Saturday, July 21, 2012

Butterfly Chronicles Volume 45: Onward Christian Soldier

Dear Zach,

A bad and good day blog all combined.  

How I feel today...

Thinking about the retreat for moms who have a child gone to heaven.  I went.  It was too early from your last day with me.  I left early.
Overwhelmed by their truth, I listened to mother after mother say the second year is harder than the first.  I can’t breathe.  Joy.  I need a joy rabbit trail.  Back to the joy of hope and light and God.  Seven months, one year, three years, nine years, their stories still the same of the heart dulled beating ache, pump after pump, pumping.  And so many with stories so much harder than mine.  The fall is a heavy weight to bear alone.  God, deliver.

Grief aches the body, dehydrates, exhausts, wishes for silence.  How does a person explain grief except to say that it wraps like a straight jacket, loosens, snaps back tighter in a spiraling cycle, neverending.  Paralyzing. If the second year is harder, I don’t know how I can walk through that.  So tired.  So sad.  Needing to write it out, running from the keyboard hands, fingers too heavy to lift to the keys.

I can barely pray.  I want to go home.  “This is not where I belong.”

And then there's how I felt days ago...better, finding joy... 

Dear Zach,
Lately, I've wondered if you pray for us from heaven.  Wouldn't that be something - prayers right in the presence of the King of Kings.  It is a comforting thought.  A thought chosen from joy.

I love you.  I miss you. I'm striving for choosing joy in all kinds of ways - from dabbling in expressing joy in art to stepping out of my comfort zone of isolation to venture back into the peopled world - a place where I've chosen the joy of sitting quietly in a corner watching the world go by - trying to listen and enJOY the stage before me.  This small back into people land step is, I hope, to remain small. Every time it exhausts me into tears when it is over - small steps. I don't want to go back to feeling the rush and pulse of a world out of step, running, running, racing toward an ever far away goal of sitting quietly.  God is in the quiet.  To be in the quiet is the street address of communion, an entangling of soul and spirit and Holy Spirit. Quiet.
Taylor is thrust into the brutal reality of a world gone wild - a job, a people without God, a place to flex Bible muscles and stand on the promises of God.  We watch her.  She grows.  I pray His hedge around her.  She misses you and locks her grief in tight where it hides and curls like smoke from under the barred door, seeking to cover and choke her.  She wrestles and learns who she is in You, Lord. Onward Christian soldier.

Madison dreamed about you.  You told her heaven is really cool because you got to meet God; it's a big place where you can swim and play sports, and you can do whatever you want. You are happy in the dream.  She is happy after the dream.  Gunner learns and listens to her "roll-over" and rolls over.  Onward Christian soldier.

Your daddy.  My hero.  I choose the joy of him. The love of my life; my hands still sweat over the him hero making me his princess.   So much weight this man carries with a character grown from that onward Christian soldier marching.  Heart full to brim bursting, I love this man who so loves you, and he has kept us all together - a sinew of unbreakable bond tied gently around us, holding us to his life.  Onward, onward. 

Life pulses by.  So changed.  Unrecognizable. My God knowing this marching of a Christian soldier is wrought with a love and forgiveness beyond our brains' abiltiy to contain it.  And I don't feel forgiven or worthy of forgiveness - and not of anything to do with you, just knowing the me I am and wondering how could He love me the way He must to forgive me.  I want to feel forgiven from born til dead.  I pray for that feeling of knowing His forgiveness gift.  Maybe I will find the security of feeling forgiveness in choosing joy - in choosing Him.
For a long time before you moved home, I asked God to give me a faith like George Mueller.  Is this His way to grow my faith on skinned knees and brokenhearted?  This growing, I do not like, but joy lights twinkle, there for the grabbing, there for the living.  The ache suffocates.  I reach for joy.  Somedays it hides and I'm too weak to seek.

Each day, we march on, Christians soldiers, broken, but seeking joy.


That's how I felt days ago. 

 Today, I don't feel that way today - at all.

Pray for us if God allows, Zach.  Each day is uphill, I guess, on our road home. I need a joy rabbit trail.  I want to go home.  "This is not where I belong."

Mommy

1 comment:

  1. I do not think the second year is the hardest. It is just different from the first. It is learning the new normal.

    I have found the most difficult times come when I am cruising along because I am "okay"... then I begin to rely on myself more than God. I become too busy to spend time in His Word or talk with Him on a regular basis. And that is what makes it hard for me.

    I know everyone's journey is unique, but do not lose heart or fear what is ahead. Our GOD is the same, even if we falter and sway from day to day!

    It gets less hard.

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