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When God shows up

Few things in life leave me speechless. We could probably count on one hand how many times that has happened.

You know, as a childless couple we lived a pretty comfortable life.  Things were turned upside down when God brought us three little girls.  Part of my struggle in knowing if we should adopt or not was questioning how we will ever be able to afford raising 3 kids and everything that entails.

We are in the process of building a house that we believe will better accommodate our new family.  In the meantime, we need to sell our current little love nest.  The timing of the two needs to be nearly perfect… and I long for control.  Yet, God has invited me into a new level of trust.

During a day of prayer a few weeks ago I sensed the Lord giving me the word “abundance” and I began to practice believing for his abundance in our lives and not just his provision.  My last two blogs were pictures of his work in my heart as I am seeking to see his goodness.  I spent three days praying show me your glory.  I have been praying over a specific need for a few weeks, asking God for his abundance and to reveal himself in a way that I would never doubt was him.

I was hoping to see his provision before we needed to make a significant payment but I sensed he was asking me to step out in faith and trust that his provision would come.  I wrote my post on Wednesday and then took a big step.

Later that day we picked up the girls and went to our Chiropractor.  These people, man… they love us more than we deserve.  I had just shared with them by phone that morning that we had finalized adoption and when we walked into that office you would have thought we were movie stars.  We were met with such excitement and celebration, hugs and kisses… joy enveloped us.  It feels like home there.  They’ve known us almost 3 years, we started going immediately after a car accident.  They have seen us grow from just the 2 of us to a party of 5 in what felt like the blink of an eye.  They have loved our girls like no other.  So much patience, such kindness and undeserved love.

Even with all their goodness, I tend to stress out at the chiropractor’s office.  If it weren’t for our family that place would be the picture of peaceful.  But my family, we’re like a freakin’ tornado… I feel certain there’s a warning that goes out when they see us pull into the parking lot.  “Brace yourselves!”    When it’s our turn to see the doctor, we go in this small changing room that I am pretty sure sounds like someone is being murdered as we try to dress three little people and keep them contained until we’re called.

We step in and with as much excitement as three little girls can have they share the news that “we’ve been adopted! and my new name is…!”  We go through all the checks and balances, every little one is serviced and we’re moving on out.  I get them all buckled into the car when daddy tells me I need to go back in and talk to the doctor.

Somewhat confused I walk back into our exam room where I am met by our doctor friend and it goes something like this

We really love you guys and are so excited for you and the girls.  We have a patient that saw you in the office a while back and asked me about you.  So I told them your story, how you went from zero to three kids and … (it’s all really a blur)… but this guy just couldn’t believe that someone would do what you’ve done.  He has been waiting for your adoption to finalize over the past year and he wanted me to tell you that he is setting up college savings accounts and would like to fund them for each of your girls……………………..

Shut the front door!

Let me pause here while you pick your jaw off the floor.      Wipe those tears friends.

God just showed up.

My head was spinning.  I could not speak.  All I could do was say, what do you mean?  Who are you talking about?  Why would someone do something like this?

They don’t want us to know who they are.  They just want to play a part in this story.  They have been waiting to make sure that we got to keep the girls, but it has been on their heart for months.  And I don’t even know their names.               But God does.

Y’all, I am humbled.  I am blown away by God’s goodness.  I prayed for 3 days that God would show me his glory, and he just showed off.  All I could think while Dr. P. was talking to me was, you have got to be kidding me.  This cannot be real.  God just blew my mind.

I cried all the way home.  Have you ever tried to explain to 2 and 4 yr olds there is such a thing as happy tears?  I seriously cannot find words to express what I have felt the past 2 days as I have reflected on God’s faithfulness.

Earlier that morning my sister shared from Psalm 27, so I spent some time in this passage.  As I reached the end of the chapter I resonated with the psalmist when he said

I would have despaired unless I had believed that I would see the goodness of the Lord in the land of the living.  Wait for the Lord; be strong and let your heart take courage; Yes, wait for the Lord.    (Psalm 27:13-14)

I was given courage that morning as I faced what felt big, then chose to step out in faith that I would see the goodness of the Lord.  It’s almost as if he was just waiting for me to believe.

I know this is long… and some of you are ready to kill me for leaving you hanging Wednesday night.  It has taken me a little time to sort out the reality of this gift and I wanted to share in a way that is honoring, appropriate and gives God the glory.  I can’t comprehend what God is up to, or what stirred this couple to bless us in the way that they have.

I try not to get caught up in the prosperity gospel, or name-it-and-claim-it goodness.  I hope you hear my heart when I say that I have simply asked God to be all that he says he wants to be for me.  My faith has been challenged almost daily for the past two years.  I have reached new depths of what it means to truly trust that no matter what comes, his heart is good.  I have had to believe that he will not lead me where his hand will not provide and in the depths of my being face the question I have carried nearly all my life, am I really worth it? 

I have spent weeks waiting for the wind, bracing for the quake, watching for the fire, but as I lay my head down to rest I hear his gentle whisper say, I see you.

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Show me Your glory

The Lord said, “Go out and stand on the mountain in the presence of the Lord, for the Lord is about to pass by.”  Then a great and powerful wind tore the mountains apart and shattered the rocks before the Lord, but the Lord was not in the wind.  After the wind there was an earthquake, but the Lord was not in the earthquake.  After the earthquake came a fire, but the Lord was not in the fire.  And after the fire came a gentle whisper.  When Elijah heard it, he pulled his cloak over his face and went out and stood at the mouth of the cave.    (I Kings 19:11-13)

I have had a long-standing fascination with God’s glory.  I’ve said it before, but I am simply in awe of the stories where God shows up.  I live in a place of anticipation, hoping and wondering what he will do next.  The story above of Elijah and the story of Moses on Mt. Sinai, these are two of my favorites.

God told Elijah to go stand on the mountain, for the Lord is about to pass by.  {Whoo!  I get goosebumps thinking about it.}  Then a great wind came, but God was not in the wind.  The came an earthquake, but God was not in the earthquake.  Then came a fire, but God was not in the fire.  After all of these came a gentle whisper…. And he knew this was the Lord.

