The Power of Retreat


You can’t always be “all in.” Sometimes you have to back off.

I wanted to be all in at Thanksgiving. I wanted to be able to do that for my family. I wanted to for my son’s high school graduation earlier this year. I wanted to for my son’s birthday. I wanted to for every day that I’ve kept my granddaughter while her parents were at work or in school.

But I couldn’t always. I can’t at all times. I try and I try but sometimes I have to retreat from the joy everyone else is feeling just to hang on to my sanity. And isn’t joy what we all want? I do. I do want to feel the ethereal lightness and boisterous festivity of joy, but I can’t seem to experience the wonder of it.

I am thankful for the bright, twinkling lights, dressed up as humans I know and love, that have poured over me in my darkness. Their job is not easy, their burden not light because of me, but they keep trying to show me the way out of this blindness as my white, red-tipped cane shows everyone around me how handicapped I am by grief – tapping, tapping, tapping against everything to see if it is safe to venture out. It doesn’t feel safe; it just feels as if thick strands of itchy wool are woven tightly around me, wrapped again and again, preventing my exit from this cocoon I live inside now. Pinpricks of light show through but they are like stars on a moonless night. They’re beautiful while not providing reliable vision.

These layers and layers of woven sadness make it difficult for others to understand me at times. My voice is muffled through the layers I struggle to fight my way out off. I can be difficult to reach some days when my head gets caught up in the headache-inducing strands when it feels as if my struggle to escape only tangles me up even more and buries me deeper. Some days it feels more like quicksand than fabric that I could cut my way out of, if only I had a proper tool.

Therefore, sometimes it feels safer to retreat. Safer for them and for me, as I succumb to the call of tears. Some days I have to take a step back. I have to take a step away from everyone else’s happiness and laughter just to breathe. As I curl in on myself, I wonder if retreat is the answer, why their joy cannot seep in through the dense fabric of my grief. Shouldn’t it loosen in the presence of liquid happiness that permeates every string with its exquisite, refreshing splash? But grief is like wool, uncomfortably scratchy while it swells at the touch of moisture then contracts as it dries, causing shrinking of the overall garment. It is swollen and tighter as their laughter seems so easy to come by, and then tighter still after everyone leaves and I was unable to fully experience the sunshine that is each of them.

Holidays bring gaiety and exultation. They also escort memories from the prison of dark recesses within the mind into the open ballrooms of regalement, dancing to entertain. Not everyone likes ballroom dancing. For me, it is an acquired taste. I find the dancers beautiful and am envious of their talent to captivate others, but know I am ill-fitted to participate, my steps too heavy and uncoordinated. Still, I do not hate watching them now; I am just overwhelmingly aware that they will continue to perform the same routines over and over again, times infinity, because no new acts will be introduced, at least not for the dance I am longing to join. They’ll do this same dance, replay these exact same memories again and again, because the choreographer of this one is no longer a part of this troupe. He has moved onto a dancer’s version of the philharmonic, a place from whence there is nowhere more prestigious to aspire to elevate. He is in Heaven and we are still here, trying to learn dances that will never be as enticing to perform.

I linger, like a wallflower, at the edges of the ballroom, smiling and nodding dutifully toward those who peek over to be sure I am pleased with the party-like atmosphere. I am pleased. I’m grateful that they do not feel the depth of pain that I seem to have succumbed to, at times. I enjoy their merriment even as I feel ill-equipped to join in.

We used to have a Christmas games celebration. Many photos and especially videos document the chaotic joy and laughter of these get togethers. We would attempt ridiculous tasks like blowing ping-pong balls from one water-filled cup to the next, the winner being able to make it to the last one without the ball plinking to the table and floor. We’d shake even more ping-pong balls from an empty Kleenex box strapped to the waist, with only the movement of one’s hips to rattle them free. Carryied oranges between our knees in a relay race to drop it into a small bathroom-sized trash can then return for the next person to do the same. And collected lifesavers from a paper plate with only a toothpick between our teeth. Those were days of joy and merriment. I don’t think I can host such a soiré this year because, while the memories are not painful, the fact that it will never be the same elicits indescribable despair. And yet I’m sure he would want us to continue our tradition.

Everyone keeps saying “He wouldn’t want you to be sad.” And I understand the sentiment behind it. They’re right; he wouldn’t want that for me. Yet I also know beyond a shadow of a doubt that if the situation were reversed, while I would never want him to be sad, he would anyway. It is the prescribed order of things. It is a destination preordained.

I’m trying to retreat less and less these days. I am attempting to learn to join in again. I know that this life is precious and I don’t want to miss any of the important parts. And it’s all important, isn’t it? Every day here is a day I should be bringing joy to someone else. Every day I should be creating opportunities for memories that they can hold dear one day, as I hold mine. It takes the strength of Samson some days. I feel as if I cannot break the pillars of the temple of my own doom, demolishing it entirely, as he did. Samson’s strength ultimately set him free to the hereafter. I just need mine to set me free here until it is my time to go there. I push mightily against the stone colonnade, some days feeling the complete sapping of my strength overtake my ability to bring the walls down.

Fortunately, my strength is not my own. It is replenished time and time again, each time I remember to ask. God’s favor still immerses my life in glory; I just need to have my blindness healed so I can keep seeing it. The ice cream has fallen from my cone, melting immediately in the gritty sand, and now I can’t stand the idea of its sweetness. But the beach is still sunny, the ocean still cool, the waves still a melody, the spring-fresh smell of fresh-cut grass still lingering.

