Showing posts with label Stories. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stories. Show all posts

Sunday, October 1, 2023

The Arrival of Abraham

 



Well, here we are again!

It seems it's taken a lot longer this time to get around to writing this. Maybe that's because I have two toddlers now. Maybe it's because I've been too busy letting my sweet little new friend take up all my space. Maybe it's because I hate writing on my phone. Probably all of those, I don't know.

Regardless, little Abraham has been with us this side of the womb for almost three weeks! And what a sweet addition he's made to our precious family. 

When I sat down to write his birth story last Tuesday, it marked two weeks since I left my midwife's office for what I hoped would be my last prenatal visit. That Tuesday was filled with mixed feelings--anticipation, anxiety, impatience, and a wish that I could suppress all those feelings and float like a serene blob into the future where Abraham would finally be born. 

I'd been pregnant by this point for 40 weeks and two days--the longest I've ever gone. I was tired and sore and facing constant reminders of why being pregnant isn't my favorite thing, regardless of how cool it objectively is. It was that point in pregnancy where giving birth feels both imperative and also like it couldn't possibly ever happen. 

That being said, my third pregnancy was far less fraught with anxiety, overall, than either of my first two. While pregnant with both my first son and daughter, I spent the last two weeks of each pregnancy fretting and stressing and pacing like a madwoman. Yet here I was, two days overdue, and only on the baby's due date had I started trying to induce labor. If you know me at all you'll be impressed by my forbearance, which, I think, can only be attributed to the work of the Holy Spirit, and the fact that I had started seeing a midwife OBGYN in preparation for a natural childbirth.

My first two children's birth stories are beautiful and I wouldn't change them. But experience has shown me that the more I try to control something (especially something as momentous as the birth of a baby), the harder it is to trust God with it. 

That may seem "duh" to you, but as a lifelong control freak with a particularly thick skull, it's taken a lot of lessons over the years for me to start acknowledging this. I set out to try natural birth this time because I wanted to give myself fewer illusions of control. Taking all the optional interventions off the table for myself meant fewer choices to be made, and fewer opportunities for me to try to do a job that wasn't really mine. And so, for the first time, I was able to spend (most of) my energy in the last few weeks happily anticipating the baby's arrival and appreciating any extra time we had to prepare. 

Going over 40 weeks had never appealed to me, as I'm a fan of deadlines. But working with a midwife gave me a lot more confidence in the process, and I trust Jenda's judgement enough to suspend my own anxiety and listen to her advice. So, at my 40 week appointment on the 12th of September, we decided together to induce no more than a week later if Abe decided to procrastinate further. I frankly dreaded the potential prospect of another week being the shape and size of a small planet, but Jenda reassured me that everything would be fine and that it wasn't likely to be much longer. To help me along, we decided to try a membrane sweep. She told me that many women go into labor the same night they have this done. 

I left the clinic that afternoon feeling slightly more at peace, and trying not to get my hopes up. The rest of the day I kept an eye on my contractions, which were coming more regularly, but not closely enough together to justify us making for the hospital. My husband and I took the kids on a two-mile walk around the neighborhood, admiring the just-changing leaves and feeling blessed that it was cooler than 80 degrees out. That night I went to bed more relaxed than I had in a few weeks. I prayed that little Abe would come soon, safe and healthy, that delivery would go quickly, preferably during the day, and that God would help me to accomplish it.

5:30 am rolled around and I woke up very uncomfortable, with contractions coming every several minutes. Was it time? Not wanting to rush anything, I woke up Zac and told him we might need to prepare to leave in a little while. I wanted to stay at home for as long as possible, to let the toddlers sleep and to minimize the time I'd have to spend wearing one of those horribly unfashionable hospital gowns. By 6:30 the contractions were coming regularly and painfully enough that I knew we needed to get ready. I called the clinic as we were about to leave, about an hour later. The nurse, possibly concerned that I was heading for the hospital prematurely, told me to come to the clinic first for a cervical exam. 

