“So, it wasn’t my fault?!?” part 3

It would be a while after both Micah and me allowed the guilt we felt to be removed from our shoulders before either of my other two sons fought a similar battle. What follows is the excerpt from the same chapter of my book, Good Grief?!?, in which my youngest realized the crushing weight he’d been carrying.

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We’d spent most of the Thanksgiving weekend with family. It had been awkward. We all felt like someone was missing. We were still in the phase of ignoring the feeling, but holidays made it especially more difficult. Emotions around the house were high. Micah had been in a car accident the day after Thanksgiving. That added to the stress in our home. It was a couple days into December when Isaiah hit the same wall, or rather the wall hit him.

Isaiah had started grief counseling shortly after Amy’s death. But it wasn’t working. He wouldn’t talk about anything of consequence for any length of time. Every time his counselor or I would bring up the topic of Amy’s death, Isaiah got jumpy…He would try to change the subject, often to something “funny”. Whatever it took to not have to talk about Amy’s death, he tried it. Sometimes he said what he thought we wanted to hear, but it was clear by the actions he was just talking for our benefit. Isaiah has a tell, however, that makes it easy to read him. When he’s overwhelmed, Isaiah runs away…or rather, he hides. When he’s hurting, he often lashes out at those close to him, for very petty things.

On a Sunday night in early December, Isaiah could no longer keep everything bottled inside anymore. It was after dinner. Isaiah and Micah had a loud verbal disagreement over something minor. I knew what was happening.

“Micah, just drop it. Isaiah’s in a mood. He’s just going to say hurtful things.”

I was trying to get Micah to break away from the fight and cool off. It didn’t work. Now he was just as mad as Isaiah had been. Micah felt slighted. He thought I was siding with his youngest brother. He didn’t think I was being fair; he was clearly right. When I realized my attempt had failed, I switched tactics. I apologized to Micah and told him he was right.

“I’ll take care of it,” I reassured Micah. “Let me talk with him.”

“You ALWAYS choose him over me! You ALWAYS take his side,” Isaiah retaliated. That’s when I knew the wall was near.

“No, I don’t,” I stated quietly and calmly. “I’m not choosing sides. I’m saying Micah’s right. Usually, I defend you, but you’re not right this time.” I knew that by talking quietly, calmly, Isaiah would be pushed over the edge. He wouldn’t calm down until he truly blew his top. Helping him reach that boiling point would lead me to the heart of the problem.

Slammed Door
Source: https://ubisafe.org/explore/dorr-clipart-slammed/

“It’s not fair!” He was screaming. “Just leave me alone!” Isaiah was enraged. He stomped up the stairs, louder than he had ever done in the past. I climbed the stairs slowly after him, further pushing the boiling point. He stormed down the hallway and slammed his bedroom door behind him. I took almost twice as long to climb the stairs and make my way to Isaiah’s door.

I knocked.

“Go away!”

“Isaiah, what’s wrong?”

“I said, GO AWAY!”

I reached down and opened the door. Isaiah was lying prone on his bed. His face buried in his pillow. When he realized I had entered, he screamed into the pillow.

I took my spot on the side of Isaiah’s bed. I put my hand in the middle of his back.

“Isaiah,” I began, just above a whisper, “what’s wrong? I know this isn’t about Micah. What’s really wrong?”

“Just please go away,” he said through the muffle of the pillow.

“I can’t, Isaiah. I need to know what’s wrong, and I’m not leaving until we get to the bottom of this.”

 

I sat on that bed in near silence, hand upon my son’s back, for nearly three hours. Every once in a while I would ask Isaiah “What’s wrong?” He never answered. Midnight had come and gone. I was tired, and I had to teach Monday morning. I needed sleep. I could have justified leaving and going to bed, but I knew the situation would multiply by morning.

Isaiah and I are so very alike. I usually know what’s going through his head in any given situation. It’s the closest thing I have to telepathy (which I’ve asked God for many times). This time I knew he was angry about something related to his mom. There had been so much stress in the house. Everyone had cried buckets, that is everyone but Isaiah. He’d cried…briefly. He witnessed my breakdown over Amy’s “missing” wedding dress. He’d listened to conversations Micah and I had while Isaiah was supposed to be asleep. He knew Gabriel was an emotional mess. I added everything up and realized Isaiah had decided not to feel. He saw everything falling apart around him and decided he’d be the stable one of the family.

I finally broke the silence.

“Isaiah, you’ve got to talk to me. I’m not going to bed until this is settled.”

He finally rolled his body a little to the right and looked up at me.

“What’s going on in your head?” I asked rhetorically.

“It’s my fault,” he whispered.

“Are you talking about Micah, or something else?” Isaiah sat up in the bed.

“It’s my fault,” he repeated. “She didn’t have to die,” he whispered.

“Honey, it’s not your fault,” I said, still rubbing his back.

“I should have heard her. I should have woken up. I could have helped her.” Each statement got a little louder.

“Isaiah, there was nothing you could have done.”

“You mean I didn’t do anything.”

“No. You couldn’t have done anything. When God calls someone Home, it’s their time. We can’t stop death.”

“But…” he didn’t finish.

“Isaiah, listen to me. The doctors believe Mom died of a blood clot. There wasn’t anything that could have been done to prevent it. She would have died if I had been upstairs in the bed. She would have died if you or your brothers heard her and tried to help. There was nothing you could have done.”

“Really?” he asked feebly.

“Really,” I replied, arms outstretched. Isaiah fell into my arms and sobbed. I cried with him.

When I finally got to bed that night, four hours had passed since I followed Isaiah into his room. I got a brief amount of sleep that night. Teaching the next day was easy; I was ecstatic Isaiah was no longer believing a lie, that he was free of guilt. It would be another month before Gabriel hit the wall.

“So, it wasn’t my fault?!?” part 2

Just hours after helping Micah deal with his overwhelming guilt, I faced the pain of my own. What follows is a continuation of the chapter of my book, Good Grief?!?, I shared yesterday.

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burden of guilt
Source: http://www.uploadinghope.com/

I completely understood Micah’s feelings of guilt. I was struggling with my own. When I had talked with Amy’s family on that fateful morning, I left one small detail out of the story, and that detail was sitting on my chest causing panic to rise.

What will they say when they find out? I had asked myself.

They won’t forgive you!

Lying in bed later that night, I began to really wrestle. I knew my family, Amy’s family, loved me. I knew they knew I loved Amy and was doing the best I could to take care of her, that I always had.

I don’t want to give undue credit to the devil, because I think he gets blamed for many things in which he has no part. Not that he minds, I’m sure. But sometimes I think Christians find the devil in the details of many things, even when he isn’t there. This time, however, I’m pretty sure my boys and I were right in the middle of spiritual warfare.

