The Way of Grief

He’d just lost his wife, the woman he’d loved for years, the one he’d shared everything with. He described the early stages of his grief this way:

“How could things go on when the world had come to an end? How could things–how could I–go on in this void? How could one person, not very big, leave an emptiness that was galaxy-wide? Everything–every object–was pervaded by the void. I could teach my classes smilingly, even to calmly reading a poem about loss…But that first day of teaching after the St. Stephen’s night, when I left the class to go home, I saw the MG, small and somehow forlorn, invaded by that void, and I was barely able to get off campus before the tears came….There were, though, thousands of other things and memories, each of which must be seen once in that piercingly bleak emptiness.”
~Sheldon Vanauken, A Severe Mercy

I read the words and identify with them. I know that void, the blankness of imagining life without, the reality that life will be–now is–without. I walked to classes, turned in assignments, taught my students, carried on with life. To the outside observer, I was fine. People commented on “how well I was taking it.”

I wasn’t taking it well at all. I continued in the routines of day to day life, but every step was now pervaded by the void.

Then as now, I shook myself and said I couldn’t be experiencing what I was. To say that my experience was anything like Vanauken’s is to make light of the depth of his grief. It’s like the pet owner who compares the adoption of his pet to the difficult process his neighbor is going through to adopt a child.

Yes, I had reason to sorrow. But grief? Grief like this?

A woman I know lost her husband of more than a quarter century at about the same time as I experienced my loss. She had reason to grieve. I–I was overreacting, clearly.

I was shamed when I wrote of the difficulties of day to day living–of living through my pain. She commented, identified, encouraged me to trust God amidst it all. How could she be identifying with my grief? She had reason to grieve–much more reason than I. I should be comforting her, not she comforting me.

Yet however small my loss may have been compared to the losses of others, I was grieving in the same way.

The same void. The same questions. The same need to trust God just to make it through the next moment. The same little things that set off fountains of tears. The same pain that can’t be put into words.

Long months have passed, months where it took all my energy to merely cling to Christ. Months where I’ve barely been able to see through the tears, through the void. The sun peeks out from behind the clouds every now and again. I begin to think that my grieving days may be numbered.

Then I read of grief like Vanauken’s and the grief rushes back into my soul. My heart aches as I read of the intimacy he shared with his wife, the years they spent together, the years he lost. My heart aches to think of the memories I don’t have, the time I didn’t share, the stories I can’t tell.

I am crying again, grieving again, feeling my loss with such intensity.

And again, I think, what right have I to grieve? My loss is so very small–Vanauken’s loss, Annette’s loss so great. How can I dare to grieve over so little, so long?

I don’t know, except to say that grief does not know the measures of reason.

“How could one person, not very big, leave an emptiness that was galaxy-wide?”

I don’t know, except to say that this is the way of grief.


If you love…

“How did one find joy? In books it seemed to be found in love–a great love….So, if he wanted the heights of joy, he must have, if he could find it, a great love. But in the books again, great joy through love seemed always to go hand in hand with frightful pain. Still, he thought, looking out across the meadow, still, the joy would be worth the pain–if, indeed, they went together. If there were a choice–and he suspected there was–a choice between, on the one hand, the heights and the depths and, on the other hand, some sort of safe, cautious middle way, he for one, here and now chose the heights and the depths.
~Sheldon Vanauken, A Severe Mercy

Love is intrinsically dangerous. It is a giving away of one’s heart that opens one up to the ecstasies of love’s return and the torments of love’s rejection. Some might carefully wall off their hearts, seal them against love, in order to preserve the cautious middle way with neither heights nor depths.

I choose to love.

“The best way to confront the traditional view of the impassibility of God, however, is to ask ‘what meaning there can be in a love which is not costly to the lover.’ If love is self-giving, then it is inevitably vulnerable to pain, since it exposes itself to the possibility of rejection and insult.
~John Stott, The Cross of Christ

But love is not merely the initial giving away of one’s self, the captivation with another, the heady emotion of shared joy. Love is the continued giving, even when joy seems unlikely, even impossible.

