








"Once you choose hope, anything is possible" ~Christopher Reeve










Dear Hope,
You were the one who poked shining rays into the darkness in the aftermath of my family’s divorce, and gave me the courage to believe that I could write a different story for my own life and family. And I did.
You were the one who beckoned me to hold on when my own marriage was at the brink of destruction, and gave me the faith to believe that things didn’t have to end that way. And they didn’t.
You were the one who picked me up off the ground following the death of my daughter and whispered that my brokenness could be used for good things. And it has been.
You were the one who gave me comfort during the long nights that I wondered if I would see my wayward child again. And I did.
You were the one who has given me strength to fight against the odds and push through the horror of my illness every day because my life can still bring glory to God. And I have.
You were the one who kept whispering to me that all these broken pieces can be redeemed and used to make something beautiful. And I listened.
You are the one who has never let me give up because you have always shown me the glimpses of what things can turn out to be if I just hold on, but I’ve got to admit something, Hope. I have been struggling to trust you. What are supposed to be seasons are feeling more like lifetimes, and the dark that I keep believing can’t get any darker still manages to. Isolation is crippling, and the barrage of hard things makes it difficult to believe I will ever know something better. I appreciate the relationship we have had so far, but could you throw me a bone here? I’m weary!
I remember “I have put my Hope in your Word,” so I turn there, seeking…
“Be joyful in hope, patient in affliction, faithful in prayer.” I feel lacking for the words to even pray, so I just start with what’s inside; “Help Lord, we need you. Please help!”

“Those who hope in the Lord will renew their strength.” My strength is waning, practically non-existent, but here is a promise I can cling to. So I wait expectantly for renewal.
“Hope that is seen is not hope.” So when hoping for what I cannot see I have to wait with patience. Patience. Deep breath. Realizing there is nothing I can do, but God can.
“And the God of all grace, who called you to his eternal glory in Christ, after you have suffered a little while, will himself restore you and make you strong, firm and steadfast.” Ok God, you said it. So I’ll hang on and wait. Please give me the strength to do that. Help me choose hope and joy even when it’s the hardest thing to do right now. Bring back my hope.

After 2+ weeks in the hospital, this past week was my week to get back on track. I caught up on late orders from my Etsy store, did as much housework as I could tolerate, and soaked up time with my people. Life started to almost feel like our normal again. Then Friday came in like a wrecking ball.
I found myself sitting alone in the emergency room with a serious complication of my feeding tube that would require a painful procedure. All went well and I was home and tucked in by bedtime with the assumption that I would wake with this small speed bump behind me. Then came Saturday.

Saturday we had lofty plans. With the temperatures trying to point to autumn, the kids had been bitten by the pumpkin patch bug, anxious to take our annual family trek out to select the perfect pumpkin and sip apple cider on hay bales. Then we had penciled in a night at the rodeo, having already laid out our flannels and boots in eager anticipation. That is until I woke up.
The pain from the day before was tolerable, but every time I tried to stand I broke out in a sweat, my body shaking as nauseating waves of weakness forced me back down. Trying to be optimistic we eventually cancelled the first activity with the thought that if I rested most of the day I would be refreshed enough to still clamor out as a family to the rodeo.
It was not to be. I continued to struggle through the day, and at one point voiced my frustration to a friend. She was quick to remind me of a truth that reigns thickly throughout my days. It’s not just me that lives not knowing what I’m going to be able to do tomorrow; none of us are guaranteed the tomorrows of our best-laid plans.
So how do we reconcile with that? The only answer is that each day has to be an opening of our hands, prying our fingers off of our own wants and desires, and instead asking, “Lord, how can I best give you glory and honor today? This can only be done by keeping our eyes and hearts on Him. We may see our days don’t look like we imagined, but the gift of that is the joy we find when we are in full surrender to God’s will for us.
My weekend didn’t include the pumpkin patch or the rodeo, or any of the house projects I wanted to work on. What it was laced with was grace for each moment— the ability to cozy up in a comfy chair and watch a movie at the drive-in with my people. The strength to show up to church to help serve and then soak in the worship and the message that clearly spoke to the things I’m walking through right now. The weekend allowed me the time and awareness to walk through some difficult circumstances and conversations with some of my littles. It didn’t look at all like I had planned it, but it looked like exactly where God wanted me to be, and I was there for it.
Surrendering our days takes intention, and sometimes it might feel like disappointment, but when the end result is us doing what God most wants us to do, it brings an immense amount of joy and satisfaction as He blesses our coming and our going for the ways it honors Him.












Moving methodically around each raised bed of my garden I parted prickly leaves to get the clearest view where any new produce was ready for harvest, or any weeds that had sprung up among my vegetable plants. I plucked thin blades of grass and clover-looking leaves attached to flexible stems that had popped up since the last rain. I counted the pumpkins that were forming and twisted a cucumber vine back around its trellis. I was snipping off young okras when I noticed the difference, and it was profound.