One of the names for the devil is “accuser”.[1] He is also called “the father of lies”.[2] I know that “He walks around like a roaring lion, seeking whom he may devour.”[3] I also know that his lies are usually subtle, but deadly. If he could entice Micah to believe his mother’s death was his fault, he could cause a lot more havoc and possibly pull Micah away from his faith. If he could get me to continue thinking Amy’s death was my fault, I would end up a shallow, defeated man. My faith would be shaken, and I would most likely begin pulling away from God and the church as well. I’ve seen it happen to others.

Upon realizing the battle my boy was fighting – that I was fighting – I decided to talk with my father-in-law right after I talked with Amy’s sister. If Lisa forgave me, Gary probably would too, I reasoned.

It was an awkward conversation that Friday.

“Lisa, um…I need to tell you something.” It sounded ominous as I heard myself say it. The two of us were going through photos for the slideshow of Amy’s life. Lisa stopped and looked at me. “I missed the last alarm on my phone to go check on Amy.” I had set an alarm to check on Amy every two hours through the night, like any other night. She’d gone to bed with a migraine. “I wasn’t there with her when she died. She was alone.” I paused.

“Thom, it’s not your fault.”

“I was afraid you’d be mad. I haven’t told Dad either. I don’t want him to be angry.” In truth, I didn’t want him to blame me for his baby girl’s death. Typing it brings revulsion. Gary took on the role of being my dad when I entered this family. He loved me like the son he never had. I didn’t want to tell him, but sitting there, talking with Lisa, I realized that if I didn’t tell him, I would hold on to the guilt. I would also be holding on to the assumed anger I expected Gary to have toward me.

When I finally talked with Gary and Mary, I could let go of the guilt crushing me. He was not angry with me.

“Dad, I thought she had a migraine. I slept on the couch so I didn’t disturb her while she slept. I checked on her every two hours, but I slept through the 3:00 a.m. alarm. She died alone.” I paused to let it set in. “I’m sorry. I didn’t tell you because I was afraid you’d be mad.”

“Thom! It’s not your fault. I know that. I know you loved her.” Gary hugged me. I broke down. The irony of him hugging me like I had with Micah is not lost on me.

[1] Matthew 12:24. [2] John 8:44, NIV. [3] I Peter 5:8, NKJV.

“So, it wasn’t my fault?!?”

The grieving process is a difficult one. And no two people enter or travel through it on the same path. In our house, I had lost my wife and partner; my 17-year-old lost his mother, champion, and mentor in the mischievous; my 14-year-old lost his mother, world, and Autism whisperer; and my 12-year-old lost his mother, baking mentor, and cheerleader.

All of us have wrestled with this question. Although the outcomes have been similar, the path through the guilt-ridden darkness was nowhere near the same.

What follows is an excerpt from my book Good Grief?!? It is the account of when my oldest first faced the harrowing guilt.

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Fault“Micah, why’d you skip so much school already?” a boy in one of his classes asked him that day. They knew each other from the previous semester, but they weren’t really friends. (Micah had transferred from a private school to an Arts focused, option, public school in the middle of his junior year, and it had been rough.

“There was a family emergency,” he replied, not wanting to get into an emotional loop that might send him home.

“Yeah, right!” the kid snarked.

“Um…right,” Micah mumbled.

“You just didn’t want to come that’s all. Right? Be honest.”

“I am being honest. There was a family emergency.”

“Right!” came the sarcastic reply. “Who died?”

Micah left the room. He didn’t respond to the boy’s taunts. He was upset, and he didn’t think it was anybody’s business he was dealing with his mother’s death.

 

It had been ten days. Ten days full of numb, full of tears, full of silence. My boys had been acting “fine”, telling me a little bit about what was going on at school, but I knew there was something deeper, much deeper happening within them.  I just didn’t know how I was going to get it out of them.

I began praying their faith would strengthen through this nightmare. That they would not walk away from the truths on which they had been raised. I began praying they would have opportunities to honestly deal with their feelings and their pain. Then it donned on me: God, what’s going on with the boys? What am I missing? The answer didn’t come in a whispered response like many had come in the past ten days. It came later that evening, almost twelve hours after I asked, at least for Micah.

 

After his brothers were in bed, Micah and I often talked. It had been a whirlwind type of day. For him, it was the end of his first “week” of school. After five days of school, he was exhausted. He hadn’t talked much to anyone about what had happened. His school guidance counselor knew. His teachers knew. His only friend at the school knew. That was all.

“What’s bothering you?” I asked Micah. We were both standing in the kitchen. It was after 10:00 p.m. His brothers had been in bed for over an hour, and we’d got up from watching some mind-numbing television show to get something to eat. I kept forgetting to eat. Micah had missed dinner, having returned to work.

His response to my question was just raised eyebrows and a cocked head. It was as if he was saying, ‘What do you think is wrong with me!’

“You’ve been acting a bit off tonight. More off than usual for these past few days. Did something happen?”

That’s when he told me about the boy in his class.

“Why didn’t you put him in his place?”

“I just couldn’t. I didn’t want to make a scene.”

“Why?” My tone was probably a little irritated from the boy’s comment.

“Because I don’t want everyone to look at me with pity and feel like they need to feel sorry for me.”

“But, he was being kind of a jerk,” I pressed.

“No, Dad, that’s how last year was. We would harass each other in class. It’s how it’s done at this school.”

“I can sic Lexy on him if you want me too.” I was only half kidding. Micah gave me a faint smile.

“No. If it comes up again, I’ll take care of it.”

We returned to the family room – Micah with a sandwich and I a bowl of cereal. We watched something else that was supposed to make us laugh, and then decided we should try to get some sleep. Walking to the kitchen with my dirty dishes, I felt unsettled.

“Is that all that’s bothering you?” There were immediate tears. I wish I had pressed harder earlier, I chastised myself.

“Um…I just…um…” and then there were more tears.

“Micah, it’s okay to cry. Tell me what’s going on.”

“I just keep thinking…um…well…” He looked me in the eye. I could tell he felt guilty for something.

“It’s okay, Micah. It’s okay to feel. It’s okay to be mad. It’s okay. But it’s not okay to hold onto things. You need to tell me or someone what’s going on.” I was trying to be as gentle as possible. I knew my boy was fragile. Who wouldn’t be?

“I just keep thinking, what if I had checked in on her in the middle of the night.” He paused. “I mean I did get up to use the bathroom. I could have checked on her. I could have called 911. I could have saved her life.” The gravity of that revelation hit me full on in the chest. My eyes watered.

