Saturday, November 16, 2013

Hands


I wrote this many years ago on my lunch break between classes of 6th graders.  I don't know how it never made it to this blog, but here it is now.  I left it the way I wrote it, but someday I want to add to it.  



  The hand is a magnificent thing to think about.  Its design and range of function are astounding.  Our hands make us who we are.  They do the work to get us where we are in life.  Our hands feed us, groom us, and pick up after us.  They make up the bulk of what we do for our professions.  Some hands cook, others write, still others make music.  The list could go on and one.  They save lives, they bid on the stock market, and they run factories.  Whatever you do, it’s likely that your hands are actually doing the manual labor. 
            Your hands convey feeling and meaning.  You gesture, you touch people, and you point.  Your touch can tell some one you care about them, or it can turn them away.  Your gestures can either be friendly or abrasive. 
            Your hands tell a lot about you.  They can tell what kind of work you do, how hard you worked, and when you’re old; they can tell what kind of life you lived. The first thing I notice about a person may be their eyes or their personality, but the thing I remember about them is their hands. 
            If I’ve known you for at least 10 years, I will always remember your hands.
Abigail has good piano hands with stubby fingernails.  She’s the only person I know that cuts her nails shorter than I do.  Rachael has hands like mine, but prettier.  Her fingers are longer and more tapered.  Her hands used to always be dirty, because they were playing with my hands :~) but now they are neat, clean, and have a wedding ring on them.  Tammi had funny hands.  When I was little, I called them “doing hands.”  She was always doing something.  Cooking, cleaning, playing the piano or helping me with puppet shows.  Her hands told me that she loved me. 
            Mom’s hands were always full of a baby.  Or a paddle, or a textbook, or food, or medicine, or whatever else her children needed at the moment.  She has classic “mom” hands.  Brenda has those hands too.  But Brenda also has chemo hands, and they remind me of some of the scariest months of my life.  But they mostly remind me of food and clean laundry :~)
            Annie has great hands.  I don’t even know how to describe them.  Maybe “best friend hands.”  She’s been everywhere and done everything with me; even the parts that involved the sewer.  Now we’re grown up and she has nurse hands.  They are small but very capable.  She’s never dropped a baby. 
            The boys are another story.  Matthew, Ben and Nathan; mostly your hands were always stealing something of mine.  Or they were pestering me.  One time Matthew’s hands stripped me of my robe and left me at the roadside for dead.  Then Ben’s hands came and saved me.  Of course, it was a play, but it mirrored our lives together.  Matthew, I miss your hands.  My favorite memory of your hands was when you handed a baby Savannah to me for the first time.  Ben your hands have always been there to back me up and spur me on.  By the way, Caiden has your hands.  Nathan, your hands were always beating stuffed animals or shooting something.  I remember your hands while you were learning to read and write.  You always had to follow along with your finger while we read.  You had baby brother hands :~)
            Dad, I saved you for last, because your hands were the most memorable.  I used to be afraid of your hands.  They were big and hairy, and you gave really hard spankings.  I only got one from you, but it made an impression.  I remember many times, sitting and watching your hands while you wrote sermons.  It was fascinating.  I remember learning how to fix cars, install toilets, mix cement, burn hamburgers, and how to hold a violin.  You made me learn how to cast, bait a hook, and a whole host of other nasty things I didn’t want my hands doing.  But they’ve come in handy.  I’ve watched your hands comfort countless dying cancer patients, dedicated hundreds of babies; and marry and bury more people that I can count.  You may not think this much of a legacy, but if it’s the only thing you ever leave me with, it’s enough.  But I have one question about your hands.  Why do you have that one funny nail with the bump?
            I’ve gone through all the hands I have time for during one lunch break.  If I kept on we’d have pages of extended family extremities.  I asked myself two questions, which hands are the best, and which hands do I want?
            The best hands are defiantly Grandparent Hands.  Mema, I didn’t get to you, but you have great hands. Grandparent hands tell the best stories, have the best advice and make the best pie. 
            Which hands I want is a slightly harder question.  Having given it a lot of thought, I still don’t really have an answer.  I just have my hands.  They have their own story.  But you know what?  I really, really hope that I grow into my mother’s hands. 

Wednesday, October 9, 2013

Bucket List

I promise to return to serious blogging shortly.  

