Wednesday, August 28, 2013

How it all began...

This is a total blog cheat.  As in it's a complete repost.  But I believe that just as it is good for us to share how God has moved in our lives so that we can encourage one another and remember what is true, it is also good for me to remember what exactly it was that happened that brought me to Sloan and have me sitting in my kitchen on our 9th anniversary a little confused as to how I have 4 kids 6 and under.

So here it is...
 
 
May 4, 2003  (Actual entry from my journal)
Lord, help me to be patient.  Forgive me for thinking it's all about me.  Thank you that it's not.  Lord, I do so want to be married—to love and be loved in a tangible way.  Forgive my constant discontent.  Forgiving me for seeing this week as a week to find a man rather than to learn more about You.  Redeem my heart and thoughts.  Thank you that even my sorry, misguided motivations are a reflection of your continued wooing of my wayward heart.
But really, God, as I pray for a husband and reflect upon the men you HAVE brought into my life, I figured it might be helpful if You I at least knew what I was looking for. 
WHAT I AM LOOKING FOR IN A MAN:
·         Non-negotiable items:  A man after God’s own heart… (Except without the whole David adultery/murder thing)
·         Primary Desires (aka…what I’m really looking for):
o   Funny
o   Tall
o   Good looking
o   Easy Going
o   Intelligent
o   Gentle
o   Passionate (about something, anything, me)
·         While I’m asking you might as well know this is what I want, but I realize that it is not a perfect world:
o   Wealthy
o   Athletic
o   Good cook
o   Nice butt
o   Likes to travel
o   Parents still married to one another
I may have repented of viewing the week as an opportunity to meet men, but let’s be clear, I still viewed it as a way to meet men.  In light of this, signing up to take pottery and scrapbooking were a poor choice.  But there were some times we were all together to play games, worship, and just mill about.  
Lee was tall and had a mop of curly light brown hair.  And when I say he was tall, I mean T.A.L.L.  Like NBA tall.  Point and stare tall.  But he spoke with a sweet Southern twang and often talked about the kids he coached on a basketball team at the Y in Suffolk, VA.  I noted that Suffolk is about an hour’s drive from Richmond.  Completely reasonable distance.  With one glance, I noted that Lee did not wear a wedding ring, and that empty ring finger totally seemed to cancel out his giant-ness.
There was also Scott.  Scott was boyishly handsome.  He had a goatee, long brown hair (which he was growing out for locks for love---AWWW!), and played the guitar.  He was a youth pastor in Florida.  Also no wedding ring.  But Florida?  That’s a long way off.  But, Scott had the bonus of palling around with my friend from high school, Grier, and her husband, the uber handsome but wedding ringed, Rich.  Scott seemed like a possibility as I could get to know him while “reconnecting” with an old friend.  
And then there was this other guy.  I never could really catch his name.  He was tall, had dimples, wore a Gamecocks baseball hat, but didn’t seem to really be there for any reason.  From what I could gather, he wasn’t a Pastor of any kind.  He didn’t know anyone I knew, he didn’t stand up and talk about Jesus or working with kids, and I couldn’t quite tell whether the ring on his left hand was a wedding ring or a class ring.  But he seemed to work the meeting rooms with ease, gliding in and out of conversations.  He also was followed around by this dumpy, albeit busty, girl named Jamie.  Oh, and this guy had a breathtaking heiny.
 And while I’m a sucker for a guy with a good Matthew McConaughy accent, and completely a sucker for a guy who can play the guitar (and let’s be honest, were Matthew McConaughy ever to play the guitar and sing to me I’d probably explode), there was something about this guy with the dimples, nice butt, and salt and pepper hair that I just couldn’t shake.  (Or maybe that I wanted to shake?)
I followed  “the Butt” around, eavesdropping on conversations.  I was stealth.  If he was playing washers in the lobby, I brought my book to a nearby couch.  If he was playing cards at a table, once again, my trusty journal and moved.  It may have appeared that I was being very studious.  False.  I was being a spy.  
