since visiting the shelter again yesterday, i haven’t been able to stop thinking about a young woman i passed there in the hallway. heavy with child and, if possible, even heavier with hard life. it didn't take more than a minute standing near this girl for my heart to begin breaking.
i didn’t know her story and i didn’t know her name, but i knew she was living in a women's shelter on the wednesday before christmas and that told me enough. and looking into her eyes for just a brief moment told me more than i really wanted to know. she was worn out, worn through, worn thin. i tried to smile at her and say hi, but her grim set of her shoulders and distant eyes caused me to feel embarrassment -- i’m not exactly sure why.
instead i looked away and i looked down and that's when i saw them -- her sparkly silver sandals. she wore these thin, flimsy sandals with socks and they were not one bit appropriate for the december rain pounding hard outside. her socks dirty and her feet too large for the sandal size. i recognized them as something old navy sold last summer. there's a pair squirreled away somewhere deep in the closet of my own teenage girl. my daughter who wouldn't wear them with socks and wouldn't wear them in december, because she owns boots and too many pairs of other shoes from which to choose.
somehow seeing these summer sandals on this fragile young woman’s feet in december pierced something deep in me. and the image has played over and over again in my mind since yesterday afternoon.
i didn’t know her story and i didn’t know her name, but i knew she was living in a women's shelter on the wednesday before christmas and that told me enough. and looking into her eyes for just a brief moment told me more than i really wanted to know. she was worn out, worn through, worn thin. i tried to smile at her and say hi, but her grim set of her shoulders and distant eyes caused me to feel embarrassment -- i’m not exactly sure why.
instead i looked away and i looked down and that's when i saw them -- her sparkly silver sandals. she wore these thin, flimsy sandals with socks and they were not one bit appropriate for the december rain pounding hard outside. her socks dirty and her feet too large for the sandal size. i recognized them as something old navy sold last summer. there's a pair squirreled away somewhere deep in the closet of my own teenage girl. my daughter who wouldn't wear them with socks and wouldn't wear them in december, because she owns boots and too many pairs of other shoes from which to choose.
somehow seeing these summer sandals on this fragile young woman’s feet in december pierced something deep in me. and the image has played over and over again in my mind since yesterday afternoon.
that image keeps playing over in my mind, while the thought presses deep in my heart: christmas comes hard for so many.
how do those who are hurting deal with their pain, heartache and loneliness when it seems everyone they pass by is merry and bright? it is the most wonderful time of the year, and yet, i imagine, the most painful for so many.
i have friends who have lost mothers and fathers this year. friends with sick children. friends with broken marriages, broken families and broken bank accounts. just broken. i know some who have lost jobs and health and, pretty much, all hope. and i am sure this month, more than any other, can be a very hard thing. for many of us, it is easy to forget, deny or choose to completely ignore that reality.
but then i stood in a dirty hallway, with stained carpeting and dim lighting and i watched weary woman after weary woman walk by. and i asked myself, how does this happen? the truth hit me: this could be me, or my sister, or even my own daughter.
at one point, my 11 year old sarah whispered to me, “mom, why are so many of them pregnant?” there really was no way for me to answer that question in a quick sentence, so i whispered back, “we’ll talk later."
and it wasn’t long after her question when i noticed this one girl with her thin silver sandals standing nearby. there is so much about christmas that is silver and shiny and bright. i wore a pair of silver heels for a holiday party just a couple of weeks ago, probably spending too much money on them. for many of us, our christmas days have at least a little something glittery and golden: pretty gifts wrapped under our trees, twinkling white lights, sugar cookies on crystal, glass ornaments shining, candles bright on our tables ... maybe even a cocktail dress and matching silver shoes. seasonal shimmer, sparkle and glitter galore.
it is so easy to get caught up in the excess of it all. so easy to be blinded by the holiday bling and not see the sad eyes of the woman on the street or the forlorn face of the man at the mall. i am so guilty of passing people every day and failing to see. failing to really see. and i’ll admit, there are even times when i don’t want to look. times when i turn away. it is too hard and it is too hopeless -- or at least it feels like that.
i want to gather my family around my dinner table and talk about the beauty of the season. i want to sit in church and sing familiar hymns full of comfort and joy. i want to bake cookies and make tea and read stories fireside -- but then i happen upon a young girl with dirty socks and summer sandals on her slender feet and i am just unable to ignore what is hard. and at the back of my mind, i have to think this could be my sister or me. this place to which we have gone twice this week is called "my sister's house." and it very well could be. it is.
it is easy to feel overwhelmed when we see need. and often the need is that overwhelming. but really it is just about looking and listening. isn't it? and when we do, we realize it really doesn’t take too much. we fear it might, but when we take the chance, we often find, it doesn't.
