The months have flown by without a blog post. I've tried to write one or two here and there and never seen to want to push publish. My days are full. My son is needy. My two year old is a two year old who is quickly approaching becoming a three year old. The sass is very strong with her.
Our days are filled with the mundane. Piles of laundry, a sink that is never empty, people who need to eat a stuff (who knew, right?) and the constant constant picking up of the toys. I have tried reorganizing my home what feels like fifty million times and it still fills with clutter. My house is too small for clutter. It is on going. An ever changing canvas.
I know, deep in my heart, what this Holiday Season means for me and my family. I know that last year I would stop and cry and wonder if my son would be here with us this year. Putting up our Christmas stocking put me in tears. Dressing Dean in his "my first Thanksgiving" onsie put me in tears. Planning what to buy him to "open" on Christmas put me in tears.
In the past year I have become part of a community that welcomed babies into this world not knowing how long they would be here. Some are still with us and some are not, leaving their families with holes that will never be filled this side of Heaven. I cry at these "little" things because I know families who all Season long will be grieving their lack of little things.
And yet. Yet.
Some day this is not enough for me. I still grieve over what life could have been. I was given the incredible healing gift this week, something that had thrown me for a loop and reminded me that I still having some very sharp edges and that my canvas is not finished. I brought food to a precious family that welcomed their first boy into their family. While there, his amazing trusting Mama plopped him in my arms, and I just lost it. I started sobbing.
I had forgotten how small babies are when they are born. I forgot how much they sleep. I forgot that they look so peaceful while they are sleeping. I forgot how much they snuggle into you, these little new bodies. I forgot how it feels to hold a newborn in my arms. And then I remembered.
I remembered that when my son was three days old I kissed his face and sent him for a heart surgery that I wasn't sure he would come out of. I remember eating breakfast with my husband, waiting for the beeper to go off with any news, but afraid of the news at the same time. I remember what he looked like when he came out of surgery, the image will haunt me for the rest of my life, that piece of plastic that separated his heart from the world. I remembered the days and weeks that felt so endless, of the longing I had to hold my newborn and the constant waiting.
I miss his babyhood. I miss him being small and snuggling in my arms. I miss the three days i had before his surgery when he wasn't scarred. I do. I miss it. Don't give me this crap about how those scars are proof that he survived. Trust me, I know he did. I know those scars tell stories of life, but don't negate the pain that they caused. I refuse to forget the pain of this. Because the pain brought us life, there was a price paid for the life.
The days and weeks being home have not been easy. I fight this inner pride and selfishness daily. I want to talk about what I've given up and how my life feels put on hold. When I catch myself thinking that way I give myself a sharp "So?" Because the point is that this is not about me any more, it's about my babies. About surviving. About letting go of what I think I need to want and remembering that what I've been given is amazing. And remembering that the alternative is that my sons high chair could hold his ashes.
It is easy in these endless feeling days to be impatient. It is a whole lot harder to remember thankfulness and gratefulness when the toddler is poopy, the baby is screaming, there are three loads of laundry to be done, and the sink needs an exorcism. It is harder to say thank you for this, when it's midnight, you went to bed at 11, and the baby woke up and just won't stop crying unless you hold him and rock him for an hour.
That happened the other night. Dean was in a mood. And he wanted me. Only me, Daddy did try. And I was exhausted. And emotional. And here I am rocking this baby and all the sudden, the broken places in my heart surface and I just started crying. This was one of those good cries. The can't breathe, biting your lip, snot and tears just rolling off your cheeks type of crying.
Because here I am, rocking this baby who is a miracle and all I want, literally all I am praying, is that he goes back to sleep because I. Am. Exhausted. Finding that balance...learning to live with the everyday things and the miracle, is actually really hard. Teaching my heart to be thankful for all things, learning to trust that what God has for us is GOOD...is a constant battle.
But one that I am up for.
I realized I have not let parts of me heal. I have not opened the wound and it has become infected. I didn't realize how much it really hurt to completely skip over Deans babyhood, and go straight to baby with serious medical issues. I didn't realize how "strong" I was trying to be until I found out I built walls on sinking sand...
I told Blair during my rock the baby cry fest that I don't feel like I am enough. That I don't enough for him, for Dean, for Ellie. That I am constantly failing because I can't keep up with laundry and dishes and bills and insurance and keeping the house clean. And he said something so sweet..."Why do you have to?"
God did not call me to be a mother of these two kiddos because I am enough. He called me because I am not enough. Because my moments of weakness and strife and pain...all of that, brings me back to Him and allowing Him to be God in in my life.
You can believe that or not believe that, I don't care. What I am saying is that on a daily basis, without God, I would be a hot freaking mess people. Because moming is hard. Moming my son, is hard. Not being a selfish jerk, is hard. And I am still so very broken by some of the things we went through this year. And still so in need of healing.
Christmas is a time of gifts. But...my kids are alive. My son is alive. I feel like those are all the gifts I want. I feel like asking for more is selfish.
I am an ever changing canvas. A constant work of art. Living moment by moment, just like everyone else.
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