Tuesday, January 29, 2008

"mad midnight moments"

i still believe. but when i hear people speak of the joy of answered prayer, it seems to me that if i believe THAT, then that must mean that our family's prayers were NOT answered. but after all, aren't ALL prayers answered? aren't we taught that? i still pray. but my perspective is so different now. i pray with less faith. oh, not that the prayer WON'T be answered but all my prayers previously have been so hopeful and earnest and i SO believed in the power of prayer. that was before. now i understand. i can't pray anymore expecting. it is more of a half-hearted "well, God, i am praying for such-and-such but i know you already know what you're going to do with this so i'll just wait and see what happens". sigh. that said, consider the following.........

i picked up a little book by c. s. lewis entitled "grief observed". it is lewis' personal account of dealing with the grief he experienced over the death of his beloved wife. a respected theologian, lewis speaks honestly, bluntly and with many questions. his strong faith is obvious - but that doesn't preclude him from feelings of anger and hurt and confusion. he isn't ashamed nor is he embarassed to express his true feelings - page after page of strong words for millions of readers to experience. his intent was not to be a spiritual example of the correct way to deal with grief - it was just the sharing of his own "mad midnight moments".

in the forward, madeleine d'engle writes "perhaps all believing people feel, like lewis, a horror of those who say of any tragedy, "Thy will be done," as though a God of love never wills anything but good for us creatures. he shows impatience with those who try to pretend that death is unimportant for the believer, an impatience which most of us feel, no matter how strong our faith." mrs. d'engle experienced a loss of her own and, like lewis, kept a journal, saying "it is all right to wallow in one's journal; it is a way of getting rid of self-pity and self-indulgence and self-centeredness. what we work out in our journals we don't take out on family and friends. i am grateful to lewis for the honesty of his journal of grief, because it makes quite clear that the human being is allowed to grieve, that it is normal, it is right to grieve, and the christian is not denied this natural response to loss." she goes on to say that "lewis wrote 'don't talk to me about the consolation of religion, or i shall suspect that you do not understand; for the true consolations of religion are not rosy and cozy, but com-forting in the true meaning of that word: com-fort.... strength to go on living.' lewis rightly rejects those who piously tell him that his beloved is happy now, that she is at peace. we do not know what happens after death, but i suspect that all of us still have a great deal to learn and that learning is not necessarily easy."

d'engle continues "lewis had the courage to yell, to doubt and to kick at god with angry violence. this is a part of healthy grief that is not often encouraged. it is helpful that c.s. lewis, who has been such a successful apologist for christianity, should have the courage to admit doubt about what he has so superbly proclaimed. it gives us permission to admit our own doubts, our own angers and anguishes, and to know that they are part of the soul's growth."

in the introduction, lewis' step-son writes "this book is a passionate result of a brave man turning to face his agony and examine it in order that he might further understand what is required of us in living this life in which we have to expect the pain and sorrow of the loss of those whom we love. very few men could have written this book, and even fewer men would have published it. it is also a stark recounting of one man's attempts to come to grips with and in the end DEFEAT the emotional paralysis of the most shattering grief of his life."

lewis writes "no one ever told me that grief felt so like fear. i am not afraid, but the sensation is like being afraid. the same fluttering in the stomach, the same restlessness, the yawning. at other times it feels like being mildly drunk or concussed. there is a sort of invisible blanket between the world and me. i find it hard to take in what anyone says....i almost prefer the moments of agony. these are at least clean and honest. but the bath of self-pitty, the wallow, the loathsome sticky-sweet pleasure of indulging it - that disgusts me. and even while i'm doing it i know it leads me to misrepresent my beloved herself......meanwhile, where is God? this is one of the most disquieting symptoms. when you are happy, so happy that you have no sense of needing Him, so happy that you are tempted to feel his claims upon you as an interruption, if you remember yourself and turn to Him with gratitude and praise, you will be - or so it feels - welcomed with open arms. but go to Him when your need is desperate, when other help is in vain and what do you find? a door slammed in your face, and a sound of bolting and double bolting on the inside. after that, silence. you may as well turn away. the longer you wait, the more emphatic the silence will become. why is He so present a commander in our time of prosperity and so very absent a help in time of trouble?.......we are reminded that the same thing seems to have happened to Christ on the cross but does that make it easier to understand? the conclusion i dread is not "so there's no God after all" but "so this is what God's really like. deceive yourself no longer."

and Lewis' stepson concludes "in the end, what shines through the last pages of his journal of grief is an affirmation of love, his love for his wife and hers for him, and that love is in the context of God's love.....what many of us discover in this outpouring of anguish is that we know EXACTLY what he is talking about. those of us who have walked this same path, or are walking it as we read this book, find that we are not, after all, as alone as we thought. c.s. lewis, the writer of so much that is so clear and so right, the thinker whose acuity of mind and clarity of expression enabled us to understand so much, this strong and determined Christian, he too fell headlong into the vortex of whirling thoughts and feelings and dizzily groped for support and guidance deep in the dark chasm of grief. if we find no comfort in the world around us, and no solace when we cry to God, if it does nothing else for us, at least this book will help us to face our grief, and to 'misunderstand a little less completely."

