Mama For a Moment

Today’s guest post (minus the lengthy intro) comes to you from the always transparent Tamara Out Loud. Maile and I had the privilege of meeting her and her family a few weeks ago while traveling through Gainesville, Florida, and she’s just as kind and fun in person as she is in her writing. If you’ve never been over to her blog, you’re missing out – follow the link at the end. She’s an exquisite story-teller and her writing explores the crucial topics we often try to gloss over or avoid.

I’m honored to post this piece by her today because it’s the first time she’s ever shared in writing her story of being a foster mom. It’s also the first time I’ve ever cried in a McDonald’s while reviewing a guest post for my blog.

When she sent it to me, she wrote “This guest post for you made me grieve hard. I’ve never written anything that made me cry like I have tonight…Yet, writing it for you because we once talked about the fact that I’d done fostering and it meant something to your family gave me a push I never would have forced on myself for my own blog. And I think I needed it. So all this to say: thanks, even if you didn’t realize it, for the catharsis of retelling this story in the way I know best.”

And that’s one of the things I love about story-telling: the healing it can bring. So without further delay, Tamara’s story:

* * * * *

The social worker had a thin frame and kind eyes. He hefted the bloated baby as gently as he could through my front door and set him on the family room floor. He gave me the blue folder, thick with legal jargon and cobbled details of a life not yet a year long but already so laden. The sweet boy, immobilized by his own weight, looked up at me with such innocence to his whole situation, eyes like dark chocolate under curled lashes, and all his weight immobilized me too.

I could hardly hold him, and I could hardly not. I sweet-talked him with my mama voice and he felt no need to cry.

We began right away to try to undo the damage of eleven months of neglect. But a boy who’s lived his whole life in a high chair, given food instead of care, isn’t one much for veggies; he certainly can’t crawl. So we were patient and persistent, and after one month in our home, the only junk he had had was his first-birthday cupcake. As he mashed cake and tasted frosted fingers, I’m not sure who delighted more– the darling birthday boy, or the family to whom he already belonged.

And the family who fed him with health and with love was more than my husband, our three kids, and me– it was also the ones whence we came. He’s been gone from our home for four years now, but my grandmother still asks about him and it kills me not to have answers, and my mom still cracks up at memories of him and sniffles back tears at his pictures.

We always knew he wasn’t ours to keep, but that’s true of any child; it doesn’t stop the heart from hoping. And when the placing agent asks if you’d be open to adoption, your brain can get tripped up too. But what can you do, and you just love them, and you pray for their best, never mind yourself, but somehow your self sneaks in.

So I picked him up from daycare each afternoon, and by then he could mightily toddle, and with arms outstretched to the one he knew best, he beamed, “Mama!” and I loved him.

But the call came too soon, and the voice was too harsh. She was his caseworker and I was only his foster mother– a place holder for a real parent, a temporary fix in a state-wide shortage, a volunteer with no rights whatsoever. Not even to advocate for the little one in my care. He’d be picked up the next day and transferred to a foster home closer to the area his transient mother hung near. It would be easier for the agency to coordinate transportation if ever she decided she’d like to see her son.

I grasped madly at wits amid hot tears and laid out in a voice with as little tremor as I could manage his sure benefits in staying. He was thriving; I would drive him to see his mother; we’d make room in our small house for his sister. I don’t know how much was articulated logic and how much, desperate pleas. But it didn’t matter what I said, and she gave herself away in the end: I didn’t know how to raise him anyway– I was white and he was black.

The words slapped my heartbreak into fury, and I spat my demand to speak to her superior. The kinder woman calmed me with embarrassed apology, but sadness, only ebbed, came back and washed me over. And I told her there was just no way I could have him ready the next morning– I needed the weekend to clean all his clothes. But you really can’t prepare a baby to leave what he knows of home, and all the clean clothes a duffel bag can hold buy a mama only so much time.

So we took our small gift of three days, and when the transporters came to take the little boy, they had to stuff goodbye-balloons from enamored daycare teachers beside him in the backseat. And as he looked at me with those beautiful baby eyes, he didn’t know that it was the last time he’d see this mama’s face. But he was fed full of her love.

* * * * *

Tamara Lunardo works out her thoughts on life and faith at Tamara Out Loud, occasionally with adult language, frequently with attempted humor, and hopefully with God’s blessing. She is the editor of What a Woman is Worth, due out this summer through Civitas Press. You can connect with her on Twitter and Facebook.

When a Woman Isn’t Allowed to Run the Race

My friend (and blog designer extraordinaire) Jason McCarty posted this picture on his Facebook page a few days ago, and something about it caught my attention. What’s up with the dude in the suit accosting that innocent woman trying to run a race? I had to read the caption.

