Showing posts with label motherhood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label motherhood. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 3, 2013

Sharing Christ's Sufferings

I can't believe it's been 6 weeks since I've blogged! For all my regular readers (if I still have any!) I'm so sorry. I have several posts in my head I'd like to write, but unfortunately my headaches and neck pain have continued for two long months now. I am conserving most of my computer usage/reading (as this flares up the pain) for my daily Bible study. (I am currently co-leading this Bible study, which has been great, but also stressful for me physically).

I've had a few days of reprieve here or there, but nothing long lasting and while I think the pain is structural coming from my sacroiliac joint dysfunction (pelvic misalignment) and resulting muscle compensation along the spine nothing I have tried has given me any lasting relief. Unfortunately, as I've mentioned many times before, I live over 2 hours away from my doctors and physical therapists and my local options have not been helpful for my complex case. I've had pelvic pain for close to 5 years now, so all of my medical professionals specialize in the pelvis. This is one of the hardest things about this type of chronic pain - trying to be my own doctor and figuring out how to get the next symptom that pops up back under control.

Today I was having a particularly hard day. My pain level was higher and I felt discouraged that I can't find a medical practitioner to help me with my head/neck pain. I try really hard not to cry or talk about my pain in front of my 4 year old daughter. But today she must have heard me in my room talking to my husband and crying. She came and hugged me and said,
"Mommy it's ok. I know your head and neck may not stop hurting on Earth, but one day it won't hurt anymore in heaven!"
My daughter quickly helped me remember that this world is not my home. And as I hugged her I felt joy that I could "share Christ's sufferings" (1 Peter 4:13) and in doing so help my daughter learn that Jesus is the greatest treasure of all - that nothing in this world, not even health, compares to Him.

Now, please don't get me wrong, I do not rejoice in my suffering the way I should. There are many days I wallow in self-pity, am mean to my husband, and a down right horrible example of Christ. But I am thankful that my suffering has allowed us the opportunity to teach my daughter about how to handle prayer that is not answered favorably (which is where she heard this response above), how to keep trusting in Christ when life is not easy, and how God is good when He gives and takes away.

I wish I could say, my break from blogging is over, but I'm not sure when or if my headaches will go away or become more manageable. Will you please pray that God will help me find resources to improve my pain or that He will take them away as quickly as they came on? And until then, please pray that God will help me to rejoice in my suffering and give me grace to endure this weary world.

Sunday, March 24, 2013

Preparing For Easter

It's hard to believe today is Palm Sunday and Easter is only one week away. It still very much feels like winter here, but as I learned during my time in Africa, we Americans associate holidays entirely too much with the weather!

This past Thanksgiving and Christmas  I wanted to become more intentional about instilling tradition in my daughter and helping our family prepare for the holidays while focusing our hearts toward the reason for the holiday. I think it's even more important with chronic illness to ensure our focus is on Christ as the daily struggles of pain and disability can drag us down. When you feel so bad you can't get out of bed and partake in the celebrations it's easy to become cynical about holidays. It often doesn't feel like we have much to celebrate. But at Easter we celebrate the most important event in history--our Savior, Jesus, paid the penalty for our sins and rose from the dead so that we can have hope for this life and more importantly for the life to come; a life without suffering that will never end!

This year we have found several ways to focus on the Easter celebration with our daughter, who is 3.5 years old. Including this 40 day devotional and this 28 day devotional that our church provided each family with children for free this year.  But my favorite is the felt banner by heart FELT truths.  I made my own Christmas Advent Felt Calendar using the FREE instructions/printable from heart FELT truths, but I ordered the Easter Banner DIY Kit this year to save time.

This Banner has daily devotional readings from Palm Sunday to Easter and each day my daughter can put one or two felt pieces on the board that correspond with the passage of scripture. It is a really well made product and my daughter is super excited about it. She keeps asking "where is Jesus?" I haven't told her yet about the actual nails she will put in the cross and Jesus' "body" that will be placed in the tomb on Good Friday (pictured below in the open tomb).

 
 
On Good Friday a black piece of fabric is pulled over the banner.And then on Easter Sunday, Jesus' "body" is removed from the tomb and my daughter will wake up to this....