C. S. Lewis "Grief Observed" Zondervan Publishing House

Monday, January 28, 2008

amazing! grace!


When I say "I am a Christian" I'm not shouting "I'm clean livin'."

I'm whispering "I was lost. Now I'm found and forgiven."

When I say "I am a Christian" I don't speak of this with pride.

I'm confessing that I stumble and need Christ to be my guide.

When I say "I am a Christian" I'm not trying to be strong.

I'm professing that I'm weak and need His strength to carry on.

When I say "I am a Christian" I'm not bragging of success.

I'm admitting I have failed and need God to clean my mess.

When I say "I am a Christian" I'm not claiming to be perfect.

My flaws are far too visible, but God believes I am worth it.

When I say "I am a Christian" I still feel the sting of pain.

I have my share of heartaches. So, I call upon His name.

When I say "I am a Christian" I'm not holier than thou;

I'm just a simple sinner who received God's good grace somehow.

(Unknown)

Sunday, January 27, 2008

read it again....

see january 10th post.

Saturday, January 26, 2008

tick-tock....

can i just say i'm trying really hard to be positive and not be too open with my feelings. we'll see how long this lasts.

Monday, January 14, 2008

don't drink from the tank.....

"As for you, my brothers and sisters, who have not to preach, the best food for you is the Word of God itself. Sermons and books are well enough, but streams that run for a long distance above ground gradually gather for themselves somewhat of the soil through which they flow, and they lose the cool freshness with which they started from the spring head. Truth is sweetest where it breaks from the smitten Rock, for at its first gush it has lost none of its heavenliness and vitality. It is always best to drink at the well and not from the tank. You shall find that reading the Word of God for yourselves, reading it rather than notes upon it, is the surest way of growing in grace. Drink of the unadulterated milk of the Word of God, and not of the skim milk, or the milk and water of man's word." (Charles Spurgeon)

isn't this the most beautiful truth-prose? i italicized the parts that i think are the most poetic! i LOVE this quote. now THIS is what growth is all about!

Friday, January 11, 2008

true love waits.....

what a blessing to be able to express your deepest emotions and feelings as you grieve. what a blessing to have the ability to show your vulnerability and honesty in front of the whole world.

what a blessing not to feel judged.

anyone who has studied the grieving process is aware of the stages of grief that everyone must pass through. the anger, bitterness, questioning and frustration are all part of it. yes, there are some who have the ability to hide behind a plastic smile in an attempt to convince all who approach that everything is fine. i'm fine. really. there are others who have had such an upbringing that their questions are but an aside to how they are viewing the tragic event they are experiencing - they have confidence and knowledge and a complete understanding of the workings of God. they memorize scripture and read the bible fervently every day. they KNOW how to find joy even in the most desperate of circumstances. and then there are those who struggle to understand and find joy but because they claim Him and His promises, they don't give up the struggle. eventually they become stronger and more faithful and more obedient.

i am so glad our God understands the depths of our grief. i am so grateful that He knows where we come from and where we are and that He loves us right there. i am so glad He is big enough to take whatever we dish out. i am so glad He doesn't judge our anger and bitterness and even our questions. i am so grateful He just waits. patiently. for our return to what we KNOW to be the truth and what we KNOW to be our hope.

people don't know what to say. sometimes, they say the wrong things. more times than not they say the right things. the knowing ones simply say i am sorry. they don't offer platitudes or triteness. they just say they care and love and pray. i am so grateful for the presence of these people, some strangers, in our lives.

we can only be who we are. we aren't prolific in our prose or profound in our understanding. we have nothing to offer anyone else in this journey. sorry. we are still learning. and growing.

and God still waits on us. for that i am grateful.

Thursday, January 10, 2008

Jesus loves her this I know........

