My Future Favorite Holiday

You know adoption is hard when your day’s held a couple hours of human excrement clean-up and it’s not even in the running for the worst part of your day. 

The poop had nothing to do with our family, by the way. Goodness, all parents have had plenty of experience with that stuff, so it’s hardly news. But this cleanup was outside our home at one of our refugee complexes, brought on by someone upstream flushing something so egregious that total pipe blockage downstream was the result. 

The problem came to our attention only after raw sewage had gurgled for days right up out of our tubs, sinks, and toilets. The toilets were the grossest, as bowls would jam to the brim with solids then keep slow-flowin’ right out to the four walls and beyond. 

Today we cleaned it up. 

Cheerfully, much of it had dried so completely that a plastic hand scraper did the worst of the job just swimmingly. Unfortunately, one tub had a dripping faucet keeping its stool pie moist. Whereas the dry cleanup was like scraping at a cow patty, this tub was more like scooping out a layer of not-yet-set Jello-O.

But the very most nauseating part of my day was encountering the few turds that were not just turd in substance, but turd in shape. I must say that the sight of them (the perpetual sinus trouble that keeps me from smelling much most days was an especial blessing today) just about sent my stomach over the edge. 

But how funny to take note my mental self-talk: “Hang in there, guy. Steady now…I’ve got it: just imagine it’s child’s poop. That’ll be better. Some kid upstairs. Hey, what if it was even a kid you’ve just adopted—you’d be able to ‘love’ and ‘embrace’ this for them…”

Indeed I would. 

Embracing the stinky feet, poopy messes, greasy hair, or poor hygiene of a child of your own is a normal part of parenthood. Whether or not you can stomach the like from a friend’s kid or teen is another matter. What about a total stranger? Sometimes it might be revolting and we can’t help it. Even after that stranger is your adopted child. I’ve been surprised at how long into our relationship with our own adopted teenager these reactions can rise up in me. Yet I move to embrace him all the same, because he, too, truly is our own. It’s nobody’s fault we all missed the cute years together. It just leaves big holes.   

Anyway, neither scraping the dry nor scooping the wet excrement of multitudinous strangers was the hardest part of my day. That was reserved for the hour and a half before bed with my adopted son. Yet another tantrum. Oddly enough, it was his tantrum the night before that had sent me out the door for the poop cleanup escapade in the first place, distractedly searching for some kind of pick-me-up from my weary morning-after discouragement. And, I will have to say, it pretty much worked. Amazing the value that self-sacrifice can sometimes bring us, touching spots within that aren’t so easily reached by other methods, perhaps. 

But tonight: more violence. More screaming. More punching. More “I don’t care!s” and “Hurt me! Break my arm! You don’t care about me!” All over something practically meaningless. Refusal to give way. To simply obey. And all kinds of breakage, as usual. He guards and organizes so carefully for weeks, only to throw and smash and destroy so much so quickly. 

And this particular requirement of self-sacrifice the past three years I’ve often grown sick of offering, frankly. I’ve processed it and blogged it and prayed it and shared it and gotten up to move forward again…more times than I could possibly tally. This being the third tantrum this week, and that not being his normal any more, it hit me, suddenly…

Of course. It’s Christmas. 

What with his great and many improvements all the rest of this year, I’d almost forgotten how much I’d grown to hate Christmas the last two. Well, not hate Christmas, but hate missing it. Hate that what was always the most nostalgic, truly wonderful time of the year for me had become a season to dread. At one point or another we dreaded any and every holiday, even weekends, but Christmas was easily the the hardest to kiss good-bye. 

But Christmas remains just too hard for him. Too exciting. Too much anticipation. Too many days of waiting. Countdowns are brutal for him, and we cannot shield him from all of them. Christmas is part of the culture and part of our family. And so counting down the 12 days of Christmas became mainly nostalgia for the years when that was actually fun. 

But my point in writing today is not to complain, but rather encourage. Many have brought home a kid(s) from a difficult place. You are not alone. Up ahead…our valleys widen. Others fight on near you, even if most of us never hear of one another. 

Together, this Christmas season especially, let us embrace Hope. And push away the wishing. “I wish my life were different. I wish people knew how hard this was. I wish folks would pity us for all we continue to lose all these weeks/months/years later. I wish people would stop commiserating with stories of their normal children. I wish people would stop lobbing ridiculous solutions at our misery.” 