Love looks like the cross.

Love is giving of oneself when it provides no rapture, only pain. Love is choosing the pain; if by the pain, the beloved’s joy can somehow be increased.

I have been offered a choice.

If you love… you rejoice when the beloved rejoices, even if his rejoicing is your sorrow.

If you love… you pray for the beloved’s peace, even if his peace means your turmoil.

If you love… you must be willing to die.

This is not romantic, butterflies-in-the-stomach, shivers-up-and-down-my-spine love. This is cross-love, God’s love. And I pray one day, I should truly learn to love this way.


See-Saw

It’s been years since I last saw a see-saw on a playground. Somewhere five or ten years back, someone must have decided that playgrounds were too dangerous, because they tore out all the old playground equipment and put in new.

The big wooden structures that allowed kids to climb to parent-terrifying heights are gone. The metal slides that burned kids’ thighs as they flew down in their shorts are gone. And the seesaws, with their child-powered action, are also gone.

I understand the reasons for removing them. Anyone who keeps these items opens themselves up for lawsuits in our highly litigious culture. Yet I mourn the loss of these symbols of my childhood. In a safety-obsessed world, children don’t get a chance to experience the same “safe” risks I took as a child–or their amazing rewards.

The thrill of standing at the top of the world, looking down on the climbers below. The delight of zipping down a slide so fast that you couldn’t stop and therefore were flung off a drop into the gravel below.

And the see-saws.

Going up and down, up and down. Having someone bigger than you sit on the opposite end, flinging you into the air. Begging them to let you down. Eventually climbing down, hoping that they wouldn’t get off while you were still climbing, which would inevitable make you crash to the ground. Adjusting where you sat so that your weight and the person’s opposite you would be perfectly balanced. Going up and down, up and down.

I enjoyed the up and down of the see-saw.

I don’t enjoy it now.

Then it was merely my body, up in the air and back to ground again.

Now I’m on a cosmic see-saw and instead of my body, it’s my heart flying up and down, up and down.

One moment I’m soaring, gloriously aware of the goodness of God. The next moment I land with a thunk, heartsick and hopeless.

One moment I feel I can tackle anything. The next moment I’m grounded and even the smallest activity seems overwhelming.

One moment I’m trusting, safe, high above the fray. The next moment I’m anxious, vulnerable, feeling battered and bruised.

Up and down. Up and down.

My life consists of up and down.

The see-saw was fun, once upon a time–but now I just want to get off.

Please, Lord? Please? I want to get off.


Nostalgia for Sweden

I’m not the sort of person to become an expert on Africa after a 6-day mission trip. But, after all, I spent almost half a month in Sweden several years ago–so that makes me an unqualified expert.

Okay, maybe not. But occasionally, I do feel a bit of nostalgia for Sweden–not so much for “the real Sweden” (which I really doubt I experienced), but for the Sweden I did experience. The dozens of teenagers living together on the floor of the school weight room. The daily routines of cleaning bathrooms and sweeping floors for the Christian conference we were helping out with. Going witnessing outside a disco with the Jesus Revolution Army (yes, that really was what another group with us was called.) Exploring the “wonders” of the original IKEA. Strolling the streets of the quaint little city and stopping for ridiculously cheap and marvelously good ice cream.

The nostalgia doesn’t happen often–but occasionally, something sets me off and I remember the wonderful days I spent in Sweden.

Something–like breakfast–set me off today.

I popped the bread I’d thawed last night into the toaster. I saw the cucumber lying on the counter where my mom had placed it a couple of days before and thought I should eat it–after all, Mom asked me just last night if I was ready for some more cukes. I sliced the cucumber and remembered Sweden.

Someone, I’m not sure who, provided food for us for breakfast. At least, they stocked a fridge for us to scrounge out of. There was fresh baked bread, butter, and strawberry jam. There were cucumber and tomato slices. There was a liquidy yogurt–and a huge wheel of white cheese that we could carve slices off of with the provided slicer.

