Showing posts with label surrender. Show all posts
Showing posts with label surrender. Show all posts

Monday, April 7, 2014

what we beat against




the animal lovers in our home have been a wee bit on edge this weekend. you see, since yesterday afternoon, there's been this beautiful red-breasted robin attacking the picture window out front. she sits on a birch tree nearby and continuously flies full force at the large glass of our living room.

she is relentless.

she is resilient.

she is determined.

she is ... er, um ... perhaps a little dumb?

i mean why is she flying at the window over and over and over again? she's most likely on her 200th attempt. surely she realized after five or after fifty times that she wasn't going to get in.

so, what is it that she wants?
what does she see?

a mirror?

a reflection?

a ribbon?

a tangle of dog hair desired for her nest?

come on mrs. robin, what gives? what passion burns in that red-breast of yours?

seriously, folks, this mama bird is literally banging her head on a wall of glass.  repeatedly. i have to wonder why she persists so. why she's this willing to persevere. i can't see anything inside the room which might attract her attention. there's a couple of cute pictures of our kids resting on the piano -- and, of course, there's the piano --but birds aren't searching for memories or music.

my tenderhearted sarah has attempted to discourage her. she's removed the mirror and even googled the problem. today, after school, she's planning on decorating the picture window with stickers or saran wrap in order to "prove to the bird" there's simply no way in. {personally, i am voting for saran wrap, seems an easier thing to remove after convincing the bird}.

and i sit here at my computer this afternoon, answering a few emails to the continuous clunk-flutter-tap-tap of this fine feathered fiend.

our big, beastly dog, minne, watches her from the driveway below. big brown dog with big brown head resting on big brown paws. only her gold-flecked eyes track the bird from tree to window and back again. if dogs could talk i know she'd be shaking her big brown everything saying, "give it up silly bird. there's no way through that window. take your bird-brained bludgeoning elsewhere already."

but still she comes.

clunk-flutter-tap-tap.


and i type and i hear and i think: oh she is me. i am her.

i am the bird-woman often clunking against something hard. a thing impenetrable. the one who bangs her head on the wall, determined to find a way in our through or over. determined to get what i want.

no doubt, tenacity can be a good thing in most matters. a person (or bird) who perseveres is to be praised. but, if we're being honest, it is also the mark of the bull-headed {or bird-headed, if you will}. a trait admirable or aggravating.

for there does come a point, perhaps on the 200th attempt, when the window's been closed and the door's been barred. there does come a time when we should realize it wasn't the route intended. it wasn't the right entrance. it wasn't the path pre-determined. it was never a part of the plan.

but, headache or not, i have a hard time admitting that. i am wired to want my way.

i want what i want.

i am like that in my nature.

and so i clunk and tap thinking if i just try again or try harder or try longer it will happen -- the break through moment might occur. i'll clunk or claw or peck or push my way into what i think is meant for me, only to find out God had another purpose all along.

God may have created us for courage and perseverance, but He didn't design us to beat our heads belligerently against walls --- glass or otherwise. He designed us, like my relentless friend, ms. robin, for soaring high and singing in spring and tending to the treasures at hand.

He didn't design us for dead-ends, but for life.

sometimes we are called to an unswerving passion, but sometimes, simply to surrender.

anyone else out there ever feel this way?

is there something you've been fighting for or flinging yourself at full force which is clearly not God's plan for you? something elusive and enticing which keeps your wings fruitlessly flapping and your eyes distracted from God's better gifts?

it's hard to look away.

i know.

but there's a difference between quitting and surrendering. often we bird-headed types fear we'll look like losers if we walk away. we're sure it will seem like we've given up or thrown in the towel or turned our back on an opportunity. i'm not talking about that though. i'm talking about when God clearly steers us away from something and yet we pretend not to notice. when we pretend we don't understand His direction.

when we don't want to see where He's leading us, but instead keep up our try-hard rhythm of clunk-flutter-tap-tap.

let's face it, there's a fine line between persevering through a challenge He's presented and pecking away at a problem He never intended for us to take on.

we can be thick-headed and blurry-eyed people, sometimes struggling to know the difference.

instead of beating my beak or banging my head, however, this is where i have to ask God to show me. it is in these moments when i need to stand back from the situation and ask Him to either clearly close the door or open wide the window. it is at this crossroad when i need to ask Him for eyes to see clearly the difference.

what is it, Lord, you want me to persist in and what is it you want to prune from my life?

what is keeping me from soaring in the sunshine or giving thanks for your good gifts?
what wall am i beating myself against which you want to remove.

remove it, Lord.

or,  remove me from it.

sticker it or saran wrap it. tumble it or take it down. but, Lord, be the Remover of anything standing in the way which distracts me from you.

funny. since i started pounding out this little piece, the robin has finally flown off. she's gone. i haven't heard her for over a 1/2 hour now.

maybe the lesson wasn't for the robin pecking outside the glass, but for her friend pounding away inside.