Someday I will take a deep breath and enjoy the serenity of it all, even with no ice cream.

I Just Didn’t Know…but a few things I do know…


As I closed my eyes to sleep the night before we woke up to leave for your common surgery, I didn’t know it was the last night I would sleep in bed beside you. I would lay in bed next to you…but only after you were gone.

As I opened my eyes that morning, I didn’t know it was the last time I would wake to roll over and touch your arm, see your face, hear you breathing beside me.

As we drove to the hospital that morning, I didn’t know it was the last time we would just chat and be relaxed in each other’s company. I didn’t know I was telling you not to worry, it was all going to be fine, we’d be driving home the next day together and you’d be feeling much better already…when we really wouldn’t. I didn’t even know I wasn’t telling the truth.

When we sat in the waiting room, awaiting someone to speak your name to call you to pre-op, I didn’t know it would be the last hours that would be somewhat “normal” together. I didn’t know we were living on desperately borrowed time. When your parents came to sit with us, to wait with me through your surgery, I didn’t know it would be the last time we were all together…until it was at the funeral home.

When they called from post-op to tell us that the surgery went splendidly well and you were doing well in recovery, I didn’t know…they didn’t know… that they were horribly wrong. As they kept me sitting in the waiting room because they were too busy for visitors in post-op and said I’d see you when you got to a room, I didn’t know that those hours that ticked by as I anxiously waited to see you were part of the last day of your life, save for but less than an hour of the next.

When I saw you smile at me as you came into your hospital room when they wheeled you in and said that you already had less pain, I had no idea how short-lived our relief would be…so very short. I didn’t know that the next hours would be filled with fear, then with the most devastating loss of my life.

When you stopped breathing, I didn’t know yet that they wouldn’t save you. I didn’t know that was the last time I would lay eyes on you…alive.

When they came to tell me you were gone. The absolute forever kind of gone, I knew instantly…every fiber of my being, every inch of my body contorted in pain, knew that life would never, ever be the same. I knew I hadn’t done enough. I knew I should have somehow done more. I knew I’d never forgive myself for failing you.

As I left the hospital, I knew where you were and yet I did not know how to leave your body there alone. I didn’t want to leave your body in that building because then it was real. It was real. It was real. And I could never turn back.

I can’t believe it’s real. I cannot believe it is real. How can it be real when I just didn’t know? I just want to go back to when I just didn’t know.

When I first met you, I didn’t know you would change how I felt about myself. I didn’t know you would make life so much better. I didn’t know you would make me a better person. I didn’t know that I would soon trust you with my whole heart. But I did already know, instantly somehow, that you owned my heart and that God alone had sent you to save me, even from myself. I already knew, in a crazy and unexpected way, that you were finally The One. You had finally come for me. I just didn’t know it would be for such an unbearably short time. I didn’t know.

As I sit here now, I don’t know how to navigate this life without you. It’s been six months and I still don’t know. I’m walking through minutes, hours, days, months, as if in a trance because even though I know you’re gone, I still don’t know. I really feel like I don’t know.

What I do know is that you are not in pain. I know that grief, the definition of grief for me, is the presence of all of the love I want to give to only you but cannot. It is love unrequited. It is love no longer reciprocated. It is painful, to my very core. But I know you are without pain. I know you are experiencing the greatest days imaginable. I know that you will greet me when I arrive and we will still share a love incomparable to all others.

What I do know is that our love has not dissolved. What I do know is that I am still holding onto it until I see you again. What I do know is that, although you are not here to share in it, I love you still. I always will. What I do know is that we were, and we are, soulmates. What I do know is that this is forever, not just for here. I know you are still mine and I will always be yours.

He’s Not a Vending Machine God


Butterflies cannot see their own wings. They can perceive the motion of their wings but not detect individual colors and patterns. They turn from caterpillars to pupa and emerge as a clear-winged butterfly, a blank slate of sorts. After their first meal they develop colors and patterns on their wings.

I perceive what is going on in my life and know exactly how it “should” look…and yet I can’t SEE the whole thing. I’m only capable of seeing what I’ve experienced up to this point. The future is a mystery to me. But it’s not to God. And yet here I am trying to decipher what happened and plan out what will be.

For example, sometimes I feel like I’m not grieving enough, like if my husband were able to speak into my life he’d actually say “it’s barely been six months and you are laughing with people?” or “How are you just having a jolly old time with our grandbaby without me there?” But, let me tell you, I’m still so broken. I’m so broken that I’d feel like there is powder left rather than shards. Can’t make a mosaic out of that. But how could it ever be enough grieving over someone so amazing and wonderful isn’t here anymore? How much grief would do him justice? Sounds silly doesn’t it? And yet the pain of these thoughts seem to have tendrils that stretch out and wrap themselves around my every limb, over my eyes, into my mouth. There are times when I feel as if I cannot function…but what would ever do justice to who he was?

I also experience an inordinate amount of guilt over his last night here. As a nurse with many years of experience, why didn’t I do something else, make demands sooner? Because I know that I experienced a similar paralysis of thought processes when my son was very sick with meningitis, I know that it is very hard to be a nurse and a close family member at the same time. My fear over what was happening and my concentrated efforts to shove that fear down inside me so that I could comfort him, so I could try to allay his fears, that’s what kept my nursing brain from thinking straight. So much fear.

