Sunday, May 10, 2015

A Tribute To My Mother

On March 27th my sister called me early in the morning saying that our mother had stopped breathing during the night and was gone.  She and my middle son had just spent several days with her and had left the previous evening.  They had thought they had seen an improvement with her and were positive about her future.  They had even had a providential conversation about her wishes for her funeral. 

Mom's biggest driving force was her independence.  She wanted to be in charge of her own life, and refused to budge on that point.  Who really knows why your life ends when it does, but I am sure the idea of not going back to her homey apartment with her cat and car and TV was discouraging to her.  She had spoken often lately about how much she missed her own mother, and I think the prospect of that reunion gave her hope. 

My mother's steadfast refusal to give up any of her independence,  her very stubborn insistence on the path that she chose for herself was both a problem in our relationship and one of the reasons for this tribute. 

My dad died when I was 12.  We were living in Houston and Mom decided we needed to be closer to family, so we moved to Rolla, Missouri where her parents and sister lived.  I know I was not easy to be with during that transition.  I hated Missouri, I missed my friends in Houston, and thought Rolla was a "stupid town, with nothing to do".  I even convinced myself that I was going to spend our first Missouri Christmas in Houston.  I made a chart with the days numbered and took great delight in marking off the days.  With somewhere about 10 days to go, Mom told me I wasn't going. There was lots of door slamming for a while. 

Mom wanted my sister and I to have a solid Christian background, so she found a church that had a school and enrolled us in it.  This was not a popular decision, either.  They wore UNIFORMS in that school.  Skirts and vests.  It was awful.  Our school was on top of a tire store, and the whole town make fun of us. 

But there was no talking her out of it.  She had made up her mind that this was the direction to take, and she took it, dragging us along with her.  Who is to say if it was the right or wrong choice.  I do know that she gave up the opportunity to get a good paying job so that she could be the secretary for the school/church.  I know that my sister and I probably paid more attention to learning than we would have in the public schools.  I know that the opportunities to get into trouble for me were seriously limited. 

As I grew older, got married and had children, my relationship with my mother grew more complicated.  She had a lot of influence over me, and that clashed with my husband.  When I tried to become more independent, that was hurtful to her, and that caused problems as well.  Eventually, I think we found a comfortable middle ground, and she was closely involved in my kid's lives.

In thinking about her past, I don't think I gave her the credit she deserved.  She lost her husband and moved her children with her to a new place.  She was fierce in her protection of us, and made us her life's work.  It didn't matter who she offended, if she was convinced that her plan was the right one, she never waivered. 

She successfully raised two teenaged girls, supported us financially and emotionally, created an environment that convinced us we could do anything we wanted.  My mother was a powerful ally and a very strong woman. I am grateful that she was my mother. 

Tuesday, March 17, 2015

5 YEARS

Tomorrow will mark 5 years since Jason died.  Even as I write that, I can feel the downward spiral of denial and I can hear my own voice yelling, "No! No!"

How can that beautiful child born to me be gone? Memories flash in my brain.  I can't breath and my eyes are overflowing again. 

The 5 stages of grief: denial, anger, bargaining, depression and acceptance.

What little I've read about these stages insists that the order is not necessary, nor is there a fixed or equal time given to any particular sage.  That's good, because, while I have dabbled in all these responses, the one I live in most is denial.

"You have to move on." "Life is for the living."  These stupid cliches are nevertheless true.  I still have to get up everyday, interact with other people, continue to grow and learn so I can help others walking through the valley of the shadow of death.  Those who, although they may not have experienced the death of a close loved one, still grieve and hurt and are stuck where they are.  My husband is a big believer and encourager that God uses the difficulties we have faced to teach us to lend a hand to those going through what we did. It's a positive position and gets me out of my own sadness. Sometimes it's all I can do to walk on.  Sometimes I just put my head down and cry and grieve and yell at God.

In moving on, once again I fear that I will the loose the essential Jason.  I will remake him using rose colored glasses as my tool.

The last time I saw him was Christmas 2009.  All the kids were in San Antonio with us for the last time.  Because Christmas and winter coincide, schedules got mixed up and we were not able to spend as much time together as we had planned.  When Jason finally got here, I grabbed him and hugged him and didn't want to let him go.  Here's the part I have never told anyone: he pushed me away.  I am certain he did that because he was cranky and needed a cigarette. My logical, conscious mind knows this.  But my soul still hurts.  I still feel him brushing past me to make for the nearest exit.  I would like the opportunity to talk to him about that.