"all that my eyes desired i did not refuse them. i did not withhold my heart from any pleasure, for my heart was pleased because of all my labor and this was my reward for all my labor. thus i considered all my activities which my hands had done and the labor which i had exerted, and behold all was vanity and striving after wind and there was no profit under the sun."  ~ ecclesiastes 2:10-11


Friday, August 9, 2013

mountain climbing: the beautiful and the brutal

"before the mountains were brought forth, or ever you had formed the earth
 and the world, from everlasting to everlasting you are God." ~ psalm 90:2

this week, my siblings and i climbed a mountain together.

mt. rainier is 14,411 feet high at peak elevation. i know this because i have a 10 year old who tells me these things. he was also quick to remind me that rainier is not only a mountain, but a volcano, as well. he did not find the fact that it hasn't erupted in 150 years reassuring -- instead, he  wondered about it being a bit overdue.

i assure you though, mountain or volcano, our climbing goal was never 14,000 plus feet -- that lack of ambition probably had something to do with the seven young children we brought along on our sibling adventure.

"it's so big, mom!"
"it's huuuge."
"can we climb all the way to the top?"
"aunt jody, why is there snow up there?"
"do we have to keep climbing?"
"mama, i'm tired."

and the all-time-parent-favorite: "are we there yet?"

these were just some of the comments from the under ten crowd.

"keep going," we encouraged. "you can do it," we repeated. "we're almost there!" we promised. each one of us took turns carrying backpacks and water bottles and the smaller children. we stopped to study wildflowers and eat fruit snacks. we stopped to scratch the dirt with sticks and turn over rocks. we stopped to look up and look down. we stopped. a lot.

at one point i looked back to find the three 5-year-old cousins, bella, colt and pearl, sitting criss-cross on the path playing with their stuffed puppies and purses. bella was in her glory this week paling around with her twin cousins of the same age. i have a new appreciation for the power of five year olds when they come in threes.

our plan wasn't to scale up to the very top, but still, i wondered how we'd get even to the waterfall -- our lunch spot -- with all these little legs. i suppose our adventure might seem crazy to some, but none of us were particularly worried. we knew it wasn't going to be a sprint, but a journey. not every adult would have been game for this kind of trek, but my four siblings and i were completely content with our four cameras and the breathtaking views. every time the little ones stopped to pick a flower (a no-no, by the way) or put up a fuss or pull out a water bottle, we stopped to click.

mountain climbing with seven young children isn't for the individual in a hurry.

it's a slow process. it's a one-step-forward-and-three-steps-back kind of thing.

it's a lot like life.

and as we were climbing, it occurred to me, this was not the first time our family has climbed slowly up a mountain together.

it wasn't the first time we've had to face something so large ... something so formidable ... something which seemed impossible.

let me tell you about my brother, doug.

not only was he crazy enough to think vacationing in a national park with his three younger sisters and their seven young children a good idea, but he was also completely on board and just as excited as the five year olds to climb this great mountain. and that day out on the mountain, as i watched him climbing up ahead, i couldn't help but think about the continual climb he's been on in his own life ...

you see, every sunday, at three o'clock, you'll find my brother, doug, at the detox center in akron, ohio.

he's there because of the mountain he's faced for almost three decades ---

alcoholism.

doug took his first drink at the age of 14. i was two years behind him in high school and remember watching him drink with his buddies at the weekend parties -- the popular crowd. and i wasn't there just watching, i was there taking my first sips of beer as well. even at our christian high school, it was what everyone did.

