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Archive for Heartbreak

Why the First Day of School is My “After”

By Jane · Comments (18)
Tuesday, September 4th, 2012

In her book Heart of the Matter, New York Times Bestselling Author Emily Giffin gently bathes light on something we’ve probably all had to deal with at some time or another: the before and after moment in life that splits our story in two.

She writes:

“Whenever I hear of someone else’s tragedy, I do not dwell on the accident or diagnosis, or even the initial shock waves or aftermath of grief. Instead, I find myself reconstructing those final ordinary moments. Moments that make up our lives. Moments that were blissfully taken for granted—and that likely would have been forgotten altogether but for what followed. The before snapshots.” (p.1)

Last night, staring into a drowning darkness, I felt the same way.

Only not because of a diagnosis or, as in the book, brewing marital trouble, but because I realized that my decade-long stint as a mom of young children was officially over. This fall, all three of our children are off to school, and yesterday was my last “before.” My last day of things being “the way they were.” Today is the “after.”

My mornings of sitting snuggly on the couch with a stack of library books: over.

My afternoons of pushing a cart full of kids up and down the aisles in Target: over.

Days of a noisy house and little voices yelling for help and egg shells cracked into my cookie dough: all over.

I wept out the kind of grief that comes when you’ve wrung yourself out and lay spent for the good of another… and then have to withdraw. Flip a switch. Change paths. Let go.

For more than a decade my life has been a satellite in the orbit of motherhood, circling around these small birds, knowing there’d come a day when they’d all take wing.

And it is so hard. And it kills me to release them.

Not because I’m longing for more sippy cups or another round at pregnancy. Not because I don’t want them to grow up or because I’ve “lost my identity.”

None of those.

It’s because raising my kids has been my joy. Being with them and sharing moments of wonder and discovery have forever captured my heart. And though I’ll never stop mothering or being their mom, my role has shifted and my place here has changed.

The Lord brought to mind a verse last night:

Hebrews 12:2

New International Version
Let us fix our eyes on Jesus, the author and perfecter of our faith, who for the joy set before him endured the cross, scorning its shame, and sat down at the right hand of the throne of God.

I started thinking about Christ and his life here on earth. I thought about all the love he showed to others, about the teaching he did and the miracles he performed — and that despite knowing of the heartbreak that awaited him on the cross — he counted it all a joy.

While I would never compare myself in such a way to Jesus, I thought about those words and about how they resonate in a new way today for me as a mom. Whenever you share your whole heart with someone else — or three little “someone else’s” — pain is assured.

And despite knowing this, I counted it all a joy. 

I went in with eyes wide open, loving every moment. Storing them up in my heart. Taking pictures in my mind’s eye of pigtails in the wind and capes on training wheels.

And I am so grateful.

Utterly grateful…for each day my birds were in our nest.

Comments (18)
Categories : Career, challenging the status quo, Chores/Duties/Jobs, Deep Thoughts, Family, Finding Balance in Life, Growing Pains, Heartbreak, Kids in School, Matters of the Heart, Motherhood/Mommy Duties, Seasons of Life, Stay-At-Home-Mom/Working Mom
Tags : back-to-school, going back to school, parenting, raising kids, stay at home moms, work from home moms

Guest Posting at Jeff Goins, Writer

By Jane · Comments (1)
Friday, May 18th, 2012

It’s such a joy to be guest posting today over at Jeff Goins, one of my favorite bloggers when it comes to writing and the craft of making words sing. I’m telling a story of a book deal gone wrong and what I learned from the experience. Please take a look!

Comments (1)
Categories : Books, Career, Heartbreak, Stay-At-Home-Mom/Working Mom, Work, writing/work
Tags : book deals, Jeff Goins

How Important Is My Happiness? Or Yours?

By Jane · Comments (0)
Thursday, April 19th, 2012

click photo for credit

The past few weeks have proven to be full of wrinkles and unforeseen changes. My emotions seem to move across the spectrum from frustration to sadness, from worry to the gray, undefinable weight of pondering late into the night.

Have you been there?

In the midst of all I feel God saying to me holiness…not happiness.

What matters more than my momentary smile, eruption of laughter, or evening levity is my pursuit of holiness.

That doesn’t mean perfection. It doesn’t mean that I’ll get it all neat and tidy and flawless. It certainly doesn’t mean that I’m better than you.

What it does mean is that God values our sanctification. He values us drawing near to Him so we can better be like him. Better know Him.

If bumps in the road can bring about godliness and right-living, then so be it.

Happiness-schmappiness?

