Three years is a short time.
Three years is a long time.
It is long enough that my six-year-old doesn't remember her daddy.
It is long enough that Ed's voice is dim in my own memory.
May has been so crazy busy that I didn't spend a lot of time contemplating the last three years, but memories drizzle in.
I've been reading The Lazy Genius Kitchen by Kendra Adachi which is more of a figure-out-your priorities book than a cookbook. She constantly asks, "What matters most?" Do I value ease, or simplicity, or low cost, or variety?
It wasn't a very big jump from thinking "what matters most?" in my kitchen and menus to life and relationships and future plans.
And it is made me think back to past decisions, specifically Ed's choices.
Ed wasn't perfect, though it is easy to remember only the best. But when I think about Ed and how he faced cancer and death, there is one song that comes immediately to mind.
Those of you that have read here for a while know that Ed enjoyed hymns and I've shared quite a few with you.
You can find all the posts where I shared hymns here.
But in the last sermon he preached, he shared the words to the praise song, "Blessed Be Your Name."
The words were ones that he lived, but I've struggled to sing these words from the heart. Three years later, I'm not sure I'm any closer to singing some of the verses. As the song states, it is a heart choice. This song is based on Job 1:21 and though I'm not in the category of Job's wife, who suggested Job curse God and die, I don't always have Job's response. This is a song that requires hands open and raised.
And possibly tears.