Welcome to A Gravel Road Journey!

NOT SO LONG AGO, Dad RE-named his art studio, "A Gravel Road Studio", and so this seemed an appropiate title for his blog.

Why 'Gravel Road'? As Dad explains, "Gravel roads take us off life's busy highway and force us to slow down. When we slow down we have time - time to notice the things around us; the things that matter the most; life and breath, the flowers and the trees. Gravel roads allow us to taste the dust of our travel and give us time to breathe."

Since his studio is a place of quiet reflection and contemplation, we wanted to create a space for family and friends to do the same as we journey together down this new and unknown path. We also wish to keep family and friends updated on his diagnoses and treatment, so please check in often for updates and new information.

Monday, December 1, 2008

A Lament from an old friend

An old professor of Dad's wrote this lament for him and posted it on his blog. We have asked his permission to share it here - it's beautiful in its honesty and fragility. Thank you, James Schaap! ~From all of us


Lament

He sat in the back, way in the back, left side. Didn’t say much either, but it was clear to me that he wasn’t dumb. He had this problem with getting work in on time—that I remember well. He was the kind of student who gives you headaches because you’ve got to bug him (or her) to stay tuned. But then, that was not an unfamiliar way of life to me.

Somehow, I got roped into sponsoring the soccer club that year, my very first year of college teaching. I don’t know how, because I knew nothing about soccer except that it was a game with astonishingly little scoring. It seemed to me an exercise in futility sometimes, but I’d been a coach before and I enjoyed the camaraderie cruising along in the van with the team.

This tall kid was one of them, quite talented too, a freshman who played a ton of soccer that year, even though he was one of the new kids on the block.

I don’t know if I had him as a student after that, but some kids you don’t lose sight of—probably because they don’t lose sight of you. This one I remembered, too.

He became a teacher, and an artist, a kid with exceptional talent with a brush and in other media as well, I suppose; and when I’d visit the place he and his wife had chosen to live, I’d run into him. He looked the artist, a pony tail shaped like an artist's brush halfway down his back from thick dark hair, hair to die for. He’d put on weight—never too much, but enough to square him up, so much so that he was an impressive physical specimen, a man with a presence. Even in a crowded room, you didn’t look past him.

And he did well as an artist, well enough to be noticed, well enough to have his work purchased and on display at a number of places and in collections, including here at his alma mater. That’s one, above—a rabbi sleeping on a bench, another man, the artist himself, walking away, leaving the scene--that one is his.

I saw him last weekend and couldn’t help but notice the half-dollar-sized spaces in that thick head of hair. He has brain cancer, and his chances are not at all good.

Twice, his singing group assembled in the front of big crowds, and all eight of them held forth beautifully; but he had obvious trouble holding up his share of the bass line. At times, he was behind a step or two—or just not with the program. But he stood there—sometimes sat—with his gang, and just seeing him up there was, to me and others, the kind of rich testimony that makes people wipe their eyes.

Twice, I saw his wife reach for hers, even though she tried stubbornly to fight the tears. And that's the picture I'm left with, his wife alone in a chair or pew, losing a battle with tears.
In little more than 12 hours I gave two talks, two speeches that had me scared spitless for more than a week. I wanted those speeches to go well, spent more than my share of worry wondering whether what I had prepared would move anyone.

What I didn’t imagine is that the story of the weekend was the story of a tall, skinny kid I had in class almost 35 years ago, a man who is now a 50-year-old man, in the prime of creative life, a pony-tailed painter and husband and father being taken slowly, painfully, from those he loves as nothing less than evil eats away at those very acute perceptions that made him an artist.
We’re not talking about a saint here. We’re not talking about someone whose life didn’t occasionally rush off in directions he hadn’t planned or later wished he’d not taken. He was as human as the rest of us.

As human as the rest of us. And now he’s facing death.

I wish I could write a thoughtful homily I could put in an inside pocket, close to my heart, something that would stanch the bleeding from my own soul.

