Story Two in “A Venture to Enter the Silence”
The white whicker was spread with cobs of corn and butter and Daddy’s best homemade spanish rice. The sun fell on our porch trying to shine on our souls and I can just barely remember the scuffle between us. It was about a walk. It was one of the first warm days in weeks and she wanted to run her bike out in the road and go on a walk in the sunshine so very much she could hardly stand it.
We had all missed the sunshine and we all needed the open skies.
I told her wait. After lunch.
Her frustration brought her to sitting on steps, arms crossed. My girl was determined not to eat with us.
When Daddy stepped onto the porch bringing drinks, I announced it out. I let out in words my own frustration. And drove her farther away…
My feet stilled on the porch while her own steered across the grass to slip behind the van. I went on setting out cups wondering why on a sunny Sunday we all can’t just have moods to match the sunshine and enjoy the day as it comes. And how often do I do that myself? Disappointment can crawl up the sides of my heart and twist every bit of beauty in my life and strangle all the pieces of the story that are so good, and it all just looks like a melting mess. And what do you do with disappointment if you don’t at least feel it?
I want to see beauty. Truly I do. I want to believe I’m capable of seeing through disappointment. But then I don’t. I don’t want to miss the deeper beauty I can find when I don’t ignore the feeling. Disppointment begs to be noticed and held and considered. Disappointment has somewhere beautiful to take us. It doesn’t happen on default, but it’s intended by design.
When I try to see through disappointment, am I lying to myself?
The screen door banged and I ventured out across grass, across the space between us. I find her there and she’s quiet. Sitting still on the rear lip of the van, her “bump shoes” hanging there on her feet. And I lowered down onto that ledge by her. What was she feeling? Her eyes stared down the grass.
They’re all sitting to lunch and asked us to come. But we stayed there on the end of the van. And slow, through the thoughts in stillness coming, her lips open to my question. Her words… honest, they come.
“I’m not going to eat lunch with you. I’m mad at you. You talked mad about me to Daddy.”
I talked mad about her to Daddy.
I speak what I want her to know before I start to remember how words can pierce your soul.
Words can pierce your soul.
You girly, you were a few weeks old and I was checking out every library book I could find on baby care. I stayed up into nights reading those books because I had no idea what I was doing with you and I was desperate to figure out which one of these books had it right. Because girly, I wanted to get it right with you. You cried more than other babies I saw and I didn’t know why and I wanted to help you. I wanted to fix it.
And every single one of those books claimed that it was proven to be the right one. But every single one of them said something all different about what I should do with you. All that happened from those sleepless nights pouring over baby care books was that one, I lost sleep and two, I got even more confused and unsure about how to be your mother. And I was so scared that I was doing everything wrong.
We were out together and ran into an old acquaintance. She was admiring you in your dress and asking me how we were getting along. I told her about how you cried and I felt guilty. She had a response for that.
“She cries because you’re not confident and she can feel it.”
I went home and cried because it felt like my soul had been stabbed through and broke open.
I think somewhere she just intended to encourage me to trust my instincts and not doubt myself as a mother. But all I felt at the time were accusations that I was failing as your mother because of who I was.
I have made most every step in life with so many feelings of uncertainty. I don’t know that I’ve ever known a way to do something without feeling unsure as I did it. I’ve always tended towards being hesitant and shy in most everything. It had so often felt inescapable like a curse, but those words made it feel more like a curse than ever.
I could read every single baby book in the library to try to be a better mother, but if I had to find a way to completely rid myself of all these feelings of self-doubt inside of me in order to be a good mother, I had no hope of daring to think I could be a good mother for you. I’ve never known how to just turn away from my feelings and my uncertainty wasn’t going away.
I dramatize people’s words. I do. I’m sure I dramatized that ladies words but the feelings were no less real by any means. And it was one of the most depressed seasons of life I’ve gone through trying to work my way through that. Trying to find a way to trust that I could go on and keep being your mother because God is with us and His grace will always be there to carry us through the blindspots.
