Nicole K. Twedt

Being Brave When Life Is Hard

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Working With Clay

02.23.2017 by Nicole Kristin Twedt //

Originally from January, 2017

I just spent an hour working on a post and now it’s gone. Darn WordPress. I wrote about working with clay at the Seabrook retreat.  I wrote about Martha Halvorsen and her bird’s nest made of play dough, circa 1980-something at the old Presbyterian church of my childhood.   I wrote about the Audition Song from La La Land, of being a dreamer and how dreamers need to be somewhat messy, or at least not afraid of making a mess.

I wrote of rolling clay in my hand to form a ball and of pressing the ball flat like dough into my own bird’s nest — that’s what my hands do with clay. Except in Mrs. Carson’s third grade classroom where my fingers formed the grey-greenish-blue clay into faux sticky tack for a pretend classroom.

I wasn’t finished.  I smashed the bird and the nest and started again, forming something new but I didn’t know what.  Seconds remained of the exercise.  What was I to do?  I always have a plan, even for clay.  But the nest wouldn’t do.  I needed a new dream to dream and to form a new bridge to walk across, unfamiliar yet familiar all the same.  My fingers created a place to land, a place to launch.  In the final seconds, clay that was once a bird and its nest became a book and the book means to write.   A book, memorialized in clay and by fire, or at least by oven heat.

The process of forming clay, and not knowing what the clay was supposed to resemble, taught me just as much as the final product.  The end game was prophetic but the process itself says more: It says to roll up my sleeves, get my hands dirty and not worry about what my writing is going to be.  God will tell where I’m headed as words take form.  But I needn’t worry now, my job is to write.

Categories // Writing Tags // faith, Mess

Christmas 2012

02.23.2017 by Nicole Kristin Twedt //

 

Originally from December, 2012

Dear Family and Friends,

The English major in me savors the task of writing our family Christmas letter.  If it were a word, I would say my “dorkiness” shines bright, brighter even than the white twinkle lights strung upon our tree, when I admit to you that I think of this very letter for a good part of the year.  I ponder what is truly newsworthy, what is humorous or sacred, or at least good enough to write about.  Then I spend endless hours plotting and crafting it all together.   But “quiet, Mommy’s writing!” isn’t flying well around here these days with an almost 6-year-old, an almost 4-year-old and a 17-month-old in the house.  So I’m giving myself permission this year to skip out on one of my favorite of favorite Christmas traditions.  Please know that wonderful things have happened to us this year.  Everyone is healthy and well.  It’s just that we are busy living life and enjoying this special season and each other.  We are truly blessed by the Lord and His faithfulness.

Who am I kidding?  I left the above paragraph alone for all of 2 days.  But really, since I took time to explain why I didn’t write, I might as well add a few details and turn this little note into the real deal.  Lauren is napping and Steven is “resting” so now is as good as any.

After 8 years in our neighborhood, Greg and I finished our backyard and set up a play area for the kids.  Truthfully, I didn’t do a thing.  GREG and a small work crew finished the yard and GREG and Grandpa Dave put together the awesome play structure.  I kept Emily, Steven and Lauren out of the yard and kept the dirt out of the house.

Besides working on the yard, Greg went paint-balling for the very first time resulting in a new hobby.  For some reason darting through the woods, while being shot at by fast and furious balls of paint, is fun for my husband.  I really don’t get paint-balling, especially the camouflage part.  Or the pain factor.  But my husband loves it and I love him and his hobby provides an opportunity to bond with his brother, Jeff, and our nephew, Brad, as they shoot each other in the great outdoors.  Guys are so different from girls!

Speaking of girls, just after last Christmas our eldest, Emily, turned five.  My parents have a tradition in our family: When you turn five you get to go to Disneyland.  We like this tradition.  Mostly because Greg and I, along with Steven and Lauren, were able to tag along when it was Emily’s turn to go to The Happiest Place On Earth in May.  We take back everything we ever said about “Disney Freaks,” you know, those families who return to Disneyland time and time again and buy things like lanyards and pins and Disney apparel.  We freely admit that Disneyland really is the happiest place, and we may or may not have returned with lanyards, pins, t-shirts, stuffed animals and even a Disney family decal for the back of the van.  Emily prefers the hotel swimming pool to Disneyland any day.  The little fish taught herself to swim underwater and surprised us by sliding down the big kid water slide her first day out.

This has nothing to do with our trip but our resident kindergartner no longer cares for the nickname Mimi.  She also wants you to know that physical education is her favorite school subject.  This morning on the way to Mrs. Lee’s AM kindergarten, Emily pointed out her handsome PE teacher.  Let’s just say I can see why PE is a favorite.

We have another little one in school this year.  We were blessed to find a preschool for Steven that is literally 5 minutes from our home.  We are so thankful to God…and Tonya, the mom-friend from ballet who told me about the new preschool.  I love how God puts people in our life at just the right moment.  I also love that our son’s teacher totally gets him.  After all, she is the mother of 8-year-old twin boys.  The bad news is Steven still “turns into a dog.”  Now he even has names for his alter egos: Buster, Chocolate Chip Mint and Woof Woof.  “Where’s Woof Woof going today?” Steven constantly asks.   “I don’t know about Woof Woof but Steven is going to preschool” is my usual response.  Goodness child, this is getting old.  However, just last week I was encouraged by some of my girlfriends to embrace Steven’s inner dog and now we are using it to our advantage.  Heard around our home: “Be a good little doggy and pick up all of the dog bones (toys) in your dog house (room).”  Never in a million years did we think we’d parent like this.  But really, how else do we train a kid who thinks he’s a dog? Obedience school?  Clearly we need something.  Just yesterday I caught our naughty little puppy dog under his beloved train table, naked, sneaking the last of daddy’s Christmas sugar cookies.

