Missing Mom

One year ago today, Dec. 10, my husband and I were at our adult Sunday School class Christmas party when we received a phone call from my oldest son saying that my sister in Texas had been trying to reach us. We each checked our cells phones and saw several missed calls; somehow we just hadn’t heard them over the conversations. My first thought was that my mom, who also lived in Texas, must be in the hospital again. She had been in the hospital several times over the years with congestive heart failure and complications from diabetes. We went out onto the front porch where it was quiet and we could get a signal on our cell phone and called my sister. We were stunned to learn that my mom had passed away suddenly. She was out shopping with my youngest sister and nephew; while they were in the car, my sister noticed my mom had not finished her sentence, looked over, and saw her slumped over. She apparently had a massive heart attack. They called an ambulance and they worked on her for a long time, but it was no use; she was gone.

I suppose on some level we always knew it was a possibility. Years earlier she had been told she needed triple bypass surgery, but she was terrified of it and refused. They treated her with medication and diet, and finally she got to the point that she was no longer a candidate for the surgery. Through each hospitalization she somehow bounced back, so we thought we would have several more years and weren’t really prepared.

We were able to go back into the house and get our coats and my purse without alerting attention: I wanted people to know, but I just didn’t want to face them right then. I did run into a good friend who had also lost her mother not long before, and we cried on each other’s shoulders for a bit. Our Sunday School leader and pastor came out onto the front porch and prayed with us before we left and told us to let them know if there was anything they could do.

We went home, explained what had happened to the boys, and began trying to figure out when we could go to Texas, how, and with whom. My two oldest sons faced college exams that week and felt it was just really a bad time for them to miss, so it was decided my husband, youngest son, and I would fly from South Carolina to Texas; two of my sisters, a niece, and the boyfriend of one sister who live about 40 minutes from us would drive.

It was something of a family reunion: my step-father, brother, four sisters and I and most of our families were there as well as my mother’s sister, niece, two brothers, one sister-in-law, and a cousin and his wife. I had not seen my aunt and uncles for a long time. It was a joy to see everyone, to catch up and reminisce through laughter and tears.

One of my concerns was who was going to preach at the funeral. My mom and step-dad weren’t church-going people (though I found out later they had just started attending my youngest sister’s church) and I didn’t know if someone, a stranger who might be from who knows what kind of church, might be recommended by the funeral home. At some point in the discussion of details, my sister asked about my former pastor from the church I had attended when I lived there. He had retired and wasn’t in the best of health, but I called him, and he graciously agreed to take the funeral. That was a blessing on many counts: my mom had attended church there only a few times, but at least he was familiar with her and our family, and I knew he would preach the gospel. I prayed for God to give him wisdom, the right words, the right tone, the right approach. Some of my family is unsaved; some believe in a general way, but I am just not sure if they believed in a saving way. There is a difference. James 2:19 says, “Thou believest that there is one God; thou doest well: the devils also believe, and tremble.” Someone can believe that there is a God and yet not be saved, and I so wanted to truth of the gospel to go out, yet not in a harsh, brow-beating way, but in a tender, caring way.

I knew that my mom also definitely believed in a general way. I never heard her say in so many words that she had “accepted Christ” or was saved or any of the terms that seem most to pinpoint salvation. I had so wanted her to come to that point. I am ashamed to say I am a very cowardly witness in person, though I could and did write about the gospel many times, and she was very reluctant to talk about this particular area, so though we talked around it and I wrote a great deal about it, I never had a very clear reassurance that she was saved. Yet I believe there was a change in her life. At one point — I can’t remember if it was during a heart episode or if it was when she was facing amputation of some toes and perhaps more due to diabetes — I sent out a mass email prayer request, and many people wrote back to say they were praying. Some even wrote out what they were praying. I printed all those and sent them to her (that was before she had e-mail). She was so touched that people she didn’t know were praying for her, and from time to time she would ask me to have people pray for various things. I think that was one of the major things that softened her heart toward the Lord. Twenty years ago she didn’t want to hear anything about it. Through the years of sending her Christian books and such to read, and sending-emails back and forth, she has grown more open to the Lord. In the last few years, there were things she had e-mailed that made me wonder if, on her own and in the quietness of her heart, she did ask the Lord to save her. She was always resistant to talk about it face to face or on the phone, but her demeanor, the things she said, her attitude, all have changed dramatically over the years. That is my hope, anyway. I know that salvation is a matter of faith, not necessarily of using just the “right” words.