If you have a few minutes and some felt and craft glue you can make a banner like this yourself (even without the fancy tomb/dowel rod, kids will think it's great!), thanks to heart FELT truths' FREE symbols/instructions that can be downloaded from their website. But if that seems overwhelming, check out my friend, Suzanne Shares, where she gives another great "last minute" idea, Resurrection eggs, and even a link to a DIY option.

Maybe you're not a parent, or even if you are, I still encourage you to spend time preparing your own heart for Easter. Desiring God has a great FREE ebook for Holy Week and you can even find it on the YouVersion Bible app.

No matter how bad your circumstances are or how deep your hurt may be, you can find joy in the one who came to one day wipe away every tear and give us a hope and a future!

"For the word of the cross is folly to those who are perishing, but to us who are being saved it is the power of God." 1 Corinthians 1:18

How are you and your family preparing for Easter this year?

Wednesday, December 5, 2012

Preparing for Jesus

The holidays are often a very difficult time for those of us with chronic illness. While everyone is running around shopping and decorating without a second thought, we are just praying to be able make a few memories with our families this Christmas. Most people would be surprised to know that in order to spend a few hours standing and socializing at a Christmas party I need to rest up in advance and even if I do so I will often suffer the consequences of "having fun".

It's tempting to look around and feel like I've been cheated. Why doesn't my husband have the wife he married and why doesn't my daughter have a mom who can do everything like all the other moms?  All I want to do is go to a Christmas parade or make cookies with my family....what's wrong with that, God?

Nothing is wrong with those things, but are they necessary in order to have a happy holiday? I can celebrate Christmas even if I am flat on my back in bed because it is not tradition or family or food in which I am rejoicing, but rather God and how He came in flesh to bring hope to a dying world.

Even though there is the constant pull from the world and my own sin of idolatry, I want to focus on Jesus at Christmas. While my chronic pain may keep me from being the kind of mother I thought I would be, it has allowed me to better teach my daughter about the importance of having a relationship with God and how even though life is hard we can trust Him. I may not be able to bake for hours on end with my daughter at Christmas, but I can teach her about who Christ is by preparing for his coming.

I wanted to start an advent calendar tradition last year when my daughter was 2, but I was unable to do much last Christmas. As I said when I made my "Thankful Tree", I am not crafty and obviously my pain greatly limits me so I began talking with a friend in October about her advent traditions and began making plans. This year we are doing a felt advent calendar and a Jesse Tree Advent Calendar.


I really like The Advent Jesse Tree by Dean Lambert Smith. There are 25 separate devotions for children and adults. Each day comes with a memory verse and song ideas as well as questions to ask children at the end of each devotion. For ornaments I used pictures from Ann Voskamp's FREE advent devotional and other images I found on the Internet. Even if you don't have a tree or ornaments to go with the devotionals I highly recommend reading the stories/scripture. It's not too late to order a copy of The Advent Jesse Tree and use it for the remaining days!



After reading Noel Piper's Treasuring God in our Traditions (which you can read/download for free here) I really wanted the advent calendar she created, but it is no longer sold. However, I did find the script she uses here. Then my friend introduced me to Heart FELT Truths and I downloaded the templates to make the nativity scene pictured above (except for the camels and dog, which I had to free hand). This was a bit more labor intensive than I would have liked, but I saved a lot of money doing it myself. You can purchase pre-made calendars through their etsy shop. I really preferred Noel Piper's script so I added on the camels and dog and re-ordered her script a little to make it work with the felt pieces I had templates for.

Even if you do not have children at home, I encourage you to spend time this advent season preparing for the celebration of Jesus's birth. Desiring God has a great app called Solid Joys, which features 365 daily devotions from the ministry of John Piper and currently these devotions correspond with Piper's ebook Good News of Great Joy (which can also be downloaded on your computer for free if you do not have an iphone/ipod/ipad).

My daughter has been so excited about the Advent Calendar and Jesse Tree this year. I hope these tools help her have a better understanding of God's plan to redeem the world through Jesus and help our family focus on Him more this season. No matter your circumstances this Christmas, may you find peace in the One who came to bring us great joy!

"And the angel said to them, "Fear not, for behold, I bring you good news of great joy that will be for all the people."  Luke 2:10 



Thursday, November 1, 2012

Be Thankful

I was inspired by a friend who blogged about the "Thankful Tree" she created for her family to count 30 days of blessings this month. Ever since reading Noel Piper's Treasuring God in Our Traditions I have wanted to instill the importance of Christ-centered traditions in our family, especially during the holidays when our hearts can be so easily swayed by the things of this world.


