Muddied hands wiped clean, I duck out of the studio to drop my youngest at freshmen orientation. In the passenger seat I spy no longer a little girl, but a young lady smiling back at me, mascara flawlessly applied, blonde tresses smoothly brushed. Not too many years ago I watched a big yellow bus take her away to kindergarten. And further back still, I kissed her soft pink cheeks and studied her tiny newborn face from a hospital bed, wondering which sibling she most resembled.
How did we get to high school?
Throwing an ordinary lump of clay like I’ve done countless times before, a handful of earth begins its transformation into a unique work of art. My slippery hands roll gently over each piece; shaping, molding, forming, changing. Dinner table chatter echoes in my mind... Graduate school & a change in degree... A serious relationship... College graduation... A youngest son’s senior year. Scripture soon knits its way into my thoughts: “Yet you, Lord, are our Father. We are the clay, You are the potter; we are all the work of Your hand.”
The first day of school arrives at 4:05 A.M. I am up while the world still sleeps. I start the coffee and step outside my studio. Gazing up above me are billions of bright tiny lights twinkling against the still, dark morning: a sky full of tiny lanterns, palpable reminders of God’s everlasting light in my life. His hands never tire, yet remain gently on each of us, His creations: molding, forming, shaping, changing.
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