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Browsing Tag: vacation

An Ode to the End of Summer

large white clouds in a blue sky

Ah, summer.  Long, leisurely days under blue skies.  This is the time we look forward to all year, the season around which the others hinge. 

Summer marks a pause, a lightening of schedules, a welcome respite in the middle of a busy year.  Summer’s slower pace allows for lengthier conversations, for books to be read that have been shelved too long, for freedom to chase hobbies and fireflies.  Who doesn’t love summer?

But I have a confession to make – summer is not my favorite season.  That title belongs squarely to spring.  Spring – with all its color and promise – has always been my favorite.  Everything looks new and feels fresh after the long, cold, quiet winter.  Spring brings new life – and hope.  It resonates with my soul.

I am not, however, sad to see spring go.  I know that summer follows.  And summer is not without its own appeal.  Summer is multifaceted.  As it progresses, it reveals itself in new ways – all of them glorious.

Early summer is all excitement and anticipation.  The making of plans, the gearing up for the fun ahead, the enjoyment of newfound free time.  Booking travel, shopping for swimsuits and flip flops, grabbing a copy of this year’s best beach read.  Settling into the season’s new routine – a wonderfully carefree one. 

slabs of ribs cooking on a grill

The middle of summer is busy in the best way.  It’s best experienced on the back of a jet ski, under aquamarine water, or walking along a shore littered with shells, feeling the sea wind on your skin, breathing salty air.  The heart of summer is filled with beach bags and suntan lines, with road trips and backyard barbeques.  It’s for family reunions and catching up with dear friends. 

It’s needing a vacation from your vacation because it was so filled with fun that it left you exhausted – in a good way. 

Summer means renewal – whether that’s found on a kayak deep in river territory, eyes open, alert to every turtle sunning, every bird singing, every drop of sunlight glistening on the water, or whether that’s found on a chaise lounge, still and silent, eyes closed, drinking in the jasmine-scented air and letting the heat melt away stress.  Relaxation takes many forms, and the center of summer sees them all.

palm trees and blue skies at the beach

Late summer is a warm, contented peace.  Late summer is a place you want to linger.  It’s a link between the fun and frolicking of the season that’s ending and the hopeful anticipation of the new season on the horizon. 

Late summer beckons to you to pause once more, breathe deeply, and enjoy the waning warmth of the season.  Fall is ahead and with it new responsibilities and new possibilities, but it is not here yet. 

Summer issues a final invitation to rest, one last call to renewal – draining the dregs of summer’s abundance.  It’s an embrace of rejuvenation that will carry you into the latter part of the year.  Summer’s last days are a gift. 

The question of when summer actually ends is answered differently by different people.  There is the official end of the season – when the autumn equinox occurs in late September, and the unofficial end of summer – when school starts in August (at least for those of us in the Southeast).  Depending on which camp you find yourself in, the last days of summer could be late July/early August or a month later in September. 

I fall somewhere in the middle.  I don’t need the calendar’s permission to hang my fall wreath, but I just can’t think about pumpkin spice when it’s 90 degrees outside!  For my part, I hold on to summer through August.  Vacation may be over, but summer isn’t.  Not yet.  I have one more cobbler to bake, one more beach read to digest, one more day trip to the coast. 

Then, around Labor Day, I’ll put up my white shorts and straw hats and take down my boots and scarves.  I’ll begin thinking about stews and football and holiday plans.  But not yet.  It’s still summer, for a little while. 

sunset over water

The end of summer isn’t sad.  Our hearts are too full now to be sad.  We rest in the memories we’ve made and look forward to what’s ahead.  The end of summer is a quiet contentment; a raising of the glass to the setting sun, casting its golden glow on the season that’s ending, knowing it’s been a full one, a rich one; and savoring the last sips of summer.

A Holiday Reminder: Refresh Your Soul

Why is it that my house is always cleanest right before a trip?  While I’m doing loads of laundry to pack and making sure the dishes are done, I figure I might as well hit the floors and clean out the fridge.  Then, I put fresh sheets on the bed and finish with Febreze on the couches, and before I know it, my house is squeaky clean and smelling good – just in time for me to leave it. 

This week is no different.  I’m flying to DC and then headed to Virginia for Thanksgiving week at my sister’s house.  So, I’ll have to wait a week to enjoy my cleared off counters and my clean bathrooms.  And that’s fine by me.  I’m ready for a getaway.  I’m ready to see my family. 

The last getaway I had was in the opposite direction.  Earlier this year, we flew to south Florida and then drove down to the Keys for a week of exploring and eating under the summer sun.  This is an excerpt from my journal in June.

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In Islamorada

I traveled today to a part of Florida I have never known – a place where poincianas bloom and roosters roam, a place that owes so much to the aquamarine water surrounding it.  As we drove from our resort, across the seven-mile bridge, to Key West – to the very edge of America – I noticed a subtle shift.  Mangroves replaced live oak trees.  Traffic and strip malls gave way to water.  And peace settled in place of preoccupation. 

red flowering trees and a blue sky
red poinciana trees
rooster walking on a sidewalk

Vacation is a good thing, especially in a place as beautiful as this.  The water is unlike anything I’ve ever seen!  It’s as green as it is blue.  And it’s everywhere you look, this vast, fluorescent water that’s waiting to be waded into.  Water like that is worth the drive, and it refreshes my soul to see it. 

ocean with blue sky and white clouds

Refreshing.  If I could describe what I want from this trip in one word, that would be it.  And isn’t that what vacation is all about?

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I will fully satisfy the needs of those who are weary and fully refresh the souls of those who are faint.

Jeremiah 31:25 NASB

A Soul Refresh

I love that we read “fully” twice in this verse, as if to really drive home the point that God is able to fully meet our needs.  Fully, completely, perfectly.  Not partially.  He is able to meet our needs when they need to be met and exactly how they need to be met. 

Also, the footnote for Jeremiah 31:25 in the New English Translation (NET) explains that the verb tense used is the “prophetic perfect,” meaning “the actions are as good as done.” The emphasis is on the surety of God meeting our needs. Since we have this promise, we don’t need to doubt if our needs will be met.  It’s as good as done.  He will fully satisfy our needs and fully refresh those who are faint. 

And it doesn’t take a vacation to do it.

So, as we enter the holiday season and the hustle and bustle it can bring, I hope we remember to pause and rest in the midst of the busyness, to come to Him with our needs, and to tap into His ever-flowing stream of refreshing. 

“The Lord will guide you always; He will satisfy your needs… You will be like a well-watered garden, like a spring whose waters never fail.”  Isaiah 58:11 NIV

Happy holidays to you!