Image Alt

A Beautiful Sight to Behold

A Beautiful Sight to Behold

The year I turned twenty my best friend gave me a book called Wide Angle that was filled with beautiful images of people and places throughout the world. My best friend said that this book had two options: it could either set on my coffee table in my future home or the images could spur me on to see the sights and the people for myself.

That birthday was a difficult one. I remember sitting on a bench beneath a crab apple tree and thumbing through the book’s pages, wondering what future path I should choose. After college graduation I was contemplating joining the Peace Corps or an organization like it, yet I was dating a man who had no plans outside the States at all. I knew from various conversations that my best friend had not given this gift as a way of manipulating me toward one decision over the other. She was just trying to show me that there was a decision I would soon have to make.

Looking back, I am not really sure how I chose the path I am on now. I know a lot of it had to do with the events that unfolded over the next two years; events that showed me I could not leave my family or those who had become like my family because I wasn’t sure what would happen to them while I was gone. And, simply, the path of my life was formed because I fell in love. I fell in love with the man who sat with me on a rustic dock overlooking a Pennsylvania farm and began to cry over the death of my dear friend before I could even find emotion to relieve my grief. I fell in love with the man who drove four hours to my school and held me while revealing the unthinkable: that my best friend’s cancer had returned. I fell in love with the man who embraced my family’s idiosyncratic behavior and loved them all the more for it. I fell in love with the man who — once cracked free of his introverted shell — was the funniest person I had ever known. I fell in love, and so, after college graduation, I did not fly off to a foreign land.

It has been three years since that evening in late September when that man and I became one. As in every marriage, there have been good times and there have been bad. That first winter after I moved out here, into our apartment adjacent to our grocery store, was the loneliest of my life. I knew no one in the area besides my husband, and for the first time I had no idea how to go about making friends. I wasn’t writing, and I truly believed that I probably never would. Then we met a family through our store who invited us over to their home for supper. We ate pea soup and buttered homemade bread while sitting at their long wooden table in front of a fire. A speckled dog was sprawled on a rug brought close to the stove for warmth. In that simple conversation, in that simple breaking of bread, so many things came alive, and when they asked what I did, I began to tell them that I worked in our grocery store. But then I stopped, looked down at my white soup bowl filmed on the bottom with green. “Well,” I said, swallowing, “what I really want to be is a writer.”

That night, although I did not know it until months later, was a turning point for me. Through that family, I met a group of girls who all loved the written word as much as I. Through reading, my desire to write returned, and by the next winter I completed my first full-length manuscript and immediately began working on another. In the meantime, my husband and I purchased forty acres of land in a valley tucked against the base of the mountains. On the weekends we would spend hours out there: combing over the woods and exploring the caves and the local derelict home where Civil War legends were said to have died. I quickly realized that one of the reasons I had struggled those first months after marriage was because of not having this refuge, this land to sift through my fingers and the sun to dapple across my face.

Now I am sitting on a camping chair outside of our new home with the sun on my face, our land spread beneath me like a quilt, our baby girl swirling around inside my stomach. And although I am not inhabiting a foreign land and we do not have any intention to do so in the future, I find that I wouldn’t mind raising our family in this rich Tennessee soil. I wouldn’t mind facing the coming obstacles and triumphs while living in our house tucked against the base of these mountains. For I know if our lives, and those of the people we have met, were placed in a picture book similar to the one setting inside on my coffee table, they would be a beautiful sight to behold.

Comments

  • OH JOLINA — a GIRL!! 🙂 So happy for you three!

    And this post??? You brought tears to my eyes! Beautiful and lovely and what an incredible story! It really is amazing how priorities and life dreams shift and grow and change when we find our true love. (It happened to me too, so I know exactly what you mean!) And when I look back on our years together, much different than I would have imagined my life, it also is a beautiful sight to behold, and I would not change one thing. Here's to life and love — and especially to beloved baby girls!

    October 3, 2011
  • Lovely. I like the last line, because I've often thought that myself. I am a romanticizer of elsewheres, but every once in a while, I look around me with my eyes a little more clear, and think, but isn't this beautiful?