sometimes it is just about being willing to look. willing to listen.
just this week, the young man bagging my groceries began to chat with me. i was only being polite and making small talk as we walked to my car with my overloaded cart, but before i knew it, john was telling me his story. he shared how he and his mother were fighting and how he was thinking he should move out, but it was christmas and he didn’t know what to do. he told me how sad his mom has been since his dad died and the rest of his siblings have moved away and ignored her. “i’m all she has left, but it is driving me crazy. i want to go to college or the military or something. i am not sure how to get on with my own life.” as he placed my bags in the car i could tell he was pretty close to tears. i uttered a few lame words of encouragement and before walking away john smiled back and said, "thanks for listening."
i had only gone to the store for dinner items and i drove away with something more -- something i never expected. someone's story.
sometimes it is just about being willing to look. willing to listen.
just this week, the young man bagging my groceries began to chat with me. i was only being polite and making small talk as we walked to my car with my overloaded cart, but before i knew it, john was telling me his story. he shared how he and his mother were fighting and how he was thinking he should move out, but it was christmas and he didn’t know what to do. he told me how sad his mom has been since his dad died and the rest of his siblings have moved away and ignored her. “i’m all she has left, but it is driving me crazy. i want to go to college or the military or something. i am not sure how to get on with my own life.” as he placed my bags in the car i could tell he was pretty close to tears. i uttered a few lame words of encouragement and before walking away john smiled back and said, "thanks for listening."
i had only gone to the store for dinner items and i drove away with something more -- something i never expected. someone's story.
if everyday life is hard--and it is for most everyone in some way--then holiday life can be harder. i am sure the lonely and the broken want only to wake up and have the whole blessed event be over. these women in the shelter who cannot provide roofs and meals and beds for their children, must feel buried in the expectation of providing presents and peace. impossibilities. i honestly cannot imagine. i feel overwhelmed sometimes as a mother trying to pull it all together in my nice, comfortable life. and then i have a day like yesterday, and i cringe at my comforts.
as i type this afternoon, three days before christmas, i’m honestly not sure what to do with the weight of it all. i don't even quite know why i am writing. i fear i've been too preachy in these past few posts. it is not my intention. i am only sharing my heart. i need to go upstairs and wrap a few presents and organize our christmas meal and attend to some last minute holiday details, but i am still thinking about that young woman and her silver sandals.
i think also of the unborn baby she carries and the cold december rain and the hard set of her shoulders. i’m glad we went yesterday. i’m thankful my kids and my friends and i touched the arms and hands of these women -- these women who, in turn, touched our hearts.
my prayer is for my eyes to be open and for courage to really see. my prayer is to not pass by, but to look and to listen and to, when possible, touch those hurting and heartbroken--especially in this shimmering kind of a season. it could easily be any of our feet walking in silver, summer sandals just a few days before christmas.
“may God break my heart so completely that the whole world falls in.” ~ mother teresa
a wonderful read. a beautiful story and reminder for us all to look, listen, hear. pain can be loud or it can be quiet, but it is indeed everywhere. thank you, jody, for looking for it and acting where you can. love you.
ReplyDeleteI am so glad I found your link through incourage. What an inspiring and wonderful read. Thank you so much for doing what you can...God Bless You and Your Family Always. Charina
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing. We don't have to look very far to find people broken, hurting or going without. We just have to open our heart and stop judging. The.mom with the "unruly" kids? Probably not a bad mom after all, her kids could have autism, adhd, etc. The woman with the bad teeth? Probably never did drugs and has a health condition she can't afford to fix. The cranky, rude old man? Has probably been lonely for so long he's forgotten what compassion feels like. If we would stop living our self - centered lives, we would realize how we can be God's eyes, ears, voice, heart, hands and feet.....
ReplyDeleteThat is my prayer for 2012. That women would stop living in this fast-paced, self - centered society and slow down their lives enough to see what God is trying to show them. People all around are hurting. We have been through many personal struggles over the past decade and I can tell you that the worst part of struggling, is being treated like the plague. Most people are quick to judge and always look the other way. Feeling rejected and judged by those who go to a church once a week. My challenge to every woman is: next time you judge someone, stop and let go of that judgemental thought. Ponder for a moment, what else it could be. Imagine they aren't a bad person, but a hurting person, in some way. What way? Is it something you can fix? A kind word you can offer? And ALWAYS PRAY FOR THEM!
I am thankful you posted about your experience. God bless!
This: "but really it is just about looking and listening."
ReplyDeleteThank you -- a thousand thank yous.
How many different seeds can you name?
ReplyDeletesilver sandals