As a matter-of-fact - this is a line of thought that started this past Christmas - I would like the opportunity to travel to the past.  Just certain times that maybe had more of an impact on future events than others.  Partly to fix damage I did to my children and partly to fix damage my own thoughts did to me.

Because I thought I was at fault for Jason pushing me away - I must have hugged him too long - in the effort to be completely truthful, I knew that I was not at fault.  Clicking back through the pictures I've taken in my mind, the ones where I felt failure, I would like to grab that girl Leigh's hand, look her in the eye and tell her, "You are doing the best you can.  You yield your children to God everyday and work tirelessly to put good things in their lives."

So my next task is to let go of my "failures".  To remember that my efforts were inspired by a desire for the best for my kids.

Jason, I love you.  I miss you.  I want to put my arms around you and squeeze you so that you can't get away. I can't wait to see you again. 


Friday, March 14, 2014

Fear

Fear has been a primary component of what compels me to behave as I do for as long as I can remember.  I often hear my mother's voice in my head, "What if this happens? What if they leave me?  What if we run out of money? What if a terrible accident happens that could have been prevented because I didn't do what I was supposed to?"  These thoughts were wrapped tightly to an almost superstitious belief that my actions dictated the outcome of things impossible to control.  It was the hope that if I planned for the worst, it probably wouldn't happen.

In my sane mind, I knew this wasn't true.  It nevertheless directed my internal monologue most of my days, as I look back on my life now.

Did that fear, the thoughts of horrendous outcomes and tragedy protect me?  Certainly not.  What it did do was rob me of the joy that I could have had in countless moments.

It makes me mad now to think of the captivity that fear kept me in.  Fear kept me from enjoying fully the childhood of my children.  It kept me bound in negative places that were harmful to my soul.  I was a prisoner of possible bad things.  Possible.  But most of those things didn't happen.  Some did.  I, however, was unable to prevent the bad things with all that fear for all those years.

I began this line of thought several weeks ago.  It is my habit to listen to radio shows while I'm working; mostly political shows that predict dire situations for my country, for my savings account, for my culture.  I listen because I want to be informed about the world, and I find that the shows I listen to are both "entertaining and enlightening".  Largely, I am not depressed by the information I'm hearing.  Concerned is more the emotion generated, as well as having some talking points for interesting conversations.

I do have to be on guard, however.  It is possible, after a large dose of such negative predictions and warnings to loose hope.  This is where I found myself several weeks ago.

Here's what I do now, when I feel that familiar dread creeping into my brain: I stop it. Here's what I say to my mind when I start to be afraid: "God is in control and He loves me."  My years of practice in thinking of all possible tragedies has given me plenty of imagination.  Those are the times that I put on the mental brakes and give it to God.

The four year anniversary of Jason's death is approaching.  In 2013 I lost four people very dear to me.  And death is not the only way to loose someone that you love. Sometimes they move and you don't get to share your life with those loved ones like you have.  

I can't live everyday with the expectation of sadness.  That is not the kind of life God wants for me.  I also can not protect myself from pain.  But I will not allow fear to keep me from those relationships that may possibly end.  I will not let it. I am through being a captive to fear. I will remember that He is my provider.  I will listen for His voice saying, "I'm with you."

Saturday, December 14, 2013

Omniscient God

"How did we get here?" My sister asked that of me at Jason's funeral.  I think what she meant was that we started with this beautiful, smart, funny, loving boy and ended at a funeral chapel before he was 26.  Where did we fail him?  How could things have gone so horribly wrong?

Christmas is a brutal time of year.  The thoughts and memories I can successfully ignore during most of the year bombard me when I get out the ornaments that we made.  Favorite decorations evoke scenes in my mind that are hard to push away.  The usual distractions of socializing, work, reading, TV, whatever, are not effective and I've cried more secret tears than I have in months.

I try to replace the emotional thoughts with practical, logical ones. "Things weren't as rosy as you are remembering." "You don't know where/how he would be if he were still alive." "He's free now of the things that hurt him in life."  All true but powerless to stop the longing just to see, touch, smell him.

