Through It All, My Eyes Are On You – FOREWORD


FOREWORD

After this post, he lived until October. The past four years has held so much loss and heartache for my family, so much so that itโ€™s been hard to take in every single next breath sometimes.

I sat with Don (my stepdad) and gave him morphine every hour overnight until he reached for the hand of Jesus and gave up his long fight.

In early 2022, Scottโ€™s brother died suddenly and unexpectedly at home. It tore at my heart seeing the pain that Scott and his parents, wife, and kids faced. About six months later Scott and I had to sit down with my precious daughter-in-love ๐™ฉ๐™ฌ๐™ž๐™˜๐™š and be the ones to deliver the news that two of the most important people in her life were gone, her mother and then only six months later her grandmother. My heart shattered both times watching her world fall apart before our eyes. Only three months later my 14-year-old nephew died. I didnโ€™t think I could manage the pain of seeing my baby sisterโ€™s world being ripped to shreds without warning. Two weeks after that, Scott was no longer here to help me shoulder grief but was now the unintended and unexpected cause of my own devastation and spiral into the depths of despair and loss. And even after this, we have lost others who have chosen to separate themselves from our lives. Grief hurts and it is true that hurt people hurt people.

If you ever wonder why I talk so much about my grief, know that it is because he (Grief) and I have gotten to know each other on a very personal level; weโ€™re on so much more than a first name basis. Sometimes he quietly sits in a corner and sometimes he screams in rage and agony from the rooftop of my soul but he is always there; even when he hides, he is a constant companion and I doubt weโ€™ll ever really lose touch again, like old high school friends or childhood pals. Iโ€™ve tried sometimes to lock him away in chains or behind doors, but he always finds a way to escape his shackles, seething and foaming at the mouth. Now Iโ€™ve learned that he remains less volatile, usually anyway, if I just let him quietly walk beside me and try to ignore him mostly, try not to bother him, tiptoe to keep from making sounds that might remind him that he has a job to do, that his journey to destroy is not yet complete. Maybe what I am doing is more like playing dead; if he thinks I no longer exist then why would he continue to exert any effort? But maybe itโ€™s really more like playing peek-a-boo with a baby; heโ€™s still there but Iโ€™m just hiding behind a blanket with my eyes closed.

What I do know? What I know that I know that I know – is that I have never been alone with him. Sometimes my kids walk with me. Sometimes my friends. Sometimes my sister, wrapped in her own cloak of pseudo-hiding. Sometimes my mother-in-law or my parents. Sometimes others who have walked the same path. Sometimes my old friend chaos comes to shadow over me, stirring me up in something that keeps my mind diverted to another temporary subject. I donโ€™t even mind her company as much as I used to because her best friend, distraction, always accompanies her.

No matter who else is with me, God has never left my side. Yes, He becomes quiet at times. And sometimes He tries to speak to me but I sit in a corner with my fingers in my ears saying โ€œIโ€™m not listening, Iโ€™m not listening, Iโ€™m not listening!โ€ just to avoid having to talk about it while Iโ€™m playing my peek-a-boo โ€œgame.โ€ But other timesโ€ฆother times I run toward Him and hide behind His back instead. Grief looks and looks; I can hear him creaking over the floorboards as he gets near but somehow doesnโ€™t see me right around the next corner. I get a blissfully transitory break from the sharpness of his claws, only a dull ache in its wake. There are times Iโ€™ve felt God lift me in His arms, a rush of wind spilling around me as I displace the air on my hurried way up. He swipes me out of Griefโ€™s near grasp just before Grief accomplishes his ultimate goal – to destroy me, demolish my spirit, devastate my soul. That was January of 2024…felt like he got so close that time.

Whether God walks beside me, carries me, or walks quietly behind me waiting for me to turn around, He has never bored of my inattention, my lawlessness, my weeping and wailing, or even my complete attempted evasion as Iโ€™d pout like an unruly child in a temper tantrum. He has never walked away. No, He waits patiently for me to return to my roots, the ones Iโ€™ve grown in Him over years of being reminded, over and over, who He is and how His arms are really the only place that feels safe.

Later on in my grief, as I shuffled back and forth between bewailing the sorrows of my life and grasping for the sparks of light, the joy that laid within the sadness, I began to truly be thankful that deep roots grounded me here. I remembered that I am not one who grieves with no hope. I was never really lost in the storm (even though it may have felt that way, at times,) because He always knows where I am and has always had the power to calm the wind and the waves if I am only so bold as to remember and believe that He can.

Today I know – I know that I know that I know – He will.

๐™๐™ง๐™ค๐™ข ๐˜ฟ๐™š๐™–๐™ฉ๐™ ๐™ž๐™ฃ๐™ฉ๐™ค ๐™‡๐™ž๐™›๐™š


September 9th, 2024

Itโ€™s possible this has turned into the longest post Iโ€™ve ever made (I know, shocking, right?) Just know youโ€™ll need to set a few minutes aside if you choose to read on but this has some important themes regarding understanding anyone you know who is experiencing grief and depression.

I have taken some time away from writing recently, but not because it doesnโ€™t live in me almost all of the time. I have written for myself, for my own thought processing and healing, but not for public consumption because I have been concerned over the reactions, just as I feared what this phase in my life would mean for me, personally. Notice I said I was ๐™˜๐™ค๐™ฃ๐™˜๐™š๐™ง๐™ฃ๐™š๐™™ over what my readers would think (which is often different from what they will actually ๐™จ๐™–๐™ฎ) but was fearful only of what it means for me personally. The former, you have to consider in your own spirit and, as a recovering people pleaser, I hope youโ€™ll find compassion and understanding in your heart as opposed to judgement. The latter, I took up with God and, as always, He has been walking me through how to manage the feelings that go with this. Iโ€™ve heard Him speak to my heart over it on a regular basis the last couple of months as Iโ€™ve been thoughtfully scrutinizing all of the cogs and wheels that are constantly rotating in my brain to produce thoughts, both negative and positiveโ€ฆand what choices will rid me of the negativity.

So here goes nothinโ€™โ€ฆ

Iโ€™ve spent the better part of sixteen months sitting inside my houseโ€ฆโ€the better partโ€ meaning 95% of the time. I had someone else grocery shopping, began working from home, had almost any food I ate (that I didnโ€™t cook myself) delivered, and spent many, many days just sitting in my own bedโ€ฆall day, in my pajamas. Somewhere around January the grief poured over me in a fresh, hot wave (Scottโ€™s birthday is in January and he will never, ever spend any of them here, with us, again) and I found myself in a very scary place; itโ€™s a place Iโ€™ve been only once before in my life and, both times, I had to constantly (๐™˜๐™ค๐™ฃ๐™จ๐™ฉ๐™–๐™ฃ๐™ฉ๐™ก๐™ฎ) remind myself, over and over throughout the day, of every single reason I had to be here. And yet God continually reminded me that He didnโ€™t leave me here, living, just for me to make alternate plans.

