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Fading by Degrees

Looking around at the faces in my coming and going these days, it hits me that the majority did not know me before I was sick. The me that they know has always been the me that needs help, that is in and out of the hospital, and navigating much of life from bed or a wheelchair. That makes me sad. I miss my strength.

I wish all my people could know the strong me that could hike a steep mountain trail. The me that loved to do all the creative Pinterest things with and for my little people. The me that was social, driven, confident, and strong.

It has been a gradual and subtle loss. The landscape of life being destroyed slowly, one square inch at a time. Suffering lingers on and on, and pain wears me down like friction wears down metal. On the best days, little inconveniences, like having to drag a stool into the shower to sit remind me that I’m sick. On the worse days I don’t make it out of bed; strapped to a ventilator and dependent on someone else to wake me round the clock to swallow the pills that give me some semblance of comfort.

I have no idea what is going to happen over the next 3 months, or even the next 3 weeks. It looms over me, casting an ominous shadow over my entire world. No matter what I am doing it is always taking up a portion of my thoughts. Yet I push it away, determined to suck every grace drop and dribble of joy from my moments.

In the sleepless dark hours I wonder over the future of my husband and my little people. I pray the loss of me will not stifle them. I replay the losses we have already been through. I weigh the scars that have already been created, and I hope that these new ones will heal too. I compare the losses and try to estimate the outcome based on what we have been through. Anyone might agree this is a waste of my time.

Loss is loss, whatever the circumstances. All losses are bad, only bad in different ways. No two losses are ever the same. Each stands on its own and inflicts a unique kind of pain. We tend to quantify and compare suffering and loss. So, I shift my thinking and pray that meaning can be gained by this suffering, and that we can all grow through it.

I pray that the scars tell a story that changes lives for the better and points to the God of my salvation who has carried me through every hard step. I pray that louder than the story of devastation, people hear the story of grace woven through it; how each time I met the end of me I was met with the grace to fight a little more, to grasp hold of more moments, and to turn broken into beautiful.

I echo my friend who was dying of terminal cancer when I say, “I feel like a little girl whose daddy has come early to pick her up from a party. I’m not afraid to die, I just don’t want to go.” I want to be here for the mundane afternoons after school; racing through homework to get to indulge in the better parts of the day. I want to be here for the sending off of each of our birdies… sending them soaring in the directions of their dreams and always having a soft-landing place back home when they need it. I want to be here for the blush-faced budding relationships, and the promises and the ceremonies and the rings. I want to get to be Grandma Nanny, with long grey hair and crinkly smile lines, rocking my grand babes to sleep.

A slow stripping of my pride and my dignity leaves me vulnerable and weary. The people I meet now have to take me as I am, with the understanding I may not have much to give back. This changes the landscape of my relationships, because those saints willing to walk into my mess with little promise of gleaning anything for themselves out of it are few and far between.

Still, here I am— hands open, life open, ready to embrace any who are brave enough to walk this life with me. And the times when my invitation is met with the sound of crickets, I know I am held and I am kept in perfect peace in the arms of my Abba Father, who takes me as I am- all my pieces-and traverses this bumpy, winding road alongside me. I have never been alone, in my strength or in my fading.

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Christmas Every Hour

6:30 am
7:30 am
8:30 am
8:30 am
9:30 am
10:30 am
11:30 am
11:30 am
12:30 pm
1:30 pm
2:30 pm
3:30 pm
4:00 pm
4:30 pm
5:30 pm
6:30 pm
7:30 pm
8:30 pm
9:30 pm

”For to us a child is born, to us a son is given; and the government shall be upon his shoulders, and his name shall be called Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace. Of the increase of his government and of peace there will be no end, on the throne of David and over his kingdom, to establish it and to uphold it with justice and with righteousness from this time forth and forevermore. The zeal of the Lord of hosts will do this.“
‭‭Isaiah‬ ‭9‬:‭6‬-‭7‬ ‭ESV‬‬

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Battle Cry

Last week I could tell as soon as he stepped through the door from school that my youngest had something on his mind. He melted into the couch next to where I lay in my hospital bed, and let out a sigh of epic proportions. I went first, as I usually do when he gets home. “So what’s the story today?” As his cool gray eyes met mine they quickly pooled with tears.

The past few weeks have brought new challenges and fears as this disease has relentlessly invaded new corners of my body. My young son, who should be getting to worry over things like homework and landing that jump-turn on his scooter unfurled the frustration of his day; how he had been unable to think of anything else but this next challenge I find myself facing, and as he ruminated over all his fears for me and wrestled with the thought that his mom wanted more than this from life, he was dished out two “fix-it tickets” for not paying attention in class. “I couldn’t help it mom, you were the only thing I could think about.”