My first lesson was that the Butt was sarcastic.  And, quite possibly, a complete jerk. There were all these college aged girls who were there and they were wearing their sorority letters.  Somehow it got out that I used to be in the same sorority that they now were in and they wanted to do the handshake and all that jazz.  Apparently, they did not get the “I’m reading my Bible and learning to serve Jesus and am too cool for sorority crap now” memo.  They were also drawing way to much attention to my sleuth-ness and I didn’t want to be made.  The Butt was apparently friends with one of these Zetas.  His first words to me were, “Dude, build a bridge and get over it.  Why you gotta be a Zeta hater?”  
I sunk into the chair and pulled my journal up to my eyes.  I wanted to die.  I retreated into the anonymity of my hooded sweatshirt.  Great.  The guy with the nice butt who may or may not be married and is being chased around by that frump-a-dump  thinks I’m a total no-fun wench.  Suh-weet.
After more reconnaissance work, I garnered the following information:  his name was Sloan (a girl’s name really), he lived in Florida (boo!), he owned a Tuxedo (bonus!), he owned several pairs of cufflinks (not really helpful information in the least), had a degree in Hotel-Restaurant Management from the University of Houston (Go Cougars?),  and presently lived with his 95 year old grandmother (Awww!).  It  was also clear that this Jamie chick was smitten.  I couldn’t tell if Sloan was aware of this at all.  But there were two things I was sure about:  I wanted to get to know Sloan but I sure as heck was not about to chase him around or fight this short girl for him.  Spying in a hoody notwithstanding, I did have my dignity.
When I wasn’t spying on Sloan, I was not having the pottery experience I had envisioned.  I considered myself artsy.  So I expected to, upon my first time astride the pottery wheel, create magic.  (Perhaps I also had visions of Patrick Swayze?)  But I couldn’t even center the clay correctly.  You were supposed to slap it down in the middle of the wheel, wet your hands, then crank the wheel, all whilst holding your hands firm and still.  The swift whir of the wheel and the constant pressure of my hands were supposed to form the clay into a cone.  When it was a smooth cone, you were supposed to simply put your thumb in the middle, slowly pull up on the sides, and voila!  You have a vase! 
Um, yeah, not so much.
I couldn’t even slap my ball of mud down on the wheel correctly.  Nor could I steady my hands properly.  I was trying to steady my elbows on my knees, hunch over the wheel, and will the clay to center.  But my boobs kept getting in the way and my hair kept falling in my face.  So I would put my hair behind my ears, getting clay on my face and hair, meanwhile, my lump of clay would go all wonky and once, defying all odds and the forces of gravity, flew across the pottery porch.  (It actually was a screened in porch overlooking a lake.  Imagine if Christians went to the camp featured in Dirty Dancing.  You now have an accurate picture of Montreat.) 
My instructor Anne kept telling me to be patient.  To be willing to mess up.  To not worry about what it looked like but to risk it going wonky.  She reminded me that even once the clay was brittle, right up until it was placed in the kiln, it could be dunked back in the water and made new.  It could be reborn over and over and over. 
“Are you talking about this clay or my heart?” I asked. 
Anne laughed.  “Both, I suppose.  But either way, nothing will be made if you don’t get the wheel going.  Be brave! Be bold!  And for goodness sakes, relax.” 
By Wednesday, with half the pottery class having already finished their beautiful communion sets and me with one little puny cup, I was weary.  Sweaty, covered in clay, I forgot to take my apron off as I walked back to Assembly Inn.  As I crossed the road, my buddy Grier’s Volvo station wagon pulled up.  Her husband, Rich, was behind the wheel. 
“You look like you need a beer,” he said.
“You have no clue,” I replied.
From the passenger seat, Grier chirped, “Hop in!  We’re going to a bar in Black Mountain!” 
And so without even caring that I was smelly and literally covered in mud, I slid into their backseat.  Next to Scott.  Hmmmm…..
Over beers and games of darts, we hung out at The Watershed.   Rich, Grier, and Scott were three peas in a fundamentally Liberal pod.  While I would have been content to drink my beer discussing music or pop culture, the three began discussing their disdain for President Bush and the war in Afghanistan.  I’ll be the first to say I’ve had many a political discussion with Rich and Grier, usually over a glass of wine  and with them it is no big deal.  Yes, they are certain that George W. Bush is the second cousin of Satan and that if you don’t recycle you might burn in hell (actually, I don’t think they believe in hell…), but they also are genuinely open-minded--willing to listen to the other side of an argument, able to point out areas of agreement and the like, and actually able to laugh about our differences of opinion.  And my political leanings are far more middle of the road than theirs.  Scott was pretty certain that the genocide in Darfur and the war in Afghanistan were President Bush’s fault, and the fault of people who drive gas guzzlers.   