One of my favorite movies is "The Bucket List"  I decided long ago to make a bucket list (although when I was 10, it was just a to-do list).  For those of you not familiar with the movie or the concept, a bucket list is a list of things you want to do before you die.  Having been ill for a few months and unable to do much of anything,  I've had plenty of time to work on my bucket list.  I decided to share it so that whoever wants can help me add to it, accomplish a goal on it, or copy and steal it.  Some of these items are old, some I've recently added.  These are in no particular order of importance, although some of them are definitely more important than others.  

1.  Own my own business (and make it succeed)
2.  Go to the circus at least once
3.  Read the complete works of Jane Austen (Done, many times)
4.  Learn how to dance
5.  Go to music school (2006)
6.  Ride a giraffe
7.  Own a home
9.  Adopt a child
10.  Go on a mission trip (Done, Mexico a couple of times)
11.  Learn to speak a foreign language fluently
12.  Work in a soup kitchen
13.  Make a difference in someone's life
14.  Write to a complete stranger (Yesterday)
15.  Run for public office
16.  Go on a cruise
17.  Go to England with my dad.
18.  Preach a sermon
19.  Write a book
20.  Read "War and Peace" (2000, 2011)
21.  Take the MCAT
22.  Go to Africa
23.  Go on a safari
24.  Backpack through the Grand Canyon
25.  Learn to hang-glide or para-glide
26.  Learn to make moonshine (2013)
27.  Make a quilt (1998)
28.  Graduate from college (2006)
29.  Go to medical school
30.  Have a pen pal (done, a lot of them)
31.  Write a blog (doing)
32.  Change the world
33.  Protest something
34.  Kiss a boy
35.  Own a horse (done, when I was a kid my siblings and I saved up and bought two horses.)
36.  Do something illegal (I speed,  all the time)
37.  Have one day with no physical pain
39.  Tell someone about my faith (done)
40.  Live in Alaska
41.  Learn to surf
42.  Work in a Level 1 Trauma Center
43.  Buy a grandfather clock
44.  Meet a Holocaust survivor
45.  Meet Pat Monahan from Train
46.  Go to a live concert (Done 2011 Maroon 5/Train with Priscilla Wiggins)
47.  Write a song
48.  Learn to play the guitar
49.  Be in Times Square at midnight on New Year's Day
50.  Drive a race car
51.  Meet the Queen of England
52.  Ride a train
53.  Scare a fainting goat
55.  Go on the ghost tour of Alcatraz
56.  Own a Diabatic Alert Dog
57.  Live by the ocean
58.  Buy a car (2013)
59.  Get married
60.  Grow a rose garden
61.  Buy a cuckoo clock
62.  Run a marathon
63.  Deep-fry a turkey


"If you're bored with life and you don't get up every morning with a burning desire to do things - you don't have enough goals"   ~Lou Holtz





Monday, July 29, 2013

Living Stones and Refined Gold

Pain is something with which I am intimately familiar.  There are many kinds of pain that range from physical and emotional to spiritual and mental.  I've dealt with chronic physical pain since I was a child.  I've also had my fair share and then some of the other types of pain.   One of the questions I wrestle with is why?  Why does God allow me to be in pain?  Why does He allow me to go through painful circumstances?  Can't He see that I've had all I can take and that this isn't fair??

After many years, I think I may have found an answer to my question that satisfies me.  But I can't give away the answer, you'll have to build a cathedral with me first.

 To build a cathedral, you can't just run down to the hardware store and buy some giant stone blocks and arches.  To build a cathedral you have to find a quarry of the right kind of stone.  Chances are you will then have to transport huge chunks of stone quite a distance to your building site.  After you get there, then you have to spend years carving perfect pieces that fit together just right so that you have a structure that can support it's own weight.  Do it wrong, and it all falls apart.  After much work and time, you finally get to make your cathedral beautiful.  You must carve each bird, picture, face, and word that you want to adorn your cathedral.  All of this takes time.  A lot of time.  When most of the the great cathedrals of the world were built, the men who started them did not see them finished during their life time.  Can you imagine spending your entire life working on a project that you may never see finished?  It's frustrating just to think about it.  One of my favorite verses is found in 1 Peter 2:5  It says, You also as a living stone are being built up into a spiritual house with a holy priesthood so that you can offer up sacrifices to God that are pleasing and acceptable.  (The Martha Translation).  You know what that means?  It means that I'm a cathedral.  I am a living stone.  I am being continual shaped into something more beautiful by every single circumstance and person I come in contact with whether it be good or bad.   I am being shaped by pain.

