Category Archives: marriage

Rambling

I wrote the following yesterday.

Sid is getting ready to leave tomorrow for Japan for 10 days.  Well, one day heading out, one day heading home, so 8 days that we won’t see him, I guess.  Too long.  Traveling with my husband was once the great joy of my life.  Now hanging out at home with him and our children is.  I have chosen to mother in a fashion, and have enough children, so that my caring for them has to usurp every other endeavor of personal interest I might pursue (except for things I can do in short spurts of time at home, and/or with my children, such as sewing, reading and origami), and I am continually passionately committed to this choice.  But it does sting at such a time as this, as Sid prepares to go to such a wonderful, enchanting, delicious, interesting, beautiful, kind land as Japan.  I know because I have been there.  At least I’ve been there . . . or does that make it harder?  He’s flying first class, there’s enough room in first class for me too, and enough for me to lie down.  I used to love flying everywhere!!  The thrill of anticipation when the stewardess would announce our descent rivaled the thrill of riding the Viper roller coaster at Six Flags in my young mind.  And not because of the physical aspect of the landing, because of the expectation that where we would be landing would surely impart to me an abundnace of life and learning and love, in my time there and I would always come home a different girl than I left home as.  I miss that so much.  But I love life with my kids and I believe strongly enough in the way I’ve been doing things for these last 10 years of my mothering.  I should add that I do know many a wonderful mother that choose both, children and travel.  Together and separate.  It is my personal choice not to leave my younger children for longer than the hours contained in a single day, so leaving home without them isn’t an option.  And with Sid working for much of his trip, it doesn’t seem reasonable for me to take on day after day of four kids, on my own, in a foreign land, including a nursling (that dear sweet nursling of mine!).  Although, writing that now, it does have the feel of the grand adventures of travel I enjoyed as a young girl!  Surely I am capable of such a task, surely we’d all learn so very much, and rely on one another, and get stressed and recover and flourish and expand and come home new people.  Why oh why are we not going??  Oh yeah, Sid could obtain exactly 1 first class ticket for $700.  One day we will all go, not flying first class, but we will go, and we will have a real good time.

 

There have been many trips Sid has gone on solo before this one, and surely there will be more, but I’m feeling the feelings more intensely this time, I believe, because next Friday, October 7th, will mark the 15th anniversary of Sid’s and my wedding.  He’ll be in Koenji, I’ll be in Santa Ana.  (Have I mentioned how proud I am of my man and that his tattoos are in demand all over the globe?)  I’ve tried to come up with some romantic and symbolic thing we can both do on that day to acknowledge our relationship, but as with every other anniversary, it’s significance is diminished by the fact that the wonder of Sid and I is in every day we spend together.  We find so much joy in each other’s company.  So if we could just get the kids to bed that night, mix up some form of a fizzy juice/vodka drink to share and then watch Mad Men on the couch, that would be perfect.  But okay, maybe I just didn’t apply myself enough to the task of figuring out some romantic thing we could do together, then I could focus on that now instead of how sad it feels that we’ll be apart on what is a super cool landmark in our lives together.  I guess its significance isn’t completely diminished.

 

Whenever he’s gone, I vacillate between wanting to take it super easy so I can check out emotionally, somewhat, and wanting to take on big, interesting tasks to make the time go faster.  Rearranging furniture is always fun, or redecorating.  This time I’d like to build an outdoor stone masonry oven and begin the trials for finding our family favorite backyard bread recipe to pass down through the generations.  Or build this cool wooden table with nesting benches I found the plans for online, that looks easy enough, and then get one of those big tents from Harbor Freight and erect a veritable “living room in the orchard” for us to hang out in.  I know very well that these things aren’t likely to happen.  I know I should focus on mustering the enormous patience, kindness, goodness, self-control and all the other fruits of the spirit I want to embody for the children while Sid is gone.  Because surely that is not my default setting when my love is so far away from me, under those circumstances my default is more along the lines of pissed, snappy, whiny, are those the vegetables of the spirit?  Ha ha, the rotten fruits?  The weeds and thorns, I suppose.  Anyway.