Itโ€™s important for anyone who has never experienced major depressive disorder to know that I love my family, quite literally, more than whether or not I take my my next breath. When youโ€™re in this phase of a depressive cycle, you battle irrational thoughts every minute of every day and many nights (all night.) It is ๐™ฃ๐™š๐™ซ๐™š๐™ง that the value of your family, your blessings, your faith, is LESS THAN the value of peace. It is that the pain of those days makes you wish for anything that will stop it and youโ€™ve tried everything on Earth that you can think of to do so. And you also know, in the pit of your stomach, that despite how happy you try to appear, or at least how โ€œokayโ€ you attempt to seem, it hurts your family to see you the way you are. This makes it a struggle, an overwhelmingly vicious spiritual warfare, not to believe theyโ€™d be able to move on and would ultimately be better off if they didnโ€™t have to watch you do this anymore. This time, though, I knew exactly how much grief costs and had learned some valuable coping mechanisms from the last time. Also, Iโ€™d like to say that experiencing depression doesnโ€™t automatically mean that you have less faith; on the contrary, it means you have to lean on that faith all the more just to survive and, ultimately, relearn how to thrive.

I realize that not everyone who has lost someone they dearly love goes through this specific battle. Grieving is different for everyone and not everyone faces a chemical disorder that causes this particular brand of despair. Iโ€™m not telling you this so that anyone โ€œfeels sorry forโ€ me. ๐˜ฟ๐™ค๐™ฃ’๐™ฉ feel sorry for me; I am winning. Iโ€™m telling you this because ๐™Ž๐™Š๐™ˆ๐™€ people do live in this place and, if no one tells you, it will likely never cross your mind to truly think about what it is like for someone walking that path.

I spent a lot of time crying to my best friend, actually telling her that I was having to fight to stay here. I talked to my sister (who lives this battle daily since last year) and to others to whom Iโ€™m very close. I ๐™™๐™ž๐™™ ๐™ฃ๐™ค๐™ฉ share this specific part of the battle with some people I love exactly because I didnโ€™t want them afraid, because I have beat this before and I had every intention of doing it again. You see, this time I ๐˜ฟ๐™„๐˜ฟ talk about it and that kept me from making other choices that poor coping mechanisms allowed me to choose in it before. ๐™„๐™› ๐™ฎ๐™ค๐™ช ๐™–๐™ง๐™š ๐™จ๐™ฉ๐™ง๐™ช๐™œ๐™œ๐™ก๐™ž๐™ฃ๐™œ ๐™ž๐™ฃ ๐™ฉ๐™๐™ž๐™จ ๐™–๐™ง๐™š๐™–, ๐™ฉ๐™–๐™ก๐™  ๐™ฉ๐™ค ๐™จ๐™ค๐™ข๐™š๐™ค๐™ฃ๐™š ๐™–๐™—๐™ค๐™ช๐™ฉ ๐™ž๐™ฉโ€ฆ๐™ฅ๐™ก๐™š๐™–๐™จ๐™š.

Our society teaches us to be ashamed of weakness and to look at depression as just that. It teaches us to suck it up and just keep swimming. But would you tell a man with no legs to just get up and walk? No, someone would try to help make him new legs then take him to physical and occupational therapy to learn how again. In clinical major depressive disorder, you have no tools, no prostheses, except the ones others help you use until youโ€™re back on your feet again. If no one tries to understand that we are literally missing parts then they simply cannot fathom the degree of difficulty in the circumstances; dopamine, monoamine oxidase A, seratonin, and norepinephrine levels are askew and it makes you feel โ€œcrazyโ€ because thatโ€™s a word that society has come up with for anyone who isnโ€™t โ€œin their right mind.โ€ And, just for the record and from my extensive research of a topic that affects me directly, research indicates that people with ADHD are significantly more likely to experience major depressive disorder compared to those without ADHD; studies show individuals with ADHD can be up to six times more likely to develop depression, suggesting a strong connection between the two conditions. In fact, all neurodivergents are at higher risk.

All of that wasnโ€™t even supposed to be part of this writing when I started, but Iโ€™m often led in a direction that needs to be heard anyway. I guess today was one of those times. Excuse my temporary digression but please consider it carefully in how you react and respond to someone in the trenches of this war.

Moving on, around March I began to resurface from what often felt like drowning; many of you have read my descriptions over the past year and you may remember that being underwater or buried in a pit of mud and mire was a common theme. I was still lost in grief (some days I feel I still am but my โ€œmuscle memoryโ€ to lift out is getting better at responding sooner) but was facing the rest of the first year. It doesnโ€™t get โ€œeasierโ€ after the first year, by the way; it just gets different. There is a realization that, although youโ€™ve checked off holidays and memorable events that youโ€™ll never experience with someone ever again, now the realization hits that theyโ€™re not really checked off at all. Every year forever will be filled with the same days and every year forever they wonโ€™t be here. It felt like acknowledging surviving those days the first year was a way to feel like you accomplished something as you managed to get through them, and you did! But there will be plenty more of those unwelcome challenges to overcome. It’s like saying, Oh, HOORAY! I made it through mile 1 of a triathalon!!!” when everyone knows that’s only a drop in the bucket. You now settle in to trying to figure out what life looks like in the long haul.

One of the things I began to struggle with was how it felt as though my future, the one Scott and I dreamed of together, was just gone. Gone altogether. Poof!

While pondering this (again and again and again) and trying to see if there was any path that didnโ€™t include daily devastation, I began to consider what ways it might look different. The vacations and trips we had planned, for example, I still wanted to do those bucket list things. I had to cancel our belated honeymoon (as we called it because we were in the throes of raising five teenagers when we married) which should have been this past summer. We were actually supposed to leave June 1st of 2023 but had postponed it to the following summer when Scott was injured in March. I didnโ€™t want to cancel all of the rest of the dreams and plans because Iโ€™m still here and heโ€™s already enjoying the ultimate paradise where he is now. The first task to face was thinking about how I didnโ€™t want to do them without him and coming to terms, once again, with the fact that it is simply impossible to change that part of it.

Over a period of weeks and even months of contemplation, I got to a point where I said โ€œI can still do those things; I can still try to enjoy doing fun things and see how that goes.โ€ And yet I still donโ€™t want to do them alone. So, my best friend, Kelly, and I planned a trip to Houston to see my daddy and to just have a little getaway. I knew Iโ€™d enjoy getting to see my dad and stepmom but had no idea how much I would actually be able to enjoy just living again. You may have seen our pictures. We did Escape Rooms and indoor rock climbing and theater (live & movies) and dinners. We acted ridiculous at times (iykyk) and laughed until our bellies and cheeks hurt. I honestly think it was the first time I fully realized that Iโ€™m not just aliveโ€ฆIโ€™m still ๐™ก๐™ž๐™ซ๐™ž๐™ฃ๐™œ. What a purely shocking revelation.