It turns out Kathrine Switzer became the first woman to run the Boston marathon in 1967. But it wasn’t until the race had already begun that race organizer Jock Semple realized a woman was running. (That’s him in the suit trying to rip her numbers off.) Reportedly, he chased her down, shouting:

“Get the hell out of my race and give me those numbers.”

However, Switzer’s boyfriend and other male runners provided a protective shield during the entire marathon.

* * * * *

photo by Shar Halvorsen of Simply S Photography

Things like this snag my attention now that I have two daughters. One of them is in her bunk reading. The other is trying to sneak toys in under her covers. But some day they will make the connection between who they are and what they want to do, and when that day comes I will do everything in my power to help them be whatever it is.

Race a car.

Be a mom.

Run a company.

Lead a church. (Ouch, a lot of you were with me until that last one, eh?)

Whatever.

* * * * *

I wonder if their race will be hindered by men trying to tear off their numbers in one form or another.

I hope my girls will have the perseverance to keep going.

And, should it prove necessary, I hope that other men and women will form a protective circle around my two little girls and help them run the race they set out to run.

* * * * *

There are some great discussions going on in the interwebs about this topic. For starters, check out Ed Cyzewski’s series, “Women in Ministry” or Pam Hogeweide’s book, Unladylike: Resisting the Injustice of Inequality in the Church.

Upcoming projects include Tamara Lunardo’s What a Woman is Worth and Rachel Held Evans’ A Year of Biblical Womanhood.

Palm Trees Can Be Very Convincing (Or the Problem With Comfort)

The blue bus relaxes in the shade of tall trees on a small back street in a quiet suburb. A thick electrical cord winds its way to a 30-amp socket, meaning the generator (aka the old man under the bus) can take a rest. A wide tube exits from the innards of the bus and trails into a septic tank, meaning the waste can be emptied at any time. This little spot under the trees is a comfortable place.

At night we turn on three small fans. One pulls cool air in through the only window that opens. The second one, situated in the hall, pushes the cool air up to Cade’s bunk. Lucy hoards the third fan in the top bunk, where the air is warmest. When the lights blink off, the sound of the three fans creates a trio of white noise, lullabies of refreshing air that sing us all to sleep. We wake up in the morning cold, wrapped in blankets we didn’t think we’d ever need again.

This is the most comfortable spot we’ve been in during our entire trip. No need to drive anywhere. No diesel required. Palm trees on the other side of the street wave their fronds up and down, up and down, moving in a rhythm not unlike the sweeping movement of a hypnotist’s locket and chain. The leaning trees whisper to us:

“You are feeling very sleepy. You’re eyelids are growing heavy. Now count slowly backwards from ten to one. Repeat after me: this is a comfortable place. This is a comfortable place. I do not want to leave this place.”

Palm trees can be very convincing.

* * * * *

Comfort is a funny thing. We aim for it. We strive for it. We work hard to attain it. So much of what we do in life is centered around becoming comfortable. I eat because I don’t like the discomfort of feeling hungry. I sleep to ward off weariness. I work to make money so that I can have nice things that make my life easier or more fun.

And I don’t think there’s anything wrong with that.

But comfort brings new problems. Comfort attained often inhibits growth. It distracts us from setting or reaching new goals. Having grown comfortable, we stop learning about ourselves. In the end, comfort makes us rigid and inflexible in our thinking.

* * * * *

Here we are. We have become very comfortable in Pinecraft, Florida, with our bus hooked up to electric and a septic tank, no need for diesel, and a place to do laundry. These small comforts make it difficult to think about leaving. But today we leave. We head north. We begin the second quarter of our journey. 8500 miles to go.

The refusal to relinquish existing comforts derails dreams and places us on paths with other unsavory travelers: Boredom and Ineffective Living.

It would be silly to live the rest of our lives on a bus parked on a small street in Pinecraft just because we don’t want to give up these comforts. Think of all the sights we’d miss out on! Think of all the people we’d never meet! Think of all the annoying adventures we wouldn’t have!

Don’t let comfort keep you from living. Don’t let the fear of discomfort keep you camped on a back street of life. Don’t be scared to disconnect, batten down the hatches, and hit the road, if that’s where your journey leads you.

The Best Way to Become a Bitter, Angry Person

I’ve been thinking a lot about flexibility. Emotional and mental flexibility. The ability to bend under varying pressures without tearing any fibers. Then, like an unexpected flash of lightning on a clear night, I read this by Henri Nouwen (whose spirit has obviously been peeking through the windows of our bus, or the thickly veiled windows of my soul):

“Trees look strong compared with the wild reeds in the field. But when the storm comes the trees are uprooted, whereas the wild reeds, while moved back and forth by the wind, remain rooted and are standing up again when the storm has calmed down.”

