Showing posts with label marriage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label marriage. Show all posts

Saturday, October 28, 2023

The Ditziest Couple

                                                         ðŸ“·~ Kerra Martin

We're probably the ditziest couple you know. 

We're the pair you could've seen kneeling on the floor in a corner of the Buffalo airport hovering over a large suitcase and frantically pawing through heaps of dirty clothes after the check-in luggage had finally come and done its dutiful rounds on the baggage carousel. We were in this humbling position all because of getting to our hotel and blissfully throwing our personal vehicle keys into our biggest suitcase in favor of using the rental car keys at the beginning of our trip. And promptly forgetting about the location of the personal keys, which eventually worked their way to bottom of the suitcase under all the smelly laundry and finally showed up in the airport after we had dug for them in every compartment of every piece of carry-on luggage between the two of us, patted down every personal clothing pocket, and prayed every arrow prayer we could think to pull back on our bowstring and shoot. 

We're the sheepish couple you could've caught trying to back safely down and off the steep and narrow Costa Rican mountain road we had endeavored to begin climbing with our rental vehicle because somehow we were super-committed to keep following the roads our GPS indicated as we made our way to visit a scenic volcano. 

We're the frazzled couple you could have observed nearly running out of gas while traversing and re-traversing the three mountains of Tobago in our rental vehicle, all because we opted not to get gas at the real gas station where the pay-at-the-pump mechanism was out of order and we chose instead to head for yonder town which boasted a large colorful gas station symbol on the map we were consulting and then when we arrived, there was no gas available at all in the end-of-the-island town, neither from the two derelict pumps at a woebegone station nor from the gas cans of the Tobagonian men lolling beside their pick-ups at the edge of the street. 

We're the helpless and hopeless couple you could have shaken your head over as we sat in our neon green Ford Focus, focusing on our parking spot dilemma on a steep hill in Germany. (Why do the ditzies seem to overtake us in rentals during trips to foreign countries??) We were nosed downward at an alarming angle and for some long and tense and scary minutes, before the driver had the presence of mind to use the emergency brake to his advantage, neither of us could remember how to maneuver a stickshift vehicle up a hill in reverse without rolling ahead (and therefore potentially crashing into the vehicle parked ahead of us) when releasing the clutch...

We're the mister-n-missus you could've watched outside after dark, scooping up tiny pieces of oven door glass from a trail on the laneway because the missus had dragged her heavy-with-rubble garbage bag over the gravel on her way to the dumpster not realizing the bits of broken glass were spilling out of a hole worn through the plastic bag and the mister was implored and employed in clean-up rescue efforts and even though they were two lovers side by side in the moonlight I betcha they weren't out there whispering sweet nothings to each other. 

Yeah, we've done some pretty stupid things over the years, where we look back and say "That was dumb; we shoulda known better", but we've also gotten ourselves into situations where clearly our lives were at stake. Like the time we walked across the bay ice in Parry Sound where there had been open water just days earlier. Or the time we were in the kitchen removing an old electrical appliance to replace with a new one, involving the use of a table knife to pry the plug out and not thinking to flip the breaker to "off" first. The sparks flew, alright, and let's just say that they weren't exactly the romantic kind. 

In spite of all this craziness, believe it or not, your ditziest couple has managed to stay alive and stay together for 35 years. Thirty-five years! (As my sister-in-law Sharon says, "Now that is a long time!") Ken and I got married all those years ago on October 22, right in the thick of apple harvest, ensuring that in all the years to follow, we would rarely be able to get away for an anniversary jaunt exactly on - or even near - our wedding date. 

Last year on our anniversary outing we went to the charming town of Niagara-on-the-Lake in December and took in a play, A Christmas Carol, at the old, intimate Royal George theater on Main Street. We got there with not much time to spare, just enough to use the washroom before heading into the auditorium to get settled in our balcony seats before the curtains opened on the performance. 

Except that just as we reached the theater entrance, a very prominent sign on the outside door caught our attention. No Public Washrooms, it boldly proclaimed. Well, that's a fine how-do-you-do, we thought. How can that be? Are the theater restrooms undergoing renovations? Is the theater so ancient and tiny that there weren't ever provisions made for normal, washroom-needy theater attendees? How very odd, we thought. This is where we may be entering ditzland, we should have thought. But we didn't. 