Christmas celebrates the coming of the Baby. A coming which grants us far greater and far more than wishes. His coming gives us hope. And only hope will carry us through pain, suffering, or loss. Pain, suffering, and loss all lay in store for the Baby, too, yet His birth announcement was an announcement of hope. Hope for us. “For unto you has been born this day, a Savior”!

Hope is possible in my valleys because of the Baby who came to die for me willingly. And He causes me to reconsider my burdens and lay them aside, also willingly, one more time, shouting, “Yes! I’ll follow. I’ll do what you ask. I’ll sacrifice anything.” 

I’ll even lay down the joys of my formerly favorite holiday filled with childhood nostalgia and wonder. 

Because of Him, my adoption became reality. I’m safe and sound in my Forever Family, and the Baby paid the price. Shall I not be willing to pay whatever price necessary to ensure my son’s place in his earthly forever family? 

Christmas will be good again, I know. 

[Update: while my quickly-thought-of original title, “My Formerly Favorite Holiday,” is not horrible, it struck me a day or so later that it conveyed a bit of that “wishful thinking” I was trying to move away from. This current one far better conveys hope.]

A Year Like None Other

(finally) Two reflective encapsulations of 2017:

 

reflective encapsulation #1

My life (in very real, concrete, unforced fashion) fulfilled these words of Jesus more than I ever imagined happening to me:

From Luke 14 (NASB)

26 “If anyone comes to Me, and does not hate his own father and mother and wife and children and brothers and sisters, yes, and even his own life, he cannot be My disciple. 27 Whoever does not carry his own cross and come after Me cannot be My disciple.”

From Matthew 10 (NLT)

37 “If you love your father or mother more than you love me, you are not worthy of being mine; or if you love your son or daughter more than me, you are not worthy of being mine.”

Burned in my mind are pictures throughout 2017 of my wife, two sons, and three daughters, each in their own age-appropriate way, raging in broken tears over the wreckage brought to seven lives in the pursuit of saving one.

My own most recent breakdown was last Sunday. I lay on the dining room floor crying over how much I’ve missed in Enoch’s life. He graduates this year!

Jesus? HOW do you love Everett (or me, for that matter) ALL the time? I don’t understand

I never intended for my family to be sacrificed this much on the altar of responding to the Kingdom’s call.

Yet I would accept it again. Because this seismic change, though completely God’s idea, was not brought about at the point of a gun. We have a love relationship; He knew he didn’t have to. 

Of course, I would rather have been spared this cup, this way. But our rock is this: out of Wreck, we know, comes Redemption of many kinds. And God is writing a story bigger than the part we can see right now.

And great news is coming (verse 39):

“If you give up your life for me, you will find it.”

It’s in the low times that all I see is that awful future tense.

Kyrie eleison.

 

reflective encapsulation #2

His eye is on the sparrow, and I KNOW he watches me

I opened 2017 unemployed and found work at a hardware store three months in. So, for nine months last year I worked full time at $15/hr and brought home $20,000. Anyone knows that a family of eight (even without three ravenous teens) cannot live in city America on $20,000 per annum.

Yet here we are. And that’s without food stamps, WIC, Medicaid, or State help of any kind (not that we wouldn’t, we just haven’t) except free lunches at the kids’ schools.

So exactly how much gift money did we get? I ran a report to see.

Oddness of all oddnesses, “Gift Money for 2017” also totaled exactly $20,000.

From dozens of people. Some extremely unexpected. Money just kept showing up, and basically (other than that little summer GoFundMe) without us doing any asking.

Amazing.

However, even $40,000 isn’t quite a livable salary for a family of our size, and we had to eliminate all optionals and many other expenses that you (and usually we) would consider budget essentials. Instead, we were buoyed by grocery store gift cards, scholarships for the girls’ dance, gifted city-league soccer, free babysitting, free gas, free turkeys, many treats to cups of coffee, discounted work on our roof, discounted work on the house painting, free machines, free work on machines, money for airplane tickets, my motorcycle!, free bags of clothes, Christmas gifts from church and school, on and on. It was still never enough, yet somehow there was enough.

I’ve never been through anything like it. It would be fine with me if it never happened again.

But whatever the future may hold, 2017 will forever be The Year of the Lord’s Provision.