Coming home from that trip or maybe shortly thereafter, I told Kelly that I need to LIVE more. I think I was really surprised to know that I could leave my house and actually experience joy and laughter and fun. Be assured that there was a guilt aspect of this that I had to wrestle with, but I saw my husband looking at me with a facial expression like โ€œwhat are you ๐™ฉ๐™–๐™ก๐™ ๐™ž๐™ฃ๐™œ ๐™–๐™—๐™ค๐™ช๐™ฉ?โ€ and saying โ€œJennifer, baby, really??? Stop it.โ€ He would have hated seeing me walk through the last almost year and a half because he loved seeing me happy. And so then I began to think (and to talk to both him and God) about my next question.

Before we left for Texas, Kelly already had a travel nursing contract planned in Kentucky. There was a part of me that felt like she was my life jacket, I think. Iโ€™m capable of being alone (clearly, ugh) but even though I can enjoy a day by my pool alone or reading a book or whatever, I can do little more than an โ€œLOLโ€ alone (which we all know doesnโ€™t actually mean the person is laughing โ€œout loudโ€ but maybe more of a quick release of breath through their nose and a smile. Letโ€™s be real here.) I have a handful of other close friends but, at this stage of life, most of them have husbands, families, are on their own adventures. I had to start thinking about what would happen to my plan to keep on โ€œactually livingโ€ without my friends being the primary supporting actors in this dramatic movie that is my life.

Youโ€™ve probably guessed where this is going by now. And both God and my husband know, not only where itโ€™s going, but exactly what it will look like. Weโ€™ve talked. A LOT.

Iโ€™ve made the decision to begin dating. Well, to begin seeking to meet people with whom I have commonalities in faith (first), importance of family, hobbies and/or enjoyable activities, and who are capable of understanding that I still love, will always love, Scott. Someone who wants to develop a friendship and then let God show us if it is intended to be any more than just that. And someone to just enjoy life with. It feels like a tall order but wonโ€™t God do it? I believe that He has held my hand and led me through deep waters and dark places to get here. I also believe that when He puts a desire in my heart (and if He puts it there then itโ€™s one that is not out of line with His Word) it is because He has a plan. He has a purpose in it. And Iโ€™ve known through this whole last 16 months (tomorrow) that He has always still had a plan for me.

Iโ€™m almost 52. Dating is not something I thought Iโ€™d ever be doing at my age. Wouldnโ€™t have wanted to. But my God brings beauty from ashes, and I have full faith in that. I might live until tomorrow or I might be 104 when I die. Maybe Iโ€™m actually middle-aged right now. And I do not want to spend this life alone.

Iโ€™ve learned to look at it like this:
When I was pregnant with my second child, I remember thinking โ€œI already love Austin (my oldest) more than it should be humanly possible to love another person. HOW am I going to love another baby on that scale when Austin holds ๐™จ๐™ค ๐™ข๐™ช๐™˜๐™ of my heart. Of course, when Luke Reilly was born, and then Christian Owen, I learned that love never, ever gets divided; it grows exponentially to accommodate all of those whom you grow to love. I did not have to love my boys less to fall hopelessly in love with Scott and I do not ever have to love Scott less in order to, potentially, love someone else. Iโ€™ll just always love him. It seems like as simple a fact as 2+2=4.

I said this recently to another sweet girl who lost her person:
โ€œIโ€™m just getting to a place where I can try to look forward without looking backโ€ฆand what I mean by that is that Iโ€™ve realized I donโ€™t have to look back because heโ€™s always just here. No matter whether I stay โ€œin the pitโ€ or try to move out of it, heโ€™s going with me wherever that is. The memory of him is everywhere, in practically everything I do and everywhere I go so Iโ€™m not leaving him behind, because he became so much a part of who I am. I am who I am today because of who he was and how he loved me. Thatโ€™s not just going to disappear because itโ€™s fully engrained in the person I am today.
I guess what Iโ€™m saying is that itโ€™s going to get easier to navigate eventually. For awhile there, I wasnโ€™t sure that it ever would. It felt impossible. Iโ€™m not saying that grief is โ€œgone;โ€ I think Iโ€™m just saying that Iโ€™m learning to accept that itโ€™s a part of who I am and may rear its head occasionally but it is not going to define me. I believe that part will come for you, too.โ€

Iโ€™m choosing to live by my own words. And to live my life on my own terms (as opposed to people pleasing) as long as Iโ€™m in line with God in it. I know, as surely as I know the sun will continue to rise each day, that some people will hold harsh criticism for this choice; they may not choose to say it to me, but itโ€™ll be there in some peopleโ€™s hearts. Some will think it is โ€œtoo soonโ€ or that it somehow means that I didnโ€™t love Scott as much as Iโ€™ve said. And Iโ€™m okay with that because I look for my wisdom elsewhere.

The fact of the matter is that I have held open discussions about this with those who matter the most in this decision (in addition to God & Scott): all of my children, and my mother-in-law. My kids want me to find my inner happy again, although Luke said that anyone I decide to date better know two things: 1.) that I have three grown sons who will ๐™ข๐™–๐™ ๐™š ๐™จ๐™ช๐™ง๐™š he respects me and treats me well and will be there to answer accordingly if he doesnโ€™t (boy moms, you already know) 2.) he has very big shoes to fill. My response to this part was that no one will be filling Scottโ€™s shoes; anyone new will have his own shoes and will be responsible for filling those. My mother-in-law reminded me, ever so sweetly, that Scott would not want me to spend my life lonely and that she supports me, trusts my decisions, and that they are still my family, always. ๐Ÿ’• I could not have asked God for more beautiful family than those with whom He has blessed me and who are all so dear to my heart.

Soโ€ฆnow you know. I love you all and wanted you to know my heart, as always. ๐Ÿซถ๐Ÿผโค๏ธโ€๐Ÿฉน

Anniversaries are Supposed to be Happy Occasionsโ€ฆright?


I didnโ€™t make a post yesterday because I needed, for my own sanity and ability to put one foot in front of the other, to essentially pretend that it was another, everyday kind of day. None of my days will ever be the kind of normal I want them to be again; yesterday was certainly anything but โ€œnormal.โ€

May 10th. One year. A whole year. The longest year of my life and yetโ€ฆwasnโ€™t he just here yesterday? I will continue to say that I really donโ€™t understand how time works after all of this. Or how it can be that my brain knows he is gone but my heartโ€ฆmy heart still thinks heโ€™ll walk in the door any minute. My heart still jumps when I see his location on my phone and it says heโ€™s home. For a split second, every time, I want to get up and go find him. And then after the split second comes the sinking feeling that he cannot be at our home because he has a new one with Jesus.