I'd like to say that I handled this suggestion with all graciousness, but it ticked me off. I remembered my mother telling me that when she was in labor with my older sister, her doctor had told her to wait at home because she "didn't sound like she was in enough pain." Was a similar thing going to happen to me? Had I not moaned in agony enough during my interaction with the nurse? And anyway, who was this person to tell me over the phone that I couldn't be trusted to time my own contractions and know my own body? I knew it was time! I had waited for two hours to be sure I wasn't imagining things! 

Thankfully I was able to keep my annoyance to a minimum on the phone, but as soon as I hung up, I called my sister Julia to let her know we'd be dropping the kids off with her and to vent my frustration about being sent to the clinic rather than the hospital.

Thank God for sisters. Not only are they willing to accept the delivery of two breakfast-minded ruffians into their home on short notice, they also tell you what you need to hear. Which, in my case, amounted to her saying that I should trust my instincts, call the clinic back and tell them I was heading straight to the hospital. When we got to her house, I said goodbye to my first two babies as their little heads bobbed away into the living room, looking for their cousin. As I made to walk out the door, a contraction came on and I squatted through it, focusing on my breathing. I felt like I had prepared as much as I could--I felt ready. Julia gave me a hug and told me she was so excited for me. 

I got back in the car and called the clinic to tell them we had decided to skip a step. I don't think the nurse was all that enthused about my decision, but she assured me they would send Jenda to the hospital to meet us. 

On the way to the hospital, my contractions stalled. Wouldn't that just be perfect, I thought. I call the nurse back to tell them I'm sure about going to the hospital, and by the time I get there I won't be in labor anymore. My theory now is that I felt so tense after the irritating phone calls that my body went into energy-conservation mode and took a pause from labor. 

So it was that we arrived at the maternity ward and I was hardly in any pain at all. When the receptionist asked me how far apart my contractions were, I didn't know how to answer. I could've cried in frustration. I told her how far apart they had been an hour ago and didn't mention the fact that they had stalled. We waited for fifteen minutes for a nurse to take us into an exam room--where, thankfully, Jenda arrived shortly after to check my progress.

It turned out I was already 7cm dilated, which is pretty far along. Julia commented later on that she couldn't believe I was dilated so far and yet hardly seemed fazed by the contraction I had squatted through at her house. As far dilated as I was though, the baby was sitting pretty high up in my uterus--higher than he had been the previous day, Jenda informed me. She seemed baffled by this. "What is he doing in there?" she said. 

So now the assignment became getting the baby to move downward and restart the contractions. Jenda marched me through the hospital hallways at almost too quick a pace for my pregnant self.

After this I was required to sit on a birthing ball to encourage the contractions. Jenda was a very no-nonsense coach, giving me plain instructions and easy-to-grasp explanations of what was going on. Most of the time I'm not a big fan of being told what to do, but in labor I was grateful to have straightforward assignments. My main concern was to focus on breathing through each contraction calmly; something that helped with this was exhaling with what they call "horse lips" in the natural labor world, but which we called lip trills during my years in University Choir. It would seem my training as a singer in college helped prepare me in some way for this. How cool is it that those seemingly unrelated parts of our lives sometimes just come together like that? 

During this stage of labor, my husband was doing a lot of waiting. I laughed at him for looking at memes on his phone during the parts where I needed him less. But it was funny, afterward, to see the notifications from instagram reels he'd sent me just before our baby was born. They were like souvenirs. 

Soon I was having more contractions; they got more painful. Zac sat behind me, ready to apply counter-pressure to my hips whenever I needed it. But for a little while it almost seemed like nothing was happening. The contractions weren't getting much closer together. The baby was stubborn about moving downward. I had hoped that, since I was doing labor naturally, we would be able to forgo monitoring the baby's heartbeat constantly to allow me a little more freedom to move around, but he was such a little stinker that the monitors had to stay on. There would be no shower or tub for me. 

Jenda decided to try breaking my water, but it didn't work! Again I saw the bafflement on her face as she exclaimed that she had no idea why there was no amniotic fluid rushing out of me. And so I just continued moving, bouncing on the ball, and later on, squatting through the contractions as Zac supported me until my water broke on its own. It was painful and intense and strange, but having him there to lean on through it was a huge comfort to me. 

