Two Kinds of Freedom

I’m celebrating two kinds of freedom today. And I’m thankful for both.

IMG_7107

 

But most of all, I’m thankful for this: “It is for freedom that Christ has set us free.” (Galatians 5:1a)

Happy Freedom Day, friends. May we live fully into freedom today.

The Weightiness of Her Life

One year ago today, I wasn’t sure if I was going to make it. Practically, yes, I knew I would live. But emotionally, I wasn’t sure how to keep moving forward. Ella was just six weeks old, and I had never known a love as fierce and all-consuming as the love I had for her. But I was also exhausted, and feeling unsteady. We had ventured into this thing called parenting with our eyes as wide open as we thought we could get them: our best friends had kids, and I’d helped Robyn clean up poop and puke more than once. We had been married for seven years, had already changed jobs several times: we knew one another well as spouses. We had the money saved up that we needed for Ella’s birth and medical care. We had been praying about starting a family for years, and I had been praying for my children since I was a child myself.

© Miss Motley Photography 2013

What, then, was my problem? Why did I feel scared and unsure? Why, when I looked at my daughter, did I both want to melt into a pool of grateful tears and also curl up into the fetal position she had just so recently left?

Well, the lack of sleep was one thing. One huge thing. I had not gotten more than three hours of sleep strung together for those six weeks, and I was tired. Really, really tired. Every new mom knows this, but there is a special kind of exhaustion that those newborn days bring. I’d heard about it, but it’s different to experience that kind of bone-tiredness, and I was not functioning well without sleep.

The hormones were another thing. I knew I had hormones prior to getting pregnant and giving birth, but wow. Wow. The high of having a child had definitely petered out by week six for me, and now I just felt overwhelmed. I felt overwhelmed by her need for me—I had never felt so tethered to another life.

And that weightiness of caring for another life—not one buoyed up in my womb, encased in layers of water and flesh—but here, awake, pink and crying—this felt important. It felt heavy. At times, the weight of her life and my weakness felt too heavy to bear.

I remember crying, and I remember asking Michael if life would ever be the same again. How could he answer? Well, of course not. We had a child. We were now parents. Our lives were unendingly altered. But yes, we would sleep again. And yes, we would gain our sea legs in this vast ocean of parenting. Just not right away. Not right now.

So I had two goals every day: keep Ella alive, and keep myself alive. Ella’s needs, although high, were straightforward—milk, sleep, touch. For me to stay alive was very different. I needed food yes, and I desperately needed sleep. Friends brought meals and family watched Ella while I napped. But I needed hope—and for me that meant getting time with God every day, even when it felt impossible to do anything. I have had friends who also needed medication and counseling, and although I did not need those things after Ella’s birth I am grateful they are available if I ever do. But my first lifeline in those early weeks was getting daily time with God. It often took me until five pm to get even twenty minutes with the Lord, reading the word, journaling my prayers through tears or through drooping eyelids. Sometimes I just turned on worship music and sang along; sometimes I immersed myself in the words of Scripture, hungry for something stable and sure in my life, which seemed unendingly new. Sometimes I just sat and wept, out of gratefulness or out of fear.

And for me, steadily, those feelings of being overwhelmed started to lift. God spoke to my heart that it was not my responsibility to carry the weight of Ella’s life–that was his responsibility. Just as I had not created Ella, I could not sustain her. Her life belonged to him; my call was to love her and delight in her, not carry her life as a burden I could not possibly bear. And I was able to hand to God the things that scared me and the things that I felt unable to hold–I gave Ella back to him, just as she has always been his. I told him, again, that I trusted him with her life. And along with the babysitting from family and the meals from friends and the conversations with my husband, I met God in a new way in that release. He carried me, and he showed me that he was the one carrying Ella.

The Weightiness of Her Life Share on X

Much can change in a year. I have had calendar years in my life where very little changed externally—this was not one of those years. I would not change this last year for anything, but I am also thankful that time does not go back. I am thankful that I have needed to continue to learn that the Lord is the sustainer of Ella’s life. I am called to give my life in many ways so that she might thrive and so that she might love Jesus. But he has already given all of his life for her. I can trust her Maker and mine with this child I was blessed to carry and that I now get to raise. Ella is a gift. Her life is weighty, yes, because she is of eternal value and worth. But I am not her maker. I am not her sustainer. I am her mother. There is a difference.

For me, that difference has been very, very freeing.

So has the increased amount of sleep. That’s helped a lot, too.

Whenmotherhoodis hard...

This is a #WritingWednesdays post. Think back to a year ago today and write about how you have changed since then. 

Stitched Together

I am privileged to have had the opportunity to write about Hand & Cloth for Today’s Christian Woman. Hand & Cloth is one of my favorite organizations; they provide dignified work to at-risk women in Bangladesh who sew kantha blankets. The results are truly stunning! Click here to read the article.

Hand and Cloth

We have one of these blankets in our home and it is a favorite of mine. I love knowing that it not only beautifies our family room but that it also helps support women who are in a vulnerable place.

Visit Hand & Cloth to see their blankets and read more about their vision!

Trusting God Enough to Stay in My Pajamas

I have a hard time resting. It hasn’t always been the case; up through high school I could take hours to sleep and read and bake without thinking about it–without feeling that nagging sense that I should be doing something else–doing something productive.