 

I recently found exactly 4 letters I wrote when I was nine years old.  They are written on stationary from a kibbutz my mom and I stayed in when we travelled to Israel with Grandpa’s church in 1987.  I have many, many fond memories from that trip, it was one of the ones I referred to in the above paragraph about loving to fly.  The letters were written to each of my siblings and they each highlighted different events of my trip, based on who the letters were written to.  I told my brother Mike about things I had climbed while in Israel, he and I loved to climb.  I told my brother William about a crusader fortress I toured, where there were holes in the upper parts to pour boiling oil onto any invaders.  I wrote to simpler, shorter letters to my 2 year old twin brother and sister, based on what I thought they’d comprehend.  These letters tell me so much about myself and my relationships with my siblings at that time, and they cause me grief too.  It would be 6 more years before my parents would divorce, and that family unity that pervaded my letters would be challenged, and eventually defeated as we all scrambled to find that feeling of family and home wherever we could.  Some of us turned to substances, others to friends, others of us – me – turned inward.  I feel so cut off from that young girl I was, writing those letters to my best friends, as my siblings surely were at that time.  I was nine and I wrote well, I would love to meet nine year old me, now.  I would tell her how special she is.  That she is obviously a bright, interesting and loving girl for her age.  I would tell her that those things will always be a part of her and to always nurture them, never believe that she isn’t those things.  At least that little girl was never forsaken by Jesus, even if His messages to her weren’t loud enough to always comfort her and convince her of her worth.  Surely that nine year old little girl is still very much who I am, even as a mother.  Loving the connection with my kids, nothing more satisfying than sharing stories with them that I know they will like.  Interested in history, I talked about the places I went in my letters with clarity, I obviously liked the stories about the places we’d been, as I would surely love them today.  I also see my own children in the nine year old me, I told my brother about all the cool stuff I got to buy in Israel, a necklace a pen and an eraser.  And I highlighted that the hotel maids put candy under the bedspread for us.  My kids love buying stuff and candy!  Just like every child.  My kids enjoyed hearing me read my old letters almost as much as I enjoyed revisiting them.  What a thing this life is.  Here I am, almost 34 years old.  I never expected to get this old!  Honestly, I just never imagined it until like, maybe two years ago!  And I am happier than I ever thought I could be considering all the drudgery I’ve offered my time to.  I am definitely blown away by how much I love living with, growing and learning alongside, teaching and witnessing the unfolding of - my children.  What a life!  I’ve feel I have been given another chance at unity within a family.

Weird week . . .

It’s been a weird week here in the Stankovits Household. Sid broke his ankle skateboarding last Tuesday. He’s been in a cast with the doctor’s orders to have his “toes above nose” since Thursday. I’m now 35 weeks pregnant, wow! This pregnancy has picked up some momentum. I’m so grateful that: #1 Sid didn’t have to get surgery, #2 This pregnancy and baby are healthy (as far as we know at this point) and I am strong enough to keep up with the housework, #3 That we have had the blessing of Sid being around with us all the time, I wish it could be this way more, but now is a time when it’s super cool as we’re getting closer to baby’s arrival, #4 That the injury didn’t occur closer to my due date. There’s a sublist attached to each of those numbers, too. Life is weird, but good weird, I think this will be one of the periods in time that we look back on often and say, “wasn’t it crazy, but so cool?” A lot like the period of time surrounding the birth of our third child, if you’re unfamiliar with that story, you could check out The Story of June’s Birth under “birth stories” to the right.

Here are some photos of this weird week.


He was eating this up! This was before he got his cast, the day he had seen our Primary Care Physician. He was stoked because without the injury he never would have been lying on the couch long enough to allow for this! He knew it and so he savored it. To the left is a sheepskin for the baby which had just arrived from here. I had read that, aside from the wonderful benefits of putting babies to sleep on them, one reason they use sheepskins in hospitals in Germany, is because it speeds up the recovery time of those who had undergone surgeries, so Sid rested his ankle on it a lot before the cast was put on. Two birds, one sheepskin =)


There’s the cast behind June. A nice way to pass the time, he was completing the next painting in his Revelation series. He got it done! And it is amazing, like the others. Crutches next to the waiting baby bassinet (with a blanket over it so the cat won’t sleep in it) . . . weird week.

