Remembering Murdoch

He loomed large in our story. A sort of bigger than life character. And in the telling and the retelling of it, he has become really sort of a legend. At one time or another we all had a love/hate relationship with him. He could be frustrating beyond belief and loveable as the day is long. He was quirky – which is to put it kindly. In truth he was eccentric bordering on neurotic. He was, on more than one occasion, an illustration in  Paul’s sermons. Perhaps the most memorable was when he used him to unpack the mystery of the trinity. You sort of had to be there for that one.

He lived in our home for over 13 years. When he died I wrote a eulogy of sorts for him which I  sent to all the kids – because it’s important to remember our stories. This past weekend when Fletcher was home with his babies, we told Murdoch stories and laughed and grieved a little that Ezra had missed out on the adventures. And it made me think that I should put the eulogy here – so that it will be here for the littles and for the rest of us. . . as though we could forget.

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Remembering Murdoch

Remember when we said, “We should get Fletcher a dog for Christmas”, and somebody said, “I’ve heard Beagles are good with kids” and Faith said, “Somebody at Roy Rogers said that they follow their nose right out of the yard and wherever that journey takes them – other than that they’re great”.  If we had only known.

Remember when we went to the farm to pick him out and they said, “Beagles are really pack dogs – they are truly happiest when they are surrounded by the pack”? (if we had only known) and we debated about getting two of them, partly because they were just so darned cute?

Remember when we brought him home on Christmas Eve and put him in the bathroom and on Christmas morning, he cried and cried because he wanted to join the party and Sean kept turning up the music? And after all the presents were opened, we said, “Wait! There’s one more for Fletcher”, and we brought him out in the box with the bow on it. And we took off the lid and the look on Fletcher’s face was pure joy and somebody said “Beagles are hunting dogs” and Fletcher said, “I always wanted a hunting dog!”.  Remember how that same Christmas Fletch got a pair of Dalmation slippers and Murdoch loved them and wanted to chew them and Fletch would dance up and down to get away and that made Murdoch go after them even more?

Remember when Murdoch would take off on one of his adventures and we would all disperse and go searching the neighborhood and finally find him blocks away with no earthly idea where he was but clearly having made lots of friends along the way?

Remember when the neighbor came leading him home with a hotdog?

Remember one Halloween when some neighbor kids came to the door and Murdoch was standing at the top of the stairs (how he loved Halloween and all the visitors that came to see HIM) and one little kid said “Well, hello, Murdoch, we haven’t seen you for a long time” ? Was there anyone in the neighborhood who didn’t know and love him?

Remember the freezing cold Feburary night when we couldn’t find him and he was missing for an entire night and we were sure he had frozen somewhere? And the next day we called the pound and they said, “Oh yes, your neighbor has him and called in to stay he was with them.” And we went to get him and they wanted to keep him because he was so sweet and they had let him sleep in the bed with them that night?

Remember when he went visiting his friend Paisely, the little bull dog around Peanut Mill, and dug under the fence and helped her to escape and then brought her home INTO THE HOUSE and they played chase around the living room? And then we took Paisley home and explained that she had just shown up at our front door and the people said, “I don’t understand it – she has never done this before”?

Remember when we would try to take him for walks around Peanut Mill and he would dig in his paws and REFUSE to walk – brave soul that he was.

Remember when he opened the refrigerator door when we were gone and pulled out the cucumber and celery to get to the two pounds of raw hamburger in the back of the fridge and then drug it out on the back deck and ate the whole thing?

Remember when he ate a five pound bag of potatoes that were in the utility room and then chewed up the insulation in the walls?

Remember when Fletch had the dream that Murdoch was dressed up in a business suit and glasses and walked on his hind legs and carried a briefcase?

Remember how when he was feeling neglected he would parade through the house with a shirt (preferably one of Fletch’s) in his mouth and then bury it under the deck?

Remember when he couldn’t find a shirt of Fletch’s and raided the laundry basket instead and Blu said, “Whoah! There goes the dog with the Rev’s underwear!!”?

Remember how much he loved going to the Smith’s to stay with Pepper at his “country home”? And the time we went to pick him up to bring him home and he hid under the picnic table and didn’t want to leave? And after he went home, Pepper would go to the edge of the woods and bark for him?

Remember how Jackson used to call him Murdog?

Remember how Faith always gave him a sweater for Christmas and how much he always seemed to like wearing it?

Remember how when Fletch left for college, Murdoch got in the front seat of the car and hid under the steering wheel and wouldn’t get out?image 1image 2

Remember how even after he was going deaf – he could still detect when it was Dad’s “snack time” by the sound of the box of crackers being opened and would show up for his share?

Remember how when last year a Beagle won the Best in Show and Leo called so excited to say that he had seen Murdoch on TV?

Remember how when kids would come home after being away for awhile Murdoch would bark and bark, scolding them for having left the pack for so long?

Remember the role he played in our story?

Enough memories and stories to last a life time.

And so this afternoon, we wrapped him in one of Fletch’s old shirts and buried him in the backyard. It is enough. And it isn’t.

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Joy to the World. . . Every Day

She was my easiest labor, easiest delivery and was born on the Thursday before Mother’s Day. We had some friends over for dinner: chili and cinnamon rolls – admittedly an odd menu choice for May but nonetheless, that’s what we had. Why I remember this detail is anybody’s guess. We left for the hospital about 7:00 p.m. and a couple of hours later we were the proud parents of our fifth child – Joy Leanne. Joy because it just seemed so right and Leanne because it was the middle name of her three older sisters (another story for another day) and it seemed a little odd to change things up now.

