On Turning 39 and Looking Up

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It’s always a bit of an ordeal, getting all six of us arranged in the small pew (Leo stays in the nursery during the service). Sam needs to be beside an adult and not beside Cade. Cade wants to sit at the inside edge so he can see. Lucy usually wants to sit beside Cade. Abra gets a little wiggly and needs an adult’s calming influence. It’s kind of like turning a Rubik’s cube. One that you have to shush every so often.

But yesterday Abra clambered into the pew with a big grin on her face. She scooched right up against me, as if was her favorite person in the world, and she handed me a birthday card she had made during her class. On the inside it said:

“Happy 49th Birthday, Daddy!”

Lest you think I am nearing the half-century mark, let’s halt this train right now. Because even though I went to bed last night with a hot water bottle under my lower back and an ice pack on my hip, and even though my beard is more white than brown, I assure you I am only 39. Not 49.

We had a good laugh about it, and later I took the card out of my pocket and stared at it again. Where will I be when I’m 49, I wondered? What will I be doing? My kids will be 22, 21, 17, 16, and 11, and this caused the most difficult realization fell into place.

Dear Lord.

Sammy will have his license.

* * * * *

Abra’s card makes me wonder, though. Ten years. The last ten went by in a blink. Ten years ago Maile and I were moving back from a four-year stint in England with only our oldest two children. The hard work of building a business overseas had worn us out. We had been married for only six years at that point and were like babies just learning to swim…paddle, paddle, paddle, mouth drops below the water’s edge, cough and sputter, paddle harder, rise up a bit, paddle, paddle paddle. Sink, rise, swim.

Sometimes it still feels that way. Sometimes we still take on a mouthful of water.

Also, we could never have imagined the heartache waiting for us in those next ten years. A failed business, near financial ruin, two miscarriages, leaving a community we loved. We could never have imagined the glorious things either: three more children, a cross-country trip, success at living a writing life, and finding another community we loved in the heart of a wonderful, small city.

If a lot can happen in a year, then ten years is like a lifetime. What can happen in ten years?

None of us have any idea what can happen in ten years. That’s the answer. We don’t really have a clue.

* * * * *

John Irving says that “If you are lucky enough to find a way of life you love, you have to find the courage to live it,” and for the last five years I thought for me that meant writing. I had found a way of life I loved. I realized I could help people tell their life stories, and I loved it. I still do. I’m working with three people right now, writing their stories, and when I hand them the book at the end, it’s more than a feeling of accomplishment. It’s like I’ve been able to bottle their story. When their kids read those books and send me emails thanking me for showing them sides of their parents they never knew…and then I think about how lucky I am to make a living doing this…wow.

So that’s what I’ve thought for quite some time now. That is the way of life I love: writing. During the last five years, I have had to find the courage to live that writing life.

But as I think about Abra’s card, and as I look ahead to the next ten years, I’m not so sure. Maybe I will keep writing people’s stories for the next ten years. But maybe, just maybe, the way of life I love isn’t specifically writing. Maybe the way of life I love is this constant upward and onward, like when the Pevensey kids in the Narnia Chronicles finally end up in Real Narnia, and Aslan keeps shouting, “Further up and further in!”

Maybe the way of life I love is this idea that something else is next, something even more adventurous, something even more exhilarating.

Something that will bring me even closer to the heart of God.

* * * * *

This Sunday after church, three wise and gracious people spent about thirty minutes of their time listening to me. We will continue to do this for three or four more weeks, and then, if we think it worth continuing,  we will keep on in some regular way for the foreseeable future. I call them generous because they are there for me, and me alone. They expect nothing from me, other than that I show up, am honest, and join them in this process of seeking.

Specifically, they are there to help me grasp for a greater discernment of where God is leading me. Might God, at the end of a few months, help us to see that I am exactly where I should be, that storytelling and story-gathering is what I have been created to continue doing? That’s a possibility.

