Friday, October 2, 2020

A Letter to Each of My Sons after Covid-19

My Dearest Son,


    As we draw near the end of the battle our family has been facing with covid-19 for nearly , I am finding that God has been faithful in teaching me through this trial. I feel a strong need to share this wisdom with you, and I hope and pray you cling to it every day of your lives. 

Photo credit: Grace Kay Photography
    First, and certainly most importantly, I have learned the true power and meaning of 1 Thessalonians 15-18 where Paul and his friends speak of God's will for us in doing good, seeking joy, praying ceaselessly, and finding gratitude: "See that no one renders evil for evil to anyone, but always pursue what is good both for yourselves and for all. Rejoice always, pray without ceasing, in everything give thanks; for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus for you." Even in our hardest struggles we must do good in this world for others, we must seek God's joy, and we must remain grateful. These things have miraculously come easily to me these past few weeks. Why? Because of verse 17.

    Right in the middle of these commands to us, God nestled in the key to it all. Pray without ceasing. Pray continually, my son. Pray all day every day. How? When you're having an incredible day or a good moment, pause often to thank God, praising Him for his goodness and grace. Recall Psalm 100:5 where the author reminds us that "For the Lord  is good; His mercy is everlasting, And His truth endures to all generations." God isn't just good for me and your dad, but He has been good for your grandparents and great grandparents, and He promises to continue to be good for you. Pray continuously, thanking Him for His goodness.

Photo credit: Grace Kay Photography
    More than that, pray continuously when you are afraid. I have been afraid in this struggle. I feared for your health and your dad's. I feared my weakened immune system would fail me. I feared for your grandparents who we unknowingly exposed and who are considered high risk with this nasty covid-19 virus. I feared. What does God tell us about fear in His word? Oh, so many things, son. Two things I have leaned on in this trial are these verses:

1) Isaiah 41:10 "Fear not, for I am with you; Be not dismayed, for I am your God. I will strengthen you, Yes, I will help you, I will uphold you with My righteous right hand."

2) Psalms 23:4 "Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil; For You are with me; Your rod and Your staff, they comfort me."

    God leaves us so very many verses in the Bible about fear because He knows it is a human weakness. Fear is in our core nature, and faith requires discipline of the mind and heart. He leaves these numerous verses because He also knows it is our enemy's easiest attack. In this time of our struggles, He has reminded me where my strength lies: my faith in Him. Yet, He has also reminded me to be diligent and prepared. 
 
Photo credit: Grace Kay Photography

   Proverbs 22:3 explains, "A prudent man foresees evil and hides himself, but the simple pass on and are punished." Solomon in his massive wisdom teaches us to be prudent, meaning to be prepared for the future. God helped us be prepared for this struggle. How? He taught us through friends and experts how to strengthen our immune systems so covid-19 was less difficult than it might have been on you. He also blessed us with relationships that would sustain us in our time of great need. We have seen an overflowing love from our family, friends and neighbors in this time. You have gotten to see firsthand why your dad, your mom, and your grandparents have always emphasized the importance of taking care of others, and we pray you never forget this essential lesson. Spend the rest of your lives loving it forward to others, precious son.

    In love of others, we must also pray without ceasing. When we know of a need for prayer, we must never fail to stop and pray. Remember the story of the Good Samaritan? Jesus is telling us we must always do all we can to help and love others. Sometimes the only thing we can do (and it is always the best thing we can do) is stop and pray to our Heavenly Father sincerely and powerfully for those in need.

Photo credit: Grace Kay Photography

    We have seen miracles in the prayers prayed over us, son. First, your brother Jackson, who has the weakest health among us, endured this covid-19 invasion of our family unscathed. Second, your mom had miraculously high oxygen levels despite weakened lungs and labored breathing throughout her struggle with the virus. Third, the symptoms your brothers had were short-lived, and your dad's symptoms were only moderate. Fourth, the outpouring of love and support converted your mother's angry heart, which was a much-needed miracle in this struggle and which awoke a strength and peace in her beyond understanding. Did you know God promises that in His word too? 


    He does, and it is your mom's favorite scripture from Philippians 4:6-7: "Be anxious for nothing, but in everything by prayer and supplication, with thanksgiving, let your requests be made known to God; and the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your hearts and minds through Christ Jesus." You see, God doesn't just promise never to leave us; He also reminds us that when we are free from worry it makes room for His perfect, inexplicable peace when we pray." How incredible is that, my loving son?! It is another reason to "pray without ceasing."