But God does not give us a spirit of fear. And that brings me to guilt over prayer during that night.

Bear with me because, as I am having somewhat of a revelation about these things, I realize that a lot of this doesn’t sound rational…but grief is not rational; it is a fire-breathing dragon with armored scales and gnashing teeth. It does not do things rationally. I am working to bring this all together so that it makes sense (not just in print but in my head, too, trust me.)

That night, I really didn’t pray during the time he was struggling. I’m just being honest. I was focused on my husband. I was concentrating on how to do anything I could to make him feel better. To ask the right questions, to find the right solution, to fix it. I do know that my “nursing brain” was malfunctioning during that time due to emotional disconnection from that part of my brain. I know this because, although I did have intermittent thoughts and ideas pop through from that part, mostly I was focused on things in a different capacity. And so I wasn’t actively praying much during the time he was struggling.

After he stopped breathing and I was escorted to the ICU waiting room by a kind security guard while they were attempting resuscitation, my prayer sounded stuttered. Jesus, Jesus, Jesus. God, help. Please don’t take him from me. Save him, Jesus, please.

Now I sometimes think, “Why didn’t I pray ‘better’ then?” “What if the way I prayed, the words I said, weren’t the right ones to get our miracle?” “Why didn’t I do enough to help him? To save him?”

The Lord of Heaven and Earth is not a vending machine God. As far as prayer is concerned, if you put in a nickel instead of a quarter or a $1 bill instead of a $5, He doesn’t spit it out and say “that’s not going to work to get what you’re asking for, sorry.” That’s not how prayer works. That’s not how God works. He wants us to pray in order to commune with Him, spend time praising Him, and especially to learn how to rely on Him. To trust Him. But it’s not a process where it becomes useless if you don’t lay it out in precisely the right format.

My mind is like a pachinko machine. All the time, but definitely as I write this. Even as I type that He wants us to trust Him, somewhere in my mind says “I trusted Him with my husband and he’s gone now.” And then my mind says back “Yes, you trusted Him and he’s taking care of him better now than anyone else ever could; he’s healed, and whole, and happy. Now are you going to trust Him to take care of you, too? Those little metal pachinko balls bounce off of the metal pins, back and forth, zig-zagging constantly.

Trust him to take care of me now…

I’m unhappy. I’m so sad. I feel lost in so many areas of life and I feel alone. I hate all of it. And I also feel like a toddler having a temper tantrum at the same time. “This wasn’t the plan! This isn’t how it was supposed to be! I want my old life back!” Mentally screaming and kicking my little Mary-Jane-clad feet as I thrash at the floor with my tiny toddler fists. “God, make it stop! Turn it back! This isn’t fair!”

He’s not a vending machine God. You don’t punch in the numbers and get the snack you chose. Sometimes God is up there saying “I’m not going to let you settle for a measly, overpriced bag of chips and a candy bar when I have a banquet-style buffet, all-you-can-eat, with all of your favorites and some you’ve never even tried but will love…I have that coming up for you.

Isn’t that a typical parental thing to do? Keep you from eating junk food so that you can eat nutritious food instead, stuff that’s good for you? And sometimes there are brussel sprouts on the plate. You don’t want them when you’re living in that toddler phase. Yuck! But you grow up one day and realize that your tastes have changed and that, now, you love many of the things you used to hate to eat. Especially things that are healthy, good for you.

He’s not a vending machine God because he doesn’t reject your prayer if you don’t put “the right amount” or “the right kind” in. He’ll find ways to teach you and lead you into more prayer but He doesn’t just tell you to turn away from the machine if you don’t have the right amount of change.

He’s not a vending machine God because you don’t always get to pick what comes out. And you don’t need to because He’s going to make whatever you “get” perfect in His time.

I’ve also fretted and panicked and cried and stressed over my future. (How am I still not getting it? That He’s got this?) I’ve tried to plan it every which way by saying things like “okay, if this happens then this piece would work out” and “I’m going to need this to happen for that part to work out.” I mean, I’ve literally looked up average lifespans and tried to plan what I’m going to do, financially, for all of the years between now and then. Like I’m in control of the calendar…and the wind and the waves. (Insert eye roll here.)

He is not vending machine God because He makes the decisions based on his omniscient knowledge of what comes ahead. I don’t. As much as I think I’d like to control my life, I don’t get to and that’s a good thing. I’m pretty good at messing things up sometimes.

God doesn’t like all of the decisions that are made down here but, if we trust Him, if we follow Him, He is more than able to bring beauty and wholeness and joy out of each one. If we turn to Him, He will work it all for our good. I’ve read it. I believe it. I know it. And then I forget, time and time again, when I’m hurting.

In case you’re wondering how on earth it tied into the rest of this, I’m that caterpillar from the first paragraph. Here I am, plodding along my branch to find the right spot to knit my little pupa case. I’m trying.

God is doing a work in me and, tonight, at 3:00 in the morning, I hear Him telling me all of this. Tomorrow may feel silent again but these reminders are what gets me through. They’re what let me know to let go of the rigid plans I keep trying to make. I do not have control of them. I may live to be 90 or maybe only until next week. I cannot plan out my survival for each of the years. But He can. And He won’t let me go. He will bring me great joy. He will bring me hope. He will be my provision and my strength in any circumstance that I walk through.

