
It is funny how the little things often have the biggest impact on our lives. Today is a typical day with typical expectations and obligations. Days like today usually go unnoticed and are filed away into the week, the month, the year, the forever. But life is made up of days like today, days that are ordinary and full, busy and plain. However, the collection of these days somehow forms the most beautiful and heart-tugging memories.
As I sit in my office working on my lectures for the week, music playing in the background so quietly it is almost unnoticed, I am pulled into a whirlwind of memories. A flood of these minute, unaccounted-for days pushes into my mind to reveal the beautiful memories left in their wake. A simple song is the catalyst for this welcomed intrusion of the past. Better together by Luke Combs hums in the background while my mind is set ablaze with the loop of our life.
Him. It is in his smile and his loving eyes fixed upon me from across any room we have ever occupied that I feel the most beautiful and loved. I shine brighter in those eyes than anywhere else in the world.
Our babies. Oh, the visions of our beautiful little cherubs revealing toothless grins and squealing in delight over a tickle or a round of peek-a-boo, have my heart in a puddle. Our big boys jumping and laughing atop the mound of Dad laying on the floor, play uninterrupted in my mind.
My work has stopped, and the loop continues. Kitchen dances before breakfast and late-night laughs tug at the corners of my mouth, bringing them upward into a grin. Nights of laughter and dreaming out loud are remembered as the memories flood in.
The images of him holding the shell of me when my parents left the world. His silence and strength had been the remedy for my broken heart and still are. The embrace that kept me from shattering into a million pieces is felt as the chorus of the song dances all around me.
A simple song, on an ordinary (for the files) sort of day, brought our life to the surface. This simple song set free years of memories that had been anchored, filed away, to light and remind me that it is in these days, life is lived.
“Some things just go better together and probably always will”. WE will always be better together. There will never be enough years to share this life with my husband and our kids, but I will be more intentional in recognizing the power of these ‘ordinary’ days.