I don’t know about you but I tend to expect God to be somewhere in the wind, earthquake and fire… but I am learning, practicing and seeking to find God in his gentle whisper.  I’m tempted to think that when I don’t feel the wind and earthquake or see the fire that God must not be near… but I have found that he is longing for me to know his voice – that still small voice.

When the twins first moved in with us we could not tell them apart at all.  Seriously.  One of them had a white sun-spot-dot on her cheek and that was the closest thing that we could identify as a distinguishing mark.  Once summer passed that white dot faded and we were in trouble.  I promise you they heard “which one are you” more times than they ever heard their names.

But then something happened.  Over time I could tell them apart by their voices.  I kid you not, the first way I was able to distinguish them was by the different tone of their chipmunk voices.

I will say it was helpful one day when Elisabeth got a hair barrette stuck between her front two teeth that resulted in a gap… then we had a definite tell to distinguish them.  But still to this day, knowing their voices gives me the most confidence.

In the same way I have learned in relationship that knowing God’s voice is the key to finding him – in the midst or in the absence of the wind, quake and fire my heart must be tuned to hear his voice, even when it is a whisper.

Similarly to Elijah, in a place of frustration and desperation, Moses cried out to God, show me your glory.  I admire their determination.  That’s a pretty bold thing to request.  I find it interesting that in both instances God sent them to the mountain and honored their request.  The thing that is so striking to me about Moses’ experience is that God’s response to him is I will let my goodness pass before you and I will proclaim my name before you.  (Exodus 33:19a)

The next day Moses climbs up the mountain and did what the Lord commanded him.

Then the Lord passed by in front of him and proclaimed, “The Lord, the Lord God, compassionate and gracious, slow to anger and abounding in loving-kindness and truth;”  Exodus 34:6

All Moses could do was bow down and worship.  When he heard the voice of the Lord calling out his own goodness –  his first response was worship.

These two stories are so significant to me.  I haven’t yet comprehended all the reasons why this resonates within me, but it has something to do with two key things:  1) his gentle whisper and 2) his glory is known through his goodness.

Moses prayed “show me your glory”; God responded with, this is who I am.  I am compassionate, gracious, slow to anger and abounding in loving-kindness and truth.  You want to see my glory?  See my goodness.

Around this time last year I wrote the post, Name the Graces.  Obviously I’m still in the place of seeking to see God’s glory.  I’m beginning to see a theme here; maybe God is trying to show me something.  So I have been practicing asking God to show me his goodness, in everything.  Naming the graces, even when things don’t look the way I want.

When I have thoughts that say I didn’t get something right, an unanswered prayer is obviously punishment for all the ways I have fallen short, or who am I to think I deserve God’s goodness…. I am able to test them against his words in Exodus.  I am compassionate, gracious, slow to anger and abounding in loving-kindness and truth…  and I can hear his gentle whisper reminding me that he never changes.  His goodness is more than I can imagine, and his love for me is overwhelming.  Yes, I may miss the mark and need correcting, but he does so with loving-kindness. It’s in knowing his still small voice that I am able to recognize his goodness, and I’m humbled.

And from that place, I am motivated – not just to recognize his goodness but to be a channel of his goodness.  I don’t share my story simply for my own benefit… my sincere desire is that through our story you are able to see God’s glory.  Y’all, I fail, daily.  Some days I am embarrassed to even be called a parent.  Just the other day I found myself half-way yelling at a child that if I had to tell her one more time to do “something” I was going to eat her cookie right in front of her…. Because that is grace.  Clearly, that is grace.  I cannot tell you how many times I have to go back and apologize for my mistakes just from recognizing that what I am saying is not giving my girls a good picture of who God is.  I want to offer grace, I want to correct with loving-kindness, I want to ooze compassion….  But sometimes the best I can do is put me in safety break!

I am learning.  The more I spend time hearing and knowing God’s still small voice, searching out his goodness and experiencing his grace, the more I am able to offer these things to my girls.  Because when the wind blows, the earth shakes and the fire roars… I long for them to know his gentle whisper.

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Still Smiling :)

Whew! It feels like I’ve been holding my breath for the past year… and all of a sudden I can feel air again.

What.a.year.  I took some time recently and looked back over many of my posts and felt the tears well up in my eyes.  Some tears were remembering the tension, the heartbreak, the disappointment and the pain that has surfaced in our story, but mostly my tears are of thanksgiving for God’s faithfulness, goodness and grace in our lives.

God is so good.  I cannot say it enough.  I’m not sure I’ve stopped smiling since that day.

Wait, I have… that one time that Annabelle tee-teed in her panties in Barnes & Noble and we walked all the way through the store with feet squishing as she told everyone “I peed in my Crocs!”…. but then again, I started laughing because this is forever my little girl.

We are two weeks post adoption and there have been moments where I remind myself, we fought hard for this life.  Sometimes I get so frustrated when things don’t go my way, when fits are pitched, when I can’t control little people or how much noise they make… and I have to remember… this is everything I asked for.  #savor

Other times I sit in awe of God’s plan.  I am humbled by the part I get to play in it.  I have been reflecting lately on the story in  1 Kings 17 of Elijah and the widow.  You’ll have to read it, but to keep it simple, Elijah predicted a drought, God told him to go live by the brook and the ravens brought him food.  After a while, the brook dried up.  Then…

God spoke to him:  Get up and go to Zarephath in Sidon and live there.  I’ve instructed a woman who lives there, a widow, to feed you.”

So Elijah does as he is told.  He met the widow at the entrance of the village and asked her to bring him some water and while she’s at it, something to eat.  (I’m certain he asked politely.)

The widow responds that she barely has a thing.  As a matter of fact, she is gathering the last drop of oil and flour to make a final meal for her and her son to eat before they die.  Elijah brings out the big guns in verse 13:

Elijah said to her, “Don’t worry about a thing.  Go ahead and do what you’ve said.  But first make a small biscuit for me and bring it back here.  Then go ahead and make a meal from what’s left for you and your son.  This is the word of God of Israel: ‘The jar of flour will not run out and the bottle of oil will not become empty before God sends rain on the land and ends this drought.'”