“Micah,” I took him by both hands and stared him straight in the eyes, “when I talked with Mom’s specialist on the phone, he said, based on where your mom was and how she died, he’s pretty sure it was a blood clot. There’s no way to know for sure because there was no autopsy, but he’s pretty sure.” Micah started sobbing, heaving at the shoulders. He covered his face with both hands. I wrapped my arms around him.

“Then it’s not my fault?” he whispered.

“No, this isn’t your fault. There’s nothing that could have been done. If it were a blood clot and she was in the hospital, she would have still died. The monitors don’t usually scan for blood clots. It’s not your fault.”

Micah’s legs ceased working. He began to crumple. Being over three inches taller than me, and a few pounds more, I was struggling to keep us both from falling onto the floor. I didn’t let go. I flashed back fourteen years. Micah was three and he’d been injured pretty badly. I was holding him while he was sobbing. I picked him up and cradled him in my arms for a long time. Then I returned to the present. I couldn’t pick him up. He was a full grown, extra-large, man sized boy with a broken heart.

“I can’t hold us both up,” I whispered finally, wishing I didn’t have to.

It took a minute for Micah to regain his footing. But he didn’t stop crying. We stood in the kitchen for a long time, me still holding my “little boy” in my arms.

“There’s nothing any of us could have done,” I whispered again. We stayed up talking for another half-an-hour. I wanted to make sure Micah had let go of the guilt. I knew it was too much for him to handle. He wasn’t guilty.

Lamentations of a child

Yesterday I posted about Amy’s memorial service. Today I felt led to give you a glimpse of what happened 12 hours prior, and the questions I still have for God. What follows is a copy and paste from a Facebook post on that night.

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In about 12 hours, the service for my beautiful bride, my Amy-zing wife, my perfect counterpart, will be coming to a close. It’s a bit surreal. After receiving the link for the video of Amy’s life in pictures, we decided (Lisa, Gary, Mary, and I) that it would be best if we watched the video before the actual event so that we weren’t caught off guard by anything. While Travis (my best friend since high school) and I watched the video with my boys, I was struck by a realization about fatherhood that I’m struggling with. I didn’t really truly understand what LOVE was until I became a dad. I thought I had figured it out when a beautiful blonde stole my heart, but there were aspects of LOVE that I was still blind to. Once I became a dad, I really began to understand God in a different way. I began noticing things of this world through the eyes of a father.

Tonight was probably one of the hardest things I’ve had to do in a very long time. While we watched the video (twice), Micah and Isaiah laughed at the funny pictures and a few tears crawled down their cheeks at others. But Gabe screamed. He didn’t just cry. He didn’t just bawl. He SCREAMED through both times through. As my heart ached for him, and my other two, who were by this time full on sobbing, I was struck with a question that still has me up, two and a half hours later. Does God’s heart rend when we scream? It didn’t take long for me to stumble onto the next epiphany. As Jesus hung on that barbaric, Roman cross, wailing in pain, did the sound pierce God the Father so much that He wanted to “end it all,” push reset, and then create a group who wouldn’t usher pain, destruction, and death into their world? I don’t think I’ve ever heard true lamenting before tonight. As I lay on the bed holding him, rocking him, I asked God how do I help heal my son’s heart. Allowing God the Spirit to fall on the room with a PEACE like no other, I asked Gabe to practice his speech for tomorrow and then to sing “10,000 Reasons” with me and my Spotify account. As we sang, his little heart began to fill with HOPE while dread and fear were thrown out.

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Picture courtesy of: http://sustainabletraditions.com/2012/08/lament-and-hope-the-need-for-a-sackcloth-and-ashes-revival/

Two and a half hours after we pushed play on the video for the first time, my little Gus was able to finally take in a couple deep breaths. He’s asleep now, and I’m still pondering the immensity of pain and anguish God the Father endured while His Son lamented the torture of His body.

2 Years Ago…Today

It’s hard to believe that two years have passed since Amy’s memorial service. Today has been a difficult day – surprisingly – for me. Two things have kept me going today. The first is the song God woke me up singing: “Even If” by MercyMe. The second was the memory of my boys honoring their mother at the service. To honor Amy and my three boys, below are the parting words of each of my three boys to, and about, their mother. Isaiah went first, Micah followed directly after him, and Gabe spoke right before the final worship song. I hope these words move you as much as they’ve moved me today.

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ISAIAH

14324483_10210808805555894_1872310915559200635_oThe first thing that I think you should know about my mom is that she changed me through her ministry to other people. Mom taught me many things and gave me many qualities of herself to continue on in her memory. She taught me to be creative and to try new things; she taught me how to cook; she taught me how to be nice to and serve others; and she gave me a passion to work with kids.

Besides the many creative things I’ve attempted and enjoyed with my mom’s encouragement, she taught me how to cook like she cooked. I am glad I know how to cook her chicken, make her version of slop, and bake her amazing chocolate chip cookies.

When I was 5, Mom let me really help her bake chocolate chip cookies for the first time. We had fun, even though there was a big mess to clean up. The best part about that day was that it was the first time I got to do “quality control”, something my dad usually got to do.

Over the years, I have watched my mom volunteer at many Beaverton Foursquare camps. This past 4-5 Camp I got to volunteer with her for both my first and her last time. Every year, even when she was tired, she didn’t stop working at camp because she wanted to serve the kids and staff, thinking of their needs, not her own. I want to go back to 4-5 Camp as a volunteer though and help honor her legacy of love and care of others.

The second thing I want you to know about my mom was that she loved everyone she met. I want to live up to her example. You may not know that there were many people who loved and trusted my mom with many different things. She loved everyone, and hardly ever said “No” to serving others, even us kids.

I loved crawling into her lap – even just a few weeks ago – and she would hold me until I fell asleep in her arms. I may have surpassed her in height this summer, but I will have to strive to come close to her supernatural height and her model of faith.

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MICAH

14310560_10210808805995905_5256768924942963016_oMy freshman year I went to my school’s graduation ceremony, and every single graduate had the opportunity to give mini-speeches and thank the people they love. Mom leaned over to me and said, “20 bucks says that you couldn’t fit song titles into your speech.” So, instead of a graduation speech, I decided that for the circumstances, maybe we could make it this speech instead? Besides, she owes me 20 bucks already. But I guess I should just “Let It Go.”

From the time that she watched me do the “Single Ladies” dance that I have regretted since, to her pummeling me with a stuffed shark because I couldn’t understand the lyrics to “Hit Me with your Best Shot”, to her trying (and succeeding) to make me crumple to the floor by tickling my earlobe, mom was always mom.

