I look at the chair and I keep thinking...
It is so ugly.
It is HUGE.
In my head I know this is selfish. I should be grateful for this monstrosity. And yet, I want our house to be pretty and this chair is.not.pretty.
It feels like a billboard that screams “I have a child with special needs!” And for so long that billboard has been tucked neatly behind cabinet doors and in tightly woven baskets. It was easily hidden. Syringes fit almost anywhere. It used to be easier to maintain the pretty.
That has changed a bit....
I think the chair looks like a cosmic throne. So big, so imposing...
Oliver with his always-awesome Occupational Therapist, Seth |
One thing it does not scream is "Coastal Living".
And as we all know this isn't just about the cosmic throne, or the fact that my kitchen table had to go and is now replaced with a crayon scribbled card table. It is about me and how I'm dealing with being the mom of a child with very significant special needs.
When we moved into this house, I prayed something like this: “Thank you Lord for providing the finances for us to have this home. Like everything else in my life, use it for your work.”
Let me tell you what I really meant in my heart in reference to that prayer:
I will use this house to have parties and baby showers; to entertain.
I will use this house to allow college girls to stay for the summer for free, or have coffee and cry until 2 AM.
I will host bible studies.
I will let Young Life use it for gatherings, etc...
Basically, I'll use it for fun, attractive kind of service. I offered it with conditions. Conditions that maintain the pretty and the comfortable. You see how it was more about me than Him?
I've been fighting hard to keep our house from looking like a special needs daycare. Or a hospital. I want pretty and I want comfortable and I want my stuff. ((I sound like a 3 year old spoiled brat, don't I?) ) I like material possessions. There I said it. I am materialistic and spoiled and, ugghhh, this transformation in my soul is so painful. Revealing my deep rooted desire to get my way.
It is ugly. My selfishness. My desire to hoard and pet things that moth and rust will destroy (Matthew 6:19).
I thought “if something this small could tear me apart, this is a wake up call!” “I have a problem with stuff.” “I like it too much.”(or as Andrew said when he read this, 'My house, my precious!')
So I'm not sure what that means, except that I acknowledge it. I confess my sin, I lay it bare before God, you and the world. Now God can get to work on this soul because true, honest, humble confession always leads to healing (James 5:16). He doesn't leave us there, on the floor in a mess, crying about a cosmic throne, and that is why I can write this so publicly.
And here is the funny part: As you might imagine, Oliver is very pleased with his throne. It is ugly and yet it is so very GOOD for him. And I give thanks for it, for the safety it provides.
This past month has had some sweetness. There have been moments of Oliver saying "happy" that make my heart want to explode, but bitter has been the main taste in my mouth.
It is emotionally draining to be discouraged so often.
I was out shopping at Marshall's the other night. In the line, there was a woman with special needs. She was there alone. It seemed like a little girl was stuck in a grown woman's body. I (along with everyone else in the line) didn't know how to interact with her. I admit it. Even I, mother of a child with special needs, just didn't know what to do or say. She was awkward and unaware and my heart broke for her.
And when I was in that line, I imagined Oliver that way, and it took my breath away. And yet this is a possible course his life will take, unless a miracle occurs.
This is a bitter pill to swallow.
A long funeral of dreams.
8 comments:
You and I so need to do coffee. You are not alone in these feelings. I often call it swimming in the pity pool. Here for you.
Rachel
Dearest Stephanie. You bare your thoughts and it hits us hard. Especially the part about those "conditional" prayers to God...without even knowing or thinking at the time that they ARE conditional. We certainly are guilty of that. But, what God has in store is so different. Often so much more disruptive. Shaking up your whole life is pretty wild! But, you can do it...with Gods help...and with Stephanie's flair. You are so special! I never would have wished this for you, but we want to support you on your journey.
Love and hugs and daily prayers.
Claudia
Oh Sweet Steph! What a incredible post (should definitely fit in your book someday!). Love your vulnerability. And, you're right, God will use this to move you through it. Thanks for being honest!