I do worry about the joy part. How can I even look forward toward a place where I can find exuberant joy when my husband is not here. It feels like it would be an insult to him for me to find a way to move forward and really be integrated in life again, living to my fullest potential. It feels as if that demeans the life I had with him. If I can be happy without him here then it somehow takes away the importance of having him when I did. I feel overwhelming guilt immediately after any time I begin to laugh over something, to enjoy something.

And there’s that pachinko ball again, bouncing all over the place. “Listen here, are you remembering where he is right now? I know you can’t be fully cognizant of what it’s like up there but, rest assured, he’s good. He’s more happy and healthy and healed and whole and joyful than he’s ever been. Nothing you could be doing on earth is anywhere near what he is experiencing where he is so go on, take the joy. Accept it. Appreciate it.” (And there’s a little pout about how he’s happier now than he’s ever been…even when he was with me. Then it’s “of course he is; it’s Heaven…hello?” Then I go back to being 100% glad that he is because I want that for him. See? Pachinko.)

So no matter what wonderful experiences God pours into my life, my husband is still living even better off than I am, just at the new address while he waits for me there. And I trust and have faith that God will bring healing to my heart so that I can enjoy living again one day, I cannot push away every opportunity to appreciate life here because he is not here to do it with me. I know I’ll experience sadness at times over it, but it’s sadness for me, not for him “missing out.” I’m just missing him doing all of it with me.

One day I’ll test out my butterfly wings to see if they’re ready to fully unfurl. I’m sitting here in this dark pupa casing and letting God grow me. Sometimes growing is a one-step-forward-two-steps-back process for me but God won’t get annoyed that I haven’t learned all of the things yet. He just keeps reminding me that this is an open book test and to go back to the chapters I’ve already read to find the answers. He reminds me He’s the one who put them there since he wrote The Book.

For me, for now, I’m going to pray and sit with Him for awhile, and then I’m going to try to concentrate on that studying. And I’m thankful there’s no vending machine here. I’m content with what I have for right now and I trust that something good will be there when I need it.

The Clockmaker


Famine shows itself in many figurative forms. You can be starved of many things besides food.

And “fair” is just the place where you buy cotton candy.

Life is not fair and, because of that, I’m starving. I’m not hungry, no. But I am starving for the life I had with my husband. Call it metaphor or an analogy but I’m going to staunchly maintain that it fits. This feeling goes beyond “missing him;” it’s just bigger, broader, more all-encompassing, more saturating than just “missing him.” This condition is deadly without intervention, exactly like starving.

Let me put it another way.

I keep reading that grief is the price you pay for love. I guess someone feels like that makes it all better. Grief is also proportionate to intensity of love. My sister and I LOVED our Granny and our stepdad VERY much and were oh-so-sad when they left. But my sister’s grief over her son and my grief over my husband is bigger. Your husband and your children are essential pieces to every part of your life. They are an integral and necessary cog in the clockwork of everything you do or plan to do in life. Take one of those cogs away and, well, let’s just say duct tape won’t fix it. You have to rebuild the entire inside of the clock to work in a different fashion if it is ever to keep time again. You have to painstakingly find a new place for every single cog and figure out how to make it a part of the working timepiece, how to make all of them turn and work together. It’s exhausting and it takes forever.

My cogs, springs, screws, other random pieces are scattered about all around me. Every time I try to fit two of them together, the teeth on the cogs don’t match up. It feels as if I will never find a way to make all of the wheels turn properly again. Typically, if this happens to your clock, you return it to where you bought it. I don’t want to do that. I LOVED this clock when it was working properly, when all the pieces were as they should be. I don’t want to go back and trade this clock for a different one. I just want this one to work again. The problem is, they no longer make the missing piece. So now I have to find a way to put it back together without it. To do that I’m going to need an expert clockmaker.

Since God is the Alpha and the Omega, the beginning and the end, He knows everything there is to know about time and about how to keep clocks running. The thing is, I’m scared to turn it over to Him. My clock is already broken and seems to be beyond repair. What if I send it off and it just gets lost? What if I give it to Him and find out that it truly is broken beyond repair and there is nothing anyone can do about making it tick again? What if, just like my engagement ring that was too big when I got it, I just don’t want to let go of it long enough for it to be fixed for me? I want to hold on to all of my own pieces that I do have left because I don’t want anything to happen to the ones that are left.

But then I’ll still just be sitting here with a broken clock. What good is a clock that doesn’t keep time? It becomes just a bauble, a knock knack. It just sits there and never does anything ever again. That’s not really what I want for my clock. I want it to work again because I’ll feel better if it does.

And yet I feel guilty for even trying to get the clock working without that essential piece. Maybe it shouldn’t ever work again. Maybe it was meant to only be functional when that specific piece was in place. Maybe that one cog was so important that it will always keep the time wrong, too slow or too fast or in the wrong time zone, if it is ever repaired to work again.

The Clockmaker. I have to give it to the Clockmaker. I’ve got to make a decision to send it off to Him, give it up in order to get it back in working order.

Uggghhhh, but I still just can’t.