Yes. If it means holiness, a resounding yes.

What do you think? Does God care about our happiness?

 

Comments (0)
Categories : Deep Thoughts, Faith, God, Heartbreak, Matters of the Heart
Tags : holiness, sanctification

Hands

By Jane · Comments (0)
Sunday, February 26th, 2012

Do you ever ponder whether dreams come to you randomly or if God sends them for a reason? And if so, what are the reasons?

A few nights ago I had another dream about my grandma. This time it wasn’t jarring or haunting in the way that makes you bolt upright in bed, head trapped in a fog between reality and confusion.

No, this time it was peaceful. This time, it was sweet.

I remember being seated next to her on the beige sofa that once divided her small, assisted living apartment in half; afghan stretched meticulously across the back and tucked into the creases. Reaching out, I took her hand in my own, noting the way that years leave their mark on skin and veins.

I turned it over and over, studying the birthstone ring she wore to mark the lives of her four children. I studied the age spots and freckles I knew well; all markers in the march through decades.

I pressed into the soft spots I remember touching when I was young while sitting beside her in church; I marveled at the smooth, papery velum that wrapped around her bones and held her life inside.

We sat together: her and I, suspended in this dream that would help me remember and not forget.

We sat in the stillness with sheer drapes drawn and silky light filtering in, dust dancing on slanted rays.

And I felt, for a moment, as though I hadn’t lost her.

As though the hands I’ve warmed time and again would still reach out for me.

As though she were still with me.

And I woke up with God tenderly whispering that, perhaps, in many ways, she still is.

 

Comments (0)
Categories : Compassion, Deep Thoughts, dreams, Dreams & Memories, Faith, Family, Heartbreak
Tags : death of grandmother, dreams, grandma's hands, grief

Haunted

By Jane · Comments (2)
Wednesday, January 4th, 2012

Nightmares are picking the scabs of grief: my grandma has been showing up in my dreams in the most gut-wrenching ways.

In her coffin.

Or standing behind a window pane, dressed in gharish clothes, beckoning me.

I run to her, but instead of her beloved and familiar scent of powder and perfume, my nose is filled with pungent formaldehyde.

Sleep eludes and my face presses into the pillow that catches my tears.

I wake up sobbing, wanting so badly to call her. To hear her voice. To feel the warmth of her smooth hands in my own; to study the maze of raised veins that map her years and sustain her.

But I can’t.

Instead I pick up the phone and call the life once-removed from grandma: my mom.

I cry into the air, giving birth to regrets and wishing to return to May when she was next to me laughing, white curls hugging the nape of her neck.

Mom says that instead of regretting, instead of longing to call the grave, I should remember to reach out to loved ones still here. I should seize the opportunity to send a note or connect with people God lays on my heart.

It sounds trite, but I know she’s right.

It won’t make the nightmares stop.

But it does help me to remember to love with all my might, right here. Right now.

No regrets…just love.

 

 

 

Comments (2)
Categories : dreams, Family, Heartbreak, Uncategorized
Tags : dreams, grieving a loss, losing grandma, nightmares

More Than Our Remains

By Jane · Comments (3)
Thursday, December 8th, 2011

A week ago I wouldn’t have dreamed that a life could be so quickly reduced to two cardboard boxes sitting on a kitchen floor. But after grandma’s funeral, I found myself pulled up to the remnants of her life now contained within the tidy margins of something barely larger than a banana crate.

My uncles had arrived early to empty her room at the assisted living center; sofa and chairs and tables and bookshelves — all part of her daily landscape, now sent to the thrift center she had served for years. Now they would press into another landscape; lovingly tended and dusted by another set of hands.

Sifting through the remains brought a fresh wave of tears:

A gift I had made for her 80th birthday;

A locket stuffed with tiny pictures;

A coat that still carried her scent;

Her wedding album.

Amidst it all I heard God whisper…”This isn’t the end…”

Friends, I am so grateful that life isn’t merely a collection of photographs and boxes of memories.

I am so grateful that we are not defined by temporal things…things that children and grandchildren are eager to discard. 

I am so grateful that God promises a new life more beautiful than we can imagine; a starting over more perfect than we can conceive in the smallness of our earthly imaginations.

Thanks be to God for his indescribable gift! (I Cor 9:15)

 

 

 

 

Comments (3)
Categories : Deep Thoughts, Faith, Family, gratitude, Heartbreak, Uncategorized
Tags : end of life, eternal life, funerals, losing grandma, Salvation, thoughts on dying

Death Dew

By Jane · Comments (16)
Tuesday, November 29th, 2011

It’s impossible to cage my memories within the confines of printed letters. Grandma and Grandpa conjure moments trapped in time; with distance the culprit of our separate lives, days spent together were precious–set tenderly on the shelf of my heart to re-open and re-examine in the privacy of the months that passed between.

