Showing posts with label angel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label angel. Show all posts

Friday, October 28, 2016

Birthdays and Blogs and the Joys of Naked Cowboys...



I just realized that I haven't posted since May. That's a really, really long time, but it's been a busy summer...
A friend of mine recently noted that I process things through Facebook posts. That's actually not true; Facebook statuses are a mini-alert message of what's going on in my world, but I wouldn't call it "processing." I'd call it "Miniature Lunatic Rants and Anecdotes."

Blogging is how I process. Writing in long-term is how I process. And when things get too difficult to sort out, writing is my method of dumping the paint all over the floor, and using the mess to paint a mural on the wall. This time of the year, there is so much to process that I don't even know where to begin.


So here I am. 


I’m only writing because this time of the year beckons it…this time of the year demands that I sit down and process the feelings that are lingering in the back of my head, those feelings that I’ve temporarily been trying to suppress with Chinese food and bad TV…But they won’t be silenced, and I really don’t want them to. You deserve the processing that is the biggest part of the remembrance.

I’m not overwhelmed in sadness, although it’s there. It rears its head when it’s least convenient, like right before a meeting with strangers that may ultimately determine the course of my employment. It rears its head when I’m trying to process delicate data that requires focus that I just don’t have; it rears its head when I tell my boss why I have to leave without notice…when I stammer out that “I’m suddenly not feeling well” and by her quick response, I realize that I must look like it’s true. These incidents are far from common, but this week has been hard….just like it is every year leading up to your birthday.


The weight of the memories is too much. I know exactly where I was, what I was doing, who I was with. I remember the feelings leading up to your birth, and the incredible, incredible joy…the photos my husband took are beautiful and painful and everything I could ever ask, and I’m so, so grateful in retrospect that he peppered my days and your days with the flash of the camera…Back then, I thought it was too much, but now? Now I’d give anything for one more shot….but would I?



As your little brother gets older, the reality of your story gets even more convoluted, even more difficult to balance out in my brain. I know without a shadow of a doubt that if you would not have died, he would have never been born. I know it, and therein lies both the confusion and the gratitude…I can’t figure any of this out, and I’m no closer now, 10 years later, than I was when you were here.


From time to time, the guilt strikes, along with the fear and the intense, soul-gripping anxiety that is medically untreatable. It is always a conscious effort to stop the derailed-train of emotions and get it back on track with prayer and focus. I know from the very bottom of my heart that your birth and death were part of God’s plan—that’s not saying that part of the plan didn’t suck and I don’t understand it—but it is freeing to know that faith that fills in the gaps when we can’t figure something out. I don’t understand why He decided you would be born only to die so quickly after. I’m still angry; I’m still devastated, and though those feelings are tempered with time, they’re still there, and I am comfortable saying that they always will be. Jesus knows how I feel; why would I try to hide it or act like I’m at peace with it? No parent is ever at peace with the death of their child—never. It’s the most unnatural event in the human experience, and it’s not the way life is designed.


Your birth (which nearly killed me—then again, so did your brother’s birth, so you kids are even) made my heart explode (literally) with happiness that I never thought I’d experience again…but I did!!!  I DID, and it’s because the joy of your birth infected my soul to pursue another chance at motherhood.  The joy of your birth confirmed what I’ve known since I was 3 years old: I am meant to be a mother. I was meant to be YOUR mother; I am meant to be your brother’s mother, and that is all I have ever wanted to be, second only to being a wife. You and your brother are my deepest heart’s desire, and for the longest time, I was so unfulfilled and empty…I held you, my soul was complete and my role in life had purpose…and then you were gone, and so was everything in me that had just been made whole…


Hannah, the emptiness in my life….

I can remember exactly how my days and nights felt in the days—weeks—months---years after your passing.
It’s so hard to juxtapose the fullness we say we have in Christ with the emptiness of the aching womb…

Having your brother didn’t “fix” me. He’s not a “band-aid” baby; he’s a Rainbow Baby, through-and-through.  He’s my Promise, my Answered Prayer, my tangible reminder that Jesus loves me, that God heard me and your father. I’ve never been more grateful for a human being than I am for you, your father, and your brother. The three of you make my heart so whole, so light…The reality of the Family Picture, of the incomplete nucleus of us, is heavy and confusing but also full of gratitude and realized hope…


Hannah, I can’t celebrate your birthday without mourning your death…without mourning the unanswered questions, the unrealized dreams. You were here, but then you were gone, and it still hurts. It still hurts…what else can I say? Christian rhetoric be damned; yes, I know you’re in Heaven, blah, blah, blah. I’m still your mother, you’re still a part of me, and we will always be connected in some inexplicable way. I will always wonder who you would have been…what you would be like. I look at nieces and other families and try not to think about dates of birth that come across patients’ paperwork…I look at forms that detail disabilities and think of the split-second where we thought you’d survive, but would be critically handicapped and think of how we would have stopped time to care for you…I pass the section of clothing for your age group in the store and still, to this day, think of the glitter we would have in our home. I saw a toddler dressed as a flamingo at a Fall Festival last week and my heart stopped…


And then I looked at your brother dressed in his cowboy-finest, and it started again. There is little time to process the things that threaten to overwhelm me when I’m chasing a pseudo-nudist/cowboy.