Over the last two weeks of her life, Mom persistently pestered me about college applications, particularly, an essay for one specific college. They wanted a paper on my Jesus story, and how I have grown in Him. And although I know there was “Something to Believe In,” I struggled to find a way to write about my faith story. “How can I help you?” she kept asking me. I didn’t know what help I needed, so I didn’t answer my mother’s question. I spent so much time upstairs in my room or with my friends to avoid her bugging me. Today, I wish I hadn’t. For those of you wondering, I have not finished that essay, but I know who it will be about. Don’t worry, mama. I’ll make you “Proud of Your Boy.”

Two weeks ago, to this day, I was at work for an 8-hour, on my feet, being nice to people, shift. I was having a no-good, very bad day, and I called home. My supervisor was going to let me go on a meal break soon, and I felt like I just needed to come home. So I came home and had dinner with the family. It was a bit chaotic: I felt like a rushed mess, and they all had finished their food already. Mom made them wait at the dinner table for an extra 45 minutes just for me, but it felt normal. I didn’t even remember that mom was sick. “I Want the Good Times Back. That Would Be Enough.” We were laughing and playing games until I had to race back to work.

“How can I help you?”

Mom always asked that. To everyone.

I asked, “Are you okay?”

The day before her passing, we were having a great time. We went bowling to celebrate a final day of summer as a family of five. Little did we know, that was our last celebration as a family of five. About halfway through the game, Mom started feeling sick. We thought it was just another bad night.  She has had so many over the last 2 years. When we got home, Dad and I helped her upstairs. I wish I remember the last thing she said to me. But I remember what I told her: “Are you gonna be okay, Mom?”

So many people had no idea how sick my mom was.

You see, she didn’t want all the attention on her. She didn’t want everyone to treat her differently. So, instead of complaining, she changed the topic. She chose to focus on her gifts, rather than her sickness. My mom served in ministry for 30 years. Knowing her state of health, it “Blows Us All Away” how continually and unfailingly hospitable she was.

IMG_90661I’m wearing those bowling shoes now. We called the venue, and they let me borrow them to honor the last time Mom was Mom, focusing on celebrating with us. I kinda wish I could just click my heels and we would be together again. She taught me to laugh, she taught me to love. So much of me is made of what I learned from mom. And it will stick with me “For Good.”

As Christians, we don’t have to be eternally sad because we know that we will someday meet again in the Presence of the Lord. So, I get to say “Goodbye Until Tomorrow.”

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GABRIEL

14409486_10210808859717248_1674417536705584557_oHi, everybody. I’m Gabriel, and good afternoon. Amy was my mom and I just miss her so much. I wish she was here with me right now. I just want her with me. What made me really happy was how she just loved me. And I just wanted, for all of us, if we could just love on her and wrap around her heart.

I’m going to miss her because she was there. But I’m excited that she’s stuck in Heaven right now. She always sung me, “How great is our God.” That was the first lullaby she ever sang to me. It took me forever to learn her. It took me years to figure out why she was my mother. And then I got it. She loved Jesus very much. I hope you do too.

Our last song is “10,000 Reasons.” Some of you know it by heart. It was one of my mom’s favorite worship songs when we were a family together. In this whole memorial service, we have been just loving her. Thank you all for coming. Let’s sing together her last song.

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Amy gave my boys a passion to be servant warriors in her footsteps, to be a spark of joy in someone’s day, and to be someone who loves for no other reason than because God put the person into their lives. I married this incredible, amazing woman 21 years ago, and even though she is stuck in Heaven, as Gabriel put it, she is also stuck in our hearts.

Choose Joy, Be Blessed, & Walk in Peace

Two years ago, near the same time as this post, I wrote about a gift that Amy had received from her best friend Temple – some two years prior to my original post. That small gift of three bracelets changed the tenor of our house and the trajectory of Amy’s and my focus as she began dialysis. My prayer – almost daily – has been that me and my children will walk in the memory of Amy by Choosing Joy, Blessing Others, and Walking in Peace with our Lord and Savior. Two days after the anniversary of my wife’s Heavenly birthday, I’m at a Peace that can only be explained by the presence of the Comforter in my life and the relationship I have with my Savior and Creator. On one of the scariest days of her life, Amy snapped the picture below, seconds after receiving the beautiful gift. It reminds me daily to remember that fear does not have control of my life anymore. I choose Joy!

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That Fateful Day…

It is important to note that what follows is most of a complete chapter of my book, Good Grief, which I am currently working to get published. It is the account of the day Amy died. I apologize for the length. I’ve read and re-read it multiple times and cannot find much to cut out of the account. 

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There’s that moment when everything around you is more real than anything has ever been real. It’s that moment when your ears pick up the slightest brushing noise from the fibers of the carpet across which you walk.  It’s that moment when your eyes see six or seven different hues of red and purple and yellow, all at the same time.  It’s that moment when the stillness is so palpable you’d swear you were swimming through silence – and drowning.

5-46a-mIt was 5:46 a.m. The alarm on my phone had been going off for over a minute.  It was the first day of the second week of school – a Tuesday, the day after Labor Day. I was a bit disoriented, having slept in the recliner downstairs. Trying to find the obnoxious chirping emanating from the misplaced SMART phone took about a minute, maybe a little less. I’d left the phone on the kitchen table. Connecting with it, I flipped it over, ended the silence murdering noise, and placed the phone where it should have been…on the counter, next to the charging station.

I stood up straight. That’s when the moment hit me. I was awake, more than awake. My heart tuned in to the beckoning of the Holy Spirit, shutting off my typical intellectual “run through the day”.

Looking back, I recognize the whisper. On that morning, I’m not quite sure my heart heard the words that now echo in my soul: “I’m with you, Son.” A prickle fled down my spine and stole away into the floor. It was an electrifying message. Immediately I knew what I would find when I crested the stairs and entered my bedroom.

I took the stairs at a run. Bursting into the room, my heart skipped a beat. The bed was empty. My beautiful bride was not asleep in it. I slowly turned toward the master bathroom. Door ajar. Silence screaming. I pushed the door gently, knowing what I would find. Body slumped, sandwiched in the space between the commode and the wall. Fingers dark blue to purple. Eyes closed. Face at peace. Head tilted and resting on the wall.

For a second – which felt like an eternity – I stood, trying to let my eyes notify my brain of what my soul had already informed my heart. The world stopped. “‘Til death do us part” had come much sooner than my life plans allowed.

Without warning, silence, louder than a racetrack, slammed against me, waking me from a stupor. It was so eerily loud.