I found this tree easy enough for a non-crafty person like me, and I was blessed to use coupons and sales to purchase most of the items at a craft store. I used a mason jar I had on hand and filled it with rocks to hold the branch. I found leaf stencils online and traced the leaves on construction paper. Then I clipped the leaves on the tree using mini clothes pins. I'm sure you could easily use real tree branches, but I used a plastic one so I can just reuse it year after year.



My daughter is already excited about it and can't wait to write something she is thankful for on one of the leaves tonight! After we write our thankfulness we will verbally praise God through prayer. I hope this is a tradition she will remember and carry on with her family one day if God blesses her with one. Most of all I hope she learns to be grateful for all that God has given us and for who He is. And this is key because as Noel Piper said,

" It's amazing how many people can say, 'I'm thankful for...' without admitting that God is there to hear their thanks. And they are certainly not giving him credit for whatever it is they are enjoying." (p. 72 Treasuring God in Our Traditions). 

I think this exercise of thanking God might be quite therapeutic for me as well as I focus on the good even in the midst of hard days because there is so much to be grateful for!
  

Friday, March 23, 2012

Guest post: "The Selfish Guilt of Chronic Illness"

Another great guest post from my friend, Victoria. See more of her story here.

About seven years into my battle with chronic pain I started to feel an overwhelming burden of guilt about my inability to serve my family.  I had been married to a wonderful man for about four years and we had a beautiful two-year-old son.  Since his birth, however, my chronic pain, which had once been pretty well-managed and activity-specific, became widespread, increasingly difficult to control, and invaded every part of our lives.  

I began to see that this chronic pain might never be leaving me – might never be leaving us.  It was like the proverbial uninvited houseguest; it arrived unannounced, not so intrusive at first, but gradually wreaking havoc on my marriage and mothering, undoing the order in my home, and settling down into my life, never intending to leave.  Chronic pain or illness can at first glance seem merely personal, but in a very real way it is something that affects an entire family just as much as the individual sufferer. 

As I had to limit my physical activities more and more to regulate the pain, my husband had to pick up my slack.  I felt useless and angry every time he would wash the dishes, something I “should have” been able to do.  I would try to do them despite the pain, to feel like I was fulfilling my role in our home (I do stay home all day after all), but would inevitably end up on the sofa with an icepack and pain pills.  My husband still sometimes has to physically remove me from the kitchen to make me lie down and not hurt myself.  But I want to work, I want to serve my family, and I want to feel productive.  These are all good things, right?  Why has God taken away something that he commands me to do: serve?   

Webster’s dictionary defines “guilt” as “a feeling of responsibility or remorse for some offense, crime, wrong, etc., whether real or imagined.” That’s exactly how I felt.  My inability to take care of my home, my children, and my husband felt like a Christian crime.  I was letting down my team.  I was a burden to them, not a willing servant.  Every marriage book, or conference, or women’s Bible study I attended affirmed my suspicion that I was committing a horrible offense against my family by my infirmity.  Serve, they said.  Serve even at a detriment to yourself, like Christ served us.  Have the house clean before your husband comes home so he feels welcomed and relaxed.  Jump up to greet him at the door.  Have great sex at least a few times a week to hold your marriage together and keep him from temptation.  And so on.  You know what I’m talking about.   

Well, I do think that is excellent and wise advise, but my husband comes home to a pile of dirty dishes, a baby I haven’t been able to hold all day, a wife who can barely get off the sofa, much less jump into his arms for a hug, and the general knowledge that sex is off the table unless it’s a special occasion and I take narcotics an hour or so before we go upstairs.  I felt like a complete failure as a wife, a mother, and a Christian woman in general.  All this practical advice doled out by wise and respected Christian women for keeping a happy home and marriage, I’ve completely failed to carry out because of my pain.    

Guilt enveloped me as my husband would take care of the dishes rather than doing his schoolwork for seminary or spending time with our son.  Guilt stabbed at my heart every time I had to tell my toddler, “no mommy can’t play trains with you on the floor” or “no I can’t hold you” or “please don’t sit on mommy’s lap.”  Guilt whispered into my ear every time I put our adopted baby in his swing instead of rocking him in my arms: “He’ll never bond with you.  You’re not his real mother.  You should be holding him.  He needs skin-to-skin time, not his swing.  You don’t really love him.”  Guilt worked its way into our bedroom as physical intimacy with my husband slowly trickled down to nothing more than holding hands in bed on most nights.  