And she went right off and did it, did just as Elijah asked.  And it turned out as he said – daily food for her and her family.  The jar of meal didn’t run out and the bottle of oil didn’t become empty; God’s promise fulfilled to the letter, exactly as Elijah had delivered it!   1Kings 17:13-16 (MSG)

The thing that is so striking to me about this story is her obedience.  She went right off and did it, just as Elijah asked.  Oh ye woman of faith!  I would have had to talk to him just a little bit more before I “went off and did as he asked”.  Seriously, a lot more.  And prayed about it.  And consulted with my mom and sister. Then checked on Facebook to see if this guy is legit.  You know, all my due diligence.

As I read this story recently I realized that this woman was not just God’s way of providing for Elijah… he saw her need too… and his provision came as a result of her obedience.  They each had a need.  God’s provision was made to and through the other.

Friends, when God calls you to do something, he provides. You can’t out-give God.

I cannot tell you how many times over the past 2 years I have fretted, wondering how God would provide, or move in situations.  There were times that I finally had to shut-up and realize that a lot of what I was praying against in the timing was a means of God’s provision for us.  I am a slow learner, so take it from me, if God is calling you to step-in to something bigger than you can imagine, and lives are at stake, He very well has a plan.

I do not believe I was God’s first choice for my girls.  Honestly, I don’t.  I truly believe that God’s plan was to be with their family.  That’s hard to swallow.  I also realize that there is an enemy that seeks to steal, kill and destroy and families are what he is after.

The events that led to a need for my girls to have a safe home were not small.  My heart breaks for both what they have experienced and also for the loss that their birth family now knows.  My own celebration of God’s gift in my life is not untouched by the pain of others’ loss.  I do not hold that lightly.

But God, in his goodness, allows me to be a part of his provision; and in my sometimes-slow-to-respond obedience, I am seeing his faithfulness to me and my family.

And this story…. it just got real.

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SneakPeek of the best day ever.

*photo credit to LittleMissCreative

Love Does, My Story

A Little Look Back

…seek peace and pursue it.   – Psalm 34:14b

20 years ago, in the spring of ’96 there was this guy that asked me to be his girlfriend and I said yes.  That isn’t even where this story begins… but it’s where I’ll start today.  20 years since that first yes.

This weekend we celebrated our 12th wedding anniversary.  I could not have ever imagined our story unfolding as it has.  never.

Years ago, at least 6 but I think even more, a friend of ours was praying for us when he had a picture of me on a rope swing, and the Lord inviting me to let go of the swing.  Let go, trust, enjoy.  Come in.  The water is cool.   At the time I thought, yeah right.  I’m never letting go.  I don’t do adventure.

As I sit here this morning reflecting on a journey, I can see God’s gentle pursuit and the many signposts along the way that speak deeply of his love for me.

A year or two later we made a major move that we had really not considered – relocating for a job that we never thought we’d get to a place we never expected … it still makes me laugh to think about how we ended up here.  We thought we had hit life’s jackpot, skipped adulthood and pretty much moved into retirement bliss.  We had a real sense that God had given us a season of rest.  Dear Jesus, if I had known what was coming I am certain I would have slept even more.

Around our 10th year of marriage we realized we’re adults now, we need to start doing adult things.  We responded to a nudge from the Lord to step into foster and hopefully make a difference in the lives of children.  We have a deep conviction that to whom much is given, much more will be required (Luke 12:48). 

We walked through a difficult first placement.  One that taught us so much about the realities of the brokenness around us.  I can fully relate to the recent words of Jason Johnson on receiving their first child through foster care:

I’m convinced we didn’t rescue a little girl from her situation as much as a little girl rescued us from ours. She pulled back the veil of the world around us and showed us a broken side of it we had all but isolated ourselves from. She pulled back the veil of our hearts as well and showed us the same.

There was no way we would ever be the same.  In some ways, we lost our own innocence, but it was needed.  We lived comfortably unaware of the battle going on in our own neighborhoods.  Our eyes were opened, our hearts were broken and we were shaken.  We took some time to regroup, pull ourselves back up and see if this is really where God was calling us.

During our break, a long time friend reached out after many years and shared a dream she had that we would be receiving twins. babies. and they will be forever. 

To say I stopped breathing would be an understatement.  I don’t remember breathing for the next week.  I hardly ate.  I prayed and prayed and prayed some more.  My husband, he prayed once… then I asked him if he was still praying and he said, what?  I didn’t know we were supposed to keep praying.  🙂

In that painful season of the transition of our first placement I engulfed myself in the Bethel Music album that had just been released.  The song It is Well was on constant replay as I tried to convince myself it was well with my broken heart.  When we received this word of the twins I really didn’t think my heart could handle another break.

I went to my parent’s house for a week while Daniel was traveling.  I had received other words confirming what I sensed God was inviting me into.  At their church a series of unfortunate events culminated in an unusual Sunday service.  With no worship leader they decided to use the Bethel video worship from the album that I had been soaking in.  The cover song for that album is You Make Me Brave.

Now if there is anything I consider myself lacking it is courage and bravery.  Seriously, lacking.  My pose of self competence is a mask of control that was deeply rooted in fear. This was not a song I could even sing.  Nothing in me felt brave.  But that morning as we sang that song an elder shared a picture he had of a person standing at the edge of the ocean, big waves were rolling in but the Father was calling them to step into the waves, they will not overcome you.

What little air I had been breathing was immediately sucked from the room as tears slowly fell out of my eyes.  This word could.not.be.for.me.  I cannot handle the waves. I hate waves.  Please Jesus, invite me into the calm… I promise I can be fun in the calm.   But calm was what I can handle.  The waves were what he wanted to use to reveal his Glory in my life.  I had to step into a story that left me believing nothing less than You Make Me Brave.