“Amy!” I reached for her left hand with mine. “Amy!” Grabbing her shoulder with my right hand, I shook her. No response. Letting go, I bolted from the room and plummeted through the door of my oldest son’s bedroom. Frantic. Trying to find his phone.

“Micah! I NEED YOUR PHONE!”

“Whaaah…,” slurred my sleeping giant.

“I NEED your phone! NOW!”

He shot to a seated position. “Here,” he mumbled, reaching for the phone, plugged in next to his pillow.

“I need your help. Get up!”  I dashed out of his room, dialing 911 in the 3 or 4 bounds it took to reach my wife’s final resting place.

“911…What’s your emergency?”

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That’s a job I don’t think I could ever handle. I realize that a significant amount of training and counseling happen with those fearless men and women who answer that phone, not knowing what they will encounter screaming at them.

__________

“My wife’s dead!” I shouted into the receiver. “She’s dead!”

“Sir, is she in a bed?”

“No, she’s stuck in the space between the toilet and the wall.”

“Can you get her to the floor so that you can perform CPR?”

“Not by myself. But I can get my son! Just a minute…” and I dashed back out of both rooms, colliding with Micah’s door. His light was still off. He’d lain back down.

“Dad,” he mumbled, “is everything alright?”

There was another moment that settled on me. My fleshly panic, my husbandly concern, stopped. I swallowed slowly. My “Dad brain” engaged. How can I prepare my oldest son for what I need him to do? I silently prayed. Micah must have realized the brain stutter. He sat back up in bed, swung his legs out of the covers, and abruptly stood.

“Micah, I need your help. Mom needs CPR. She needs to be on the floor and I can’t move her myself.” I turned and fled.

Lights flooded his eyes and Micah was a breath behind me. I pulled to a full stop just before entering the master bath. I know it may sound like I was wasting time, but I knew she was already gone, and I couldn’t let my son enter the room without a bit more warning.

“Honey,” I turned, peering into his terror-filled eyes, “Mom’s fallen between the toilet and the wall. We need to move her to the floor so I can do CPR. Your phone’s on the counter and the 911 operator is going to walk me through what I need to do. After we move Mom, I need you to go find my phone – it’s downstairs on the counter – and call your aunt. Okay?” He nodded. I could tell my rushed, and slightly loud, directions hadn’t completely donned on my son.

I turned back to the door and entered the room, not stopping. I reached under Amy’s left shoulder while Micah reached under her right. Within seconds my bride was lying on the floor, Micah was fleeing down the staircase, and I was alone with the operator’s voice – on speaker. I’d taken countless CPR/First Aid classes over the years, but I was relying on the faceless voice in charge.

“You don’t need to breathe for your wife. The paramedics are less than two minutes from you. I only need you to perform the chest compressions. I’m going to count. Each time I say a number, you need to press down firmly and quickly. You will be acting as your wife’s heart. Can you do this?”

Oddly, this is when my brain stopped. I was a machine. I remember compressions and breaking ribs. I remember yelling down for Micah to unlock the front door. I remember the speakerphone droning through numbers. And then there were many EMT’s flooding up the stairs.

I stood and stepped out of the way.

“Her fingers were purple when I found her,” I stammered. The EMT just nodded. “Can I go to my son?” He nodded again. My feet wouldn’t carry me as fast as my father’s heart wanted. I stumbled twice down the stairs. My Dad’s heart was pulling me down the stairs; my vows were pulling me back up. I had left a piece of me on the floor in that room.

Micah had fled to the kitchen and was just ending the phone call with his aunt.  I barely heard the EMT’s announce the time of death over my left shoulder.

“She’s getting Dale and getting dressed. She’ll be here as soon as she can,” Micah said. His voice was quavering. He knew what I was about to tell him.

I just looked at him. There isn’t a training manual for telling your son that his mother is in fact dead.

“Dad?!?” It was both a question and a plea. “Dad?!?” this time with a tremor.

“I’m sorry, honey. She’s gone.”

He started bouncing on the balls of his feet. His breath flew inward and halted behind his teeth. His head wagged back and forth, quickly at first, but slowing with each swing.

I stepped the last foot between us and caught him in my arms.

“No!” He was my little boy again, holding onto me through the pain. His voice seemed much younger than his full seventeen years.

“I’m sorry.” I didn’t know what else to say. I was sorry that his mother was no longer with us. I was sorry that I needed his help. I was sorry that he had to see his mom in the state she was in, trapped between the toilet and the wall, dressed for bed, not for kids. I was sorry that he was stuck with me as a single parent. I was sorry for a lot of things.

There was a flurry of activity in and out of my house. One gentleman approached the two of us after a spell.

“Sir, I’m a chaplain for the Beaverton City Police Department. Can I talk with you for a moment?” I followed him to the living room. “I’m not sure of your belief system, but chaplains often go out with the police in situations like this to help the family.” I nodded.

“I know,” I managed. And then, after a pregnant pause, “I’m a licensed pastor myself. I’m not pastoring right now, but I know how it all works.”

“I don’t want to offend; I’m here to help however I can. Usually I stay with the family and pray with them if they wish and help them understand what the police and EMT’s are doing. Would it be okay if I stayed to help?”

“We attend Beaverton Foursquare Church. I need to call my pastor.”

“Would you like me to call him for you?”  I shook my head. “Do you know his number?” I nodded and then retired to the kitchen to retrieve my phone.

“Hello.” He didn’t sound asleep, but neither did he sound completely awake.

“Todd, it’s Thom. I’m sorry to call, but…” The words wouldn’t come out. I couldn’t breathe. This was real.

“Thom, is everything okay?”

“Todd…Amy’s…dead. I…found her…this morning. Can you come over?” In that moment, I felt guilty for asking for help. I had probably just awoken our Children’s Pastor, starting his day on a horrible note (Amy was one of his most faithful volunteers), and I was daring to ask him to come over. Who was I? He’s a busy man! What was I doing?!?

“What?” There was a pause on the phone. “Thom…”

“Todd, the EMT’s and police are here. Amy’s dead. Can you come over, please?”

And just like that, Todd was fully awake. “I’m on my way, Thom. I’ll be right there.”

“My pastor’s coming,” I managed to tell the chaplain after I hung up the phone.

I ascended the stairs, asked for a minute with my wife, and covered her with a clean, new, tan waffle-weave blanket. I knelt down next to her and whispered, “I love you and I’m glad you’re no longer in pain…you’re no longer sick. I don’t know how I’m going to finish raising these three boys without you, but I’ll try not to let you down.”

I talked with Micah again and encouraged him to go upstairs and “say goodbye”.