I adored it. The memory this morning enticed me to rig a Swedish breakfast of my own. I pulled out some strawberry jam to slather atop my bread and butter. I dumped a jar of yogurt into a glass and diluted it with a bit of milk.

Swedish breakfast

And I sat with the Bible I’d bought for the Sweden trip (and used ever since) and remembered those days, when I’d sat in a school lobby, eating a similar meal, reading this word while dozens of fellow teenagers sat around me, spurring one another on into love and good deeds.

Good food. Good times. Good fellowship.

A trip worth emulating.


Clothing Impressions

I was looking at some photos from an independent Baptist youth camp and was struck with sudden terror.

“Is that what my clothing makes me look like?” I wondered.

I thought back to my mid-teenage years, when my clothing “style” was at its most “independent Baptist.” I’m sure I was quite a sight in the preppy high school I attended for a couple of classes. In sharp contrast to the jeans and barely there tops my classmates were sporting, I wore formless mid-calf-length skirts and equally formless t-shirts. Bleh!

A fellow hall-wanderer once approached me to ask a personal question. “I hope you’re not offended, but I was just wondering…What religion are you?”

I answered briefly, said that I was a Christian. She gave a hmm and mentioned something about the way I dressed. I don’t remember exactly what I said, except to say that the way I dressed had nothing to do with my religion.

Later that year, I saw that same girl walking through the halls wearing an Islamic head scarf–and I wondered if I’d missed my chance. Clearly, she had been searching for an identity–and thought she’d found it in Islam. But what if I’d better used that opening question and her comment about my clothing? What if I’d used that opening as an opportunity to share with her about an identity that goes far deeper than the clothes we wear–an identity that can only be found in Jesus Christ? I still regret not taking that opportunity–and whenever I think of it, I pray for that girl, wherever she is.

It’s amazing how powerfully clothing can influence people’s perceptions.

Looking at the independent Baptist pictures, I worried that my clothing might make people perceive me as such. I do, after all, have very long hair and more than my share of below-the-knee skirts.

See for yourself: Me at my independent Baptist best.

Me in long skirtMe in long skirtMe in long skirtMe in long skirt

Then again, I also wear shorter skirts:

Me in short skirtMe in short skirtMe in short skirtMe in short skirt

And sometimes I wear pants:

Me in pantsMe in pantsMe in pantsMe in pantsMe in pants

And then there are those times when I completely defy stereotypes:

Me in costumeMe in costumeMe in costumeMe in costume

So tell me–what do YOU think my clothing says about me? What about yourself–have you ever had someone comment on your clothing and the impressions they have of you based on your clothing?


Waiting for the Wedding

A glimpse into my mind as the hour of my brother’s wedding draws near…

Jealous Matchmaker

In II Corinthians 11:2, Paul says “For I am jealous for you with godly jealousy. For I have betrothed you to one husband, that I may present you as a chaste virgin to Christ.”

I didn’t make the match between Debbie and Daniel, but I recognize this thought.

I threw Debbie a bachelorette party a couple of weeks back. As I planned it, I was appalled by the sorts of ideas that are generally seen as bachelorette party fare.

Yes, I wanted to embarrass Debbie. But I wanted to be able to present her as a chaste virgin to my brother. I was jealous that she not offer herself to anyone but him.

Preparing for the Wedding

Matthew 25:6-10

“And at midnight a cry was heard: ‘Behold, the bridegroom is coming; go out to meet him!’ Then all those virgins arose and trimmed their lamps. And the foolish said to the wise, ‘Give us some of your oil, for our lamps are going out.’ But the wise answered, saying, ‘No, lest there should not be enough for us and you; but go rather to those who sell, and buy for yourselves.’ And while they went to buy, the bridegroom came, and those who were ready went in with him to the wedding; and the door was shut.”

I’m a “prepare-for-every-eventuality” kind of gal–which makes me just the sort of person to be the last-minute-detail person. I’ve spent significant time considering every possibility and preparing for what might happen so that I can respond to any emergency without a problem. I have my “kit” packed up so that runs in hose, torn out hems, hair that won’t lay flat, cameras without batteries, and hungry attendants won’t cause problems for this wedding.

