Spring is the season of
change. Trees flaunt their
fragrant blooms. Red robins
return to hatch their
young. The exploding color
of dormant daffodil bulbs
announces the season’s
arrival.
Recently I was looking
through old articles and
ran across the story I
wrote a year ago about
Father Ambrose’s arrival to
serve as pastor of Saint
Dominic’s Catholic
Church.
When asked about his 30
years in the ministry, the
Nigerian-born priest
replied, “One of the things
I have come to know is that
the only thing we can count
on in life is change.”
That nugget of truth hit
home a week ago when I got
a phone call from my
mom.
“The neighbor’s ewe had
a lamb that she won’t take
care of,” she said, adding,
“Do you want it?”
Of course we “adopted”
this “bummer lamb.” I am
not sure if that means it
is a bummer because the
mother rejected it or that
each time it drops organic
waste on my kitchen floor
is a bummer -- a big
bummer.
Our almost 12-year-old
daughter, Amy, has fallen
in love with the little ewe
that she lovingly named
Baa-bie (pronounced
Bobbie).
She has become its
surrogate mother, making
sure its milk replacement
is mixed and heated just
right and letting it sleep
in a dog kennel in her
room.
Overnight our family
went from a normal routine
to one consumed with a
little gangly-legged
creature that follows us
around.
Our lives now revolve
around bottle feedings,
cleaning its straw bed, and
making sure it has plenty
of exercise. It’s a lot
like having a new baby in
the house - without the
pregnancy.
Many times I catch
myself spending a lot of
energy trying to regain
control and balance in the
household. I now realize
the notion of what is
normal has been replaced by
what is predictable.
It would have been so
much easier if I had told
my mom that we were way too
busy and had too much going
on to take in an orphaned
lamb.
But just as Father
Ambrose said, change is a
part of life.
Change isn’t always
easy, but it is there all
the same.
Many of life’s changes
are out of our control, yet
how we respond to them is
up to us.
Every time I watch Amy
taking care of Baa-bie, I
realize the importance of
being willing to accept the
unexpected changes that
come into our lives.
I also realize that to
have missed the opportunity
to love a little lamb named
Baa-bie would have been the
biggest bummer of them
all.
Tomorrow is the official
start of spring.
Take time to smell the
daffodils and make room in
your heart for whatever
unexpected change may come
into your life this
season.