I told him that my Jeep Grand Cherokee handed brilliantly in the snow.  
Needless to say, it was not a love connection.  (Though he did end up moving to my hometown and marrying a girl with whom I went to high school.)
But at least I now knew where the nearest bar was.  Always important.
By Thursday morning, I decided it was now or never in terms of getting to know Sloan.  There was just something about him.  I wanted to know him.  And be known by him.  I didn’t need it need it necessarily to be romantic, but I could just sense that behind his gregarious personality was a depth.  Perhaps I saw a bit of myself in him. 
That evening, there was a square dance.  (This is a church camp.  Of course there was a square dance!)  I borrowed my roommate’s blow dryer and straightened my hair.  I borrowed make up.  Why I didn’t bring a blow dryer or make up to a week where I was so obviously going to be spending my time chasing boys is beyond me.  I wore my one shirt that had a collar.  I had, in fact, packed it for the square dance.  Embarrassingly, it was a cowboy type shirt.  Pink and brown paisley, complete with pearly snap buttons on the flap pockets across my chest.  Not really a man catcher shirt, unless you counted that it DID sometimes unsnap. 
I did not see Sloan at the square dance.  I got up and went to the bathroom so I’d have reason to scan the entire barn.  If he had been there and noticed me, he would have thought I had a bladder problem.
After the disappointing square dance, there was a party.  The kind of party that churchy types throw with the intent of it being mimicked by youth groups.  There was some sort of magic carpet ride optical illusion.  It was hailed as the coolest thing I’d ever see.  
It was not.   
After exiting the ‘magic’ carpet ride, I sighed and said, not really to anyone, “Oh my gosh, I don’t think I can handle Jesus camp anymore.  Anybody want to go get a martini?”
“Dear Lord, yes,” someone behind me replied, “but I don’t have a car .”
I turned.  It was Sloan.  I tried not to pee in my pants.  I offered my Jeep, and, in fact, made him drive to The Watershed.  And in my CD player was probably the worst ever music for a guy to hear in the car of a girl he just met—Liz Phair.  And not new pop Liz Phair.  But old, folky, man-hating Liz Phair.
To add insult to injury, we arrived at the Watershed to be told that we were in a dry county.  The bar served beer, but no booze.  I would not be having a martini.  We ordered 2 draft beers. 
In the dimly lit bar, we took opposite sides in a booth.  And as I drank my liquid courage, it dawned on me that this was a date.  Not any date I would’ve planned on purpose, mind you, what with me wearing an Xrated cowboy shirt, someone else’s make-up, and in a dry county no less. 
Perhaps it was in acknowledgement of this date’s badness, but we began to spar with one another about our unfitness to actually be on a date.  I told him I hadn’t been on a date in over a year.  He confessed he was unemployed.  I just recently moved out from living with my sister and her five kids.  He lived with his elderly grandmother.  I’d fallen in love with the wrong guy and moved to Colorado to find myself and didn’t find jack.  Subsequently, I’d instated the 3 date rule.  If I didn’t know you were “the one” by date three, I was moving on.  He had been married before.  I was tired of just hooking up.  I wasn’t in middle school: I didn’t need to kiss to figure out how to do it or pass the time.  The next guy I kissed would be my husband. 
Looking back, I think the only thing that was normal about our first date conversation was that every time he smiled, I blushed.  I couldn’t help it.  My stomach was in a knot.  I felt as though I was living an episode of The Wonder Years, and I was the Kevin Arnold to his Winnie Cooper.  Had I been watching this conversation occur on television, I’d be yelling at my screen self to shut up already and button my shirt. 
I told him how I had always been best friends with the popular girls, but not really popular myself.   
He found this hard to believe. 