Tornados hitting the county, a tree falling and crushing my new baby almond tree, my patio furniture being slung all over the place, and no power most of the day while Lillian was with me kept my thoughts busy in the early morning. We hid in the hallway and played with flashlights with all of the curtains, shutters, and doors in the house closed until the danger had passed, then walked window to window to survey what damage we could see from inside. Soon after, a sweet friend took time out of her own busy, kid-filled schedule to just come sit in our powerless house and talk with me for a couple of hours. We talked about a myriad of things but really didnโ€™t focus on Scott. Oh, I thought about him all day long..heโ€™s in most of my thoughts every dayโ€ฆbut I couldnโ€™t really talk about him yesterday. I had wanted to spend the day celebrating who he was but then realized I could not talk about him much at all on this โ€œanniversary dayโ€ or I would lose what composure I was managing to maintain, a slim cord wrapped around the bulging chaos of grief that wanted to spill out. So I just kept pretending.

A little later my kids started showing up to hang out while we all waited for power to return at our respective homes. We all laughed at Lillianโ€™s antics, which tend to amp up when there are so many of her favorite people there to watch, and everyone tiptoed around what day it wasโ€ฆor more accurately, around what this day looked like, felt like last year. With no power, no TV or music or phones for distraction, it was a blessing to be occupied by casual conversation with others the whole day.

Luke and Patrice asked me to eat supper with them but Austin and Taylor had already invited me to go out to dinner with them at the beautiful 406 restaurant. They took me with them to their anniversary dinner and then insisted on paying for my dinner and theirs. I didnโ€™t realize last year that it happened on their anniversary. Iโ€™ve found, along the way, that there is a LOT I donโ€™t remember at all about those days.

Our power was restored and, thankfully, I was able to get some sleep with the A/C on. Much needed sleep because, although Iโ€™ve been dreading the arrival of this date for awhile, what I didnโ€™t anticipate was the 9th being much worse than the 10th this time around.

The 9th, throughout the day, was a replay of what we were doing this time last year. Waiting for him to be called to pre-op. Kissing him goodbye in the pre-op area before they took him back. Telling him I loved him and he was going to be fine; Iโ€™d see him when he woke up. Sitting with his parents in the waiting room while he was in surgery. Saying goodbye to them while I was waiting for him to be taken up to a room. Seeing him at 7:00 p.m. And then it got really hard. You see, I never saw him on the 10th. Well, I did. I laid in the bed with him but he was already gone. Re-living, again, the hours from 7 p.m. to 11:43 p.m. was brutal. And then remembering the time from then until 12:45 a.m., frantically pacing a waiting room I had been shuffled to and left alone in, trying to get a hold of people I needed, until doctors came to tell me it was overโ€ฆlife, as I knew it and loved it, was over. And the feeling of the cold wall against my back and my shoulder as I slid to the floor, unable to hold my own weight. No. No. No.

That film has played in my head many times during sleep over the last year but usually, while awake, Iโ€™ve been able to redirect myself. There are too many whys, what ifs, why didnโ€™t Iโ€™s, why didnโ€™t theys, and the ever present โ€œwhat else could I have done; what should I have done differently to make them save him.โ€ I donโ€™t have a choice when Iโ€™m asleep, until I wake in sweat, but in the daytime I can usually waylay the thoughts, except for this time. Itโ€™s like when you think about the Challenger explosion, or 9/11, or the Oklahoma City bombing, and you not only remember exactly where you were and what you were doing at that moment but you can feel the shock and devastation you experienced then. This time I was unable to let go of it until I had walked through much of those hours again. The last hours. Iโ€™m sure โ€œanniversariesโ€ are different for everyone but I now know that the anniversary of the day before will always be harder than the day they officially called off the code and delivered news to me. By then, he was at peaceโ€ฆand I was desperately clinging to strands of faith that one day Iโ€™d find peace here before I go to be with him again.

Looking back, this year has been a picture of Godโ€™s hand at work after tragedy. Friends Iโ€™m blessed with rallied around and poured love over our family. Some of those same friends have been very steadfast throughout this whole year, understanding that this wasnโ€™t a pain that would disappear after the visitors and meals stopped coming, after the funeral was done. Financially I shouldnโ€™t have been able to maintain what I have been able to thus far. Many times I thought I may be forced to break mine and Scottโ€™s promise to the kids that I would stay home to keep Lillian at least until her mama finished nursing schoolโ€ฆbut God. Every time I prayed I could keep the promises that Scott and I had made, every single time, God made a way. While I will have to return to work soon, it wonโ€™t be before what we committed to. Iโ€™m not sure what that work will be but God has given me a year to heal and learn how to manage my grief before needing to concentrate on whatever my new job will entail. I do not even have words to express how thankful I am for this time.

And Lillian, my beautiful, sweet granddaughter. God knew, long before we did, how much she was going to be needed in our family, the light she would bring in darkest sorrows, the joy she would spread even when sadness seemed to reign over everything, the hope she would sprinkle over grown ups, not even knowing that she was doing it.

I havenโ€™t posted much online lately but that doesnโ€™t mean I havenโ€™t been writing about him. This last month, especially, has given me much to write. Now, though, for the most part, I am saving my words for print. I still have a lot to learn about publishing and a lot of choices to make about how to do this, but if everything goes well, and I believe God is in it so it will happen, I will have a book out sometime this year. I always thought my novel would be the first (and really only) book I would write but this book has written itself in my words but by Godโ€™s voice of hope intermingled with my trauma. Iโ€™ve decided to finally tell about what happened to my husband and how he diedโ€ฆwhy he died. I have also decided to add in some other very sensitive subjects about loss, widowhood, and being left behind, that I have written over the last year but decided were not social media material. Theyโ€™ll be in my book. Iโ€™m saying this now because Scott really wanted me to publish my novel. He was proud of my writing, even when I felt like I couldnโ€™t get it right, sounding like I wanted. He believed in me so much more than I ever have. He encouraged me endlessly to do this thing I never felt worthy or capable of doing with any success. I do not care, though, about success in an authorโ€™s terms. The success is in completing another thing we had planned to do together. This first book wonโ€™t be my Christian fiction novel, although I hope to one day finish the other half of it, too, but this book was born of pain and healing, of loss and still living, of devastation clinging to hope. And it is filled with him.

Today is the 11th. This year has been like a marathon (and I ๐˜ฉ๐˜ข๐˜ต๐˜ฆ running) with those little tents throughout the race where you stop to drink or fuel up before continuing on. My stops werenโ€™t fuel ups, though. They were days I had to get through. Instead of marking my progress by how many fueling stations I had passed (I donโ€™t even really know what marathoners call them) my progress was marked from one day I made it through to another. Holidays, birthdays, probate dates, and tasks completed. The thing about this marathon, though, is that when I finally felt my chest hit the ribbon at the elusive finish lineโ€ฆit wasnโ€™t the finish line at all. It was yet another starting line and I cannot leave until I finish. But when I finish this one, thereโ€™s still only another start again. Every marathon, every year that passes, flows into the next and the next with no end, like some ride that you cannot step off of because it never stops moving so, so fast. Iโ€™ve gotten through all of the โ€œfirsts.โ€ Now I have to learn how live without just surviving each day. So starts a new yearโ€ฆand God will still be in the outcome.