Sometimes I am not sure how to respond to these moments, because I want to throw myself on the ground and kick my feet and scream that it’s not fair that a 10 year old boy should get in trouble at school because he is preoccupied with the ever-present razor of death that he lives with. I want to yell at the world that they need to be gentler and more kind and take a gosh-darn second to try to understand what people are going through. For real, couldn’t we all use a little understanding? Instead I draw the defeated hunch of his shoulders in close to me and I reassure him in every way that I know that we’ve got this, and God’s got us, and we are going to be ok. And sometimes I’m not sure if I’m preaching more to him or to myself, but as we bring our deepest fears and frustrations before the throne of grace we both lift our heads with a little more resolve than we had before. A little more peace, a little more comfort, and a little more fight to face these giants that keep coming our way.

Sometimes I anguish over the fact that when my boy pops in the door from school the things he does battle with aren’t who won the coin toss today at recess or why the lunch line was so long he only got halfway through his chicken patty before the bell rang. Sometimes I long for the simple and the mundane over the big and complex things my boy, and my whole family are having to grapple with. But when my thoughts wander to these dark places I find myself back on my knees, trusting my family to the Author of my story, and believing with everything in me that it’s a good, good story. Even if we can’t see that yet. I believe.

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Grieving Well at Christmas

The first December after having watched our youngest daughter be buried in a gaping rectangle of earth I did not feel like celebrating Christmas at all. I wanted to skip it altogether, and truth be told if I hadn’t had 3 other littles expectantly waiting on our yearly traditions I would not have done a thing. But there they were, those bright little eyes and tiny hands open wide to receive the giving and the caring and the celebrating of the most joyous gift, and while I couldn’t see it then I know now that my heart needed that just as much as theirs did.

I was stuck wondering how to move forward through the dark days of Advent in a way that would point my family to hope while still suffocating beneath the ache of the sudden loss of my little girl. What I learned that December and all the ones since is that the Christmas story holds space for our stories, even the dark parts— for the tears and the scars, the mourning and our deepest grief. I learned how to weave the remembrance of our littlest sister girl into the stories and traditions of each Advent season, and have done so ever since.

When a friend visited a few days ago and saw how we still include our Ellie in the patterns of our Christmas season, she suggested I share the ways that we do that, knowing there are others holding the shards of painful losses and unimaginable grief this season, and hoping I can help you to find meaningful ways to embrace the joy of anticipating the day of our Savior’s birth while still honoring the lives that have left us with ragged and tender edges during the happiest season of all.

One of the long-standing traditions in our home is that every year each of the kids get a new ornament to hang on the tree. Wanting to include Ellie in that, yet realizing it didn’t make sense to gather a growing collection of ornaments that she would not be taking with her to leave our nest one day, we came up instead with Ellie’s Christmas Tree. Delighted to find a tree existed in purple, her favorite color, we set about adorning it with miniature ornaments that all reminded us of her and her precious days spent with us. Every year the Ellie Tree gets set up on a tabletop and decked out with all the girly symbols of her tiny self. Occasionally we find a new ornament to add that suits her perfectly, but for the most part we keep the same collection and enjoy every year this small but bold representation of our girl.

As I hung the family stockings that first Christmas without her, it felt like betrayal somehow to not include her in that tradition, yet an equally painful gut-punch was staring at a limp, empty stocking that would never hold gifts for the littlest sister. So we started the tradition of Letters to Ellie. As the calendar page turns to December each year we purchase a pack of cards specifically for Ellie’s stocking, and as we move through the days of Advent toward the coming of the Christ-Child, each family member takes the time to write a personal letter to our girl and slip it into her stocking.

In the early days when the siblings were bitty, that often looked like adorable drawings of stick people representing the littlest girl twirl-dancing in Heaven, or memories of what they missed doing with her. As they’ve grown the letters have grown too, to include writings of their memories with her, updates on what they wished she could have been a part of this year, or wonderings of what she would look like or be involved in today. Each year as the celebration of Christmas winds down I have taken the cards and added them to a growing scrapbook of Ellie’s Letters that we all enjoy looking through and seeing how time and maturity and the aching of missing her have colored what has been documented. It has been a sweet way to include her and to reflect on the impact her life has had on our lives.