So there we were on the sidewalk, Dani the Upholder, aka rule-follower, along with Ken the Questioner, aka rule-confronter. But both of us "had to go"; we were a couple in search-for-a-bathroom mode and we clearly weren't going to be finding one in this building, so we went next door to the nearest available building, which happened to be the theater box office, where the same type of sign was boldly posted. We went therein, anyway, to ask where the nearest public restrooms were. (IF indeed there were any usable restrooms to be had in the whole of Niagara-on-the-Lake: un-added part of question)

A few blocks down the street, the ticket officer said, so we headed that way, more puzzled and consternated than before. Could we actually trek down to the clock tower, discover the public restrooms in that vicinity, use the facilities, and hike back up to the theater before A Christmas Carol began? 

We had to walk fast and I felt my annoyance growing apace with a stitch in my side. So dumb, I thought, that we had to mess up the start of our romantic outing with an unexpected glitch like this. Thing was, I didn't know whom to blame. 

It wasn't until intermission that I found out who was at fault. It was us two, being the ditzy couple again! After the customary dismissal announcement halfway through the play, a bunch of people around us filed downstairs to purchase refreshments and/or to use the washrooms! Only then did we realize our misunderstanding of the sign outside the front entrance. It didn't mean that there were no restrooms in the building, it meant that the restrooms were available only to ticket-purchasing patrons of the theater. Well, duh on ditzy us!

And so, in reflecting upon these ditzy matters at anniversary time, I wrote a little poem, an Ode to Us, on our Thirty-fifth, in which I altered the meaning of ode slightly, from "a poem meant to be sung" to "a poem meant to be swung", but you may do as you wish:

Back when we began this waltz

our skill was rather fritz-y.

Of graceful moves we didn't 

know the nitty grits. We

stumbled on as happy klutzes

full of feeling, flit-sy.

Neither one of us fit the shoe, not 

being glam or glitzy

and somehow through the flitting years we 

never got more ritzy.

(Still, despite my tangled steps, 

surprisingly, he gits me.)

I watch some others glide with grace

and charm, all perfectness lock-fits-key;

I could allow that envy asks 

if we should call it quits? We

pause, instead, mid-swing (or -lurch?)

and then it hits me:

there's truly no one else with whom

I'd rather dance the ditz. See? 

Happy 35th Anniversary to us! Praises be to God, who led us together in the first place and has kept us together in all the places since. May He continue to bless, sanctify, and preserve us. 




Tuesday, October 4, 2022

A Half A Hundred (plus ten) Ripples

                                        📷: Ricky Martin

When I was a student in grade school, I memorized a poem that had some fascinating lines. I thought they were fun to repeat because of the easy way they rippled off my tongue, but now I like them more for their meaning. When James W. Foley wrote his poem about dropping a pebble in the water and watching it send out a half a hundred ripples, circling on and on and on, he was referring to our actions having a bigger impact than we sometimes realize. He points out that the mere words we say to others can be of great significance, either for good or for bad, in their lives.

This past weekend an event in the Martin Family reminded me of the spheres of influence we gain throughout our lives; how the single words, actions and attitudes we accumulate over the years and drop into the waters of relationship, as it were, have ever-widening circles of effect on others. 

My parents-in-law, Leighton and Florence Martin, have been "dropping their pebbles in the water" together and the results have been "circling on and on and on" for many years now. On Sunday, we as a family got to see some of that ripple effect when we gathered to celebrate Mom and Dad's 60th wedding anniversary. 

In an Open House that we (Ken, his siblings and their spouses) were privileged to host for Mom and Dad, a delightful variety of people showed up to congratulate our parents. Relatives and friends, former employees at Martin's Family Fruit Farm, hired men who worked for Dad and maids who worked for Mom when she had a new baby, former youth group pals, couples in the bridal party, children of long-time friends, and former fellow pastor couples each brought their own set of memories and unique points of connection to the anniversary couple.

One of the predominant ripples of influence had to do with church. Thanks to some of the siblings' orchestration of planning details, the generosity of Hauser Hall's owners, and the blessing of God, we were able to hold the event in what used to be the Heidelberg Mennonite Church. Dad M had been a pastor there for several decades, and a good many of the guests who came to the Open House had attended church in that building during those years. Memories of the place itself intertwined with memories of Mom and Dad and their impact on others through church life.