But might God also reveal something about me that has, until now, been murky? Might God bring additional clarity to the cloudy corners of my existence?

That’s also likely. More than likely, I’d think, as it always is for those of us who stop and listen.

* * * * *

I’ll end this rather long and rambling post with a question, for you.

Yes, you.

If you opened yourself up, if you honestly set everything else aside and sat quietly in the presence of God, would God say, “Keep going. Keep doing what you’re doing. Stay the course”?

Or would God say, “Okay now. Time to move. Onward and upward! Further up and further in!”

Please don’t let something like expected career path determine your answer. For heaven’s sake, don’t let your age define whether you should stay put or hike further on. Don’t let critical voices or the perceived expectations of others provide you with the answer. Lack of schooling, lack of resources, lack of experience…these things should never have the final word.

Which is it for you? “Keep doing what you’re doing,” or “Further up and further in?”

You can only know the answer to this question if you stop, if you listen.

I Know You May Know This. But It Helps To Say It Still.

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Photo by Derek Truninger via Unsplash

This Advent Letter to Those We’ve Lost is written by Guy Delcambre to his wife who he lost five years ago.

* * * * *

Marianne,

You may know this.

There were days I teetered close to death myself. I wished then that I were the one who’d gone away. Not you who held the words, which soothed their baby hearts so well, but me. Behind a fixed smile hung to protect all that died within me when you left. I couldn’t help but think they were fiercely cheated in life with me alone here on this side of time. I watched in horror as their eyes dimmed and the coloring sheets they made just for you, the ones meant to comfort you, to fill the room surrounding your hospital bed, fell to the ground. Helplessly I observed death snatch innocence right from their little hearts. They trembled for years. I stumbled for some. I know you may know this. But it helps to say it still.

You may be aware of them. My, how they’ve grown! Each slowly stretching into beautiful young ladies who I’m hoping will be strong women not stained by grief, but improved by its haunting presence returning through those years. I say improved not because loss is some sort of treasure. No certainly not. Rather, loss has introduced grief into our lives and grief is a graceful teacher to those who’ll learn. We’ve learned through tears and fights and wounds splitting open again to spill longing and fear onto the floor of the house we call home.

It’s Christmastime again. The fifth since you left this life. With each passing year, the season lightens a bit more in grief’s working to loosen the suffocating grasp of loss on our family. We remember you in stories and smiles. The girls soak in them both as they learn better that grief isn’t a taker, but in this way, a giver.

We have hope here in this time present.

You may see. There’s a woman who swept into our lives as an elegant breeze. She carries hope in the warm depths of her chest. She’s unbelievably strong in the way her heart loves and often undeniably oblivious to this strength of hers. I love her deeply. And, she is brave. Unflinchingly she strolled into our tattered lives ready to join in and belong here with us. The way she smiled, as though she could see our wounds and went right about dressing them so they could heal. It was almost as if she traveled in from tomorrow or knew a secret we hadn’t yet heard. Her love stirred my heart, and I awoke someone new.

There are days now so difficult, words I still don’t have to heal their hearts with, but I wouldn’t want to be anywhere but here now. I have something now I’ve never fully had before: hope. That’s one thing death couldn’t take. Hope is the day that never ages and calls us beyond our difficulties and ourselves. In only a way God could so reposition such a pain, I suppose this is the gift you give to us each year during this time.

You may know these things I’ve said. Still, it helps me to say them and to hold them. For the past five years since you’ve gone away have been the most beautiful to endure. I am happy and full.

* * * * *

Guy Delcambre is the author of Earth and Sky, the story of a traveler walking through the deepest valley and the highest mountain, through great heartache and unexpected joy. It is not a book about grief, but a book about grace and the goodness of God in the darkest night.