When I finally shared the dream with my dad, he laid back on the couch, almost in an overwhelmed way, and said he had a deep sense that the word shared on Sunday was for me but he couldn’t even look at me.  It was a distinct confirmation for me that I better get ready, the waves are coming.

One week later I received the call about the twins… after Daniel and I picked ourselves off the floor (in two different places) got over the “are you shittin’ me” shock of this call… we said yes.  Our yes was half-obedience, a little bit of curiosity and the rest pure fear of saying no to something God had so clearly spoken.

The rest of the story unfolds throughout the 60 something posts of this storyofagirl blog.  It’s surreal.  It’s stunning.  It’s beautifully painful but undoubtedly raw.  I’ve sought to bring you the real life as it has unfolded in the daily battle of loving children from hard places to  learning what it means to surrender to a plan that wasn’t yours, trust a God that is bigger than big and hope that no matter what may come, he is faithful.

There were many days when I wondered if we would survive.  There were prayers that I could relate to Jesus’ prayer in the garden… if this cup could pass from me – not my will but yours be done.  But there are so many days that have been beyond what I could have dreamed of.  The laughter and love that fills our home from these three precious girls is what kept me in the battle.  The growth we’ve seen in them and in us as they’ve raised us and turned us into parents is what makes it all worth it.  It has taken us a while but in all fairness, they have been children longer than we’ve been parents… it’s hard but we’re doing the best we can.

Your support has been the glue that holds this girl together.  Knowing you are praying, you are vested in our story, you are welcoming little girls with everything you have to offer, unconditionally, without judgement, offering grace when they have screamed their heads off… you people are my people.

Two weeks after the last trial, the final hurdle between us and adoption, another friend sent me a message with a dream she had of our adoption.  This was a much-needed burst of hope on a weary journey.  I haven’t really watched The Lord of the Rings and I most certainly haven’t read the books…. but from what I’ve gathered… I feel like Frodo and you guys have been all those weird looking people that are on his side 🙂  Except you’re all much prettier!

As I sit today and reflect on the past 24 months… the journey of the dream, the rope swing, the waves that I thought would take me under, I listen over and over again to the song You Make Me Brave and my heart sings indeed… He has made me brave and you have been a big part of it.  There are a couple of key things I want to point out from this part of my story.

  1.  Build your fellowship.  Surround yourself and fill your life with people that know and hear God.  I fully believe he speaks and I am forever grateful for those that have shared with me his words and in turn given me the courage to step into the big things he has invited me into.    Call it your tribe, your fellowship, your village, your people… don’t do life without support.
  2. Seek peace and pursue it.  It is tempting for me to seek answers.  Often my prayers are asking God for specifics… or explaining to him how I think he should move… but I am learning that not every answer is specific.  Many times the next step is just into peace.  My wrestle in the past two years has been trying to figure out all the timing, the provision, the pieces of this story when all God was asking was for me to follow his peace and trust his heart.  Sometimes God gives specifics… like a dream, or scripture, or specific word… but sometimes he simply gives peace.  Go with it.
  3. Love big.  Love unreservedly.  Leave no regrets.  In these two years we’ve had a number of children come in and out that were not forever pieces… but we will forever be impacted by their time here.  My hope is that they will remember the love they experienced in our home and that it will forever point them to a Father that loves them big.
  4. Be brave.  Don’t let fear hold you back.  If God is saying do something that seems bigger than what you can do… trust that he is faithful.  Often times he is more concerned with the process than the destination, so find God in the waves.
  5. Share your story.  There is power in vulnerability.  Don’t just share the pretty parts… we need to hear the hard parts too.  I have often found the greatest grace in the most painful places.  These are the places that have strengthened my faith, solidified my trust and refilled my hope.  We all need to hear how God is moving, it encourages me.

Y’all 12 years of marriage, 2 years of parenthood and in 2 days we stand before a judge and give a big yes.  I imagine I will still be singing You Make Me Brave for the next 12 years and beyond.  By then I’ll have twin 16 year olds… dear Lord, I need you more.  As I anticipate celebrating the realization of the dream we’ve been holding, I know our story doesn’t end here.  This is just the beginning….  I hope you keep hanging with me.

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Throwback to the beginning.  They were so tiny!

*photo credit to LitteMissCreative because she’s the best there is.

 

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When a heart breaks

I’ve been avoiding you.  All of you. I want to hide.  I want to pretend like this past week wasn’t real.  I wish it wasn’t, but it is…

She was my biggest fan… well… next to my mom of course.  But you couldn’t tell where one of them ends and the other begins.  She loved our story, she prayed for me daily and now she will watch it unfold from a higher place.

This was her last message to me:

You are their mommy today, tomorrow and for ever long that God gives you this title. I love you like my own and I am proud to say I know you.

My eyes fill with tears as I try to capture in one post all that she meant to me.  It just isn’t possible.

This was my friend Judy.  She was ushered into heaven one week ago and I still feel the sting of loss.  She loved me big.  I honestly thought I was her favorite… then as I gathered with everyone else in her life I realized,  we ALL think we were her favorite.

Judy had a special way of making you feel like you were the most important person around.  She loved unconditionally, unreservedly and unlike any other I have ever known.  She always saw the good in me and called out of me things I couldn’t believe for myself.

She prayed faithfully.  She loved my girls.  She fought in the heavenlies and held on to hope when I didn’t have the strength to hold on for myself.  She’s the first person my mom calls and quite possibly the most excited when she found out about our adoption.

I’ve always called her my other mother, because that is for sure the role she played in my life.  She was there the day I was born.  She picked up the pieces of my devastated brother who had begged for a brother and found out I was a girl.  (sorry!)  She loved me, crooked little legs and all.  Unconditionally.

She has been at every major event in my life… except when I graduated college… but even I skipped that.  When Daniel proposed to me at midnight on New Year’s Eve many years ago, her door was the one I knocked on at 1:00 am.  And she screamed with excitement at this little girl that couldn’t wait to be married.