Abe was head-down and making progress, but he was also lying face up in my uterus, which is not optimal for childbirth. I'm not sure, but I wonder if that was hindering his progress a little bit. Jenda tried several times to manually turn him around in there, which to me was the worst part of the whole process, psychologically. 

Breathing through a contraction while your midwife tries to turn your baby around... it just doesn't feel good at all, to put it lightly. It feels like the opposite of natural. While recovering later on, the word "horrific" kept popping into my mind whenever I recalled this particular detail. 

So far, nothing about this experience was living up to my expectations--but then, I had prepared for that as well. I had written up a birth plan but ultimately decided against bringing it to the hospital. I was sure that everything would happen as it should, without me controlling it--and I wanted to retain that confidence once it was happening. This was no easy task, one I couldn't have accomplished without the reassurance of the Holy Spirit. There were moments during labor where it definitely did not feel like things were going to be okay, but because of His presence with me, I never believed that I wouldn't make it. 

2 Timothy 3:14 contains a charge to the letter’s recipient to continue in what he’s learned of God and the Gospel, remembering the heritage of faith given to him through his family and experiences. After giving birth to Abe, I have a sharper perspective on this verse—it’s about the germ, the mustard seed of truth planted in easy times that, tiny as it is, brings forth a harvest of perseverance when you truly need it the most. 

All the affirmations that God had poured into me during my pregnancy--affirmations of His help and His strength becoming mine--came back to me in the most difficult moments of labor, and sustained me. I learned what it meant to have a mustard seed of faith. It was barely faith at all, almost nothing more than a memory of it. But because God was in it, it was enough. 

That was how I endured lying on my side for the last 45 minutes of labor in an attempt to get the baby to turn around, while the contractions intensified and all I wanted to do was run and leave my body behind. 
I never thought I’d have to cope with the last stage of labor with my movement restricted so much, but thankfully I remembered some advice I’d read in a book my sister gave me, about how women in other cultures often have their midwives and partners shake them during their contractions. I’d never discussed this with Jenda or Zac before this point, and by now it was too hard to talk, so I did it myself. I lay on the bed, resting and breathing and praying between each contraction. Every time I felt the pain returning I signaled to Zac to dig his fingernails into my palms, and then I started shaking myself, imagining my muscles relaxing. Trying to become jello. Jenda laughed and said, “I don’t think I could do that even if I wasn’t contracting.” Hearing her and the nurse chuckle at my crazy coping method helped ground me somewhat. If they were so calm and happy, then I must be okay. I couldn’t give up. I said I would do this, I wanted to do it, and anyway, it was too late now to change my mind. 

 
It seemed like it would go on forever this way, but thank God, babies are meant to come out. At 12:43 I found myself being coaxed onto my hands and knees, apparently the best birthing position when your baby is face-up, and I felt nothing now except the pain-ridden animal desire to get Abe out at any cost. I could barely think, barely hear as Jenda coached me to take it slowly, that Abe was almost here. I was mindless. I was afraid. I screamed and groaned and yelled “NOO” like a dying woman. But I felt a sense of determination I’d never felt before, and at 12:49–a shockingly quick six minutes later—my second son was born.


In the end, he never turned around. He came out face to face with the world, screaming almost immediately. The nurse told me “He’s out! You did it!” All I could say was, “No way.” No way had I done something so unimaginably hard. But it must be over, because I felt the fear dissipate. 


I climbed up onto the bed and they handed me my baby. He had tufty black hair and a squishy little face and was completely perfect in every way. Without an epidural, I felt all the residual pain of pushing a baby out of me. It was surprising at the time how much it still hurt—I hadn’t known what to expect. But it was so much less now, and I was holding Abe, finally, and I could almost ignore it. (Almost. I practically inhaled the ibuprofen they brought me about an hour later.)

I was sure that I had sustained serious damage. Hadn't my body been ripping itself apart five minutes ago? But Jenda assured me that there was no tearing. I was probably in better shape, actually, than I had been after either of my first two deliveries. I praised God for so many prayers answered. 

As I lay there, trying to relax my adrenaline-charged limbs, snuggling the sweetest of babies in my arms, I remarked to the nurse that the post-birth experience was very different than I'd expected, as I'd had epidurals with my first two babies. She looked at me in surprise. 

