Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Senseless Truth



Last year at this time, I was looking at schools for our oldest daughter.  I wanted the best.  I yearned for a place where she would be nurtured and challenged.  I would have driven miles and paid a fortune to find that special place that would be her second home in the coming years.

Today we are weeks away from our goodbyes.  Goodbyes that I really don’t want to say.    We are leaving all we have ever known to live with the people of Cameroon.  My children continue to celebrate so many firsts; first day of school, first words, first time to tie her shoes, first lost tooth.  Everyday, they do something new and I am inspired by them.  I had forgotten what it feels like to experience the terror of the first jump off that high dive, but I am remembering now.  Last year we were looking at the best schools, and this year we are moving to a city where I am told that the student to teacher ratio is  50 to 1. 

I must be crazy.  I have to think of some way to explain to my family why we are choosing to do this.  

When we were pregnant with our first child, we decided to wait to find out the sex.  I knew nothing about the little person growing inside me.  I knew nothing, yet heart and soul, I felt to the core of my being that this little person was special, a unique and unrepeatable gift from God.  Daily, I marveled at the miracle of this being growing inside me, and then she was born.  She was perfect.  She was too beautiful to be mine, and my world was rocked.  It was rocked by this raw emotion of holding her for the first time, and watching her open her eyes and stare in awe at the sunlight.  My world was rocked, for although I felt this awe, I knew absolutely nothing about this new little person.  I thought I would, but I didn’t.  How can you truly love someone that you do not know?  This thought came to me and I was terrified.  I thought the wisdom of motherhood would arrive with the birth of our daughter, but like the labor process of birth, it was hard won.   

The first weeks and months with Honora were this horrible, awkward dance.  She would cry and sometimes despite every last ounce of energy being expended, I did not yet understand her language.  Although the translation and response seemed horribly slow, we made progress.  It never felt like progress in the moment, hour, day or week.  It was only months later looking back that I realized it had happened.  I just remember realizing, one day, all the little things that I had learned about her, and I loved every little thing, all her unique ways of being.  Perhaps it would not have been as precious, if it had not been so hard. 

Before Honora was a year old we conceived our second child.  Life was busy and I had less time to stop and marvel.  The moments of amazement would sneak up on me.  I never planned them.  It was in the times where I got to breath that I would realize the miracle of it all, somewhere in between the dirty diapers and sleepless nights.  Becoming a parent was and is a lesson in the spirituality of messy good (sometimes it is just the messy), the spirituality of spending all day cleaning house and at the end of the day having no evidence of your effort.  It is the spirituality of realizing that I am no where near as patient as I always thought I would be. It is the spirituality of humility, knowing that I do not have this figured out and still my babies tell me that they love me.

During this time of early toddlerhood and second pregnancy, Ryan and I were learning the discipline of date night with a baby in the house.  We decided to take a class at the local university, Justice and Peace from a Faith Perspective.  We probably should have focused on “fun” opposed to “interesting”, but there is nothing like the responsibility of a class to make sure that you take the responsibility of date night seriously.  The class was “interesting,” but it also changed the way that I viewed the world as a momma.  

During the reading for the class I learned that “40,000 children under the age of five die from malnutrition and preventable illness every day.”  40,000 is a big number.  That is probably all it would have meant to me except that this sentence was followed with “that is like filling Fenway Park with children every day and at the end of the day they would all be dead.”  Now I am not a baseball fan, but I have been to several sporting venues in my lifetime.  Stadiums are big places.  I could not wipe the mental picture from my mind.

I always thought of myself as a sound sleeper, but that was before children.  I now have these super ears that can hear whimpers and coughs several rooms away (or any other perceived danger that lurks in the dark - who needs an alarm system when you have these ears).  During my second pregnancy I would often find myself awake due to some need of my little one.  Once she had been quieted and was back to sleep, the temptation to feel sorry for myself would creep in, especially if the sleep would not come.  I would find myself numbering the days since I had last slept through the night, but some small voice would then remind me of all the mommas in the world who had lost their loves today.  I remember realizing that the child growing inside me was a mystery, but I knew, because of Honora, that I would love that child more than life.  I realized that the tiny soul growing inside of me, God could have given to a woman in Africa, and the tiny soul that the woman in Africa was nurturing could have been given to me.  Regardless, I would love and she would love, and in that moment I felt that all the children of the world were mine and their mothers were my sisters.          

I think of the love that I feel for my children, and I think of the children of the world and the love their mothers feel for them.  I feed my children, bathe them and put them to bed and I think of the mothers of the 40,000 children that died today of malnutrition and preventable illness and my heart breaks.  

We are going to Africa not because I think we can save them.  I am going to Africa because I love.  It is the messy love of vulnerability.  It is knowing that I need help as much as I am willing to help.  I believe in the depths of my soul in this beautiful God of relationship.  He created this beauty in the meeting the other, where when we come together we heal each others wounds.  How can you truly love someone that you do not know?  We are going to know and be known.  Perhaps this journey is senseless or perhaps its purpose is the only thing that does make sense.   

-Maura