As the Open House was winding down, the grandchildren and great-grandchildren began to arrive for the after-events. Nearly seventy of the eighty-some applepeople in total were able to attend the celebration. It was a large group that clustered around Mom and Dad during the family photo session. I wonder if they thought about the way their circle of influence has widened (literally) over the years since the two of them said "I do". 

During the sharing time following the family dinner later that evening, we pondered more of Mom and Dad's ripple effect. We watched a video from ten years ago, in which many family members spoke words of affirmation and appreciation to our parents/grandparents for their 50th anniversary. As the scenes replayed, certain themes emerged that could easily be imagined as pebbles that Mom and Dad have consistently dropped into the river of their married life: a strong work ethic, leadership in business, generosity, gratitude, hospitality to strangers and friends alike, servanthood, valuing family, and dependence on God. The effect of this on us and on the generations to come is inestimable, really.

There have also been pebbles dropped that brought regret. Hands (much like the ones all of us own) have released harmful words and attitudes into the water of relationship, pebbles that are suddenly wished back, wished to be retrievable the minute they have landed on the water. Pebbles that, if not retractable, could somehow have their ripples stayed and that the waters they have disturbed could smooth out glassy calm immediately after their initial splash. But, like James Foley penned in his poem, unkind or careless words are gone in a minute, and no one can keep their half a hundred ripples from "spreading, spreading, spreading from the center as they go"... "There is no way to stop them, once you've started them to flow." 

Dad Martin, in his speech to us as a family at the end of the day, acknowledged his imperfection as a father and stated an apology for the effect his mistakes have had. As I heard his words I thought how this, too, was a sort of offering on the water with subsequent ripples of its own. While we can never un-drop the pebbles that have fallen from our hands, we can release other small stones from our grasp, realizing that our own vulnerability and admission of wrong are also pebbles of significance for good.

James Foley had it right when he also described the impact of dropping pebbles such as cheer and kindness. We tend to underestimate the volume of hope, joy and comfort they bring on "splashing, dashing waves". In a minute, we can forget the pleasant words and actions we have shared, "but there's gladness still a-swelling, and there's joy a-circling yet," and we've "rolled a wave of comfort whose sweet music can be heard over miles and miles of water just by dropping one kind word."

I sensed that swelling of gladness and circling of joy quite poignantly as we shared songs, laughter and tears together on Sunday evening. Words of the songs "For God So Loved Us" and "Praise to God, Immortal Praise" urged us to honor the Bounteous Source of every good thing, and another family favorite song, "We Have This Moment", reminded us to hold each family member dear while they're near. What a blessing it was that both Mom and Dad were able to come to this celebration day in a season of good health. 

I'm sure that as we sang, the minds of many of us went to Verlynn, Ken's sister Laurel's husband, who has recently received treatment for a brain tumor. In a last-minute gift of a miracle, he and Laurel and some of their family were able to come from Minnesota and join us in Mom and Dad's anniversary celebration. 

Of course, we all thought of Sandy and Bonnie too, whose Home-going had been on that very day, 23 years prior. As we cried our way through the song "Working the Road", which had been a favorite of Sandy, I heard "sweet music in the wave of comfort". Mom and Dad's service in God's kingdom had affected the life of their son Sandy who in turn had also been working the road while he lived, making things easier for those behind. Now we see Sandy and Bonnie's children continuing that way of blessing others, and it brings comfort.

One of the most significant pebbles Mom and Dad have introduced into family waters is faithfulness, Their steadfast commitment to God and to each other, as well as their love and service to us as a family and to the people God has placed in their path over the years has made a valuable impact. One effect this has had on me personally is that it's given me a desire to acknowledge the Father who "opens His hand and satisfies the desires of every living thing." I want to declare the "goodness of the Lord in the land of the living." (Psalm 145:16 and 27:13)

I'm so grateful for the example of my parents-in-law who have together in their marriage - if you figure the ripple effect in years - circled out half a hundred, plus ten. 

Love and faithfulness making their impact, on and on and on...