It's a foreign concept to us that pain and suffering can be a good thing.  It goes against our humanity to embrace suffering.   It is the opposite of everything our body and mind says is right and good.  But imagine the freedom that can be found in seeing a higher purpose to pain.  Even the most petty annoyances can be used for good.

Still not convinced that your pain and suffering are a good thing?  Then let's refine some gold.

Gold doesn't just show up in a pure form.  It has to be refined.  There are many ways to refine gold, but all of them involve separating the gold from other compounds or impurities.  Gold is also the most malleable of all the metals.  One ounce of gold can be beaten into 300 square feet.  One of my other favorite scriptures is 1 Peter 1:7.  It says "The trial of your faith, being much more precious than gold which is temporary, though it be refined with fire, will be found unto the praise, honor, and glory at the appearing of Jesus Christ."  (Also the Martha Translation)  This verse seals the deal for me. This tells me that no suffering is pointless if I belong to God.  No pain is meaningless.  No fire of life will kill me, it will only refine me.  It will all be used for the glory of God, if I let it.

There is no promise or guarantee that following Christ will be easy.  In fact, it won't be.  If it were easy, it wouldn't mean as much.  There will be pain and there will be suffering.  It may be physical, it may be emotional, and I can guarantee that some of it will be spiritual.  But there is great beauty to be found if you look.   Whatever form your pain takes, whether it be the sharp chiseling pains of being sculpted or the the burning pain of being refined, let it be used for something good.  Let God take the pain and use it to make you into something beautiful that has far more worth than gold and will last long after the last cathedral has crumbled into dust.



Sunday, June 16, 2013

Un-parents

I started to write this post around Mother's day and decided to wait and finish it for Father's day.

While I'm all for celebrating the men and women who are parents, these holidays make me a little sad.
It seems that these days are specifically focused on the parents who have contributed genetic material to form a human being.  But what about the rest of us?  You've heard the saying "Any man can be a father, but it takes someone special to be a dad."  I'm sure there is a counterpart to that saying about mothers.

You may be the best mother or father in the world, but I guarantee that you didn't do it by yourself.  Look around you.  There are teachers, coaches, aunts, uncles, family friends, Sunday school teachers, grandparents, and many, many more who support our and allow you to be an amazing parent.  Don't believe me?  Stay with your kids 24 hours a day for two straight weeks and no one else around and see how difficult your life would be.

Someone is picking up the slack from your rough days and days that you just want to hide in the closet from your kids.  Someone is not only spending the majority of the day with your children 5 days a week to educate them, but they are also teaching your child to be a responsible and kind person.  When you are not around, there is someone else answer your child's questions about how babies are made, what holds water together, and how far away are the stars.  When they are older, there is one more trusted adult to encourage your child to make wise choices, not date idiots, not get drunk and drive, to make good grades in school.  When your child fails (and they will) there is one more person who will storm the castle with you and help rescue your child.

Single parents or working parents seem to have a tendency to hold a grudge that someone else is doing this for their kids.  I promise you that even if you were with your kids every waking hour of every day, there are still questions your child will be more comfortable asking someone other than you.  Don't look at this as a slap in the face, look at it as a blessing.  There is one more person in your child's life that would do anything for them.

Sadly,  in today's culture there seems to be a stigma attached to being childless, especially regarding women.   Some people can't have children.  Some people haven't met the right partner to have children with.  Some of them had children and lost them.  I'm here to tell you that to us, none of that really matters.  What matters is that there are children in front of us in whose lives we can make a difference; even if it is small.

Don't make the mistake of thinking that we are always happy this way.  What hurts even more than the fact that we don't have our own children is hearing the snide and catty remarks from parents.  "Wait until you have children of your own."  "You'll think differently when you have your own kids."  "Your opinion doesn't matter, you don't even have kids." "You don't understand how hard this is."

Stop treating us like babysitters.  Stop assuming that we quit caring the minute we walk out the door.  Stop telling us that we know nothing about raising children.  We have plenty of other things we could be doing in our lives, but we are on this journey with you because we choose to be.

In some cases, we know your kids better than you,  especially if you have a trophy child (just for show).  In some cases, we run unseen interference between you and your child.  In some cases, all it takes is to have another adult backing you up with your kids.  In all cases, your child is just as important to us as our own child would be.

