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S. A. J. Lyttek, a multiple award-winning writer, always loved writing, but didn’t arrive at the profession in the typical manner. After college and graduate school, she plunged into government consulting. In this environment, she discovered a knack for writing tests, interviews and other measurements. That soon became the focus of her career—reigniting her love for the written word. Thus captivated, she spent evenings freelancing “fun” writing including short stories, poems, articles and cards. When her eldest was a toddler, she quit full-time work to stay home and write. Eager to spend more time with her children, homeschooling intrigued her. From preschool through high school, she homeschooled both sons while continuing to freelance. While an integral part of the homeschooling community, she developed and taught writing classes to a generation of homeschoolers. Married to her childhood sweetheart, Gary, Mrs. Lyttek loves to share her commitment to learners of all ages and her fascination with the written word.
I had intended a different blog, a different theme for this week. It was a slightly humorous tone to start off the New Year. And I’ll probably still write it sometime this month. But as I tried to get it done for the January 8th slot, I couldn’t. The words just wouldn’t gel and I felt blocked at every turn.
Then, this morning’s devotion from the book of Galatians talked about Paul’s conversion with the words “but then God.” And the message reminded me that as of this week, it has been forty years exactly since my “but then God” moment.
As with most testimonies, if you really probe into the how’s and why’s and wherefore’s, there’s much too much information and history for a blog post. Because of that, I decided to turn it into a kind of a chart. I’ll list an earlier event or behavior or belief, the “but then God” and then the aftereffects.
In my early teens, involved in the occult, I followed a spirit guide, a demon in other words. |
But then God |
The majority of my life has been committed to following the lead of the Holy Spirit. |
I was known for my temper. (ie: I threw things at my husband, got into cursing screaming battles with my mother, routinely yelled and slammed doors…) |
But then God |
Friends and acquaintances who have only known me on this side can’t even imagine me raising my voice. |
Starting at 13, I smoked a half a pack to a pack a day. Tried to quit time and time again. |
But then God |
The same month that I committed my life to the Lordship of Jesus, I gave up the cigarettes and haven’t had one since. |
I stole money from friends and family to pay for the above cigarettes if I didn’t have it. |
But then God |
Rather than stealing to indulge my habits, I grew to love giving to others, particularly fellow Christians. |
All my life until 23, I lied easily and convincingly. So convincingly that sometimes I believed my own lies were true! |
But then God |
Convicted me (and continues to) let my yes be yes and my no be no. Instead, the creativity I used in the lying is now incorporated in stories. |
If someone else did something better than me, I gave up. For instance, I was pretty good at tennis and was asked to be on the doubles team. But my younger sister was better than me, so I quit playing. |
But then God |
I’d be lying if I said the temptation to give up when things are hard doesn’t still assault me. But, with God’s strength I have served in the military, written books, earned a black belt (four levels!), and made a point of challenging a fear yearly. |
These are just a few of the ways that God has remade me, or as I prefer to think of it, made me into who He always meant for me to be. There’s no doubt that I like the person on this side of the “but then God” a whole lot more than the one before the Lord made me do an about face.
But I also know whenever I look into the face of Jesus, my spiritual mirror, I have a lot of growing, making, and becoming left to do. I fail all the time it seems. I set goals and fall short. I make promises and can’t keep them. In other words, I am a work in progress.
Thankfully, the “but then God” in my life has allowed me to grow!
Karl and I had an interesting conversation a while ago. (Actually, most of our conversations are interesting, but one specific one relates to today’s topic.) I was asked, in a virtual interview, what day or time I’d like to relive or do over. I said ‘none’. My reasoning was, how could I believe that I’d handle a bad time any better? And as far as a good day, if I knew I was reliving it, I’d be too focused on savoring to actually live and totally blow the experience.
“Besides,” I said. “All the days that have been make me into who I am now. Why would I want to mess with that and change who God made me?” As an avid reader, I do remember a few stories along those lines. Anytime the person attempted to redo the past, things eventually went horridly wrong.
Karl agreed with not wanting to relive a day, but his reasoning was quite different. (I didn’t really understand his reasoning, so I can’t summarize it here, but that’s nothing new. Karl’s application of logic has been known to befuddle entire online gaming communities.) Suffice it to say that neither of us want to go back in time. At least not reliving one of our own days! (Living someone else’s day, if possible, might be interesting though. Especially if one could choose a specific day!)