When I got married, she gave me one piece of advice:  “never let the bed get cold.”  So I immediately went on to Pottery Barn and ordered more bedding.  I live in Florida now but I’ll be darned if I don’t have blankets and down comforters on my bed… even in the summer.  Daniel keeps telling me that’s not what she meant… but I know it is.  We stay warm.

She was a safe place, comfortable, welcoming and funny.  We always laughed when we were together.  If she couldn’t find my mom, she would call me and we would talk through all the possible places she might be.  9 times out of 10 it was just the shower.

When my sister called and told me I needed to come home, I couldn’t believe it.  I couldn’t swallow the truth.  All I could think is how hard it will be to celebrate the big things without her there.  Our adoption is so close… but she won’t be here.  It’s not just about me.  My heart breaks for so many people that will feel the pain of that empty space at the table, at the party, at the office, at the doors of Wiregrass church, at the baby showers, the graduations, the weddings and at Labor Day.

She was so many things to so many people, it’s hard to believe one tiny little lady could have such a big impact on this world.  At the funeral Amy listed all the names of Judy.  I never knew we could call her Judy Booty!  Seriously, how did I miss out on that!?!?!

But now we speak of her with her new name.  Faithful, beautiful, bride of Christ.  I know she is watching down on us… all of us.  And if you have any doubts, I assure you she is taking care of business in heaven.  Trust me, there is no resting.  She has Jesus’ undivided attention now.

I don’t know what I was hoping to accomplish with this post…. except to honor that which is honorable… one special lady that has forever imprinted love on my life and the ones I love.

To all of you who were fortunate enough to know her, consider yourself blessed.  For those of you who didn’t have the privilege of knowing her, rest in knowing that you have seen her fruit in my life.

My heart hurts at knowing there won’t be a comment from my Judy on this post, or any others.  It won’t be the same.  But I find comfort in knowing she is having a grand ol’ time running things in heaven.  Once again, sorrow may last for the night and I can trust that joy will come again… one day.

Love you forever~

 

Love Does, My Story

When Heaven Moves Earth

“yes Jesus loves me, yes Jesus loves me, the Bible tells me so”

I hear the sweetest little voice singing these words from under the table.  This is my favorite.  My heart skips a beat at the sound of her voice singing the words I long for her to know in the depths of her being… Yes, Jesus loves you!

Adoption is in the air… the anticipation is almost more than I can bear.  Every little thing tugs at my heart-strings.  It’s not just our story, but yours as well.  The very day we found out that we were cleared for adoption, 4 houses down from us a tiny baby girl was born into her adopted family that had waited and prayed for this child.  I met this tiny one last night and the peace that envelopes her is surreal… I can’t help but wonder, “will you ever understand how heaven moved to get you here?”

One of my favorite scriptures in the Bible is found in Matthew 7:11 If you, then, though you are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your Father in heaven give good gifts to those who ask him!” 

I have often said, my dad makes God look good.  When I have thought of this scripture I have known that there is nothing on earth my dad would not do for me… how much more so my heavenly father?

There have been many times in the past 21 months that I have looked at my circumstances and talked back to God saying, “my dad would have done something by now!”  I’m sure there were some feet stomping and tear shedding to go along with my tantrum.

I may not fully see in this lifetime how heaven has moved on my behalf… but I know it has.

When I look back on our story, the past 21 months, and all that God has done to bring to fruition the dream he placed in our heart I want my girls to know one thing, He is a good good father. 

It’s hard some days for me to wrap my head around adoption.  For adoption to be necessary something has broken, a plan or a dream,  something is not what it should be… but in God’s grace, he provides a path of redemption, a saving of the story.

Here we are, literally counting down the days until adoption, practicing new names and beaming with excitement like expectant parents.  I have prayed that God would guard this season, for the first time we get to truly be excited and let the anticipation build up for this one big day… almost like a wedding!

We’re riding down the road in the car, “Raise your hand if you wanna be adopted!”  or shouting out new names like we know who we’re talking to.  Y’all, it’s just too much!

We had never discussed adoption before last week… honestly… the girls haven’t even known that they needed to be adopted, life has just been life for them.  So we took them out to dinner and it went something like this:

“Girls, mommy and daddy want to talk to you about something.”  – me
“What!?!?!?”   – all the little girlie voices
“Well, want to know if it would be okay if we adopted all of you so we can be your mommy and daddy forever?!”  –  obviously me
a twin’s head hangs down and she softly says, “but I wanted a new mommy and daddy…”
……………….    [I am sitting there stunned….]
“I’m just kidding!  I want you to be my mommy and daddy forever and ever and ever!” – said twin

What the hell was that!?!?!  Seriously! That is some high level sarcasm there.  Not what you would expect from a four-year-old!  I almost told her I changed my mind!  But honestly, I can’t blame her… Daniel and I are two of the most sarcastic people you will ever meet.  I can’t say I deserved that… but I can certainly see where I contributed to it. 😉

I told my dad the other day I’m a little worried that once we finalize adoption I’m not going to have anything to write about…. after spending a couple of days around us he assured me there will still be things to write!  Maybe, just maybe, you’ll get to see our fun side again.

Until then… I will be reading everything I can about What to Expect When You’re Expecting – 3 Toddlers… oh wait, no one in their right mind would put something like that in print.  I’ll keep on potty-training, planning a celebration and seeking to capture this story that God has given us.  Thank you for being there through every step!

I mentioned last week that there were a bunch of legal hoops that needed to be jumped through, and I just have to say, our case-worker was on point… and God has moved in incredible ways.  We have been approved and will be moving into our final stage of adoption, exactly ONE day before our home-study expires.  Yeah, let that sink in.

God is kind-of a show-off.

This morning as I sat, somewhat anxiously, considering where we are and what still needs to happen I came across a new-to-me song that just met the state of my heart…

Oh, I’ve heard a thousand stories of what they think you’re like
But I’ve heard the tender whisper of love in the dead of night
And you tell me that you’re pleased
And that I’m never alone

You’re a Good, Good Father
It’s who you are, it’s who you are, it’s who you are
And I’m loved by you
It’s who I am, it’s who I am, it’s who I am

– excerpt from Good Good Father by Chris Tomlin feat. Pat Barrett & Anthony Brown

My heart can’t stop singing this morning of His goodness.