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Mothers Day 1984

I came home from the hospital the next day. On Sunday we went to church and then to Ponderosa for lunch since it was Mother’s Day. Paul took the other four in to get a table while I stayed in the car to feed and change the baby. When I finally made my way through the very crowded restaurant (it was Mother’s Day) an older lady stopped me. “How old is your baby?” she wanted to know as she admired the little red-headed bundle in my arms. “Three days”, I answered, sweeping  the room for the table for seven. “Oh honey! You might do something this stupid with your first one, but trust me. . . by your second, you’ll know better!  You’ll know to stay at home and rest!” Apparently I am a slow learner.

The child was a force to be reckoned with. She walked at seven months – not a few, halting steps but she walked across the room. And she never looked back. They asked us to move her out of the nursery because she roamed the room, snatching crackers out of the babies’ hands and moving on to the next one before anyone could stop her. At home, our only recourse was for everyone to man their stations and keep her out of their stuff and away from places she shouldn’t be. There is no use trying to teach a seven month old what is off limits.

If she learned to walk early, speech was not far behind. By a year old she was talking in sentences and by two she was talking in paragraphs . . . and talking. . . and talking. . . and you never knew what she would say or sometimes even what she meant by it but you had no doubt that she knew exactly what her point was.

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Her favorite song was Joy to the World and she would randomly (and loudly) serenade the family, the restaurant, her Sunday School class or herself – even in mid July. I mean when you have a song that is written about you, why would you not?? Sometimes when she was feeling particularly generous she would substitute someone else’s name in place of her own “Fletcher to the world….” and always at full volume. But mostly, and often, it was Joy to the world. When people would comment on her head full of red curls – which they always did- she would agree “Yup, it sure is cully”.

When she was almost three we had a single guy who was living in our basement for a few months while he was between houses. Joy would corner him on his way in or out and chat with him. One day she said to him, “Joe, did you know I’m getting married?”

“Really??” he asked her. “I did not know that! Who’s the lucky guy?”

“You’re looking at him!!!”

As it turns out, that relationship did not work out – but not for her lack of boldness.

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In both the church and the neighborhood I was known as Joy’s mother. She knew everybody and everybody knew her and they all found her enchanting – as did we. She seemed to draw a crowd wherever she went. One day Paul took her to McDonalds for lunch. Usually on such an outing she was so busy talking that she left most of her food untouched. But this day she had eaten all of it. “Good job on the chicken nuggets!” he encouraged her. “What does that mean?” She wanted to know. “Well, it just means you ate all your chicken nuggets. So good job.” She thought about it for a minute and then said, “So was that in Spanish?”  One day I was combing her hair (or trying to) when she said to me, “Mom, you know why I like you? Because most of the time, you don’t even treat me like an orphan.” There was her revelation that the Super Bowl is really only a football game (which I wrote about in the story “It’s All  About the Snacks”.)  It was her world and we were only visiting.

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When she turned two we rented a house that had an indoor swimming pool and a sauna. Crazy, right? I was paranoid about having a baby and a pool and so we set out to teach her to swim.  Before long, she could jump into the pool, turn around, swim to the side and crawl out. We worked on this routine every day, but after putting her through her paces a few times, her teeth were chattering, her little body was shivering and she would say, “Only one more time, and then I get to sit in the warmer.” And while I could do without the swimming pool, I have often wished that every house I lived in thereafter had a warmer where I could reward myself at the end of an unpleasant task.

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It was in that same house where she grew into our “hobbit child”.  Not because she acted like a hobbit in terms of avoiding adventurers, but because she just so looked like one.  I always thought if she had been born at the right time and the right place, Peter Jackson would have totally cast her in his films.

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She was about three when we got a Cocker Spaniel puppy. Always thinking ahead, she asked if the puppy would have puppies. Maybe. What would we do with the puppies? Well we would probably sell them to somebody else who wanted a puppy. It was shortly after that she learned a new baby was coming to the family and that she would get to be the big sister. She seemed to take it in stride. And then one day I heard her talking to herself: “We will have baby puppies and a baby baby. And if we want, we can always sell the baby.” Let the record show, however, that when the new baby brother arrived she was over the moon and has been a devoted and loving big sister for the last 27 years – except, of course, for the times when he was being an annoying and irritating little brother.  But as far as I know, she has never once considered selling him.

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Her older siblings were 12, 10, 8, and 6 when she was born, so she came into a family with a clearly defined pecking order and a history that she had not shared, which my own experience teaches me had to make her feel at times like the odd man out. But her sisters doted on her. They carried her in their bicycle baskets, put her in a cardboard box and pushed her around the house keeping her happy with an unending supply of Smartie Pills, bought her toys with their own money, threw her birthday parties, and advocated on her behalf. When she desperately wanted an American Girl doll for Christmas and I thought they were outrageously expensive, they offered to pitch in with their own money. It was their idea to give her a Victorian doll house (one that came in a kit and had to be glued together piece by piece and then painted and then decorated and furnished) and helped put it together late into the nights before Christmas. It was her brother who salvaged an old computer and repaired and restored it for her when she got older.

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Joy with Grandma Fletch
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She got those curls form me.

My mother always said that looking at her was like turning back the clock  – that in her she saw me at that age.  She died when Joy was only five and I’m sad that her youngest granddaughter has few, if any, memories of her.  She lost her other grandmother in her early teens and this, too, robbed her of a strong and remarkable woman.  But she comes from a long line of such women, and their legacy and their traditions live on in her.  And for that I am grateful.

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And now, 31 years after that lovely May evening when Joy came to  our world, she has a husband and three little girls of her own.  And I swear that sometimes it’s like turning back the clock. Each in their own way, they are like their mother:  sensitive, filled with a bull-in-the-china-shop energy, and the  one with the head full of “culls” (even if they are blond instead of red.)

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Abi, Tacy, and Maddie
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Happy Birthday to you, my dear  . .  and Joy to the world. . .  this and every day!