I’m not sure when my family arrived. Nor do I remember who came first. But all of a sudden, there I was, in my living room, standing next to my sister-in-law and her husband, with my father-in-law seated in a stuffed chair, his wife standing next to him, my oldest son standing behind me, and Todd.

I remember vividly looking directly at Todd and uttering the most ridiculous request: “Todd, can you stay here with my boys? I’ve got to go to work and set up for a substitute.”

Todd simply looked at me and calmly replied, “No. You’re not leaving. Your boys are going to need you here. Do you have your principal’s phone number?” It was only around 7:30 a.m.

“It’s in my cell, but he’ll be driving to work. He has a long commute.”

“Let me call your principal. What’s his name?”

“Kevin,” I stammered, then looking at Micah I added, “my phone’s on the counter in the kitchen.” Todd took my phone outside and called Kevin. Todd returned with our senior pastor (who’d just arrived) and said, “Kevin wants you to call him in a couple of days. He said not to worry. He’s got it covered.”

But I was very worried. I was worried about losing the temporary assignment I’d just been given at the school. And I was worried about money, of which Amy usually handled. The epiphany that I now was in charge of paying the bills landed on me, crushing my ability to think (although, it was quite apparent that I was already impeded and unable to think rationally at that point).

Then I realized Randy, my senior pastor, was standing in front of me. I was dumbstruck. Again, I felt guilty. When you attend a church the size of Beaverton Foursquare Church – of which my wife had attended for thirty-seven years – you don’t expect the senior pastor to make house calls. Don’t get me wrong; we’ve had a personal relationship with our senior pastor for quite a while. He was my oldest son’s basketball coach in middle school for three years. Amy had known him from when she was a kid at camp and he was part of the camp staff. Randy and his family had eaten dinner at our house. We knew him. But that still didn’t stifle the feeling of guilt: who were we to take up his time? There are so many things on his plate.

Randy asked some questions and began to shepherd us through this dark day.

“Can I get you anything?” I remember asking. It’s what Amy would have done. God had given her the gift of hospitality like none other. Had she been catering the wedding feast in Cana, Jesus’ first miracle wouldn’t have been turning water into wine. She took care of everything, usually before people realized it was needed. That hallmark of our ministry together now rested on my shoulders. “I have water and milk. I could make tea or coffee.” No one took me up on the offer.

Many things were said. Decisions were made regarding a mortuary. Lisa, Dale, and Dad had all gone up the stairs to say goodbye. Then the police and EMT’s filed out of the house to un-clog the street so our neighbors could take their children to school.

I found myself standing there in another moment of silence. I could see the lips of those I loved moving, but I heard nothing. I kept slipping in and out of the tangible silence, the one that feels more like a jail cell, not the awaiting arms of the Savior; but this time was really different: the silence was cold and howling – as if I were standing on a mountaintop in a gale.

In the center of the silence, I heard, I’m still here, Son. The cold began to ebb. For a brief eternity, I felt almost as if I were being held.

Daddy, a term that I’ve used for Abba Father before, I don’t know how to do this alone.

You won’t. You can’t. I haven’t left.

My confession was about raising three boys alone, but somehow I understood God was giving me an answer to so much more than my terrified confession; He was reminding me of his covenant with Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, David, and many more who have gone before me.  The conversation was very short. I heard it just as if I was standing face to face with my Maker in conversation, but no one else was privy to that short conversation.

In an instant, the noise in the room flooded back in, my father’s heart switched on, and I said, “How do we tell the little boys?” Gabriel and Isaiah were still asleep – aided, I’m sure by the Holy Spirit and a few soundproofing angles – but I knew they’d be up any minute. The eight of us made a plan. I talked with the mortician, who’d arrived by this time, and informed him of our desires. Then, everyone who my boys wouldn’t know disappeared, either by going outside or stepping into the master bedroom, behind closed doors.

Within a few minutes, my youngest two boys sleepily descended the stairs. I was sitting in the middle of the living room couch and I beckoned the boys to sit on either side of me. I put my arms around them and pulled them closer. They were nervous, looking around at the family members and pastors standing above them.

“Boys,” I began, just above a whisper, “I have some bad news.” My face scrunched up, trying to contain the tears behind the dam and keep the sobs from climbing my throat. I took a deep breath. “Mama went to be with Jesus last night while we slept.” Gabriel shook his head slowly back and forth trying to understand what I was saying. (Sometimes I forget that Autism doesn’t understand figurative language.) Isaiah burst into tears.

“She’s dead?!?” he blurted, burying his head into my chest. And then a little quieter and muffled, “Mom died!?!”

“Yes, honey.” Realization struck my middle son, and there I was, the middle of a tumultuous sandwich, as both boys squeezed and sobbed and cried.

After a few minutes, Pastor Randy took charge. “Boys, they’re going to bring your mama downstairs in a minute so you can say goodbye. I thought it would be appropriate to read some scripture and sing a worship song or two like your mom loved to do. Did she have a favorite verse or worship song?”

When the men from the mortuary had finished bringing Amy down the stairs on the rolling gurney, she was covered with a quilt atop the waffle-weave blanket she had been wrapped in earlier. Randy read scripture. We sang two songs. And then we prayed. At that moment, I didn’t know that I could feel any greater pain. More, yes, but not greater.

As each family member leaned over to say goodbye, some touching Amy’s cheek, others a shoulder, Gabriel nearly climbed on top of his mom, supporting himself with only one toe, wailing. I had never experienced wailing before. Yelling, yes. Screaming, yes. But I had never experienced a broken soul wailing, crying out because there are no words to explain the pain, loss, anger, and loneliness. The room began to slowly spin, picking up speed as Gabriel punctuated each inarticulate wail.

I looked to Todd, Gabe’s childhood pastor. He was praying silently; I could see his heart breaking. I was looking for comfort and help, but Todd was not looking at me. He was praying for Gabriel. That’s when I realized, it wasn’t about me. The next few days, weeks, months and years would be about my boys and how they would walk on in their faith and service, without their mom. I stepped closer to Gabriel, put my hand in the middle of his back, and stood with him while he wailed. Standing there, allowing a boy to grieve over the loss of his mother in the way he needed to grieve was more painful than any experience I have ever had. There would be two more of those painful moments when my other two sons hit the proverbial wall and grieved, rather wailed, for the same loss. Unfortunately, it was not in that corporate setting; it took a little time for one, and a few months for the other.

Gabriel finally stopped wailing, kissed his mommy one last time on the forehead, and then turned to me.

“Why doesn’t she wake up?” he pleaded. “Love’s true kiss is supposed to wake the princess.” His innocence and belief in happy endings shattered. He clung to me, tears soaking us both. Moments later, the gurney was removed and the silence sang once again.