You led us to him…the love we have for you led us to him, and he is everything we could have ever dreamed, even on the hard days. I don’t know how or when we will tell him about you; you’re certainly no secret, but as he gets older, he will start to understand that those pictures on the wall are not all him…he will have questions, and I am praying even now for the words to answer. The answers we give now will set the stage for the deeper questions he has later on…for the times when the enemy comes to steal, kill, and destroy his self-esteem, for the times when he hears the whispers and the lies that say he is not unique, that he is not special, that he is “second,” or that he is a “replacement.” That day will come…I know it, because in my own way, I’ve been there. I hope that by the time we have that conversation, that he reads the words I’ve written to both him and to you that share the deepest love in my heart…that he understands the love I have for him, and how utterly unique and special it is. I hope he gets even the tiniest inkling in his heart of how grateful we are for his smile in our lives…of how blessed we are, of how great the reward is for the hard-fought Battle of Jericho. He is such a tremendous gift…I hope he understands, and grasps that there is no pressure in being who and what he is; there is only love and appreciation for him, and for the great, mysterious grace of God.


10 years is a long, long time; it seems like yesterday. Your birth was a traumatic experience; I didn’t realize how awful it was until I had your brother, which was peaceful and planned, and so exciting. In retrospect, I actually feel somewhat violated by my birthing experience and by a doctor who seemed more concerned about how “perfect” his incisions were, rather than the long-standing damage done to my body by symptoms that pointed in every direction to cardiac complications. I’m not angry with him; I’m frustrated with an industry that has made the most human experience of giving birth into a highly-marketable commodity that is a minefield of lies. Giving birth is difficult, natural, raw, and messy, yet we’re taught to expect a stylized suite in luxury accommodations that look lovely but fail when we look at statistics. Since your birth and death, the façade of American healthcare has been shattered in my life, and now I know: 1 in 4 pregnancies in our country end in loss. 25%--we don’t even rank in the top 10 countries with the lowest infant mortality rates (http://www.mapsofworld.com/world-top-ten/countries-with-lowest-infant-mortality.html)


Our nation is failing our children.


We’re facing an election over the next few weeks, and there’s a candidate who thinks you--you, my perfect, 34-week angel—do not matter. She thinks that babies like you are trash. I can’t even look at her face on the television. She even thinks your brother, at 36 weeks, is trash. I don’t understand this kind of disregard for humanity. That is a woman who has never known what you and I have known, what you and your brother have known. She has never known the love of a mother, not even for her own child. She doesn’t value life, and she doesn’t even know what it is. She couldn’t; she is blinded by deception. I feel so sorry for her; a life without love just isn’t a life at all. Maybe I’m being terribly judgmental, but how could anyone—anyone—look at your sweet face and not be in love?


I am sad for our nation and for the place we are now….for a nation that feels that we are an accidental collision of cells without purpose, and are therefore worthy of nothing but destruction.


You, you beautiful girl, were created by God. So was I. I know your brother was, and so was your Daddy. God cares for us; He loves us, and He sacrificed His own Son—I can’t imagine—so that we could all be reunited someday. This is my hope, this is why and how I breathe; this isn’t rhetoric or myths. This is Truth. Jesus is real; I know you know that better than anyone.


I don’t know what your life is like in Heaven, or if you remember me…I don’t know how you pass the days, or what you will look like when we meet again. I know I have my own beliefs of what happens to babies that die before they’re capable of making decisions, and I feel those beliefs were whispered into my heart by the Holy Spirit when I needed them most. I believe we will have our chance together, and I do not believe that has to make sense to anyone else.

I believe in reunion and restoration.

I believe the Word of God is true, even when I do not understand it.
I believe in the Hope He gives, and I rest my life on it, even when my life is not easy.

Hannah, I miss you. I miss the way you felt, all snuggled up on my chest…the way you smelled like Cheerios…the sounds you made, the way your fuzzy hair stuck out…your beautiful eyes and your gorgeous fingers and tiny toes that were shaped just like mine…I miss the way you looked at me, and I miss holding you in my arms most of all…I still feel you, even now, and I remember…I will not forget, and neither will anyone in our family.


I hope that if for some reason, you can sense me where you are, that you still feel the love I have for you and that it has never faded. I hope that you know you are thought of every day, and that I am so incredibly grateful for you.  I am grateful for the fight you put in me, for the faith you put into your father, and for the days we are living right now…I am so grateful for the life we have, for Jericho, for our family…you made me never give up. You showed me and your father what we are capable of going through, and what we have in each other, and every year that goes by, that gets stronger.

Most of all, I am grateful for Jesus, Who walked us through the darkest days, Who has grace for our anger and for our confusion, and Who truly does trade beauty for ashes. I am grateful that in death there is life, and that nothing is for nothing.

Hannah Elizabeth Gayle Cooley…I am grateful for every second I spent with you, so for your birthday, I am going to set my face and celebrate our time together. I never want any emotion other than gratitude to cloud your memory or my celebration of the gift of you.


