Jan Richardson wrote: “You could not imagine that something
so empty could fill you.”—Painted Prayerbook.
Recently
while quilting with a group of women, we began to talk about the empty
nest. We are a group of women at a
variety of ages and with a variety of thoughts on the empty nest. One of the women still has children at home
and I know there are times when all think the grass is greener on the other
side. As we talked about the emotions
behind our experiences we realized they all varied. Some struggled with each child’s departure
and others of us found it easier with each good-bye.
Our
traditional response to Easter is “Christ is risen” followed by “He is risen
indeed!” Christ was with the disciples,
with the Marys, with the people for a short time. Like us often the good-bye in death includes
returning to the burial site. When the women arrive to the tomb they find it
empty. They were not ready for
good-byes, they were not ready to move on without him and they must have
wondered how they could manage without Christ beside them.
Would they recognize
the best and be able to ignore the worst in each other without Christ telling
some story for them figure out? Who would distract them from judgement? Who would ask them to pray? Who would have faith in THEM?
I think
of 20 years of “school years” parenting and would anyone know that about me at
that time, about me as a parent? Would
anyone know I taught 3 teenagers to drive?
Would anyone know that my husband pitched more baseballs than I could
ever count?
The question of the
empty nest might very well be—who will we be now without them? Who will distract us from the stresses of
work and home? Who will we pray for in
the wee hours of the night? Who else
would ever have as much faith in us as they did?
Our
nest has been “empty” for some time now but occasionally it is full of all our
children, their partners and their children.
When we are all together the space is full. Full of a vibrating energy, it is joyful, it
is noisy and it is crowded. As the flock
slowly takes leave, one by one, I begin to breathe.
With
each breath, with each lego and farm animal put away, with each lone toddler’s
sock stuck in a cushion, I begin to feel.
It is with that one last flop on the couch that I look at that empty
space and I am full. I am full of
memories, full of joy, full of worry as well.
The kind of fullness I feel in that emptiness feels too big for my heart
almost—it is almost pain—full.
When the room is empty who will know us?
The stone is rolled
away, the tomb is empty and like the disciples we might ask “Who are we now?” We are
Easter people, defined not by an empty tomb but by a risen Christ.

Just Lovely thoughts and beautiful reality!
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