The anniversary couple all set to receive Open House guests

The Hauser Hall is a lovely venue retaining much of its original "church" beauty.

Numerous guests had memories/stories to tell of happenings in this auditorium 
and balcony, back when they attended church in this building.

Photos and memorabilia table

Display in the entry to welcome guests as they arrived

Table centerpieces in the basement, where refreshments and fellowship 
were enjoyed by the guests after they had gone through the 
receiving line upstairs on the main level

Mini cupcakes that I was privileged to help decorate


Refreshments had to include apple products, of course: 
fresh apples, apple chips, and apple cider

The aunts and uncles were invited to come a little ahead of the Open House 
hours, so they could have Mom & Dad all to themselves for a time. 
Pictured here is Mary (Mom's older sister) and her husband Orvie.

Verlynn & Laurel visiting with Uncle Clarence (Mom's brother) and Aunt Marie 

Guests seemed to enjoy meeting Mom & Dad's family, as well. 
Here Ken & I are sharing a humorous moment with our friends Earl and Lucille.

                                                        📷: Ricky Martin
Friends of Mom & Dad enjoyed meeting and mingling 
with other friends that they met at the Open House, too.

                                                               ðŸ“·: Ricky Martin
The whole group of applepeople who made it to the celebration

                                                        📷: Ricky Martin
Mom & Dad, backed by their children (and spouses) 
in order of age, youngest to oldest. Siblings names are in bold. 
L to R: Dale & Colleen, Marge & Kevin, Sharon, Dave & Janet
Verlynn & Laurel, Ruben* & Chris, Ken & Danette, Rose & Steve


Leighton Martin Family picture taken in 1980


One of the brothers suggested re-creating the above 1980 family photo, 
which ended up being a hilarious undertaking. Sadly, brother Sandy 
wasn't around to fill his spot in the reenactment, but thankfully there 
was an "adopted" brother to take his place. *Ruben Guevara met the 
Martins when he entered Canada as a refugee from El Salvador in 1984. 
It didn't take long for him to fit right in as one of Leighton & Florence's 
children, and the family welcomed him as one of their own. Ruben 
and his family have been a special part of applepeople ever since.

Thursday, September 23, 2021

Completing the Cycle

 

Over the past few summers, Ken and I kept talking about going on an overnight bike trip, but our talk never even got to the serious planning stage. For one reason or another, such as Ken being too busy with harvesting apples, we just hadn't made the trip happen. Until this summer. On a beautiful weekend in August, we biked the Niagara Peninsula Loop, covering 140 kilometers over the course of two days. Our overnight stay was in Niagara Falls at The Old Stone Inn. 

The bike trip was a lovely thing to do together. Upon completion of the route, we felt numerous things. Besides exhaustion and very sore muscles, there was quite an exhilarating sense of accomplishment. We planned for this trip, we began it, we endured it, and we completed it. We will always have great memories to accompany our experience of accepting a challenge and succeeding. 

Some cyclists go on a long bike ride to raise money for some worthy cause. Friends and acquaintances support them by donating to the charity for which they are riding or by providing drinks, snacks, assistance with mechanical repairs, and encouragement along the bike route. This is a fabulous way to go beyond the personal enjoyment of such a trip and to benefit others. 

Ken and I didn't choose to do our ride this "worthy cause" way (maybe next time?) but I don't think our trip lacked pleasure or purpose because of it. Either method can produce great results. When I think back over our experience, I can list numerous things I'd "do all over again".  If someone were to ask me how to have a good overnight bike trip, here's what I'd recommend: 


1. Get yourself some quality equipment. When we first decided that the summer of 2021 is when we're doing the trip, I pictured me using the old red bike I've always used (at least, ever since I got it for a gift on my 40th birthday) in spite of its difficult gear-shifting and its worn brakes. But Ken said if we're serious about going on a very long ride, I should have a bike that won't leave me so far behind him and puffing even on the calm, level stretches of trail. Well, I wasn't going to sniff at that. The dear bought me a new tan bike for my 56th birthday. Already at first ride, I was greatly impressed. The bike was so lightweight and lithe that forthwith I named her Willow. I don't know how many times on the trip I thanked God and Ken for her! 