I love you…

And I always will.
Happy 10th Birthday, Beautiful Girl…













Monday, May 9, 2016

I get an "F"

Yesterday was pretty much a complete failure for me. I tried to go to church. I tried to be "normal." I failed. As soon as I got there, a well-intentioned person mentioned my daughter, and though I made it through worship (barely--all of those songs about Heaven? Not cool. Some days it's just not a comfort, you know?!?), I was ready to leave....and then the same well-intentioned person stopped me mid-flight, and oops--there went the embarrassing ugly-cry.
I give up.
I have no intentions of going to church on Mother's Day ever, ever again. I don't like feeling like I have a target on my head...like, even if there's really not a spotlight, and no one else really thinks about what my husband and I have been through, all it takes is one person, and I'm in the weeds. I just don't want to feel like a spectacle, and since I seem unable to do that, I'm just DONE with church on Mother's Day. FOR. GET. IT.
That being said, in the midst of my flight out of the church (and subsequent ugly-cry/sob/bah!), I neglected to have conversations with two very special people that I simply wanted to hug.  I GET the whole "I don't really want to talk about it" thing. I don't want to talk about it unless it's on my terms. I'll start the conversation if/when I want to; you just don't know how fragile someone can be until you hit them with that subject right out of the gate, and watch them crumble. I was keeping it together for the sake of my own dignity, for the sake of my husband...I really didn't want to talk about my daughter yesterday. I have days like that. It's incredibly intimate, regardless of how many times I've blogged about Hannah-girl. So, for the two people I was thinking of, I just wanted to hug them in silence.
I appreciate silence.
Please don't laugh...if you laugh at that sentence, you don't know me very well.
There is such a deep, deep unpredictable tenderness with grief...10 years now, and I am still so fragile certain days of the year.  This was my 10th Mother's Day without my daughter...I can't put my feelings into words, and if I can't, why would someone else try?
I can't.
David and I have walked such a searing path...we understand the timing of the discussion between ourselves, as we are the only ones who went through Hannah's loss in the ways that we as parents went through it. He asked me yesterday why I wanted to leave church, and I got aggravated--"Do I have to freaking explain?!?!?" He didn't know I'd been "triggered;" he also had the sense to not question me any further. He did what he does...he took me to a park.
That man takes a lot of crap for being thick-headed sometimes, but darn it if he doesn't GET me so incredibly well...Sitting outside while he played with Jericho was what my heart needed...sitting at home, drinking a margarita, eating barbecue and binge-watching The Office? Perfect.
He makes me feel as normal as any post-loss-anxiety-struggling-post-thyroidectomy-stuck-with-stupid-cancer-loon-of-a-wife can feel.
It's very easy, post-embarrassing ugly cry, to beat myself up for not being able to keep it together.
I really shouldn't care.
I cried. Big Deal.
Yep--10 years later, it still hurts. Last night, I had a phone call with my bestie from elementary school, where we basically told Hallmark to suck it, because Mother's Day is an atrocious stick in an open wound that makes us want to drink. That's such an awful thing to say, because as a daughter, I want to honor my awesome Mama (we celebrated her on Thursday due to logistics). But as a mother, MD makes me want to scream at the universe for all of the questions that are answerless...and as a Christian, I guess I'm supposed to be okay with that.
I'm not.
Neither is my friend, who lost her Mama and her Grandma...who never conceived, and who will never conceive, in spite of the fact that she and her husband would be AMAZING parents. Or my other friend, who lost her mother as she was becoming a mother herself...Or my other friend, who has spent the better half of a decade trying to conceive, only to hit one obstacle after another, and has a whole new series of appointments looming....Or my other friend, who just had her second failed attempt at IVF...
Why do we go through these things?
What is God thinking?
Do I trust Him enough...do I love Him enough...to set my questions aside and keep going?
I do....
That doesn't mean it doesn't hurt, and that doesn't mean I have to wall off that hurt. Do that, and watch your life be over as you know it.
Mother's Day is so, so hard...so many unanswered questions, so much heartache, for so many people that I know, that I love...for myself, for my family...
I love my friend at church that mentioned my daughter, that had the best of intentions...she couldn't have known that I was just hoping to survive the day. She couldn't have known that she knocked on the door of a glass house...because normally, I don't consider myself to BE a glass house. I can normally discuss my daughter and keep it together.
Well, I didn't yesterday, and rather than apologize for it, I'm just gonna own it and start over, today...
And give up on it for next year.
Next Mother's Day, I'm sleeping in and watching Netflix.
(BTW, the best part about Mother's Day, besides barbecue? Rico-Bean--who never saw me cry; it's important to me that he not, at this point--tried to "kiss my freckles off." I thought that was the sweetest thing in history, and gave me much-needed warm fuzzies.) :) 
For every heart out there that struggled this weekend...who dreaded another Mother's Day full of confusion, secret hurt, public hurt...who dealt with a tender heart, or even a broken heart...
I am so, so sorry you're hurting...
There is no perfect way to grieve, and no one can tell you how you're supposed to feel. If they try, they're not your friend.
I will not slap a churchy-answer-band-aid on your hemorrhaging heart and feel like I've done my Christian duty...You are allowed to grieve your loss, your missing piece, any way you need to. Give yourself permission to hurt. Don't clean yourself up to approach the God you're questioning, the Jesus you don't understand. He gets it. He gets YOU, and He knows how it is to hurt and feel like the heavens are silent...He will love you in the dredges of sadness or in the sidelines of grief.
Please don't feel like you have to "church up" in the process of grief, regardless of where you are in the process...I struggle with that.
You are loved, I am loved, even when we don't understand or have the answers, or when the answers just plain suck. We are loved, even when we ugly-cry and leave church or accidentally cause a scene, or stand in our backyard and yell, "SUCK IT, HALLMARK!!!!" with our bestie over the phone.
So, yeah...
That was my Mother's Day.
Ugly-cry-missed-conversation-fleeing-church-sitting-at-a-park-post-ugly-cry-nap-barbecue-margarita-The-Office-freckle-kissing-yelling-at-Hallmark
And waking up the next day, pouring my heart out to God in my morning commute, and getting reminded once again that where I am in this process, this never-ending process, is where I am supposed to be...that I don't need to explain myself to Him, or rationalize myself to Him...that He hears me as I am, and He hears you as you are, and He Loves Us, even when we're ugly-crying over things society tells us we should be over. GOD NEVER TELLS US TO GET OVER IT. He says "Let Me help you through this."
He never tells us we're stupid or silly for feeling the way we do; He honors our hearts, because He created them.
Jesus gets me...He gets my husband and my son, and for that, He GETS me for eternity...and I get Him...
I remind myself of eternity on a daily basis...
And I remind myself that there is no "right" or "wrong" way to navigate this process...the only thing we have to do is to trust Him (which is sometimes the hardest thing of all).
One foot in front of the other, y'all...
Just keep swimming...
Even on Mother's Day...

