Yet Another Goodbye

I think I nursed my baby for the final time last night, as tonight I ended up skipping our nightly nursing and instead just sang to him and gave him a cup of milk. While I didn’t plan it in advance, I’ve known this day was likely coming sooner rather than later, as my baby is 16 months now and in recent days has been barely nursing before I tuck him into bed.

For the last month or two, I’ve stopped bringing my phone with me when I rock and nurse him, so that instead of being distracted by scrolling (ever more disheartening) news stories, I can just be mindful of him. I’m thankful for this, for these extra moments of singing to him and noticing the warm weight of him in my arms, the shape of his cheeks, the sound of his breathing and swallowing, the smell of his freshly shampoo-ed hair, what it feels like squeeze his warm, pajammied squishiness close.

But these last couple of days he has hardly nursed at all when I rock him, although he still has wanted to snuggle and sing bedtime lullabies with me. And tonight it just felt right to forego nursing altogether, even though a part of me didn’t want to believe the time to say goodbye had truly come. I suppose this is yet another lesson in the complexity of holding multiple experiences, of how even something that is good and right can also feel sad and hard.

I’ve been putting off ending nursing with him in a way that I didn’t with my first. I’m not sure exactly why. I think a part of it may be because this time I don’t know if I will ever nurse again. Will I have another baby, or will my second also be my last? Right now I don’t have an answer; I really don’t know. And yet from this space of not knowing I still need to live, to love.

I think another part of my reticence also has to do with not wanting to say goodbye to yet another precious thing, after a year of what has felt like loss after loss and sorrow upon sorrow—globally, nationally, and personally (even though I realize I’ve lost far less than many). All of these layers of grief make one more loss—even a loss that is a healthy and even joyful part of my baby growing into toddlerhood—feel sad.

Losing nursing reminds me of other losses, of things that are gone and can never be again. And it goes against my desire to freeze time and hold everything close and familiar, as it is, forever. I realize, intellectually, that a part of life is that it is always changing, growing, shifting—with loss and joy intermingled. But my heart still feels sad for now.

I suppose sadness and loss are fitting reflections and feelings to be experiencing during this first week of lent, a time when we are called to remember and honor and enter into suffering (Jesus’, others’, our own). I want to be brave enough to make space for grief, even while holding on to the hope of life—life offered in the full by Jesus, but also in the little everyday experiences such as how my boys grow and play and laugh and cry, fiercely feeling and present even amidst the sorrows of the world.

A Note of Love to my One Year Old

And just like that, my littlest love, you are 1, and you are walking..!

In what has been a dark year in the world and in my own emotional life, you have been such a beam of light. I’m so grateful for you, and I delight in you and in getting to know and love you more each day.

I’m so thankful for your joyful and resilient spirit, how quick you are to smile and laugh, how you’re not afraid to show your feelings of sadness and anger, how you get back up when you fall, how you face your fears with a growl and a show of curiosity, how you seek out relationship and also know how to be independent, how you know how to make the best of things, how you insist on your voice being heard, how you delight in learning new things, how incredibly busy you are, how you love to give kisses.

There are many things you (and your big brother) have been teaching me this year, but one lesson in particular that I’ve been reflecting on is about love. You have been showing me how love—and the context in which love occurs—does not have to be “perfect” in order to be “good enough”, and that there is joy and grace and unexpected resilience in this (less-than-perfect) space that is messy but still beautiful.

When you entered the world in 2019, none of us had any idea what 2020 would have in store, and the first year of your life definitely did not look like what I had imagined. But amidst many tears and worries, this year has also had so much love and hope, and we have shared many dear moments amidst the difficulty. I wouldn’t trade you, or the time we have shared together as a family this past year, for the world.

And now you are walking bravely ahead into a new year of life, falling down and getting back up, toddling here and there and everywhere. When you took your first steps a few weeks ago, you looked so very happy and full of smiles. We all bore witness to your accomplishment, and were so proud of you. Your big brother exclaimed, “Our baby is growing!”—and indeed you are. I cried—tears of joy (for your obvious delight, for how you are growing just as you are meant to), tears of sadness (don’t grow too quickly though, my little one).

Already you seem less like a baby and more like a toddler. Sometimes when I am rocking you at night, and you are still and calm, I just gaze at your precious, round baby face and your little open mouth. I feel your warm, milky breath puffing softly on my cheek; I soak up the warm weight of you in my arms. And I love you, and will always love you.

I hope you always know how wanted, loved, cherished, and delighted in you are—by me and your Dada, by your big brother, by your extended family, by Jesus.

I love you, my littlest love, my one year old. May you be brave, be kind, and grow, my little one. And as you grow bigger, may God grow your faith and keep you ever in his love.