I’ll keep trying. I’ll get a box to send it in, pay the postage, and just keep trying to send it out.

One of these days, I’ll be able to step close enough to the mailbox to put it in. One of these days, it will work again.

Tick-tock…


From time to time it hits me…how can it have been _______ (insert months, days and hours here) since I’ve seen his face? Touched him? Laughed with him? Watched him play with the dogs or love on our kids and granddaughter? How…? And how do I keep making it through all the rest of them? Every time it leaves me reeling for a little bit.

Today is November 6th. He’s been gone for five months and 27 days. All I can think of is that the 10th of November will mark SIX months and then I’ll be barreling toward the holidays after already surviving half of a YEAR without the other half of my heart.

I’m fortunate that the half I still have is filled with my boys, daughters-in-love, my granddaughter, and more family who love me. If it weren’t still filled with these people, there would be little to nothing left. But the half of my heart that was him is empty save for my beautiful in-laws. His half of my heart is composed of huge, empty holes that feel destitute and void of…well, anything, and very little to hold those holes together. The Scott is missing from it.

I used to watch a movie called Drop Dead Fred when I was younger. “Used to watch” means that I watched it quite a few times. It has some ugly words in it but I found the overall movie, however crass, incredibly funny. (“Used to watch” also isn’t entirely true because I recently re-watched it with my sister, you know, for old times sake.)

In the movie, the main character, Lizzie, had a mischievous imaginary friend (Fred) as a child who pops back into her life as she is going through a divorce. Fred was fun, goofy, exciting, and he loved Lizzie. She makes a comment in the movie about how she felt once her mother locked Fred up so he couldn’t come around anymore: “You just disappeared. And when you did, all the life and the spirit and the…Fred…it all just went out of me.” And that’s how I feel now about Scott. All of the Scott just went out of me.

So, how have I lived almost six months without him? It’s 5:30 a.m. and I’ve been up since 2:00 (another panic dream…some call them nightmares but I don’t even know how to quantify the way these feel.) So how do I do these extra long days knowing he won’t be here for any of it?

The peace that passes all understanding, a kind we can’t make sense of in the natural because it is supernatural, is the only thing that gets me from one minute to the next. Clearly I don’t have peace in my dream state but if I stay awake it eventually comes over me. Sometimes it takes longer than others, even with prayer when the panic was especially real, but it comes. I know it only comes from God because, yes, I’d be capable of eventually calming down, but this peace isn’t just “calm;” it’s…well, it’s peace.

I’m going to be okay eventually. The dreams will become less frequent (at least that’s what my therapist says) and my life will somehow find a new rhythm. I’ll always prefer the beat of Scott’s heart to any rhythm I live to now, but I’ll learn to dance to the one I’ve been given. For now, though, just walking without being out of cadence is overwhelmingly challenging.

I guess that’s because I’m only at the crawling stage.

My granddaughter just started crawling and pulling up on things. She desperately wants to walk…no, run…and she gets so frustrated at being stuck when she runs out of furniture to hold onto. I can relate. If I’m not holding onto something, I’m going down. Neither she nor I have the balance to maintain upright mobility alone right now.

Fortunately, my “furniture” (faith) doesn’t run out, but in my desire to move faster than I am, running from this grief rather than wanting to go through it, I let go and try to step sometimes. That provides failure after failure. You’d think I’d have learned by now but God knows He created me awfully hard-headed. Which is a good thing since I run into walls every time I let go.

Let my faith be bigger than my fear. This is a common prayer for me these days. I used to pray for God to give me faith until I remembered that the Bible says I have already been given a measure of faith; it’s my job to grow it. Seeds start out underground, where it is dark, until they grow enough to reach the light above them. I find that to be a fairly good analogy for where I am now but I have no idea how deep I’ve been planted, no idea how long it will take before I can see light.

When you’re growing in the dark, it’s difficult to discern how much growth has taken place because you can’t see it. I can’t look to see if my roots have grown deeper or my stem longer. All I do know is that, fertilized by the Word, growth is the only outcome because God is in it, the fertilizer.

Meanwhile, there is still a part of me that never wants to bloom when I reach the surface. I want to keep the bud squeezed tight where no petal sees the light of day. It doesn’t seem right to go on flowering when my husband isn’t here to encourage it and then see it happen. He’s always been the green thumb around here. I have no clue how my houseplants are still surviving…well, most of them anyway. And no clue how I am surviving, but by the grace of God.

Bloom where you are planted, the saying goes. Seeds don’t get to choose the terrain and neither was I given an option. The soil I’ve been covered with is especially nutrient-poor right now. Without fertilizer as nourishment, I couldn’t even bust through the casing. But here I am, breaking out and pushing toward a surface I know will eventually show up.

“In all your ways, acknowledge Him, and He will direct your path.” Proverbs 3:6.

Lead me, Lord. I will follow. Lead me, Lord. I will go. You have called me. I will answer. Lead me, Lord. I will go.

Coming Full Circle…One of These Days


I recently found a blog post that was left in the draft folder on my blog website from many years ago, one which had never been posted.  It was from 2013.  There were only two paragraphs written and I guess I got distracted and never went back to finish it.  By the date it was saved to drafts and by the last paragraph, I can tell you that I had just met the man who would become my husband, Scott.  The last paragraph probably tells you all you need to know…I was already fully twitterpated and loving every second of it.  And before he died, only a too-short three years and two months after we were married, almost ten years since we’d met, he was the one who was constantly telling me to write a book.  He loved my writing and he felt like writing was one of my callings, that God would use it if I did finally write a book.