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Joy comes in the morning

Oh.my.heart.  Grab a tissue and sit down for a minute.  Life is getting real.

My heart has gone up and down all week.  I feel like all I have done is cry. Don’t worry, it ends well.

It all started with Mother’s Day weekend…I was feeling so tender already with my conflicting emotions about Mother’s Day and knowing that what is meant to be celebratory can also be such a painful day for many women.  I was keenly aware of how blessed I am to both celebrate and be celebrated.  I was especially honored by my older brother who offered to help Daniel watch all of our kids so the Moms could have a girls night out.  It was such a treat and the men did a great job keeping all the little people alive.

Monday night when we were getting ready for bed we realized that our beloved dog Mojo was on his last leg.  Now this dog… man… he’s been through a lot in the (almost) 12 years we have had him.  I even named him Mojo fully expecting he wouldn’t last long in our life and I could say, “we lost our mojo”.  I know, I’m crazy.

I had hoped we would catch his decline in quality of life early enough that we could intervene and save him from suffering.  By midnight I realized we were probably not going to make it through the night.  Daniel found me cuddled in his dog bed, petting his formerly-golden-now-just-grey coat as he struggled to breathe.  I wanted him to know he wasn’t alone, he has been a great dog and I forgive him for peeing in my shoes two weeks ago.  He didn’t seem to be in pain, just confused as to why moving and breathing was so hard.  I could feel his body relax as we spoke gently to him of our love and all the fun times we had together.  I have never seen a dog love a man as much as Mojo loved my husband.  His heart beat stronger just with Daniel near.  And I felt it as his heart gave up and his breath stopped.  I cried as if he was a child…. because let’s be honest… that is what he has been to us.  He was our first child and I had to let him go.

Mojo&Daniel

I was so incredibly grateful that we were able to be with him in those last moments, to share our love and comfort him in what I can only imagine was a scary stage.  He died so peacefully and he looked beautiful.  And for the first time in his life, he was still.  To be honest, I always expected him to go in some dramatic  blaze of glory… but it was so peaceful, like he knew there was nothing left to be said.  Just our “I love you” was enough. It was over.

mojo

Since I am clearly unstable, you can only imagine how much crying we did.  In the middle of waiting as Daniel was digging a really big hole on Tuesday morning, I received a text that our sweet blue-eyed girl would be moving the next day.  Seriously?  Do you know my dog just died?

What’s a girl to do?

Well, I did what I signed up for.  I washed what little bit of clothes she came with, I packed up her things and prepared to let another piece of my heart go.  When we picked the girls up from school we explained again where Mojo went.  We let them put flowers on his grave and waited to see him “fly to heaven”.  Because… all dogs go to heaven.  And then we talked about miss blue-eyes and that she would be leaving tomorrow.  We wanted to have a fun night together and savor the time we had left with our sweet girl.

This morning we woke up, got dressed and took the sisters to school.  I let little miss blue-eyes say goodbye to her sweet teachers and hug all the sisters.  She and I had a breakfast date at Chick-fil-A where she gave three random strangers hugs.  She lights up a room with her smile and her eyes are just the icing on the cake.  Her ringlet curls are to be envied and her sweet spirit will be missed.  I struggle with not knowing what her future will hold, but I rest in knowing the One who holds her future.  As I took her to meet her family my heart couldn’t help but be excited when I saw her feet break out in a happy dance at the sight of her brother and grandmother… it was priceless… and I could let go knowing I had loved her well.

Driving home through the island I marveled at the beauty around me.  It is a stunningly beautiful day.  I thought about the date, May 11th; five years ago we put our roots down in this place.  Five years to the day, we bought our house and said I wonder what God has in store for us here.  It didn’t seem real.  Why would God move us here?

I reflected on our journey in foster care.  This was the first time I gave a child back and felt like this is what was supposed to happen.  This is what foster care is supposed to be.  Loving with open hands and trusting God with the rest.  Then I thought about our girls and their story… and how God perfectly aligned us for this season, this place to be open and receiving of them.  How different our lives were five years ago.  How creative God is in his story.  You can’t even make this up.

Through it all I have such a sense of God’s tender care for me.  From Mother’s Day weekend, to being able to love Mojo through his last breath and letting go of my sweet blue-eyed girl – seeing her excitement as she goes home.  Through it all he has gently met me in the joy and in the tears.  Such a loving Father.

As I stepped into the busyness of my workday I received a text… not just any text… but the text I have been waiting for.  Eight weeks of waiting…

shoes2

WE ARE ADOPTING!

This story of a girl is about to get real!

What we’ve been waiting on… what we have been praying for… it has been cleared.  We are moving into adoption as fast as we possibly can.  Now friend, there are still things we cannot control and timing is one of them.  But let’s just take a moment and scream!

Happy dance. Wipe your tears. Happy dance again.

So as with all things I share… this comes with a disclaimer.  We are not aware of any other hurdles between us and forever, however I have absolutely no control over my life these days… so for today, we celebrate!

Thank you, thank you, thank you for all your prayers.  We are reaping the fruit of your faithfulness.  I truly hope you know what a huge part of our lives you are.  Please don’t stop praying, we still have those legal hoops to jump through.

Sorry I had to put you through an emotional roller coaster before we got to this point, but hey, if I had to ride it the least you can do is read it 😉

 

 

 

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Confessions of Mother’s Day

I found myself lying awake at 4:30 in the morning, Baby Girl couldn’t find her Sassy in her big bed, just one of the 3 times I have been up this night –  once to comfort and pray with Sissy after her scary dream and another just in response to mid-night cries.

I never dreamed this would be my life. If I’m honest, I don’t think I ever dreamed at all.  Sure I had plans, and they involved not having children… so I can’t help but think back to how I got here, awake at 4:30 in the morning on Mother’s Day weekend.