    The battle is not over, and I'm certain our God has more wisdom to teach me. Most recently He is guiding me to study deeply the story of Esther, reminding even me that "Yet who knows whether you have come to the kingdom for such a time as this?” (Esther 4:14). I still have much to learn, my son. My promise to you is this: I will share the wisdom God grants me and pray that in the learning and sharing of it your life may be better and your faith may be even stronger, my dearest child.



Love You Fiercely and Forever, 

Mom

Sunday, September 8, 2013

A Series of Seriously Stressful Situations

Painful contractions. Fears of early labor. Lack of sleep. Blood results that confirm anemia. A failed glucose tolerance test. A three-hour repeat test. Managing my work duties. Too much housework. Daily technology issues in my classroom. A four-year-old facing a phase of defiance. A husband in the midst of coaching football. A death in the family. Late nights and early mornings. The "go here" and "do this" every day. And to top it all off, more than forty hours of work lost in a matter of seconds. The past two weeks have been building for me. Stress has mounted. I've been reading a devotional about truly counting the gifts God has given me, though, so for the most part I have been able to turn to Him and see the blessing in the brokenness. I could see the beauty in it all--how God was shaping me into the person He wants me to be. Maybe that's why the challenges were mounting, but I was pretty well taking them all in stride. Then Friday came. The epitome of my stress, and I was devastated in a moment.

Children in bed and household responsibilities under control for yet another day, I sat down to complete my current unit plan while my husband worked on his master's course homework. It was quiet, and I was eager to be productive in finalizing this project I had been working on for weeks. Earlier in the day I had felt so confident about this unit; I was finally making my grammar instruction into something usable for students and applicable to assessments they would soon face, and the pacing and design of it all felt comfortable. The most exciting part of it all was that the software I was using to develop the unit allowed me to incorporate explanations of topics, examples of concepts, images of exercises for discussion, links to online resources, class questions for immediately assessing student understanding, quizzes to check individual mastery of an idea--I had pulled out all the stops, and it was a work of classroom beauty! I literally thought, "Wow! This unit is going so well, and I can't wait to be able to use all of it again." We teachers lesson plan daily, weekly, monthly even when we're "off the clock" or on summer "vacation," and we hope and pray to be able to find that sort of mastery of the content--those lessons that just work so well that we can pick them right up and use them again "as is" with success and ease. I was in that zone: a true sense of accomplishment!

Then on that peaceful Friday night with my laptop at the ready in front of me, it happened. I plugged in my USB drive, opened the file, and found destruction. The software opened, flashed an error message, replaced all of the sections with blank pages, automatically saved itself, and crashed. In just one moment all of that near-perfection was destroyed. I was destroyed. I felt like I was going to get sick. I shamefully used a few choice words, said a desperate and angered prayer that God would return my work to me, turned to my husband for any technology tricks he might have up his sleeve, emailed our school technology coordinator hoping for something magical, read online to research the problem, and learned that the version of the software that I had at home had a bug in it that caused this exact error. Even though I had managed to miss it several times before, this time the bug had gotten me. It won. I lost. Angry and defeated, I gave up an hour later and recoiled to my bedtime routine--knowing hopelessness and feeling attacked. All of those hours had been for nothing.

When I woke the next morning, the sting of loss hadn't left my heart, but I knew that I had to carry on--pick up the pieces and learn a lesson from it all. I got ready for the day, gathered my materials for the task ahead, and left home headed to the hospital for my three-hour glucose tolerance test. Yet I couldn't shake the anger. It wasn't until an hour later as I waited in the admissions room at the hospital all alone that I asked the question: what is wrong with me?! It's not just this instance; I typically react to this sort of small-scale daily bad situation with this sort of negativity. Hiccups in the day can, and often do, just set me off, and it's not just the pregnancy hormones! With the "big" challenges in life, I rely on God, see his plan, find his blessings, and become an overcomer. With all else in life, I react with anger or devastation; I let things get the best of me.