The Labor Day Stress

20180903_151824It started at Starbucks this afternoon. Pumpkin Spice is back on the menu. Amy’s signature drink: Grande, 2 pump Pumpkin Spice, 2 pump White Mocha, 2 pump Cinamon Dulce Latte. I ordered one. My heart had been in a numb funk all day. I thought the memory and the taste would perk things up; that is not what happened.

We’d gone to the Disney Store at the Outlets in Woodburn, Oregon because the boys had some money to burn. We looked around. I found a few things I couldn’t live without. Neither boy spent his money. We all smiled at the “Incredible Mom” cup and T-shirt. I thought of purchasing the cup for one of the “moms” who’s adopted my boys into her heart, but I couldn’t do it. Amy was my Mrs. Incredible. She could stretch to do so many things at once. I was the stressed out, stay-at-home dad (only 1 summer), who drove a small hatchback car when the first movie was released. My students swore Disney captured my story – taking a few creative liberties – and made a movie franchise! I put the cup back; I just couldn’t buy it. We left the store, purchased our Auntie Ann’s pretzels (a Woodburn Outlet tradition), and headed to find drinks. I dropped the boys off at Jamba Juice and headed to Starbucks.

Upon receiving my drink, I headed back to pick up the boys. From the moment they hopped in the car, the tenor of our day slid south. We couldn’t really figure out why. Everyone was just a little jumpy, nervous, irritable. Due to an accident ahead of us on the route home, our 30 min. drive became an hour and 20 mins. Needless to say, by the time we arrived home, we were needing some dinner and some alone time.

As the boys were getting ready for bed, I began busying myself with the chores of the house. I found myself checking the clock many times, but not really knowing why. Somewhere around 9:30 p.m., I realized what was wrong.

Today is Labor Day. Tomorrow is Tuesday, the beginning of my second week of school. Two years ago on Labor Day, I put a very nauseous Amy to bed, fed my kids dinner, and then busied myself about the house. When I woke in the morning, “Till death do us part” had become a reality.

I’ve spent the last hour hemming and hawing about the things that need to be done before tomorrow then chastising myself for worrying and picking up the fear God delivered me from six weeks before Amy passed away. It’s been a vicious cycle. The only way I know to break it is to admit that I’m in the crosshairs of fear, pray, ask God for peace, and then head to bed. Tomorrow will be another day. The actual anniversary of Amy’s death is Thursday; I’ve taken the day off work so I can deal with it for what it will be, and so that my students do not have to endure a numb, slightly frustrated teacher all day.

So, good night. I’m letting go of the fear so that God can take care of it for me. I pray I can fall asleep quickly and that my dreams are peaceful. Tomorrow is not a day to fear.

Daddy: A Reckoning part 2

Amy was hospitalized at twenty-five weeks and one day in her second pregnancy. I was out of my league on the parenting front without a partner. My hope lay in two things: I serve an awesome, big, and powerful God and the pregnancy had already surpassed the necessary point for a baby to possibly live outside the womb: 24 1/2 weeks. Amy could give birth and God could perform miracles, with or without the doctors’ help. The goal was to deliver after thirty weeks. Alas, she only carried the baby to twenty-seven weeks and two days.

In order to survive as a quasi-single dad, adhered to a crushing schedule. I woke at 4:30 each morning; made and packed two lunches and dinner; and then headed for the shower. I woke my son at 5:30 for his bath. We ate breakfast and were out the door by 6:15. I dropped Micah off with a friend or family member for the day, complete with a diaper bag ready for Armageddon, and had to arrive at school for morning staff meetings by 7:15. After school, I picked him up and we went – along with the dinner I’d stashed in the staff lounge – to the hospital to see Mommy. Traffic prevented us from arriving before 5:30 p.m. We’d eat dinner while Micah babbled about the fun things he’d done that day with Grammy, Lisee, Miss Ali, or whichever family friend he’d been stashed with for the day. At 7:15 each night, we would hug Amy and head home. By 8:30 my son was fast asleep and I still had dishes, laundry, and grading to complete. By 11:00, I had usually passed out asleep on the table or in the recliner where I’d been grading papers, usually having just consumed three or four scoops of Rocky Road for comfort. Wash, rinse, repeat four days a week. Fridays we didn’t go to the hospital because I was utterly exhausted. To make it up to Micah, we spent four and six hours at the hospital on Saturdays and Sundays respectively. The rest of the weekend was spent going to church, mopping and vacuuming the floors, and more grading. Grocery shopping happened when I could squeeze it into the schedule. The local Safeway had just been remodeled, and, for a blessed week, half-gallon bricks of ice cream were only one dollar, limit two per customer. I gave my little giant (who was eye to eye with the check counter) two dollars and sent him down the line next to mine each night on the way home from the hospital for a week. I consumed 9 1/2 gallons of ice cream myself while Amy was in the hospital.

One week into the regimen, I realized I could not keep up with an energetic 3 1/2 year-old boy who loved life and lived it hard all while juggling a home, a job, and a wife in the hospital; I just couldn’t. I begged God for a miracle without specifics since I didn’t really know what I needed. He answered my plea by providing prayer warriors and working hands – many unseen to me at the time, and a few very visible – to help me cope. My first Thursday night without Amy happened to be “Back to School Night”. I was mobbed by parents who wanted to bring meals, mow my yard, or clean my house. Amongst the fray of bills piling up and a tight checkbook, we were given fuel cards by two different families in order to keep our family physically together as much as possible. Amy took all the grading from me she could possibly take and I rearranged my lesson plans to avoid long essays until later in the year. Daily I woke feeling an encouraging hand pushing me through my day; I thanked God for the prayer warriors I knew and the ones I didn’t. And on the days when I felt I would break completely, God showed up in an encouraging note, delivered groceries from an anonymous source, or some other creative way.

After a week, I bought paper plates and plastic silverware and stopped folding clothes out of necessity. These two decisions bought me another hour of Z’s a night. I still had a few dishes to wash – pots and pans and the like; and I still completed one to two loads of laundry a day. I just upended the basket onto the couch. It became Micah and my dresser/closet for the month. Amy named the pile “Mt. Washington” when she arrived home to witness the carnage of her once beautiful, neat, organized home.