Tuesday, October 27, 2015

The Perceived Suckiness of the Plans of God and Silencing the What-Ifs...



For years, October 30th glared at me from the calendar.  Every day that approached was like another page turning in “The Monster at the End of This Book” (see THIS for more details—with pictures!).
This year, I’m not sure what’s different…Is it the pace of life? Is it the fact that physically, this year has left me feeling pretty spent (and marginally emotionally uninvested)? Is it the fact that I am finally, truly at peace with a clearer understanding that my daughter—who would be turning 9 this year—is, beyond the shadow of a doubt, with my Savior? 

I generally have my prayer time on my commute to work. I feel like I can have an unadulterated, uncensored, frighteningly-but-beautifully frank conversation with the Lord, free from pretense or interruption (with the glaring exception of the occasional eruption of road rage). This morning, we talked about Hannah…about the fact that my concrete beliefs that there is a Heaven, that Jesus is there, and that my daughter is with Him, are probably the only reason I have survived the loss of my firstborn. Without that knowledge, without knowing Him (in as broken of a way as I do), I would be lost. Even with that, there were days the despair was so heavy that I wanted to end it all. I will never, ever forget those days of darkness…there really is nothing like it. It’s like living in a state of suffocation…but not quite enough that you get the bliss of unconsciousness. It’s scary, because all you want is to be extinguished; however, your own faith keeps you from pulling the trigger yourself. You just pray that something else kills you (I can’t tell you how many times I prayed my heart would just explode). It’s the hardest thing a soul can go through…And we survived.

We made it (oh, the fear that goes into making that actual statement…there is no pride there, trust me. There is simply the acknowledgement and gratitude of the Spirit of God that kept us from self-destructing). I’m not sure how I didn’t off myself, or how David didn’t lock me up (or why he hasn’t as of today…I’m not ruling it out as a possibility at some point in my life, LOL), other than by the grace of God.  And how thankful am I, for that grace? If not for the grace of God…I wouldn’t be here. Jericho wouldn’t be here.

When I think of all of the joy that would be missing from the world, without that little boy…
God is good, y’all. He sustains us, even at our weakest, our most unlovable, our most vulnerable. He doesn’t walk away, even when we yell at Him in our anger. He doesn’t give up, even when we don’t want to breathe. He stays, even when we are unfaithful.
His ways are not our ways. His plans don’t make a lot of sense to us…and who are we, to think that they have to? I had a friend who recently said, “I’m sick of being told that God has a plan for all of this. If this is His plan, His plan SUCKS.”

After I took a few steps to the side, so as to avoid the proverbial lightning strike (God doesn’t really do that…I hope), I didn’t really say anything back to her. I just told her that I understood. It’s true…to us. Sometimes His plans just suck. Going into heart failure sucked.  It sucked, to lose my daughter. It sucked, when my husband lost his job. Those years of unemployment/underemployment? THEY SUCKED. Finding out I had cancer this summer? IT SUCKS. Do I think that God sits in Heaven, intentionally inflicting pain on His constituents? No…but I certainly think He uses it to draw us into Him. He takes these things…these results of living in a fallen world that hates His children…and He recognizes that they hurt. Jesus wept when His friend Lazarus died. He wept, even when He knew what was to come. He cried because it sucks when your friends die…even when You’re the Son of God. Jesus cried in the Garden of Gethsemane. Why? Because He knew what was to come…He knew it would hurt…He knew it would separate Him from His Father…and He knew it was gonna suck, BIG TIME. Sometimes, God’s plans just suck.

(It’s at this point that I recall how many times I got into trouble for saying something/someone totally sucked, in elementary-junior high-high school. Never really broke that habit.)