2. Plan ahead. Yes, I did actually make this list at the beginning of the year, and no, I did not keep up with all of my lofty goals for each month. Surprisingly, though, we managed to work in our trip one month ahead of schedule. I found that having a basic plan like this gave me incentive to get out and exercise weekly, to work myself up to greater strength and stamina over time. I also learned that it is possible to bike often enough to eventually acclimatize one's seat muscles. (Perhaps having a gel bike seat cover helps, too.)


3. Do the research. We weren't stellar at researching, but we definitely did benefit from the map-finding and the blog-reading we managed to do ahead of time. (How else would we have known to do the loop in a counterclockwise direction, so that the longest hill stretches we had in Queenston were down and not up?) The green trail line on the map above gives a pretty good picture of the route we took around the Niagara Peninsula. Here is a description of the Loop, as found on GoBiking.ca: "It runs next to the Niagara River and the Welland Canal, with short segments along the shores of Lake Ontario and Lake Erie. For the most part, this route follows a wide bicycle/multi-use path that has a good paved surface. This loop covers about 140 kilometres; a little longer with a side trip to Port Dalhousie."

We began our trip in St. Catharines at Lock Three of the Welland Canal at 7:30 on Friday morning. Heading south to Thorold, we encountered the cool and lovely air of dawn, a nice paved trail with only a few short uphill sections on the escarpment, and dew-laden greenery flanking the path at various intervals.



Do polar bears eat pines, or does it only look like it?


4. Pace yourself and take plenty of breaks. We knew we had a lot of kms to cover on Day #1 of our trip, but that knowledge didn't keep us from occasionally pulling our bikes to a stop at the side of the trail for a break. Maybe it was to have a snack while sitting on a canalside bench. (Note to self: Buy the trail mix without corn nuts.) Or to take a swig from our water bottles. Or to consult Google Maps on our phones. Or, as Ken could readily tell you, for the photographer among us to take yet one more picture. Once, while stopping in a humid, shady spot beside a wooded lot, we were joined by mosquitos that appeared to be breaking a fast. It was when we were hasting out of there that a deer fly bit my ankle. I reacted somewhat to the sting so that by evening my foot was stiff with the swelling, but by the next morning it was fine.


There were interesting bridges and other structures to observe along the canal.


Huge bowls of flowers and a great iron anchor adorned one of the parks we rode through.


5. Keep hydrated. As the morning sunshine turned the day warmer, our thirst increased. Thankfully we each had a water bottle nestled in a holder on our bike. The water level in the bottles drastically receded the farther we got into the morning. In Port Colborne, we stopped at a Shopper's Drug Mart to buy a few bottles of Gatorade and a "big water", which felt satisfying and provisionary. 


It seems each town or city has its own unique brand of Main Street decor. I thought that the anchors were a fitting nautical touch along the streets of Port Colborne, which is on the shore of Lake Erie.



Our bike trail, having hugged the canal on its left from our starting point at Lock Three all the way to Lock Eight near Lake Erie, crossed over the canal and headed straight east in Port Colborne. When crossing over the canal to catch the Friendship Trail, we had to stop and wait for this ship to pass through, under the raised portion of the bridge. 



6. Choose a route with variety in scenery. A good bit of the scenery we viewed from the trail on our trip involved water - the Welland Canal, Lake Erie, and the Niagara River. I loved the beauty and diversity along those waterways. The Friendship Trail section between Port Colborne and Crystal Beach was straight and hot and almost boring at times. It did have its own charm though, with the farmland, wildflowers, and butterflies.  



7. Be flexible and embrace the unexpected. We expected to stop in Crystal Beach for lunch. Since we'd vacationed in that lovely town last summer, we expected we'd have to leave the bike trail to reach a Tim Horton's coffee shop along the main drag. What we did not expect or remember was how far into town it was. Exhausted and very ready for a lunch break, we entered the air-conditioned Timmie's restaurant. We were not expecting their no indoor dining policy, nor the absence of any patio tables or seating arrangements outdoors. We ended up taking our chicken wraps lunch across the street and sitting on the grass in the shade near the Fire Department. It was relaxing and refreshing to eat there, if a bit unhandy. And we did have the brilliant, memorable bikes-on-street-poles decor of Crystal Beach in our view as we ate. 