The first paragraph of the following saved draft (at the end of this post) is because of divorce.  Somehow my divorce, my re-marriage, and my becoming a widow all tied together to become the fodder for this very blog, at various stages in my life.  I began to blog when I was jaded and trying to navigate life as a single mom of three and still figure out who I was if I wasn’t a wife.  It had become an identity and once it was shed, I felt naked beneath.  I vowed never to let someone else “become my identity” again.  I was ME and I was perfectly happy being just that (most of the time.)

Enter Scott…who made part of my new identity “wife” again.  Once I met Scott, suddenly I didn’t mind a bit taking that identity on again.  If we were famous, someone would have invented some name for the two of us like ScoJen or Jenott because that was all we ever, ever wanted to do.  Be together.  A therapist may have called it co-dependent but, if it was, neither of us cared.  It sounds mooshy and gross probably, to some people, but we completed each other.  We were peas in a pod.  Peanut butter and jelly.  Insert any other combination where it just doesn’t seem right if the two parts aren’t together: that was us.  I loved it.  (He did, too, and he would have told you so; I’ve heard him say it many times.)

But it didn’t end up the way we planned and he was quite suddenly gone…without me.  I’m sure he’s managing just fine because he is walking streets of gold.  Me?  I’m down here feeling like I’m lost in an endless, foreboding forest with magically changing paths that continue leading me absolutely nowhere as I try to find out who I’m supposed to be again…as just me. Another new identity: widow. I hate this one more than any other I’ve had, ever.

So, I decided to hit the laptop (not literally, although at times I may have wanted to) and start doing what he had always wanted me to do.  I started writing. I’m writing a book, a novel actually.  Look at me, being an author.

A part of me will always feel guilty for not finishing it while he was here to see it and glow with pride as he bragged to people about me and my book.  He knew a lot of the overall premise of the book and I had started and restarted several times. He thought the prologue was a good hook. If I’d finished it while he were still here, he’d have gone on and on about it; I know he would. He wasn’t into bragging much unless it was about me or our boys, but then all bets were off…if you knew him, you were going to hear a LOT about us.

A month or two ago, I suddenly got the unction to write almost every day for a week.  I got to Chapter 10 so that equated to somewhere between 1 and 2 chapters a day.  Writing a chapter sounds like something you could do in an hour of one day but this comes along with outlining, character mapping, planning rising conflict, plot twists, crises, and resolutions before diving in and then having to go back and edit and then edit again.  I think I was making pretty decent progress.

Then one of those magically moving paths in the dark forest shoved me down, down, down into another deep pit with a quicksand called despair at the bottom. I didn’t write blog posts for quite some time and still haven’t written another word in the book. At first I started getting stressed about how I had just quit in the middle and I needed to keep going. Then I’d sit down at the laptop and just stare at the screen. I had nothing to say. I’ve now decided not to worry about it and also that when it’s time to write more of it, I’ll know.

Once I finally do finish it, I don’t know what happens next, when I finally get to the point where I’ve written the epilogue.  That’s something I’ve decided to wait until later to worry about, too, because right now the important part is that I do eventually write it, get it done, finish, accomplish completion.  Even if he is the only one who ever knows I did it, then I’ll know he would be proud.  For today, that is what matters to me the most.

But when I found this saved blog draft today, it brought a couple of things together for me.  I once live in The Before, the place I lived in prior to meeting Scott.  Mistakes, regrets, a lifetime of falters that led me to heartbreak and total opposition to romantic relationships.  That Before was also an After – after divorce.

Then, quite unexpectedly, another Before popped up; that’s the one that I lived in prior to Scott’s Homegoing.  That middle part was the best there ever was; that was where I lived knowing I had been given a wonderful gift, a real kind of love, a soulmate.  

And now…now I live in The After again.  I have to remind myself that, once, a long time ago I lived in a different kind of After.  After divorce.  And then one day another unexpected Before came along.  One day life was worth living so much that I often thought I must have dreamed it, dreamed him up. He was so perfect for me that he should have been a dream.

That means that sometimes The After is also a Before. I’m hoping you’re still following me here. (After divorce but also before finding the love of my life. After meeting my soulmate but Before losing him.)

I know that one day God will pour out some kind happiness over my life again.  One day I’ll feel like I’m in a new Before and not just the After. This time The After is devastating, but the Before will have hope and light and life. I doubt I’ll ever be involved in romance again because, without a doubt, Scott was my soulmate.  He was The One that people look for their entire lives and some never find. But other good things could be in the new Before. And Before what? I don’t have a clue.

The second thing this ten-year-old post (written just three months after meeting Scott) brought together for me was that I’m using all of this, parts of the life I lived in both of The Befores, to create something.  They say to write about what you know.  This is it.  (It is fiction, yes, but I am using pieces of my life to breathe life into the narrative.)

So, although there has been tremendous happiness and there has been devastating sadness, they will blend somehow in a medley that creates a new song altogether.  And I hope it’s one worth tapping your foot to the beat. I actually already know a lot about what the second book will be about but have to get through the first. It’s a process I am determined to complete.

