Finding my Voice

It’s been a long time.

I’ve been quiet here for a couple of years now. There have been too many things to say and yet so little ability to articulate those experiences and thoughts, so I froze.

Grief, trauma and broken relationships have a way of stealing a person’s voice – hiding them under a heavy cloak of fear, disillusionment and shame.

And then there is the exhaustion that comes and overtakes and sucks up every last ounce of your resources. Your brain and body kick into conservation mode, desperate to reserve enough energy to make it through the day.

My own story is so intertwined with others’ stories that it feels nearly impossible to figure out how to talk about what is going on inside of me and in my life without revealing too much of someone else’s story.

But I’ll try.

The hard truth is that we – my family and I -are not ok. We haven’t been ok for quite some time now. It feels uncomfortable to just leave that sitting there…but that’s exactly what I’m going to do.

Opening up this page again to start writing is me choosing brave and burying the shame and fear that would like to keep me silent.

I know that I’m not alone. There are more of you out there who are not ok and there is no light at the end of the tunnel in view to run toward.

It’s ok to admit that.

It’s important to admit that.

The fixer in me desperately wants to rush toward the bow tie of this post – to come up with some silver lining to cling to. I’m not denying that the potential for that is here, but I’m saying maybe that’s not what is needed right now.

It has been said of grief, of writing and of art,

“It takes as long as it takes.”

Does anyone else feel a surge of irritation at those words?

Does anyone else also feel a deep and pulsing calm?

Breathe in.

Breathe out.

Drop your shoulders.

“It takes as long as it takes.”

We create these timelines in our minds; goals, expectations and hope are all pinned to that progressive, horizontal line.

But then life comes and sends us spiralling off that line and into some other reality that we have not considered. There doesn’t seem to be any sort of way to measure progress over here.

I used to think that the word faithfulness described an outcome, with positive data and results that I could meaure and analyze and replicate.

I think now that faithfulness describes a state of being. It involves someone practising deep presence and abiding fully in the harsh, delightful, mundane realities of life. It is less about something you do, and more about who you are.

The strength of faithfulness is in our understanding of our identity. Faithfulness is born out of a knowledge that we are deeply, unconditionally loved by God.

It’s almost impossible to measure.

When conducting a science experiment, it’s important to make sure that only a singular variable exists within the experiment. Every component must be identical except for the one that you are planning to change. In this way, we are able to determine whether the impacts observed are truly results of the one component that has shifted.

Our lives as Believers can be explained in similiar language. When we are born again into a saving faith, there is only One component that truly shifts. But suddenly, our identity has changed. With the covering of our sins by the completed work of Jesus, we become heirs to an entirely new existence and reality. We are set free.

However, our physical reality here on earth remains the same. We still exist in a very physical, broken and sin filled world. We still live within the parameters of our own humanity and others’ sinful choices. Every day we wade through the mess of a world that is tainted and decomposing around us. We live inside of human bodies that betray us, constrict us and limit us.

Sanctification is the process in which Jesus takes our surrendered hearts and changes them from one degree of glory to the next. It is the proccess of our minds and hearts being renewed day by day. It is the gradual, patient work of healing and forming new rhythms and choosing gratitude. It includes the physical neurological work of rewiring our brains by the slow, intentional shifting of our daily choices.

When Jesus saves us, He doesn’t save us from the world and all it’s difficulties, but instead promises that our reality within that world is going to change.

We will be changed.

Faithfulness, the way our Father describes it, is simply relationship. It is acknowledging that now we exist within the reality of Emmanuel – God with us. In the middle of our same broken, flawed, sin tainted reality we suddenly have a new Presence and Light. Choosing to cast our weary selves upon that Presence is where faithfulness is found and where the glory of God is revealed to us and others.

Advent came and went a few months ago, and there doesn’t seem to be a break in sight.

No break in the pressing daily realities of parenting my children,

No break in the seemingly steady waves of grief and loss that continue to wash up on our shores,

No break in the hard work of fighting for healing and justice and services,

No break in the layers of trauma that need to be stripped away so that those I love most can experience love and joy.

But Emmanuel – God with us – brings Peace.

Knowing that I am not alone and that He is all about changing me from the inside out helps me fix my eyes on Him instead of our circumstances.

