Saturday, April 24, 2010

Letting Go...


If you've ever been a parent (or maybe been in the initial stages of love of any type), you probably know what it's like to want to hold or hug something so tightly that somehow you become a part of it. I know if I had squeezed my children as hard as I wanted to at times, they probably wouldn't have survived it. I think most people have experienced this somewhat strange urge - including my children who themselves have often squeezed things they loved to extinction (see Pets or Playthings? ). Maybe that's where the phrase "loved to death" originated. Anyway, I have these moments with each of my children, and I love them.

This week has been difficult for me in many ways, but I think the biggest challenge was that of Levi's MRI. The actual MRI was difficult for him and me, but the most difficult part of it was the worry over whether or not his brain would be found healthy. I have watched in gut-wrenching heartache as my little boy grips his eyes and cries that he can't see. I've watched him try to run half-blind to a trashcan or bowl so that he can vomit from the pain. I've watched him pinch the bridge of his nose so tightly it turns bright red as he cries that, "It hurts, mommy!" I can't do anything to stop his pain. As his episodes have increased in frequency I've argued with doctors and nurses and tried to get him the attention I felt he needed. I've chewed my tongue half raw in my sleep, and my hair is falling out in clumps. I thought I was okay with it, but my body says something is bothering me.

The results came in Friday that he has a cyst in his brain. I was very thankful it wasn't a tumor, as that was our worst fear. However, as I've started to understand what his cyst could mean for him I've begun to let it bother me again. My little guy is exhibiting symptoms of a cyst that is apparently enlarging. This is likely causing his migraines. The cyst will not go away on its own. It will need watched (probably with more MRI's), and probably will eventually need to be removed - if it is in an operable area. The complexities involved in all of this scare me... for him and for all of us. I like to "borrow trouble", and I keep thinking of how this will effect his quality of life and how it will change the rest of ours. Will we keep home schooling? Will he be able to keep being his normal, active self? How will this change our family? These thoughts make me want to hug him tighter and hold him closer than ever before in his short life. He, of course, understands none of that as he squirms to get out of my grasp and back onto his own agenda.

Non-coincidentally (I'm certain) I had some other trials this week that made me realize that when a mother worries too much and tries too hard to control her children's safety or well-being by her own methods, she crushes them. She leaves them incapable (either emotionally or physically) of meeting their own needs. This starts in childhood, but most of the time it continues as a dysfunction long into adult years and effects the lives and happiness of so many more people than this one, worrisome mother can even imagine.

I love my bed. I snuggle into my covers and my cold pillowcase, and I immediately start to pray. This is a largely pavlovian response that started as early as I can remember. Why? Because my parents didn't stay all night to offer me every comfort I could need. I learned to lean on the Comforter of my soul, and that skill has never served me ill. My relationship with my Heavenly Father deepened from childhood and continues to this day, and I look forward every night to that moment when I hit the covers. Bed is not my danger zone. It's my safe zone. It's not my worry zone. It's my worry-free zone.





I say all this to make sense in my own head of the fact that I could "squeeze" (smother) Levi (and the other children), but the fact is, I wouldn't be squeezing him for him. I would be squeezing him for ME. I would squeeze him, because it makes me feel better. The truth is that isn't loving them. It's loving me. It's giving me a sense that somehow if I follow a certain parenting formula that I'll be able to control their level of safety (mental or spiritual or physical), and that makes me feel better about me and about my ability to control their health and safety. It is my responsibility to provide for their well-being, but those things that are outside of my ability to completely control are also outside of my God-given responsibility. If I dip my toe in the pool of fear then I will start to try to control every thing and everyone around me so that they will be safe inside the bubble I've created for them. Not free... but safe. What about when I follow the formula and fail? What if someone gets epilepsy? What if a brain cyst? Who's to blame? The person this is all about... ME. One second I believe a lie, "I'm the best mother in the world." The next second, I believe the opposite of that lie, "I'm the worst mother in the world." This, of course, is another lie but just as effective at making me completely ineffective as a mother.