Donating genetic material doesn't make you a dad anymore than going through child birth makes you a mom.  Parenthood is sacred, and it's about the state of your heart.   Whether you are single or married, rich or poor, barren or otherwise, parenthood is about giving your time and love to someone.  It's about nurturing and comforting.  It's about learning and growing.  It's about cooking meals and kissing scraped knees.  It's about reading and storytelling.  It's about discipline and mercy. It's about innovation and practicality.  It's about being part of a child's life.

So as you celebrate the days set aside to honor you for being a parent, take a moment to thank the un-parents who always have your back and who are silently smoothing the foundation and laying the bricks to help you raise the best thing that ever happened to you.


Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Open Letter To The World At Large


Do you ever stop to think of how many times you hear women being referred to as "slut", "hoe", "beeotch", and much worse by Hollywood, song lyrics, literature, and just about everywhere else?  Does it bother you?  Do you ever stop to think of how often you use those terms?  Does it make you stop and think?  

Do you ever wonder why this language is reserved for women and seems to not have a counterpart in the male world?  

I wonder the same thing.  But I also wonder why those terms and the rest like them are seen as culturally acceptable.   I'm shocked and surprised not only by how prevalent and acceptable they are in our culture, but by who I hear using them the most.  It's not always men who are screaming at their wives.  It's not always guys who are mad at their girlfriends.  It's not always a rap song that you really like.  It's boys and girls talking to and about their friends.  I can't tell you how often I've heard girls and boys refer to their friends and often themselves by using this language.  I don't just mean teenagers either.  Sadly, this type of language is prevalent in the adult world among both genders.  

I have somethings I would like to say on the subject to everyone who reads this.  This is my point of view and you are in no way obligated to even respect what I have to say.  But you should :)  

Variations of these terms have been used for centuries to describe women who sell their bodies for profit.  In the Bible they were called harlots.  In Shakespeare's time they were called slatterns.  The various terms have devolved over the years until the meanings are often blurred.  The point is this, today these terms are all used to degrade women regardless of if the user understand the meaning of the word.  More often than not, these words are used in a flippant and joking fashion.  

This is the language of hurt and abuse.  These are the words that someone uses when they want to debase and degrade you into what has historically been seen as the lowest form of humanity.  Why would you ever use these words to describe yourself or those you love?  Girls, if  a guy says these words to you, he certainly isn't trying to make you feel loved and appreciated.  Guys, is the name you are flippantly calling your female friend going to make her feel safe with you?

Girls,  you need to stand up for yourself.  Don't just stand up for you, stand up for the women who can't stand anymore.  There are women so beaten and broken by the world that it is just easier to keep being abused than it is to fight back.  Don't let people treat you this way.  Don't treat other people this way.  

Guys, you want to know how to make a girl respect you?  Treat her with respect.  Want to know how to get girls to notice you?  Treat every woman you meet honorably and with decency.  Protect the women in your life, especially the broken ones.  

This is not a language that builds and supports, but one that tears down and damages.  Even if you are joking, these words still hurt.  Have enough respect for the people in your life to find better ways of expressing yourself.  Have enough respect for yourself to not use abusive and degrading language for any reason.  Better yet, if you can't say something nice, don't say anything at all.   


Wednesday, May 8, 2013

My Friend

One day when I was somewhere in the vicinity of  9 years old, I met a person who has changed my life in more ways that I can count.  When she reads this, she is probably going to disagree with most of it. She won't believe some of it, and some of it we probably remember differently.

It was a Sunday; the first Sunday in a seemingly endless line of first Sundays that happen when you are the daughter of a somewhat transient pastor.  

I hated these Sundays.  There is nothing quite like walking into a new church, being the daughter of the pastor, and more often than not, dressed exactly like the rest of the people in your 8 person family.   I can't think of words to describe the feeling of knowing that you now have to befriend not only the children your age, but basically everyone else in the church as well.  It is what you do, you are the pastor's daughter.  

After you befriend them, you answer questions like "Why are you all wearing the same clothes?" "Where do you buy your clothes?" "Why do you go to school at home?" "Do you get to wear pajamas all day?" "Is it weird to have so many brothers and sisters?" "What do you DO all day?" "Can you really make your own clothes?" 