This thing I’m wrestling to the ground might never change.

But I will change – He will make sure of that.

This hard might never get easier.

But I will see it differently – He has promised growth and vitality.

This might be only the beginnning of a very hard, long season.

But I will be granted endurance for one day at a time to trudge through it.

“As we consider our family’s story, our hope is not in a happily ever after, but in knowing the Author.” -Jamie Finn

-AF

Pro Life Meets Grace

I wrote a post a few days ago entitled “Every Life Matters.”

In it I shared my passion for the pro life movement and my firm belief that life begins at conception.

I believe everything I said but it left me with an unsettled feeling that I couldn’t shake. Something just didn’t sit well in my heart.

Was it fear of how others would label me? Discomfort at placing myself so entirely in an unpopular camp? The Spirit’s promptings of the airs of self righteousness that trickled through my words?

Those things for sure, but there was more.

I finally realized, it felt unfinished and unsettling because it was.

This was only half of the story.

I firmly believe that life begins at conception and that from the very first second that life should be protected, advocated for and fought for.

But I also believe that being pro life means advocating for, protecting and fighting for the lives of women, not just babies.

It means not ignoring the stories of the women who feel abortion is their only option, and allowing those stories to drive us to hard questions.

It means advocating for real, viable solutions and accessible support for women struggling with mental health issues.

It means supporting local pregnancy centers in their goal to give women support emotionally, physically and spiritually whether or not they choose to carry out their pregnancy to term.

It means crossing social, economic and racial barriers to reach the hearts of women living out realities I don’t understand or cannot identify with personally.

It means fighting for laws that will offer protection and healing for vulnerable women.

It means grieving with them.

It means listening to their stories and not offering unsolicited advice or uneducated options.

It means offering truth, grace and support to women who have chosen abortion in the past or are choosing abortion now.

It means choosing words and actions that bestow dignity and value on women who are considering abortion.

It means raising young men of integrity who will treat the women in their lives with respect, dignity and honor.

It means surrounding our daughters with both men and women who will protect, empower and validate them to live out their fullest potential.

It means supporting struggling mothers, getting involved in foster care, providing permanency for children who need to leave their first families.

It means grace.

Grace that humbly admits I have few answers to the difficult situations women find themselves in leading up to this decision.

Grace that acknowledges we live in an imperfect, marred world where sin and darkness berate, abuse and destroy.

Grace that sees my own brokenness, fragility and sin.

Grace that covers, forgives and redeems.

Pro Life meets Grace when Jesus enters the scene.

Jesus offers us life abundant, regardless of the wreckage of our lives.

He infuses hope, courage, resiliency and beauty into our mess.

As a Jesus follower, and a pro life advocate, this is the message I want to carry.

~AF

Family of 5

So…in the space of a week my husband and I officially, legally became the parents of 3 children!

First, our 2 gorgeous daughters, whose adoption was finalized on October 16, 2015.

Second, the birth of our son on October 22, 2015.

And then we were a family of 5.

And they lived happily ever after!

Right?

Oh, except for…

crazy hormones,

sleepless nights…which turn into harried mornings where we miss the bus,

attachment issues revisited,

the barrage of colds and flus on stressed out bodies,

the physical recovery after being stretched to 10 cm (have you looked at that on a ruler!?  10 cm!!)

The impossible balance of learning how to divide your time between 3 little people and realizing that means you’re never, ever alone!

The never ending “Can I hold Karter?”…which turns into a competition of

“Is it my turn yet?”

“I think he wants me.”

“Mommy, she won’t give me a turn!”

“Don’t pull his arms!”

“Stop!”

and the inevitable cry of a baby.

Lest you all jump to the conclusion after my last two posts that we are living in some sort of sparkle land filled with rainbows and unicorns I thought I better fill you in on the realities of life around here.

Let me clarify.

We are incredibly blessed and over the moon in love with our little man, but the arrival of a new little person in a home invariably means adjustments for all involved and we are no different.