“Flexibility is a great virtue. When we cling to our own positions and are not willing to let our hearts be moved back and forth a little by the ideas or actions of others, we may easily be broken. Being like wild reeds does not mean being wishy-washy. It means moving a little with the winds of the time while remaining solidly anchored in the ground. A humorless, intense, opinionated rigidity about current issues might cause these issues to break our spirits and make us bitter people. Let’s be flexible while being deeply rooted.”

Clinging to my own positions, unwilling to let my heart be moved back and forth even a tiny bit by the ideas and actions of others.

How many times am I humorless? Opinionated? Rigid about current issues?

If there’s one thing I’m learning on this trip, it’s the importance of flexibility. I can be deeply rooted in my decision regarding where our next stop is, but if I’m unwavering in WHEN we’re going to leave or HOW LONG it will take to get there or EXACTLY WHAT TIME we will arrive, the little detours that come up, the innocent diversions, the unlooked for blessings…they all get plowed under by my unrelenting determination. Or even worse, when I try to knock over insurmountable obstacles, I get depressed or angry.

See life through a lens tinted by humor. Hold opinions loosely. Always remember, no matter how difficult it might be to accept, that you could be wrong. Seriously. It’s possible.

Become an emotionally flexible person.

How to Win Big Money and Make a Lot of Friends

My new e-book, “Building a Life Out of Words,” officially releases on Tuesday, March 27th. For those of you who are mathematically challenged, that’s in 11 days. And I could really use your help to get the word out.

So here are some ways you can help:

1) If you have a blog and are willing to write up a review, I will send you a free PDF copy. Not only that, but if you post the review on Tuesday, March 27th, I’ll put your name into a drawing to win a $100 gift card (that’s big money, right?). Let me know in the comments or shoot me an email (shawnsmucker@yahoo.com) if you’d like to get involved.

2) If you’re on Facebook or Twitter, I plan on hosting a Facebook party as well as a Twitter party during the week of the 27th. How does that work? I’m not exactly sure yet, but stay tuned because if you participate you’ll have the opportunity to win some awesome prizes.

3) Buy the book! It will be available for $3.99 on the Nook, Kindle, or as a PDF.

Thanks to all of you for being such faithful readers. You are so generous in the way you share my posts with your friends as well as encourage Maile and I through your comments and messages. We wouldn’t be enjoying this trip around the country even half as much if it weren’t for your constant input and positive feedback.

 

The Power of Prayer and an Empty Waste Tank: Our First Month on the Road

One month ago we pulled away from my parent’s house in a big blue bus. Everything felt foreign and surreal and very, very exciting, sort of like when I first showed up for junior high looking forward to having my own locker. We drove just under two hours and arrived in Gettysburg unscathed. So began the trip we had always dreamed of taking.

Then an interesting turn of events. Our heavenly visions of cruising the country, listening to Willie Nelson and Tom Petty, the wind blowing through our hair while the children sat in the back learning multiple foreign languages, collided with reality. I got the bus stuck in a ditch. The waste tank was difficult and time consuming to empty. The two youngest kids got sick, and I got stressed out. It was like when the first few weeks of junior high passed and I realized that everything and everyone, including me, was difficult and weird and very, very awkward.

Then came the day, about two weeks into our journey, when we drove into North Carolina. A driving rain caused a steady drip to fall in through the emergency escape hatch and on to the floor in the small hallway. All four kids slept in the back: peace on earth. Maile sat perched in the passenger’s seat, and she turned to me with a strange look on her face.

“This isn’t exactly what we expected, is it?”

I just shook my head. Then I looked at her. We both started laughing.

“If we’re going to keep going,” I said, the words barely escaping through the laughter, “we need a serious attitude adjustment.”

Maile said a little prayer for us right there inside Willy as we flew through that rainy afternoon in North Carolina. A prayer for peace. For chill-outedness. For the wisdom to drop our worry and obsession about tomorrow like the waste we emptied out of the bus every three to four days.

And it kind of worked.

We decided to enjoy each day as it happened. If we only ever looked forward to GETTING THERE, we’d never enjoy HERE. We stopped letting minor obstacles steal our joy. We tried to embrace what Henri Nouwen refers to as the “Here and Now.” It took us two weeks and 1500 miles, but we started catching on.

Then, from the ashes of our worries and the remnants of our stress rose the hint of beautiful things: stunning friendships, the glaring light of opportunity, and that peculiar thing called “a love of adventure.”

The most intriguing part is that nothing has changed. Willie is still Willie. Our kids still occasionally overwhelm us as their energy erupts in this small space. Diesel prices continue to climb. We don’t know where we’re going to live when it’s all over, and I’m still trying to line up some projects for the second half of the year. Nothing has changed.

Yet everything has changed – I found peace in the most unlikeliest of places. Even a place as unique as a forty-foot bus.

Where’s the strangest place you’ve ever found peace?