i don't know when my brother moved from being a teenager who had a few weekend beers to a full-time alcoholic. that's a line rarely clear for most people. during these years i was busy with my own life: away at college, getting married, having babies, raising kids. my sisters and i were not only wrapped up in our separate lives, but we also had all moved out of state and away from home -- three different directions we scattered -- west, east and south. we grew farther apart from my brother and his issues and his growing illness. it was harder for any of us to know what was really going on in his life. we sensed things deteriorating, but still ... we'd sweep into town for a brief visit and then jump back into our cars or onto a plane and return to the preoccupation and commotion of our own homes.

we worried about him and, on occasion, we even talked to each other about our worry, but always felt helpless and unsure about what we could do. we tried talking, even tried a family intervention ... but my brother was a smooth talker and always steered us away. he talked us down from the cliffs of our concern. "i'm fine. don't worry about me. you're imagining things ..." and the truth is, we hoped deep inside, we were imagining things. we didn't want to believe our brother was an alcoholic any more than he wanted to believe it. my charming brother always had an answer or an excuse or a good explanation. alcohol makes exceptional liars. because alcoholism mingles well with deceit.

this went on for years. decades, really.

but then came a cold january day in 2010 and a phone call from my brother. "i'm desperate, jody. i don't know what to do. i'm at the end. i can't go on like this any longer. help me." he was on the cliff's edge and his desperate words were the final thin threads holding. the high school homecoming king ... the star basketball player ... the boy with the charming personality, the winsome smile and a million friends ... was holding on by nothing more than a thin thread.

it was time to do something drastic.

phone calls and connections were made. there's no quick way to explain how God orchestrated the details. He just did. He directed our steps to the right people, the right place. we were able to find my brother a spot in a christian treatment center in georgia. he had only to get himself on a greyhound bus and come south.

at this point my brother couldn't fly any longer. he had lost his license because of too many DUI's. lost his insurance. he was drinking a fifth of vodka every day. he couldn't go longer than four hours without a drink or he'd be violently sick. he had to drink first thing in the morning to get his body moving. his eyes were glassy. his hands shaky. his spirit destructive. he was lying to everybody about everything. losing money. losing his family. losing his mind. alienating people and partying hard with his inner demons. the doctors had told him, his body wouldn't continue much longer like this. he was killing himself slowly.

in another blog, i wrote about the january day he arrived in atlanta on a greyhound bus ... 3 1/2 years ago:
the arrival door opened and people began to drag in. as i searched through the muddle of tired passengers, my eyes paused at the haggard man hanging back from the group. everyone exiting the bus looked exhausted from a long night of travel, but this man looked exhausted from a long life ... or a slow death. he was grey and shaking, unshaven, hunched over, broken like one homeless --   
he was my brother.  
my stomach dropped -- this shuffling body moving in my direction, almost unrecognizable. our eyes met. mine welling with tears, his bloodshot and distant. and immediately i knew, as hard as it was for me to watch my oldest sibling come to me this way, it had to be a million times harder for him to be met by his younger, healthier, seemingly-whole sister. but he had come for help. we embraced, we clung, we knew what the weekend ahead held. this was not a favorite uncle coming for a quick visit with his nephews and nieces, this was a broken brother limping into town for help. 
he was coming to our house this weekend to detox and prepare to enter a six week treatment center here in the south.
later that night, he told me he had passed the 16 hour trip from cleveland to atlanta counting the white slash marks on the road. a man can only count so many white slash marks before having to come face to face with the slash marks in his own life. on his own soul. the slash marks he has left on those he loves. doug had 16 solitary hours on a greyhound bus to take count of them all.  
alcohol has been my brother's buddy for a couple of decades. it has been his culture. his comfort. his best friend. his mistress. one doesn't walk easily away from those relationships -- from those holds. their tongues have lured him into a seductive dance, while their unrelenting claws have clutched and snared and gripped .... leaving marks. leaving wounds. leaving blood. taking life. 
while he was at my house this weekend he told me the story of another detox attempt earlier in the year:
just days after leaving that last treatment center the engagement began again. the comforting words of his cunning friend quickly convinced him he could pick up a six pack and have just one, no more than two. he was told by the wooing voices of his head, he "could handle it. he was stronger now." 
he took his purchase to the basement when he arrived home. he was called for dinner, his children at the table. the food ready. his place set. yet he sat in that dim basement and drank all six beers on the cold cement floor. he sat alone. his family was only a floor above -- they might as well have been a world away. his one beer turned into six. 
because this is the story of alcoholism: broken man or beaten woman. alone in a cold and filthy basement. desperately clutching their betrayal. their family at the dinner table with warm food waiting, but the drink winning. the demons wild. the dark things rejoicing.                                  
      ~ january 14, 2010 "the eaten years"
doug went into a treatment program that winter. it didn't heal him completely. but he came out with new tools and a new determination. mostly though, he came out with a renewed faith in God. and for a while he was good. he was great. but even after all that renewal and all that time spent in treatment, he stumbled again. it's one thing when the mountain looms up ahead, it's another thing when you've made progress and then begin sliding back down into the darkness ...