"I'm shocked!" she said. "I would have thought you'd done this all three times. You were so controlled!"

I didn't know what to say. I hadn't felt in control at all. I felt like I had just almost died. But it was nice to hear anyway. 

I had a lot of feelings about the experience over the next few days, which I'm sure I will write about in another post, but I think at this point I can say that this pregnancy and birth experience was the best one I've had so far, and I wouldn't change a thing about it. 

We named our boy Abraham Ezekiel. A strong name, I like to say. Readers of this blog (or anyone who’s known me for any length of time) will know I deeply admire Abraham Lincoln. The name Abraham itself means “father of multitudes.” Ezekiel was a fearless Old Testament prophet, and his name means “God strengthens.” 

All of our children’s names are prayers. This one is a prayer for a strong foundation, for wise leadership, and for unshakable trust in God’s sovereignty. 


As I prepared to give birth naturally, I considered the middle name a prayer for me as well, a reminder of where true strength comes from. I never wanted to forget who my help would be--and now I pray I never forget how giving birth to Abraham illustrated this reality in such a visceral way. 


Psalm 27:1 "The Lord is my light and my salvation; whom shall I fear? The Lord is the stronghold of my life; of whom shall I be afraid?"

















Wednesday, April 12, 2023

A resurrection story

Last year around Easter, I found myself compelled to poetry by Good Friday, that beautiful contradiction. 

This year, for whatever reason, I was inspired by the time in between Friday and Resurrection Sunday, when all the disciples had to show for all their learning was a dead rabbi and a hostile community. What would it have been like to walk home after Jesus' burial, anything but assured of his resurrection?

In particular I wanted to explore Peter's perspective, and the complex emotions that I'm sure he was wrestling with after Jesus' death. He wasn't just a passive observer of the event. He'd been intimately connected with Jesus, the only disciple recorded as being confident enough in Jesus to say that he was the Messiah. And even after all that drama, all that conviction, in Jesus' time of suffering, Peter had still denied him to preserve his own well-being.

It must have tortured him. Imagine the relief, then, when Jesus came back--not only justifying all the disciples' faith in him, but willing to embrace Peter as a brother and to empower him to share the fulness of the Gospel with anyone and everyone he could. What a comeback story. And what an encouragement to me it is to see Peter's cowardly yet all-too-relatable failure turned so magnificently into Spirit-driven fire. 

Without the resurrection, we're all stuck in our failures. But Jesus defeated death so you too could rise up out of it and become his champion. 


Saturday


The world was ending.

more precisely,

the world had ended yesterday

a few hours after noon—

the visible simply took time

to catch up

with the invisible.

The Truth, invisible to so many,

still cloudy, even to his closest friends,

had been marched to his death

only yesterday afternoon.

His body,

heartbreakingly human,

lay lifeless, empty as a shattered vessel.

His blood had been red as it poured out,

no more extraordinary than a loaf of bread.


What was it he had said? 

For you I am broken, drained. 

Remember me always.

And as he passed the bread Peter had thought,

I would sooner forget my own name 

than You.

But he had been wrong. In weakness he’d failed

even while praying for the courage to fight.

Now his one hope, his redemption was gone,

hidden away in a tomb

whose stone, rolling to seal it,

had lodged itself in his throat

and would never be exorcised.


Don’t be afraid, he’d said. I will return.

But it couldn’t be true. 

Even if it were,

surely Peter had soiled his portion.

That wine-red blood was on his hands.

And the rooster had crowed his death sentence

even before they had condemned his Christ.

What sacrifice could cover the shame 

so real to him now, 

so much more piercing than any fable of forbidden fruit?

No, the golden hour had passed.

They had killed him,

and he had died like any man.


The dawn of that Sunday

Peter’s mind was an island,

a sheer, desolate crag.

A place no miracles could grow.

Blasphemer or coward, he’d earned

his reward. 


Someone burst in the door–

doors still existed, even in a world at its end--

Mary had been running.

She stood, eyes bright with tears,

catching enough breath to utter two words.