For every answer you give, there are a million more questions.  Yes, I can cook, do laundry, bake, preserve food, change a diaper, clean anything that needs to be cleaned, plant a garden, milk a goat, ride a cow, supervise my younger siblings (and a few of the older ones as well), translate Greek and Hebrew into English, demonstrate proficiency at multiple types of handcrafts,  and the list goes on and on and on some more.  After this list of questions there are more questions that usually start with "Why."  What it all boils down to is this question, "What kind of a freak show is going on in Tuckerville?"

  Once we have established sufficient grounds for friendly acquaintance, then we start the dance.  Our relationship becomes complicated.  You don't know what to think of me, I don't know how to act with you.  My whole view of this is not that I met a new friend who I enjoy spending time with.  My 9 year old self wants to be your friend.  My freaky adult-like self knows that in all likelihood, I'm not going to be at this church long enough for it to matter.  If I am,  I can do nothing to dispel the belief that I am weird.  Also, getting to know your parents, grandparents and every other adult in the church is more important because I have to answer important things like my views on homeschooling, raising children, the Triune God, baptism, prayer, healing, speaking in tongues and anything else that comes up.  I am a Tucker, I am home-schooled,  I can quote entire books of the Bible, and my mission in life is to give all glory, praise and compliments to God - and to be a good reflection of my parents.  This is my life.  

After 30 years of being the preacher's daughter, there is a long list friends that I met as a child in church that were and still are my friends.  If we narrow that list to people my age, it gets drastically shorter.  If we narrow it again to girls my age, the list can be counted on one hand.  

Back to 9 year old Martha.  I walked into Calvary Bible Church in Abilene, Texas that Sunday morning 21 years ago.  I knew at this point that there was a vast difference between a friend and an aquantaince.  I was 9 years old and I didn't have friends.  I had brother and sisters.  The only two people I could call a friends in the traditional sense of the word were Annie and Abigail.  Even they were people I saw only on special occasions.  They were my "default" friends because our dads were best friends, we occasionally went to the same churches and they were also home schooled.  They actually fit better into the 'sister' category anyway.  

That day, I saw a girl who I assumed to be my age all the way on the other side of the church.  She wore the most beautiful dress I had ever seen with purple and yellow pansies all over it.  She had the the most beautiful blonde hair and looked almost exactly like a china doll I had seen once and desperately wanted for Christmas.  I didn't get it, because I never told anyone I wanted it.  It wasn't practical, serviceable, useful so it wouldn't have made the cut anyway.   

Lacey Gamble was the most quiet, shy person I had ever met in my life.  She was also very "girly",  a staunch vegetarian, and I had a sneaking suspicion that she mostly wore clothing purchased from actual stores.  She was in every way, everything that I wasn't.  Oh, and she went to school outside of her home.  She was normal.

I launched my "preacher's daughter friendship" campaign because I was supposed to.  It didn't work well.  So I stepped it up a notch.  I made a point to talk to Lacey.  Lacey made it a point to nod and smile.  After a few weeks of this, I saw it as a challenge.  This girl was going to be my friend whether she liked it or not.  So I resorted to a tactic that has proven highly successful for me.  If the shy person seems like they don't want to be your friend, talk to them, sit next to them, ask your mom to let them come over and play.  My plan is simple; they'll either eventually like me and want to be my friend, or they will be my friend simply so I'll scale back and stop bothering them so much.  It worked like a charm.  

I have no idea to this day when the magic moment was that we became real friends.  I think it was when we were sitting in her pink, frilly bedroom (that she didn't have to share with ANYONE) and telling our middle names.  She told me her middle name, and I told her about a book I loved that had a princess with the same name.  Thus launched the first real, honest to goodness, I-haven't-known-you-since-birth, we are close to the same age friendship of my life.  

I did most of the talking, she did most of the laughing.  She liked Annie and Abigail (pretty much a pre-requiste for any sort of lasting relationship in my life), they in turn liked her.  Her dad made me memorize the Circle of Fifths, Fourths, and some really weird jazz chords that I still don't understand.  My mom gave Lacey and her brother piano lessons.  Her dad gave my brother and sister flute lessons.  Possessing adequate knowledge of all things musical, I managed to escape most of these exasperating music lessons and got to know Lacey's mom really darn well.  This earned her mother in the second ever awarded spot in the "Martha's Mothers" club (alternately known as the adults to who I can say or ask anything and be given not only wise advise, but more importantly, it won't be repeated verbatim to my parents) and thus essentially making Lacey and I sisters.  