I found myself constantly apologizing, especially to my husband.  I really believed that I had wrecked his life.  The fun, active marriage he thought he would have is gone.  The physical intimacy he had longed for with a wife, though now approved by and rejoiced over by God, is mostly a memory of just the first few months of our marriage.  The hope of having a little blond girl with my eyes is something we don’t bring up anymore.  Our plans for hiking and canoeing and camping with our children, like our parents’ did with us, is a silent dream now.   And it’s all my fault.       

As I was fleshing out this idea of living with chronic pain and the resulting feelings of guilt to write about it on this blog, God sent a friend to me with a wise word.  She pointed out that I cannot deny God the use of my pain to work in the lives of others.  God is using my pain, she said, to sharpen my husband’s Christ-like love for me.  And who knows how else he is using it in the lives of my children, and our church family, and my own heart.  

I thought about this for a while.  I knew it was true that God was using my pain to work in my husband’s life, and in mine, but I had never really connected that to my guilt.  I always thought, “I can deal with this pain and let God use it in my life, but I don’t want it to ‘hurt’ my family.  That’s not fair.”  I thought that was righteous and loving.  But if I am reaping the eternal benefit of having my faith tested and strengthened through this fire, how can I deny that same experience of God’s grace to my family and friends?  I came to a rather startling conclusion: my guilt, for all that it appears to be concerned for others, is really self-centered.  It’s selfish.  It’s my ego screaming out to be validated while writhing in my own feeling of uselessness.    

Guilt was something in which I had allowed myself to indulge.  For example, I have felt “righteously guilty” about not being able to take my children for walks around our neighborhood.  After all, one of the reasons we bought this house was the fact that the neighborhood has paved sidewalks on both sides of the street, just for mothers like me to take their children out for walks (of course, then I feel guilty that we bought a more expensive house to be in this neighborhood for that purpose).  My line of thought would go something like this:   “I should feel guilty that I can’t take him out.  Children are supposed to go for walks.  They would be happier and healthier if we got more fresh air and stretched our legs.  I feel so useless.  I’m such a bad mother.  I’m so insufficient for this task.  My kids would be better off with someone else, who could really give them what they need.  I wish I could just get better.  Is being able to walk really too much to ask?  Why does God not want me to take my children for walks?  Doesn’t He want them to revel in His creation?  Doesn’t He want me to take good care of them?” 

Not sure if you noticed, because I didn’t for a long time, but that inner dialogue was really all about me.  It is just me whining, letting my feelings rule over me, and indulging in a little pity party.  It’s me not trusting God.  And it’s me wrongly defining what it is to be a good mother and to live a “useful” life.  

So there’s the truth about my guilt; what I thought I could wallow in as “selfless love” for others and sorrow over my “ruining” their lives, was actually sinful and self-centered.  I shouldn’t be surprised; “The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately sick; who can understand it?” (Isaiah 17:9).

This life is not all about me and how I feel.  It’s not all about my marriage or my children either.  It’s certainly not about my ability to go for walks or do the dishes.  It’s all about God.  It’s about the work He is doing for His glory – and as believers that includes working for my good and the good of my family.  He has seen fit to give me this chronic pain for a purpose – His purpose - which I don’t fully understand.  He has given me a husband and two wonderful children to go on this difficult journey with me.  And He knows that I struggle with my role as a mother and wife.  But I know that He is good and He is training me to take my eyes off of myself and my guilt and onto Him for sustenance, even when I don’t understand.  He has a plan: “You hem me in, behind and before, and lay your hand upon me.  Such knowledge is too wonderful for me; it is high; I cannot attain it” (Psalm 139:5-6).
  
God never defined good mothering as taking your children to the park every day.  He didn’t even define a good marriage primarily as one that has intercourse four times a week (though some Christian books may convince you He did).  The purpose of mothering is to raise up children to know and fear the Lord.  It is to “teach [God’s works] to your children, talking of them when you are sitting in your house, and when you are walking by the way, and when you lie down, and when you rise” (Deuteronomy 11:19).  The purpose of marriage is to reflect the loving union between Christ and His Bride, the Church (Ephesians 5:22-33).  Those goals can be accomplished only through God’s grace and strength, and even through much suffering.  In fact, as I think about it, my pain gives my husband more opportunities to serve me as Christ served the church.  He is challenged to lay down his life and his plans and his dreams anew every day.  God is forcing him to change those personal plans to better reflect His plan.  Rather than feel guilty about this, I should praise God that He is constantly using my pain to shape my husband more and more into the image of Christ. 