Two words,

and Peter’s legs couldn’t take him fast enough.


Two words:

He’s alive. 




Happy Easter!



Friday, July 22, 2022

On Surviving a Car Accident


Yesterday I was in a car accident, and it was rough. Every hour since it happened I've been praising God that no one was seriously hurt (except my beloved car, Han). Somehow we're all safe, and life is so much more valuable than a car. And I am humbled, once again, determined to keep glorifying the Lord for blessing me and everyone else with so many mercies. 

Since I can't seem to help going over the experience and almost none of those thoughts are helpful, I wrote a poem. Maybe it's therapeutic. At the very least it's something to offer. 

Life of a Car Crash

the crash feels like nothing,
like a sound,
like your arms floating up toward the heavens,
like a gesture of surrender.

it feels like blue,
the color of airbags,
it feels like black and white,
like looking through your eyelids.

it feels fuzzy
like losing your glasses,
like the only reality is the baby screaming
like no one and everyone hears you saying
sorry

it feels like shock,
like a moment of invincibility,
like remembering others exist somehow,
beyond yourself.

and then
it feels like a million questions,
like losing consciousness,
like recalling a dream

only later do you begin to sense
your body was in the car with you
and now it's one big bruise

and it feels like relief,
then like swallowed confusion
then like all the fear you should've felt
returning
and again

the crash was like dying
like resetting a switch on mortality
like we could've died and thank God
no one died

it plays over, 
theme and variations
it begs for resolution.
you begin to recover, mind and body
and soul
but that part feels like pain
and why does the pain come now

it's not the losing control
but the trying to find it again
that hurts.

Monday, April 18, 2022

Easter for the guilty ones

Barabbas is an afterthought in the Easter story, but this year I find myself compelled by his experience. He was guilty of great evil, yet the Jews demanded Jesus be crucified on the cross that had been prepared for him. 

What would it have been like to be the very man who was exchanged for Jesus on that Good Friday? We all are Barabbas in practice, all of our souls exchanged for the one perfect Jesus--but he was granted this intensely personal view of Jesus' propitiation for our sins in a way that no one else has ever known.

I hope he didn't take it for granted. I pray I never will. 



A Good Day for Barabbas

All I can see is the cross.

Lurking behind, looming before me

around and above me,

inescapable.

I know only one emotion now.

Fear.

Fear of dying.

And beyond that, the still more ominous fear

of death.

I know nothing good can await me there.

It is a dead end, the road to it paved

with pain and humiliation

and overshadowed by that sadistic tree.

They will come for me.

They will open the door and speak my name.

Barabbas,

they will sneer. 

They will spit it out like sour wine.

And then will come the real fear,

the slow and masochistic march.

I will see the cross,

feel its crushing weight

cut into my back.

My ears will fill with the sound of my name,

spoken with contempt, with derision.

Never again

will I hear love in those syllables.


I will feel the life within me churning,

writhing as if caught in a snare,

not knowing its escape will also be its downfall.

They will strip me bare

like Adam in the Garden.

The nails will snap shut their jaws

and I will wait to die, blessing and cursing every breath.


The cell door opens.

Barabbas,

they call. The first stone.

But the next ones fall from their hands.

They want him, not you.

Him

not me.


Who is this man, 

condemned to take my place?

Ashamed, I realize

I do not care.

Him, not me.

Not me.


I am a free man, an impossible 

contradiction,

but I cannot go home.

They may have freed me, but

they will never welcome me. 

My life is tainted by death.

Where else can I go but that inevitable place?

I am drawn to the hill,

the place where he died,

where my blood should have watered the ground.

My blood, not his.

But I am here, I am whole. And he is not. 

Who is he? I look up,

as if Heaven might answer

but when I lift my eyes, all I can see

is the cross. 

Monday, March 7, 2022

A Long-Awaited Treasure

Not so long ago, I was just sitting down to write my son Salem's birth story. Now he's almost 15 months old and here I am again, writing his little sister's. (The scene is very similar, actually, except for a few significant details: there are two cribs in the nursery now instead of one, and while one tiny baby sleeps on my chest, my firstborn is now too much his own man to ever do more than sit next to me on the couch for a few minutes. I'm using my phone, not my laptop, to draft this post, because toddlers have devious little fingers that can't be trusted with laptop keyboards.)