and though there have been times when doug felt like he would never conquer the mountain of alcoholism, he has learned, in the past few years, to climb more slowly, more carefully. more like a child who sometimes needs to be carried. like our own mt. rainier adventure this past week -- one step forward, three steps back. he has learned to respect the size and scale and the seductive power of what he faces. he has learned it's not a sprint, but a journey. he has mostly learned to surrender himself.

my brother has not had a drink in 18 months.

maybe that doesn't seem like much to you, but to our family, it's huge. it's a miracle. we are all incredibly proud of him. and this weekend, my sisters and i had a chance to tell him.

my brother, today, is a different man. he is still up on the mountain climbing, but he is no longer on the edge.

he would tell you that at any time he could slide back again, because there's no slope more slippery than addiction. but through his surrender he is learning how to do battle with something so large. doug is at every AA meeting he can attend, he facilitates them and regularly shares his story. he spends time in the trenches mentoring other men and women. he talks with teens and goes every sunday afternoon to the detox center at st. thomas to meet with the most broken. he knows their pain well. and he knows the importance in his own life of remembering that pain.

working with those in the evil clutches of alcoholism is necessary for doug. it is now his mission and it will always be his medication. because it is easy to slide back down a mountain when we forget about the dark places below.

mostly though, doug has learned that he isn't alone. Jesus is climbing with him.

early wednesday morning, while everyone else was still asleep in our cabin, doug and i sat out on the deck. and under the shadow of mt. rainier, he shared more with me about the mountain of alcoholism. my brother, who at age 46, has been through detox four times and failed, knows the cost of this climb. in alcoholism you will never stand at the peak and declare you've conquered your disease completely. it is a continual climb, an every day decision. there is no pinnacle of perfect success. you just keep doing what you know how to do. doug told me that at AA they have a saying about recovery,"it is simple, but it's not easy."

mountain climbing is fundamentally pretty simple. it's about one foot in front of the other. it's not looking too far ahead, and not dwelling too much on where we just came from. it's about one step at a time ... one day at a time. it's about sometimes stopping to scratch in the dirt with a friend or sit for a while and rest, but then it's about getting back up and continuing to climb.

this sibling get-a-way wasn't about my brother or about any one of us. but while there, i think each of us discovered it was about all of us in some way. we've each had our share of mountain climbing in the past couple of years. and though this trip wasn't planned to be symbolic -- it was.

there was a day when the last place my brother would have wanted to be was on a mountain with his three bossy, know-it-all-sisters, but he bought a plane ticket and got himself there and, together, we climbed a mountain.

when i asked doug's permission to share this on my blog, he answered, "those people that know me, know my story. those who don't, might be encouraged to hear it."

friend, i don't know what mountain you are facing right now -- but i know you probably have one. we all do. my prayer in sharing doug's story is that you are encouraged by his struggle ... and inspired by his surrender. he would want you to know whatever your problems and however large they loom, there is hope when you stop sprinting up the mountain in your own strength and learn to journey with Jesus in His strength.


"the mountains melt like wax before the Lord, 
before the Lord of all the earth." ~ psalm 97:5

"if you have faith as small as a mustard seed, you can say to this mountain, 
‘move from here to there,’ and it will move. 
nothing will be impossible for you.” ~ matthew 17:20
































"in His hand are the depths of the earth; 
the heights of the mountains are His also." ~ psalm 95:4

Monday, December 12, 2011

snowflakes and flying


when the plane is preparing to take off, i confess, i am one of those who begins to pray hard.  i can't help myself.   i mean i know God and i are good and i'm pretty confident if things don't go well with the engine, my trip will probably end at the pearly gates, but still, i pray without ceasing. from the time the plane picks up speed until it is stable and steady high in the air, i close my eyes, grip my armrests,
and talk pretty intensely with God.  extra assurance? perhaps. or maybe i am just doing my very best to remind Him that though i packed for a trip, i have little interest at the moment, in a one way ticket.  and so i pray.


