[No promises that this is coherent ... just the ramblings of my heart]
Yesterday I read "A Grief Observed" by CS Lewis -- a very short and very poignant book. People who know me well will not be the least bit surprised that I turned to my bookshelf in my moment of need: the written word tends to be my coping mechanism.
The book is essentially Lewis' journal writings following the death of his wife, Joy. It was originally published under a pseudonym, for it is disturbingly raw and honest. Honestly, I'm not sure why I own it. And I have no idea why it was actually on my bookshelf (alas, most of my precious books are in boxes in the basement) -- it is usually reserved for favorites, current reads and things I want to read soon.
But there it was nonetheless, and my tear-stained eyes seemed to find it almost instantly.
It did not, by any stretch of the imagination, ease my heartache. Not that it was ever intended to. It is called "A Grief Observed" because it is a window into one man's particular pain, not a self-help book to guide one on the way to recovery. But it gave me a fellow traveler on the journey, and some words to help process my hurt.
We have spent a year and half gaining love-traction for our adopted child, and that was compounded with 6 weeks of fierce love for this particular girl. She had a name - Sloane (which is not her name now, of course) - and we prayed over her and dreamed about her by name.
Of course the overall pain of the loss is horrible, but it's so big that I can attend to it. The little things, the specific dreams that unsuspectingly replay in my mind are much, much worse. The death of each of those dreams aggregates into something unbearable. I imagined the way her dark skin would look against the new, bright clothes we picked out for her. I imagined waking up to a quiet cabin in WV over Thanksgiving, getting to nourish my new girl while snow fell outside. I imagined bundling her up, getting both of my girls set in the new double stroller (which I now need to return) and taking long walks while looking at her sweet sleeping face. I imagined doing puzzles with Phoenix with Sloane wrapped up next to my chest. I imagined her tiny body rising and falling on her daddy's sleeping body.
I don't regret those dreams - if Sloane had ended up as my child, I didn't want to miss one moment of loving her. Refusing to dream about her wouldn't have made the loss easier; when we are chosen again, I will commit my imagination to dreaming again.
In Lewis' book, he talks about a mother's loss of child. She is comforted that her "child has not lost the end for which it was created," and she is comforted that she has not lost her greatest treasure, "that she may still hope to glorify God and enjoy Him forever."
And here is where he hit the nail on the head:
There is no comfort to her motherhood. "The specifically maternal happiness must be written off. Never, in any place or time, will she have her son on knees, or bathe him, or tell him a story, or plan for his future, or see her grandchild."
There is great comfort for my soul, but my Mama's heart bleeds uncontrollably.
I feel sick to my stomach, and yet I want to drown in a pint of ice cream. I am so deeply exhausted, but I can't sleep. I don't want to be around anyone, but I don't want to be alone.
This is uncharted territory for me. I recognize that this makes me very lucky indeed ... grief is not a stranger to most people. But it is nonetheless a hard lesson to learn for the first time. And, as Lewis writes, "there is nothing we can do with suffering but to suffer it."
"You can't see anything properly while your eyes are blurred with tears." And since I have spent much of the last two days trying to catch my breath while weeping, I know that I can't see straight.
Fortunately, God was preemptive in caring for my heart, knowing that I would be too broken to make my way to His arms just yet. Sunday night, while I was driving to Decatur, I felt God pressing on my heart to recount to Him the many things that I have learned about hope in this season of waiting. I also felt strongly that I should write them down. At the end, I wrote:
"The one who pursues hope leaps with great faith, knowing (even in a free-fall) that God is greatly kind. And even if she hits the ground at her greatest hope-speed, she rests safely in the care of a healer who will surely mend her broken heart, her rattled mind, her fragmented soul."
Well, I sure did hit the ground. But I am in the hands of a healer. A surgeon, lovingly taking me apart so that I can be made into His likeness. Unfortunately, this surgery comes without anesthesia. I acutely feel each cut.
Even still, in darkest night, I worship God. Because I am still forgiven, still loved, and still adopted by Him. He hasn't changed.
So while my heart cries "Sloane," it also sings "Jesus."
Emily. You just wrote out what I felt and continue to feel after losing a child through miscarriage shortly after Ryan and I were married, about 2.5 years ago. I'm now currently 9 months pregnant, yet in the midst of the celebration, my heart still longs for our baby. Yet, He continues to place praise on my lips, even in the midst of confusing emotions and pain. "So while my heart cries "Sloane," it also sings "Jesus." " Thank you so much for your honesty.
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