Lydia Zahava was born on February 28th, 2022, one day after her due date. 

She had spent the entire month previous playing practical jokes on me. Night after night I went to bed with mild contractions, thinking it couldn't possibly be that much longer until she finally decided to come out--and every morning I woke up, still pregnant and incredibly tired of it. By the middle of February my body felt so cumbersome that my husband started helping me into and out of bed without me needing to ask. I started avoiding the stairs in my house at any cost. I grew increasingly touchy about acquaintances' well-meaning inquiries of "how much longer?" and "no baby yet?"

I expected the end of my second pregnancy to involve less anxiety than the first, but in reality it was more excruciating--probably because of my expectations. I felt I should be more prepared, should be able to easily distinguish between real labor and a Braxton Hicks contraction. I thought my labor was sure to start suddenly, since my body had already been through the process before--and this is what I wanted, for things to simply happen. But these expectations kept getting disproven left and right. I told people sardonically that the feeling was like knowing you were going on a road trip soon, but not when you were leaving or where you were going--only that you had to be ready to leave at a moment's notice. 

One night as I treated Zac to my millionth rant on the subject, he stopped me and said, "Have you been praying about this? I haven't heard you mention God a single time in this whole conversation." To which I replied, "Get out of my face with that convicting nonsense."

Not really. But that is kind of how it felt. To be honest, I didn't want to talk to God about it because I thought I could predict what He'd say: that I should be patient and trust his timing and let go of my expectations. As much as I wished I could be patient, I was also tired of being placated and admonished. But I will begrudgingly admit that Zac was right to point this out to me. 

So I decided that I would just start complaining to God. Every morning I nagged Him with the same request, to finally meet this baby, knowing that one of these days that prayer would be answered with a yes. I stopped ending my prayers before they began. I told God how I was feeling. And He did not give me what I wanted--but He did also show me how okay it actually was for me to not get my way. Every notion I had about the perfect timing got chucked out the window one by one. We made a plan to induce on the 28th, a Monday. It was an unsavory choice for me, the last resort I hadn't wanted to worry about. But every day I got a little more comfortable with being proven wrong. 

Not that I gave up very easily. I still paced my living room like a caged tiger and danced around my kitchen and recklessly drank chamomile tea in the hopes that the little lady might catch my hints. 

She did not. Or if she did, she decided unequivocally to ignore them. By the 27th, Lydia's due date, she was no closer to moving herself out and I had been sufficiently humbled to no longer feel like inducing was somehow beneath me, like it meant I was giving up or admitting to my desperation. In other words, I got over myself a little bit. 

The day itself was a beautiful day. The night before, my parents came by our house to pick up Salem for his very first sleepover, and I didn't even cry after they left (I got that over with before they arrived). On Monday Zac and I got up at 5:45. I had predicted only restless, anxious sleep for myself--if any--but far from being anxious, I was relieved. That morning did indeed feel like getting ready for a road trip--a road trip that promised the best souvenir ever. Nothing was rushed. The car seat buckled in, the go bags stuffed in the trunk, the tiny polka dot dress for Lydia all ready for her to come home in style. The week's forecast was practically summery, so much so that I boldly left the winter weather car seat cover at home. 

To most people, when you say the words "in labor," the images that come to mind are hardly placid ones. Most people would not envision a pleasant day spent playing made-up word games with one's spouse, watching Marvel movies on TV, and cracking jokes with two nurses as they bustle around checking monitors and hooking up bags of fluid. But that was how we spent Lydia's birthday. The only low points in the day were getting a disgusting IV placed in my right forearm, and trying not to picture the epidural needle going into my back as I squeezed the life out of Zac's hands. 

I will never be ashamed of getting pain medication during labor. With Lydia, and Salem as well, once I had the epidural I was able to rest and really enjoy the time spent anticipating the birth. I can remember both days as peaceful, even restful, preparation for an exciting change. 