My former pastor preached a very clear, very tender salvation message. You know, I’m not one who likes a lot of “Amen-ing” in services — when it’s loud or happens a lot, it is distracting to me — but throughout the service I heard various quiet statements of “Amen,” “That’s right,” “Yes!” — and I can’t tell you the good it did my heart to know there were others of like precious faith there. The pastor said many people told him afterward that they were so glad the gospel was presented. That, to me, was an indication of the answer to another long-standing prayer request, that God would send other Christians my mom’s way, perhaps in her job or other relationships.

We had such good visits with the family, but it was so eerie to be home without mom there. I kept expecting her to come around a corner. At one point before everyone began to leave to return home, some wanted to take pictures of various family groups. When my mother’s siblings grouped together for their shot, my heart caught to see them grouped together without her.

The Lord answered so much prayer not only for those days but also for travel, health concerns, and the boys. It was the first time we had left Jeremy totally alone for several days. That was helpful for his finals. 🙂 But as a mom I was concerned for his safety, for everything in the house working in proper order, etc. I think we had leftovers or things for him to eat, and one family invited him over for dinner one evening. On the day we traveled home, there was a big ice storm. Our connecting flight in Atlanta was delayed, and during a phone call to Jeremy we found out all the power was off at home. Jeremy was supposed to pick us up, and I was concerned about him driving in the ice. We were supposed to drive to Jason’s school, about half an hour from the airport, to get him and his “stuff” from college for Christmas break. Though our flight was delayed, eventually everything came together and we all got home safely. I found out later it took one of my uncles 24 hours to get home due to delayed flights because of the ice storm: at some point we would have all been in the Atlanta airport at the same time, but we didn’t know it.

God blessed us through so many people: my former pastor, friends at church here: one dear friend brought home-made muffins over before we left and had a meal for us our first night back home; others were “on call” for Jeremy while he was here alone; many here and across the country prayed, sent cards that ministered to us, and just cared. We were so blessed.

In the musical, Les Miserables, there is a line Collette sings to her father when she finds out he is dying: “It’s too soon, too soon to say good-bye.” That is exactly how I felt. I am sure a quick, sudden death is probably easier on the dying, but it does mean the living don’t get a chance to say, “Good-bye,” to give one last hug. That’s one thing I most regret. I found out later that one of my mother’s “horrors” was that she would die alone or die in the hospital. It was a comfort, then, that it didn’t happen that way. Though I am sure it was traumatic to my sister and nephew to witness her death and the paramedics working on her, I hope it was a comfort to them that she wasn’t alone, she was with people she loved doing what she wanted to do.

It hasn’t been the easiest year. I never knew sorrow could be such a constant ache. I remember thinking of other friends who had lost loved ones, and though I expressed sympathy, I thought, “Oh, if I had only known it hurt this much, I would have done more.” I couldn’t go anywhere near Hallmark around Mother’s Day. I went there in the spring to look for some things for our annual ladies’ luncheon at church, and saw some spring salt and pepper shakers she would have loved and a few “mother” things, and had a good cry. There have been several moments like that through the year. I thought that that particular ladies’ luncheon, the day before Mother’s Day, would be really hard, but the Lord got me through. One of the things I miss the most is our phone calls. We talked frequently, but particularly on holidays I would call in the evenings after the festivities were over and everyone else would have left. That’s been an aching point in the holidays this year.

My mom was one of my closest friends. There’s no one else who loves you like your mom does, no one else with whom I had a 48 year history. I can’t tell you how much I miss her. There is comfort in the hope of seeing her again: the thought of what she is experiencing now in heaven is the only thing that keeps me from wishing her back.

If you are still reading, you deserve a pat on the back or something. 🙂 I probably should have condensed this for the blog, but it is the first time I have ever written this out at once, so it’s been therapeutic.

Let me encourage you, if you are not sure where you would be if death came suddenly – please make sure of that today, for your sake, for your loved ones’ sakes. It is not a scare tactic: it is a truth that you just never know when your time will come. To read more, please visit here.

Saturday Photo Scavenger Hunt: Red

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Jeremy on a snowy day

Red is not one of my favorite colors, so I don’t have much of it in my home, and I wondered what to put up today. I thought of a couple of photos I could scan in, and then remembered this one from a couple of years ago (no snow yet this year) of Jeremy out in the snow and being red from the cold.

He inherited his mom’s tendency to have red cheeks — I was even nicknamed “Rosie” for a while in high school because of my “rosy” cheeks.

“A child learns self-denial”

That is the title of today’s devotional from Back to the Bible’s series made up of Elisabeth Elliot’s writings. I highly recommend this one. I highly recommend most of her writings. 🙂 But this especially speaks to some issues involved in raising children.

