Thursday, August 30, 2012

Letting Go

      Have you ever really thought about what it means when we say God is in control? Anyone who really knows me will tell you that one of my biggest flaws is my inability to let things go. I have an incredible knack for picking even the most mundane things apart to find out "why" it happened that way and will argue to the death to prove my point. (Sorry Casey!) What happened with Lilly is no exception. Believe me I have spent night after sleepless night going over and over every event of her very short life. I blame myself, mostly, but I find some flaw in the midwives, nurses, doctors, ultrasound technicians, you name it. "If they had paid more attention, got me back sooner, been more concerned with some test" on and on and on. And of course "I should have gone to the hospital sooner, made them get her out sooner, prayed literally without ceasing" are there as well. Everyone tells me it is not my fault, God chose her...us for a reason we cannot understand. I'm sure I will always search for "Why" but somewhere somehow I am beginning to understand. I am a control freak about making sure my kids are loved and taken care of in the best way possible and it terrifies me to think that no matter what I do, I am not in control. 
    
http://withoutwax.tv/2008/04/28/rocked-to-my-core

This link tells the story of Angie and Todd Smith who lost their baby girl in April of 2008. Angie carried little Audry, knowing that she would die. It is an incredible story that inspired her book I Will Carry You as well as her blog "Bring the Rain" at angiesmithonline.com. We have shared a couple of emails, and after watching this video I sent this response...

Dear Angie,
Thank you so much for the ministry you continue to do through your blog. Tonight I stumbled upon the video "Rocked To My Core" and I am just so moved by it! There are similarities in our stories and it blesses me to be able to relate to another mother, when I have felt so very alone and misunderstood. I too remember rocking my Lilly in her last moments repeating over and over "even now Lord I know you can heal her...now is the time to show the world who you are...." and yet moments, perhaps seconds, before Jesus took her I told her "it's OK baby, you can go be with Jesus now, you don't have to stay for us"...

Lilly was full term, no complications until mid-labor. I had such a horrible hospital experience with my son I was trying to labor at home and possibly deliver if things went well. When my water broke there was meconium and we went straight to the hospital where I was in triage for an hour before they rushed me back for an emergency c-section. My husband, family, even my therapist has tried to tell me it was not my fault, that it was a part of God's plan, nothing I did could have changed the outcome. I want to believe it but I have struggled SO much with the guilt... ("If only I had gone to the hospital sooner. What was I thinking trying a home birth? Why didn't I pray harder? I must not have been close enough to God or He would have healed her. Am I responsible for my daughter's death?")

It is hard for me to grasp that He is in ultimate control. As it seems we have similar personalities, for I too have a wicked Italian side , I think you might understand that. However, how you, without a doubt, said there is no plan B...it gave me the "ah-ha" moment I have been searching for. I don't know if it's just hearing it from another lost baby's Mama or what, but I burst into tears and knew, in that moment at least, that it's true. This was God's plan from the start. I cannot understand it, how this can work together for my good, but I know deep in my heart that it's true. Not because I need it to be, not because it's something pretty I can tell myself to make me feel better, but because it is truth. God the Father is in control, so what have I...what have we to fear? It feels so good to say it and mean it!      


Loss like ours forces you to bare your soul and come to conclusions about questions you didn't know you had. When life is normal and running smoothly you don't question the things you believe are constants. In my head I'm sure it was something vague like "Of course I believe God is in control. I believe He is real and I want His will to be done in my life. I will always believe in Him no matter what and nothing will ever change that." When Lilly died I began to question my own beliefs. Not so much as to whether I believed them anymore, although that was part of it, but why do I believe them? Because Mamma and Grandpa said so? Because the Bible, ancient books written by men, tells me so? If God is real and really loves me and works all things together for my good (Romans 8:28), then where was he when we called out to Him night and day for my baby girl?? How could He take her, knowing that it would destroy me? If He loves me how could He be so cruel? I like how one grieving mother said "my earthly father would never do such a thing".

I look back on the last six months and I can see how far we have come. There was a time I believed I would never smile again. I thought I would never again find pleasure in any form of life. There were times I thought I would never be able to take care of my own son without help because I couldn't function well enough to even remember if I had fed him yet that day. It is not by my strength that I have come this far. Before Lilly, I used to think I was so strong and courageous, but truly I am weak and any acclaim belongs solely to the Lord. 

I believe in Him because He is real in my life. He is the voice that tells me I am good enough to love. His arms hold me together and put Hope in my heart. Not just of heaven but Hope of life, Hope of light, Hope for humanity. He "steadies my heart". He is the thing that lives in my heart and gives me the strength to endure another day. I am not this strong. Without Him I would be dead. Without Him who could endure this world and it's crushing sorrows? Without Him, no one is in control. Without Him, life really is chaos. And that would be truly terrifying.

Psalm 27

The Lord is my light and my salvation—
    whom shall I fear?
The Lord is the stronghold of my life—
    of whom shall I be afraid?

One thing I ask from the Lord,
    this only do I seek:
that I may dwell in the house of the Lord
    all the days of my life,
to gaze on the beauty of the Lord
    and to seek him in his temple.
For in the day of trouble
    he will keep me safe in his dwelling;
he will hide me in the shelter of his sacred tent
    and set me high upon a rock.

13 I remain confident of this:
    I will see the goodness of the Lord
    in the land of the living.
14 Wait for the Lord;
    be strong and take heart
    and wait for the Lord.

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