My children won’t suffer from a lack of walks as much as they would suffer from a mother who has no faith in God’s providence and goodness.  My pain can point them to the Gospel in a way a “normal” life would not.  “No, mommy can’t hold you right now, and that makes me sad, but my hope and joy is still in Christ and I want you to have that joy too, my son!  It is far greater than being in my arms, and He will be able to hold you forever!” There is no room for guilt in that great hope. 


Thursday, March 8, 2012

Guest Post: "When They're All Screaming!"

Along my journey of pain I have been blessed to meet several women also struggling with chronic pain. There is an empathy we often share that transcends even some of the closest of relationships. One of these ladies, Victoria, has become an especially dear friend to me. We were introduced by a mutual friend who thought our pain experiences might prove encouraging to one another. Turns out we have a lot in common including a history of competitive swimming (she was MUCH better than I though) and having children born on the exact same day! However, the real reason we had an instant bond is because of the saving grace of Jesus that we both share. Despite the trials we face, we find hope not in our similar circumstances, but in our sovereign God. Here's a little of her story...


I’m a young Christian wife and mom.   I’m twenty-five, and on the outside I look perfectly normal: young, fit, happy.  But on the inside it’s an entirely different story; underneath the veneer of health and youth, I have been suffering from chronic pain for eight years.  I have congenitally lax ligaments and tendons, which predispose me to injury, and the chronic instabilities and constant damage have led to central pain sensitization; the pain itself becomes a disease, responding with heightened pain to even the smallest stimuli.  As a collegiate swimmer I tore both of my shoulders and damaged my knees and hips due to the laxity.  Now married and five years beyond my short-lived athletic career, the pain continues to pervade every area of my life.  After each of my children came home my pain increased dramatically with the extra demands on my body and energy.  The pain has never returned, and maybe never will, to the more tolerable pre-child level.  I have a biological son who is two-and-a-half and since my pregnancy with him I have been struggling with debilitating sacroiliac, hip, and low back pain.  My affected pelvic joints never returned to “normal” after stretching to accommodate the pregnancy and remain in very out-of-whack positions, constantly provoking pain.  My husband and I have decided to not have more biological children as a result of the pain and so we happily turned to adoption to build our family.  Our adopted baby is now three months old, and caring for him, even though I’m not recovering from a pregnancy, still challenges me physically every day. 

There comes a point every few days (or every day during a rough week!) when both of my children will scream or whine inconsolably for no discernible reason.   This is an overwhelming experience for any parent, and it inevitably happens to us all.  But sometimes I feel like I have three, or four, out-of-control children to deal with - not just the two I can see.  My two-year-old is screaming, the baby is screaming, and my back is screaming with burning neurological pain, and my sacroiliac joint is screaming with sharp, biting pain every time I put weight on my right leg, and my knees are screaming ‘mercy!’ every time I get down on the floor to pick up a pacifier. The constant barrage of noise and need makes me feel like I am being crushed under the burden of my home and my children and my pain.  Sometimes I just physically can’t console my children and a tremendous weight of guilt is added to the already-heavy load.  I can’t pick the baby up because my back pain radiates all over my body.  I can’t bend down to hug my toddler because he throws himself on me and makes the SI pain spike and my knees buckle.  I can’t get my hip to stop hurting once it starts, and my back pain is just as persistent once triggered.  I have no control.  At all.  Of anything.  Even the dishes seem to want to join in my humiliation, screaming “wash me!” from the counter top.  And my floor, piling on, yelling “Mop me!  Mop me.”  And my laundry, “fold me!”  Feed me, hold me, change me, fix me, clean me, wash me, fold me, mop me… the rising chorus of needs I can’t fulfill pummels my exhausted brain and beaten body.   My mind starts racing as defeated tears well up in my eyes:  I can’t do this anymore.  I can’t do this.  This is not okay. I am not okay.  