But why me? "I buy bottled water and organic food? I give them the right milk. I wash their fruit with Fit. I never microwave plastic. I give them plenty of exercise and minimal T.V." The list goes on and on... Those self-righteous ways we have of controlling our destinies by controlling those of our children. Those things that make us feel superior to "worse" parents. Those things we can drop ever-so-nonchalantly in on conversations with other mothers or on FB statuses so that everyone knows we are an amazing parent. But the sense of security I might take in those things comes crashing down when I have children who are ill. What did I do wrong? Could I have somehow prevented this? What is everyone going to think of me? I, me, my...

Like each of my children, Levi is a gift to me and my husband. He is not ours. He is a loaner. Who knows how many people's lives he will impact - no matter how long he is here on this earth? Only God - the Giver of our gift. I will protect him and try to do best for him, but the result is not in my hands. The goal is not to keep him under my thumb forever in order to make me feel loved and secure. It is to prepare him to go out and impact a world that needs love, compassion, and reconciliation with his Maker. If I make an idol out of any of my children (which incidentally is easy to do because they are my "job" and my "love" and most of my "life"), they are taking a wrongful place in my world, and misery will surely ensue. I'm trying to remember Whose they are and to rest in His plan for their days. This will eventually bring the desired result of all my striving - honor - for their Father and for their parents, but it won't be because of the destiny I controlled into being for them. It will be the one that God had planned for them. I hope they will embrace Him above me, because I will fail them. I will not provide perfectly for their needs. I can't. I can trust the One from whom they are on loan, and He knows the plans He has for them... to prosper and not harm.


With the pressure off of me, I am released to give God the glory for their health and well-being and to cry out to Him in times of fear or disappointment. A dear friend with a chronically ill daughter said to me a few days ago that her daughter was a gift from God, and as I watch this mother give "God" to her daughter, it is a far superior gift than giving her primarily herself. Understanding that I will give my children as much of myself as possible, not shrugging off their needs or displacing them, but if I don't begin to meet a smaller percentage as each year passes then they will always be confused about the ability of a person to meet their needs. As we all find - people are entirely disappointing in the true meeting of needs.

This blog is primarily a sorting of thoughts. I have lost children before in a way - not permanently, but when I got divorced, I lost the ability to have my daughters much of the time. I lost half of their special occasions, half of their weekends, half of their vacations for all of their lives. I remember the devastation of that thought, but it didn't hurt half as much as the reality of it does. When they're gone, their safety is completely beyond my control, and I don't even know where they are or how to get to them if I wanted to get to them. It's like part of my heart is missing. No one is immune to such a scenario, as much as we'd like to think we are. One way or the other, the Lord enabled me to release them - not in bitterness or in apathy, but in total trust that they are not my own, and even if they were with me, they could just as easily become hurt in some way as they could with their father. There is a freedom in trusting God for the safety and well-being of my children. Even as I write that I imagine that I'll be judged by some that I am trying to forego some of the responsibility of having children. But it's the only way I won't drive myself crazy with worry. Now... if I can just stay put.

Monday, April 19, 2010

How Celtic Music Changed My LIfe

So it's 9:30 AM. We tried putting Levi in big-boy underwear this morning. We both entered it optimistically - with the enthusiasm that accompanies (for me) the possible end of another diaper era and (for him) the opportunity to wear "Mater" on his bottom.

I started a little Celtic music a bit earlier this morning, as the girls have been into it lately, and it seems to soothe the sometime savage Levi.

As I was preparing breakfast for the other children, Levi disappeared (unbeknownst to me & SURELY a bad omen for a potty training mom). A few moments later, he was trying to get in the door to the house from the garage. Why had he been in the garage? The odor that accompanied his return left little doubt. As I asked him if he had pooped in the garage, he replied, "Where's Mater?" I responded, "Covered in poop." We went in the bathroom to clean him and his underwear up. Ugh... not a job I relish. However, as I noticed the Celtic music playing in the background I thougt, "This doesn't seem quite so bad. It's like washing out underwear at a Renaissance Fair. That prospect, of course, was filled with much more gaiety than the one I was facing."