this past weekend, i flew to minnesota, the land of 10,000 lakes and 10,000 inches of snow.  and what's best, i flew alone.  completely alone.  though i know some people don't relish this thought, i actually like to fly and even enjoy flying by myself.  a few uninterrupted hours on a plane with my book or knitting or laptop is a treat -- a retreat.  though typically kind of social and one who easily strikes up conversation with anyone or anything, it's different when i travel.  while flying, i feign terrific awkwardness and incredible anti-social behavior. i sort of like it to be just me and my thoughts in the little pocket of peace 10,000 feet above the world.  there is something quite lovely about that for a mother who usually has a dog or a toddler or a teen at arm's reach.  even the ridiculously small seats of coach feel wide open and roomy.  no one is asking anything of me.  no one expects anything more than that i buckle my seatbelt and secure my belongings.  as long as i don't tamper with the smoke detector or abuse the carry-on rules, i'm good.  i'm left, blissfully and beautifully, alone.


it probably doesn't surprise you that i am also kind of partial to the window seat.  i keep the shade up and my nose pressed against the pressurized plastic oval. perhaps not completely age appropriate, but i stare and i stare.  i look and i look.  i care little about pretending myself a sophisticated and seasoned flyer. whether it is the city lights at night or the patchwork farm fields of day, there is something to see when the clouds part.  flying this weekend i had an incredible view from my window seat.  as we came across, what i guess was the northern part of iowa, i had my eyes glued to the neutral pieces of land below.  fields and farms, dotted with solitary homes.  i couldn't help but think of those little people inside--near fires, fixing dinner, bathing children, reading books--each one miniature in my bird's eye view.  and as i was considering those hearty iowan farmers, i noticed a distinct line arcing across the land. it was a line of snow cutting straight across the fields, as far as my eyes could see; one side brown and grey, the other side pristine white.  it was so clear from my place high above.  but those tiny people below knew nothing of this massive mark, they were seeing snowflakes. crystal white--each delicate, each different.  they were holding them in their hands, catching them on their tongues, sweeping them from their porches. rejoicing or cursing, but seeing nothing more from their warm kitchen windows or drafty planked barns, but the flurries in front of their face. perhaps they also saw their children grabbing sleds or searching for mittens and boots.  perhaps they saw the family dog's nose pressed to the glass of porch door, but that was it.  limited--all of them. from their minute places they were short-sighted, and thought nothing of that expansive line looming across the wintering midwest.  the line which i could see.


it felt strange and almost serious to be able to see this distinct wrinkle of weather.  my shoulders felt inadequate with the weight of this seeing--like i was peeking into something not entirely my own business.  but it reminded me of my own limited perspective. i don't live life from 10,000 feet above, i live life with feet planted on solid ground.  i can only see the small snowflakes of life, rarely do i get a chance to look out at the width and breath of my personal storm.   how often i want to live acting as if i know what's best and what's right, me peering out from my small kitchen window, my vision stopping in its snowy tracks of human small. is it possible God allows us only to see what we can catch on our tongues and hold in our hands...because it is enough?


the truth is, sometimes when i get a glance of something greater, i am sometimes moved to fear, like that flying woman in her take off posture -- fingers a-tightening and prayers a-whispering.  God has been in charge all along.  there is no difference between my walking the dog on the quiet street of buttercup trace and myself in a plane zooming speedily down the run way.  He is in control in the mundane moments and in the seemingly dangerous.  it is my perspective which colors the scene and the sense of certainty.  His perspective and His control never waiver.  He has the whole picture in His hands.  always. 


and flying this winter weekend, i was graciously reminded again, God holds the sky and the snow and the storm and the line.


later that day, i stood at a glass pane in the minnesota cold and watched the tiny snowflakes drift down.  one by one.  and i could hear God.  "see the beauty." He whispered.  "don't worry about the storm line, but catch the snowflake. i've made you, my daughter, to see somethings small."