I won’t let what happened to these bridesmaids happen to me. I won’t be off running interference and miss the wedding. I’m prepared in advance because I want to be a full participant in this wedding.

My joy fulfilled in theirs

Jesus had come and was baptizing, and many of those who had previously been coming to hear John and be baptized now came to hear Jesus and be baptized by His disciples. John’s disciples are jealous for their leader’s following. In John 3, John the Baptist answers his disciples concern:

“He who has the bride is the bridegroom; but the friend of the bridegroom, who stands and hears him, rejoices greatly because of the bridegroom’s voice. Therefore this joy of mine is fulfilled. He must increase, but I must decrease.”

Daniel is the middle child in our family. He is four years younger than I. Yet he is the first to be married.

Am I melancholy about this?

Yes. A little.

I would have liked to have been first. In fact, we all kind of suspected that I would be first. But that isn’t what has occurred.

I think it’s always difficult for a single person to go to wedding after wedding, as friend after friend gets married and they remain single.

But the bit of envy I harbor is none so great as the joy I experience that my brother and my friend will be joined in marriage today.

I rejoice as I prepare for this wedding. I rejoice that today is THEIR day. I rejoice that today I can hear the bridegroom’s voice, my brother’s voice, as he gets closer and closer to the time he will be joined to his bride. I rejoice as I fuss over Debbie, preparing her for the time when she will be joined to my brother.

I am the friend. This is my joy.

I can celebrate as a jealous matchmaker, a prepared attendant, a friend of the bridegroom. The culmination of my “ministry” to them has come.

My name appears nowhere in this wedding’s order–I am not the focus. And that’s exactly as it should be.

I must decrease, they must increase. And this, this is my joy.


Graduation

Timothy's graduation photo
Our Spim-meister is graduating from high school today (or, at least, we’re celebrating his graduation today)–so I’m gonna be spending time with family this afternoon.

Timothy is the last of the boys, leaving only Grace still in high school. He has the singular distinction of being the only high school senior currently in the church youth group.

He’ll be attending the University of Nebraska-Lincoln this fall, studying Biological Systems Engineering as pre-med. Next January, he’ll go off to Marine boot camp and other training. He’ll resume his studies in the fall of 2011 as a Marine reservist.

Preparing his photos for the celebration this afternoon, I’ve been struck by how quickly he’s grown and how roles and relationships change over time.

I was a witness to his birth (not by my parents choice–I was just a curious little gal) and, while I helped out with John, Timothy was really the first baby that I helped with the care of from the beginning.

But somewhere over the course of the past 18 years, Tim has gone from a helpless baby that I diapered to a mature young man that I consider a friend as well as a brother.

God has been good to us. He certainly has.


Daddy Dates

I’m sure I’ve said before that I don’t have tons of dating experience. I chose not to buy into the casual dating atmosphere of high school–and was pretty school focused throughout college.

Now, I just love it when someone or something asks about my “favorite date” or “ideal date” or what I envision as the “perfect date.”

Uh, I don’t know.

Can’t say that I’ve dated around enough to get some sort of ideal vision in my head, divorced from WHO I’m enjoying something with, that is.

My most regular date has been my dad. We’ve been enjoying daddy-daughter dates off and on for five or so years. It started out as lunch dates, just having lunch once a week and talking. We worked for the same department of the University for a number of years and could both get reduced-rate meals at the cafeteria. It made for a nice little break for both of us–and didn’t cost either of us much at all.

Now that I’m employed by a different department and don’t have reduced-rate meals, we’ve varied things up a bit. Sometimes we still do lunch and we just pay full-price for my meal, but just as often we’ll choose something else.

About a month ago, we put in part of my dad’s garden together. Dad tilled, stretched the lines, and dug the furrows. I planted the corn. It was great. We just talked and enjoyed life together.