After a few years, my family moved on to another church.  Lacey stayed my friend.  

Lacey had an endless supply of knowledge for things I knew nothing about.  Disney movies, the Dixie Chicks, Elvis, the Beetles, mascara, nail polish, hair accessories, and a whole lot more.  In return for this forbidden knowledge, I provided as much knowledge as I had for the things that were probably in retrospect totally foreign to her.  

Somewhere in the 2nd or 3rd year of this friendship, it became ok to talk about things that we weren't supposed to talk about.  I don't mean cute boys and gossip magazines.  I mean family problems, I-don't- understand-my-mother problems, things that no one else knew about me that were not blood relatives.  Actually, a lot of things I still don't talk about with blood relatives were discussed on the privacy of the the trampoline or in the horse pasture.  

Fast forward through our short-lived housecleaning business in which I had the distinct honor and downright pleasure of guiding her through the cleaning of her first (and at the time swore would be the last) bathroom only used by males.  It was hilarious.  I laughed, she gagged.  She left her school and was home schooled.  She talked me into going with the youth group to Six Flags.  It was the first and only time I've been.  

We started our first "real" job at the same place either at the same time or within the same couple of months.  We were the Burger Queens of Abilene.  She developed an interest in a particular boy (who is now her husband).  I am still largely annoyed by most males (quite possibly the reason I'm still single). I've had a key to the home she grew up in for more years than I've had keys to the house I grew up in.  I know more about her brother than I know about most of my brothers-in-law.  At some point around year 3 or 4, my family moved on to another church.  Then we came back to Calvery. Then we left again.  Then we came back again.  

Somewhere in our teenage years we had a brief patch of heated disagreements, hurt feelings, huge miscommunication, and probably a lot of raging hormones.  I have no idea how it started but I do know how it ended.  Our boss and youth group leader hauled me into his office and sat me down for a come to Jesus meeting.  I aired my feelings and was told that a friendship this good was worth the fight.  I was instructed to go straight from work to Lacey's house and sit down and work it out and not to leave until it was resolved.  I've never asked, but I think Lacey may have also gotten a come to Jesus meeting.  I've also never asked, but I'm pretty sure he called Lacey's mom and told her to lock us in a room and not to let us come out or feed us until we fixed the problem.  I remember we sat in her room, yelled, cried, explained, re-explained, cried some more, hugged and resumed our lives.  I also remember that it took a while.  

After that our relationship started to change.  She left our Burger joint job.  I stayed for  6 years.  I went to college with a passion.  She did not share that passion.  We both became busy with the details of our young adult lives and by necessity and busyness stopped seeing each other as much.  We both had cell phones though and boy did we keep those minutes rolling by.  

Age 17 to 24 I don't have as many interesting stories to tell.  This was a time in my life the details of which few people know all about.  Lacey is at the top of that list.  Even fewer people have heard me be totally open and brutally honest about my thoughts, feelings, and experiences of those years.  Lacey is one of 3.  Those same 3 are the only ones that I completely trust to take my hand and help me revisit the memories of those years.  She's heard the same things about the same events for more than 10 years now.  It doesn't matter if it keeps on for another 30.   That giant long discussions when we were teenagers to sort out our differences is the moment I first realized that I'm not the type of person who can discuss, analyze, process, and heal.  My road to healing is fraught with discussion, analyzation, processing and then repeat it all again.  She knows me and loves me enough to walk through all the repeats, all the possible outcomes, all the possible shortcomings, every possible variable and then sit back and watch a small part of me heal.  Then we do it all again.  

One of the best moments of that time in my life was getting the phone call from Lacey that she was engaged to the aforementioned boy.  Even better than that was playing at their wedding.   Of all the weddings I have attended in my life -which is a lot - theirs has been my favorite.  But that is a whole other story.

Age 25-26 we set off into a brave new world.  She was a wife.  I was a teacher.  She lived 10 minutes from her family.  I live two hours from mine.  She went through a time of fighting her own demons which were in some ways very similar to mine, but in other ways polar opposites.  Her issues were rooted in the discovering her identity.  My issue were rooted in juggling mine.  The phone calls lessened significantly.  What did not lessen was the knowledge that if we needed each other, we would find a way whether it be by phone, email, text, carrier pigeon, or prayer.  