Talk, Talk, Talkโ€ฆ


I talk to myself more than I used to. And I donโ€™t just mean in my bedroom before bed at night, having the conversations we used to have and telling him how much I love him and miss him. I mean in the grocery store, at the DMV, in my back yard. Doesnโ€™t matter if other people are there, apparently, because I realized this was occurring while in Walmart when a lady looked at me like I was schizophrenic as I had a discussion with myself about which vegetable would go better with the supper I was planning. Yes, itโ€™s like that.

Iโ€™ve decided that itโ€™s safer to leave the house with my granddaughter in tow because at least then people will assume Iโ€™m talking to her. And I donโ€™t really even know WHO Iโ€™m actually talking to (which may be even more scary.) Is this some leftover habit of talking things through with my husband? I donโ€™t know because we didnโ€™t really always discuss what vegetable to have. Iโ€™m excusing myself when I burp at home and, just being honest, I didnโ€™t always do that anymore with him either.

On one hand, Iโ€™m home with a toddler most of the day every day and have very little adult interaction overall. Maybe itโ€™s just that I have a quota of words that I need to spend each day (if you know me in person then you already know thatโ€™s typically a high number) and Iโ€™m just fulfilling the minimum requirement to relieve the pressure of holding it in all the time. I think I drive my boys (autocorrect just changed โ€˜boysโ€™ to โ€˜joysโ€™ and thatโ€™s true, too) crazy wanting to talk forever when I do see them because I have to fit it all in somewhere.

Loneliness has a way of creeping up on you, too, though. My person isnโ€™t here. When I talk to my mother-in-law (love) we can talk for long periods because the loss is a hole too deep to ever fill but maybe talking eases it some. Maybe talking to air is some strange way of placating the monster of loneliness. I just donโ€™t know. I also havenโ€™t talked to another widow about this (yet) so I donโ€™t know if this isโ€ฆcommon. I wonโ€™t say โ€œnormalโ€ because thatโ€™s only a setting on the washing machine. In people, thereโ€™s no real โ€œnormalโ€ because itโ€™s okay to be whoever you are, but some things are more common.

Ultimately, what I have come to realize is that Iโ€™m not directing as much of that loneliness, that random talking anywhere and everywhere, up to God. Why am I talking to an unrecognizable void rather than to the Living God? The one who never leaves. The one who always stays. The one who is omnipotent, omnipresent, and omniscient: all powerful, everywhere, and knows all. My words should be directed at my power source. Over the past year, when my spirit has not wanted to live in this realm any longer, Abba God came through every single time and reminded me that He is still here and He has a plan; I just need to wait for it to be revealed in a way I am able to understand. Mind you, I do pray, but there is still all this extraneous talking that I apparently feel the need to do to no one in particular. I can definitely make better use of those words.

I donโ€™t even know if this is a โ€œstageโ€ other people go through but, if youโ€™re here with me, I see you! I truly believe that God never leaves us alone. If you canโ€™t feel Him there, someone else is feeling what you do and you just have to find the helpers. The whole beauty from ashes? Sometimes itโ€™s when God uses us to help those who come to a place after we do. We are the map. If youโ€™re in that place where you feel lost, I hope something I say gives you a place on the map to start.

Change is the only Constant


Iโ€™m not who I was a year ago. There are parts that are healing. There are parts that still feel beyond repair but I know they will healโ€ฆthey just wonโ€™t ever look or feel the same where the scar lies. There are parts that are wiser (about things I donโ€™t really want to be wiser.) There are parts of me that still canโ€™t figure things out. All I know is that change is the only constant in life. How ironic is that?

The one year โ€œanniversaryโ€ of my nephewโ€™s death is next Tuesday. It feels weird to call it an anniversary – those are supposed to be happy occasions, like birthdaysโ€ฆbut those arenโ€™t as happy either anymore. After we fumble our way through that day, it is only 16 days until itโ€™s been a year for me, too. Itโ€™s like there is a convoluted countdown going on. Part of your brain unwittingly hopes that one year means โ€œWhew! I made it through the firsts. Should be smooth sailing from now onโ€ฆโ€ while the part of your brain that contains intellect knows full well that an anniversary date is no longer the end of anything. It ended last year and once itโ€™s ended there can be no other ending. Thereโ€™s no reprise, no encore act. The bow has been taken and the theater long cleared out.

Iโ€™m different because Iโ€™ve made it this far. I have exercised my faith this year as if I were training for a double triathlon. God has come through every time. None of it has been easy – the exercising of my faith to what felt like the full limit part, or even the parts when He came to the rescue. Itโ€™s still all been really hard, but I am here. I am still living in our home and was not forced to move. I still have three amazing sons and three wonderful daughters-in-love plus a grandbaby. I was able to care for my granddaughter during my daughter-in-loveโ€™s entire nursing school program so that my son didnโ€™t have to pay for daycare and so that my sweet grandbaby was exposed to as little illness as possible. My husband and I had agreed to do that for them and I was trying my best to hold true to that. The fact that I feel so much loss and brokenness but am still so blessed seems like a crazy paradox. An impossible coexistence.

I will be applying to jobs soon. The retirement my husband wanted and planned out for me was revoked once he was no longer here. Iโ€™m so thankful that the grace of God has provided ways to allow me time to grieve and to be with my granddaughter; He has provided hand over foot, over and over again, each time I even considered that the time may be coming when weโ€™d be forced to look into daycare for the baby. Then suddenly a solution that would appear, in the natural, to be completely out of the blue, totally unexpectedโ€ฆthey were solutions that were promised to me last year. He said โ€œdonโ€™t worry; itโ€™s already taken care ofโ€ and it was, right on time, every time.

I really didnโ€™t want to go back to work but I am thankful that I was afforded this time to walk the brittle beginning of this journey with my granddaughter to light up the darkest days and without added stressors to keep me from processing all that I have been able to thus far. Now I will work on walking back into the work world and figuring out how that is going to look.

Money has been a sticking worry point for me throughout the last year. Iโ€™ve often felt guilty for worrying about it because figuring out how to deal with the money part isnโ€™t nearly as difficult as figuring out to deal with the loss of my husband, my soulmate. Also because God tells us not to worry about what we will eat or what we will wear because the birds of the air do not sow or harvest but God provides food for them. And the lilies of the field are dressed in the most beautiful finery but need not worry about clothing. How much more does the Father love us? (Matthew 6:26-30) Every time I tried to stop worrying about money, another problem would pop up, making everything feel like a monetary house of cards all this time. And every time, He provided a way like He said He would.

I figured out this week one of the main and primary reasons that Iโ€™ve been so worried about the financial part. First off, my husband and I were both nurses but he was in a position to make a lot more money than me. As is typical, our bills grew to what we were able to afford and we bought a new home just four years ago, right before the onset of COVID-19. We bought a home together. For anyone who doesnโ€™t know already, this was not either of our first marriage. He had a home and I had a home when we met. He eventually moved to the home I already lived in. Then his career path changed course and we were able to begin looking at houses together. We found one we loved for various reasons and we purchased it together. Then we made even more memories here.