By the end of the weekend the kids were crazy with cabin fever, so Monday we headed down to Baby Beach. I have a couple of great videos, but still haven’t found a way to post my videos on here, yikes Jennifer, get with it! So here are some photos from that much needed respite.


Those three!

Thankfully the trash bag worked and no sand made it into the cast.

I almost can’t believe that’s my boy when I look at this photo! He’s so grown up.

She was exhilarated from her swim in the ocean and it was contagious!

She asked to borrow my “glassies.”

I like the way life’s weirdness stretches us in ways we aren’t used to, we get to see how capable we really are and we get to rejoice in a new awareness of all we are so richly blessed with. Wishing you and yours, only the very best weirdness life has to offer =)

Reverend Sid

Sid performed a wedding for our dear friends last Saturday. He had never done it before, but you would never have known. It was a touching and funny ceremony and it was met with approval by the Bride, the Groom and both of their families. I’m so proud!!

Awaiting the soon-to-be couple

It was very special for me to get to be a part of Sid’s process of developing the ceremony. It was especially cool to listen in on the conversation he had with my dad. Dad’s ceremonies always had a level of depth that typical wedding ceremonies (though always touching, just by virtue of the fact that two people are making that most sacred commitment to one another) lack. I think that’s because he could always get to a place, in getting to know them, of seeing the couple through God’s eyes, in all their pneumatic beauty (pneumatic is a term my dad coined to clarify the definition of our true self, our spirit as opposed to our flesh, the self God created us to be; read more about this idea by searching “pneumatic” at the Reflexion, or Express Image link to the right). As an attendee of these weddings, you couldn’t help but fall in love with the couple yourself.

Sid and I discussed marriage a lot during his process and we both got to reflect on the things we are so grateful for in our own relationship. We’ve been married almost 14 years now and somehow I feel like we’re reaping rewards never granted us before. Relationships are tricky, complicated and challenging, ours is absolutely no exception, but at this point we just both feel we have so much to be grateful for in each other. I’ve never seen Sid like I see him now, and his performing this ceremony highlighted a part of him that isn’t always shining so obviously as it did that day. I just love him so much and felt very overwhelmed at the emotions that surfaced as he joyfully joined our friends in matrimony.

He loves me!

I pray blessings on your relationships.

silver lining

Sidney recently went to Barcelona for 7 days. It’s always weird when he’s away. I find myself feeling zombie-ish, or maybe it’s more like sad ghost-ish. I attempt to retreat from the feeling of being only half a person by doing things like adding multiple UFO and haunting documentaries to my instant queue and vegging out, tripping out and creeping out with my favorite friends (a.k.a. our kids).

We had a long Sunday that week that Sid was away, no school, no errands to run, no more UFO documentaries available on instant. I needed something to lose myself in to pass the long day. Sew . . . I sewed. The pattern came from a book I got from the bookstore in Mitsuwa a while back called Cotton & Linen. It has super cute patterns for projects made from cotton and/or linen. Good thing the instructions are illustrated cause the whole of the text is in Japanese.

I used a sheet I bought from a thrift store and the silvery bias tape I made from an old flat sheet of ours. I love this tank top! I extended the length beyond what the pattern called for. I like the fit a lot.
IMG_7980
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Photo by Jonny

Photo by Jonny


I wore it to the airport to pick up my other half. Synchrony of our systems was reestablished, and that felt wonderful.
Aaaahhhhhh, there always is a silver lining . . . Get it? The tank top has silver . . . yah, nevermind.

Then, as a whole, we celebrated the 13th anniversary of our elopement the very next day. <3 4 ∞

How The Alchemist Taught Me to be a Better Wife

 

How The Alchemist Taught Me to be a Better Wife

 

 

I really am astonished at the changes the ideas in this book encouraged in my life!  Here I will write about how it showed me, by example, how to better love Sid, my husband.

 

The main character in The Alchemist is a shepherd boy.  When we meet him we learn of a woman who he has been thinking about ever since he had a good, long conversation with her a year earlier.  He is looking forward to arriving in her village again in just a few days.  Before he gets there, he decides to sell his sheep and pursue his treasure, his “Personal Legend” in Egypt, rather than continue on in the life he knows.