While I was handling that, Violet had apparently gone through the trash and eaten some unknown leftovers - as is her customary specialty. However, there just happened to be some accordian music on the Celtic CD, and it gave the air of a French dining experience. Trash to... treasure. Debris to... delectable. Waste to... why waste? Refuse to... how could I refuse? I almost felt like joining her.

Even now I can't help thinking that the Celtic bagpipes might even add a little sobering class to a goldfish funeral.

Not A "Failer"

Computers: On a good day, they can be my best friend - a gift seemingly heaven-sent. On the other hand, on a bad day, they can be the most fiendish instrument of torture, ever to bedevil the days of mankind. We just bought an iMAC, and it is an odd combination of heavenly and straight from the bowels of hell. Avoiding the complexities of computer-speak, as I'm sure any men reading this would be compelled to try to solve this problem for me, let's just say I'm not a complete idiot when it comes to figuring out computers. However tonight, following a round of "stump the condescending Geek Squad guy" and downloading shareware in order to reformat an external hard drive that refuses to be reformatted... ugh... you get the drift. I'm obsessed by it. This machine is conquering me.

After retreating to bed with my proverbial "tail between my legs" resounding in my head was a word... "FAILURE"... an ugly word, to be sure, but one that crops up for me every now and again. I don't even know exactly why. I'm not particularly prone to fail, but the thought leads to a feeling which leads to an action which leads to a result, and on the cycle continues. However, this occasion I was reminded of a time about 6 or 7 years ago. I was riding in a vehicle with Brett & Sadie who was, at the time, somewhere between 2 and 3 years of age. I remember throwing up my hands in frustration and saying to Brett, "Sometimes I just feel like such a F-A-I-L-U-R-E!" Now I spelled, because I didn't want Sadie to pick up on such a negative word. Sadie was an early talker - putting 2-3 words together by 7 months of age. At the time, of course, since she was my first child I was pretty sure she was a genius, but I've since come to find her very bright, along the lines of most children her age I would imagine. I don't consider her particularly advanced. However, that night, from a tiny little voice in a car seat in the back of our van, came these words, "Mom, you're not a 'failer'." Huh? I'm sorry, but how could she have possibly had a clue what I was spelling? I'm not even sure her dad had kept up with me.

This incident was brought starkly to my mind tonight as I struggled over my seeming inadequacy to understand such a simple task. I personally believe that God doesn't allow a single thing into my life that He won't use to grow me, remind me, love me, or discipline me. I know many would disagree with me, but it's an approach to life that has given me peace as I walk along what are sometimes discouraging paths. As long as I believe there is a point to my present circumstances, I find myself much more able to endure them with patience and a positive attitude.

The point is, I AM, in fact, a "failer". I do, at times, fail to do things that I should. I fail to thank someone who deserves it. I fail to encourage a child who needs it. I fail to treat my husband with respect or love. I fail to remove a grilled cheese from the griddle before it gets burned on one side (resulting in a scraping of the burnt part into the trash - hopefully before anyone has noticed it was ever tainted). However, if I were to let those types of events define who I am, I would feel like a failUre all the time. What a difference a "u" can make. "Failers" can learn from their mistakes, but "failures" are too beaten down and full of self-pitty to attempt to rise above that little letter "u".

Maybe it was a miracle that my sweet baby girl spoke that truth into my life all those years ago. What she meant so sweetly still resonates with me clearly today. I'm not a "failure". I am weak, but that's by design. I can thank the Lord for it, because 2 Cor. 12:9-10 says, "9But he said to me, "My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness." Therefore I will boast all the more gladly about my weaknesses, so that Christ's power may rest on me. 10That is why, for Christ's sake, I delight in weaknesses, in insults, in hardships, in persecutions, in difficulties. For when I am weak, then I am strong."

By God's grace, I am certainly STRONG tonight, and that's a much easier word to sleep on. :)