Even though things are arduous (fancy-talk for “sucky”), it’s only for a little while in the grand scheme of things. There is always, always, ALWAYS another side to the battle. There’s a break in the storm; even hurricanes eventually come to an end, although they seem insurmountable in the process. 
It WILL get better, because He is. HE IS.

We have that truth—the truth of The Great I Am. Sometimes, those two little words are all we can wrap ourselves around in the middle of the chaos…

I spent about an hour on the phone with my Mama the other day. She’s taught me a lot, and I feel like she’s lived a lot of life in a few years. I’m sure I’ve aged her a few decades on my own, although you’d never know it to look at her—she’s super snazzy!!!! I’d like to be more like her, when I grow up. We discussed the fact that this summer was pretty much a great big pile of poo. Seriously—getting cancer (albeit, “the good kind”) really trashed most of my plans. It took up all of my vacation time, rendered me unable to tend to my garden (big waste of $$), made me unable to really have too much fun (minus my concerts—those were a blast), and I am STILL dealing with trying to get my meds regulated. She took quite a bit of care of me and JD during that time; the emotional toll of being told mid-surgery that your child (even a grown-up child) has cancer is pretty great….even when it’s “the good kind” (that phrase!). If not for the ever-changing antics of JD (and my concerts), I’d like to forget most of this summer. So would my mother. She really took my diagnosis hard, and I think she still struggles with the aftermath. Every 6 months for the next 2 years, I will have tests; because of the high reoccurrence of this kind of cancer, I’ll probably have labs to monitor my thyroid levels for the rest of my life (also, to maintain the dosage of replacement medication that I have to take).  That’s a lot to ask of a person as a patient; I think it’s more to ask of that patient’s mother. My mom has held my hand through 10 of my 11 surgeries; it’s safe to say that this one was the hardest on her.  Cancer is a kind of chaos that requires clinging to “I Am.” Even the “good kind” of cancer wreaks havoc on a mother, when it’s her child. My mom really hit her knees through this process, and I know her prayers have been heard.

Mom and I talked about my fears and frustrations in our phone call. The change of seasons…grayer days…gloomy weather…the ever-approaching end of the month…It all affects me, emotionally and spiritually. I look for ways to escape; I find myself dealing with irrational fears. I don’t want to go anywhere; I just want my blanket and a fireplace screensaver on Netflix. I eat more, and I make bad choices. I’m more introspective and less social; I bake more, and channel my lack of adventure into a recipe book. The irrational fears are a problem. The “what ifs” go from a murmur in the back of my brain to a screaming chorus in my head that makes me paranoid about everything, and there is a daily battle to keep it in check. You could say that my natural crazy gets “turnt up,” and it’s a problem. Mom talked to me about prayer, and I said that I wondered if it’s the natural fear associated with Halloween that I’m subconsciously picking up on? She said it’s not…it’s this time of the year. She’s right.

Not having a birthday party to celebrate is a nagging constant in my brain and in my heart…I’d be lying if I didn’t admit that it hurts. This time of the year makes me more emotionally sensitive. I HAVE to disassociate; I have to unplug. I have to make myself stay off of Facebook for a few days; I have to stop reading the news (I think I need to do that, regardless of the time of the year). There are 29 days each fall where the clock is pounding in my head…where was I, what was I doing, what was Hannah doing? Only in the past 3 years has that improved, and that is honestly because having a toddler means that I don’t have time to climb down that rabbit hole. It’s an unfair pressure to say this about my son, but he has, in so many ways, pushed me to a different place of healing where Hannah is concerned. You simply, physically, cannot focus on the sadness and on what you missed, when there is a child that takes up most of your attention. Days become markers on the calendar, rather than the overwhelming emotional valleys. Life forces you to move through and walk forward, rather than stopping (notice I didn’t say “move on.” That’s another discussion).
That’s not to say there aren’t pauses, and that there aren’t moments where it hits…that there aren’t moments like this morning, where I wonder what would have been? What would she be like? I have no idea…
But I know what her brother is like.

And I suspect that had she made it…had she survived…he wouldn’t be here (we wouldn’t have tried again, because of the damage I sustained to my heart. I really don’t think David would have wanted to risk another pregnancy, and I think I would have been reluctant to, as well). God has a plan for that little boy that we have yet to have a clue toward…

I think the greatest way to celebrate Hannah’s birthday is to thank her…Having her, knowing what motherhood felt like, loving someone so strongly and having that blessing to hold in my arms, was the greatest gift I’ve ever been given outside of my salvation. She has an eternal impact on my life and on my soul, and I am grateful for the chance I had to hold her. My son is in no way, shape, or form, a replacement for her…but he IS a response to her. I knew that I knew that I KNEW that we were meant to be parents after Hannah died, and we pursued that dream until it became a reality…The reality known as Jericho.

What we have does not replace what was lost…and focusing on our present is the best way to honor the past.