“No really.  I was the one who the guys came to for advice.  How can I date Meg?  Do you think I have a chance with Dana? I was always the buddy to guys, never the date.  Or if I was the date, I was the girl you could ask if no one else could go.  We’d have a blast, but I’d know you really were looking for someone else.”
He readjusted his baseball cap and tilted his head.  “Hmmm…I’m pretty sure I’d look for you first.”
I shook my head.  “You’ve never seen Meg, Kate, Dana, or Beth.” 
“I don’t need to,” he said.  “I see you.” 
Wait,  What?  Was I the Winnie Cooper here?
I excused myself and went to the bathroom.  Resting my hands on either side of the small sink, I looked in the mirror to see if I could see what Sloan was talking about.  Sweat was beading on my forehead.  I pulled my shirt away from my body, trying to fan myself.  Of course, all my snaps busted.  It made no sense.  This guy lived 600 miles way.  What was I doing?  What was he doing?   
What in the freaking world was God doing?
I returned to the booth and I’m fairly certain I just sat there staring at him.  His blue-green eyes, his wasted on a man super-long eye lashes, his dimples. I watched his lips moving and I imagined shutting him up by leaning across the table to kiss him. 
“Elizabeth,” he said again.  “What is that look?”
Um, it’s my please shut up and kiss me look.  “What are you talking about?”
“I don’t know.  It’s nothing.  Just no one has ever looked at me like that before.  It’s not a bad thing.”
“Well, I don’t know what you’re talking about.”  The bartender warned us it was last call.  We’d been sitting in that booth 5 hours.
He drove us back to Assembly Inn, listening to more man hating, foul mouthed Liz Phair.  I knew it was late, but I didn’t want to go inside.  I didn’t want the night to be over and for tomorrow to go back to normal, me chasing him around while he chatted with that Jamie chick.  I wanted to keep looking at him.  He held my hand as we walked across the parking lot and back to the Inn.  It was all I could do to not skip from excitement, pee in my pants, vomit from nervousness and pounce on him all at the same time.   About 10 feet from the door I declared, “I’m not tired.  I’m not ready to go in yet.”  
Praise God he received this invitation as it was intended.  He leaned down to kiss me.  I was self-conscious because I’d been drinking and was cotton mouthed.  In addition, it had been awhile since I’d kissed anyone.  My legs shook and I laughed.
“That’s not the response I was hoping for,” he said.
I felt horrible.  “No, no.  It’s not you.  I’m just nervous.  None of this makes any sense to me.”  Didn’t I just tell this guy that the next guy I kiss is going to be my husband?  Argh.
We walked from the brightly lit parking lot to a picturesque gazebo next to the pond.  Yes; there was a gazebo, by a pond.  Complete with swans swimming.  It was idyllic and romantic, save for every few minutes the swans would make these strange noises and water would shoot up behind them.
“What is that?” Sloan asked.
Giggling, I said, “I think the swans are farting.”
“I don’t think swans do that,” he replied.
“No, I’m pretty sure all animals fart.  I mean, all animals poop.”  Dear God, Elizabeth!  What is your problem?  I’m pretty sure you’re not supposed to talk about farts and poop on a date! 
I was cold and he gave me his shirt, leaving him just in an undershirt.  He shoved his hands deep into the pockets of his jeans.  I could tell he was cold as well, so I put my arms around him.  We kissed again and once again, I laughed. 
I apologized.  “No, really.  It’s not you.  I’m a nervous laugher.  When I get too much of any one emotion, my body’s response is to laugh.  I’ve laughed at a funeral before.  It’s just a release I guess.”
“Oh-kay?”  He didn’t sound convinced.  But he didn’t stop kissing me either.
I told him that my biggest fear was that he’d tell me “we’d always have Montreat.”  That this night, with its nervous confessions and gazebo kissing, would just be some romantic summer camp moment.  But that I sensed it meant more. However, I also was aware that he lived in Florida and I lived in Virginia. 
He didn’t say much, except as the sky began to pink with dawn, he told me he’d look for me.  “I’ll look for you at breakfast.  Or really, whenever I enter a room, I’ll look for you first.”
I made certain to be at breakfast first.  I didn’t want to have to awkwardly want to sit next to him only there be no room.  And what if he didn’t save a seat for me?  I saw Grier and Rich in the breakfast line.
“Hey,” Grier said.  “I looked for you last night.  Where did you run off to?”