I think it was in the first few days thay I said โ€œI canโ€™t lose our house; God, please donโ€™t let me lose our house.โ€œ This home represented so many of the dreams we had together. Things we wanted to do here for future grandchildren. Upgrades and even addition we dreamed of doing one day. Plans of what life would look like after all of the kids had moved out. I was terrified of an empty nest but he had a way of making it seem exciting and fun to be โ€œon our own,โ€ able to leave town at the drop of a hat and explore places we wanted to go. So one thing that has been at the tip top of my mind this whole time was โ€œhow am I going to afford to keep this house and all of the bills that go with it?โ€ I was talking about how going back to work was the only choice but that I should be able to work it out to have the house paid off before retirement (hopefully and prayerfully.) Someone said โ€œwell, you could look into selling the house and moving into something smaller since you donโ€™t need so much space.โ€ That person meant no harm at all and was just trying to give a helpful potential solution, but my heart felt like it fell past my stomach and to my knees. Literally like the first downhill of a roller coaster. That same fear of not having this place where we planned our forever jumped right back into my throat while my heart tried to find its way back to my chest. It was all I could do to hold the grief break inside of me til later. It was only then that I fully realized that was the source of almost all of my money fears. Yes, I could survive if I had to sell our home. Yes, I could probably afford a tiny home more easily. Yes, I know many people end up not having a choice but, if there is anything I can do about it, I will have a choice about whether to keep or sell my house. And I will stay right here.

Now that I know part of my plan to do that means I have no choice but to return to work and that I know I will have gotten through my granddaughterโ€™s first year and a half with no daycare, at least, I am able to build the resolve to step into it. Iโ€™m in the process now of figuring out how to plan for retirement without him here, too, but God still says itโ€™s all going to be okayโ€ฆthe money part anyway.

So, things are still changing every day. Nursing school ends next month and then I go back to being one, too. It wasnโ€™t the plan but things keep changing. But I was wrong about one thing. The only thing constant in life is not just change. Itโ€™s also God. He is never-changing.

Another Monthversary


Today is the 10th. Itโ€™s been eleven months. For some reason this landmark in my journey is trying to turn my balance beam into a tightrope. Eleven months means that, right around the corner, Iโ€™ll soon be looking at having spent an entire year without him in my life. I donโ€™t know how this can be. And how can it still feel so surreal when I have battled, struggled, and wrestled with grief like a black belt Brazilian Jiu Jitsu champ.

Still, my perspective is changing. Iโ€™m still sad and still miss him terribly; I think Iโ€™ll always, always be sad on some level and Iโ€™ll definitely always miss him, every day forever on Earth. Along with those emotions, though, Iโ€™m starting to feel like maybe, just maybe, the horizon is changing a little bit. It will never change back to how it was, but there may be some light up ahead. I find myself wanting to celebrate his life and what we had together more often than devastatedly grieving his death. Yes, there are moments the grief overtakes me and the nightmares encroach on my wellbeing, but itโ€™s less often than before.

Itโ€™s springtime outside, mine and Scottโ€™s favorite season. The smell of fresh-cut grass, flowers beginning to bloom, sunshine earlier and later in the day, and time for planting new things. I think that being outside planting, watering, pruning, deadheading, and fertilizing has not only kept me busy but feeling closer to the one who would have been here doing it with me. When I think of things he used to say or do now, I find myself smiling a little more often rather than desperately feeling the loss of never having those moments again. Not always, but at least sometimes now. He brought true joy and love to my life and Iโ€™m thankful that Iโ€™ll never be the same because he changed me in all the best ways.

Springtime after winter is like a rainbow after the rain. It is ripe with promise of change for the better. It brings a feeling of starting againโ€ฆor at least of continuing on. Springtime, for me, is hope. God created many reminders that we can keep starting over. A sunrise always eventually comes after a sunset. Rainbows after rain. Jesus on the cross. My husbandโ€™s death was a semicolon for me. I wanted to end the sentence but it wasnโ€™t finished yet; there is more to be said and done. I take one day at a time while I wait, sometimes impatiently, for God to unfold my assignment, a way to be used by him for good.

For now, baby, Iโ€™ll hold you in my heart until I hold you in Heaven. I miss you so much. (And you would have loved watching this little rugrat we have running around now. I often think of how much youโ€™d laugh at her and get on to me for getting onto her about something.)

The Span of Ups and Downs


Grief makes you feel bipolar. It feels like I think having a legitimate care of bipolar or multiple personality disorder would feel.

Yesterday, despite the fact that it was the eleventh monthversary of his death, I felt somewhat hopeful and just thankful for what we did have when he was here: a kind of love that many people never experience in a lifetime and that it was so very easy to keep the covenant of โ€œtil death do us part.โ€ The sun was shining outside. The weather was gorgeous and the temps in the 70โ€™s. Nostalgia wasnโ€™t making me sad yesterday.

This morning I was on my way to pick up my granddaughter and had my music on shuffle. An old song by Styx came on the radio: โ€œDonโ€™t Let It End.โ€

โ€œWhat can I do
Pictures of you still make me cry;
Trying to live without your love,
It’s so hard to do.
Some nights I’ll wake up,
I’ll look at your pillow
Hoping that I’ll see you there.
But I get up each day, not much to say
I’ve nowhere to go.
Loneliness fills me up inside
‘Cause I’m missing youโ€ฆ. Don’t let it end;
I’m begging you, don’t let it end this way.โ€

Yes, I know this song is an obscure piece of music history. The lyrics are, in actuality, about two people who broke up and heโ€™s begging her to try again, to get back together. This morning, though, this part tried to pull me back toward the abyss that is grief. It doesnโ€™t help that today is rainy with thunder and lightning. A day with very little light.

This is a perfect example of what grief does to people. One minute youโ€™re fine. You think youโ€™re figuring it out. Thinking you are figuring out how to keep living makes you feel a little bit manic, like you finally cracked the code to a lock youโ€™ve been trying to remember the combination for forever. You get a dopamine hit from what feels like an almost impossible success.

Drastically and suddenly, with no warning, reasonable cause, or explanation, something causes your foot to slip from the tightrope and before you know it youโ€™re hanging from a thin line by your fingertips while the wind is blowing, rain makes the rope slick, and you look down to see a bottomless pit. Except there is probably a bottom down there somewhere and it wouldnโ€™t be pretty to hit itโ€ฆagain. The โ€œbipolarโ€ feeling hits again. โ€œI was just okay; what happened???โ€

The thing is, I have choices when this occurs. Choice #1: continue listening, dig deep to really feel the words, and end up so deep in the hole that itโ€™s hard to find a foothold to climb back out. Choice #2: change the station.