"nature is full of genius, full of the divinity; so that not a snowflake
 escapes its fashioning hand."   ~ henry david thoreau



Thursday, March 10, 2011

i surrender

last weekend i had the chance to share bella's story with over 600 women.  it wasn't planned.  i wasn't scheduled to do so. but it happened.   i'd like to say it happened spontaneously, but that's not quite right either. you see,  i was emceeing the women's retreat for our church.  i was only asked to emcee.  i was only asked to keep things moving, to keep things light, to keep things clear.  no one said anything about sharing our story.  no one asked me to talk about bella, or adoption, or my personal journey.  that part Just Happened. 
i had gotten to callaway gardens on thursday and spent my first day there prepping for our event.  i spent the day hanging our set design.  i spent the day arranging flowers and candles and rocks.  i spent the day rehearsing a skit and an intro and a whole lot of lines.  i spent the day figuring out the order of events, the entrances and exits and the right level of  levity.  i spent my first day gathering announcements and information and a boat load of details.  i spent the day worrying about whether i would strike the right tone...make the right transitions...remember all the right stuff.  i wondered whether the women would like me...laugh with me...tolerate me.  i had not once thought about sharing anything to do with adoption. 
thursday turned into friday and our first session with the women came and went.  all went well.  saturday morning came and went.  all went well.  as i was gathering my notes saturday afternoon and beginning to prepare for that evening's session, i flipped ahead to sunday.  the topic was surrender.  i sat down on a seat in the somewhat empty ballroom and stared at the stage.  there were five words in bold lettering up on the stage.  i knew them well - i had personally hung them there.  these were the five words which our retreat focused on:  undivided.  contentment.  gratitude.  worship.  surrender.   sunday would be our last session together. i had scripted little items throughout the whole weekend, but because of the craziness back home, i just had never gotten to sunday's session.   i was going to have to come up with something to lead into our main speaker's talk on surrender.   what did i know about surrender?   it hit me immediately.  i was supposed to share something about our journey to bella.  i just knew it.  i mean i really knew it.  i had been as faithful to our minute-by-minute-schedule as was possible.  throughout the whole weekend i stayed on target.  i respected the work of our producer.  when she told me i had 15 minutes,   i worked hard to stay true to those 15 minutes.  when she told me i had 8 minutes, i obeyed her without question.  i have worked in production long enough to know how precious those minutes are and how quickly a program can get off track.  there is usually no margin for rabbit trails or sidebars.  and there is absolutely never room to steal time or an audience's energy from a key note speaker.  i was sharing the stage with world renowned author and speaker, linda dillow.  i was sharing the stage with dove award nominee and recording artist, our worship leader, laura story.   this was their gig, not mine.  but even in knowing all of this, i was certain i was supposed to say something.  i wasn't sure when i would ever have the undivided attention of 600 women.  and you see, i didn't have much choice,  i had made a promise less than 7 months ago.
it was last summer on our return flight from china.  i remember staring out the window and thinking myself the luckiest girl in the whole wide world.  i remember the tears trailing down my cheeks as my husband slept alongside me and my bella slept sprawled across my lap.  i remember well my conversation with God.  "Lord, how did this happen?  (long story) Lord, what did i do to deserve this? (absolutely nothing) Lord, how am i worthy? (you're not) Lord, what can i do to give you the glory? (tell others).  that was it.  that was my conversation.  i am not saying that i heard an audible voice.  i am just saying that those were my questions and the answers were immediately in my head.  i didn't do anything to deserve a gift like our bella and i wasn't even close to worthy...but you see, this is where God steps in.  He told me from the beginning this wasn't about me, or our family, or even about bella.  this was abou HIM.  this was about His Glory.  and knowing this leaves me little choice but to tell others.  to tell others God will show up.  to tell others God is in control.  to tell others it doesn't matter that they are not smart enough, or rich enough, or capable enough or calm enough.  God is enough.  He is more than enough.
all along we have said we looked more like we needed a nanny than we did a fifth child.  so true.  i remember one particularly chaotic morning in my kitchen when i came face to face with this realization.  that morning it was crystal clear we had our hands Very Full Already.  standing in the middle of that morning's breakfast cacophany, i simply couldn't imagine adding a toddler.  but God met me even in that chaos and assured me, it might be ugly at times, but it would be okay.  this was His Will.  i can't explain that.  i can't explain how out of control i felt as we waited one entire year for our daughter on the other side of the world.  but i can tell you it was a time in which God worked on my heart.  i mean He did a complete and total surgical makeover.   i have always struggled with wanting to control things - wanting to fix things - wanting to make things just right.  call it the teacher in me.  the director.  the producer.  the mother.  call it whatever you like, but i have struggled terribly.  every single day i could agree to surrender my will and promise to give up my plan, but every single day i fought like crazy to keep it clutched in my insecure grip.   i had four children in my home and even though i could appear laid back and easy going, i worked tenaciously behind the scenes to hold on to the strings.