Dear Stephanie, Thank you so much for sharing your heart with us and for helping us to see our selfishness and conditional prayers. You are an inspiration and I am honored to pray with you and for you during this Journey.
Stephanie,
We have never met, but you and Oliver have been in my prayers since last summer when my sister in law asked me to pray for Olivers brain surgery. I can't tell you how much you have touched my heart. Your honesty is so refreshing. Thank you for being real.
Amy Carlson
I soooooo get this about the chair! We had a stander for Aidan that was a monstrosity. We had a tiny apt so it really didn't fit well there at all. I used to tell my PT I was going to burn it. She was awesome and we worked very hard toward his goal of standing and got rid of it as soon as possible. And yes, sometimes the physical trapping make it hard to deny that our lives have taken a turn we didn't expect. The good and the bad in one jumbled life.
{{sigh}}
It's just one more glaring reality in all this isn't it?
Think of it like the playpen of baby days....it too will disappear and then will feel like that phase has passed.
This just doesn't fit with how you envisioned family life. I get that. And it's normal to balk a little or a lot at that.
You're not spoiled, Steph. You're human.
Hang in there, friend. Hang in there...
Hey Stephanie! I read this post yesterday and you were on my heart all day and night. I had to ask my husband to help me write this (I’m Moses, he is my Aaron), because he is MUCH better with words than I am, so that's why it takes on a masculine tone in the next paragraph. :) But we write from our hearts...
Can I provide a little more thought on this? There might be more to your desire for “pretty” than it seems. Let’s make it a different word - beautiful.
God is beautiful. Everything he makes has an end - it is useful in some way, but sometimes its only useful for being beautiful, so it seems. Even what he makes that is useful is beautiful. Pineapples, apples, mountains and even soil have a beauty to them. Trees, clouds, mountains, your son. He never just makes things for “utilitarian” uses, only man does that.
Males tend to focus on the utility, but women do a great job with making things beautiful and beauty is a gift from God because He Himself is Beauty. Beauty stops us in our tracks and makes us consider. A hike on the coast can arrest the heart of the most hardened athiest, and it is God that speaks, even if they deny it. Beauty can save a soul.
Yes, like all things in life we can make this sinful. We can become too attached to things and make them our end. For example, if you desired a beautiful home, but then never invited anyone over out of fear that they would “mess it up.” But if God is the end, as in “I want this to be beautiful because I love my family, and God, and those that will visit here.” A dinner table has a clear use, but can’t it be beautiful? Medical equipment has a use, but since its for men, can’t it be beautiful? Even impoverished people try to arrange their few things in beautiful ways. Rich and poor alike can be materialistic, but that is a twisting of the “use” of beauty - its meant to point to God, not to us. Women have a great skill in making their home beautiful, and they should do this. Mary may have placed Jesus in a manger, but I bet she arranged the straw beautifully - He deserved it.
Recognizing the equipment as looking like a hospital is a good thought - hospitals treat people very utilitarian and are rarely beautiful. You wanted to make your house beautiful for late night bible studies, but your desire to make it beautiful for your son is a sign of goodness as well. People with disabilities deserve beauty too. People with disabilities are beautiful too.The world may see them “useless,” but in their disabilities, the beauty of God can shine as bright as anyone and we see His wisdom in this - the weak confound the strong. I bet you and those other talented women in Wilmington could come up with ways to make those things more beautiful. Slipcovers for the chair for example? (I’m sure lots of other moms who have children with disabilities would appreciate your God given ability to make utilitarian things beautiful.) Beauty is not an end, but it points to God, and anything that we can make beautiful is a good thing.
(Katie again) A friend put this quote on her blog the other day and I think its a perfect feminine way to sum up what my husband said:
“To a young child home stands for God. In it he learns to see and touch the gifts of God. If his mother is wise she will make his home beautiful. She will copy the world’s creator and make a tiny new Eden. She will bring in flowers and give the child animals and feed the birds. The food on the table will be clean and simple and good. It will not only taste nice, it will look nice. From all this the child will learn naturally that God did not make the hideous travesty that we have made of created things.” (Caryll Houselander, The Mother of Christ)
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