It also got me thinking of the theme of A Christmas Carol. While related to the observation of Christmas, and not the new year, per se, Scrooge ends up learning to appreciate the past, even the painful moments and decisions, as part of what made him into him. He gains insight into how to live in the day while keeping an eye on the future. In other words, he gains insight into the balancing act of life. Truthfully, I think the reason why Dickens’ Christmas tale remains so popular is that it is a lesson we must all learn (and relearn).
On the cusp of the year, it’s easy to look back and plan ahead. Since I write an annual Christmas letter (posted last week), the overarching theme of the previous year is still vivid. And with that, I know what I failed to do and what I’d like to rectify in this new year. After all, “he who fails to plan, plans to fail,” right?
Well, yes. And no.
God does not want us to dwell on the past, but he wants us to consider it and learn from it.
Nor does God want us to dwell on the future, but to hope for it and to remember his promised victory.
Most of God’s comments to mankind, about life, have to do with today. As a visual person, this is how I imagine it. Warning: I am NOT artistic!
As we stand balanced in today, one foot rests in the past to remember how God has blessed us and loved us and carried us. One foot sits in the future to hope for the fulfillment of God’s promises and to look forward to Christ’s coming.
In tae kwon do, this is called ready stance. When I was in the military, it was called parade rest. Either way, this way of standing allows your body to recharge and prepare, while remaining ready to move at a moment’s notice. Spiritually and mentally speaking, it’s how we need to wait in any of the “between” moments.
All the weight is centered on today. And because of that balance, we can move as needed. We are ready for the changes that come.
This year, let us live fully in today, balancing across the past and the future as God intended.
Merry Christmas one and all!
May we begin with the fact that in a multitude of ways, 2024 was not what we expected. It was, as Erik said, a multitude of years crammed into one. It seems impossible that Christmas was only a year ago.
As most of you know, the year began in a way that caused us to grieve as a family. No one actually died, so that might be a plus. Though, it was definitely a plus to have Erik here again. Sadness struck us again in May when the beloved neighborhood cat Mio (who had moved in and adopted our family) died suddenly.
Speaking of Erik, in June he moved to an apartment in southern New Jersey near Princeton, close to his new job and first full-time professional position post-PhD. That began July 1. Before the job’s start date, he enjoyed a fair amount of travel including El Paso, TX, to hang out with his best friend Ben; Colorado to visit the Montgomerys; and, Chicago with me to see my dad and other family. The pic of the two of us is from September when I drove up his way so we could go to a Skillet (Christian metal) concert in Pennsylvania. The best thing about getting to his apartment is the drive on highway 301 across Maryland and Delaware—what a peaceful stretch of road!
The winner of the Lyttek travel award for this year, though, is Karl. In the spring, he headed to Scotland to see a certain someone via Iceland. From Scotland, he and Sabine did a hop to Lithuania to visit her relatives, particularly her grandparents. Then back to Scotland. The return trip from Scotland to the US had issues, though, which let Karl play tourist in Reykjavik, Iceland, for about 12 hours and sleep overnight there. During the summer, and before his first full-time professional job began, he headed up to Canada to visit more of her family—stopping first in Ontario before heading to Manitoba, for a family reunion in Winnipeg. Fortunately for us, Sabine was able to swing down here for a few days in August and I was blessed to spend the afternoon with her near my favorite plane of all time (the Blackbird). Then in October, Karl flew up to Canada again to hang out with friends for Halloween. As mentioned, he started his job in July as well, working on Quantico for the Marines as a civilian.
Gary and I didn’t cruise this year, but a fair amount of travel was still involved. He went out to Albuquerque for a conference (without me), but then I went with him to Minneapolis and Knoxville. Both of those cities are so clean and pedestrian friendly! The added benefit with Knoxville was I got to play tourist with Aunt Joan for the afternoon and then Gary and his cousin Kim joined us for dinner. Gary and I also had some time when we first arrived to reminisce about our time at the World’s Fair in 1982. He and I also spent a long weekend in North Carolina at the beginning of October. As mentioned earlier, I went to Chicago with Erik where we got to enjoy the cicadas and the heat in between rounds of pinochle. In July, I went to Colorado to spend time with my friend Angela (and other Montgomerys). She was having some health scares at the time, but thank God everything worked out. I also found out that I love pickleball!
