I was craving blue on the Christmas tree this year. The kind of deep royal blue that goes well with a rich crimson.
We set up the tree in the dining room this year since it’s the room we spend the most time in, the room that the rest of the house stems off of. This year we have new wood floors in there, to replace the cracked and faded linoleum that was in there last year and I love the way the tree glows over those new wood floors. And even when there’s hardly ever a time when all the lights on the tree are working, there’s magic in walking into a dark room in the morning and turning on the tree before waking up the kids for school.
Tuesday was the day we put up the tree. That day I was working on getting the house back together after our long November. It was a foggy-brained month full of no routines where Daddy felt awful with covid there at the first of the month, where the kids had three weeks of remote schooling, where it’s never easy to navigate the emotional territory that goes with elections, where my brothers came to help us tear apart our only bathroom to do a remodel right before we went to see my parents for Thanksgiving. And we closed out the month with sweet family time that revolved around filling our bellies full at Aunt Sarah’s house, then squeezing into swimsuits the next day to take the kids to an indoor pool with Grammy, before the Saturday when Gramps and Uncles Dill and Dan helped Daddy to build the new bathroom and there was sad news on the phone.
That Tuesday while getting the house back together I was thinking over life, about the kids and Nano and me and some unknowns we’re facing as a family right now. I thought about how I am twenty-seven and my oldest is seven and how I’m still growing up while I’m learning how to mother her. I thought about how Nano and I got engaged when I was eighteen and how I don’t regret it at all even though… eighteen-year-old me feels like she has nothing to lose.
There’s something to that. Embracing life as if you have nothing to lose. I miss her and I’m grateful for her and I wouldn’t change her. If I were to meet the eighteen-me, I think a part of me might have a lot of things I’d want to tell her. But then again, if I were to think about it, I’d want to hold my tongue and trust the story where it is. I’d want her to travel the journey ahead just the same. And I’d want to relearn some things from her.
Eighteen knows how to dream and risk and see life with fresh eyes. Eighteen-me signed up to become a wife and mom within a year. Teach me how to step into new seasons with courage even when I have no idea what I’m doing or how to even feel like a full-grown adult.
I thought alot about her while I put the clothes away and got out the Christmas decorations and I told her that I thought she was brave.
That afternoon, we went to the park with some of our dearest sister-friends. There were reminders of the sweet gift of friendship, as well as the moments when I realize what I forgot to pack for our trip to the park, feel like the most unprepared mom, and then have a two second conversation with myself where I tell myself to quit feeling that way, criticize the way I’m telling myself to stop feeling, question whether that was actually a thought or a feeling, and then remember where I am, call timeout on the scattered debate inside my head and bring myself back to reality where we talk about all the things that you talk to a sister about including how in the world to parent a child.
While we talked, Liesel leaned up against me under a blanket waiting for the things she needed.
That evening after dinner was when we set up the tree and baked cookies. There was music and Amayah requested the ‘Twelve Days of Christmas’ and showed us the hand-motions that she learned at school. Liesel thought the cookies were for Santa and was very careful to set them up on a plate next to the tree until Daddy told her that they might go bad before Christmas and we could always make Santa fresh cookies. She didn’t at all mind the thought of eating them.
The girls started homework while I cleaned up the kitchen from the soup and tortillas that Daddy and Amayah had made us. Liesel was overwhelmed with her homework to the point of tears and I took her to her room to rest a bit together. By the time bedtime came around, we were all out of energy and the toys were cluttering up the place in such a way that it rubbed our last nerves and turned into a small disaster of interactions.
We got to bed in the end. Amayah was the last one to fall asleep as she always is. I rubbed her back until she was out. And when I got in bed I cried, for though we had finished today, I felt lost to be the mother she needed tomorrow.
I picked up my phone to set the alarm and there on the screen was the verse…
“Then the Lord said to Moses, ‘I will rain down bread from heaven for you. The people are to go out each day and gather enough for that day. In this way I will test them and see whether they will follow my instructions.’” Exodus 16:4.
And I was hungry for this truth that He has always been the God who gives His people what they need just when they need it, on the day they need it, because all He needs us to do is to trust Him. To ask for this day, our daily bread. It rested my soul in knowing that while I don’t know what my kids need in a mother tomorrow, He does.
He knows how to give them the things that I can’t, the things I haven’t learned yet because I’m still growing up too. And He knows perfectly how to Father the person that I am inside. He knows how to Father me when I long to understand the whole story and know my next twelve moves, rather than simply being content to take the next step with Him just today.
He knows how to use the weakness of me to show Himself strong. Sometimes, there are moments when I have wished that I could be a robot that simply stuck with the plan and kept doing the next thing and moving towards the goal and ignoring the feelings. But the thing is, if God wanted children who didn’t know how to feel, He could have made children who didn’t know how to feel. He, Himself is a God who feels and He chose to form us in His own image.
The Bible shows us a God who rejoices over His creation, aches and heartbreaks over the mess of humanity, and dances in His Love for them. And when I have moments when I want to rejoice over what I can make with my hands, when I ache and my heart breaks over the mess in this world, or when I simply want to dance in Love for another soul, none of these things themselves are cause to call myself an unfocused mess.
Rather, these things are cause to enjoy the gift of getting to have a heart that feels, just like my heavenly Daddy.
One thing that makes me so different from my Daddy is that I don’t know what to do with all of these feelings inside me, but He does.
He knows how to perfectly use everything in His own heart to write the story of His grace and glory. And as my Daddy, He is the One who knows what to do with everything in my heart too. All He wants from me is to lean my one heart up onto His own.
“The one who calls you is faithful, and he will do it.” 1 Thess. 5:24.
He will show Himself strong with the weakness of His child. In her life, in her marriage, in her children. Each friendship and each failing is held by hands that work all things together for the good of those who love Him.
Each teardrop that falls from the face of one of His children is a prayer and He is the God who sees, the God who listens and the God who takes note of every tear and holds it precious. (Psalm 56:8)
So we wake to another day, and two heads of long brown hair wake up before their brother and each tuck themselves under one of my arms to rest on their mama’s heart. I can’t understand this world for them. And I don’t have the perfect guidance needed for the wild and beautiful hearts inside them. But just as they rested themselves firm upon my heart, I can rest myself firm upon the heart of my Daddy who has all the guidance we need for one more day in a broken world that is just a piece of His one good and beautiful story.
This is grace.. the gift that's longing to be unwrapped inside of each blue this Christmas.
The sure presence of a God who always keeps His promise.