During this year, I've lost some people very close to me, prompting me to question closely God's mercy.  One after another, they died, quickly and unexpectedly.  I shared my belief that God is omnipotent and omniscient, but I didn't understand His "higher ways" with the sister of my best friend, who died in September.  She is a believer, but her response was, "Sometimes bad things just happen."

I suspect that was comforting to her, otherwise would she say it?  But it made me feel like life was chaotic and out of control, like a train gone off the tracks.

If God is real, if He is our Maker and our Father, then things don't "just happen".  The role of God dictates His planning and execution of the events in our lives.  Our reactions to those events are controlled by our free will, but He is the author.  This brings me to the conclusion that He must have a plan; He meant something good to come out of pain.  Maybe I'm supposed to learn something.  Another grieving friend said she didn't think she had learned anything for her loss, and that nothing good came from the death of a child.

I've recently become acquainted with another story of loss - the unexpected death of a young girl and the unbelievable strength and optimism displayed by the members of her family.  While not mitigating their sorrow, I'm sure, they have been able to help others in their daughter's name.

Maybe that is something I can learn.  I find that I don't look at people the same way I did before Jason's last years, the years he spent with the "outcasts" of our community.  I'm drawn to the ones that need family.  I'm driven to make a family for them.  Not fulltime, not to exclude their real families, but to maybe fill in some gaps.

While walking with a co-worker the other day, we were laughing about our various infirmities - my feet, his knees, and I said, "I guess that's the price you pay for living."  We don't get through this ride without injury.  I want to make those wounds count for something.

Merry Christmas.  Hug on the people God has put in your life and enjoy each little minute you can.

Sunday, July 7, 2013

Vulnerability

Nothing in my experience has made me more vulnerable than being a parent.  From the moment Jason was born, I became hostage to another person.  His health, safety, happiness became central to my contentment.  When my children were young, I worried about things like their falling down, or getting sick.  Then the relationship things started - what influence their friends have on them, do they have any friends...

In some ways, that's the hardest.  You have some influence when they are little, but that, rightly, diminishes as they get older.

I'm in the phase now when Andrew and Emily are well on the road to adulthood.  They are making their own decisions, choosing their own paths.  It's my role to be a cheerleader and a shoulder to cry on - an ear for a rant session.  My advice is seldom sought, nor is it appreciated when offered. The time between visits is long, and the visits are short.  Phone calls are infrequent.  You hear the highlights of their lives, and not the daily experiences that add up to real life.

I've struggled with living in the past.  In my quest for "moving on", I refocus those thoughts on present events.  Sometimes that's successful, often not.  Today, I cleaned out my closet and found a couple of boxes of memories.  One was old cards, but the devastating one contained pictures.  Random pictures to remind me that I used to have children. That I used to know them, and I mattered to them.

I realize how pathetic that sounds, believe me.  I had my finger on the backspace key, but what is the point of this blog if I'm not going to be honest.

I like to think of myself as a strong person.  I have survived many disappointments and grief along the road.  Survived.  I'm still breathing and functioning like a rational person.  But there are some holes that never get filled.  And maybe they won't.

I am not sorry to have been a mother.  I'm delighted in my children, even when they are misguided.  Even when I disagree with them.  Missing Jason often consists of wondering what his life would be like now, and the conversations we would have about his experiences.  I'm certain I would miss out on the daily events of his life, just as I do with Andrew and Emily.

So, I guess I will always be vulnerable.  Probably I will always wish for more involvement in their lives.  That's being a mom.

Here's some hope, though:

Why am I discouraged?  Why is my heart so sad?
I will put my hope in God! I will praise him again - my Savior and my God!

Now I am deeply discouraged, but I will remember you -
Even from distant Mount Hermon, the source of the Jordan,
From the land of Mount Mizar.
I hear the tumult of the raging seas as your waves and surging tides sweep over me.
But each day the Lord pours his unfailing love upon me, and through each night I sing his songs,
Praying to God who gives me life. (Psalm 42:5-8 NLT)






   





Friday, April 26, 2013

Moving On

You might think from the title of this post that I am ready to move on from the all-consuming grief of loosing my son.  I don't see that will happen, ever.  Instead, what I have decided that my next task is will to be to stop living  in the past.

The origin of the concept for this post was the sale of the land that is the repository for Jason's ashes. If you have read the previous post entitled Ode To A Festival, you will know how important this property is to me. When Jason died, I struggled with what to do with his remains.  Cornerstone Festival grounds seemed to me the perfect place.  My kids and I had a tie with that place, and it was a location that I knew we would be visiting, sometimes together, for many years to come.