Just love her like Jesus, carry her to Him
His yoke is easy, His burden is light
You don’t need the answers to all of life’s questions
Just know that He loves her and stay by her side
Love her like Jesus
Love her like Jesus
The gifts lie in wait, in a room painted blue
Little blessing from Heaven would be there soon
Hope fades in the night, blue skies turn to grey
As the little one slips away
You’re holding her hand, you’re straining for words
You’re trying to make sense of it all
She's desperate for hope, darkness clouding her view
She's looking to you
Just love her like Jesus, carry her to Him
His yoke is easy, His burden is light
You don’t need the answers to all of life’s questions
Just know that He loves her and stay by her side
Love her like Jesus
Lord of all creation holds our lives in His hands
The God of all the nations holds our lives in His hands
The Rock of our salvation holds our lives in His hands
He cares for her just as He cares for you
So love her like Jesus, love her like Jesus
You don’t need the answers to all of life’s questions
Just know that He loves her and stay by her side
Love her like Jesus
Love her like Jesus
("Love Them Like Jesus" by Casting Crowns)

Wednesday, January 9, 2008

"deliver me and fill my spirit..."

so, sorry for the momentary lapse into political cynicism. i really thought she would lose the new hampshire primary. but guess what, right now, all of that which used to catch my attention and hold me captive to CNN seems rather meaningless.

i have so many thoughts going around in my head right now. i am so fortunate to have very good friends, 3 of whom were willing to sit with me for 3 hours on two different occasions and discuss theology, spirituality, churchianity, heaven, etc. and etc.

i mentioned that i feel so unprotected now. and then i think to myself, why did i EVER feel protected? why did i think our family was immune from tragedy? is it because i have always prayed expectantly? is it because as i prayed for safe travel for our kids when they were in college or living across the country there has never been an incident? is it because as i prayed for comfort and peace for a family member or friend it ALWAYS seemed to be delivered? is it because i prayed with a faithful, believing spirit and then went about my business, letting God just work on it? when my kids needed prayer during particularly stressful times, i always told them "i'll pray HARD". did i not pray HARD enough this time?

our entire family has been praying for this baby. because our daughter experienced a partial abruption with her first, Liam now 3, this time we just simply prayed BELIEVING that everything would work out. the thought NEVER entered my mind that it would turn out like it has. we watched alyssa be so careful and her sweet husband take SUCH GOOD CARE OF HER - doting on her and making sure she didn't neglect any part of her physical or emotional health during the pregnancy.

so, have our prayers been offered in the wrong spirit? have we been arrogant in our belief? naive in our expectations? while we know that suffering is dealt to believers and non-believers. good people and bad people. faithful and not so faithful. and i really do understand now that our suffering really does make us perfect in Him - and that He suffers with us and that our how we deal with our suffering will either glorify Him (for which He will be pleased) or that we will just muddle through (for which He will be sad) and that we are called to share His suffering by suffering ourselves......

.....and so on and so on. I KNOW THESE THINGS.

.....what we can't EVER know is why. we can't know why one family gets to experience the joy and excitement of a new baby while our daughter and her family grieves their sweet little girl. we can't know why blogspot after blogspot celebrates the arrival of a healthy little one with a joyful "we have prayed for this baby" and "You answered our prayers" while other sites offer evidence of the same intense prayer and hope for miracles only to be allowed only minutes or hours with their babies before they return to the arms of Jesus.

.....one of Alyssa's friends visited me at church today. she and alyssa shared the same due date. her first child is almost 2 and is developmentally delayed due to contracting meningitis during her birth. the baby that she is carrying now is such a blessing and will bring so much joy to this family. when she approached me we both began to cry. tears for sydney grace who will only know Heaven as her home. tears for sweet ella who struggles to keep up with other toddlers who are doing things so much quicker than she is able. tears for little william who will be here in two weeks. and tears for alyssa whose heart is broken but who desperatly wants to feel joy for her friend. and tears for andrea who feels so much joy for the baby who is almost here but whose heart is hurting for alyssa.

i just read a comment from a young mother who lost her baby several months ago; i've followed their story even before the baby was born. i can't do her recent post justice by trying to paraphrase it or extract pieces of it. please go to this site and read it for yourself. it is powerful. it is amazing. and it gives me such hope for my daughter. thank you boothe.

http://conorbootheandgirls.blogspot.com/

Monday, January 7, 2008

...and...

....a new link "our sydney grace" (links are on the right hand side middle of the page)....

Saturday, January 5, 2008

ok, so my heart just drove down the street. all three of them. they packed late last night and after two weeks of three-year-old bedtime tantrums, playful bath times, thomas the tank train running down the hall and into the living room, picking favorite ornaments off the tree and carrying them around in the trunk of the trike, curious george movies early in the morning with gram before anyone else is up, walks around the block, planting and watering flowers, filling the birdfeeder with granpa, making "dough" with flour, water, cinnamon, chili powder, cumin, garlic salt and then calling it apple pie, making biscuits with granpa on saturday mornings, jumping on gram's bed when she pretended not to look, driving to plano to look at cmas lights that dance to music and then just wanting to come back to the "hood" and watch the simple little train go round and round in a neighbor's yard......