Christ's cove

That sense of always needing to use my time to do something feels inherent to my personality, and I suppose in some ways it is. If you’ve ever heard of StrengthsFinder, my #1 strength is “Achiever.” This means that I am driven to accomplish things and I care deeply about achieving goals. But it also means that it’s difficult for me to flip that switch off. I rarely sit on the couch and just think. It has become more and more rare for me to read a book “for pleasure.”

I’m not saying that I’m entitled to rest or pleasure. None of us are promised that. But this morning as I am spending time with my larger family, I was reminded that part of the reason it felt so easy for me to rest as a child was that I knew I was not in control. I wasn’t concerned about putting food on the table or paying the mortgage or going to meetings or leading. I was being led. I was able to rest because my parents were in control. I trusted that they would take care of things, and so I could rest.

I was reminded of Psalm 23 this morning:

The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want.
 He makes me lie down in green pastures.
He leads me beside still waters.
  He restores my soul.
He leads me in paths of righteousness
    for his name’s sake.

Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death,
    I will fear no evil,
for you are with me;
    your rod and your staff,
    they comfort me.

Reading even just the first half of this Psalm again, I saw–it felt as if for the first time–that God “makes me lie down in green pastures.” For someone like me, who struggles to rest, it is important for me to see that at times, the good shepherd forces his sheep to lie down, even if they feel like they can–should?–keep going. Even if they have a nagging sense that they should go farther. The shepherd knows how much the sheep can take, and when it is time for them to rest.

I also see that God’s leadership–here  symbolized through his “rod” and “staff”–brings comfort to David, the writer. He knew God was in charge of his life, and that brought him comfort.

And I know that while it often feels like I am “responsible” for my own life and that I should be doing productive things all the time, I am not really in control. When I trust God’s leadership, and when I let his leadership in my life bring me that comfort that David experienced, I can rest. And when I will let God make me lie down and rest–even if I don’t want to, I will learn trust. Because ultimately, resting is a form of trust.

When I rest, I am trusting that God will take care of things, and I am trusting his leadership in my life.

So today? You’ll find me playing Yahtzee with my family, wiggling on the floor a little longer with my daughter, and wearing my pajamas longer than usual. And I will tell myself as many times as I need to that I’m not wasting time. I’m learning how to trust the Maker of my life. 

Trusting God with all of our livesAllows

Great is His Faithfulness

Eight years ago today, I stood in a circle with my bridesmaids, and together we sang this hymn before I walked down the aisle to my groom. 
 

“Great is Thy faithfulness,” O God my Father,

There is no shadow of turning with Thee;

Thou changest not, Thy compassions, they fail not

As Thou hast been Thou forever wilt be.”

Married
“Great is Thy faithfulness!” “Great is Thy faithfulness!“
  Morning by morning new mercies I see;
All I have needed Thy hand hath provided—
    “Great is Thy faithfulness,” Lord, unto me”

DSC_0018_2
“Summer and winter, and springtime and harvest,
Sun, moon and stars in their courses above,
Join with all nature in manifold witness
To Thy great faithfulness, mercy and love.”

Reception Kisses

One year ago today, Ella was born when the sky was still dark. 

“Pardon for sin and a peace that endureth,
Thine own dear presence to cheer and to guide;
Strength for today and bright hope for tomorrow,
Blessings all mine, with ten thousand beside.”

Ella newborn

And every night when I put her to bed, I sing the same hymn.

“Great is Thy faithfulness!” “Great is Thy faithfulness!“
  Morning by morning new mercies I see;
All I have needed Thy hand hath provided—
    “Great is Thy faithfulness,” Lord, unto me!”

Family Newborn Photo

God has saved us, loved us, and carried us through these eight years.
I am so, so grateful.
He is good, and his love endures forever. Alleluia!

 

A Day of Waiting

Ella's baby feet and toes

One year ago today, I was in labor. Ella wasn’t born until the 20th, and there were many hours ahead of me before her arrival. I was excited, a little nervous, and thrilled that she was finally arriving.

Eight years ago today, I was at our rehearsal dinner. Our wedding was on the 20th, and there was only one shell of a day between being single and being married. I was excited, a little nervous, and thrilled to finally marry the man I loved so much.

One day makes such a difference.

There is always a ledge that we wait on before change comes in our lives. For me, the 19th of May is a reminder that waiting on the cusp of that change is also a blessed place.

Waiting can be a place of blessing.

Labor–although difficult and not what I expected in many ways–was a powerful time of unity with Michael as we walked the halls of the hospital trying to speed Ella’s entrance into the world. I stared into his eyes and breathed through each contraction–and I knew that I was not alone. He was with me. The hours we lived through together when I was in labor, prior to Ella’s birth, hold sweet memories for me.

The day before our wedding, full of conversation and a shared meal with our families and the exchange of wedding gifts to one another–that last day of waiting before stepping into marriage was a gift in itself. In that day of waiting I was reminded of the many, many people who loved us and were willing to upend their schedules and travel long distances simply to stand with us and by us as we promised our lives to one another.

Tomorrow is a great day of celebration in our little family. Ella’s birthday, our anniversary–and, amazingly, my sister and brother-in-law’s anniversary as well. We have much to rejoice in!

But today is important, too. I remember the anticipation that leads to these changes–the days and hours and years of waiting that are just as important as the change itself. May 19th points me to a God who is faithful in the changes and the celebrations that life offers, and also to a God who is faithful in the waiting, whether that waiting is filled with nervousness, hope, or hard, hard labor.

We are not alone. He is always, always with us.

How are you meeting God in the waiting of your life this week–or this year?