Sometimes I have to walk (limp) away from my children to try to get a grip.  I’ll just sit in the bathroom, tears rolling down my face as my child tries to break down the door, pleading “Mommy! Mommmmy!” over the screaming baby.  Other times I just tune out the children and stare at the wall in perplexed self-pity, wondering, “When does someone jump out of my coat closet with a camera and say, “Just kidding!  This isn’t your life!  Game over!”   I am overwhelmed, outnumbered, exhausted, in pain, and at the end of my rope.  I’m ready to give up.  But how does a mother just give up?  You can’t.  There are no time outs, no recovery periods, no vacations, not even a bathroom break from this job.  So you have to make a choice. 

I can pull myself up by my bootstraps (slippers) and go back out there to handle it all, physical and mental breakdown or not.  I can stay in the bathroom and call my husband to beg him to come home. Or I can fall on my face and plead with God to give me strength and hope and joy through this trial -mostly strength to just not break down. Joy, in these moments, seems too far away to ask for. 

That’s not always the choice I make.   But that’s always the choice I need to make.  I can’t do it anymore on my own.  Let’s face it - I couldn’t do it on my own from the very beginning.  In these moments when my whole life seems to be screaming at me, I can run away, or run to my Father. 

I wish I could say that I have this down after eight years in pain - five of them as a Christian.  That the first needles of pain in my back send me to my knees in dependent trust.  But I don’t.  Not always.  Not often enough. I am so prideful.  Even through some of the worst pain of the last few months I’ve just battled on by myself, with a forced smile and a pocketful of prescription painkillers for when I really can’t take it anymore.  But God has been working on my heart to show me that His plan and purpose for my pain is far, far greater than to just “get me through it.”  He has my heart and my soul in focus.  Every moment of pain, every second (or hour) of screaming children, every humbling limitation that sends my ego into fits, has a purpose that works out for my good and God’s glory.  I don’t feel like this is true in those hard moments.  When I’m curled up in a ball on the floor, back and hips and knees and brain and children screaming, beyond exhausted and past my tolerable pain threshold, it feels anything but good.   

That’s why I need the Gospel.  That’s why I need to hear, read, sing, and meditate on the Gospel every day, through the pain, the uncertainty, the hopelessness, the anger, the bitterness, the helplessness, the guilt, the grief.  God sent His beloved Son to bear the entire weight of wrath that I deserve for my sin – “how will he not also with him graciously give us all things?” (Romans 8:32).  And even more than that, “we know that for those who love God all things work together for good!” (Romans 8:28).  This is for my good.  This is working out for the redemption of my soul and the fine-tuning of my affections.  This is training my heart onto God, and away from myself.  I am God’s child, and every moment of my life – through pain and weakness more than anything else – is designed to draw me closer to Him and make me more like Him.  Through this pain God is doing the most loving thing imaginable: He is conforming me into the image of His obedient, loving, glorified Son (Romans 8:29). 

What I have to do in these breakdown moments is believe those truths – and pray for God to anchor my heart in these truths so that nothing can shake them. Through His word, God will bind up my broken spirit and salve my bitter heart with His loving promises.  I need to believe them so much that this world and its problems – even eight years of chronic pain - fade away in comparison to the eternal joy set before me in union with Christ. 

The screaming doesn’t stop because I’ve remembered that God is sovereign and God is good.  The pain doesn’t go away.  Nothing out there in the world, or in there in my body, has changed.  But I have remembered that God is sovereign and God is good.  Instead of suffocating under the weight of anxiety, guilt, and despair, when I trust God my soul can sing out, albeit through tears, “Whom have I in heaven but you?  And there is nothing on earth that I desire besides you.  My flesh and my heart may fail, but God is the strength of my heart and my portion forever” (Psalm 73:25-26).

On the days when I come out of the bathroom flooded with a renewed vision of God’s grace and mercy, holding onto these truths for dear life even though I still can’t hold my baby, I’m at peace. God grants me not only strength in Christ, but joy!  My hope is not in my abilities, or my children, or the cleanliness of my home; my hope is in my God who has saved me, redeemed me, adopted me, and is using my pain for His glory and my good.    

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Exchanging One Set of Problems for the Next

Several months ago I read a little book called Loving the Little Years: Motherhood in the Trenches by Rachel Jankovic. Rachel is a young mother with 5 children under kindergarten age, including twins, and is pregnant with her sixth! The book is only about 100 pages and has 20 short chapters making it a practical, easy read for the mother of toddlers.