In total, I was in labor for about 9 hours. At 5:15 pm, my doctor arrived to interrupt our scheduled programming of Avengers: Endgame, and it was time to push (we did finish the movie afterward, ha). I was so grateful that this moment came before the nurse shift changed, so that the two nurses who had helped make my day so peaceful were the ones there with me when Lydia made her appearance. 

She was born at 5:41, weighing 7lb 15oz, measuring 20 inches long and looking, somehow, just like her dad. In the end she couldn't have made it easier on me. 

We named her Lydia Zahava. Lydia was Zac's choice: in his words, the prettiest name for a girl he could think of (and fitting, because it actually means "beauty"). Zahava is a name of Hebrew origin, from the word zahav, meaning "gold." Lydia Zahava, because of what a treasured gift she is to us, and because our prayer for her is that she will learn to find her worth in the beautiful identity that God bestowed upon her when He created her. 

I spent the next day in the hospital with her, just the two of us, since Zac, husband and dad extraordinaire, had to be at work. My mom brought Salem to see us during the day, and I loved watching his sweet, clumsy fascination with his new little sister. We brought both our babies home on the evening of March 1st. 

This time around, the wait was certainly the hardest labor, but our precious Lydia is well worth it. She's truly adorable, a little angel who looks just like her brother when she's sleeping and makes the tiniest squeaking noises whenever she stretches out her limbs. She's had no trouble at all stealing the hearts of everyone she meets--except maybe the cats. 

Welcome to the world, sweet girl. 

He will be the sure foundation for your times,
    a rich store of salvation and wisdom and knowledge;
    the fear of the Lord is the key to this treasure.

Isaiah 33:6










Wednesday, January 5, 2022

2021: the year of change in stasis

My word for 2021 was LEARN. Looking back, I think I did that.

Thank God for His patience with me, and His always faithful love. His goodness is eternal. His steadfastness is a well of courage. He is the only Truth in the universe, and He invites us to seek and find. 

Last year I...

Read the entire Harry Potter series out loud to my husband and son...

Acquired a new old car named Han "Stormtrooper" Solo...

Got a new dining table...

Had the scary leak in our basement fixed by some true professionals...

Found out I'm pregnant again! Baby girl Coté, due in February...

Lost one of the sweetest kitty boys in the world, the dashing and heroic Bombadil...







Said hello to a new friend, Princess Peach, and had fun watching her grow alongside baby Salem...









Grew some flowers in my garden...

Helped plan my sister's wedding to her true love...





And rejoiced very selfishly when they moved into a house only five minutes away...

Painted our house a bright, warm, Abuela's-house-in-Mexico orange (well, I and many friends)...



Made it just past the halfway mark on a novel I've been working on for some time (don't rush me)...

Saw the new baby giraffe at the zoo...

Took my boys to Vala's on a perfectly crisp fall day...

Watched my very cool, very determined husband run a marathon...


Relied on God a lot when our life was turned upside down over one week in November: both cars out of commission, broken and replaced furnace, and Zac lost his job...

Received the precious blessing of peace from the Holy Spirit as I watched God provide for all those needs with perfect timing...

Cheered Zac on as he found a new job...

Celebrated Salem's first birthday...


Spent a huge amount of time, planned and unplanned, at my parents' house, which somehow feels even more like home to me now than when I actually lived there...



Baptized a friend...

Shared dinner with my sister and her husband most Fridays...

Gave and received many gifts...




Cooked many meals, played many games, hugged many friends, sang many songs, read many books...





Daydreamed about the next time I will see Lake Superior...

Resolved to buy more books and fill my home with only good stories...

And to be more intentional with photos documenting a beautiful life...

And to never let fear appear to me more powerful than my God.


This year, my word is INVEST. May God bring fruit out of the learning.

"He who trusts in riches shall fall, but the righteous shall flourish like a green leaf." -Proverbs 11:28

Thursday, November 4, 2021

Another poem about washing the dishes (?)

What can I say but that monotony inspires poetry?


Prometheus

Eventually,

it all became routine.

The cliff, the eagle, the blood. 

There was a rhythm to it, a savage kind of defiance

in ceasing to struggle. 

Every day became a small eternity, 

its own cycle of destruction and reincarnation.