Throw adoption in the mix and some of you will understand very well what I mean when I say that a new baby triggers all kinds of emotions, memories and insecurities that make their appearance in all kinds of erratic behaviour!  (Aka: a little bird chirping in its nest…really?!?!  Sigh.  Don’t even ask.)  Despite one’s deepest determination to be sensitive and kind and gentle and patient…the notes home, phone calls from school, jealousy, defiance…it all gets old really fast even when you know your child is struggling with feelings of insecurity.  It’s so much easier to say that you’re going to pick your battles and leave the ones that don’t matter.  So much easier.  I’d like to say I’ve responded perfectly every time in the last month, but that would be lying.  I’m never a perfect parent and lack of sleep apparently doesn’t make it easier!

And then there’s the hormones.

They’re actually real!

I really never thought I’d be that Mom that was flooded with all kinds of thoughts and emotions that to anyone else seem completely irrational!

Leaving the hospital I totally had “that” moment.  The one where I froze inside and went, “They’re actually letting me take him home?!”  Which was followed by the intense desire to run back the other way and keep my newborn safe inside the hospital walls.

I had to force myself to let other people hold him the first few days and I could hardly bear to watch him lying somewhere not being held even if he was perfectly peaceful and content.

I didn’t turn off the lamp in the nursery at night for at least a week…just because it felt so dark!

Karter slept in his crib instead of his bassinet for the very first time last night.  One month old.  The difference being only that the bassinet is small and cozy and the crib is just so, so big!

I’ve cried.  A lot.

I’ve been irritable and easily overwhelmed.

I’ve called my sister at 5 o’clock in the afternoon in tears with the words, “I’m a terrible Mom!” and “I am so tired!”

And the crazy thing?

I’ve had such an easy baby!   All this with the sweetest little angel on the planet.  He is so chill and just such a happy, content little guy.

But you know what?

It’s still an adjustment.  It’s still a huge life change.  You’re still inevitably going to go through that moment where you panic mentally and go, “What have I done?!  Can I handle this?!”

But I knew that was coming.  I’ve experienced that moment of panic every single time a new child has entered our home.  And it’s perfectly ok.

What’s made a huge difference is something a friend of mine told me…no, showed me.

With her third child she made a conscious decision while she was pregnant that no matter what, she was going to enjoy this baby!  She was going to hold him as much as possible.  She was not going to complain about the sleepless nights and the aching breasts and the dirty diapers.  She was going to choose to see this tiny human being as God sees him…a wonderfully, beautifully crafted gift meant to be treasured.

I watched her love her little boy so beautifully over the next year, and I saw Jesus in her.

That made a huge impression on me, and I knew I wanted to do that…to feel that.

I wanted to be the Mommy who sees my children as blessings.

To see every moment as one of a kind; a gift I get to enjoy.

So I’ve been trying really hard.

When it’s 2:15 am and I’m bleary eyed in the rocking chair, I’m trying to remember to look down at that little boy and trace the lines of his face.

When I hear his cry while I’m busy I am trying to remember that he is so much more important than anything else I could be doing.

When he poops all over the clean diaper I am just about to put on, the change table, the floor, the door, my hands…I am trying to grin and just shake my head that he got me…again!

When I can hardly see over the car seat perched on my shopping cart I am trying to take the time to notice the joy in the eyes of the old woman who stops to peek at my precious cargo.

I am trying.

To see my children as Jesus saw the ones He scooped up in His arms and loved.

To love my children and offer them grace even when they don’t comply with my schedule or my plans.

To remember that my daughters are still healing, still growing, still learning my love is limitless.

To face the realities of children damaged by trauma and prenatal alcohol exposure with courage and unwavering optimism even when the trenches feel dark.

I am trying to say yes more than no; to ask “Does it really matter?”

To draw her body close for a cuddle even though my personal bubble is screaming not to be touched!

To cheerfully repeat instructions the third, fourth, fifth, tenth time.

And most of all I am trying to count my blessings every day.

I am so incredibly blessed.

That is the one thing I want to sing to the world.  I want everyone that sees me to see in my eyes that these little people are valued.  That their lives are cherished and nurtured.  That I believe they were created in the image of God.

Yes, God.

He has been so good to me.

So are we blissfully revelling in a happily ever after wonderland?

No.

But we are very blessed and honestly…

I wouldn’t trade any of it.

It’s mine, and I’m blessed to own each and every little flaw of our life’s canvas.

We’re real, we’re scarred and we’re a little cranky some days.

Still a masterpiece in the making!

AF