I don’t mean to write more about Steven than the other two.  They are loved the same.  It’s just that at the present Steven’s antics provide the most writing material.

As for Lauren, our pretty pumpkin is extremely laid back as far as Twedt babies go.  She’s a joyful child and we can’t imagine life without her.  We wouldn’t want to.  Never having a sister, we are both touched by Emily and Lauren’s bond, especially since more than a few years separate them.  Some of our littlest girl’s favorite things include carrying random toys around the house in shopping bags and other plastic containers, singing E-I-E-I-O, and studying picture books upside down while sitting in her miniature rocking chair that was mine as a child.  Mostly, though, Lauren is fond of her morning and bedtime bottle, which I’m embarrassed to say we are still doing.

As for me, I stepped down from some of my favorite things, such as MOPS and the Thursday Morning Bible Study at church. This has nothing to do with not wanting to be part of them and everything to do with our new school schedules up north and not being able to be in two places at once.  But some of my dearest of dear friends are plowing through Beth Moore’s study of Daniel with me and I joined a book club over the summer. Once again my inner nerd shines bright.  I’m stinking excited about my book club, something I always wanted to do.  For years I’ve been telling myself that I’d join in a heartbeat if I ever had to drop something from my busy schedule.  Another new thing is that after nearly 6 years away from the classroom I’m back!  Well, sort of…once a week I get to help in Emily’s kindergarten.  I’ve only volunteered 4 or 5 times, but I’m already hooked.  I simply come alive when teaching, or in this case, just helping out at school.  I liken myself to Eric Liddell from Chariots of Fire.  I feel His pleasure knowing I’m doing what He created me for.

So much for not writing a family Christmas letter this year.  I just couldn’t help myself.  The melancholy introvert in me just loves to write.  I always have.  The one thing I struggle with, however, dating back even to WWU, is that I have a tendency to fall short in the end of a paper and forget to leave the reader hanging on my words.  My professors searched for the punch but it was never there.  After spending every ounce of all that was in me on the body of an essay, short story or research paper I was DONE.  Things are different now.  I’m ending abruptly this time around because Lauren’s cries have announced the end of her nap, Steven is standing in his doorway asking “How many more minutes?” and Emily wants her computer time.  So Merry Christmas to all!  May God bless you and keep you.  May His face shine radiant upon you and may you know how very much He loves you this Christmas season and always.

Love,

Greg, Nicole, Emily, Steven and Lauren Twedt

Categories // Christmas Letters, Family, Writing Tags // Babies, Emily, Kindergarten, Lauren, Preschool, Steven, teaching, WWU

Scars

02.23.2017 by Nicole Kristin Twedt //

Mid-February, 2017

I’m struggling lately over brokenness, my brokenness, and the scars of my past.  I’m wrestling with the wounds of grief, loss of many kinds, and basically I’m feeling like I’ve been kicked around, tossed aside and thrown in a ditch at the side of the road, an attempted homicide of the heart gone terribly wrong.

I don’t believe in coincidence.  I believe in God’s mighty love, quick to save at just the right moment.  Basically, at the very moment I was falling apart he gave me the charge to write.  And confirmed it in a mighty way through Courtney who didn’t have a clue what was going on, or what my struggles were.  So for the last week of writing I can honestly say that I’m no longer falling apart.  I shouldn’t be surprised.  It’s always when I begin to listen to what God is saying to my heart, that my soul quiets down and rests.   I just had to get over myself and write to get there.

Just like that, writing has lifted my overwhelmed soul and brought life to these tired bones.  Most of these blog posts will never see the light of day, and that’s okay.  I have to process all these feelings somewhere.

There’s something else.  About a year ago I started a Bible Study with a group of friends.  Due to the craziness of life, family schedules and other commitments, we never were able to get past a week or so of study.  It’s an old Beth Moore study, Beloved Disciple.

I have run from writing, but I have been running from him as well.  I felt God calling my heart back to Bible Study.  It’s strange, and funny, and so like God that in week 3, where we left off, is all about grief, how the disciples, particularly John, would have felt during the time between the capture of Jesus in the garden, his crucifixion and his appearance to Mary Magdalene and the disciples.  I didn’t see that one coming.  How perfect that a study I started a year ago, from a study that was published in 2002, is exactly what I needed today.  I marvel at his tenderness and perfect way of coming to me at just the right moment.  Hope wasn’t lost after all.  Oh, I was holding on to hope for sure, always a flicker of hope, but the flicker was loosing some of its wonder trapped under the weight of my brokenness.

Beth reminds us of the story of how Jesus came to his dear ones, the disciples, and showed them his scars.  And it hit me, I’m struggling with brokenness, with my scars.  What a comforting reminder, to know Jesus still has scars.  He conquered the grave but he was scarred nonetheless, like me.  And those precious scars remind us of his great love and resurrection power.

I feel comforted at last and so, well normal!  Grieving is a part of life, a normal part of life, even if hurts.

I read recently in a Facebook article (because I am very scientific in my research), that scar tissue is stronger than regular skin.  I don’t know if this is true.  And I’m too tired to Google it.  But I will hold to the belief that God is going to use this messy part of life for his glory.  That the gruesome details of my story will be what draws me closer to him as I write, and what keeps drawing me near so that I can cheer others as they run the into his arms.

Categories // Grief, Writing Tags // Bible Study, Brokenness, faith, hope

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