On Friday nights Micah and I ate dinner on TV trays while watching a movie. We sat together on the couch but I usually fell asleep within fifteen minutes, sometimes before I’d even eaten my dinner. Micah would always wake me up at his favorite parts: “Daddy, ya hafta watch! Dis is da bess part.” By that time, we’d amassed a cache of videos complete with singing vegetables, a skidoo-ing blue puppy, and singing animals who danced with princesses “Once upon a dream”. With such a variety, what did Micah always choose to watch?!? Disney’s Cinderella or

Cinderella

Roger’s and Hammerstein’s…Cinderella starring Brandi, Whoopie, and Whitney! Every Friday, Saturday, and Sunday we watched those movies – or at least they were on while we played on the floor, unloaded and/or reloaded the dishwasher, and performed a sundry of other tasks. By the end of that month, my dreams were replete with mice singing while they helped me clean the house

Gus2

(“Cinderelly, Cinderelly…”). Sometimes my students, family, and friends joined into the nocturnal foray, hounding me of many different tasks I couldn’t complete in the day, or sometimes I found myself arguing with a wand toting, diva fairy-godmother trying to convince me that Impossible was Impossible. Today, Micah’s favorite films include both these movies. He even nicknamed his newly minted brother “Gus-Gus” when they first met!

When Amy came home, I began joking with her: “You cannot die until our kids have all graduated from high school! I can’t do this alone.” There was a bit of truth veiled in that joke. I barely made it through that month and I didn’t want to become the “barely made it” dad my children would weep to their therapists about during their 30’s. Silently, I lived with the fear of losing my wife while my kids were still kids. It became an overwhelming terror multiplying inside of me. When Amy was diagnosed with kidney failure, I choked on that joke once, never again. In that moment I realized I would most likely become a single parent soon, and I wasn’t the daddy I wanted to be.

…to be continued in pt. 3…

Daddy: A Reckoning part 1

1BryanDuncan
Photo courtesy of amazon.com.

In 1990, my youth group and I attended a Bryan Duncan concert. Opening the concert was an unknown group to me at the time. I do not remember the second half of the concert at all. In the middle of the opening act, Bob Carlisle, lead singer for Allies, began talking about the difference between his and his wife’s views of God when they were first married. Carlisle thought God to be the Zeus type, ready to throw bolts of lightning at a single misstep, demanding unwavering respect, and distant from His creation. I’ll never forget, however, the description of God as his wife encountered Him. What follows is my best attempt at retelling the story. 

“…My wife refers to God as Abba. In Hebrew, Abba means Daddy. It’s an intimate understanding of a child’s relationship with their father…as a daddy. She had a great relationship with her daddy and it transferred to her view of God. She wanted to call God by a name that indicated the same intimate relationship a little girl has with her daddy. The little girl doesn’t worry about grown-up issues because Daddy takes care of them. She doesn’t worry about angering her daddy because he always has time for her. And she doesn’t worry about tomorrow because she’s caught up in the here and now talking with her daddy. For my wife, the name Abba God fit that relationship better. When things get stressful and difficult for my wife, she closes her eyes and pictures herself curled up on Abba’s lap while He plays with her hair…”

That last sentence haunted me for decades. I grew up in a broken family. I had a father, not a daddy. In fact, my father asked me to stop calling him Dad or Daddy because he felt Father was more respectful. When his marriage to my step-mother ended in divorce, our relationship ceased to have any resemblance to healthy.

As I moved through Bible college, I still wrestled with the idea that I could have an intimate relationship where God would let me curl up into His lap and listen to my worries, my boo-boos, and my victories. When I was diagnosed with Acromegaly, I was angry at God and expected a lightning bolt for the many tantrums I threw directed toward my Creator. A year after I was diagnosed, I received an almost clean bill of health.

“We don’t know what’s happened, Thom, but you no longer have the pituitary tumor nor the disease in your bloodstream.”

“I do,” I told the Endocrinologist, “God healed me.” I was ecstatic…until I comprehended the doctor’s next piece of news.

“Our tests show that you may never have children, though.” My life entered a tail-spin. Selfishly, I wanted to have children. I wanted to prove that I didn’t have to be like my father. I wanted to prove that the mold could be broken and I could be a dad. With the announcement brought the certainty that no one would ever consider marrying me, that I was broken. I gave up all dreams of being a dad.

When Amy and I were dating – very early on – I made sure she understood I may not be able to sire children. After we were engaged, we began a five-year plan that would end with the first of five adoptions. (Yes, we were crazy and wanted five children: boy, girl, boy, girl, boy. Oy!) About six months after we were married, Amy was told she “would never be able to bear children”. We threw caution to the wind. I was told “may never” while Amy was told “never”. Her news was more definitive. She stopped taking the birth control pills and we began looking for an adoption agency just to figure out what hoops we’d have to jump through and just how much each hoop would deduct from our bank account.

God had a different plan. Fast forward five and a half years, add the mathematical rule “two negatives make a positive” and multiply by three. In the beginning, I was not a very good dad. I struggled to understand my role and to become the Daddy my children thought I was, or rather, the Daddy they deserved. With each of my three boys, there was a moment in time God froze for me. I can still close my eyes and relive each of those three moments. The house, furniture, and surroundings were not the same, but the three events were nearly identical. In each one, I was sitting in a recliner with one of my three toddlers curled up in my lap. Guess what I was doing. The realization at the time etched the moment into my memory. I can smell dinner during the first encounter. I can hear the blips and squeaks of the hospital monitors during the second encounter. I can see my beautiful wife watching me during the third. What was I doing? I was playing with my boys’ curls and talking with them about why their little heart hurt.

Sometime later, Amy and I were in a Christian bookstore, and I stumbled upon a picture by an unknown artist, simply titled “Destiny”. DestinyI stood stone still staring at that picture for an unknown length of time. My collar was wet from the tears when Amy found me. I couldn’t move. I couldn’t even speak. God gave her a revelation of her own. I had never even imagined Jesus as a toddler, let alone a nearly red-headed toddler with curls. The toddler in the picture looked almost like my youngest; it was overwhelming. Amy pointed out the shadow behind the toddler; that was the moment when God brought it all to a point. The concert. The desire to be a daddy. The three moments, one with each of my three boys. I was wrestling with it all while looking at one of my now heroes – Joseph of Nazareth – as he lived life with his “son” at his feet. We bought the picture and have had it in our home since. Today, the juxtaposition of the toddler Jesus playing with a spike while the cross looms in the foreground has me choking on yet another difficulty related to being a daddy: the world is big and scary and my children will get hurt – it’s my job to be the daddy they need when they are hurt.

In this season of life, as a widowed father of three teenage boys, I find myself struggling as a dad. My soul aches to crawl up into Abba God’s lap and bear my soul while He plays with…what’s left of my hair. And in the middle of the heart-pounding desire is another desire, to be a better daddy today than I was yesterday.

…to be continued in pt. 2…