And then, several days ago, there was this little post on Facebook from Wilson Abbey - a division of JPUSA, the hosts of Cornerstone Festival - that they had sold the land.  "Praise the Lord," is what they said, I think.  And my world just dissolved again.

I had pictured, in years to come, pilgrimages to Bushnell, Illinois with Craig and the kids.  Staying in a trailer and touring the property.  Spending time reliving memories, reminiscing, crying and laughing together.  I pictured it sort of like visiting a cemetery.

So, I got the idea to make a photo diary of Cornerstone Through The Years.  I even made a folder in my computer for all the pictures.  I searched, I scanned, I looked and looked and I cried a lot.

And it occurred to me that I was exhausted from crying.  Tears of missing Jason.  Tears of missing Andrew and Emily.  Tears for the times we had together that we will never have again.  I was wallowing in memories. 

I think it's an indulgence that is keeping me from living here today.  The past is comforting and rosy.  The pain and worry of that time is lost, and all that's remembered are those moments where smiles and sunshine abounds.  If hard times are recalled, it's with the temperance of having lived through it, and come through the other side.  The uncertainty of daily life is taken out of the picture.  It's not an accurate representation.  But it is a comforting one. 

And it is distracting.  It can't compare, no matter how much I love my present life.

So, I am moving on.  I am going to carry these memories with me, and take them out and look sometimes, but I'm going to work on living today.  Y'all come along with me, be a part of my present. 

Friday, March 15, 2013

Book Report

For well over a year, I have been reading the complete works of George MacDonald.  He was a Scottish minister/writer/poet who lived from 1824 to 1905.  He deeply influenced such writers as C.S. Lewis and Madeline L'Engle.  He was also a mentor to Lewis Carroll.  When I tell people about him, I don't often get recognition.  This is sad, because he was a very important author.

As you might expect, while reading many thousands of pages, the ideas that most interested me were those dealing with death, eternal life, grief.  I will endeavor to share some of these things with you, in the hope that they bring comfort and hope to you, as they did for me.

For those who face the grief of death of someone we love:
On the scripture "Jesus wept"and Lazarus' grieving sisters -  "It was the aching, loving heart of humanity for which he wept, that needed God so awfully, and could not yet trust in him.  Their brother was only hidden in the skirts of their Father's garment, but they could not believe that; they said he was dead-lost-away-all gone, as the children say.  And it was so sad to think of a whole world full of the grief of death, that he could not bear it without the human tears to help his heart, as they help ours.  It was for our dark sorrows that he wept."

"But things are unbearable just until we have them to bear; their possibility comes with them.  For we are not the roots of our own being."

"The merest trifles sometimes rivet the attention in the deepest misery; the intellect has so little to do with grief."

"For I found, as I read [the gospel], that Thy very presence in my thoughts, not as the theologians show Thee, but as Thou showedst Thyself to them who report Thee to us, smoothed the troubled waters of my spirit, so that, even while the storm lasted, I was able to walk upon them to go to Thee."

Regarding the hope of eternity:
"Jesus wanted to make them know and feel that the dead were alive all the time, and could not be far away, seeing they were all with God in whom we live; that they had not lost them though they could not see them, for they were quite within his reach-as much so as ever; that they were just as safe with, and as well looked after by his father and their father, as they had ever been in all their lives.  It was no doubt a dreadful-looking thing to have them put in a hole, and waste away to dust, but they were not therefore gone out-they were only gone in!  To teach them all this he did not say much, but just called one or two of them back for a while.  Of course Lazarus was going to die again, but can you think his two sisters either loved him less, ore wept as much over him the next time he died?"

Narrator is speaking to an old woman who had lost several sons to the sea. " 'But,' I said...'some of your sons were drowned for all that you say about their safety.' 'Well, sir,' she answered, with a sigh, 'I trust they're none the less safe for that.' "

"We have yet learned but little of the blessed power of death.  We call it evil! It is a holy, friendly thing.  We are not left shivering all the world's night in a stately portico with no house behind it;  death is the door to the temple-house, whose God is not seated aloft in motionless state, but walks about among his children, receiving his pilgrim sons in his arms, and washing the sore feet of the weary ones."

And my favorite:
"He who made this room so well worth living in, may surely be trusted with the next!"