My eyes grew wide.  “Oh my gosh, I need to tell someone.  Sloan and I went to the Watershed and I felt like I was in middle school and I was so nervous and I made him listen to Liz Phair and then we kissed in the Gazebo and I laughed and there were farting swans and he said he’d look for me first and I think I might be in love with him.”  I breathed. 
Wait.  What did I just say?  Did I just say I was in love with him?
“Really?” Rich asked.  “Sloan?” 
I was still in shock with what I’d just admitted.  We sat at a table.  Within minutes, Sloan entered the room.  “Oh dear God,” I said.  “Grier, pretend we are deep in conversation.  We are deep in conversation…”
“We are deep in conversation, “ she said back to me without missing a beat.
Still looking at Grier, I said, “Now, Rich, tell me, without actually looking at him, what is he doing?”
“He’s looking around.  Well, actually, I think he was looking for you because he’s walking over here.”
Oh. Dear. God.
*******************
That afternoon’s pottery class everyone else was oohing and ahhing over their beautiful things they’d sculpted, caressed, and created.  We were sifting through things that had been fired.  I had made a sad little communion set—the chalice about the size of shot glass atop a poorly constructed stem, and a platter large enough for a dinner roll.  It looked like something a 5th grader would make for Mother’s Day. 
Anne encouraged me to sit at the wheel again.  But my mind was everywhere.  I was upset about my stupid communion set.  I was confused about Sloan.  I was scared about Sloan.  Scared that what I’d said to Rich and Grier was true.  I’d already fallen in love with the wrong guy before and had sworn to myself that wouldn’t happen again.  I was too old.  I didn’t have it in me.  Hence, the three date rule.
Anne and I sat across from one another at a pottery wheel.  “Okay, Elizabeth.  I’m not going to let you leave my studio so downhearted.  We’re beginning again.  Let’s throw some clay down onto the bat.  Now close your eyes.”
I hesitated.  “If I can’t center it with my eyes opened, how am I supposed to do it with my eyes closed?” 
“YOU aren’t going to center it.  You can’t.  You are going to remain still.  The wheel is going to center it.” 
I put my clay on the bat.  I closed my eyes.  I felt Anne’s hands atop mine.  “OK, Elizabeth, with your foot, start the wheel.”
This is ridiculous.  It’s just pottery.  Who cares if I can’t throw a pot?  I pressed the pedal.  Barely.
Anne, said, “That’s it.  But we need more speed.  And more water.  You crank up the speed, I’ll get the water.  Don’t move your hands.  Just rest.  Let the wheel do the work.  Don’t be afraid of messing up.  Don’t be afraid of the what if?  You must have faith that the wheel will do its work.  You must have faith that my hands will not leave yours.  And for goodness sake, crank the wheel.  If you do nothing, nothing will happen.”
Through my closed eyes, I began to cry.  I could feel the clay beneath my hands.  Wet.  Firm.  Centered.  From time to time, I’d feel more water flow down my fingers. 
“Okay, Elizabeth.  We are going to begin to pull up.  Slowly.  Allow my hands to lead your hands, and yet, above all, you needn’t move much.  Once again, let the wheel do the work.”
I felt her fingers gently press down on my fingers, slowly turning my centered ball into something.  I opened my eyes.  My eyelashes were stuck together.  Through tears I looked at Anne. She was smiling, intently looking at what we were creating.   I don’t think I even thought to look down at what we were making.
And I knew. 
I knew it was risky to love Sloan, but that without a doubt I did.  It made absolutely no sense, except for the fact I was certain God had His hands on mine.  If I just sat there, doing nothing, nothing would happen.  But if I trusted.  If I trusted.  Perhaps Sloan wasn’t the one, but he really wasn’t the One I was being asked to give my heart to. 
“Look,” Anne said.  “Look at what you made because you trusted the wheel do its work.”
I looked down.  It was lovely.  A vase.  It had a wide bottom and thin sides that fluted ever so slightly at the top.  The perfect size for pencils, or kitchen utensils, or a loose bouquet of yard flowers.
“But I won’t be able to finish it myself.  It’s the last day,” I said, crestfallen.
“Let me finish it.  I’ll glaze it for you and you can get it the next time you come to Montreat.”
I would come back to Montreat.  If only to pick up this pottery.  My little monument to trusting God, and subsequently Sloan, with my heart.