I started to really think about that problem; I know so many people that face this same mentality in the moment things go "wrong." Why do we do that? Even when we know God is right there in the trial--big or small--and waiting to love us through it, we face frustration alone. The problem with my series of stressful situations in the past two weeks is that I didn't actually turn to God; I turned to anger, to frustration, to helplessness--these feelings where the moMEnt centers on me, not God. In those moments when things don't go the way we plan or the way we know they should, we find ourselves at a loss. It's quite often our self-centered nature that takes over. For me it's often even finding myself a victim of the situation itself, and this thought sickens me!

With all I have faced in life, with all of the trials and pits God has brought me through, I have always seen my reaction to each challenge as a choice: choose to be a victim or choose to be an overcomer, conquer or be conquered. It is one life philosophy I hold dear, and I have seen the blessings that result from turning to God in those challenges; He carries me through even when I don't know how I will take the next step. Why then do I become a victim and see it as a moMEnt instead of a moMENT? Why do I focus on the impact on ME and not on what it is that I am MEANT to learn from the experience? God wants me to grow, to seek Him, to glorify Him, and each challenge is a chance to do all three at once. There is blessing in the burden--grace in the glitches.

This morning as I read God's Word on the way to church, I found myself in Colossians 3. In the beginning of the chapter Paul talks about making Christ the focus of our lives, and instantly I thought, "Yes! This is what I need to remember for times like this." The first two verses say, "If then you were raised with Christ, seek those things which are above, where Christ is, sitting at the right hand of God. Set your mind on things above, not on things on the earth" (NKJV). This lack of focus is where my negativity begins--where moments defeat me. I must remember to turn to God and not to the failings of this world.

As I read on, though, I read the familiar "put off all these" with a list of ungodly things and the obvious "put on" followed by a list godly actions and ideals (longsuffering being the one that stood out most for me right now), but verses 14-16 hit my heart hardest: "But above all these things put on love, which is the bond of perfection. And let the peace of God rule your hearts, to which also you were called in one body; and be thankful. Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly in all wisdom." As we pulled into the church parking lot, I had tears. God's love is our link to perfection. His peace is the cure to our pains. Thankfulness is the solution to the problem. Wisdom is in God's Word!

This message was reinforced for me as I listened to today's service. As pastor K said, "When God tests his children the purpose is to prove to us that our faith is real, and that God can be trusted," I was so thankful for the trials. In spite of the difficulty of where we may be in a moment or in a series of moments that become months or even years, we have God's favor. He is in our corner! As the Chris Tomlin song lyrics go "The God of angel armies is always by my side"! Sometimes we focus so much on the trial itself that we forget how God works. The outcome of all trials is blessing when we realize that God is with us in the trial. Just as he brought us to the trial, He helps us through the trial when we seek Him, and He deserves the glory at the end of the trial.

As I focus on the moment when things go wrong, my priority becomes the failure. God wants us to focus on His love, not the failures of this world. The most assured success we can have in life is to place our trust in God; Psalm 118:8 says, "It is better to trust in Lord than to put confidence in man" (KJV). I move forward out of (or still in) my series of seriously stressful situations today with renewed trust and faith. Technology will fail us. Children will challenge us. Pain may come. Health may waiver. Death is a certainty. And yet God has it under control, and my hope is in Him.

Revelations 4:11 has crossed my path three times already this month: "You are worth, O Lord, / To receive glory and honor and power; / For You created all things, / And by Your will they exist and were created" (NKJV). At the end of my series of seriously stressful events, I am reminded that God deserves the glory. Today I pray I am a blessing to Him; may I glorify Him in all I do, including the way I react when the moment isn't going my way. May I see how I am meant to grow from each challenge I face.


Tuesday, August 20, 2013

His-tory: The Ten Miracles God Gave Us with Our Son's Birth


Anticipation. It's something we begin to experience from an early age, waiting for that bite of cake or longing to play with a new toy. Birthday presents. First days of school. First friends. First loves. Anticipation is one of the most exciting aspects of the human condition, and each big step in our lives brings more anticipation than the one before it. Driver's License. Graduation. College. Career. Engagement. Marriage. For the most part these anticipated events are all life-changing; we can look at the before and the after and say, "Yes, there is definitely a difference." They are also times at which our lives often pause on some heightened pinnacle of clarity or meaning. A goal achieved. A right of passage attained. Growth. We anticipate these moments knowing that things may never be the same once they arrive. For me, the moments of greatest anticipation have been the births of my two children.