Last night, we took a leisurely little six mile bike ride and then settled in at my parent’s house to watch “Elizabeth”. On our bike ride, we talked life, blog reading, Microsoft’s market share, and the latest in science and news. Then we talked our way through the movie too, fast-forwarding when it included some gratuitous sex (WHY do they do that?), rewinding when we missed a line or which character was which, and occasionally pausing so we could make some popcorn or use the restroom. Of course, we had the subtitles on.

We have shared interests, we enjoy talking with one another. Our “dates” are generally pretty successful whatever we do.

Sure, sometimes our interests don’t align as perfectly. One night, we went to an art show that my cousin was showing a painting at. I enjoy art galleries, but it’s not really my dad’s favorite thing. What’s more, I really like to get up close to a piece of art and then move far away from it and then explore it from a dozen different angles. I like to wonder about the craftsmanship and the techniques and the tools. This show was pretty busy and I didn’t have opportunity to do that–and my art-viewing-style is rather solitary in the first place. My style, the atmosphere there, and my Dad’s apathy towards art combined to make that date less-than-ideal. But we made up for it by going to a coffee house and chatting over coffee (Dad) and a steamer (me).

So what is a perfect date?

I think it must depend on who you’re having the date with. The perfect date is one which allows both individuals to enjoy their shared interests and to relate to one another. And since everyone has different interests and relates in different ways, that “date” isn’t always the same for everyone.

In short, I don’t know what a “perfect date” looks like, but I do know what I enjoy in my “daddy dates”. I enjoy talking with my dad and sharing our common interests. And I’d imagine that’s what I’d want to do on a “real” date too.

What about you? What’s your vision of a “perfect date”? Have you ever done regular “daddy dates” or “friend dates” or something of the sort?


A Silent Cry

Sometimes I can’t articulate the
things within my heart
I can’t tell you what
I’m thinking
I can’t tell you what
I’m feeling
I’m not sure what
I want
Except that the ache
grows on
I have wasted my words
Trying to pray
as if God needed my words
to know my heart
Today, I cannot speak
I can only turn
my heart towards Him
A silent cry
“Please”


Desires of my heart

“Delight yourself also in the Lord,
And He shall give you the desires of your heart.”

Psalm 37:4

It’s probably the one Scripture I have the most trouble with. Does God really promise to give me the desires of my heart when I delight in Him?

‘Cause I’ve been delighting–and still so many of my desires remain unfulfilled.

I’ve had women quote this verse to me as a promise that I’ll marry someday. I don’t want to believe them. Because what if that is what this verse is saying–yet I never do get married? What if I cling to this as a promise when that isn’t what God intended–and I end up a bitter old spinster?

How many times have I begged God to take away my desires? “Lord, if this isn’t Your desire for me, may I not desire to be married. If it isn’t Your will for me to be a mother, take away this desire to be one. If you don’t want me to foster or adopt, then take away this yearning inside of me.”

Can I take His silence as confirmation? That His will is to fulfill my desires?

I dare not do so and place words that He has not spoken into His mouth.

But here, as I long intensely for what I cannot have, I am tempted to believe that God is not good. I am tempted to think that He is the ultimate tease, awakening my heart to dream only to dash my dreams.

How many time has this happened over the years? Yes, not so solidly as this time, but how many times has my heart risen only to drop to the depths?

Years ago, I wrote these words:

I’ve been seeking
But I’m not seeing
Where are those things
You were going to add?

I’ve been delighting
But I’m not sighting
Where are those dreams
You said You’d fulfill?

I don’t understand
Why You’ve got me in this place
This life that I’m living
is so far from my dreams
I can’t understand
What it means

I don’t know
Why it’s so
But You are Lord
Speak Your word
I will go

I am clay
Have Your way
You are Lord
Speak Your word
I will obey

This verse remains the most difficult one in my mind. I don’t understand it. I don’t know what it means. I don’t know how to take it.

So I move a verse further and cling to verse 5.

“Commit your way to the Lord, trust also in Him, and He shall bring it to pass.”

So I commit my desires to Him, daily pouring out my heart, raising my requests to Him, begging yet again that He would conform my desires to His.

And then I choose to trust in Him, that He shall bring His good purposes to pass in His perfect timing.