Every morning he blessed the sun for its renewal,

the fiery orb that both taunted and inspired him.

He blessed the sun,

the bright splash of daybreak,

the inward breath that told him he was whole once again.

He’d learned to number the clouds in their colors,

to lift his face and receive the light gratefully.

He would not blame the sun

though it was the herald of his doom, 

bearing on its rays the swift and hungry eagle.

He of all people should know,

fire brings life as well as death. 


Thursday, July 29, 2021

My ultimate book re-read list

Hello, you wonderful person.

Do you ever just sit and think about books? I do it often. More often, perhaps, than I actually read them (something I've excused myself from since having a baby, but need to work on).

I love books. Of the many things in my life that I feel strongly about, books are probably number 4 after Jesus, my precious family, and human rights for preborn babies. Passionate though I am about books, I suffer, as do many of my fellow bibliophiles, from the curse of forever desiring to purchase new books while also refusing to read them, instead returning to beloved titles from my formative years. In my home there are over 400 books, about 40 of which I've never read. That number keeps pretty stable, because every time I do miraculously read a new book, I consider that an achievement worthy of celebrating with (you guessed it) a new book. 

I do not, and will never understand those people who choose to never re-read books. I'm of the philosophy that a good story, the kind that goes beyond entertainment to actually enhance your shape as a person, is like a favorite meal--it should make you want to experience it again. Perhaps readers who refuse to re-read have simply never known a connection like that with a story and its characters, in which case they need to keep searching. 

I don't re-read all of my books, but I feel very blessed to have many I'm happy to greet as old friends every now and again.

So, if you haven't found your re-reads yet, this list might be a good place to start your journey of discovery.

1. Harry Potter. All of them. 

I re-read this epic saga every year and it never gets old. In fact, every time I re-enter Harry's world it feels new again. And it's especially exciting this year, as I've had the joy of reading it out loud to my husband and son.

2. The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings.

J.R.R. Tolkien's word-smithing is the stuff of magic. Reading his intricately woven masterpiece is like stepping back in time, both fascinating and bittersweet. No one writes like that anymore.

3. The Wind on Fire trilogy by William Nicholson.

These beautiful books are alien and inviting, heart-wrenching and humorous. They will make you feel courageous.

4. The Noble Warriors trilogy by the same.

I can't even put into words what I feel about these books. I read them at a crucial and difficult time in my life, and they helped me center myself and ironically (for Nicholson is an atheist), helped deepen my faith in a surprising way. 

5. The Tale of Despereaux by Kate DiCamillo.

One of those amazing books of which I have memories as vivid as any real-life experience. It's a tale of fear-conquering love, soup, and overcoming grief.

6. Wildwood Dancing and its companion, Cybele's Secret, by Juliet Marallier.

I discovered these beautiful fairy tales by accident at a library book sale. I love to re-read them in the fall, when the chilly air outside helps transport me to the Transylvanian forest where the first book is set. 

7. Alcatraz vs. the Evil Librarians by Brandon Sanderson.

I read (most of) these in 8th grade, at the recommendation of a scurrilous knave I had the misfortune of having a crush on. The books are so good they can't be tainted even by the memory of me making a fool of my 13-year-old self. And I have never laughed so hard at something I've read, ever, in my life. 

8. Attachments by Rainbow Rowell.

What can I say but that I love this book? I find myself in the characters. In my experience it's best re-read around the New Year, when everyone is hoping to turn over a new leaf after feeling, perhaps, a little stale for some time.

9. Wishing Moon by Michael O. Tunnel.

An Arabian Cinderella. What more could you ask for? I've re-read this on several occasions when my life was feeling distinctly un-magical. 

10. Watership Down by Richard Adams.

I have never been as surprised by a book as I was by this one. My mother and sister admonished me for years to read it, and I finally did in the week or so after giving birth to my son. It is beautiful and powerful and strange and my goal is to re-read it at Christmas every year. 


These are by no means the only books I could've added to this list, but for sanity I'll stop there. Happy Re-reading!



A fearful world needs courageous people

We live in a moment of fear. Fear is inherent in our culture; we breathe it in as we walk outside. We speak it into our relationships. We co...