Monday, February 15, 2016

Worth the Wait

We both hear the crying, volume ascending. I'm in the bathroom finishing up getting ready for bed, and Daniel is likely already in bed. He goes in to soothe the unhappy babe.

I can hear his soft melody of grace amazing as I take the few steps into our bedroom, and I pick up the moniter. 

I'm struck, suddenly, at this miracle I'm watching through a tiny little moniter's screen. I see the chair rocking back and forth, two sets of eyes wide and bright in the camera's night vision. I see the little legs crossed, the hand resting on her cheek. I see all the things that make up the faithfulness of God and I'm dumbfounded.

Sometimes we get so caught up in life that we forget where we've come from. We get so trapped in what's happening in our small world that we miss the bigger picture. We lose sight of the important, precious, tender gifts that flow all around us like the melody of a song.

It wasn't all that long ago that I wondered - no, worried - if we'd ever have children. I feared I couldn't carry a baby full-term and felt so trapped in my desire. I hurt for my husband, this wonderful man who I knew in my soul would make the greatest Daddy, feeling as if I was letting him down somehow. As if my ability or inability to have children was the only gift I had to offer his life.

And now here we are. Soul-deep in poo poo diapers, bathtime, little feet learning to take steps, and a little heart whose care has been entrusted to us. Here we are, learning more and more every day what exactly this thing called love really is.

The season of doubt and fear and waiting - so, so much waiting - it took to get us here feels like a lifetime ago now. Like the page of a book that hasn't been read for some time. But it's there. The words are written, the story played out. Life goes on, but the memories remain. They remain now as a reminder of the unimaginable gift we've been given. They serve to tell us that God is good, God is faithful. They whisper of His love, how deep and wide it goes.

Waiting is hard. It's one of the hardest parts of living a life in love with Christ. But it's also an integral part of that relationship with Him. As we look to promises to be fulfilled, we also find ourselves waiting for some sense to be made. Waiting for a nod that we're moving in the right direction or a hand to pull us back if we're moving too fast. Waiting for the waiting itself to be over.

As much as we wait, much is also made of God. It is without fail that these seasons prove His love for us, His love of the Father who wants the very best for His children: Himself. We can't possibly know a life of freedom and joy and eyes to see gifts without seeing that HE is the best part about life. HE is the joy. HE is the freedom. He is the gift.

I look at my daughter and I see His hand. I see the details of her face and know He designed it. 

Gift.

I see the unbreakable bond that grows deeper every day between my husband and his cherished daughter.

Joy.

I see a reflection in the mirror of a woman who once felt helpless, useless even. Who wondered of her purpose. Who now knows she is daughter of the King, co-heir with Christ. Made in His image and loved without measure or conditions. Who knows that her identity isn't determined by what she does or who others say she is but what HE calls her: beloved.

Freedom.

I see the details that make up my life; our family, our home, our friends. Trips to the grocery store, dishes in the sink. Clothes to be folded. Strawberry Shortcake by day and Netflix by night. Toys on the floor and Dr. Seuss books galore. I see the details and I know that it all adds up to one thing: God's faithfulness.

 I look back only to remind myself of where I've come from, where I've been rescued. Where God gave a promise and carried me down the crooked path that lead straight to it. Straight to Him. Straight to His faithfulness.

Waiting is hard. Yea, no denying that. But the arrival? It is worth the wait.

It just is.

Hold on to your hope, even if what remains is just a shred. Look to the Father, your Father, who takes you down a road leading to His pure love. A road that leads to fulfilled promises. A road built with bricks of freedom and love and more gifts than you can count.

So just hold on. Your joy awaits. 






 

Friday, February 5, 2016

Capture


It's been ninety-five days.

Ninety-six sunrises and ninety-five sunsets since my Mama stepped into eternity with Jesus.

Ninety-two days have come and gone since we returned her body to the dust from which it once came.

Not a single day has passed where thoughts of her are absent.

At the beginning, so soon after her passing, the days were long. And a month in, the days seemed longer somehow. Weeks later, they also seemed darker.

But in the midst of those dark, long days: Grace.