I distinctly remember the instant I first became a mother. I had anticipated his arrival literally for years, and I waited those last nine months knowing that he would forever change who I was. As my husband handed our eight-pound-fourteen-ounce whaling little boy to me, I was flooded with pure joy, and the only words I could find were "hi" and his name. The sounds no more than left my mouth when he opened his eyes and was completely at peace. Captivated, I stared deeply into the hazy, onyx-colored windows to his soul and was lost in the most powerful love I had ever experienced. I felt whole. We were one. It was the single most powerful experience I had ever encountered in my twenty-eight years. Come what may, I knew we belonged to each other, and the years that have followed have taught me more and more about how incredibly sacred that gift is--the belonging between a parent and child.

Naturally, when we found ourselves preparing for our second child, the first moments of anticipation for me as a mother centered around that initial greeting--that finding myself in my child's eyes. We began planning almost immediately after that faint pink line told us to. The most exciting stages of those plans involved our oldest son. Now the big brother, he too would tell us about the things he was anticipating about "the new baby." At my twelve-week appointment he was thrilled to get to see the tiny baby growing inside me, and we were all amazed as we watched the ultrasound monitor--the little one was throwing tiny baby punches like a professional boxer. The fighter. That's what I began to call him.



For the most part, the first two trimesters of the pregnancy were uneventful. Appointments. Routines. Raising an almost-two-year-old energetic boy. Then came week twenty. Our ultrasound was exciting to say the least; we were indeed to expect another boy (news that was received with mixed reviews), and that little boy would barely sit still long enough to take a photo! Completely in character, our little fighter was a mover and a shaker. In meeting with the doctor afterwards, the tone changed from enthusiastic to somber. He informed us that we had two "markers"; my heart almost stopped as my brain took over. What?! Markers for what? Was something wrong with our little boy? Wait just a minute! I tried to focus intensely on his scientific "doctor speak" of an explanation. Apparently there was evidence of renal pyelectasis (an enlargement of part of the kidney, which is often seen in boys) and an echogenic intraventricular focus (a bright spot on the heart). The two of them combined gave us such a minimal increased risk for what the doctor termed "genetic abnormalities" that my husband and I discussed it for half an hour after the appointment and "let it go." My husband's science mind and math-teacher nature gave me peace, but in all honesty, for me it confirmed something in my being; from those first days of my pregnancy I knew something was "different." Call it what you will--crazy, a mother's intuition, paranoia--I just knew things weren't the same. This time the anticipation had anxiety in the mix.

In the meantime I was hired as a teacher in another school district. Let the plan shifting begin! My husband and I planned for everything. Commutes. Budgets. New insurance. New day care. New baby. New. New. New. Plan. Plan. Plan! The big change and excitement was a much needed distraction, and I truly loved my new school; well, I loved it for the six days I got to experience it at least. The plan had failed us. Our little fighter was on a different schedule than we were. Five weeks early, I went into labor--yes, at school. Much in denial, I made plans with my husband for alternate arrangements to get our oldest from day care, waited until the end of the school day, and went to labor and delivery--alone. Much to the protest of friends and family members, I could do this. I mean, I wasn't staying; I didn't want to bother anyone; it was fine!

After a couple of hours of monitoring, the nurse gave me medication to stop the contractions and was preparing to send me on my merry way. Literally seconds after swallowing the pill, my little fighter's heart monitor dropped off. For four minutes his heart rate was irregular and sometimes untraceable. They scrambled, did their triage tricks, and had us both in working order soon after, but I wasn't going anywhere. I now had to stay for an additional two hours for further monitoring. Miracle number one: we weren't going anywhere!

Still in denial, I calmly called my husband and explained what was happening. Annoyed, he began to pack the list of items I relayed and prepared to take our oldest to his parents. At the very least I wasn't doing the hour-long drive home on my own that late at night. I then called my mother to tell her what was going on; she would come to my side while we waited for my husband. Plan? Check! While I waited, I watched the monitor and graded papers; no time wasted, right? The medication to stop the contractions had not proven to be that successful either, so I was really trying to distract myself from the pain and fear. Every once in a while, though, I would notice that the baby's heart monitor line would stop. The alarms never sounded, and no one came rushing in, so I figured it must be fine. Then the nurse happened to walk by and see it happen too; she came in my room trying to be reassuring and went to contact the doctor. Miracle number two: the nurse saw!

