The View From My Front Porch


Why Nancy Still Lives With Me

I’m watching Dickensian for the third time, and it’s definitely better than the first two. Maybe it’s because I’m more familiar with the stories. Or perhaps it’s because life has continued its forward march since the last time I watched.

But truthfully, I think it’s because of Nancy.

Long before I ever watched Dickens come to life on a screen, I was Nancy.

Nancy—the conflicted, fiercely loyal young street woman from Oliver Twist—was the role I played as a teenager. It was a glorious experience, and to this day, it remains one of the most meaningful experiences of my life. The applause was heady. The costumes were fun. And the music was spectacular. But those things aren’t what made my days and nights as Nancy stand out. It was because of who she was.

She was complicated.

She understood good and evil.

And she was brave.

What I loved most about playing her was her strength—not the loud, obvious kind, but the kind forged through survival. Nancy’s world was brutal, ruthless, and savage, yet her heart was capable of love, kindness, and understanding. She knew who Bill Sikes was. She knew what he was capable of. And still, she loved him. Not because she was weak, but because she was human.

Their relationship was volatile and heartbreaking, layered with fear, devotion, and longing. As a young actress, I didn’t yet understand that kind of complexity, but I felt it—every night on stage.

And then there was the barroom scene.

The music.

The laughter.

The tables.

The swirling skirts.

For a few rousing, exhilarating minutes each night, I sang like a dance hall songstress. I danced and kicked and twirled without fear. It was loud and wild and joyful, and Nancy, through me, came alive.

But what stayed with me most was Nancy’s tenderness.

Her gentleness with Oliver.

Her protectiveness.

Her quiet courage when no one was watching.

And the way the Artful Dodger looked at her—with admiration and affection, something for which he had no words. Even then, I understood that she represented something good to him. Something hopeful.

Then came the final scene.

The night Bill kills Nancy.

It still lives vividly in the theater of my mind.

As I lay crumpled on that stage, the lights dimming and the audience hushed, something unexpected happened. My little brother—four or five years old at the time—bolted out of his seat and ran toward the stage to protect me.

He was going to take on Bill Sikes himself.

My dad flew out of his seat, catching him just in time before that furious little boy could kick a grown actor in the shin.

I didn’t know about it until later. But when I did, I laughed—and then I cried.

That’s the power of story.

That’s the power of believing.

That’s what Nancy brings to people.

Watching Dickensian now, I see her again—not just as a character, but as a mirror. I see her strength. Her loyalty. Her quiet courage to do the right thing, even when the cost was everything.

And I realize something I couldn’t have imagined when I was belting out that raucous barroom ditty:

Some stories don’t make sense until life fills in the spaces.

Nancy has stayed with me all these years.

And watching her on the screen today is less nostalgia . . . it is recognition.

We don’t outgrow our stories.

We grow into them—One Story at a Time.

— Charlene

Of Mousetraps and Pens

Several years ago, I had the awe-inspiring idea of getting each of our six kids a piano for Christmas. So, I set about finding pianos we could afford. I did not, however, share this awe-inspiring idea with my husband because he had moved one too many pianos in his life to be excited about moving four or five more.

In late summer that year, I learned my cousin had a couple of pianos she wanted to re-home. One was a family heirloom, and the other was an old upright church piano. Two pianos—two Christmas gifts.

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Peace, Be Still

This morning at church, I played “Master, the Tempest Is Raging” on the organ. It has been a favorite since first singing it in church as a young girl. But this morning as the congregation sang, it felt different—I felt different.

Perhaps it’s part of the natural aging process. Hymns we have sung our whole lives begin sounding like pieces of our own story.

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The Children of Israel

I love the Bible story of the children of Israel. I picture them gathering their families and their flocks before leaving Egypt. And I picture their exodus from bondage.

Not the dramatic movie version with music swelling and Moses raising his arms to part the Red Sea. Oh, I love The Ten Commandments and can probably picture Charlton Heston better than I can half the people from high school.

No, I picture the morning after they walked across the Red Sea on dry land. The morning after they stepped onto the opposite shore. The first morning they woke up free.

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Forever Thirty-Two

Lately, I’ve found myself thinking about my first husband, Martin.

Ken has been halfway across the world for several weeks for work, and I’ve been on the road visiting kids and grandkids, spending more time alone than usual. I’ve also been working on my fourth book—remembering old stories and sitting with moments I haven’t revisited in years.

And Martin has been there.

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