I am a mother to an only child, but a lot of Rachel's words resonated with me. Perhaps being a mother of one with chronic pain is similar to being an able bodied mother to several children. With chronic pain, everyday "mother" activities like washing clothes, preparing meals, and playing with your child can often be a daunting task. I'm sure even if I was healthy raising one child would be challenging because being a mother is hard, draining work! Rachel admits mothering is not easy, and she shares practical examples of how she must so desperately cling to God for strength.

One of my favorite illustrations she uses is the "Fruit of the Spirit Speed Quiz". She explains how each day we have basic Christian living challenges brought to us daily by our children. She says,
We struggle our way through, and our score is not so good. So the next day, we will be given another test. As we get the hang of some problems, they disappear off the test and new, harder ones replace them. Eventually, the situation, which would have made us lose the bubble when we started the class, doesn't even cause us to hesitate. Easy peasy. Great! Time to move on!
I found this so applicable to life with chronic pain, or dealing with any other life circumstances and family members as well! Sometimes I feel like I should have "arrived" already in dealing with chronic pain. I mean, I've dealt with pain on some level for over 3 years now (I know 3 years isn't very long, just humor me!).  It seems like I am constantly battling the same frustrations and temptations to worry or doubt or not be patient. I often wonder when will this not be so hard?!

But in reality, this is the life of the Christian. We are constantly moving from one set of problems and challenges to the next. I was talking with a friend with chronic pain recently and she mentioned how her pastor explained that we are either just finishing a time of suffering, in a time of suffering, or preparing for a time of suffering. How true! Suffering is needed in order to sanctify us and make us more like Jesus.

While we will never "arrive" at perfection on this Earth, due to sin, we can, by God's grace strive to follow Him despite the challenges that come our way. Just like progress is made with our children when disciplining them, God uses suffering (not necessarily always as discipline) to conform us to the image of His Son. Rachel says,
And if you have been faithfully repenting of your own failures and looking for chances to grow, you are making progress too. You might feel just as tired, but you are now running ten miles instead of tow blocks. Take a moment to remember what used to annoy you when you were single --are you done howling with laughter yet? Do you see how totally unchallenging that looks now?
The things that bothered me pre-pain seem like nothing now and I'm sure in 5 years, if I'm still dealing with pain, the challenges I face today will pale in comparison. I hope the growth I feel inside is apparent to others. But, when my pain is searing, my husband is working, my daughter is irritable, and another bill comes in the mail, I do not always respond with the fruits of the spirit: love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control (Galatians 5:22). But I want to. The question is, am I willing to endure whatever it takes to make me more like Jesus?

Thursday, January 26, 2012

Teaching Children about Illness

My daughter is almost 2 1/2 years old now. She is incredibly smart and never forgets anything it seems. While she doesn't understand the particulars, she knows that Mommy hurts. It's normal to her that her grandmother and grandfather often pick her up and take her out to eat at one of her favorite places, Dairy Queen, while Mommy rests. She's used to having people from church come clean our house and friends bring us meals. She knows Daddy gives her a bath and gets up with her most mornings so Mommy can sleep later. It's normal to her that Mommy has to lay down on the couch and rest frequently, take medicine, sit on cushions, and use ice packs all the time.

I try not to cry in front of her a lot or talk about hurting all the time, but my kind of pain is pretty hard to hide. However, I've started to realize that she is very in tune to everything that is going on. Often my husband will use a rolling pin to massage the knots out of my legs or give me a massage when he gets home from work. If my daughter sees him she will come over and try to help or recently has started giving me a hug saying, "it's OK, Mommy". If I have an ice pack, she wants an ice pack.  If she sees me take medicine, she wants her vitamin.

But I don't want her to worry. I don't want to her to be scared and I don't want her going to school telling her friends that her Mommy's bottom hurts (I'm sure that day may come though)! I try to rest while she naps, use my ice as discretely as possible, and make tea party fun while I lie on the couch. But how do you keep chronic pain that never goes away and greatly limits your life away from your child? The reality is; you can't completely.  Whether she likes it or not, her mother is different than most mommies and this is something that she may have to deal with her whole life.

My pain has made me more diligent to use every day life to teach our daughter about God. If I have a good day and can do some housework, I tell her "God is good, He helps us be able to clean." We pray with her that God would give Mommy strength. When we have lots of food to eat, we talk about kids like our Compassion International sponsor child who doesn't have all the things we have. I want her to grow up understanding that nothing happens outside of God's control and that He loves us and has good plans for our life if we follow Him. We don't just want her to think God is something you talk about at church, but He is real and very much a part of our every day life.