Standing tall right between the towering cornstalks and the fuzzy buds of okra there was a different plant. Its stems were a rhubarb red, and flat pointed leaves grew abundantly from matching branches. As I examined these plants I noticed the leaves were close, but shaped differently than the neighboring okra, neither did they have any evidence of bearing anything of edible value. That’s when it hit me. These were weeds! Standing just as tall as the okra plants, and almost in neat little rows, it was clear why I had thought these had come from the seeds that I planted. I had been deceived from the time of tiny seedlings to these now towering plants.
I grasped the thick woody stems and yanked, but no matter how hard I pulled, most of them would not budge. The ones that did come up had impressively massive roots.

With these crawling tentacles beneath the surface of the soil I had to worry about how entangled they might be with my healthy plants, and many of them I had to just hack off above the ground, knowing they would need to be watched closely for regrowth. I was frustrated with myself that I had not noticed them and put a stop to them when they were seedlings. That made me realize how much this is like us missing the mark of God’s design in our lives.

When the wrong things we choose to do are disguised as something good; healthy green leaves in straight lines, it’s easy to overlook them. They creep in, and unknowingly we water and fertilize them, allowing the roots to grow deep and take hold. By the time we recognize there is something that shouldn’t be there, it is already so tangled around the healthy roots that it is sucking the nutrition from the fruit that is growing, and there is often no way to remove it without casualties.
So how does one prevent this kind of sneaky invasion? We have to be attentive, distinguishing what does not belong in our lives and uprooting it before it takes hold. The best defenses we have are spending time regularly in God’s Word, and faithfully in prayer, as well as having friends we can trust to hold us accountable; then we will be so immersed in truth that anything not of Him will be easy to recognize.



























The past few weeks have felt HEAVY. One of my dear friends was diagnosed with lymphoma. Chemo has started, and with it the constant fight against weakness, sickness, feeling worse than the actual cancer makes you feel. It doesn’t seem fair.
Another of my friends was also diagnosed with lymphoma, and we are in the waiting of what treatment is going to look like. A period of time suspended, feeling strangely well despite the cancer that has invaded many corners.
My sweet friend with ALS had a bad fall and ended up with a broken shoulder. A long road ahead of healing and rehab and wondering if strength will come back enough to return to her home, or if a new, harder season is beginning.
Friends with children who are trudging through broken places, with exhausted parents who aren’t sure where to turn next, who just want to shoulder these trials so their children don’t have to.
My kids are struggling with some painful battles, and I have to stand back in silent prayer and watch them fight through it, knowing there is nothing I can do to take the pain from them; it’s a road they have to walk.
My husband is on several weeks of travel, which always feels lonely and scary and takes a cumulative toll on my strength. And of course it is always when he is away that Murphy shows up in all the ways like car trouble and kid injuries and leaks under the kitchen cabinet.
It all feels so heavy; suffocating at times. Multiple times this week I have found myself in tears, overwhelmed by the sheer weight of it all. Sometimes I have forgotten my /first/ defense is to reach for my Heavenly Father. I finally remembered that in a simple prayer yesterday; “please send help.” I’m sure you know even before the end of this sentence that of course God has shown up in the ways I knew I needed, and even the ways I had no idea I did.
He has given me the energy to go visit my friend between chemo treatments, the simple presence of each other’s company being enough to reassure me of God’s presence in this story. And a smile that even in his weakened state he cut the grass and welcomed me with my own parking spot. Daily graces.

My friend with ALS does not have much of a circle, and she has spent many long days and nights sitting alone in her hospital room. God gave me the strength and the creativity to go spend some time with her and to decorate her room with color and love, as my own friends have done for me.

He has given me wisdom, discernment, and patience to assess the needs of my hurting littles, and provide the best support I can at the right times. He has given me the privilege of coming before the throne in prayer for all of these things.
And all of a sudden, with praise music playing in the background, and friends who are willing to show up both in person and in prayer, the anxieties of my heart melt into deep gratitude for all the ways I am held and carried, and the ways I can hold and carry my own people.
As I cracked the book of my quiet morning devotion today, the words specifically chosen for this date wash over me like the healing balm that they are: “Come to me, all of you who are tired and have heavy loads, and I will give you rest.” Matthew 11:28.
Another daily grace, God whispering my name, saying “I see you. Let me carry your heavy loads.”


13 years ago we had to say goodbye to a piece of our heart and soul. Even though I had a peace about her returning to her Father’s arms, there was still a part of me that felt like she had been ripped from our arms. I wondered how we would ever be ok. How we would face each day with the crushing weight of having watched our youngest, beautiful daughter be laid deep in the ground.


Tracing back over the time that has passed since her death it is clear that even when I have lost myself in indescribable grief, I have always been held by the One I can never lose.
When I have thought I cannot go on He gives me incredibly meaningful reasons to keep showing up.
When I have thought the pain is too intense, He has given me important distractions to take my eyes off of my own pain.
This day will always hold some painful memories remembering the events of losing our girl, but it will also hold the hope of our reunion with her someday, and the remembrance of how God has carried us each and every step of the way.