In other news, the remaining 4 books in my Portal Watchers series released this spring. (Available wherever e-books are sold.) While the three main characters are teenage guys, I’ve had people from 10 to 80 enjoy them. If you enjoy fast-paced fantasy with layers of history and prophecy, you’ll like these stories. And if you hate spiders, I apologize in advance!
As I send this off, we’re praying that Erik gets the job of his dreams, ideally in Colorado and starting next summer. He and Karl are still cranking on their stock bot trying to port it to their GPUs, whatever that means. I’m still applying for full-time positions and hoping I get something that gives Gary the flexibility to retire no later than January 2026. And the Lytteks have more travels already planned for 2025. In February, Erik heads back to Colorado and Karl back to Scotland. In March, Gary and I head on another Caribbean cruise.
But now, from a quiet and peaceful December, we wish all of you a Christmas blessed by and centered around the manger.
Gary, Susan, Erik, and Karl
Sometimes I like having a birthday close to the holidays. Sometimes I don’t. But what I argue with God periodically about is, why did my birthday have to be in January? January is, quite frankly, a depressing month.
The holidays are over. People have gone home. Here, in the Northern hemisphere, it’s cold. Even if you are fortunate to have a mild winter, the days are grey or slanted. The sun doesn’t feel right. Its angle has a coldness to it that doesn’t quite warm body or spirit. Quite frankly, it makes me grumpy. It makes me fragile and quick to cry. And I hate it.
This is the second week in a row where I was trying to write a blog post that was light-hearted. Meaningful, with a great takeaway, but not as intense.
I started it. I liked where it was going. And then all the words ground to a halt.
Ugh.
I’ve written about this mood before. More times than I wish were true I’ve blogged or written poems about the thick haze that can descend without warning. There are days, and lots of them occur in January, where it feels like a cloud drops over my spirit. I know what’s real and true intellectually, but temporarily, I can’t see it.
Some things do help. Making myself go out and see friends helps. Working out with Gary does help. Both sleep and eating good food do moderate my mood a bit. But then all it takes is a small hiccup and the grey crashes in again.
Recognizing this recurring theme, I recently bought myself (with birthday money) one of those mood therapy lights.
It does work, I think. I turn it on and my emotions warm. The problem comes when it turns off. I want to turn it back on immediately instead of waiting and treating it like a vitamin or medicine that needs certain doses. It’s like I crave the light. I can’t get enough of it.
And that, because of how I’m wired, got me thinking. (Pretty much anything gets me thinking which is why you might find me awake at 2 AM trying to solve a plot twist, fix a conversation I already had, or find the perfect word for a poem.) In one sense, the eternal sense, we are supposed to crave the Light.
Before He created anything else, God created light. Then, when He led Israel through the wilderness, He became their light, their guide. He made sure the Tabernacle and later the Temple were filled with light. God focuses a lot on how we need his light, particularly in the darkest days. Isaiah 9:2 The people who walked in darkness Have seen a great light; Those who dwelt in the land of the shadow of death, Upon them a light has shined.
In his epistle, the apostle John reminds us that the essence of Jesus is light; He is a pure light without any darkness or slant. He is the light my soul craves on winter days.
I found it interesting that if you do a Bible search for light, the word appears the most in the book of Job. If anyone had a dark night of the soul, it was Job. Even so, he sought and saw the light. And when he couldn’t see it because of the pain, he remembered it.
We are like the children of Narnia trapped in the world below. We know there’s something more. We hunger for a brighter world, a reality above where we are truly home. In the moments of darkness and confusion, it’s the spells of the fallen that keep us prisoner and dim the memories of a sunshiny day. In those times, may we all find our friendly Puddleglum to stomp out the deceit and remind us of what is true.
Revelation 22:5 There shall be no night there: They need no lamp nor light of the sun, for the Lord God gives them light. And they shall reign forever and ever.
Maybe I should be grateful for these January days. Because they remind me not to be too comfortable in this dark and dying world.