees the danger in every opportunity.
Winston Churchill

If a man thinks ill of you, do not be angry with him;
for you are worse than he thinks you to be.
Charles Spurgeon

To forgive is to set a prisoner free
and to discover the prisoner was you.
Corrie Ten Boom

You don’t have to give up your intellect to trust the Bible.
You have to give up your pride.
R.C. Sproul

“Books are people,” smiled Miss Marks, “In every book worth reading, the author is there to meet you, to establish contact with you. He takes you into his confidence and reveals his thoughts to you.”
D.E. Stevenson, The Four Graces page 10

Read that last quote and then consider how the Bible fits the description…

I’ll be throwing this post into troubled waters in the morning.

Wednesday, August 13, 2025 Fruit Fly Infestation

When we got back from our time away, we discovered we were not alone in our house. Of course Luna was there to greet us with her urgent and accusative yowlings and meowings. It disappoints her greatly that we don’t just drop everything immediately and focus all our attentions on her, as if unpacking the car and trailer should wait for another hour or day entirely.

But when I did finally sit down and greet her properly, little flies were flitting about like they owned the place. Lots of them. Some investigative research showed that we had mistakenly left some coffee grounds in the compost bucket when we left. I took a peek into it, and seeing hordes of the tiny winged invaders, quickly shut it and took it outside where it sat until somebody cleaned it out. If you have guessed that this “somebody” was not me, you know me well.

Still, we were faced with the remainder of the army in the house. A dim memory surfaced…didn’t my friend Sherri have some sort of liquid trap in her house for just this kind of thing? The Internet came to my rescue once again: 1/4 cup apple cider vinegar with a few drops of dish soap, covered with plastic wrap that has holes in it. It’s been awfully satisfying to look at each day and see more fruit fly carcasses at the bottom. All’s fair in love and war.

We also got a couple store-bought fruit fly traps. They look like inviting little fruit fly hotels, but the fruit flies seem to prefer the homemade trap.

Now you know what to do if the fruit flies invade your house, may it never be.

“All the teeming life with wings are unclean to you;
they shall not be eaten.”
Deuteronomy 14:19

You’ll get no argument from me.

Fruit flies will infiltrate this post in the morning – it must be destroyed.

Tuesday, August 12, 2025 Truth on the Battlefield

Some quotes to feed you this week:

I write to discover what I know.
I write because I don’t know what I think until I read what I say.
Flannery O’Connor

This is so true about my writing as well. Good old FOC!

To study and not think is a waste.
To think and not study is dangerous.
Confucius

If Truth is on the battlefield,
let her and Falsehood grapple;
Who ever knew Truth put to worse
in a free and open encounter.
John Milton

All that is gold does not glitter
Not all those that wander are lost.
The old that is strong does not wither,
Deep roots are not reached by the frost.

JRR Tolkien

For to know a man’s library is,
in some measure,
to know his mind.
Geraldine Brooks

Not all blog posts that glitter are gold and some must wither in the morning.

Monday, August 11, 2025 Reboot the Blog

My last post was a month ago. We have been hither and yon and living lives of such abounding activity that the blog was abandoned. Some of you have probably been relieved not to get the regular emails with my posts attached. If that describes you, I have no rancor toward you whatsoever. And if you decide that it was such a relief that you might as well unsubscribe, I will cheer you on. However, for those of you who actually missed my little musings, bless you. It is for you that I write.

Now as to the abounding activities, here’s a sampling of them:

We got reacquainted with 5-month old “Darling,” and met brand-new granddaughter, “Sweetheart.” Sweetheart was still fresh from the womb, only 3 days old when we met her.

Later in the week we had a family reunion, which included the other two grands, “Lovey” and “Dovey.” Being grandparents is such a joy. And we’ve got another little dear coming in October!

We went to our favorite used book store. Twice. And bought books both times. We currently own 2,131 books, but that number not only doesn’t discourage us from accumulating more, it’s almost an incentive to keep going.

Bowling! Our bowling crew included the 5-year-old and 3-year-old, who used the bowling ball ramps to send their balls toward the pins. Their dad was chagrined to find that they scored better than him for both games.


Swimming! Well…swimming is a bit of a misnomer. Let’s just say that we were in swimming suits and were, in fact, in the water at the local water park.

Farmer’s Market! (I feel like I’ve gone a bit to the dark side with all of these exclamation points). I’m more of a window shopper at the FM usually, but this time I bought tiny doughnuts to share with our crowd, as well as a tiny book for putting tiny drawings into.

Add to that many meals eaten together, two birthdays celebrated, a family photo taken, a few movie nights, visits to thrift stores, conversations with old friends, church services (and the baptism of Sweetheart) and you’ll see why we slid under our sheets tired but happy every night.

O taste and see that the Lord is good!

I’ll probably reboot the reboot of this rebooted blog in the morning.