That evening, we had our final worship service.  I’d looked for Sloan everywhere, but once again couldn’t find him.  Someone told me he’d gone to Black Mountain for dinner with one of the people from his youth team.  The speaker was discussing how everyone always pictured Jesus as a”nice guy”, but that Jesus was more.  That He often entered into people’s temples, meaning their hearts, and tossed the tables around.  That Jesus walked alongside us when we were blind, and opened our eyes to His mercy and grace.  We were asked to pair up and walk around the room, then come take communion.  We were to discuss with our communion partner what tables had been turned and how our eyes had been opened during the week.  I felt someone behind me grab my hand. 
I turned.  It was Sloan.
We walked in silence, staring at each other.  I remembered what I had prayed for earlier in the week and recognized, in shock, that God had actually heard my prayers.  It was too much.  We approached the celebrant reverently.  We were before the youth pastor that had encouraged Sloan to come on this trip as a preamble to his helping out with the Youth at his church. 
“Come and see that the Lord is good, “she said. 
The Lord is good, indeed.
It was the last night of the conference.  Some people had packed up already and were leaving.  Everyone was in the common room, laughing, playing washers.  Rich and Scott were playing their guitars and people were singing.
“I need to talk to you,” Sloan said to me.  It sounded ominous.  If he told me “we’d always have Montreat” like I was some summer camp girlfriend I was going to throw up. 
I had much to say as well, and so we meandered around the Inn, hand in hand, looking for somewhere quiet.   Along a corridor, we saw an empty room.  Its occupants had left the conference early.
“I know it’s a bit inappropriate, but I really don’t see anywhere else.  You wanna just go in there?”  Sloan timidly motioned to the door.
“No, it’s fine,” I said.  It seemed like the most natural thing in the world to be doing.
We each sat on one of the double beds, facing each other.
“I need to tell you something,” I blurted out.  “I think you’re the person I’ve been praying for.”
His eyebrows furrowed.  “What?” 
“And I think you’re the person my parents have been praying for my entire life.”  This seemed safer than just confessing that I’d fallen love with him and was pretty certain he was the man I was going to marry. 
“Ummm, what?”
Perhaps not actually safer.  Perhaps a little creepy.  I jostled my knees up and down as I sat on the edge of the bed.  “Ummm, I think you are the man my parents have been praying for?”
“I don’t follow,” Sloan responded.
Dear God, this isn’t better.  “Well, my parents have been praying for me to meet the right guy since I was born.”  Please do not make me explain it any more clearly.  I will probably explode.  As it is, I might pee myself. 
“Oh-kaaay?  That’s.  Kind of.  Weird?” 
“You have no idea,” I countered. 
He sat next to me.  He took one of my hands in his and placed his other hand on my knee.  Dear God, please don’t let me pee myself when his hand is on my leg!  He leaned in to kiss me, and as his face was inches from mine, he whispered, “I know this makes no sense, but I am in love with you.  Hopelessly.”
I began to cry.  I was unexpectedly aware of God’s love for me as when Sloan’s lips touched mine.  All those years whining about being single.  Those countless prayer requests to friends, “Please bring me a boyfriend!”  The laundry list of things I wanted in a mate.  And God had heard my prayers and dreams and had, in Sloan, said to me, “You have not dreamed big enough.  You have sold my love for you short.”  God had not simply brought me someone.  He had, in fact, created each of us with the other in mind. 
And here we were, in a dimly lit room, nervous knees touching, kissing. 
Sloan pulled back, and looked at me.  He was waiting for me to say something in response.  I wanted to shout at him, “Yes!  I love you too!  I have loved you since you first called me a Zeta hater, but I was scared and then God gave me courage!”  But I did not want him to think I was telling him I loved him simply because he said it to me.  So instead, perhaps because I’m an idiot, I said, “Thank you.”
He sighed, falling back onto the bed. I turned to look at him.  His eyes were closed and he’d taken off his ball cap.  It rested in his fingertips then fell to the floor.  I curled up in the crook of his chest and arm.  I could hear his heart quickly beating.  I traced his face gently with my finger—his eyebrow, his nose, his lips.  He opened his eyes and looked at me.
“I love you,” I whispered.  “And not I love you, too.  Just  I.  Love.  You.”                        
He closed his eyes again, smiling. 