This wasn’t ever my dream.

I remember that special day when mothers are invited to stand and we honor the women that have poured into our lives, made sacrifices day after day and been the one cheering us on every step of the way.  I adore my mom and it has been a joy to celebrate her every year.

As I think about this Mother’s Day my heart feels such a tension that in some ways I wish we could skip this day.  I am all for honoring what is honorable, don’t get me wrong.  And Mothers, you are worth honoring.  But I can’t help but feel all the pain that comes with this day.

To the friends that have longed to be called mommy, have prayed for the positive pregnancy test or wept over the life that was lost…. I see you.  Your heart is good.  Your desires are right.  I wish there were words I could type that could touch that pain of desire not yet met.   It’s ok if you don’t want to come out today.  It’s ok for you to be disappointed, life isn’t fair. Your pain is real.

To you friend, who lost your own mom, even with all her imperfections, you still feel the deep loss.  I see you.  I long for you to experience comfort and peace this day as we honor our mothers.  I pray you are able to remember the good things and celebrate her life.  There is no softening your loss.  Your pain is real.

To the friends that never experienced what a mother should be, loving, nurturing, protecting and fighting for you… I pray God touches that deep place in your heart that longed for what was rightfully yours… but was stolen for whatever reason.  Your pain is real.

To the first mommy of my little girls, I see you.  I see you every day when I look in their deep brown eyes.  I see you in the passion they have for life and fierceness in their fight.  I hear you in their laughter that comes from the bottom of their belly – that you can’t help but join because it is so contagious.  This is you mommy.  You are all over them.  And some days, I feel guilty.

I know I shouldn’t feel guilty.  But I do.  I feel guilty for getting to adore these beautiful girls, watching every new milestone, tucking them in at night and breathing a sigh of relief when they fall into sleep.  This wasn’t my dream.

It is everything I never knew I ever wanted.

Abby_Daniel_Family_CampHelen-19

They are stunning. Even on the messy days, they take my breath away.  We are covered with attention everywhere we go.  I often feel like I need to admit they aren’t even mine.  We’re the lucky ones here.  I don’t know what I did to deserve this… they call me mommy.

When people ask me if I have children, I always say, “sort-of”.  I am stepping in to more confidence that I can say yes… but there’s always an explanation that follows.  I can’t fully own this glory that doesn’t feel like mine to own.

I have to be honest with you when I say, Mother’s Day is hard for me… it doesn’t feel fair.  It was much easier when I just got to celebrate all the wonderful mothers around me.  When I think of myself as a mother I think of all the things I don’t get right… the nights I have regretted what I spoke, or how I reacted.  I think of all the other people that could do a better job than me.  I feel so undeserving of the honor of mother.

But I imagine there are very few of us that wake up thinking “I’ve got this mother thing down!” I have to give myself grace.  Maybe Mother’s Day is not about honoring perfection but honoring the women that haven’t given up.  The ones that get up day after day and start over and face this life that we’ve chosen, or been given or are waiting to experience.  The key is showing up.

Show up for whatever season God has you in.  Never stop showing up.

That’s what I’m doing.  I don’t know how long God is giving me to be called mommy by these sweet girls, but I will keep showing up.  In the middle of the night, at the end of the day, when they wake up way before I’m ready…. I’ll be there.

He’s giving me dreams.  I dream of being mommy forever, and maybe one day I’ll stand up on Mother’s Day, fully owning that honor.  For you friends that struggle with this day, I feel your pain… and it’s ok.    Just don’t stop showing up.  And if you need to wait til Monday…. I’m ok with that.

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Because, everybody needs an Abby

I remember back in the day, when my nieces and nephew were still small and liked to hang out with me, my littlest niece thought that an “Abby” was something everybody had.  Her little neighbor friend was going to the movies and Lexi naturally assumed her “abby” was the one taking her.  After all, everybody needs an Abby.

I loved being an aunt.  I could run to the rescue, do fun things, send unexpected surprises, have sleepovers and fill kids up with sugar and soda.  At the most most my responsibility would last 24 hours… at the least, I returned sugar-high kids to their parents with little to no remorse.  It was fun to be an Abby!

When children enter our home we always introduce ourselves by our first names.  In the past month we’ve seen three new faces come in for a short period of time or possibly longer.  Some of them have an understanding of their story and some of them don’t.

No matter what a child has experienced, no matter what they understand, one thing I have found to be true is that each child is created with this need in their heart to know there is a mommy and daddy.  We are uniquely created for connection and designed to experience nurture.  No amount of trauma can change that…. it only feeds it.

We have a sweet blonde hair, blue-eyed girl with ringlet curls in our family these days.  I’m not sure anyone could stand out more in the midst of our dark hair, brown-eyed mix of love around here.  This sweet angel has the biggest smile and sweetest spirit… and she calls me mommy.

I never imagined having a blonde little girl, but God did.  I sat in the ER late one night, holding her tightly, comforting her fevered body and hoping to calm her anxious heart.  We had only known each other a few days, I couldn’t give a lick of health history when the doctors asked, nothing about us looked like family but she called me mommy and that’s all I knew to be.  She needed to know she was safe, she was loved and someone was fighting for her.

Our other little ladies don’t take this in stride quite as well as we’d like.  I couldn’t help but laugh one day when the little guy in our home asked “where is daddy?” when one of our twins responded without missing a beat, “I don’t know where your daddy is, but mine is right there!”

Oh sweet girls… this is what we have fought for.  You don’t even remember the time when you didn’t call us mommy and daddy.  We spent countless days, sleepless nights and unending prayers building your security and a sense of normalcy… and we’ll keep doing it.  You are so worth it.  And so are they.

We’re trying to teach compassion… not focusing on where you came from… but remembering what it might be like to be a stranger in a new home.  So when little miss blue eyes calls me mommy… we remember she needs a safe place too… and being mommy to her doesn’t make me less of mommy to you.

It isn’t so easy for a 2-yr-old to understand.  Her fighting words are, “no, my mommy!” Even last night when our little neighbor called me Abby, she said, “no, my Abby!”  I couldn’t help but laugh, remembering another little girl that though an Abby was a thing to be had.