The purpose of what I am writing is this.  There is a lot to Lacey that people don't know.  Lacey went on a mission trip to China that transformed her from my childhood friend into someone that is mighty in spirit, bold, and honest.  Lacey also deals with a severe anxiety disorder.  We have spent many hours sitting in her car trying to figure out what causes it, how to deal with it, and more importantly, how to live with it.  We have boldly sat in Olive Garden long past finishing dinner because if you have to do battle with the Devil, you may as well have eaten awesome food first.  One recurring issue the last 6 or so years has been weighing the decision of wanting children, but first needing to not be on medication that makes you able to function.  This is an issue that we have in common; Lacey for anxiety and me for chronic pain.  We have both always known we would grow up and be mothers.  It's one of those things we both want, but not necessarily with the same intensity.

In 2011, I moved to Dallas to take a job that has easily proved to be the most stressful, challenging, and time-consuming of my life.  I basically shut down for a year and didn't communicate with anyone if it wasn't by a two line text message.  I frequently found my self driving home from work at 10 or 11 at night in tears.  Not just tired tears,  but full-on I am totally alone tears.  I'm pretty sure in that year I actually physically saw Lacey 1 time and spoke to her on the phone maybe twice.  One of my biggest fears in life is growing apart from my closest friends.  I've come to realize that we aren't growing apart per se, we are just growing and maturing in different ways.  

In October 2011 my phone rang.  At this point my first reaction when I see Lacey calling me is worry and concern, so I freaked out, hung up on my mother and answered the call.  Lacey was calling to tell me she was pregnant.  I distinctly remembering shreaking from joy and then stopping myself to ask her how she felt about this.  I think it is a fair bet to say that in that conversation, I was by far the most excited (what can I say, I'm nutty about babies)  We talked for a while about the pregnancy, nutrition, how to deal with anxiety and I'm sure a million other things.  Knowing Lacey's fears, she was promptly moved to the top of my daily prayer list (which is prayed for from 5 am to 6 am while I get ready for work).  We also texted a lot.  Right about the time she started getting used the whole pregnant thing, I got a second phone call.  This time, I was in the middle of doing something, answered the phone and thus set fire to something in my kitchen because I went into 911 mode when I saw the call.  She was calling to tell me she was expecting twins.  Again, I was the most excited person on the phone.  I think if we had nicknames to describe our reactions from my point of view, I would be name Wild and Unbridled Joy.  Lacey would be named Cautious Optimisim Leading up to Joy.  

Without telling you about every single sonogram pic I saw, every single text and phone call, and every single detail of Lacey's pregnancy, I will tell you this.  Every phone call ended with prayer over Lacey's mind, body, emotions and the health of those babies.  Every discussion about gender and baby names and diaper brands and everything else are memories I treasure.    But it is not just the memories of these times we shared that I'm going to remember for the rest of my life.  

What I will remember most about those 9 month is this.  In that 9 months I watched my friend leave behind the cares, anxieties, and troubles of her life to focus solely on her mental, emotional, spiritual and physical health for the sake of her children.  While I watched this I noticed something else.  Even though she still had the same cares and troubles, they stopped mattering as much and by virtue of that fact, stopped troubling her as much.  I watched Lacey grow and mature in ways that astounded me (and I'm hard to astound).  For lack of a better visual image, I watched her turn from a caterpillar into butterfly.  It is a sad comparison for what I saw, but it's the best I can do short of writing a symphony about it.  I watched a miracle.  I watched an answer to years of crying out to God.  I watched the process of cells turn into two perfect little boys.  I watched the perfect doctor be in the perfect place at the perfect time.  I watched Lacey fit all the stuff for two babies into an already tiny house.  Every day of that 9 months was a beautiful, joyful miracle and I'm not even the one who experienced it.  

If we could name children based only on the landmarks of the paths we walk until their births, those boys would be named Grace and Joy.  Thankfully, I'm not in charge of baby names :)

Lacey Brynn Gamble Casey.  This was written because I had a story to tell and this is the only way I know to even begin to express how much you mean to me and the point to which you have impacted my life.  You are one of the strongest, wisest, Christ-like people that I know.  Being a part of your life has been a rich blessing that I'm not sure I have any right to.  My deepest and most heart-felt prayer for you is that in the coming years of your life, no matter what storms or troubles come that you will be able to hold on tight to who you are in Christ and the promise that brings.  If you ever need reminding, ask me about the Lacey that I see, the marriage that I see, and the parents that I see in you and Brian.  If I had to pick one Bible verse to ever say or remind you of, it would be 2 Corinthians 5:17-21   In the Revised Martha Edition of the Bible it would say this. 