But you, dear friends, by building yourselves up in your most holy faith and praying in the Holy Spirit, keep yourselves in God’s love as you wait for the mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ to bring you to eternal life…To him who is able to keep you from stumbling and to present you before his glorious presence without fault and with great joy— to the only God our Savior be glory, majesty, power and authority, through Jesus Christ our Lord, before all ages, now and forevermore! Amen.

Jude 20-21, 24-25

Thirty

Last night, while doing dishes, I listened to Risen Motherhood, one of my favorite podcasts. The episode turned out to be particularly timely for the eve of my thirtieth birthday in that Laura, one of the hosts, mentioned that she loves growing older because doing so is an opportunity to love Jesus more and become more like him. She finds there is a joy and security that comes in growing in relationship with him in this way, and that this growth and maturity can only be accomplished over time. Emily, the other host, added that loving God and doing great things for him often looks like being faithful in the everyday moments of our lives.

Then this morning, I turned thirty. And I was encouraged by the thoughts Laura and Emily shared on their podcast because, as I reflect on my life thus far as well as on my hopes for this new decade of life, I find that I most want to be faithful and to live a life that matters. The most significant thing I can do with my life is to love Jesus in increasing measure, which will also lead me to more faithfully love those around me. And these things are possible wherever I am, including quarantined with my little family for the indefinite future as the pandemic continues to ravage the globe.

Prior to thinking about the possibilities for meaningful love and growth that exist even now, I was feeling a bit discouraged. As a 1 on the Enneagram, I am constantly seeing ways that I and the world around me could be improved, and I love to dream and plan for the future. But now, in this time of pandemic and quarantine, life feels so uncertain, and so does planning. What will this new decade of my thirties look like? I honestly have no idea, as my illusions of control have been largely shattered. So many things have been stripped away, and I am left with the present—which, I suppose, is all I ever really had. I don’t know what tomorrow, or next week, or next month, or next year will look like.

Yet here, in the present, I still have a myriad of opportunities to devote myself to what really matters: to loving Jesus more, to becoming more like him, to pointing to him, and to growing in faithfulness in how I love my husband, my boys, and the friends and family in my life. If anything, this drastic restructuring of life as we know it gives me even more opportunities than before to grow in sanctification and maturity, for the testing of faith through trials produces steadfastness and patience, which lead to increasing holiness and even unshakeable joy in the Lord (see James 1:2-4).

This season might not look like what I had expected or even hoped. I’m still afraid of suffering, and often wish I could just make a plan that will “solve” everything. But this season is also precious and meaningful and has eternal significance. I pray that the Holy Spirit will be changing my heart, making me more trusting and open to God’s refining process even when this process is hard. As I now enter into my thirties, I pray too that God will be growing my patience and steadfastness, that he would be maturing me even when refinement comes through suffering, that he would give me the grace I need to be faithful, and that he would be growing me in love for Jesus and those around me until I am ready to someday stand before him and hear that I have indeed been faithful.

In closing, I will include the prayer from Colossians that my husband, who knows and loves me so well, wrote on my birthday card. It has always been one of my favorite prayers, and this is all the more true today as I look ahead to a new decade of growing:

For this reason, since the day we heard about you, we have not stopped praying for you. We continually ask God to fill you with the knowledge of his will through all the wisdom and understanding that the Spirit gives, so that you may live a life worthy of the Lord and please him in every way: bearing fruit in every good work, growing in the knowledge of God, being strengthened with all power according to his glorious might so that you may have great endurance and patience.” Colossians 1:9-11

Look Upwards: He is Risen!

Rejoice,
 Heavy hearts;
 Now delight:
 
Jesus,
 Once dead,
 Filled with life!
 
Hope;
 From the valley,
 Look upwards:
 
Risen
 Is he,
 Indeed!
 
And
 he is
 coming, again.
 
Come!
 Lord Jesus,
 Come.

Reflections on Easter Sunday.

Darkness, For Good

Death.                   "But he was pierced for our transgressions,
Despair. he was crushed for our iniquities;
Darkness. the punishment that brought us peace was
ON HIM,
Can this really be and by his wounds
For good? WE ARE HEALED."
-Isa. 53:5

Reflections on Good Friday. Ref. Isa. 53:5.

Maundy Thursday: Mystery

 Teacher, Lord, Servant-King
Finite human, fully God
Gathered, with disciples

Unexpected example, washing feet
Confrontation of pride

Breaking bread, pouring wine
Confusion, protestations

Wholly (holy) Mystery

Foreshadowed sacrifice
Broken body, spilled blood

Costly atonement
Filthy hearts, washed clean

Once-alienated enemies
Like you, like me
Brought near the King