 

A couple of years into his journey, he meets another woman, his twin soul.  I don’t think he would have recognized her as such, at least we (the reader) might not have, had he/we not had the first woman to contrast her by.  The twin soul lives in an oasis town in the middle of the desert in Egypt.  She is “a woman of the desert.”  Her name is Fatima.  She and the shepherd boy know from the first time they look at each other that they love each other, that they are twin souls.  Care to have your socks knocked off?  No sooner than they express their love for one another, does Fatima bid him farewell as he embarks on the next leg of his journey!   Neither of them sought to satisfy their own self through their love.  They don’t spend hours talking, they don’t kiss, they don’t fish for the other to point out their own wonderful qualities or describe their physical beauty.  

 

This is altogether a foreign concept to us modern day Americans, isn’t it?  Loving someone without seeking to have our own needs met through them?  That does not compute, don’t we seek to have love in our lives so that we won’t be alone, so that we feel loved, so that we receive validation for the way we live our lives?  I’m ashamed of myself!  I feel that I have not truly expressed my love for Sid!  I have verbally, but I now realize how little that really means.

 

Okay, back on track, each lover has faith that they will be together again, but the shepherd’s treasure (which is the symbol of God’s will for his life) takes priority not only in his own life, but in Fatima’s life, as well.  She sends him off on his journey without burdening him in any way, besides the burden he may feel just wanting to be with her.  She wants to support his mission, above her desire to be near him.  Wow.  Here’s a quote from my favorite poet, Rainer Maria Rilke:

Once the realization is accepted that even between the closest of human beings infinite distances continue to exist, a wonderful living side by side can grow up, if they succeed in loving the distance between them which makes it possible for each to see the other whole against the sky.” 

 

If I truly love Sid, then why do I live as though my needs are more important than his mission?  Okay, so maybe I could argue that out-of-town tattoo conventions (. . . with buddies . . . in OUR motorhome . . . leaving me behind with three young children and a flat tire), don’t seem to get him one iota of a millimeter closer to God’s will for his life!  But who am I to even attempt to guess at how God works in Sid’s life?  Or how He might use Sid in the lives of others?  I have to let him go.  I have to let him go.  

 

So, lately I have been longing and striving to live out my love for Sid.  To love the distance between us, to succeed in seeing his whole against the sky.  To encourage his pursuits, to assist him in all the ways that I can.  Of course, I have already blown it!  But the life-giving thing that has happened is that in trying to be Sid’s “woman of the desert,” striving to view his distant, whole individual, I have begun to feel my love for him in new ways.  He’s so beautiful!!

 

Why did it take me 11 years of marriage to get to this point?!  Because I’m selfish.  I wanted our love to serve me, to meet my needs.  I refuse to blame that entirely on our culture, but I do think it played a role.

 

Can I really do this?  Here’s a breakdown of my goals for how I want to be as a wife.

    

  • one who encourages and adores Sid’s Sid-ness.
  • one who does not seek to consume Sid’s gifts, but rather seeks to find ways to nurture them, to multiply them, that they may bless others.
  • one who responsibly holds things together at home, loving and teaching our children to the best of my understanding and ability, with a good attitude.
  • one who spends Sid’s earnings in a manner that expresses my acknowledgment and appreciation of the effort and sacrifice required of him to bring home those earnings.
  • one who releases her desire and attempts to own Sid, hopefully eliminating destructive jealousy.
  • one who gives Sid liberty to carry out his life as he pleases without giving unnecessary, burdensome questioning, judgment or criticism.
  • one who praises God for the man that Sid is, thanking Him for His gift of Sid in my life as a sign of His unconditional and eternal love for me.
  • one who prays and encourages that the good in Sid be preserved, while accepting, yet never dwelling on what might not be good.
  • one who is committed to seeking the Lord in continuing to learn and practice being a better wife, companion, friend, mother . . . ah, what the heck?  Better housekeeper and cook, too!

 

I still can’t believe that I got so much from that darn book!!  Are you convinced, yet?  You need to read The Alchemist.  Anyone up for a reading club?