The blog post draft saved from 2013 but never posted…until now:

Some people say they don’t regret any of the choices or mistakes they have made because each decision has taken it’s part in molding them into who they are now. I cannot comply with this way of thinking. I do regret mistakes I’ve made. I regret being stupid enough to have needed lessons such as the likes of some of my falters. I regret the changes that some of those trespasses made in me. I’m not even happy with parts of who I am because of the changes some of them made in me. I never wanted to be jaded. I didn’t want to be suspicious and fearful. I never intended to be someone who sometimes uses anger to walk through hurt. I do wish I could go back and not be who I have been at certain times, but I cannot…so I will be a better me now, today. And better tomorrow than I have been this day.

None of this is to say that I am not happy today.  I have actually been deliriously sparkling with newfound joy lately, so much to the probable annoyance of onlookers who don’t like to watch people being “mushy”.  I’m thankful to have found a soulmate who accepts me as I am and whose faults I accept, also, knowing that we all are imperfect.  It is being able to accept each other with our imperfections and not putting one another on pedestals that allows our relationship to be real and yet still adoring.  This is, surprisingly, where real love is found. I’ve really found it. This is definitely it.

The Countdown


The holidays are bearing down on me like a freight train. I feel like I’ll go through this next few months saying “Six months gone…survived it – check. Veteran’s Day…survived it – check. My birthday – check. Thanksgiving – check. Christmas – check. Lillian’s First Birthday – check. Scott’s birthday – check.” And I wish there would be some kind of sigh of relief at the end of all of that but there cannot be. If only I did have to survive just one year of him being gone and then he’d be back, like a far-away military deployment, but it won’t be like that. It will never be like that.

I feel myself sinking deeper as we get closer. And I don’t even think it’s only that. Is it getting closer to these holidays that we celebrated and spent with our family? Or is it that every day closer to those days is a day farther from the last time I was with him? I can’t tell. I’m not focusing on the holidays with dread (although I do not feel ease going into them this year either.) I’m not specifically trying to focus on how long he’s been gone. But the tenth of the month just keeps on coming back around, for crying out loud.

The sinking seems to be a phenomenon all its own. A chaotic spiral over which I have no control to avoid the suction, much like the approach of a tornado toward your home. I still have faith that God will bring me out into the light but that doesn’t prevent the bleak and frightening outlook of the dark while I’m in it.

I went to the cemetery today…well, it’s yesterday now. I sat at his grave for nearly two hours. I played music on my phone. I picked all of the weeds and leaves off. I took implements to allow me to clean his grave marker. I added a flag honoring Veteran’s Day, honoring him. I have already purchased flags for Thanksgiving and Christmas to put there soon. The Christmas one has a photo of him, smiling and handsome, sitting on the lap of a fake Santa. I took that picture when we went to Savannah together.

Mostly, though, I cried. I ugly cried. I sobbed. I asked why (again.) I didn’t think I’d stay that long but I found it difficult to leave, despite the fact that I know that is not his place of residence. Mostly I feel closer to him at home than anywhere else. But that place is a home to my grief. It is the representation of the fact that even though his body is on this earth…in this earth…he is not. It is a quiet place of emptiness that mirrors the way my life feels without him here. I don’t talk to him much there (like I do more so at home) because the cemetery represents the fact that he is not here. But I also didn’t want to leave him there. Such a strange paradox.

I remember the night when my nephew died, when it came time for us to leave my sister’s home, still crawling with police officers and investigators, and go somewhere else to stay the night. My sister said “I can’t leave him here; I don’t want to leave him here.” As a parent, we would never leave our child alone in a houseful of strangers. You’d take him with you. But leaving nails the first level of finality right through your skin. I felt the same way leaving the hospital that night. I didn’t want to leave him there. I was supposed to stay the night with him. I was supposed to drive him home in the morning. Nail. Nail. Nail.

I don’t know how many nail holes you have in you when grief allows the curtain to part to begin letting light in again. I know it’s a lot. Pour water in and I’d leak like a sieve right now already. Need a sprinkler to water your lawn? I’m your huckleberry. And I guess I still have room for more holes because I didn’t want to leave again yesterday. I actually had an incredibly strong urge to lay down there, right on the dirt. Instead, I sat Indian-style with my elbows on my knees and my head in my hands for most of the time. Thankfully, he’s way out in the country so no one else was at the cemetery to witness my profound grief.

Then I decided to push through more time in the day by stopping at the theater on the way home. I sat, completely alone in an empty Saturday-afternoon theater, and watch the After Death movie by Angel Studios. For today, I’m reserving my thoughts about it because I’m still processing what I saw. I did cry. I also felt comfort at some parts. I felt the choking feeling of being in the hospital room a few times. Now I’m mentally processing the scientific process with which they documented facts vs. potential hallucinatory effects. And there were irrefutable facts. I’m leveling that with what I know about life after death from a Biblical perspective and then how all of that relates to what my husband is now experiencing, what he experienced on that night. I do know that they reviewed hundreds of what they call NDEs (near death experiences) although those who experienced them were actually clinically dead for a period of time before being resuscitated. One particular line stuck with me over which I am still pondering the full significance: “Doctors resuscitate their patients; they don’t resurrect them.” And yet some of these people were clinically dead or without oxygen for up to 90 minutes.