God's perfect grace has carried me day after day, moment by moment. His perfect grace lead me to a place of wholeness again. A place of peace and surrender and deep knowing that this - this plan that included the loss of her life - was the better way. It was always the better way and there could have been no plan to compete. This way may have shrouded me in dark days, but this way lead her to eternal light.

A truth of life that none of us want to think about but know we will one day reckon with is the truth of loss. The truth that the physical beings we know to be our families and friends will one day become eternal. The truth that at some point, all we will have left are the remnants of the lives they built: Walls, doors, windows, and a roof. Pictures that speak a hundred words. Memories, both precious and bitter. Music that represents their essence. Movies they loved, books they read. Certain scents.

It may seem like a long list. But compared to having them here? Impossibly short.

Our lives go on after a loss. We feel the void their presence once filled, but life goes on.  Moments come and we wish they were here. Memories flood in that we wish could be changed. Others that we wish we could freeze and live in, just for a moment.

For me, a single photo by my bed serves as reminder of who my Mama was. It was taken on my sixteenth birthday and still sits in the original frame it was placed in ten years ago. The photo was snapped in our front yard. We both smile, the mother and daughter who share such similar features. The mother and daughter who started out the inseparable pair only to one day become strangers; the daughter filled with bitterness. The mother who loved in spite of the daughter's anger-masked-anxiety, who loved with no conditions. The mother-daughter duo who eventually landed in new territory: a place of few words but great forgiveness and surrender. A place trembling with God's redemption. A place where life came full circle: the daughter who was once dressed by the mother now did the dressing.

We look at this picture, Camden and I. Each morning she points to it, excited to hold it in her chubby little hands. She traces her fingers over the three-dimensional roses, taps on my face and then her Mimi's. We talk of her. I share stories. Sometimes I don't speak at all. Sometimes, her Daddy says Camden comes from a long line of strong women.

I can only hope that to be true of my life as it is true of my Mom's.

But while I wait, in what I hope are many, many years before my legacy is left, I live each day. I love my daughter, my husband. I try to memorize the twinkle in Camden's eyes, the way her belly rounds and the infectious and joyful sound of her laugh. I try to remember the way her little body feels in my arms. I watch as light pure fills their being when they lay eyes on each other every afternoon - Camden and her Daddy. I hear the deep, strong voice that prays over our meals, thanking God for breath in our lungs. I witness the strong hands, following the command of a selfless heart, that clean the kitchen after I've cooked dinner, no matter how messy the condition. I listen each night as he reads a story of Camden's choosing and then sings a song. I feel his warmth as he hugs my body close every single night before we drift off to sleep.

My life is good. My life is full. My life is joy.

I live. I live in that goodness, fullness, and joy from God every day. And I look at our picture, my Mama and I. A moment captured.





Loving can hurt
Loving can hurt sometimes
But it's the only thing that I know
When it gets hard
You know it can get hard sometimes
It is the only thing that makes us feel alive

We keep this love in a photograph
We made these memories for ourselves
Where our eyes are never closing
Hearts are never broken
Times forever frozen still

So you can keep me
Inside the pocket of your ripped jeans
Holdin' me closer 'til our eyes meet
You won't ever be alone
Wait for me to come home

Loving can heal
Loving can mend your soul
And it's the only thing that I know, know
I swear it will get easier
Remember that with every piece of ya
And it's the only thing we take with us when we die

We keep this love in this photograph
We made these memories for ourselves
Where our eyes are never closing
Our hearts were never broken
Times forever frozen still

So you can keep me
Inside the pocket of your ripped jeans
Holding me closer 'til our eyes meet
You won't ever be alone

And if you hurt me
That's OK baby, only words bleed
Inside these pages you just hold me
And I won't ever let you go

Wait for me to come home

Wait for me to come home

Wait for me to come home

Wait for me to come home

Oh you can fit me
Inside the necklace you got when you were 16
Next to your heartbeat where I should be
Keep it deep within your soul

And if you hurt me
Well, that's OK baby, only words bleed
Inside these pages you just hold me
And I won't ever let you go

Wait for me to come home

-Ed Sheeran, Photograph