Today is one of those days.

I remember shoveling snow with my dad and brother when I was probably no more than eight years old. Flakes covered the ground in wild confetti, snowsuits swirling in the dark of a winter evening.

The melted snow on my eyelashes was illumined suddenly when unannounced headlights split the veil of night: my grandparents had driven across five states and over twelve hours to surprise us. I can feel the love swell even now as it did then. To think that they missed us so much takes my breath away.

I am eight again.

I remember the familiar creak of printed orange linoleum covering four stairs from the back door to her kitchen. Notes scrawled on her cutting board, coffee and humming in the air. The island on casters. The candy dish whose glass clapped and collided and gave me away.

I remember the lunch siren in her farming community, calling men in from the fields and grubby children in from the lawn. Calling me to her side.

I remember running and hugging her so tight that I knocked her over on this sidewalk, at this house. Her home for sixty years and more.

Tomorrow she will turn 84.

But today the death dew threatens to lay cold.

They’re moving her to another hospital as I write. As the tears sting my eyes and wash my cheeks.

They’re waiting for her to die.

And I know a part of me will die, too.

How will I say goodbye to someone I love so dearly?

How can I thank her for the way she listened, for the way she showed me Jesus, for the ways she made me feel special?

Next time I drive those streets and pass that house and sit in the pews of her church will be at her funeral. I try to celebrate her Homecoming, but all I think about is the eight-year old inside me, longing for grandma. Longing to bury my face in the white curls at her neck, breathing in the smell that was uniquely hers.

I think about seeing her from our back window as we drove away last spring, standing still and fragile and small. Maybe part of me knew it then: it wouldn’t be long. Jesus was drawer closer.

The last time I saw grandma | May 2011

For all my tears I know she is dancing inside. Ready for heaven, ready to see Grandpa.

For all my tears I can almost hear her singing. And I know without a doubt–if ever she loved Him, indeed, it is now.

I’ll love Thee in life, I will love Thee in death,
And praise Thee as long as Thou lendest me breath;
And say when the death dew lies cold on my brow,
If ever I loved Thee, my Jesus, ’tis now.

Comments (16)
Categories : Deep Thoughts, Family, Heartbreak, Matters of the Heart, Seasons of Life, Uncategorized
Tags : childhood memories, death of grandma, grandmothers, Minnesota, My Jesus I Love Thee lyrics

…and Her Unborn Child

By Jane · Comments (8)
Sunday, October 30th, 2011

This past September we had the wonderful opportunity to travel to New York City with dear friends to take in the city and enjoy some time away. One of the highlights was a Friday morning spent at Ground Zero’s 9/11 Memorial.

In a moment of serendipitous beauty, we were able to get tickets and felt incredibly grateful for the opportunity to reflect on the events of that day on the sacred ground where so many lost their lives to unchecked hatred; where countless tears were shed, symbolized now by the cascades of tiny waterfalls raining down over the footprints of the Towers.

With the sun climbing higher, we decided to walk the perimeter of each of the two pools to honor the names etched deep into the bronze walls of the memorial. As our hands moved along the smooth metal, we brushed up against this and let our own tears come…

“…and her unborn child.” 

Allow the grief of that to settle in on your shoulders. Feel the weight of it.

And then feel the duplicity of our world.

This memorial was funded by private donations, not the government. However, the fact we can call this unborn child a child—and not “tissue” or “fetus” or “embryo,” and then etch those words in bronze at what will undoubtedly become a National Monument, raises more than a few questions.

How is it that in that hallowed space we speak the truth and honor the lost life of an unborn child, yet the aborted child is not honored—or even acknowledged as a child?  

Is it because the 9/11 mother did not exercise choice over the destiny of her child, whereas a woman choosing abortion does—and therefore the loss is not to be mourned?

How is it the world misses this hypocrisy? This duality of thought? 

We saw these words more than once, connected to the name of more than one mother-to-be.

And each time, her unborn child was honored; named, if not in a literal sense, in the sense that space was dedicated to remembering the small, growing life.

Those babies were named, and acknowledged, and grieved.

And I wonder how long we will continue, as a nation, to look the other way, all the while failing to do so for millions of others who go unnamed.

How long?