The recurrent theme for me, throughout the entire documentary, was that I wished Scott were here, watching this movie with me, and telling me if that’s what it was really like. Because he had come back when they resuscitated him. I could almost hear him saying “that’s pretty much what it was like” or “I didn’t feel/see/experience that part.”

And then I think of the parts of the movie where people described being greeted or welcomed or even guided by others they had loved and who had already passed…

And so my countdown to someday is still on. Someday my prince will come…and he’ll take me to meet my King, face-to-face.

Savannah, GA. November 21, 2014

Give Credit to the Meek


I’m reflecting this morning on the word “meek.”

Matthew 5:5, in the Beatitudes, says “Blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit the earth.”

Previously, to me, meek would have been interpreted as weak, passive, or timid. None of these are words that strike a chord of longing, typically. We don’t strive to be “meek” if that is our interpretation of the word.

But some study through various sources today taught me something different.

First, I went to my Dictionary app which instructed that the definition of meek is the following:

  1. Humbly patient or quiet in nature, as under provocation from others.
  2. Submissive or compliant; tame
  3. Gentle; kind

Besides the fact that the world typically looks at the world “submissive” as a bad word, these are all things we might strive to be. And even more so after the other things I read.

For the record, the definition of submissive in the dictionary includes “unresistant or humbly obedient” and “yielding to the authority of another.” While I have authority in the name of Christ, that is all due to submitting to His own authority, (doing my best to be) being obedient to His authority.

I learned today that, in Matthew 5:5, the English word translated as meek comes from the Greek word “praeis.” It means gentle, humble, or submissive; modest, mild, or unpretentious.”

The very first thing that struck me about this explanation was: my husband, Scott, was meek.

He was truly gentle, humble, submissive (in the appropriate situations – to God, to work leadership, and to the needs of others.) He was modest, mild, and the most unpretentious person I know. Although it’s hard to be prententious when people are teasing you (in a good-natured fashion) about your Baker County accent! 🙂

When I was young, these are not things I looked for in a partner or in myself. I wanted to be powerful within myself, to be in control of my surroundings and my situations, to be who I was unashamedly. But I don’t like some parts of who I was then (although that was a process of learning and growing that we go through) and I learned – usually the hard way because that’s how I roll 🙄 – that we are rarely “in control” even when we think we are. Things that we are unable to control can take us to our knees in literally the span of a heartbeat and we are forced to recognize our vulnerability to outside influences. To a drunk driver, to cancer, to words or actions of heartless people and unkindness.

It took a lot of growing up, spiritually and emotionally, to learn that Scott was exactly what I wanted and needed. I thought God sent me Scott to make me happy. I’m sure that was part of it because I know He wants all of the best things for me. And oh, glory, did he make me happy. But I learned that God had another purpose in that beautiful gift I called a soulmate. I learned that I needed to be more like Scott in many ways. I still want to be and I’m working on it, albeit slowly and with backtracking on some days.

If you’re looking for a partner now, you want God to send you someone who is all of these things (and recognize that person for these reasons.) Maybe today that isn’t what you think you want right now but I assure you that your whole world will flourish under the influence.

Allow someone to walk into your life who has traits of beauty that you don’t see enough of in yourself. Someone whose very existence urges you to be more like them.

I always admired Scott for his patience with me. Don’t laugh; I know y’all probably already know it’s true. When I am hungry (especially) or overly exhausted or stressed, I’m far from meek. I’m testy, grouchy, and definitely not patient.

The night my nephew died, just sixteen days before Scott did, I was mean to him. I couldn’t get packed and in the car fast enough to get to my sister and brother-in-law, and I was throwing things willy-nilly into the suitcase. Scott was hurting for them, too, but he knew we’d be staying awhile. He was quietly methodical and thoughtful. He gently removed random things I threw in (a little bottle of air freshener? a beach hat? the ceiling fan? Seriously, though, I was just grabbing and tossing and I have no idea what all went in there but I know I saw him replacing them with things I would really need – I know I didn’t think of underwear or shirts but there were probably six pair of pants from when I ripped open that drawer and then was ready to LEAVE!) I yelled at him, “We have to GO! You’re moving too slow!” But he wasn’t being slow, he was being purposeful and I was rushing because my mind was madcap. I simply couldn’t think straight.

Another time, we were on a vacation trip, just the two of us, and we were riding bikes around Savannah looking for a place to eat. We started off wanting to find the most amazing local restaurant that you couldn’t find anywhere else. Then, as time passed, he still wanted to find that and I wanted to find FOOD of any kind. We were fairly young in our relationship, within the first year, and he didn’t recognize the signs yet, bless his heart. But I was getting sweaty, lightheaded, and nauseous (low blood sugar) and I suddenly stopped the bike, got off and said “We are eating here. I have to eat right now.” He did, then, realize that these must be signs of 𝘴𝘰𝘮𝘦𝘵𝘩𝘪𝘯𝘨 and said, “Okay, baby, if that’s what you want.” We ate at Panera.

I feel guilty about those things now but I don’t have a single doubt that Scott knew how very much I loved him. And there were times he told me that he wanted to be more like me in some ways so I know we balanced each other out and we helped each other grow.

Don’t be afraid to be meek. Challenge yourself to memorize and understand the real meaning of the word. I know I am. ♥️