Tuesday, August 20, 2013

Thankful for the "Not Knowing"



As we’ve been treading water these past few weeks, a few things have risen to the surface.  Mainly, some questions and then (thankfully) some Scripture.   

The questions have been:
1.      If I knew at the beginning all that I know now, would I do it anyway? 
2.      Is this worth it?
3.      If I had to do it all over again, would I?

And the simple answers are: 
1.       Probably not. I would’ve been too afraid to obey. 
2.      Yes.  Heck yes.
3.      Over and over and over again. 

Psalm 119: 105 says “Thy word is a lamp unto my feet and a light unto my path.”  (Drink if you grew up in the 80s in a Christian home and totally just sung that in your brain a la Amy Grant.)

This tells me that God’s promise is to lead me.  Step by step.  That I will safely see the next step, but not the whole landscape.   

Folks, this is hard.  And on the one hand, I hate this.  I would have much preferred God to have shown up two years ago in a burning bush and said, “Okay, so here is what I’m going to do.  You’re going to go here and do this and then this will happen and then we will party. The end.”   

But on the other hand?  God knows me.  He knows that I’d hear “Okay so this is what I’m….” and then I’d go running off all willy-nilly forgetting that it was Him I was following.  If God had told me that he was going to bring three children into my heart that wouldn’t be my kids but I’d ache for them for forever but He was doing it for them and not for me, I’d have politely said “No thank you.”  If I’d know that the immigration steps would change and a two week process would become a six month process and that instead of a week in country we’d be staring down 3 plus weeks in country, I would’ve let His call go to voicemail.  So knowing my feeble heart and scattered brain, He graciously left me in the dark.  He said, “Sweet baby girl, you can’t handle to walk by sight.  Not yet, anyway.  So take my hand and walk by faith.  Okay?  All you can manage is to hold my pinkie?  Fine.  I get it.  This is scary terrain and you’re going to trip and bloody your knees.  But you’re not alone.  I’ve given you Sloan.  And I’m going to give you new friends and old friends to help you find My Hand again when you drop it.  And I'll be here beside you and I'm going before you.”    

But has this treacherous journey been worth it?  Oh my goodness, yes!  I have been blown away time and time again by God’s mercy, provision, grace, patience, tenderness, and sovereignty.  I’ve grown apart from some friends during this journey because adoption is just hard to understand.  I mean who runs headlong into a wall with their heart and pocketbook?  Fools, really.  But God has strengthened other relationships long dormant and even given Sloan and I new friends whose friendship is so dear it takes my breath away.  Because most certainly after Himself, God’s greatest gift to us is His people.  

And if I had to do it all over again, would I?  That’s the million dollar question.  Because if we hadn’t taken a detour in China we would’ve thought we only had a son and our timeline would’ve been different and Charlie and Mollie wouldn’t have been our Charlie and Mollie.  Sure, we would’ve made a few different choices, but I’m thankful for all the lessons learned.  As we did during our infertility, there have been rocky moments between Sloan and me.  Moments where we forgot we were on the same team.  Moments when our grief made us stabby and angry.  But we’ve learned to forgive with greater ease.  We’ve carried one another to the Cross time and time again.  We’ve come to that strangely lovely place where all we have to give one another is Jesus.  

So Lord, thanks.  Please continue to remind me that You’ve lit the path for my next step.  Help me not to run ahead of your leading.  Thanks for pushing me out of my comfort zone.  The folks You’ve got out here living on the fringe are amazing.  As are You.

Friday, August 16, 2013

The Lord is not Slow...



Wow.  It’s been almost two months since I last posted.  And these months have been insane.  Pretty sure we’ve experienced every human emotion, sometimes simultaneously.  Why?

Well remember in June how I told you that there was a teens tiny chance that we might not have to wait until the end of the summer for investigations to be completed?   That if they were completed sooner that maybe we’d get to travel this summer?  To be honest, I only half-heartedly prayed this would be the case.  But, 48 hours after our living relative interview at the embassy, we received an email that our investigation was complete!  We had visa appointments in July, which meant we would be traveling in July to pick up our children!  Wahoo!

We booked a hotel room.  We booked plane flights.  We furiously packed.  And packed.  And weighed bags and repacked.  We scurried around finding perfect money newer than 2006 with no creases, marks, or tears.  (Because few places accept credit cards and apparently, they only like perfect US money.)  We hosted missionaries to the Congo who helped us pack and prepare for life in Kinshasa.  We gathered groupons and gift cards for Henry and Grace to take with them to our friends who were keeping them.  

And then about 48 hours from the time we were supposed to leave we heard devastating news:  Charlie’s passport application had been lost by the passport issuing office and so, obviously, the kids had missed their visa appointment.  We were suddenly forced to decide to push back our tickets and pay change fees and the difference in fares or cancel them all together, pay fines and get partial refunds. We tried to push back our hotel reservations, but always knowing there was no real way to know when exactly his passport would be issued.  Or if the embassy would be able to reschedule our appointment in a timely manner.  We were one of the first appointments scheduled for our agency under the new immigration policies, so to some degree, all of us were swimming in unchartered waters.  And the water was deep, dark, and churning.  