Previous Advent Letters to Those We’ve Lost:

The Dust of Glory by Andi Cumbo-Floyd
This Should Be Your Second Christmas: I Wish You Were Still Here by Alise Chaffins
Dear Mom, I Have Your Christmas Cookie Cutters
by Bethany Suckrow
Sometimes It Seems Like I Am the Ghost in the Room by Rebecca Mast
Advent Letters to Those We’ve Lost

Also, we’ve completed the first season of the podcast, The Story of My Death. Caleb Wilde, Bryan Allain, and I recorded three different episodes in which we interview people who tell compelling, intimate stories about death. Caleb tries to give away a Hearse. Bryan tries to make us laugh. The episodes are funny, sad, poignant, brave, and heartwarming. You can check out the first season of episodes HERE.

The Dust of Glory

MomChristmas2009 copyThis Advent Letter to Those We’ve Lost is written by Andi Cumbo-Floyd. One of my great regrets in life is that her mother died of cancer before I could meet her. She passed away on Thanksgiving Day, 2010.

Here is Andi’s letter to her:

* * * * *

Dear Mama,

This morning, I found out that we are, yet again, not pregnant. . . and all I want to do is turn on the Christmas tree lights, sit beside you, and hear you tell me about when you were surprised to find out you were pregnant. I want to ask your advice about our journey. I want to get some of the comfort you gave out like breath.

But you are not here . . . still and again. . . and it is the third Sunday of Advent, and I cannot help but sit heavy with sadness – grief, once it comes in, shades everything a little more charcoal. The white Christmas lights that I insist on because you taught me their beautiful simplicity. The jigsaw puzzle of Santa that I am putting together SO slowly, doing the straight-edges first as you taught me. The journal that sits next to your Bible, the one I read every morning. All of these things carry both the light and the shadow of your existence.

In this season of waiting – for babies both eternal and mortal – I miss you. I miss your laugh – the way it filled a room with its joy. I miss your wisdom, doled out in tiny measure over stories with coffee on our pj-clad mornings when I came home as an adult. But this time of year, I miss your music most.

When you sat at the piano, a dust of glory shown around you. Your whole body moved behind your fingers, beauty streaming forth, praise to the God you trusted –with strenuous commitment and a whole bevy of doubt – glowing into the whole room like frankincense.

Oh, there is worship even in memory.

Remember that year you wrote that Christmas cantata from the perspective of “the least of these.” How you took to heart God’s choice to send Jesus as an infant and pushed us all to see that when we are on the bottom, we sometimes see the glory best? That was my favorite Christmas program you ever did.

This morning, I feel a bit on the bottom, and yet, you taught me that when you’re really low-down, the best thing to do is look up and give yourself over to the work that lets you shine. For me, Mama, that’s words . . . and I can only pray that when I write them well, a little of that glory dust spills out and shines up the room as your music did.

I love you, Mama. I can’t wait to see you again. Merry Christmas!

Love,

A

* * * * *

This Should Be Your Second Christmas – I Wish You Were Still Here

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This Advent Letter to Those We’ve Lost is written by Alise Chaffins. Her son Elliott was stillborn on June 4, 2014, when she was 35 weeks pregnant. Four weeks later, my wife Maile gave birth to Leo, and there has been a connection in my mind between Leo and Elliott ever since.

Here is Alise’s letter:

* * * * *

My Sweet Elliott,

I miss you. Every day, every day,  every day. But there are times when that missing deepens a little bit. Times when I think of what could have been – what should have been – and I wish I could hold you again.
I said that there are times when the missing deepens, and that’s especially true of Christmas. My Instagram feed is filled with family pictures, which means lots of photographs of the babies that were born at the same time as you – little boys and girls who get to grow up and see what the world has in store for them, not stunted in infancy like you. Pictures that get to change each year, rather than just a new filter on the same dozen or so pictures I have of you.

And it’s not just the pictures on Instagram and the Facebook updates. It’s in our Christmas carols, in the nativity scenes, in the Bible passages. The story of a little boy, born thousands of years ago. And to make things worse, this baby’s birth is seldom talked about without mentioning his death as well.

