Furls Fire wrote:Stephen said he was taken to that house many many times after that first night. Usually in his dreams, but also, like you Sky, in his comas. He used to say that when his passing came, it would be his home. There is no doubt in my mind that his spirit resides now in that little house from his dreams.
He drew pictures of it, and he collected art of cottages and small houses, lots of Thomas Kincaid and other artists. He was an art curator so he had quite a few. After his passing, we auctioned most of them off, per his wishes, and donated the money to AIDS research. I kept a few of the special ones and have them hanging on my walls. And when I look at them, I think of him living inside one of them in peace.

Do you have his own drawings of the cottage? I'd love to see any of those that you might have.
Furls Fire wrote:Have either of you ever watched the television show "Touched by an Angel"? This used to be Stephen's favorite show. His belief in God and Angels was very profound, and he always used to say that angels really did walk the Earth and that we all had a gaurdian angel at our sides at all times. I believe this too.
That show is a bit much for me, religiously speaking. I enjoyed
Highway to Heaven more.

But, to stay with Michael Landon, Charles Ingalls is my favorite deeply religious characters. One time they had some kind of berries for dessert. They couldn't make cobbler, because they didn't have flour. They didn't even have sugar to sprinkle on them. So he says something like, "Well, if the Lord was good enough to provide these berries, and Laura was good enough to pick them for us, let's eat them and enjoy them."
Another time, he was too sick to go to church. When Caroline and the girls came home, they saw him working in the fields. The look of "Oh man, mom's gonna kill him" on the girls' faces was great!

So Caroline tells them to go inside, while she goes to yell at Charles. He told her that he didn't do this on purpose, that he felt better, and had to catch up because of the work he'd missed from being sick the day before. And he said, "God understand farmers"
Furls Fire wrote:And Fist, did you read his poem about the tower bells? I thought you would enjoy that one, because of the Magi

Yes, I did. I especially love these lines:
Holding eternity for an instant
Glimpses, glimpses—for one pure second
I love that kind of thinking!
Tangent- The tower bells brings to mind a song called
In Liverpool by Suzanne Vega. The chorus is:
The boy in the belfrey he's crazy,
he's throwing himself down from the top of the tower.
Like a hunchback in heaven he's ringing
the bells in the church for the last half an hour.
He sounds like he's missing something
or someone that he knows he
can't
have
now.
And if he isn't, I certainly am.