My mother arrived and served as a much better distraction from my fears than grading had been; shortly after, my husband walked in. I explained everything to them both, and we waited for more ultrasound testing. The testing was inconclusive. All they knew was that the baby was in intermittent distress, likely from pressure on his umbilical cord. They moved us into a delivery room, and we were given a "choice": have him now or go home (with the "likelihood that he wouldn't survive the next 24 hours"). The nurse had given us plenty of reason not to trust the hospitalist on duty, and I had the "lack of trust" vibe all on my own, but the choice wasn't a choice. We knew what we had to do, but my husband and I both needed to hear the possibilities from the neonatologist. We made the request sometime in the wee hours of the night, and not five minutes later a well-kept but groggy doctor walked into our room. The scientific discussion between he and my husband began; I followed as best as I could with my English-teacher, terrified-mommy mind and asked the questions I needed to have answered. It was the hardest choice we had ever made to that point in our lives, but we made it. Miracle number three: we weren't going home without our baby.

The next several hours were a blur. At some point they gave me medication. At some point I briefly fell asleep. At some point the clock flashed to 6:00AM. Finally, the shift change had arrived! The new nurse, the new doctor, the NICU staff--all were exactly what I needed in the hours to come. We were ready. Change of plans? Yes! But we were passing the test of flexibility. Little did I know at the time that the new plans weren't mine at all. I had no control. Miracle number four: we had a medical staff that put us at ease and a plan that was not our own.

Once things were on the right path, there was no looking back. Our little fighter's delivery was quick and terrifying! The first words out of anyone's mouth were from the doctor, "Whoa! Short cord!" I looked at my baby for the first time, and he was entirely purple. Terror! I remember my husband being rushed to cut the cord and asking if he would cut the doctor's finger. I just wanted to hold my baby! The anticipation! Oblivious to all else, I craned my neck to see his every move. The nurse taking him to his crib. My husband standing over his tiny body. I couldn't see much, but I stared at my husband's face for any sign. Then it came--that spout of water streaming up from the little bed. I laid back with relief, "Is he ok?" My husband's voice was full of confidence and wonder. Yes. He was fine. His distress had been caused by the short umbilical cord, which he was likely tugging on and pushing against. Miracle number five: our little fighter and I had survived what could have been disastrous.



Minutes later, that moment I had anticipated--the being lost in his eyes and belonging to his soul--had come. My husband placed him in my arms. Nothing. I looked directly into his eyes, said "hi" and his name, and saw a vacant stare. My first feelings towards my son were of disappointment. Our first meeting was not what I had dreamed it would be. Was it prematurity? I mean, he really had just been through quite the ordeal. No. Something else. As I examined his face I found it. The bridge of his nose was flatter than I had envisioned. His eyes were almond shaped. The blankness. It consumed me. I wanted to scream, "No. This isn't mine. This isn't my dream. No part of our plan called for this." I felt a hand on my shoulder and turned to my husband, trying to smile. Our little fighter had entered the world in true character--with a strong fight; he was the champion. I had to cling to that. Bleary-eyed and exhausted, we posed for our first photo together. Did I smile? I had to look later to confirm it. I had anticipated the same intense joy I had experienced in becoming the mother to our first son but was instead slapped with harsh reality. Down syndrome.



Seconds after that photo, the neonatal nurse practitioner confirmed my fears. She would later tell me that she had read my face; she knew that I already knew. With care and compassion she congratulated us on our son, told us he was doing well, and then the reality: "Based on the markers from your twenty-week ultrasound and the things we are seeing in him now, we suspect your son may have Down syndrome. We will be taking him to the neonatal intensive care unit for more testing." Tears I had been holding back for what felt years began to silently pour out of my eyes. I nodded in understanding, but it was simply a reflex. What was happening? I felt my husband's hand move from my shoulder and was jerked out of my selfishness. I hated that moment for him. He had just experienced the pride of greeting his second son after the terrifying details that led to his birth, and that joy was stolen from him. I hurt in every corner of my soul. I hurt for him. I hurt for our oldest son. I hurt for me. I hurt for our baby. The pain consumed me. I couldn't breathe, and I couldn't look at him--this tiny, innocent child who needed me--I couldn't even feel him in my arms.