I don’t like death.

Later today I face another class full of students. I’d like to tell them, if I could, that, quite honestly, nobody knows what life holds for them. I’d like to say a ton of things, but I won’t. Maybe one of those kids will be an artist too—who knows?

We’ll just go on. We’ll read a story about a father’s loves for his daughter, a father who talks to God. That’s what we’ll be doing. We’ll go on. As we always do.

Last night at a committee meeting, the chair extended sympathy to two members who, in the last while, lost two family members. Tonight I’ll go to a wake. Yesterday was Veteran’s Day. This country has only one doughboy left—107 years old—from the First World War. All the rest are in the earth, “one mighty sepulcher,” William Cullen Bryant once called it in a poem he wrote, as unlikely as it seems, when he 19.

It’s all around us, really, this mess. But we go on. Grab a Kleenex maybe, howl some.
But the human story—our need for love, God’s love—just keeps playing. Just keeps playing.
Not unlike soccer maybe, a game—or so it seems this morning—with not much scoring.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Dana,

Thanks so much for sharing this. It truly touched my heart. I continue to pray for you and your family.

Diane

Anonymous said...

Dana, thanks you for this blog that keeps us up to date on behalf of your dad. This is no small thing you are doing. And the Christmas season could make it more difficult under such troubling circumstances. I can’t help but ponder how the cheerful music and glittering lights stand in contrast to the hardships you as a family are walking in. Christmas also marks the very reason for our faith in God, of whom our prayers are for your dads healing and comfort. …What a thing it is to experience the blend (or collision) of faith and suffering! It really escapes words of adequate description. …My heart goes out to you all. Special attention will be in my prayers for your dad and family.
Gerry Goertzen

Matthew said...

I read this poem a while back in the book "Suffering and the Sovereignty of God" ed by John Piper and Justin Taylor. I've been thinking and praying for you all & I had an impression that God wanted you to be encouraged that he is present in this time. Not just present, but lovingly their as a Father who cares, as a Son who knows suffering and death and as a Spirit who comforts. I hope you find the poem encouraging.

The Thorn
by Martha Snell Nicholson

I stood a mendicant of God before His royal throne
And begged him for one priceless gift, which I could call my own.
I took the gift from out His hand, but as I would depart
I cried, "But Lord this is a thorn and it has pierced my heart.
This is a strange, a hurtful gift, which Thou hast given me."
He said, "My child, I give good gifts and gave My best to thee."
I took it home and though at first the cruel thorn hurt sore,
As long years passed I learned at last to love it more and more.
I learned He never gives a thorn without this added grace,
He takes the thorn to pin aside the veil which hides His face.

Matthew Wassink

Anonymous said...

Thanks Dana, for sharing this touching lament. I have been following this blog, and wanted to share a few memories of my own. Gerald was my teacher at Calvin Christian School. He taught me Bible, and Art. I wasn't much of an artist, and so his excellent instruction was lost on me. But Bible, that is something I continue to study.

Mr. Folkerts had us as a class memorize two Bible verses, and I will never forget either. The first, "Therefore, do not store up for yourselves treasures on earth, where moth and rust destroy, and theives break in and steal. But store up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where moth and rust do not destroy, and where theives do not break in and steal. For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also." And the second, "For I am convinced that neither death nor life, neither angels nor demons, neither the present nor the future, nor any powers, neither height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation will be able to separate us from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord." I have retained this knowledge throughout my life and I thank you, Mr. Folkerts, for making us memorzize it.

Many years after Calvin, I was a student at King's college and one day found myself standing in the atrium where Gerald's creation series was displayed. I overheard two of my favorite professors admiring one of the first in the series, and the female professor casually joked that the hand of God looked a little feminine. I laughed too, and I remember thinking about the artist, who had been my teacher. I was, and still am, proud to have been his student. My thoughts and prayers are with you and your family.