So, on October 30th, I’d like to say that the day will go on as mostly “normal:” David and I will both go to work; JD will go to daycare. We have a meeting scheduled that afternoon, and I may convince David to go out to dinner; otherwise, we will treat the day as any other. At the end of the day, though, I will get a candle out of our coat closet. It’s a Birthday Cake candle, made by a mother in Kentucky who lost her son. I light it one day a year, on Hannah’s birthday.  I will light that candle, and we will pause…we will hold our son a little tighter, and maybe keep the bedtime ritual a little more relaxed…We will kiss our boy, and we will be thankful for the love we have, for the grace of God, and for the beauty of knowing the peace of the Great I Am…We will marvel at the good, the bad, the sometimes-perceived “suckiness”, and the overall, misunderstood awesomeness of the plans of God….And we will cling to the verse that David chose as our wedding verse, because every year, it just becomes more and more clear that only He fully knows what He is doing; all we know is that we can rest in His plans because above all, He is a good God:
9. However, as it is written: “What no eye has seen, what no ear has heard, and what no human mind has conceived” the things God has prepared for those who love Him—I Cor. 2:9 (NIV)

Wednesday, March 11, 2015

Creaks and groans and memories past...

Every time I think I've gotten rid of the last thing of Hannah's, I find something else. It's usually an unexpected, takes-my-breath-away moment that causes the chaos that led me to the discovery, to come to a quick halt. There's always a pause--usually brief--where I stop and simply thank God for the blessings we have. Joy, for our family, seems to have grown up from a garden watered in tears.
Oh, that's so dramatic...quick, pass me a tissue...choke...
Seriously, though--the pain of losing Hannah makes the very presence of Jericho that much more awesome, and I mean that word in it's true definition. AWEsome. Anytime I have that sharp-inhale feeling (that can easily turn into a full-blown panic attack, if I let the fear reign), it is quickly quieted by lessons learned about being present....about embracing THIS moment, the one right in front of me...not the one we had...not the one in the future...and not the one where I wonder what could have been. THIS moment. Right here. Green/gold/brown eyes stare back into my own...a giggle escapes the tiny human that grew in my womb...I am overcome with the need to hug this little man...this little world-changer...
It's not glossing over the past.
It's embracing the miracle of now.
It's understanding that she is in my future, in Heaven, with my Savior---with the One Who has carried us through it all...
It's laying down the ever-present fear...turning off the news and the feeds...It's faith, it's hope, and it's relying on Jesus.
This Jesus--I sometimes think I am the worst representative of Him. I swear, I can be extremely disrespectful, I mess up constantly, and I'm known to be linguistically lethal when so inclined. But in my heart of hearts, I hope no one ever questions the simple fact that flawed as I am, I love Jesus. Seeing Him face-to-face is the greatest desire of my heart, and always has been, even when I was so angry that I wanted to look Him in the face long enough to scream at Him. He's the only true constant in my life...He's my Best Friend, and He loves me for who I am...and for who He made me to be.
Trusting Him at this stage of my life is a whole new ball game. I'd imagine that parents that have lost a child have a much harder time doing this, than most? I don't know; it's just way too easy for me to personalize every news story with "it could be him...That could be my son..." The news is overwhelming to me,  and I don't think that's going to get any better. It freaks me out. God is bigger than the worst of my anxiety, and for that, I am grateful. I find reminders of His magnitude everywhere I look. Psalms 8 comes to mind...I find tremendous peace in looking at His hand in nature, and I'm so excited that warmer weather is here! The outdoors is the best therapy in the world.
Anyways, I started this blog out about things that belonged to Hannah. The last remaining thing (I think, outside of her memory box) is her rocking chair. It's the only piece of her furniture that I did not have removed from my house; we were so broke when we were pregnant, that our beloved rocking chair was $10 from our local Goodwill. I simply do not have the heart to get rid of it, even though it creaks, and groans, and is full of memories of not only her little life, but of Jericho's full, long, hilarious life.
I've dried tears, cried tears, rocked babies to sleep, played in, rested in, and prayed countless prayers in this old, creaky rocking chair. Tonight, it groaned its protests as I settled back into it, rocking Bug to sleep for the second time tonight...
This child brings me the greatest of joys, and teaches me more about the love of God than I could have ever thought...
That rocking chair...I don't know who had it before us...whose babies were rocked in it, whose tears were dried in it, or whose prayers were prayed in it...I do know that it is part of our family legacy, and that in spite of the sound effects, we will keep it until its in pieces...
And then I'll use it in an art project. :) (That's a reference to "Hoarders," LOL).

Sunday, March 30, 2014

The Inevitable...

