Solutions December 2018 | Page 39

I woke this morning to my dogs calling me from their crates. Correction: I woke to Maisie, our two-year-old golden, calling to me from her crate. The occasional cross between a yip and a whine told me that I had fallen back to sleep and had been dozing too long for her taste. I’d been awakened several times in the night by an anxiety that threatened me. This past night, though, I had recognized it for the temptation it was: to take up a mantle of dark fear that was not mine to wear. I was too tired to wrestle with the spiritual assault. (That is what it was, friends. Even laden with some truth as to the circumstances of my life, it was a spiritual attack to entice me into the land of worry.) Too sleepy to corral my thoughts to the deeper truth of the faithfulness of God, I did not want to wake fully. I did not feel called to do so. This night, unlike too many other nights, I simply said no and then tucked my heart into God and continued to rest. I redirected my thoughts first to sweet memories, then to memories I wanted to make, and suddenly Maisie was calling to me. Surely it was well after 6:00 a.m. Sweet and poor girl. I looked at the clock, and it was eight! I quickly got up to let both of our dogs out to run and take care of business. recognized a scent that I hadn’t smelled for years. Though the winter here is full of crisp, cold mornings, something in the wind, or perhaps something in the night, awakened a stirring in my soul. I remembered that evocative smell, that feeling of an invitation to play. When I opened the door to release them, a cold blast hit my face. It was a crisp cold. A winter cold. A cold that spoke of past snow and past stories. I My soul was filled with expectancy all those mornings so long ago. I did not know what the days held, but I reached out to them boldly with both mittened Suddenly I was eight years old and wearing my favorite blue-and-white jacket with fur around the hood. I was a little girl again, getting ready to go outside and discover the joy awaiting me. I hadn’t remembered that feeling or that jacket since I don’t know when. Sense memory is something else, isn’t it, showing up at the oddest of moments whenever the whim hits it. The sense of smell accesses and evokes memories more than any other. This morning my grown-up self was still in my jammies when I opened the front door and was hit by the longing to be eight years old again. The door opened before me to a world filled with wonder and unending discovery. In my child- hood I’d had different choices. Maybe I’d go sledding. Maybe I’d build a snowman. Maybe I would simply enjoy walking solitarily through the snow, relishing the sharp sound of crunching whiteness beneath my feet. Solutions • 39