Here are a few verses to consider:

โ€œThe eye is the light of the body; so then if your eye is clear, your whole body will be full of light. But if your eye is bad, your whole body will be full of darkness. . . .” (Matt.6:22-23)

This passage reminds me to pay attention to what I put into my mind through my vision. Be careful what I watch on TV or read in books, for example. If my vision starts to stray to something unsavory (from a spiritual perspective,) I should change my view by altering my perspective or averting my eyes elsewhere.

โ€œYou will keep him in perfect peace, whose mind is stayed on You, because he trusts in You.โ€ (Isaiah 26:3)

This verse reminds me that I will find peace if I change my thought process and aim toward spiritual things (whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirableโ€”if anything is excellent or praiseworthyโ€”think about such things. Phil. 4:8)

More than anything you guard, protect your mind, for life flows from it. (Prov.4:23)

I have to guard what is allowed to infiltrate my thoughts; my life is influenced by what I allow.

โ€œMy son, pay attention to what I say; listen carefully to my words. Donโ€™t lose sight of them; let them penetrate deep into your heart. For they bring life to those who find them and healing to their whole body.โ€ (Prov 4:20-21)

Finally, my ears are a direct line to my heart. Music has always told me this because it has the power to elicit deep emotional responses. The Bible says that the Word of God in oneโ€™s ears brings life to those who find them and will heal their whole body.

This morning, I changed the station – literally and figuratively. I chose to pick a different playlist, and the song that played first on that station was โ€œHealedโ€ by Nichole Nordeman. This song sounds pretty somber, too, but the words are life-giving because they remind us of who we are, even in adversity; we exist but are incomplete until He reaches our hearts.

โ€œWe stutter and we stammer til You say us,
A symphony of chaos til You play us.
Phrases on the pages of unknown
Til You read us into poetry and prose.

We are kept and we are captive til You free us,
Vaguely unimagined til You dream us,
Aimlessly unguided til You lead us home.

By Your voice, we speak.
By Your strength, no longer weak.
We are no longer weak.

By Your wounds we are healedโ€ฆ

Passed over and passed by until You claim us.
Orphaned and abandoned til You name us.
Hidden undisclosed til You expose our hearts.

By Your death we live.
It is by Your gift that we might give.โ€

Today, my path was redirected because I changed my destination. Understand, though, that this isnโ€™t something that is easy to do at all in early grief. There was definitely a time when I felt altogether incapable of redirecting my thoughts to anything but loss. And that is okay because it was part of processing the reality of the loss I have experienced. Even now, there are days I will still dig deep into the sadness and sit in it for awhile because something inside me needs to acknowledge my husbandโ€™s absence and the effect it has had, is having, and will always have on my life. Then, once I have had an opportunity to acknowledge those feelings, Iโ€™ve learned that if I change tracks to being thankful for the time we did have to spend together and for the beauty of our relationship while he was here, I am slowly and gently filled with peace. It all comes down to me being the boss of my thoughts and remembering that this life on Earth is merely one star in a sky of endless ones; it is the purรฉed spinach at the beginning of a long life of steak and baked potatoes, fresh bakery pastries, and millions of other delectably delicious delicacies. It gets infinitely better after this part that weโ€™re slogging our way through.

If youโ€™re grieving, know that it is okay if youโ€™re not at this place yet, where you can take control of where your thoughts take you. I really think we need to go through the place where grief completely takes over. It sucks, but I think itโ€™s necessary as our brains try to wrap around what happened and learn to grow our lives around it. If we shove those thought and feelings away in the beginning, if we just decide not to deal with them, they do not go away. Weโ€™re only hiding them so that they can explode later. It is not possible to ever eliminate them but allowing yourself to feel them takes away some of their power later on. If youโ€™re not there yet, accept this hope that it does become easier to manage eventually. For me, right now itโ€™s intermittently; sometimes it still rears its ugly head and tries to take me out but I seem to be able to find my way out of the pit a little more quickly after all the practice Iโ€™ve had climbing up.

The way God works, once you have experience hiking your way through dense and unexplored terrain, youโ€™ll make a great trail guide for others who are trying to follow the same path behind you. Youโ€™re struggling now but one day you may be someoneโ€™s lighthouse on stormy seas. Itโ€™s a job you never wanted but someone will be grateful for you. โ™ฅ๏ธ

Whatโ€™s That in the Mirror?


I realized today that I cannot remember the last time I looked at myself in the mirror. Iโ€™m thinking that when I brush my teeth I guess I must look at my teeth. When I brush my hair I must look at my hair. But I havenโ€™t โ€œlook-lookedโ€ at myself. I have worn makeup maybe three times since Scottโ€™s been gone. I mean, who cares, right? Whatโ€™s the point? I didnโ€™t need to wear makeup around Scott. Even when I looked hideous he would say I was beautiful. (That reminds me of a photo of a kidโ€™s school paper where the question asked โ€œwhat is love?โ€ And the little boy answered that itโ€™s when you tell your wife she is pretty even if she looks like a dump truck. Sorryโ€ฆA.D.D. moment.) Anyway, I definitely cared a lot more about my appearance when he was here.

When I acknowledged this thought, I instantly thought of James 1:23-24.
โ€œAnyone who listens to the word but does not do what it says is like someone who looks at his face in a mirror and, after looking at himself, goes away and immediately forgets what he looks like.โ€

I think Iโ€™m having an issue with that, too. I read the Word almost every morning, rarely missing. It often tells me not to worry. To be anxious for nothing, but in everything by prayer and supplication, with thanksgiving, let your requests be made known to God. (Phil 4:6-7) It tells me the joy of the Lord is my strength. (Nehemiah 8:10) It tells me to cast all anxiety on Him because He cares for me. (1 Peter 5:7)

I read these things and then often donโ€™t get very far into my day before I seem to โ€œforgetโ€ these things. Or at least forget to focus on them in the chaos that has been my life over the last year. I think a lot of this is because of difficulty understanding why or at least accepting that this is how my life is nowโ€ฆas a widow. But that thought process made me think of another verse about a mirror in the Bible. 1 Corinthians 13:13 in the KJV says โ€œFor now we see through a glass, darkly; but then face to face: now I know in part; but then shall I know even as also I am known.โ€ Itโ€™s a little easier to understand in the Amplified Version: โ€œFor now [in this time of imperfection] we see in a mirror dimly [a blurred reflection, a riddle, an enigma], but then [when the time of perfection comes we will see reality] face to face. Now I know in part [just in fragments], but then I will know fully, just as I have been fully known [by God].โ€

I guess my mirror needs some workโ€ฆor, well, my eyes do. Or my brain. But if Iโ€™m going to do my very best at walking what I talk, Iโ€™m going to need to focus my concentration on the Truth more consistently and less on the things I am worried about. Finances have been a big one and I have become far too focused on how to make ends meet rather than focusing on Godโ€™s assignment and calling on my life. Where God guides, He provides. And God doesnโ€™t call the qualified, He qualifies the called. They may be somewhat clichรฉ but both of these statements are 100% true. That should be at the center of my attention. If I am where God wants me, doing what He has called me to do, other things will work themselves out. I am admitting, much to my own chagrin, that my life has been fear-based more than Iโ€™d like to admit over the last year. Thatโ€™s not who I want to be. I want my eyes to be fixed on a resurrected Jesus.