I suppose it was inevitable...
I have a pretty wicked shopping addiction. Fortunately for my husband, it's the worst when I'm at thrift shops, yard sales, or resale shops. I'm also pretty practical about reusing and up-cycling (everything can be reused or sold). I haven't always been this way--okay, I've always had a serious shopping problem; it's just that until the leaner years (thanks, Mr. President), I wasn't as into the thrifts shops. I also put everything on plastic, which I'm in the process of paying off...again...
Anyways, I love to shop, but I love to sell...and I also love to give when I can. With both Hannah and Jericho, I was blessed with a considerable amount of new and used clothing. The clothing I was given has been passed along to several other new mothers, or has been upcycled at a favorite shop of mine, and traded for more secondhand clothes for my son.
Of course, Hannah didn't get to wear much; we had a huge amount of clothing that I had washed and sorted (so it couldn't be returned); I can't begin to remember all of the people we gave it to, but they all knew it was given with love, and with a broken heart. I'm glad that their little girls got to wear the ruffles and bows...and truthfully, I'm glad I never ran into anyone wearing one of Hannah's dresses. I think it would have shattered me.
With Jericho's clothes, it's been delightful to see where they've gone. One friend of mine brought her son home from the hospital in a particularly cute outfit of Jericho's. It was so cute to see our babies in the same monkey-suit! And since her baby was like, twice the size of mine, he looked even funnier in it.
As many things of Hannah's that we could reuse, we did. We had the nursery bedding packed away; she never used it, and it was a gender-neutral jungle design that Jericho loves. There were yellow onesies, white onesies, Blues outfits, some Cardinals gear--we kept what we could, within reason. I didn't get rid of the very last of her clothes until I found out Bug was a boy. We kept books, CDs, certain toys...we had hope that we'd have another baby, and I'm thankful we kept what we did.
So, it was inevitable that one day, I'd run into something of hers that I'd forgotten was hers, and that it would sucker-punch me in the gut.
And it did, 3 days ago.
Books are friends, right? And I firmly believe one should never gift a book without an inscription.
I grabbed a book for Jericho's nightly Bible time and story time, and there it was, from some dear friends and prayer warriors of ours..."For Hannah: Love, The Renauds, 2006"
I stopped breathing for a minute; tears welled up, and I couldn't help but cry...
But there was my boy,
Looking at me...
Big blue/brown eyes staring up at me quizzically...
Tiny hands touched my knees...patted my legs...
He is my now.
Even though I was sitting in what was her room, in the only piece of furniture that we kept--the rocking chair--even though the words on that page had me split-second thinking of what we missed out on---
He is my now.
I looked at him and dried my tears. I kissed his head, and said, "It's all right, Bug. This was your sisters. And now I'm going to read you the stories I didn't get to read her...but it's okay, because she's living them as we speak."
I know he doesn't understand, and I have no idea how David and I are going to approach the subject when he asks (I'm sure he will; her pictures are on the wall, and it's only a matter of time). What I do know, is that all I ever want him to know is how much we loved her, and how much we loved him; how much her tiny life changed ours forever, and how much we learned...and how faithful God is at keeping His promises, and in never wavering in His heart's desires for our lives.
The occasional sucker-punch never hurt anyone, right? Sometimes it's what it takes to remind us how far we've come...and how much the blessing right under our noses really means to us...
I love that boy.

Friday, March 21, 2014

The Garden Alone...