One of my favorite children's books is God Knows My Name by Debby Anderson. It talks about how God knows everything and even before we were born God knew what would happen every day of our life.

We also love the Seeds Family Worship CD's and Hide 'em in Your Heart by Steve Green both of which take Bible verses and put them to music.  My daughter has learned so much scripture through these tools. It has been helpful when trying to discipline to sing the words of a Bible verse to her that she knows from her CD's and it's so sweet to see her singing along in the rear view mirror about storing up treasures in heaven (Matthew 6:20-21).

We pray that filling her mind and ears with these truths will help our daughter better accept that her mother has chronic pain and the future disappointments that are sure to come in her own life. Being the child in a family with prolonged suffering is never easy, but we want her to know that this is God's good and perfect plan for our family just as much as if I was healthy.
How do you handle your chronic illness or suffering with children?

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Motherhood and Pain

My daughter has never known the "pre-pain" me.  Despite a hard recovery from childbirth, the first 6 months postpartum were the best days I have had since November 2008, but they were still not "normal".  I was always such an active person that I expected as a mother to be right out there on the playground with my children. However, that is not God's best for me right now.


My husband has been off work all week and the "do-er" in me wants to go somewhere and take my daughter to do something fun. Of course, I still barely feel like getting out of the house, almost 4 weeks post my injections.  My husband reminds me that our daughter doesn't care at this age what we do. She's perfectly content swinging in our backyard or playing play-dough for hours. It's me who struggles with not being able to do things like other mothers.


But even if that day does come and my daughter asks why Mommy can't do things or go places like other moms, how will I respond? Will I encourage her, and my own, self-pity and apologize for my weaknesses? Or will I point her to the truth?  Surely God had my daughter's best interest in mind, as well as my own, when my pain became chronic and disabling.


We must remember that God's primary purpose in giving us children, and all things, is for His glory not our own enjoyment (Colossians 1:16, Romans 11:36). God doesn't give us children so we can dress them up in cute outfits and take adorable pictures of them to adorn the walls of our house.  Although he does often give us the pleasure of these things, we have to be careful not to let children become our idol or boast in them. They are given to some of us for a short period of time and for a specific purpose.


Our main job in raising children is to instruct them in the ways of the LORD and to love Him and serve Him all their days ( Psalm 34:11, Proverbs 22:6, Ephesians 6:4).


"You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your might. And these words that I command you today shall be on your heart. You shall teach them diligently to your children, and shall talk of them when you sit in your house, and when you walk by the way, and when you lie down, and when you rise. You shall bind them as a sign on your hand, and they shall be as frontlets between your eyes. You shall write them on the doorposts of your house and on your gates." Deuteronomy 6:5-9


More than teaching our children their ABC's or manners, we must teach our children to love God with every part of their being and help them see that He has supreme worth in our life. The love of the Lord should so consume our life that we talk about Him all the time.  I may not be able to take my daughter to the zoo, but as I lie on the couch I can look at a book and teach her that God made every animal we see.


What better opportunity than chronic illness to teach our children to fear the Lord (Proverbs 1:7-9)? Our children watch our every move. They are watching how we respond to suffering and pain. Does my daughter see me reading my Bible, praying, and talking of God's goodness despite my circumstances? Or does she only see me crying, depressed, and complaining?  Do I take out my anger and frustrations on her, or do I cry out to the One who controls all things?


If my pain continues to keep me debilitated and unable to live the kind of life I had dreamed with my daughter it will not be easy.  There is the constant temptation to be jealous, discontent, and to covet the lives of others. But, as a child of God and by His grace, I have to focus on what is true. I have the most important message in all the world to share with my daughter, whether I am in pain or not,---the hope of Jesus Christ (John 14:6), our Savior.  And unlike popular belief, it is only through the hard and narrow way that we receive this life (Matthew 7:14). 


In the end, when I am in heaven with Jesus, I don't think I will say, "LORD, I wish my life had been easier so I could have enjoyed taking my daughter to the zoo more!" What a ridiculous thought! I hope and pray I will say, "Thank you God, that you allowed chronic pain to enter my life so I could teach my daughter, and learn myself, that YOU are worth so much more than this world can offer."

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