To say we were sad and angry would be an understatement.  There was a sense of us reliving every miscarriage and the loss of Emma Sloan all over again.  Because you should just know that waiting adoptive Mommas are so very much like pregnant women in their emotional (in)stability. But not only are we wrecks,  we are loony while also under intense financial strain.  So much fun for everyone!  (Bonus points are that you can drink while waiting during adoption.  And you should.)  

Henry and Grace even buckled under the weight of our grief.  I oscillated between snapping at everyone and crying out of sadness and shame.  We tried to find someone to blame: each other, our agency, the system, the embassy, the Congo, God.  At one point, Sloan awoke to the sound of me crying and cussing while in the shower.  He asked, “Ummm…is there someone in there with you?”  I replied, “I’m yelling at God.  Sure, there are bureaucratic delays, but ultimately He is in charge.”  Sloan said, “Okay, well maybe lay off the f-bombs when praying.  You’re a grocery cart and a pint of booze away from being a hobo.”  

But in the end, we knew the truth:  there was no one culprit behind our delay—this was just life in a fallen world, bureaucracy was slow and orphans got the short end of the stick.  

But this was God’s plan for our family, and He would derive glory in our delay.  I delved into the Psalms.  Ever grateful for David’s words which were f-bomb free but still spoke my heart.  Psalm 22 was ever on the tip of my tongue:

My God, my God, why have you forsaken me? Why are you so far from saving me, so far from my cries of anguish? My God, I cry out by day, but you do not answer, by night, but I find no rest…Do not be far from me, for trouble is near and there is no one to help… I am poured out like water, and all my bones are out of joint.  My heart has turned to wax; it has melted within me. My mouth is dried up like a potsherd, and my tongue sticks to the roof of my mouth; you lay me in the dust of death.

And in the midst of David’s distress, David ends the psalm in the future tense, knowing that one day God’s people will proclaim He has done it!  So while I was upset with God’s tarrying, I knew He would bring my kids home.  

But when?

After much delay, we FINALLY got Charlie’s passport.  So then it was time to re-appproach the embassy and ask for another appointment.  During this time, we continued to beg God for patience.  If there was a verse on patience in the Bible, I was clinging to it, thinking if I just prayed the right prayer, God would make me okay with these delays.  That if I just trusted Him enough I’d be all zen and peaceful and could return to business as usual, complaining about my first world problems like too much rain and forgetting my grocery bags as opposed to yearning for my children languishing in an orphanage.    That if I could just learn the lesson that God was trying to teach me, all would be well and we could proceed.

But then God gave me 2 Peter 3:9.  At first glance, I kinda dismissed it.  Perhaps God was not trying to teach me about myself.  (Wait?  You mean it isn’t about me?)  Perhaps it was not my own impatience God was trying to reveal, but rather, His own patience with me.  That I can and should continue to pray Come quickly, Lord Jesus!  Hasten the day when my faith becomes sight and there is no more death or mourning or tears or orphans!  However, I should also realize that He tarries not because He is forgetful or distracted or angry with me or stuck on Candy Crush level 208 (for the love, people!), but because He is patient and He is not done.  He is waiting so that more of us can experience forever in His fullness.  His love is so great, it empowers Him to wait for us.  

Y’all I can’t even comprehend that.  Love so big it is pleased to wait? 

So we wait.  Not because we are pleased to do so, but because we really have no other choice.  We have new visa appointments for next week.  We hope to travel mid-September.  About 2 months after we first thought.  But I do get to be here for Henry’s first day of Kindergarten
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How can you be praying?
-For no more hiccups in our process.  For the embassy appointments to go well and for our visas to be issued quickly.
-For the next steps in country to happen quickly. 
-For our new travel plans to be able to happen:  I am planning on travelling solo and then Sloan will follow up about 12 days later and then we will all fly home together, thereby maximizing Sloan’s PTO stateside.
-For me to figure out how to divvy up our supplies.  Before I had everything split evenly between 5 bags.  Now I have to basically put every necessity in 3 or pay loads in extra baggage fees.  So that’s 100 lbs less!
-For Charlie and Mollie’s health.  Charlie has lost some weight and has begun to ask for us.  Our boy misses us and is ready to come home to us! 
-For us to continue to trust God to provide for us.  Each delay has had both emotional and financial cost.  The changing of the plane tickets cost $1600.  So basically the entire amount raised during our CFA fundraiser.