I had these wonderful aspirations of sitting down to write every day, and it just isn't happening. But I think I need to be okay with that--I mean, life is hectic (for me, and for everyone else). The drive to write, for me, is frequently sparked in frustration or in a lack of feeling like I've truly expressed myself (most of the time). I write the most when I'm untangling drama in my head; lately, although there's been no shortage of drama, I truthfully just don't care about it. I have other things to think about.
I keep waiting for the "new mom euphoria" to fade, but it hasn't. :) Don't get me wrong--there are days when I'm home at 6, after being up since 4, and I'm exhausted; dealing with the dishes or the house is NOT on my to-do list; and the Tiny Human is in full Tiny-Tyrant mode. Those aren't smiling-happy-shiny-people moments...but I wouldn't trade them for the world.
In my heart-of-hearts, I am happy.
That being said, I don't have much fuel for angst-ridden writing right now...and that's a good thing. I'm learning to write in all aspects of my life...without deadlines...without unrealistic rules...without comparison.  So, sure, I said I was going to write every day. I've failed at it.
Again.
And I have to tell myself that's okay.
It's officially SPRING, which is my absolute favorite season. When I was in college, Autumn was my favorite. After losing Hannah, Fall has taken on a particular melancholy...although I appreciate it, and it's truly the most beautiful season, it will always be colored by bittersweet memories. My life has changed...Spring has sprung, in so many ways...
Green leaves...sunny skies...gentle rains...Even though here in St. Louis, where we have the most bipolar weather in the world, spring still brings with it the freshest smells, longer days, and the sounds of birds returning from their winter away.  I love it. 
Spring also means it's time for me to start working on my Garden.
I started gardening 3 years ago, per the advice of some close friends. They introduced me to the concept of raised garden beds. I live in an area where our dirt is AWFUL; it's full of rocks, and the chemical makeup makes it unsuitable for growing anything but grass. I don't have a tiller (or the desire to shred my back while using one), and my back yard turns into a mudpit during heavy rains, so raised beds were a genius suggestion. I bought two of them, put them together all by myself, and started my small garden back in 2012. The best thing about it, is the fact that every year I start my seedlings in the windowsill of my office. Even my bosses seem to be impressed at my use of space; my windowsill currently houses 80 seedlings that are growing unbelievably fast. They'll sit there until next month, when my Burpee app tells me it's time to plant...(BTW--if you garden, get that app! It's fantastic!)
When I downloaded my Burpee app, it asked me to name my garden. Hmm--that's an interesting thought.
I got nuthin.'
I actually thought about it for a few minutes: Did I want something Cute ("Cooley's Corner?")? Something Funny ("Gnome Home")? What's in a name?
The words to the old hymn came to mind..."I come to the Garden alone; while the dew is still on the roses. And the voice I hear, falling on my ear, the Son of God discloses...and He walks with me, and He talks with me; and He tells me I am His own (yeah, I know--you can't read that without singing it!)..."
When I began my garden in March of 2012, I had many doubts. After all, I can't grow anything. I've never had the patience...and the more I worked on it, the more I began to see what a metaphor it was for my life. I didn't think it would work--after all, everything I tried to grow, died...even my child...It was a horrible thought to have, and as I started my seeds, I prayed to God the plants didn't die. I couldn't stand the thought of investing so much, and having it flop. Maybe, just maybe, I could start over...I could try again. Maybe my hands could find something to cultivate....maybe I could see something come to fruition.
I was still, even 6 years after Hannah died, deeply hurt by her loss. I hadn't quite gotten to April of 2012, when for some reason, the love of God just clicked in my head. I still felt like God hated me, like He didn't pick me to be a mom. I was still really struggling with disappointment, with feeling like a failure...I started the garden, praying my heart of hearts that I wouldn't fail at this, too...like I'd failed at parenting...
Clarification: I knew that I really didn't fail at parenting. Hannah's death was a disease, and it was something NO ONE could have seen coming. I just couldn't unbury myself from that feeling, though, that I wasn't good enough to raise her, and that I'd failed her, regardless of the sermons, prayers, and lectures that said otherwise. It just hadn't clicked yet.
So, I started the garden. In March, April, and early May, things began to change in our house. Someone preached a sermon where they stated that just because you had prayed for a healing one time, and God didn't allow it to happen, didn't mean that you STOPPED praying for healing. That registered with me...faith began to grow.
I planted seeds...watered them...prayed over them...I knew they weren't a metaphor, but it just felt like it was...
Someone preached a sermon about the love of God. I'm not sure exactly when, but around that time is when I finally told my husband that I didn't think God loved me...I don't remember what he said, but something clicked, and healing started happening...
And the seeds turned into plants...
Spring brought changes in the house; we did a mini-makeover, and I got to redecorate the living room and kitchen.  We freshened up the house, we opened up some windows and added more colors, and the garden continued to grow beyond my expectations...
David isn't too into the garden. Sure, he eats the veggies, and will do some of the grunt-work when I desperately need him (I really struggle with the 50-pound bags. I can lift them, but the consequences are not good); however, it's mine. And the longer I have a garden, the more I appreciate the investment of time.  It's my alone time...
It's me and God...in the garden...alone.
It's where He speaks to me...it's where He breaths life into something that was dead.
I can't go into my garden without thinking of the times that I felt like a desolate wasteland, and  thinking of the time that He spent healing me.
I spent many years as a broken woman; anyone who has buried their child can relate. The process of coming out of that brokenness is long, and cannot be judged by anyone. And as far as I can see, the only way out is through Jesus.
After many years of winter, March and April of 2012 began a season of Spring in my heart. Just as seeds were planted, hope was planted and renewed...by the time flowers began to appear in May of 2012, I began to suspect changes were on the horizon...
Sure enough...in June of 2012 I discovered I was pregnant.
Spring began...and so far, in my heart, it's still going on. 
My seeds have been planted this year, and are already going crazy in my planters on my windowsill at work. I'm not sure how I'm going to manage working in my garden while taking care of my little one...I may have to invest in a little bordered "pen" in my yard, for him to be in while I work, on the days David works late. I'm not sure--but I know that I am excited as I think about all of the beautiful possibilities in The Garden Alone this year.
Time in The Garden Alone...time to teach my son about life...time for God to teach me more lessons about His love...
Time for Him to "tell me I am His own," for one more season...

Wednesday, March 5, 2014

Other People Stole My Memories...

Disclaimer: I've been sick with the stomach flu, and I just took something for the God-awful body pain that I've been in for 3 days. I should totally be in bed, but something on Facebook just tripped the writer's trigger, so if I don't write, my head will probably explode. I'm okay, just shaken, so don't take this as some kind of off-the-wagon head trip into the padded cell. It's just writing, people, and we're all a work in progress...

Other People Stole My Memories...

I saw your post online...
How your daughter sang your son to sleep...
How you heard her angelic voice over the
Monitor in the nursery...
I saw your hashtag:
#ProudMama
Did you know it would break my heart
Into a million pieces?
Of course not--how could you?
You have so many beautiful
Rights to boast...
So many beautiful children...
Voices ringing down your halls...
Birthdays to celebrate...
Songs to sing...
Ruffles and glitter and
Everything glorious.
You deserve it all.
I'm not jealous...
No...
It's just that sometimes...
Sometimes...
I wonder what your life is like?
Did you know she'd be 8
In October?
You're not the only friend I wonder about...
If we switched lives
For just one moment.
If I could see what you see--
Hear what you hear...
Older singing to younger;
What's it like?
Please don't think I'm not grateful;
Words can't express how much I
Thank God for
What
For
Who
I hold in my arms each night.
He is everything to me,
The small one...
The mighty one...
The one who Survived The Odds...
He is the strong one...
The one who was promised to me
And I have
No
Regrets.
But sometimes...
Sometimes...
I imagine what it would be like
To hear my angel
Singing to her brother
Down the halls...

Followers