Sometimes I want to ask people to stop, just for a minute, and simply enjoy the miracle of the birth. Let’s not rush Jesus to his death, but let’s just take a breath and celebrate his life. Not even how well he lived and what an amazing teacher he was, but simply that he was born. That he grew and kicked and was born. That alone should cause us to marvel.

This should be your second Christmas. Last year you would have barely been able to sit up, but this year, oh this year you would be tearing around the house with your brothers and sister, adding to the noise and commotion of our big, blended family. I say that I want to hold you again, but let’s be honest, you would be at the age when holding would be hard to come by. I can just see your little legs pumping around the living room, clambering over your siblings, trying to sort out where you fit in. I can see the little annoyances and the big affection that would come from your family.

You would probably be starting to talk. If you were like your brothers, maybe not a lot of words quite yet, but you would know me, you would know your daddy. You would say our names, and even if we were exhausted from a lack of sleep, you’d melt our hearts with those words. Mama. Dada.

I wish you were still here. Sometimes I’m tempted to “look for the bright side,” but the bright side would be you here with us. The bright side would be something completely different than what is.

Instead, I’m finding that I need to allow myself to feel grief when it happens. To allow the tears to fall when they come to my eyes. To allow myself to think about you when you come to my mind.

This Christmas, that is the gift that I can give you. The gift of remembrance.

And son, you have given me a gift as well, even though at times I don’t recognize it. Not the gift of a bright side, but the gift of darkness. The gift of permission to seek help for so many other hard things that have happened. The gift of vulnerability.

You have given me the gift of grief.

I love you, baby boy.

Your Mommy

* * * * *

Alise Chaffins recently released a book called Embracing Grief: Leaning Into Loss to Find Life. She is a wife, mother, eater of soup, and defender of the Oxford comma. She writes about life and grief, and how embracing grief allows for a fuller life. You can follow her online on Facebook and Twitter. She blogs regularly at knittingsoul.com.

Previous Advent Letters to Those We’ve Lost:

Dear Mom, I Have Your Christmas Cookie Cutters by Bethany Suckrow
Sometimes It Seems Like I Am the Ghost in the Room by Rebecca Mast
Advent Letters to Those We’ve Lost

Also, we’ve completed the first season of the podcast, The Story of My Death. Caleb Wilde, Bryan Allain, and I recorded three different episodes in which we interview people who tell compelling, intimate stories about death. Caleb tries to give away a Hearse. Bryan tries to make us laugh. The episodes are funny, sad, poignant, brave, and heartwarming. You can check out the first season of episodes HERE.

Dear Mom, I Have Your Christmas Cookie Cutters

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This Advent Letter to Those We’ve Lost is written by Bethany Suckrow to her mother, Tina, who died January 2, 2012, after a 14 year struggle with metastatic breast cancer. Her last day at home was Christmas Day, 2011, before she went into hospice care for the last week of her life.

* * * * *

Dear Mom,

I have your Christmas cookie cutters, your dough mat and rolling pin, and your mixing bowls. Dad brought them to me because he’s been cleaning out the house, getting it ready to sell. This, if nothing else, is a reminder of how much has changed in our lives this year.

Dad remarried and moved into his wife’s house early this summer. A few months later, Jacob and Kayla tied the knot and bought a home of their own, which is where we’ll be staying for Christmas. It’s strange, this prospect of going to my hometown for the holidays without going to the home of my childhood. But I think this is the start of a new era. Your kids are talking about the traditions we want to create in our changing family. We’re finding ways to do for ourselves what you always did for us. I think you’d be proud.