 

 

 

Comments (8)
Categories : Abortion, Compassion, Controversy, Deep Thoughts, God, Heartbreak, Matters of the Heart, Our Nation, Our World, Social Justice, Uncategorized
Tags : 9/11 Memorial, abortion, choice, Ground Zero, life, NYC, Twin Towers, unborn child, unborn children, World Trade Center

Thoughts on 9/11

By Jane · Comments (2)
Monday, September 12th, 2011

Over the past several days I’ve watched a handful of 9/11 specials, cried a bucket of tears, and tried to imagine how in the world such hate-filled evil filtered through the hands of God and fell to earth that September morning.

Why was killing the best way for terrorists to package their message?

How was such unrestrained hatred even possible?

And how can such a worldview offer any hope or joy to its ascribers?

Watching those shows and looking into the faces of children born after the disaster, now ten years old and filling a split screen next to their lost fathers, one cannot help but think of what those dads have missed. One cannot fathom the kind of hole that burrows without end through the lives of their kids.

Ten years without knowing the steady hand of a daddy; ten years without a hug from strong arms or the scratch of whiskers accompanying bedtime kisses.

And for the wives, as this documentary featured: a decade of wondering and explaining to sons and daughters why their dad would never walk through the door again.

The pain and the echo of unanswerable questions seems an unbearable burden.

Tonight at bedtime I was faced with some of those same questions. I tried to explain to my own children how anyone could hate so thoroughly; how anyone could be so determined to rise up against another worldview that death was deemed honorable. Necessary.

Although we know slivers and snippets of that day, the shape of  its story still does not fit within the confines of my brain. It cannot be kneaded or massaged to squeeze into my heart.

Instead, it lies on the floor like a mass of charred remains, blackened by the sickening evil that birthed it. It casts the ugly shadow of hatred that gathers along the edges of the world, stiffening the fringes with snarling lips and hot breath.

I can only pray for a better tomorrow. For a new decade. For a world that is cracked open with the brilliant shining light of Christ. For a world that allows the scales to fall away so that truth can be proclaimed to open ears and receptive hearts.

Join me in praying for that day when light truly overcomes all darkness.

[art credit]

Comments (2)
Categories : Compassion, Deep Thoughts, Faith, God, Heartbreak, Matters of the Heart, Prayer, Seasons of Life, Social Justice, Uncategorized
Tags : 9/11, NYC Attacks, September 11, Twin Towers, World Trade Centers

Living with Paradox

By Jane · Comments (1)
Wednesday, July 27th, 2011

Monday began as an exciting day around these parts:

*High heels helped me weave a trail of bold job hunting in our neighboring city.

*My husband came home with exciting news from his employer, and then went on to be a featured caller on a   national talk-radio show.

*We feverishly planned the epic visit of our dear friends from Washington–and wanted everything to be perfect: pantry stocked, beds adorned with fresh linens, small tokens of welcome awaiting their arrival.

*My generally stoic inbox chimed the arrival of an email that unfurled my wings even further; a small grace that bloomed into a bigger blessing.

Yes, Monday was a happy day here, until my heart slammed into the unflinching wall of paradox. I heard the news that one of my favorite college professors and a foundational part of my past church community died suddenly after a terrifically short fight with cancer.

From the pieces I was able to put together, she left this world just weeks after discovering the name for the war raging inside. At such a young age, how could it be?

How can it be, Lord?

As I relayed this to my dad on the phone, I said, “I know age doesn’t matter when it comes to death–you’re not guaranteed to live a long life–but this is just so hard to understand.”

But do I really believe that? That age doesn’t matter? Isn’t it true that somewhere, if I’m honest, I kind of DO expect to live into my 80′s, to love my husband after my hair turns gray, and to rub BenGay into aching knees while I rock on the porch?

I have no right to expect those things, but I do.

Even though I acknowledge that it’s completely possible and in the realm of God’s sovereignty to take me at any time, never do I reframe my life and call for a stage-left-exit at 57.

It’s hard to understand, just as it’s hard to understand men who hang innocent children. Or famine wielding a merciless sword across a scorched and impoverished land, ending the lives of millions who might go on to be compassionate world-changers themselves.

And as those nightmares set up a tent in my mind, I come home to joy and excitement and wonder how such a chasm can exist.

I come home to paradox, and pray to understand.

 

 

Comments (1)
Categories : Compassion, God, gratitude, Heartbreak, Matters of the Heart, Seasons of Life
Tags : 8 year old boy hung by militants, afghanistan, Africa, CNN, death of professor, famine, heartbreak, joy, paradox, terrorism
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