when we began to fall in love with bella and began to realize just how long it would take and just how sick she was and just how little we knew and just how far she was....well, this was when i knew one of the reasons God had put us on this adoption path was for me.  it was to teach me about letting go and letting God.  it was about my surrender.   He knew He had to use something large scale.  i am certain He witnessed every battle with my mother and my father and my sisters and my husband.  He knew i was a really serious case. totally desperate.  i had spent most of my life thinking i was in charge or wanting to be in charge or at least acting like i was in charge.  so, it was going to take something big.  well...actually bella is pretty small....so it took this tiny, tiny girl from china to change and soften and surrender my stubborn, stubborn heart.  don't you just love how God enjoys surprising us?  He just loves to take the insignificant and make it significant.  He loves to take the weak and make it strong.  He loves to take the small thing and make it huge.  He loves to take the ugly and make it beautiful.
there bella was last summer,  in a hospital recovering from major open heart surgery.  a surgery which saved her life.  she was alone.  i was told there were probably some nannies from the orphanage who took shifts staying with bella.  that offered some comfort, but not much.  when she returned to the orphanage we were given nothing.  no reports.  no updates.  no pictures.  the only thing we received in all those months was one picture of her in her crib.  behind bars.  head shaved and a puddle of liquid underneath the crib. she was wearing a coat and a vest at least 3 sizes too big.   i had to crop that photo.  i wanted her face, but i couldn't bear to see those bars, that puddle or even that oversized coat.  i hated the thought and the image of bella in this crib alone.  i couldn't stand to think about it at times.  i hated that we were wading through a sea of useless and repetitve papers and forms.  the mountain seemed huge.  the road seemed endless.  i can recall a set back that november which caused me to just lay down on the hardwood floor of my office one night and cry.  let me rephrase that: weep.  i wept with the frustration of it all. i couldn't understand why it had to take so long and why we were not able to get updates on our girl.  i was angry.   but when i was able to be completely honest with myself, i realized that a good deal of my frustration came from me wanting to march into that orphanage and demand my rights.  i believe there is even a post somewhere in last year's writing which speaks to this.  anyway, it was at that point of honesty, when i started to face the fact that God was working on me.  i won't go into detail.  there are countless postings already written which offer proof enough.  little by little my heart was being softened and my white-knuckled fingers were unwrapping themselves from all that i clutched.  little by little God was whispering into my ear, "I have it under control jody...My ways are not your ways...My thoughts are not your thoughts....I care even for the birds of the air...I have clothed even the lilies of the field...I can move mountains...I am the beginning and the end...I have ordained all the days of your life...to what can you compare Me?"   over and over and over again these words were seared into my stubborn heart.  i have this little leather journal from that year.  i will always think of it as my surrender journal.  there are countless passages copied into it.  passages declaring God Is In Control and I Am Not.
i want you to know i was fast.  i spewed out bella's story as quickly as i could.  you know this was not easy. i could have talked for an hour.  a day.  a week.   i happen to use too many words any time i open my mouth or sit down at my computer.  i apologized upfront.  i apologized after the fact.  but i know it was the right thing.  i didn't say half of what i had intended, but somehow there were women who heard.  despite my rambling and stumbling, i know some heard.  since last sunday i have had numerous conversations, messages and emails with women who want to know more.  who want to talk further.  women who feel a stirring.  i didn't stir anything...that was the Spirit.  He told me to share and i shared.  that was the beginning and ending of me.   how lucky i am to have evidence of His work.  how blessed i am to see a glimpse of God's glory.   i don't believe much in luck...but still can't help but feel the luckiest girl in the world,  indeed.  and what's more...i didn't get in too much trouble.

i'm giving you my heart, and all that is within
i lay it all down for the sake of you my King
i'm giving you my dreams, i'm laying down my rights
i'm giving up my pride for the promise of new life.

and i surrender all to you, all to you
and i surrender all to you, all to you

i'm singing You this song, i'm waiting at the cross
 and all the world holds dear, i count it all as loss
   for the sake of knowing You for the glory of Your name
    to know the lasting joy, even sharing in Your pain
                                                ~ lincoln brewster