Very soon
now my beloved family milk cow Moo will give birth to her 5th calf.
And Kirkhaven will have milk again. Fresh, rich, milk. Delicious. Organic. Healthy.
And we will
have homemade butter.
And any
flavor of ice-cream we can dream up.
And tangy
sour cream.
And yummy
cheese spreads full of fresh herbs from our late-summer garden.
I love
everything about milking my sweet Moo. I love getting up early to meet her at
the stall gate. I love humming and chatting as I wash her udder and tie her in
the milking station. I love the
satisfied look on her face when I pour grain into the bucket at her head. And I
love folding myself low-to-the-ground to reach beneath her short-statured udder.
There is no
fanfare about it. When the rest of the world is still in bed . . . or getting
their morning coffee . . . or preparing notes for their next meeting . . . or
trying to get children dressed for school . . . I
am sitting on my tree-stump milking stool. The television is
broadcasting the latest news about the election, but I don’t hear it. There are
wars in foreign countries, but I am not experiencing them. People are blogging
and tweeting about themselves, or their accomplishments, or their opinions, or
their passions, or their crusades, or their disdain for other people’s opinions and passions and crusades . .
. but I am not reading any of it. There is only Moo, me, the sound of munching,
the feel of her ample belly against my cheek, and the uncomplicated rhythm of
squeeze-and-squeeze-and-squeeze-and-squeeze.
Cows have no
charisma. I think that is what I love the most about Moo. There is
warmth and acceptance in her eyes. There is a quiet regality in her posture.
There is a practical intelligence in her demeanor. There is even a charming agreeableness in the way she willingly cooperates with her farmers. But there is absolutely no charisma.
None.
In a world
that deifies advertisement and self promotion, charisma is everything. You need
to be gorgeous. You need to carry yourself with pride and confidence. You need
to be quick witted and sharp tongued. You need to be talented and specially
gifted. You need to be passionate. You need followers. And you need to be able
to cut your opposition off at the knees with one quick flick of the tongue.
But Moo
needs none of these things.
And when I
am milking Moo, I need none of these things too.
My husband
and I did not begin our farming journey to learn the secret of a charisma-less
life. But sometimes the journey you begin to take will follow a path you never knew was there.
So I wait .
. . with great anticipation . . . for Moo to have her new calf. My heart longs
for the simple joy of hand milking Moo. There is a deep thirst in my soul
for a rich, meaningful life that transcends the shallow popularity of
charismatic living. I am ready for the lessons.
I want to
find the treasures that are hidden ...
instead of manufacturing crass
trinkets for popular display.
I want to
relish the effort of working hard ...
instead of expecting easy benefits
from effortlessness.
I want to
understand the real importance of faithfully stewarding the tasks set before me ...
instead of wishing to be someone else doing something else somewhere else.
instead of wishing to be someone else doing something else somewhere else.
I want to walk through my day with a nurtured sense of gratitude ...
instead of feeding a desire to always want more.
Dear Lord,
you were a carpenter by trade. A scholar by heritage. A servant by choice.
Teach me the lessons that will forge my heart into a sanctuary for the kind of
Truth that is real . . . and the kind of living that is really Good.
Free from the burden of charisma.
I am
waiting.
And I am
ready.
And Moo will
help.
Mom- I thoroughly enjoyed this! I look forward to more lessons with Moo and you
ReplyDeleteThanks, Dave. I am looking forward to the journey . . .
ReplyDelete