However you choose to include your missed loved ones into the celebration of our Savior’s birth, always remember that the little Lord Jesus asleep on the hay has made a way for us through the tears and the deep grief-aching of our hearts. His birth paved the way to the cross that beckons us to come and makes space for all of our grieving, and promises to bring us rescue from these dark days into an eternal life of joyous fulfillment.

Come, oh come, Emmanuel.

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Broken by a Pillow

A few days ago I was attempting to change the sheets on my bed. My dear hubs likes to use these heavy weighted gel pillows to sleep on that feel best on his neck. He was helping me put the bed back together and I reached for one of his pillows on the floor to hand it to him. Grabbing it with both hands I yanked it up almost to waist height only to have the weight of it slip from my hands and plummet back to the floor. Again I reached for it, and again it slumped to the floor as it slid from my weak grasp. And then I lost my ever-loving mind. “This is ridiculous!” I shrieked, and before I could even think I burst into tears. I know his kind words were trying to console me, but I could not hear them over the shame and frustration and despair that rang through every cell in my body.

I made a beeline to retreat to the bathroom where I hid behind the closed door and let loose hot tears of anger and deep sadness. All I could think was, “They used to call me Mighty Mouse because I was the strongest in my fire department, and now I can’t even pick up a stupid pillow. This isn’t fair, God. This was not supposed to be my story. Why can’t I have my life back?”

Silence screamed back at me as I finished having my temper tantrum and blotted my swollen eyes. Then there was a quiet whisper to my soul, “There are countless others who have that story; yours is one that will show my glory even more so because of your weakness. Just trust me.”

Peace seeps in like the gentle rocking of a newborn to sleep. My Abba Father has got me. He knows the pain, He knows the frustration and disappointment, and He promises to make something beautiful of my broken pieces.

As I crawled into bed I did the only thing I know to do when given the choice to despair or choose hope; lift my hands and praise Him for the many gifts in my life. I list them off into the stillness of night, and like a mighty shield, that act of thanksgiving pushes back my shame, my frustration, and my despair, until all that’s left is a calm assurance that I am exactly where I am supposed to be.

In what ways are you feeling your shortcomings? Are you able to leave those at the feet of Jesus and trust that He’s got you? It’s not always easy, but it always comes with a huge helping of peace.

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Thanksgiving

In a season of suffering and deep grief, a day set aside to give thanks can feel counterintuitive. This week as I have pressed into a list of tasks to prepare for a day of fellowship and feasting with my family I have faced endless hours of debilitating pain, a frightening drop in function on a repeat breathing test, a company that has decided not to provide my tube feedings anymore, and fatigue that binds me with so much exhaustion that a whole day slips by without me waking. Admittedly, it can be easier to find things to complain about than to be grateful for, but then in my morning quiet time I am reminded that thanksgiving is the way we enter into and experience His presence (see Psalm 100:4). To say “Thank You, God” is to perceive Him with us in our suffering.

In the dark, painful corners of a Nazi concentration camp, Corrie ten Boom wrote, “Thankfulness keeps us connected to the reality of God in our lives.” If a woman persecuted and tortured for doing nothing more than showing love and hospitality can find reasons to give thanks during the darkest days of her life, than I have no excuse not to be counting my blessings. So, I pull out my journal of daily graces and scrawl them down on the pages; the easy-to-miss but very present reasons throughout my days to give thanks to a God who is acquainted with my sorrow, and is fiercely present in my suffering.

Gratitude is not always easy to embrace. Suffering affords us endless opportunities to complain and despair and harden our hearts. For myself, some days are so acutely painful that I wonder how is there possibly anything good to be thankful for today? Yet I continually find that just that amount of belief is enough to gently turn my heart and head toward my Savior.

To those of you that are trudging through deep grief and fighting daily battles that threaten to consume you, I see you. I hear your desperation and I feel your pain. Still, I urge you to lift your head and look around. Find the daily graces, no matter how small. Your warm cup of coffee. The sunshine streaming through your window. No matter how small your capacity gratitude in that moment, you will find yourself inspired to thank Him for more and more of His gifts and His goodness.

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Seeing Stripes

This is meant to be a PSA in the kindest possible way, because I know most people do not go out there trying to be a pain. A lot of the time it is just that they simply do not know better yet. And once we know better, we do better, right?

Have you ever noticed that most handicapped parking spaces have a series of stripes painted on one or both sides of the parking spot? I’m sure before I knew better I was certain they were for playing hopscotch over the lines, or for discretely dumping off your shopping cart when you were too lazy, I mean busy, to walk it all the way to a cart corral or back inside the front door. Then one day I found myself navigating my foreseeable future in a wheelchair and a van with a ramp that goes in and out, and I became very acutely aware of what those painted lines are for, so I’m doing my due diligence to pass this mind-blowing information along to you!

