Not Knowing

I’m no good at not knowing. I’ve always been one to question things, to seek answers, to research tirelessly.

This morning, as the sun peeks over the expanse of fresh snow outside my window, I don’t know.

I don’t know how the EEG went yesterday.  (Results early next week.)

I don’t know how my work flow will work with some of the changes ahead with our family tragedy.

I don’t know if there’s more I should be doing.  Should I show up at the pediatrician’s office and demand to know all the options?  Should I drive back to Children’s and harangue the doctors there?  Should I research online and scare myself until I can’t breathe properly?

No.  No.  NO.

God doesn’t promise things will be easy.  He doesn’t say there will be no pain, no suffering, no sorrow.

I’m scared, and yet I have peace.  (It’s one of the great graces I’m experiencing.)  I’m worried, and yet I know, without a doubt, that it is all in His hands.

And His hands are big enough, strong enough, able enough.

He can bring good from everything, if only I’ll stay back and trust.

It is no accident that I’m slated to write about Our Lady of Mental Peace and Our Lady of Sorrows in the coming days.  I picked the titles and the schedule weeks ago.

I might not know, but He does.

And, in that case, I don’t need to know, after all.

Thanks, again, for your continuing prayers and support. We are on a wave of grace and blessings, thanks in large part to the love of all of you.

Grace in the Midst of Trial

Today’s the day of my brother-in-law’s funeral in New Orleans.

We’re not there.  We can’t be there for very strange reasons.

Today’s also the day of our five-year-old’s EEG, at 3 PM.

Any accident that’s the Mercy Hour?  No, I don’t think so either.  She seems perfectly back to normal after the big adventure from the other night.

All the same, my heart is in New Orleans, with family members I have been missing for years and who I long to hold.

We’ll have a chance to hug them soon, because the body is coming to Ohio early next week and there’s an interment, so he can be buried with his boys.

We have a few days before we’ll see them, before we can share the grief and gather around them and be family in person.  Before then, my husband’s face is going to haunt me, tug at me, remind me of many, many things.

Yesterday afternoon, he talked to Susie for the first time since this happened.  I couldn’t ask him what she said to him until four or five hours later, when the kids were in bed.  We both needed time to calm down, to breathe.

I’ve seen my husband cry twice before that moment.  I’ve never seen him cry hard or come close to sobbing.  I’m sure he has, but not in front of anyone, even me.

Susie told Bob some beautiful things yesterday afternoon.  It was a moment of grace for me, watching his face, hearing his responses, seeing his emotion, feeling his pain.

“I love you, honey,” he said to her, choking a bit on his tears, before he hung up.

All day yesterday, from the moment Lisa posted a request for prayers on her Facebook wall and continuing as I updated both on my blog and social networks, the comments and emails have rolled in, offering support and prayers and wisdom.  When Rebecca posted a prayer request last night, my site flooded with traffic, which included comments, prayers, support, and wisdom.

I joked with someone yesterday that I’m not a big fan of 2010 so far. Maybe I need to rethink that.

There has been a mountain of pain and there’s more to come, of that I’m sure.

But in that pain, I’m finding grace unlike any I’ve ever experienced before. I’m learning about things I had never considered and I’m growing closer to Mother Mary, knowing she walked this way first.  She feels our pain.  She knows our grief.  She sees our fear.

And though I may wonder, question, seek…she’s still there.  So is her Son.

Sometimes, the greatest gift is the presence of others.  Sometimes, carrying our crosses, we just need presence.  I am feeling God through all of you and in the daily hurdles of my children and the family members still here in Ohio.  Thank you for that.

Thank you too for your continued prayers for all of us.  You’re making these unbelievable moments of grace possible.  For that, we are all so very, very blessed.

Living in the Now

Last night, at almost 10:00 PM, the squad left my house with my five-year-old (Elizabeth) and my husband.

She woke up crying/screaming/groaning, in a pool of her vomit.  She was on her side.

I was annoyed.

We were supposed to be flying out this morning to go to my brother-in-law’s funeralIt was bad enough already. A puking kid, one who wouldn’t even move out of her own pool of icky, was one more thing.

I’m not going to beat myself up publicly for that reaction, or for the fact that it was my husband’s compassion and brilliance that realized she was exhibiting stroke-like symptoms.  She couldn’t talk, stick out her tongue, move her right arm, stand properly, or move the right side of her face.  I’m not going to dwell on my failures.  I have too many.