Time became irrelevant. Nothing around me seemed to exist. At some point they took my son from my arms and the next thing I knew they were letting my husband take him to the NICU. Before I knew it, I was again alone. There was a great irony in that understanding. Not eight hours ago I had wanted to be alone--to visit and leave labor and delivery triage without bothering anyone. Now alone felt terminal--felt empty. Soon the silent tears turned into loud, screaming, ugly tears--to the cleansing of a pain that I could not escape. Every piece of my being was broken and numb and lost. The next moment caught me by complete and total surprise as I unconsciously called out, "Why, God?!" Not only had I long since left my path with God when I began college ten years earlier, but questioning God was not something I ever thought it my place to do. In that moment I demanded an answer, and as quickly as I turned to ask, God answered with a quiet, peaceful, "Because YOU are his mother." My tears stopped in that instant. Reassurance. It may have taken me a few months after that point to actually have peace with what God had called me to be on that day, but I knew right there alone in that hospital delivery room that I was my little fighter's mother. He was mine, I was his, and we belonged to each other. Miracle number six: God spoke us into belonging.

After what seemed like an hour, my husband returned. We held each other, cried, and shared. Our fears for his future. Our shame in our reactions. Our pains for our newly formed family of four. Our confusion. Our dreams seemingly destroyed. Looking back at it, there was a great deal of ignorance in it all, but the emotions were raw. It was probably the most honest, pure moment of our lives, and it hurt--we were broken.

My mother opened the door in the midst of it all just to be sure we were ok, and we told her to leave. I know she was angered and worried, but we couldn't face it more than once. We knew we had to tell "the world" the truth but didn't have the words--couldn't do it yet. We longed to hold our oldest child--to know once again the perfection of our family's love. We waited until he was there to let anyone in to see us and told everyone that our youngest was healthy but that there were problems and not to ask questions until our oldest got to see us. When he arrived, we hugged him like never before, smiled at his excitement, and told him that his little brother had arrived. Pure joy! He couldn't wait to see his new baby. My brother took him to a nearby vending machine for a treat while we told everyone about our little fighter's "abnormalities." I was so proud of my husband in those few minutes; I didn't have the words, but he did. His strength and his vulnerability in one sentence, and there it was: the first step in our public path with the unknown. My mother came to hug me, and his parents to him--both assuring us that we could do this. It was a brief but needed comfort.

Soon thereafter I was taken to my hospital room, and we made the long journey down the hallway to the NICU to see our newest family member. I still hadn't experienced that feeling of "wholeness," and a new anticipation began to grow with every floor tile we passed. I couldn't face him. What kind of mother reacts to her son's first glance with disappointment? He deserved better.

Then it happened. We entered the NICU doors--my husband, our oldest son, and I. We rounded the corner, were directed to the right crib, and I found it. Wholeness. In watching the joy and rapture of our oldest son as he looked on in awe at his little brother, I found our family once again. Looking at his little brother's face under the oxygen hood, his little two-year-old voice so proudly said, "J is Buzz Lightyear! To Infinity and Beyond, J!" The words ring through my mind to this day--a motto to remember. Moments later we took our first photo as a family with puffy, tear-stained eyes and smiles that were finally sincere. Miracle number seven: God gave us wholeness in the sweet innocence of a child.



As we headed back to my hospital room, I was amazed at how "normal" everything around us appeared. My world had just shattered, but nothing else had changed. I just didn't understand how it was possible. I had suddenly become "removed" from it all in some way. I just knew we were going to become the people that everyone pitied or didn't understand because our lives were "different." I felt sick from the thought. I didn't want to be on this path. A nurse came to check on me after supper, though, and brought us a poem "Welcome to Holland" by Emily Perl Kingsley. I couldn't read the poem yet; something inside me wouldn't allow me to let the words in, so I didn't even look at the paper. But her story about a family member with Down syndrome gave me hope of acceptance and strength. I was reassured.

Later that night I awoke to tears. Fear had found me once again. I couldn't stop crying for fear that my little fighter would never have friends and that his big brother would suffer as well. Minutes later a nurse entered to check on me. She told me the story of her own sons; the youngest had special needs, but her oldest son's friends stuck by him and defended him no matter what. I was reassured, and as the nurse left I realized that every single one of our own friends had had or would have had a baby the same year as our little fight was born--built in friends--God's design. After reassuring my husband I was going to be fine, I went back to sleep.

