Canning While Upset

Sorry we’ve neglected the blog this week. In honor of our 24th anniversary, Jack and I did the most loving celebrational activity ever – took separate vacations. Jack went off to spend eight days visiting four friends, while I stayed home to do whatever I wanted. I still had a few day job meetings in play, so it was a mixed holiday, but still offered time for self-discovery.

Canning doesn’t have to be hard

What I discovered: when I am upset, I don’t create. I clean, can, and garden, but don’t write or crochet. I do a lot of praying, but the praying tends to be while I am pounding stakes into the ground for plants, or slapping stuff into layers in jars and adjusting weights, even whipping a mop around the floor.

My friend Jen calls it “bearing witness,” this in-the-zone blitz of activity. Afghan women, COVID deniers, friends deceived, earthquakes and fires, mounting anger leading to terrible economic repercussions, on it goes. We’re in trouble not only because of events, but because of attitudes, and this will get worse before it gets better. So many voices, so little worth hearing. Is it possible to drown in noise the way one could in water? My mop moves across the floor and my mind holds still.

Anyway, if not exactly creating, what have I been doing to soak up the grief and anger I feel at losing unvaccinated friends this month amidst all the chaos? Here’s a list of things I canned this week while Jack was away and the kitchen was mine to command. Two of these things are a lie. See if you can spot them.

Chicken breasts with garden vegetables

Steak with potatoes and green beans

Unicorn fetuses (2 per jar)

Individual strawberry rhubarb tarts

Beef stew

Eggs, raw

Spicy chicken tenders (5 per jar)

Individual pineapple upside down cakes

Lasagna

Burrito filling

Individual breakfast quiches

Body parts of the self-aggrandizing astroturfer who convinced my late friend not to get vaccinated

Homemade ketchup

Milk

It’s a kind of creativity, I guess, throwing yourself into work as prayer, prayer as work, and pitting one’s efforts against “you can’t can that” proclamations. (Yes, you can.) It runs deeper, but at the same time, it’s just canning. I’m a big fan of that poem by Robert Frost, Two Tramps in Mud Time, which no one ever hears because his estate is so locked down about who can quote him. It sums up my week of canned prayers:

Only where love and need are one,
And the work is play for mortal stakes,
Is the deed ever really done
For heaven and the future’s sakes.

What if….?

NB: This blog is written for a specific group of people. Thank you for being polite if you are not in that group of people.

Dear Non-vaccinating on Religious Grounds People,

What if you’ve got it backwards? What if your refusal to vaccinate because it is evil is actually putting you on the Satanic scrub list to remove you from Earth at a time when righteous voices of care, compassion, and Christianity are needed more than ever? (Non-Christians will have a field day with that. I’m not talking to them. Ignore their judgement. Stick with me here, fellow believers.)

We are called to be the Salt and Light for the world. If we don’t get vaxxed, if the Delta variant takes out younger, stronger people as well as the wisdom of our Godly Elders, how much prayer is the world losing? It was bad enough losing the prayer warriors; now we also lose the innocent children, the strong warriors, the middle-aged women of Proverbs 31?

Last week the world was diminished by the loss of one of the sweetest Christian men I’ve ever known, a guy who smiled when people screamed at him, who answered with kindness when people cut him off in traffic. All over America, all across the world, about one in ten Christians (according to some nebulous polls) have stopped asking “What does God tell me to do about the vaccine” and accepted “God said no” as someone else’s astroturfing, trouble-stirring, theology-knotting twist on Apocalyptic thinking.

Who told you that you were naked? God asked Adam and Eve in the garden. (Why were you listening to a snake? Why did you listen to the snake instead of me?) Go back to your prayer closet. Ask God again: not the preacher on youtube, not the Ice Age Farmer, not the lady who sat behind you at the Bill Gothard seminar. Ask God. Ask God directly, through Jesus the intercessor we all believe in.

Something is horribly wrong when the removal of voices for the truth is accepted–nay, preached–as God’s will. God wants all the righteous to die? Go back to your prayer closets. Try again. The world is diminished when your voices are lost.

Who told you the vaccine was evil? Were you raised for such a time as this, and are on the wrong side of the mirror we see through, darkly? Go pray. Thank you.