We’re all learning.  We’re all remembering what it was like before and embracing where God has us now.  I wish I could speak to our sweet girls with all confidence I will always be your mommy…. but we’re still waiting… we’re still holding on to hope for our forever story.

Please pray with us… for the grace and stamina to stay in the waiting place… to not lose heart.  And pray that God will raise up new families to be a safe place for these children to land and know that they are safe, they are worth loving and to have a mommy & / or daddy.

I look in her big blue eyes, meet her smile with one of my own and call her beautiful.  If she never hears it anywhere else, I hope she will always remember that she is precious, she is loved and she can always call me mommy.

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When life gets messy

I returned from a 4-day business trip last night.  My parents and niece graciously moved into our home and took the challenge to sustain life for 3 little people and 2 dogs.  That’s no small challenge.

Just before these sweet people literally ran out of my front door, my mom said “sit down, I need to tell you about what happened at daycare while you were gone.”  So I braced myself.  “Baby girl was on the playground, hiding in the castle… and when they found her… she had been playing with poop.”

NOOOOO!  Please no!  I’m not ready for this! This can’t be my life.

Y’all… life gets messy. It happened again this morning.  She came to me, “mommy look!” showing me her dirty hand.  What is it???  “It’s poop mommy!”   NOOOOOOOO!  How can this be happening?  I.can’t.handle.this.

“I sorry mommy. You ‘give me mommy?”  (You forgive me?)

March was a messy month.  There are various factors that came into play but as I reflect on all I walked through, it’s a lot like stepping in poop.   {I literally hate that word.}

In the midst of all the messiness I have recognized key things in my life and had to make choices to live in authenticity, embrace the pain, suffering, crucifixion and death so that I can fully experience the beauty of resurrection, life and glory.

What does that look like in my life?

We were married 10 years before we jumped into this form of parenthood.  I would say we have a pretty solid marriage.  But there is something about parenting that reveals so much more…  and after 2 years in the pressure of parenting children from hard places, this lady started cracking.

I am convinced marriage has to be the most vulnerable relationship we will ever experience, if you have the joy of experiencing it.  Parenting is a close second, but marriage takes the cake.

A few weeks ago a perfect storm formed and I took a hit (metaphorically) that knocked me off my feet.  Through a series of circumstances what started as a small difference of perspectives gradually grew from a snowball, to a snowball fight, to what felt like an emotional avalanche…. and there were about to be casualties.

But I had a choice to make…

When I am hurt, deeply hurt, my natural instinct and desire is to strike back, cause pain, punish, make sure the other person hurts at least as much, if not more, than I do.  I know, that’s not pretty… and certainly not what you expect from me 😉  but it’s true.  Deep down there’s this crazy little Mexican lady in me that is fierce and wants to fight back.  When I see her fight coming on strong I have to stop and understand what is really happening here.

In the messiness of my pain  I had to consider what kind of woman I want to be.  What is at stake here?  in the woman I want to be, in the wife I want to be and in the mother I want to be?        Everything.

As we authentically walked through the conflict I had to truly own my story.  What was I hearing and believing through these circumstances that made me feel so strongly?  My feelings don’t matter.  I am alone.  Everything is always going to fall on me.  I can do this, I don’t need you.

Friends, these aren’t easy things for me.  As I began to reflect on these more, knowing these aren’t the truths of my reality, I began to uncover distortions that I was operating out of.

When we stepped into fostering, I did so in such a calculated way so as to make sure that it wouldn’t be more than I could handle.  Remember? 1 child, aged 5-10… I could reasonably handle that.  But God, in all his funniness, gave me 3 children, under the age of 3…. and I seriously tried to live life as if it wouldn’t change anything.   In my mind I have tried to walk this out in such a way that nothing else in my life had to “give”.  I tried to absorb 3 children without dropping any other balls.

If I work 8 hours a day, there are clearly 16 more hours to parent, cook, wife, clean, Bible study, be a friend, daughter, sister and sleep.  I CAN do this!  God wouldn’t have asked me to if I couldn’t, so I gotta do it.

Through tear filled eyes I shared with my husband how hurt I had been and how through all these circumstances these are the things I was believing, and this is why I was acting like a crazy person.  I can do it all…. but I don’t want to do it all by myself.

{disclaimer, I have an incredibly helpful husband… my feelings had very little to do with his contribution or a lack of… it had everything to do with lies I was believing and how evil hunts me.}

A wise woman, mother of twins, gave me advice this weekend – get as much help as you can afford.  Let people help you.  Take care of you.  This will let you be a better mother, wife and person.

These are life-changing realizations for me.  So much of my own distortions are based in a need for control.  But my control is not helping anything.

What’s my biggest learning point here?  Conflict.  In life, in relationship, in community,  we are going to experience pain.  People we love most may very well be the ones that cause it.  We are fallen, sinful people; there’s no way around it.  The choice is yours – will you embrace it and grow or will you withdraw, strike back and punish? Or will you enter it, muck around and discover what’s really going on here?  There is fruit in the perseverance, there is growth and in the end, there is glory.

The hardest thing I did was sit down and say, I am hurting, and you are a big reason why.  Everything in me wanted to hurt him back, but he wasn’t the real enemy.  I had to risk my own heart, not knowing how he would respond, and offer to show him my pain.  By God’s grace, he was able to respond with love, owning his part in my pain and talking through how we could grow and do life differently.

I have experienced so much freedom just from realizing what I was believing and owning that this is not at all what I expected my life to look like.  There is more poop than I ever thought possible!  Even in all this messiness, through all of it, God is revealing his glory.

I thank you friends for the many ways you support us.  Your prayers, your faithful covering and making us laugh are what gets us through everything.  We still don’t have an update from our recent “big thing” we asked you to pray for.  I promise you, you will know as soon as we do 🙂

Thanks for being a part of this crazy story-of-a-girl. Here’s a glimpse of my heart’s song for today: