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Saturday, February 27, 2016

FU JB Continued

When a hurting child called me Jerk Bitch, I embraced JB as part of me.  I knew that I needed to tear down some walls of pride, control, and social appropriateness in myself, in order to tear down some walls of hurt and defense in my children.  I often get asked, "Don't you worry about your children being exposed to inappropriate behaviors in your home?".  Of course I do.  I also worry about them hearing the f-word on the playground, on the bus, and at the grocery store.  I worry about them witnessing, or being victim to, bullying.  I worry about them crossing the street, choking on grapes, and blowing their noses.  I worry about all of them, all of the time.

With good intentions, fear, and limited understanding, people have told us that we are doing irreparable harm to our family.  That our efforts are wasted and our intentions are misguided.  There are people who have no tolerance for JB. 

Considering the advice of some of these people, we could have easily and maybe justifiably, not tolerated JB in our home.  We could have said that it was inappropriate, unacceptable, filthy, and rude. We could have moved a child out of our home the first time a block or a fist was thrown, the first time an f-bomb was spewn, the first time a JB was uttered.   We would have been supported and possibly applauded in doing so.  

What happens when we don't tolerate JB in our lives?  We are comfortable, not offended, and not inconvenienced.  We are protected from inappropriateness, ugliness, and hurt.  We are keeping love to ourselves, and not sharing it; we are selfish JB's.

I will say it again, I am not a cursing woman, except when I am.  Love must transcend appropriateness. Love must transcend niceties and comfortable expectations.  If I can't love, and be home, to a child who calls me JB, what am I? I am really JB.  

My children, all of them, have heard language, stories, and life experiences that should never be heard by anyone.  What happens, when it is heard in my home, is that I am there.  I am there to tell them that it is not ok.  I am there to tell them that it is inappropriate and unacceptable.  I am there to tell them that behind every hurtful word, is a hurting person. I am there to tell them that I will love them, regardless of the words that come out of their mouths.  I am there to tell them that I see their preciousness beyond their words and actions.  I am there to tell them that hurting people hurt people.

Our children deserve love.  They ALL deserve love.  Because my children were exposed to JB, because JB was tolerated in my home, they know that THEY were tolerated. They know that they deserve love.  They know that they are expected to love and tolerate people that are hurting.  

We need to look beneath the surface.  Lift the veil.  See the hurt.  Our comfortable lives are comfortable because we don't look beneath the surface, lift the veil, or see the hurt.  People don't say offensive things to offend you.  It's NOT ABOUT YOU.  It's about them.  People say offensive things and do offensive things because they have been hurt and offended. 

My child said "FU JB" because he had heard "FU JB" from Every. Person. In. His. Life.  

If I would have sent him away, he would have heard the same thing from me. 
My children are strong and amazing.  They see someone acting out in public, swearing or being rude, and they can say "that person must be hurting".   They understand and can articulate what is appropriate vs. inappropriate with wisdom beyond their years.  I have no regrets about the things they have seen and heard.  

The world is ugly.  Most people only see the ugly side.  My family has seen the redemption, the grace, and the transforming power of love.  My children would have never seen the beautiful transformation,  if we didn't allow it to happen.  My children would have never experienced the beautiful transformation, if we didn't allow it to happen.  They would have never seen the light, if we had we stopped in the darkness. 

There is healing power in being accepted, welcomed, and embraced for who you are.  Our communion table was intended to overflow with the imperfect, broken, socially inappropriate, and unacceptable.  When all the veils are lifted, which is more troubling;  a hurting child who throws blocks and swears, or a hurting adult who can't see the precious child beneath the JB?   The truth is, they are both troubling.

We are all hurting, and we all fall short.  What we can do, is to join in communion together.  We can break bread and share life with each other; sinner and saint, each of us playing each role, each of us sinner, each of us saint, each to the other.  We are each others.  There is no other.

For a space and time, I was JB to a child.  For all my days, I will hear his voice and be reminded that he and I are kindred.  Hurting, scared, unsure, and loved.











Sunday, February 21, 2016

FU JB

My family signed up to help children who were facing some of the most difficult times of their lives.
We entered the foster care system knowing that our job was to love, and not to judge; our job was to be a safe space for healing.

Hurting children have a small but powerful arsenal of survival skills; they are operating from a fight or flight mentality, assuming that they are not safe.  There is a misconception that children in foster care are "bad" or "troubled".  The truth is, they are the same as every other precious child, but necessarily encapsulated in a protective shell of survival skills.  In some situations, a child might need to be physically aggressive to survive, in some situations, he might need to run, to hide, to swear, to fight, to scream, or to throw things at people.  These defenses, in these situations, are not bad behaviors, and they are not disrespectful attitudes.

That being said, there was a day where I firmly planted myself in the doorway between two rooms in my house.  On one side was a justifiably angry young boy.  On the other side were two small toddlers. These young children were brilliant, beautiful, and engaging.  They had also had been hurt in more ways than one can imagine.  Sometimes that hurt has to come out.  On this particular day, the boy jumped on the bed, hurling wooden blocks at me and the little ones, yelling "YOU JERK BITCH, YOU RUINED MY LIFE".  On the other side of me, the two little ones threw toys back at him, matter-of-factly chanting "f-you, you mother f-er".

I sat in that moment, in that doorway, in the crossfire, knowing that this moment was do or die for me.  It had been a long and exhausting road already,  I wasn't sure that I could do it anymore.  I knew I had to either fully commit to being what these children needed me to be, or I was throwing in the towel.

It was that day, in that doorway, that I chose to be Jerk Bitch.  Brent lovingly nicknamed me JB, and we dug into the beautiful, messy process of giving all of ourselves to these beautiful children in our home.

I am not a cursing person, nor do I condone cursing from children.  But to that boy, in that moment, I was JB.  I embraced it and it became part of me--it changed me.

I cherish the title, and I wear it proudly.  Being JB is my badge of honor. I had the honor of standing in the space where a young child felt safe enough to let his anger out without repercussion.  I had the honor of sitting in the space between these children, to mediate their hurt, loss, and sadness.  I was able to see them through to a place where they felt comfortable, where they learned the skills of living and loving.  I wouldn't have been able to carry them through the darkness if I hadn't entered the darkness to find them.   Being JB means going into the dark and ugly spaces and places with them. Being JB means joining in communion with not only the flawless and unscathed, but with the hurting and broken as well.  Communing with someone in their dark spaces is a strong predictor that they will eventually commune with you in the light.

In order to help them break their protective shell of survival skills, I had to break my shell of comfortable, socially appropriate niceties.  I couldn't be a Stepford mom anymore, I couldn't pretend to have it all together or to put on a show. In order to make a difference, I had to go to the ugly places.  If that meant being called ugly names, than so be it.

I could have decided that JB was not for me.  I would have gone back to an ordinary life.  I would have taken the easy road, where there was less cursing and block throwing.   The easy road would have been, well, easy.  But healing and growth doesn't happen on the easy road.  The light only shines in darkness.  Healing and growth, the shedding of armor, the revealing of the heart: these things often happen in unsavory and ugly ways.

All of the times that I heard someone say f-you to me, all of the times I was called a JB, all of the block throwing, kicking, hitting, and gnashing of teeth: these are my sacred souvenirs.  These are the things that remind me of those ugly places and painful spaces, where healing occurred, beauty prevailed, and love won.

Being JB is being present for the hurt and pain, being someone's unwavering strength, being someone's unshakable rock.  That little boy tried to move me from that doorway.  He tried to see if I would remove him, hurt him, or cast him aside.  He tried to use JB to get under my skin, he tried to make me run from the blocks, to run from his hurt.   Being JB is putting yourself out there for the ugly and unsavory moments in life. It is tearing down the protective shell and letting the blocks hit you directly in the head.

My friend Kristy made this coffee mug for me.  It is JB on the outside and FU on the inside.  A slightly inappropriate, humorous, yet poignant reminder; sometimes the path of FU JB is the only way to reach sacred spaces and holy healing.











Friday, February 19, 2016

Run Into the Darkness

It always seems that the most challenging times in life also yield the most beauty.  I think it is because during the dark times, the light shines brighter.   The stark contrast between light and dark is most visible when the dark is very, very dark.  I am reminded of a stormy fall day, when bright yellow leaves contrast against a black sky.  Or of a cloudy sunset when all is dark, but a single ray of sunshine pouring through the one opening in the clouds.  

One of our daughters was diagnosed with a vascular illness three weeks ago.  She has been hospitalized four times so far with complications of the illness.  Last weekend, we were on our way home from the third admission.  The roads were icy, and visiblity was minimal from a February snowstorm.  We were driving down a slippery hill when the front wheel of our vehicle flew off.  My husband calmly and skillfully guided us into a snowy ditch, where we landed unscathed.  We arrived safely at home and the vehicle was towed away. 

The next day was Valentines day.  Our family was systematically dropping to the stomach flu.  We attempted a super fancy Valentines day dinner anyway, because we needed some family time after all of the mishaps of life. (There wasn't even a chance of a romantic couples getaway).  About three fourths of the way through dinner, one of our other daughters projectile vomited, hitting every one of our eight dinner plates.  Our third daughter vomited all through the night.  One of our teenage sons woke up Monday morning, vomiting, blacking out, hitting his head on the door, and vomiting again all over my bed.  Our two year old woke up from a nap covered in poop, while our other teenage son hid in his room.  At this point, I couldn't even keep up.  I was throwing towels on piles of bodily fluids all throughout my house.  

During the vomit fest, our daughter suddenly developed severe complications of her vascular illness.  The doctor wanted to see her immediately, so I left the piles of vomit, loaded her in the vehicle, and went to the doctors office.  Her condition was serious, so the doctor advised me to drive her directly to the children's hospital, two hours from home.  I immediately followed doctors orders, leaving my husband home with five children, and no vehicle.  After a three night hospitalization, we were finally being discharged.  As I was signing discharge instructions, my husband had one of the other girls at the doctor's office back home.  She was diagnosed with the same vascular illness.  It is not contagious, and it seems there are only two documented cases of siblings developing it at the same time.  And now our family is a living medical anomaly. 

Seriously. 

I couldn't make it up if I tried.  

Once upon a time, a wise woman was faced with cancer for the second time in her life.  When asked if she ever thought "why me?", she replied "why NOT me?" (another story, for another time).  Her words resounded with every beat of my heart during these past three weeks.   Her words have given me a tendency to run into the darkness with my arms wide open.  I just can't help myself.  

I heard those words in the lyrics of a song a while back.  "Carry your candle, run into the darkness."  And I thought, why would you do that? Who RUNS into the darkness?  But now I know; to embrace the darkness, is to have the opportunity to really see the light.  Without the dark, dark, spaces, our world is a muted shade of grey.  The beauty of the yellow autumn leaves is most evident against the black sky.  Only through clouds, can you see those single, beautiful rays of sun. 

So tonight, when our weeks have been so very dark, the light is so very bright.  My two year old's mischievous grin, spending hours braiding two of my girl's hair, watching my ten year old daughter do flips, just looking at the faces of my teenage sons and how they've changed since I saw them four days ago.  And now, sitting in bed, next to my husband, writing, while he watches a movie.  The ordinary is extraordinary.  

I sit here and absorb my light, I bask in it, and I let it renew me.  Communion with my loves.  It is precious.  And I know that it will not last.  So as I drink in the light, I am preparing myself to run into the darkness again.  

Tuesday, February 16, 2016

A Mother's Kisses Stick to You Forever

You know how it goes. You hold your sweet child's face in your hands, and you give them a kiss; the child promptly wipes the kiss away.  You kiss them again, and they wipe it off.  This could go on forever, but this doesn't happen in my house anymore, because I finally made up a rule.

Mother's kisses stick to you forever. Period. The end. There is no wiping them away, washing them off, or rubbing them into obscurity.  If a mother kisses you, it is eternal.  Sorry, sweet child, it's yours until the end of time.

I'm sitting here in a hospital room tonight with my very ill daughter.  All is quiet but the beeps and blips of the monitors.  After adjusting her IV lines, rearranging her pillows, and silencing the monitors, I kissed her on the forehead.  She slipped peacefully to sleep; the "mother's kiss" left right there on her sweet brown skin, invisible to the eye, yet fully visible to the heart.

I look out the window at the city sky-scape, and I am transported to the other side of the city, to the hospital where my mother lay, six years ago.  In her last days, another patient's family told us to never leave the room without kissing our mother goodbye.  Always kiss your mother goodbye. Always kiss your children goodnight.

My "mother's kiss", her invisible strength and eternal presence, carries me in her physical absence tonight.  These have been long and lonely days. I long for my mom to kiss me on the forehead, and for her to kiss my daughter on the forehead.

There is power in the unseen.  When I look at my children in a certain way, in a mother's way, I see the kisses I've left behind.  I see them all over their little faces, like how you see smudge marks on a window if the sun shines just right.   When I look in a mirror, I see my mother's kisses; they have now turned to fine wrinkles, creases, and varying tones of flesh.

I look across the room, and I see the resting form of my sleeping daughter, curled up under a purple butterfly blanket.  I look out across the night lights of the city, and I see memories of my mother, dancing in the stars.  The two of them never even met; yet they are joined with me in this hospital room tonight, through kisses, moments, and memories.

A mother's kiss is serious business.  A mother's kiss, inside the walls of a hospital room, while praying your heart out, is holy business.

With Love and  Kisses,
Sarah.