So there we were sitting on the bumper of the van. I want to try to be your mother best I can. I want to sit with you when you’re feeling everything, even though I still don’t really know what we’re doing.
But I have that… I do know what it feels like to hear words that pierce your soul.
And I had just pierced your soul with my words.
Where in the world is there a soul who is dear to my heart who I have always, unfailingly loved with my words?
My words come out and they show that the grace I have for my people falls desperately short of the grace that I hope they give me.
I don’t know if I can even remember what were the words came out my lips that pierced you through. Somehow I can remember so well the words that pierced my soul, but struggle so to remember my own words that pierced someone else. I wasn’t feeling what you felt when I said the words, was forgetting how words can feel.
Words can hurt. The hurt doesn’t change the needs. It doesn’t change right and wrong, doesn’t change what was told or what was needed. But it is a real hurt, a place in both of our hearts where we can find new grace for each other and build a bridge that our hearts need.
All of this moment hits an open place in me where hardly anything about the mother I am, the person I am, the place I’m going… hardly any of it seems “right” to me. There are so many confused questions that I don’t know even know how to ask and I sure don’t have answers for. Doubts can feel so full over the unknown place life goes.
But just like when you were a baby, every time I try to do it “right” all I get is sleepless and more turned around and confused than ever. And we can’t afford that kind of right. Not for me. Not for you. Not for any of us.
“Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding.” Proverbs 3:5.
The internal place your mother is going scares me sometimes, girly. And we’re on it all together and that’s what scares me more. It feels messy and weak and I know it’s laced with mistakes and the markings of my flesh. It goes against what I understand. But God never said that trusting Him will be in accordance with what we understand. He said for us to trust Him with our heart and not to depend on our understanding.
That feels like letting go of alot of what seems stable. And maybe like learning hard through a mess of floppy-feeling-moments to simply accept the grace God freely gives.
I want to give you the same grace that I need myself. I want to remember that we all will best learn how to walk in this life, when we are given the space to stumble in the process. We all learn best through mistakes… through following the story God is writing in us with enough wiggle room to do it messy while we’re learning.
May grace be found to renew the grace we have for each other’s messy stories.
You weren’t sure how to forgive me with your words, but in the quiet you found your smile and threw your arms around my neck. When I caught you there off the bumper of the van, what I knew is that our hearts had found a bridge. Blessed, blessed bridge.
Truthfully, it’s easy in this life to feel like you’re on an island, but what I want to know and remember, what I want to testify to you, my girl, is that there’s been a thousand bridges extended to my island since the first day I held you.
And it’s the love of a single moment that can light up those thousand bridges that you never fully realized were there before.
The love of a single moment. Never underestimate love, not for a moment.
I don’t get love and I don’t think I ever will, but what I do know is that you don’t have to get love in order for it to get you.
Love gets us girly, so thank God for the beautiful bridges of love He gives us. Heart to heart, we make it through.
So a body of us all will take another quiet step today. It might not look like much. It might feel a little like falling down. But this is God building His kingdom. Using the weakness of a child’s heart to guide us onto the mountain of fear, into the cloud of disappointment – a step that makes no sense when we take it. But somehow, somewhere He builds it into one more bridge, heart to heart, that heals our own and multiplies heart to heart again. Love always multiplies somehow.
If faith is walking by what we trust instead of what we see, then maybe we don’t have to learn to see without fear in order to know that we can still walk with our God.
Maybe we never have to be able to see through our disappointments, but only let our disappointments find their stumbling way to falling on the God who sees through us.
When these hearts understand so little, they can always unwrap the gift of getting to reach out blind and stumble our way toward God with each other, while He teaches us all how to walk and multiplies bridges with the journey.
And we’ll breathe in what is true over all these unsure moments…
Our inability to understand the way we’re going never alters God’s ability to build bridges with us and grow our hearts on the way.
“For the Lord will be your confidence and will keep your foot from being caught.” Proverbs 3:26.
So with a new bridge fresh built heart to heart, my girl and I came to gather again at the table in sunlight, and our hearts were filled with cobs of corn and Daddy’s spanish rice.
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