....i could go on and on. now the house is clean and quiet. the only sound is the tick of the wall clock - so loud it hurts my ears. it will be a long time before they come back. we will get out there occasionally but the intensity of two weeks makes their leaving even more difficult.

i know the healing has already begun and i know our daughter is strong and determined underneath her confusion and questioning. i know her spirit is strong even though it feels weak right now. i know her God will take care of her, even though we don't know what that looks like or what that portends.

hearts hurt. hearts break.

and hearts drive out of the driveway and down the highway at 9:30 in the morning.

Godspeed. And keep you safe.

Thursday, January 3, 2008

pain returned accompanied with receipt......

so, they are still here - one more day. so today while liam napped, i went out to make some returns. popped in my robbie seay NEW cd and off i went. went to radio shack, tom thumb and target. then on to the hallmark shop. but there was a sign on the door that read "seasonal merchandise: NO RETURNS OR EXCHANGES after the holiday". hmmm......surely there were exceptions.

i walked into the store and asked a young clerk about the sign. yep, she said, it was correct. i looked at a rather bustly (bustly not busty), business-looking woman with a terse expression and no smile. yes mam, she assured me, no exchanges or returns on seasonal merchandise. "ornaments?" i asked. for sure ornaments, she curtly replied. "no exceptions" i pleaded. she shook her head and firmly repeated "no.".

i turned and stood still, my hand on the door handle for a few minutes, peering out the window into the bright sunlight. then i opened the door and walked out. i was half-way across the parking lot when i stopped, turned and walked back toward the shop. i opened the door once again, walked over to the counter and laid the bag of merchandise down next to the cash register. the woman looked up at me with a "oh-no-surely-she-g0t-the-memo" look.

tears began to spill down my cheeks behind my sunglasses. my voice was barely understandable as i pushed the bag toward her and said "you can have them. my daughter lost her baby and i don't want them any more. you can have them." and i turned and walked out of the store. the woman just stood there, speechless.

on christmas, my daughter hung her own ornament for sydney grace. she desperately wanted some reminders, as painful as they were, this holiday. after all, sydney is a part of their family. so a few days before christmas i had carefully selected a mother/daughter willowcreek ornament and then a delicate hallmark white fabric baby bassinet ornament. but the more i thought about it the less i was sure that i could actually give it to her on christmas morning. i didn't want to be the one who made her cry. there were others who could do that - the joyfully pregnant friend, the newborn baby at the christmas party proudly handed from guest to guest, the pink bundle in the basket next to hers at the store. there would be so many. but by golly, i wasn't going to be one of them. not her mom.

so i just took my pain and returned it along with the receipt to someone who right now is more concerned with inventory and sales and profit and losses. losses. i'm sure she didn't get it.

Tuesday, January 1, 2008

it just is......

i've got that knot in my stomach again. alyssa and ian decided to stay over a few days. of course, we were thrilled! didn't have to say goodbye quite so soon. they went to austin to visit chris and jenny and we got to keep liam! we went to look at christmas lights last night and it was spectacular! he has had a cold so we've been laying low during the day.

but the know, i know, comes from the anticipation of them leaving. this holiday season was so different and sad for us. there is a part of me who wants to keep them here - keep alyssa here and take care of her and ian and liam and i guess avoid the return for them to reality. for i know when they return home to albuquerque and all the holiday distractions and busyness comes to an abrupt halt, it will be so much harder. i can remember every holiday season feeling a letdown during the month of january. the end of this january we were all looking forward to welcoming a new member of the family and it is not to be. it will be that much harder for her.

i am so grateful that alyssa has good friends who will walk right beside her and hold her hand and cry and laugh with her. i know they will take care of her and liam, especially if ian goes back on the road. i am so grateful that she has a church family who is praying for her and a bible study that consists of a group of young women who will pray her forward. i know it is oh so hard watching friends and family members approach due dates with their own pregnancies; while she doesn't at all deny them the joy of a new baby, it is still extremely difficult to observe and remember and long for.

i also know that i can't keep her here because she has to return to life; she has to return to being a wife to ian and a mother to liam. she has to return to changing the cat litter and potty-training a strong-willed three year-old. she has to return to long days with lots of hours to think. i pray that she finds comfort in her faith. i pray that her friends don't neglect her and don't assume that all is well so quickly. i pray that she finds something worthwhile and positive to do with the empty days; i pray that sleep comes to her more easily as time goes on. i pray that she doesn't give up hope and that the doctors will find ways to encourage her and even acknowledge that down the road not too far there is a possibility of another baby.

i HAVE to pray for my daughter; i always have. i can't let her down. and what i've come to understand is that i have always prayed for God's will to be done even if it is not OUR will. now that we have experienced such a deep wound, even though i still have questions and confusion, i guess i can't question His will. we just can't know why it is what it is. it just is.

i pray for such healing for her. on my knees i ask God to surprise her with His grace.