The next day I was allowed to attempt to nurse my little one. I was nervous because of all of the wires and monitors connected to him, but I knew nursing. I had done it for a year with my first son, and there was comfort in knowing that at least this part of the plan would be my own. The lactation consultant warned me that because of his prematurity and his "possible" Down syndrome that he may not have the strength and tone to latch on; it was probable that he "just won't be able to do it." Much to my amazement he did--on the first try. Later that same day, our little fighter was doing push ups in his crib; our son, who was supposed to be immobile and have low muscle tone, was stronger than he was supposed to be. His doctor even noticed as she walked by joking, "Wow! That's not low tone at all. We need to make sure the rails are up on his bed!" In that moment I learned never to listen to the "might nots" and "can'ts" that our little fighter may have thrown at him. He could. He would. He will. Again I was reassured. Miracle number eight: God gave me reassurances exactly when I needed them most.




After my own release from the hospital, we spent fifteen more days with our little fighter in the NICU. Early morning arrivals, coaching him through feedings, late night calls to check on him. Juggling two lives between our two children was a challenge, but my husband and I met it head on and saw each other in passing a great deal. There were moments, however, when we would find time together, and one in particular I will never forget. It was in the hospital cafeteria about five days into our adventure, and we had stolen away for a lunch date. We slowly walked around to see the various selections for our meals, paid for our final choices, and made our way to the table. The first few minutes were silent; it was as though we were soaking in the peace. No monitors. No responsibilities. Just the two of us and a simple lunch. Once the conversation began, it was centered around the to-dos and the kiddos but somewhere along the way it took a surprising and amazing shift. I don't remember how we got there or what we were talking about, but I will never forget the words spoken by my husband, the nonbeliever, when he said, "I get it. I understand faith and why people lean on it because right now it's all I have." In our eleven years together we had discussed God and faith many times; I knew where he stood--somewhere far away from God. I also knew where I had been--somewhere with my back turned. Yet in that moment in that cafeteria we were on the same page, walking forward in faith that the God of all things had a plan for our family--a plan that we did not comprehend but a plan that we were ready to be in the middle of. It was peace. Miracle number nine: my nonbeliever husband found his faith.




It has been two years to the day since that first day when our world fell and was reshaped. The lessons and gifts have been around every corner. Not every day has been easy, and not every day has been a burden, but each day has indeed been filled with God's blessings. The ease at which he became a part of our lives. The forgetting about the Down syndrome entirely. The smile that brings the purest joy to a stranger's face. The fears of losing our little fighter to health issues at six months old. The challenges of his many food allergies. The way he makes his friends feel safe and loved. The love he has brought into our lives. The blessings from God manifested in this little life that I once saw as a burden have been endless.



I used to see perfection as something I could prepare enough to attain. A well-developed lesson plan. A spotlessly tidy home. A dream for my family's future. Today I see true perfection regularly as I watch my sons play and grow--when I see God's perfect plan unfolding in our lives. Perfection has never been something attainable through my powers; instead, all along the way it has been God by my side even when I ignored him. It has been God loving me onto a path that He knew I needed. For that I am truly blessed. Miracle number ten: God has forever changed my life and led me to a path I never imagined I would be walking.

Sunday, August 11, 2013

Thesis

As a high school English teacher I am always trying to get my students to dig deeper into ideas, and when it comes to writing I expect the same sort of depth in thesis statements. So it makes sense for me that this is the place God has asked me to start. Who am I?  Why have I created this blog? What will it be about? How did I get to this point?

The short and sweet of the first question is I am a child of God, wife, mother of two (almost three), daughter, sister, friend, teacher, writer, semi-recovering perfectionist. These are some of the labels I can claim at least. Is there more depth to me? Sometimes yes. Sometimes no. In the end, though, I pray that I can glorify my Lord in all that I do, which is the start to the answers for the second and third questions. I have created this blog as an act of obedience to God; as such I will share my testimony, my thoughts, my life. Don't get me wrong, though, I'm not the easily obedient Christian. I should be; I know. I just have a good deal of growing up to do with God. Maybe we can all grow together along the way through this process?

Since I struggle with quickly following the Lord, it won't be surprising that process of getting to this screen on this day has been a long one. Quite honestly, when I heard God speak to my heart about using my gifts to share His love, I was really enthusiastic...for about an hour. Then I started thinking, rationalizing, fearing. Putting myself and my family "out there" was something I truly worried about. What if I offended people? What if I didn't know what to say? What if I wasn't strong enough in scripture? What if I didn't have time to follow through? And most importantly what if I shared something my family would later resent me for?