When my ramp is out and I am getting in or out of my van, this is how much room that takes…

Our ramp sticks out a decent amount, and then I have to have room to turn around at the end of it to drive on or off.

See the amount of space left here? This is never going to do. You can see I cannot even get to the bottom of my ramp, let alone turn off of it at the bottom.

How about this one? Nope. It does not seem like they took much, but this is not enough room to turn onto my ramp to get back in the car.

Assuming I had wanted to park in the spot to the left of this car… not going to happen!

This was the last handicapped spot left in the parking lot, and this person had the stripes AND the spot blocked!

This one had narrow stripes to begin with, but there was no way parking next to that I would ever be able to get my ramp and chair out.

This one is really just for amusement because this car had a legitimate tag and clearly /wanted/ to park in the handicap spot, I’m just not sure what happened.

So the moral of the story is please save the stripes for ramps and wheelchairs, not your shopping cart, or two of your tires. If you are parking next to a handicapped spot, please always assume the striped area is needed for a ramp and wheelchair. Understand it takes a little room to maneuver, so unless you’re a fan of door dings and inexplicable tire marks on the side of your car, try to have a little consideration and please give as much room as safely possible. Take a little stress off someone with wheelz and make it easier for them to get out and where they’re going on time; you’ll make their day, even if you don’t get to see it!

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Life in the Balance

You often get to see the good and miraculous in my life, and I love sharing those parts with you, but right now I am fighting from a pit so dark it seems to swallow my ability to find the streams of light I have grown accustomed to piercing the darkness. My heart and mind are tired. My body is exhausted. I have dared to hope that I am still here because God is going to bring about a miraculous healing in my life, but as time edges on and I feel the weight of not being even a shadow of who my people need me to be, I find myself dreadfully weary of this life hanging in the middle between the miracle of being restored to health and the seeming relief of death.

Red tape curls angrily around the care that I need; new rules preventing what I was able to get before, but the alternative of leaving the security of what care I do have is intimidating and perhaps foolish. I am tired of having to fight for myself; to advocate for things bigger than myself when I hardly have the strength to take a shower.

Come and save me Lord God, because you bless and protect your people, and I am yours. Give me a glimpse of the glory behind this wall of darkness to refresh my hope in you. You are my God and my protector, please answer my prayer and refresh my hope in you. Let my life be a living testament to your sustaining grace; whether by giving me the endurance to withstand whatever suffering will align my life with your heart, or by extending the grace of calling me Home.

I do not know how to gracefully live out what you have called me to, but I know you have been good all my life, and I trust that if hanging in the balance is what you have for me, you will help me find the strength to endure the calling you have set before me. So help me Jesus, I need your love to restore my peace.

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Four Friday Favorites

A few of my favorite things…

I don’t know about you, but watching the news for me can get really overwhelming with all the negativity that seems to saturate every news outlet. I recently discovered The Pour Over, and I am a huge fan. It delivers the news to my email and shares the top stories in an honest and politically neutral way, and then gives little things like an eternal perspective and a verse of the day. It’s such a positive way to learn about what is going on in our world. Sign up with your email address at this link:

https://www.thepourover.org/

I have been such a hard core strawberry Twizzlers fan all my life it almost feels like I am cheating, but these new orange cream flavored ones are the absolute bees knees. They are soft and chewy at the same time, and the flavor is so outstandingly good it is rare for a bag of them to get opened at my house and not polished off in the same day. Try them… let me know what you think!

G L I T T E R. I enjoy having my nails painted any color, but this 40-something year old woman must still have a 7 year old girl streak, because I LOVE glitter. I love the way it catches the light and twinkles back at me, and I find myself staring at them with a quirky little smile throughout the day. This particular color is from Color Street; the little wrap stickers made for nails. I especially love their glitters because they last for like ever.

https://www.colorstreet.com/sarasigley/beautysocial/4100908

Geocaching! Lately my youngest boy has gotten into Geocaching. You can download the app on your phone and it shows you all kinds of locations near and far from you where people have created a little hiding spot to leave small treasures. I obviously cannot do the ones that involve hiking through the National Forests, but we have discovered a few in easy places around town, and he loves stopping to check on them and see if anyone has swapped out what he left there for something new. Good clean fun with a little suspense and patience to get him up and out of the house.

https://www.geocaching.com/play