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Home » Encouragement » Page 8

Carried

06.25.2016 by Sarah //

Carried Header

Sweet little-girl arms wrap tightly around my neck, her head buried into my shoulder. A perfect fit. I breathe into her and feel little legs clinging to my waist, core muscles holding their own weight.

It’s taken a long time to get here. This little one was slack when she first came. Arms hung loose, heavy as a sack of potatoes when I picked her up.

“Why is she so hard to carry?” I used to think to myself.

Out loud I had said say, “Hold on. Put your legs here so I can get you”.

It had taken a bit of awkward maneuvering and a lot of verbal direction from me, but eventually I had always hoisted her into my arms. It wasn’t until a friend observed one of those moments that I understood.

“She was never carried before.” My friend had commented.

My foster daughter had never been carried.

My emotional response had been immediate. My heart hadn’t broken, hadn’t mourned, those came later. No, it had been tazered still. The simplicity of that statement had been disarming.

Realizing Emptiness

It was a realization of emptiness that had stilled my heart, not shock. The idea that my foster daughter had never been carried fell right in line with what I knew to be true. But I couldn’t picture it. It was the absence of something and the realization that I had no idea what not being carried would have been like.

Think about it, if you grew up in a home with healthy relationships you have all these subconscious images of family- of parents caring for children. Then, you become a foster parent and you’re faced with a new reality. It’s one you knew existed; you’ve read articles, watched the news, and at times rubbed shoulders with families in turmoil, but now you are to parent a child who’s had a tumultuous life. You find yourself bumping up against thousands of daily differences and you start to realize there is no way to imagine the full reality of their previous normal.

Missing Pieces

For my foster daughter, there was a great big picture of her life – a puzzle box lid – that I hadn’t been given. The day she’d arrived, I’d been handed clothes, a daughter, and a handful of puzzle pieces, but no lid.

Pieces, just pieces.

And so, we had learned together. I how to interpret her, and she how to be carried.

And now, years later, my heart is no longer frozen. We still don’t have all the pieces. We never will. And the puzzle box lid? It’s still lost. But, today I happily snuggle down into the young ones head on my shoulder. We fit together like our own two puzzle pieces. I squeeze her just a little tighter- sharing the happy-joy because today she is being carried.

And today she squeezes me back tightly on her own.

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The Hidden Gems of Foster Parenting

(Note: I created the image using Pic Monkey’s free photo editing website. Check them out here. This post may also contain affiliate links. For more information, read my Disclosure Policy here.)

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Categories // Real Life Tags // Encouragement

But Love Wins

05.21.2016 by Sarah //

But Love Wins

“She’s so good at just going with the flow.”

“I wouldn’t know how to add another child to my home at a moment’s notice.”

I hear this but say nothing.  How to explain…

The truth is; she doesn’t just flow.

Believe me, I know her.  Type A by nature.  Her schedule is her salvation.

But love wins

She doesn’t know how to add and flow.  In fact, she doesn’t know what to expect at all.

That week, that first week the foster child arrives she studies.  She learns.  She watches.  She cares.  She abandons all responsibilities that can be left untouched and she is present.

Because love wins

Groceries? Not a chance.  Too risky. Can this new one handle it?

The other children in her home? The ones who were there before? They cling and clutch – insecurities rather than thought driving action and word.  What does she do?  She holds and rocks, plays and reassures, reassures, reassures.

And love wins

Does she sleep? I don’t know maybe.  She prays.

Does this new child sleep? Probably not.  The people are new, the smells are odd, the rules….there are actually rules.  Scary doesn’t begin to describe it.

No one knows what the next weeks entail.  But, we know this….

“… God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life.” (John 3:16 NIV emphasis added)

God gave. Jesus went.

Love wins

Note: Since the writing of this article I’ve been notified of a book titled Love Wins: At the Heart of Life’s Big Questions by Rob Bell. This article was written without knowledge of that book and is not connected to it or its theology. If you are interested in the theology associated with this article the book titled What is the Gospel? By Greg Gilbert is a good example.

(I created the image using Pic Monkey’s free photo editing website. Check them out here. This post may also contain affiliate links. For more information, read our Disclosure Policy here.)

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Categories // Considering Fostering?, Real Life Tags // Encouragement

Survival Was Our Choice

05.09.2016 by Sarah //

Survival Was our Choice smaller square

The suffocation of the laundry pile. The pressure between my ribs. Dirty shoes on the carpet.

Breath, I tell myself. Exhale. Inhale.

Peas in the hair. The pressure, the overwhelm. The never-ending. The dark encroaching jungle of dirt and din.

I disappear into a bathroom to scrub a toilet and children run up and down the halls yelling.

It’s too much. I give up! I’ll never be able to beat it back.

Giving up, Curling up. Nap isn’t an option with all the noise.

Kid’s movie.

Block it out. Ignore it.

More laundry at the end of the couch.

Like fertilizer for weeds this trying to shut it all out is.

The jungle encroaches. It’s sins domain.

Death, destruction, survival.

The buying of the food, the cooking of the food, the eating, dish washing, and working for the food.

“Cursed is the ground because of you; in toil you will eat of it all the days of your life. By the sweat of your face you will eat bread.” Genesis 3:17, 18

Survival – it’s part of the garden curse.

The daily grind, the upkeep, the tending, and cleaning, the fight for order so that real life – the good life, can happen.

That’s the curse.

It’s not just you. We ARE losing out. It’s a fight to get through the mundane, in order to focus on what matters, God, our family, friends.

Real life, the good life.

This is what was lost in the garden. We traded relationships for survival.

We lost life.

Death entered.

God had to promise a seed that would one day make it all right.

Survival didn’t exist. Relationships did. God walking with man did. Perfect spousal unity did. Glorious, unashamed nakedness did.

So now what? There’s no putting the lid back on sin’s curse.

Now, we run. We run to our savior, the one who fulfilled His promise to crush Satan’s head. The one who’s guaranteed our future.

And we fight.

We fight the encroaching jungle of disorder, and we do what we can to get back to garden relationships.

We minimize. We get rid of stuff so there’s less things to wear out, break down, and maintain. We eat simply, we plan ahead.

This is curse busting stuff!

We let some things go, because this world, it’s all headed toward death and decay, but people, our loved ones, relationships they don’t have to be. There is a savior for them, for us. There IS REAL LIFE and, in the midst of the curse, God has made a way.

So, dear friend, don’t become weary in well doing. This side of heaven we will always fight survival mode, but we can recognize it for what it is, and not become discouraged when yet something else encroaches on what really matters because that is what this curse does. So fight for your relationship with God, and with others, because at the end of this life, that is what will matter.

Two of my favorite resource to help you fight survival mode are this book, and this short, 15 minute a day course for mornings or the one for evenings. Keep at it my friend!

(Note: I created the top image using Pic Monkey’s free photo editing website. Check them out here. This post may contain affiliate links. For more information, read my Disclosure Policy here.)

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Categories // Real Life Tags // Encouragement, Struggle

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