What I remember about you at Christmastime is the way that you always forged a path to joy with festive rituals. There were so many years when hope seemed to elude us with crushing circumstances – bad diagnoses, bad financial circumstances. Another parent might have allowed the bad to ruin the good, to let the season fall apart with the sadness. I want you to know that although I do remember the difficult circumstances, I don’t remember a single bad Christmas. I remember those years for the beauty that you made of them, like a candle in the darkness. The traditions and the rituals were a means of survival for our family. Every cookie, every carol, every ornament was a good tiding, calling us to great joy. A joy that transcended our circumstances, even after your death.

I hang the ornaments on my tree, I bake your stuffed french toast, I play our favorite Christmas songs, and for a little while, everything is merry and bright. The grief is bittersweet but bearable. I feel like you’re near to me – a small miracle, considering just how often I feel as if I’m waiting for you, despite how hard I try to move forward with my life.

Truthfully, I’m not sure I’m ready to make your cookies on my own yet. For one thing, I have all your tools but I haven’t found the recipe. Also, without having kids around, I’m only making cookies for myself and that seems a little too decadent, even for me.

But I’ve surrounded myself with good tidings again this year – the ornaments, the tacky holiday tea towels, the Amy Grant Christmas carols. I’m basking in the joy of your memory. My heart is light. Thank you.

* * * * *

Previous Advent Letters to Those We’ve Lost:
Sometimes It Seems Like I Am the Ghost in the Room by Rebecca Mast
Advent Letters to Those We’ve Lost

You can find out more about Bethany and read some of her beautiful writing over at her website HERE.

If you wonder why I’m running this Advent series of letters to those we’ve lost, you can find the answer HERE.

Also, we’ve completed the first season of the podcast, The Story of My Death. Caleb Wilde, Bryan Allain, and I recorded three different episodes in which we interview people who tell compelling, intimate stories about death. Caleb tries to give away a Hearse. Bryan tries to make us laugh. The episodes are funny, sad, poignant, brave, and heartwarming. You can check out the first season of episodes HERE.

Advent Letters to Those We’ve Lost

Photo by Harman Wardani via Unsplash
Photo by Harman Wardani via Unsplash

I think Advent and Grief are two sisters wandering the wide world, two sisters who every year cross paths and decide to walk together for a spell. If you are so brave as to step foot in a shopping mall this time of year, it seems that for every wide-eyed child waiting in a long line to meet Santa, you’ll also find a grown-up wandering the store with empty eyes, someone for whom this season brings thoughts of what-ifs and might-have-beens.

I write this without any pride or malice, simply as a statement of fact: this world has been kind to me. My parents are together and living. Only one of my twenty aunts and uncles has passed away. I have one grandmother remaining, and she is dear to me. My grandfathers both died relatively young, in their late 50s or early 60s.

We grieved through two miscarriages. Yes. There was that. And there have been financial avalanches, but we have not yet been overcome. And yes, we grieved the loss of communities when we moved by choice or by necessity.

But as I get older, I start to recognize the deep grief around me. Parents losing children. Spouses dying far too soon. Cancer. Divorce. ALS. This world can be a dark and shadowy place.

Grief refuses to leave us, even when her sister Advent draws near. And so I am beginning to see how the holiday season can, for some, only serve to magnify the scope of their loss.

This week I’m going to share some special, intimate letters with you. Notes written from people during Advent to those who they have lost. There is a young mother of three who lost her husband in a tragic accident. There are daughters who lost their mothers. A husband who lost his wife.

This is the face of Grief, and we do ourselves no favors if we ignore it. We do our fellow sojourners an injustice when we expect them to put a happy face on so that we can have the all-smiles holiday we’re looking for. Please read these letters and consider reaching out to someone you know, someone who has recently suffered loss, someone who bears the heavy burden of grief. It gets a little heavier this time of year. They need someone to help them carry it.

I think if you do, you’ll both, together, discover a new kind of joy. A new kind of peace.

Did you know I started doing a podcast with Bryan Allain and Caleb Wilde called The Story of My Death? In it we interview people and they tell a story about a loved one who died. Sounds depressing? You should check it out – the stories are beautiful, and the people are strong. You can find it HERE.