Bob’s the one who realized that she was exhibiting stroke-like symptoms, and gave me The Look, the one that said “CALL 911 NOW!”  The squad got here (two of them, actually), and after they recommended taking her to Children’s, I started the car and started trying to find friends who could watch our two-year-old.

I wanted to be in the back of that ambulance, holding my five-year-old’s hand.  I wanted to know what was going on.  I wanted to be there.

But I couldn’t be.

I had calls to make and arrangements to make and prayers to say.

I had to be careful on the roads (though they weren’t as bad as I feared) and some crying to do before putting my brave face back on for the hospital.

I had more prayers to say.

After spending the night at Children’s Hospital, the conclusion is that maybe it was a seizure.

I’ve been waiting two hours for the doctor’s office to call me back, and isn’t blogging what you do when you can’t sleep, when you can’t get an answer, and when you’re just not sure?  :)

The lesson, right now, is of the present moment. The decade I keep coming back to, when my tired brain and hurting head can string enough words together to pray (and when I’m not on the phone), is the Annunciation, the ongoing “Yes” that’s my model.

She wasn’t my child first, after all.  He loves her more than I ever will.  He will take care of her — always has, as a matter of fact — far better than I ever can.

But the present moment sucks, if I may say so.  Living in the now is painful and challenging and awkward.

Thank you for the outpouring of prayers on Facebook (both mine and at Lisa Hendey’s) and Twitter.  I’ll keep things posted there (and here) as I can.

Urgent Prayers Needed

We just received word that my brother-in-law Allen passed away very unexpectedly today.  Please keep his widow, my husband’s sister Susan, and his two daughters (our nieces, blog-named Ree and Junie B.) in your prayers.  Reflections and memories to follow, but for now we are all shocked and grief-stricken, wishing that New Orleans was closer so that our prayers and our hugs could touch those who are ripped apart by pain.

The Poppa Gene Update

(The back story is here and here.)

He’s home!

They took the tube out this morning, kept the packing in, and will look at it again on Thursday.  Thanks so much for your continued prayers.

We’re headed over to kiss him into shape.  (Nothing like a couple of princesses and a lot of talking to recuperate a grandpa, you know?)

Praying

This morning we woke up lazily, with the girls, and I made coffee and we talked about our party last night.  We came home with tiaras and treats from Bob’s company Christmas party, which was delightful, and it was turning into a nice Saturday morning.

And then Bob told me about the phone call he got from his brother.

My father-in-law was taken back to the hospital last night, and he’s in ICU.  He had just returned home from the other day’s adventure in the ER.

Please pray.  There is no way my children will see him while he’s there, and we didn’t go over yesterday when he came home because…well, there was a party to prepare for, a babysitter to pick up, and today to go.

Except it’s looking like there’s not today anymore.

Please pray, for him, for my mother-in-law, and for us.

Requesting Prayers (updated) (again)

I don’t usually post more than twice a day, but I am breaking my own rule to ask for your prayers for my father-in-law.  My mother-in-law just called me (it’s 8:18 AM as I write this) to tell me that the squad came to take him to the hospital.  He was hacking in a more alarming way than usual this morning, and she found him in a pool of blood — he has a nosebleed that won’t stop.

On the one hand, I guess this means I can’t call him to come and fix that silly pipe under my sink.  On the other hand, I guess I have an intention to offer up my little irritations for today.

But, really, I just hope it’s not symptomatic of heart complications (we had some scares in July) or some other scary thing that could turn the week completely around.

Mother Mary, hold Poppa Gene close and help us to accept God’s will for him…and for us.

(I’ll update this post through the day.)

Noon update:

I just talked to my mother-in-law.

They’re admitting Poppa Gene.  They can’t cauterize his nose; he will have a catheter in his nose until Sunday or Monday.  He’s on pain meds now, so I guess things are better, but he was screaming in pain at one point and told Ann it’s been worse than three tours in Vietnam.

He’s in observation now.  More as I know it.  Many thanks for your continued prayers.

3:30 update:

No more real news, but I did call and find out his room number at the hospital.

They are not sure why he is/was spontaneously bleeding from his nose.  He is resting comfortably.  My mother-in-law has slept some, but is rather miserable (worried and anxious, I think, plus her back has been bothering her).

I won’t post more updates on this post, and hopefully I’ll have good news in a couple of days when he comes out of the hospital a new man.

Thanks again for your prayers, kind comments and emails, and your support.

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