    October 3, 2011
  • This is so moving, Jolina. I absolutely love it and can TOTALLY relate to your feelings of loneliness that dissipated when you found your “land.” I tell everyone that when we bought our 40 acres (odd coincidence) out here in the true desert – away from the booming metropolis of Phoenix, I finally felt like I was 'home.' And when I finally started exploring it, I finally felt like I was connected to the land is some spiritual kind of way. I FEEL what you feel exactly, and it's such a wonderful realization to know you're very, very content. And your love story … ah, it gave me chills. And – oh- a GIRL, not a boy? What fun!

    October 3, 2011
  • A very moving post Jolina. Not many people can actually take a look back like you did. Find that one fundamental moment that shifted your whole life and understand the path you took. Life is a funny thing, it's not the plans that get you where you are but your own choices and motivations.

    October 4, 2011
  • Goodness, this is like a fairy tale. We do have to work hard for our dreams but that doesn't mean they weren't meant to be.

    October 4, 2011
  • So beautiful, Jolina! Thanks so much for sharing this. And I'm so happy for you! A girl…how wonderful!

    I can so relate to your post. I never thought I'd move back to Texas, but this is the journey our marriage has taken us on and I could not be happier. It's great to imagine and plan our future together, but every once in a while it's even better to be surprised by the unexpected. Life is supposed to be an adventure, and it's all the more wonderful when you have the perfect partner for it.

    October 4, 2011
  • You are such an amazing writer, Jolina! The words you chose are beautiful and you have such a gift for telling a story. And a GIRL — YAY!!!! My little girl is probably the blessing of my life. I'm sure you will feel the same when yours comes along. Congratulations!

    October 5, 2011
  • What a beautiful post. Thank you for sharing a bit of your life. You've made me feel good deep inside today.

    October 5, 2011
  • Thanks for a dose of joy on my rainy editing day in the Pacific Northwest!

    October 5, 2011
  • Isn't it just wonderful, Julia, when we take the time to remember how we got to where we are and appreciate the beauty of our life's destination? I just love it, and I believe I will continue to do it even more once this little one is born. Hugs to you.

    October 5, 2011
  • A “romanticizer of elsewheres,” Keely. That is just beautiful and the fact that you recognize that where you are is where you were meant to be. I believe you and I, Honey, are kindred spirits. We need to get together for coffee/swing dancing sometime.

    October 5, 2011
  • How strange is it, Melissa, that once we found our deserted piece of land that our loneliness dissipated? I guess we're just nature girls at heart, and it brings comfort to us when hoards of people can't.

    And a little girl, yes–much fun! I grew up with all boy neighbors, all brothers, and I never babysat anybody but little boys. Kinda makes me nervous and excited at the same time!

    October 5, 2011
  • I completely agree with you, Philip, when you so eloquently said: “Life is a funny thing, it's not the plans that get you where you are but your own choices and motivations.”

    If only we could always keep that in mind!

    Thanks for stopping by! 🙂

    October 5, 2011
  • Oh, Sara, my marriage is certainly like a fairy tale, but that — like our dreams — also requires work and communication. But I think this causes us to appreciate the good marriage/accomplishment of our dreams all the more.

    October 5, 2011
  • I'm so glad, Natalia, that you have been given the perfect partner to accompany your life's journey. And yes, not knowing where we'll end up makes the destination all the more exciting! Texas or Tennessee! 🙂

    October 5, 2011
  • I'm glad you enjoyed this post, Leah, and I do believe that our little girl will be the biggest blessing our life has been bestowed with yet. Can't wait to meet/hold her! 🙂

    October 5, 2011
  • V.V., that is the greatest compliment I could receive. Thank you.

    October 5, 2011
  • I'm glad it could bring some warmth on your rainy day, Pam! Happy editing!

    October 5, 2011
  • Beautifully written, Jolina. Glad to meet a fellow Tennessean on the blogosphere. 🙂

    October 5, 2011
  • Beautiful post, Jolina. It really does sound like your new(ish) setting will be so great for your writing inspiration. And the baby girl too!

    October 6, 2011
  • Nice to meet you, too, Diane! Thanks for stopping by!

    October 10, 2011
  • Thanks, Nina. I certainly am loving it so far; I hope Baby Girl will too!

    October 10, 2011

Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.