Iโ€™m praying that, as I change my focus (again, because I know youโ€™ve heard me say it beforeโ€ฆthatโ€™s what I mean about walking away from the mirror; grief has a way of clouding that image.) God will have an opportunity to speak to me about where I need to be and what I should be doing next. Iโ€™m also praying He uses neon signs since interpreting subtlety is not my fortรฉ.

And Iโ€™m expecting a BIG answer. โ™ฅ๏ธ

๐˜ผ ๐™๐™š๐™–๐™ก “๐™€๐™–๐™จ๐™ฉ๐™š๐™ง ๐™€๐™œ๐™œ” ๐™๐™ค๐™ช๐™ฃ๐™™ ๐™ƒ๐™ž๐™™๐™™๐™š๐™ฃ ๐™ž๐™ฃ ๐˜พ๐™ช๐™ก๐™ฉ๐™ช๐™ง๐™–๐™ก ๐˜พ๐™ค๐™ฃ๐™ฉ๐™š๐™ญ๐™ฉ


Within my theology and Christology, there is definitely a place for the historical Jesus and the cultural context within which he lived, alongside the divine person of Christ Jesus who gifts us with salvation and eternal life and lives within us through his spirit. Iโ€™m not sure who the original explanation of this came from because I found it copied on many websites while researching the validity of the historical context. The context, by the way, is valid according to my research.

So, we realize Jesus, the man, was a reflection in many ways of the culture within which he was born and lived.

Jesus used the customs and culture of that time to teach with parables, to spread his message, and to prove his divinity and his return to earth again:

Why did Jesus fold the linen burial cloth after his resurrection? The Gospel of John (20:7) tells us that the napkin, which was placed over the face of Jesus, was not just thrown aside like the other grave clothes. The Bible takes an entire verse to tell us that the napkin was neatly folded, and was placed at the head of that stony coffin.

Early Sunday morning, while it was still dark, Mary Magdalene came to the tomb and found that the stone had been rolled away from the entrance.

She ran and found Simon Peter and the other disciple, the one whom Jesus loved. She said, โ€œThey have taken the Lord’s body out of the tomb, and I don’t know where they have put him!โ€ Peter and the other disciple ran to the tomb to see. The other disciple outran Peter and got there first. He stooped and looked in and saw the linen cloth lying there, but he didn’t go in.

Then Simon Peter arrived and went inside. He also noticed the linen wrappings lying there, while the cloth that had covered Jesus’ head was folded up and lying to the side.

Was that important? Absolutely! Is it really significant? Yes!

In order to understand the significance of the folded napkin, we need to understand a little bit about Hebrew tradition of that day. The folded napkin had to do with the master and servant, and every Jewish boy knew this tradition. When the servant set the dinner table for the master, he made sure that it was exactly the way the master wanted it. The table was furnished perfectly, and then the servant would wait, just out of sight, until the master had finished eating.

The servant would not dare touch the table until the master was finished. Now if the master was finished eating, he would rise from the table, wipe his fingers and mouth, clean his beard, and wad up the napkin and toss it onto the table. The servant would then know to clear the table. For in those days, the wadded napkin meant, โ€œIโ€™m finished.โ€

But if the master got up from the table, folded his napkin and laid it beside his plate, the servant would not dare touch the table, because the folded napkin meant, โ€œI’m coming back!โ€

Jesus left a thoughtful, intentional clue for people who would find the empty grave and little did they know they would see him again so soon. And one day we will, too.

Why is this important on my grief journey? My husband was saved by grace, as am I. Knowing Iโ€™ll see Jesus one day also means being reunited with the love of my lifetime here on earth. This story of the folded โ€œnapkinโ€ gives me a reminder of the hope I have in Jesus and the assurance that my husbandโ€™s death was only a mortal one. He is alive in Jesus and waiting in the place God has prepared for me. That means that his death was not the end but that a new beginning awaits. In that, I find great comfort even as I grieve the changes I continue to face here. โ™ฅ๏ธ

Chasing Peace


This is from Joyce Meyer but I think itโ€™s my primary problem right now:

You can’t just sit back and wish for peace, wish the devil would leave you alone, or wish that people would do what you want. The Bible tells us to actively pursue peace. You have to make up your mind to crave peace.

It actually feels as if a the opposite of peace is actively chasing ๐˜ฎ๐˜ฆ, every single day lately. And I know the author of peace but I know who dishes out the other, as well. And I absolutely do ๐˜ค๐˜ณ๐˜ข๐˜ท๐˜ฆ ๐˜ฑ๐˜ฆ๐˜ข๐˜ค๐˜ฆ. But the Bible says we have to actively pursue peace: โ€Turn away from evil and do good. Search for peace, and work to maintain it.โ€œ
โ€ญโ€ญPsalmsโ€ฌ โ€ญ34โ€ฌ:โ€ญ14โ€ฌ โ€ญNLTโ€ฌโ€ฌ.

The verse makes it sound as easy as a Nike commercial: Just Do It. But, holy cow, it is NOT easy to maintain sometimes. Iโ€™m reading my Bible. Iโ€™m doing four separate devotionals every day (because theyโ€™re all very helpful – while Iโ€™m reading them but then somehow I get off track walking away from them.) Iโ€™m praying. Iโ€™m seeking it. Still, it is elusive. Itโ€™s as if it found the ultimate hiding spot in a game of hide & seek while Iโ€™m getting hot and sweaty outside looking for it, ready to throw in the towel and just go get a glass of cold Kool Aid and plop down on the couch in front of the TV until it comes to say โ€œwhyโ€™d you quit lookinโ€™?โ€

Trying to muffle the chaos inside my head does not work because that just wakes me at 2:00 a.m. when my mind figures it has nothing better to do. Raging at the tornado Iโ€™m constantly facing doesnโ€™t help because, alas, I do not control the wind and waves. Crying over it doesnโ€™t help because I just get a headache and stopped up noseโ€ฆalthough sometimes it feels like it helps release the pressure in the moment. The only thing that does help is reading my Bible and Iโ€™m sure thatโ€™s what Iโ€™m being called to do even more than I have been but Iโ€™m kind of stubborn sometimes (no comments from the peanut gallery, please.) My childlike mind wants to say โ€œIโ€™ve already done my homework and I worked hard on it! Why are you assigning me more? Iโ€™m tired already!โ€

And so I pray to crave it as strongly as I crave peace since sometimes I canโ€™t seem to remember that theyโ€™re the same thing. And I pray for my stubborn, childlike mind to maintain a stubborn, childlike faith but to do a better job growing out of the attitude I tend to get when Iโ€™m tired or hungry. The I Canโ€™t attitude.

For now, I will try to sleep. When I wake up, I will try to start again, again.