Fear. It's a powerful thing, yet when God calls us to something we're supposed to have faith, not fear, right? About a year and a half ago I faced this fear for weeks on end. Every time I went to a church service at my home church or in visiting others, I heard the same message connected to sharing our gifts to the glory of God. It was everywhere for me; I even heard it on television sermons, on the radio, or in things I read. I couldn't escape it. Finally, I decided--quite selfishly--that I would share when I had the time. The end. And ignorant. Who was I kidding? I couldn't run from God.

The messages died off in frequency, but the calling still pulled on my heart. I dabbled in sharing from time to time with Facebook posts because, well, that was easy. It wasn't what God wanted, but it was rewarding enough at the time for me, so I was content to wait, not committing to God's plan until "later when..." It had to be a part of my own plan. Then about a month ago our pastor asked my husband and I to share part of our testimony in front of the entire church as part of his message centered on celebrating through our challenges. I was hit with absolute terror--a silly sort of terror that made me laugh at the pastor as he suggested the idea. I couldn't say the right thing or remember the right verses; I wasn't good enough to bring glory to God on a stage! But my husband assured me that I could do it and that we needed to because "we might help someone." I was sold; helping people has always been a point of motivation for me. We shared...at both services...and I was the technological idiot both times, making one mistake or the other with the headset. But it didn't matter. I didn't need to be perfect for God to do His work; our story, even just the small piece we shared about finding God and then later facing the hospitalization of our six-month-old son, touched people. They came to us, messaged us, thanked us, shared their own stories, and we both knew that facing our fears had been a blessing.

I knew God wanted more of me; that calling to share never left my heart. I didn't follow through, though. Then, two weeks later we visited a church nearer to our home, and I heard the message again. "Fan the flame of your gift from God." After our experience with sharing our testimony, I started listening to God a little more this time, and when discussing it with my husband he agreed that I needed to start blogging. I almost didn't believe what I was hearing because it wasn't two years earlier that he was adamantly against the idea. I knew God had been working on his heart too. So I made a plan to start sharing our story when "the time was right."

Are you catching onto a pattern in my life, yet? I'm all about MY timing. I don't know how many times I've learned the lesson that my timing doesn't matter in God's plan, but I still stubbornly think I can control these sorts of things. Hilarious, right? But I digress...

On the first of August that plan changed for me when I awoke to an extremely clear revelation. It was as if God had given me an exact picture of what He wanted me to do. Despite my normal morning grogginess, in an instant I knew the title, description, layout, and even the ideas for this first post. Again, I was excited. It didn't take five minutes for the nerves to take over, though. But I knew I had to get over it, and after a discussion with my best friend later that morning, I had decided that I would start "soon." Relativity. I still only had one foot in the water.

Five days later I was having a rough day, but by the end of it I felt strongly that God wanted me to share that experience. I posted a small testimony on Facebook (my comfort zone) about singing praises to our Lord even in our trials. From the comments I got I was convinced I needed to do more...after things settled down from the start of school in a few weeks. But only four days passed when yesterday God slapped me in the face with reality; a former high school classmate posted on Facebook about how my testimony had lifted her spirits and given her peace; a close friend of mine called me to say she had faced a trial the very next day and immediately went back to read my post. I had an ugly cry for a good hour, but God was extremely clear. NOW was the time!

Getting here has been a journey, and God has broken down many walls in my heart to get through to me, but I know He has a plan. All I have to do is step out in faith and follow him. So...finally...here I am putting things "out there" and trusting in God to do the rest. If I can touch even one life by sharing my story, it will be worth it. Fears aside. Here I go!

Welcome to the beginning! As a child of God, I pray that I may glorify Him and not seek my own desires or be hindered by my own fears. In creating this blog I hope to share God's love and the stories about how He has changed my life, about how He blesses my family, and about how the challenges we face have and will help us to grow into the people He wants us to be. Thank you for joining me on this journey! I can't promise I have all the answers. I can't promise I will never offend anyone. I can't even promise to be an expert. What I can promise, though, is to be open and honest about my life experiences. May God bless this experience, and may He show us His love along the way.