“Why do we even believe in God if He doesn’t help us?” The words sliced through the sweltering afternoon air with razor intensity as hot tears dropped dark shapes onto my 11 year old’s gray T-shirt. He had just finished lying a sharpie-labeled headstone over the dented ground in a shade-protected corner of our yard where he had buried a tiny baby bunny for the second time that day.

“God could have saved that bunny. I prayed so hard for that. If He can do whatever He wants to, why didn’t He save him? Why doesn’t He make you well? Why does He let bad things happen to the best people?”
I sucked in a breath as my chest squeezed with the painful questions that seemed to bounce back off the canopy of leaves above us, unanswered. I was watching my boy reckon with one of the deepest struggles we all wrestle with at times; the ones that can strengthen your faith immeasurably, or send it crumbling into nothingness with the verdict that God can’t be trusted.
As strange as it might sound, these are some of the most sacred moments in parenting. Moments so heart-wrenching, yet so utterly priceless you can almost feel God’s hands on your shoulders as you tenderly walk your children through despair and into hope, reminding them the thing you need so desperately to remember yourself; this life is just a blink, and tomorrow has been promised to none of us. This day is a gift, and if it is full of suffering, it is because God loves us too much to let us waste our lives on earth’s pitiful indulgences. He wants to give us astonishing abundance that lasts forever—and suffering is often the means by which He gives it.
I don’t know if I would have become a parent if someone had told me that I would have to watch my children suffer immeasurable pain that I could do nothing about. I don’t like that; I’m a fixer. But even today I am still learning that the only way through is a repeated opening of my hands and surrendering my children to the Only One who can make good of their pain. He promises not to waste it, so I trust that somehow each of these hurts will be used for good.

As I’ve considered the things I’d really like to do before my illness progresses enough to eliminate possibilities, I’ve kept kind of a bucket list of sorts in my mind of things I hope to get to do. At the top of the list was going to the beach with my family again. As time has slipped away though that has seemed out of reach, so when I discovered we essentially have a beach and sand dunes just a few hours from us by Lake Michigan, I jumped all over making it happen.

For months I saved up the earnings from my Etsy store so I could pay for us to rent a campsite and a comfortable RV that could power all the medical equipment that has to trail along behind me. I managed to snatch one of the last groups of days left for the popular camp spots at Indiana Dunes State Park, and started harping on my family to black out the days and make sure their bosses knew they wouldn’t be working. When one of my kids got pushback from their boss about taking the days off I even composed a carefully written letter about how important this was to our family, and praise Jesus he consented to approving the vacation days.
We planned for months… meal planning, gathering up our boogie boards, kites, and buckets for the beach, and rounding up sleds we could use to fly down the nearby sand dunes. Lists of medicine and machines I needed to have with me. I found an amazing RV nearby for us to rent, and got everything settled. I was so excited and looking forward to this time for all of us to escape our busyness and make memories together.

I don’t know if it’s sad humor or irony or what, but a few days before our trip I landed in the hospital as the result of a mistake made by the healthcare professionals. It was serious, and my hopes for a quick prescription and release were dashed as I was admitted and prepped for surgery the same night. Buckets of tears later I had begged and pleaded with each doctor, explaining the significance of the trip, urging them to let me go. It was not to be.

Father’s Day morning (and also my son’s birthday) was the day we were set to leave. The rest of my clan packed up the RV and came to the hospital to have a makeshift celebration with me before they hit the road for our vacation. There were to be no refunds for what we had paid, and by then there were no other days available to rent camp spots, so it made the most sense for them to go ahead without me.

The disappointment mixed with excitement in my hospital room that morning was palpable, and I felt genuinely joyful they were still getting to go, while at the same time deeply disappointed I would have to stay behind. There was a flurry of hugs and kisses as I sent them on their way, demanding many photos.
In the stillness of a familiar hospital room my frustration burned hot rivers down my cheeks. All the things I have lost to this disease, Lord, why did this trip have to be one of them too? The whole point was for it to possibly be one of my “lasts.”

In the painful silence of a room that overlooked a brick wall, I remembered the story of Nehemiah. A man who had worked so hard for something, and then had seen it come crumbling down. He says he sat down on the ground and cried. He mourned for several days and refused to eat. Then he got up and dusted himself off. He thanked God for keeping His promises, and he prayed for restoration. This is the heart posture I desire to have.
Charles Stanley said, “Taking time to lament what we have lost can be an act of worship. Nehemiah allowed his distress to lead him into deeper communion with God. Offer your tears as devotion to Him.”
I pray that through the many disappointments and missing outs of this disease that I will learn more and more to press into Jesus through my frustration and discouragement. I know He sees far beyond what I am able to, and I trust that He knows how to write more good into my story.