In the background of this shot is the Peace Bridge spanning the distance between Canada (Fort Erie, Ontario) and the United States (Buffalo, New York). We biked along this area of Lake Erie in dazzling sunshine and gorgeous vistas. We were still in good spirits and had considerable energy yet at this point. A stop at an outdoor patio in Fort Erie was very welcome, nonetheless. We weren't hungry, though; just positively thirsty. I think we puzzled our waitress with our order of no food, only things to drink!



For a long stretch in the late afternoon of Day #1 of the trip, we pedalled with the wide and lovely Niagara River on our right and the wide and lovely Niagara mansions on our left.


8. Optional, I'm sure, but I wouldn't have wanted to do without: Have along a partner who is willing to take more than his share of the load. We began the trip with our luggage distributed between both of our bikes. The rack on my bike is less sturdy than Ken's, so I took the lighter duffel bag, and Ken took the bulging twin saddle bags. We hadn't gone many kilometers into the trip before my bag shifted and ended up falling partway off the rack. We didn't want that sort of thing happening, so Ken put ALL of the luggage on his bike rack. I was so grateful for his taking this on, as well as consulting his phone to give me distance reports, and for encouraging and affirming me when the going got long and weary. 





9. Visit Niagara Falls in the summertime. The Falls is one grand, thunderous, majestic place to enjoy, no matter how many times you've seen it. When we reached this spot on our trip, I was struck by the realization that it had been a very long time since I'd seen Niagara Falls in summer. It seemed to me that this time of year, the colors were sharper, the light more brilliant, the grandeur deeper. I suppose our thrall would have been even more intense, had we not been so exhausted and been more willing to leisurely hang out there. As it was, we'd put in nearly 100 kilometers on our bikes, and our bodies were screaming, "No more!"



10. Book a nice hotel for the overnight part of your trip. Ken had reserved a room for us in Old Stone Inn in Niagara for Friday night, bless his dear heart. This hotel is located up the hill from the Falls, near the Skylon Tower. We pushed our bikes slooowly up that last long hill and wobbled (was it wobbling? I don't know - it was whatever one does on a bike after biking a whole day) into the hotel parking lot. The Inn proprietors showed us where we could stow our bikes for the night: in their back office under lock and key, and then Ken and I went to our room and crashed on the blessed bed in the blessed air-conditioning. 
The next morning, we had a rather leisurely start since we didn't need to bike nearly as far as we had the previous day to complete our trip. This included an ample and tasty breakfast at the Inn Restaurant.


11. Make new discoveries along the way. One of these discoveries was Ken learning that he could make his biking "steps" count by attaching his FitBit-type exercise tracking device to his shoe. On Saturday morning, we were a good twenty kilometers into our biking when Ken realized he'd forgotten to put the band on his foot. In the pic above, he is tying it to his shoelace.


Closeup of the Floral Clock, a tourist attraction near Queenston.


I loved the glimpses we had of the Niagara River as we neared Niagara-on-the-Lake.





12. Gain new perspectives on your surroundings. As part of our Saturday route, we biked from Niagara-on-the-Lake to St. Catharines along Hwy 55, which took us past numerous vineyards. From the care and maintenance of young grapevines, to the gnarly-trunked vines laid out in symmetrical rows, to the clusters of luscious individual grapes, I found the scene fascinating.


13. Give thanks. The last ten kilometers of the forty we did on Saturday were very tiring since we were biking into a strong and warm headwind. I'm very grateful that we didn't have those conditions any more than we did. By the end, I was really starting to flag. (I had begun encouraging myself by saying "Dani, you can pedal to that road sign up there" or "When we get to that little patch of shade, we'll stop for a water break".) 
We returned to our starting point in the mid-afternoon on Day #2 of the trip, so ready to be done and so happy to have accomplished what we had set out to do. Some of the many points on our gratitude list regarding this Overnight Bike Trip are: 
- health and ability to pedal that far
- that we could do this together as a couple
- all the beautiful aspects of God's Creation we could enjoy with our five senses
- that my duffel bag didn't break any spokes when it fell onto my bike wheel
- that the rain on Saturday held off until we were in the van and driving home
- getting to share our pics and experience with you, my blog readers

What's been a big goal that you've accomplished recently?