Because you are a part of Christ as He is a part of you, you will continually transform into a new creation.  The old you has died and a new one has come.  This is a gift from God who through Christ brought us to himself, reconciled how we see ourselves with how He sees us and gave to us the ability to show this to others.  This is because through Christ, God reconciled the world to himself and did not count their trespasses against them, and then called them to take that message to the world.  Therefore, we are ambassadors for Christ and God can use us as his voice.  For your sake, he took on your sin so that you are now free to transform into the righteousness OF God.  

Thank you for letting me into your life 20 something years ago.  Thank you for choosing to let me remain there.  Thank you most of all for seeing my heart and who I really am under all the crap from my life and my family and for always being there to remind me to keep cleaning off the mud because somewhere under there, there has to be a diamond :)

HAPPY FIRST BIRTHDAY DECLAN AND ETHAN!!!!




Lacey at 9 months




Declan and Ethan with Aunt Martha

Tuesday, January 1, 2013

Guest Blog on Les Miserables

This is a guest post I wrote for my sister Tammi's blog. You can check out all her blog posts at www.ktmossman.com/tryinglesstrustingmore



 Hello All, Tammi did something very dangerous, which is to ask my opinion. :) While I loved seeing Les Miserables, it is my firm impression that Hollywood and Broadway need to stick to their respective coasts and stop intermingling. I went into this movie with what is for me, a fairly open mind. This is one of my favorite musicals of all time and I was trying very hard to not walk in expecting to be disappointed (I'm a music snob, I can't help it). As I watched the movie, I couldn't help but mentally criticize some of the singing, the changed orchestrations and the choice of some of the actors used to portray some of my favorite literary characters. Around the middle of the movie, I decided to let go of my expectations and just enjoy what I was there to see with a sister that I hardly ever get to see. 

 As I continued to watch, I was moved again by the choices the characters make. Jean val Jean had every reason to be a bitter man, full of hate for the people who wronged him. But he wasn't. Instead, he chose to live a life marked by grace, doing what he could for those around him. It didn't matter to him who needed help, all he saw were people who were less fortunate than he. Fantine chose to do whatever she could to provide for her daughter. Granted, she made less than healthy choices to do so, but in my experience desperation doesn't always see clearly. She also made a tremendously courageous choice to trust her daughter's future to a stranger. Eponine loved someone who couldn't love her in return. Did that cause her to walk out of his life to find someone better? No, she stayed and fought by his side and eventually died without ever telling him how she felt. Marius fell in love and was ready to abandon everything for the sake of a girl, but then chose to stay and fight by the sides of his friends for something that was bigger than all of them. Javert spent his entire adult life trying to live by the law and thus please God. In the end, the grace shown to him by Jean val Jean rips apart everything he has believed in for so long. So he kills himself. Gavroche is a street urchin who chose to fight the injustice that is all he has ever known and dies in the process. 

 We can all sit and debate the theology and morality of these and the rest of the choices made in this story but the point is this: almost every person represented chose to put the welfare of others before that of themselves. There is a famous line from this story that says "to love another person is to see the face of God." If you read this quote literally, there are all kinds of problems. I think a better way to read this quote is "Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends." John 15:13 I think Victor Hugo was trying to make the point that by learning to see and love people the way God sees and loves them, we cannot help but to grow closer both to people and to God. If you want to watch a spellbinding movie with a great story, then do so.

 If you want to see something deeper, then look at what drives the characters to make the choices they make. Learn from Jean val Jean that hatred and bitterness will only kill you. Learn from Fantine that you can't always solve problems by yourself. Learn from Javert that there has to be balance in your life. Learn from Marius that sometimes being a part of something great is worth personal sacrifice. Learn from Eponine that love doesn't have to be declared to be real and fulfilling. Above all, take away from this that love comes in many forms. It can be giving someone back their life or giving up your own life for someone. But more often than not, it is simply looking around and choosing to make a difference in the life of someone less fortunate than yourself. If I were Victor Hugo and I had written this book, my famous line would have read something like this, "If you want to see the face of God, go and feed the hungry, clothe the naked, be gentle with the hurting, and love those who are unlovable."

 Martha