I was especially struck by the thought that in Bible times, women did a lot of hard and time-consuming tasks and probably didn’t have a lot of time for sitting in the floor and playing with their children. I am sure they did to some extent, and, as a young mother, I enjoyed those playing times, but there was a constant struggle and fighting off guilt for not doing that more. But, truly, as we go about our daily tasks and include our children and interact with them all through the day, we’re having an influence on them, teaching them, building our relationship with them, and using opportunities in everyday to teach them about the Lord.

It was also a rebuke and a reminder to include them. When they were little and “Mommy’s shadow,” that just happened by necessity. As they got older I’m afraid I would often shoo them off to play so that I could work more efficiently. But even still I enjoy the fellowship of working together as well as playing together.

Favorite Christmas memory

Monrn2 has invited us all to her place at My Quiet Corner to share a favorite Christmas memory. She says:

Even if you do not come with your own Christmas memory to share, please come and just relax. The music is playing (turn up your volume), the fire is burning, hot drinks are served, plenty of goodies for everyone, and throws are available to keep out the winter chill. Today warm hearts of friends gather sharing a quiet moment of Christmas together here in “My Quiet Corner“.

Oddly enough, I don’t have any concrete Christmas memories from childhood — just wisps of little things here and there. Many of them will probably come flooding back after I post here, just like I can’t think of anything when my family asks me what I want for Christmas, but I think of several things just after! 🙂

One of my favorite Christmas memories is the first one my husband and I shared as man and wife. We got married Dec. 21 in Houston during a Christmas break of college. I normally wouldn’t advise students to get married while still in school. But I only had 3 courses left (I was one who had crammed 4 years into 5…) and my husband had two semesters. His adviser had also advised us to get married and felt my husband could concentrate on his studies better if we were. That’s highly unusual for an adviser to say, too — but, hey, we took it. 🙂

Being poor and not having much time, we did not have a honeymoon, but that was all right: we were excited about heading back to SC and setting up housekeeping. We spent our first night at a nice hotel in Houston, then went over to my mom’s house the next day to load up my “stuff” out of my bedroom into a U-haul truck to drive back to SC. Unfortunately, something went wrong with our car, so we had to stay another night. Being poor still, we didn’t have money for another night at a hotel, so…we spent the night in my bedroom. That did seem more than a little strange, let me tell you!

I don’t remember what was wrong with the car, but my step-father is a great mechanic, and somehow he and Jim got the thing running, and we were on our way. I think we may have spent a night in a hotel along the way, because we ended up arriving in Greenville, SC, very late Christmas Eve. We contacted the university faculty member through whom we were renting a little mobile home and followed him out to our new place — it was his new place, too, as he had just bought it in order to rent it out to students. He invited us to the Christmas banquet the school was offering the next day to all the faculty, staff, and students who remained on campus. We gratefully accepted his invitation, unloaded just enough stuff to go to bed, and fell in.

Bright and early the next morning, Christmas morning, we heard a loud banging on our front door. We couldn’t figure out what in the world or who in the world it could be. My husband scrambled himself together enough to open the door when what should his wondering eyes behold but a short grey-haired man — with no beard, no red suit, and a decidedly unjolly expression.

It turned out to be the man who owned the mobile home park. He had not been told that anyone new was moving in, and furthermore, he did not allow renters. He was very upset. I don’t know how the transcation had occured between our landlord and the previous owners without taking into account the need to contact the landlord of the mobile home park — maybe they each understood the other was going to do that. I don’t remember exactly what Jim told him: something to the effect that we were sorry, we didn’t know, we’d have our landlord contact him.

When we met our landlord for lunch, we told him the dilemma. He went out to see the man and they worked it out amicably: the man would allow us to stay.

This man (whose name escapes me) was a little old man who shuffled when he walked and looked like he would be no physical threat to a puppy dog, yet he was one of those people who somehow exuded authority, who seemed to convey that you didn’t really want to mess with him. He lived next door to the mobile home park and drove through it several times a day keeping an eye on things. He had pretty strict rules (which we appreciated). After that inauspicious beginning, we got along really well. We tried to never give him any reason to regret allowing renters into his park. It was the nicest mobile home park I’ve ever seen — a lot of trees and space between homes. We lived there happily for seven years.

Back to that first Christmas: after everything was worked out between the two landlords, we unpacked and settled in. We celebrated Christmas a few days late. We had a little 2-foot artificial tree that had been my grandafther’s (I cringe to say it was aluminum, but we were happy with it at the time. 🙂 ) We shopped the after-Christmas sales for ornaments, decorations, and presents. Two of our ornaments were angels made out of candle wax (maybe they were supposed to be candles — we used them as ornaments) who looked like us: a boy angel with brown hair and a girl angel with blond hair. We put those up next to each other for years until they melted in the attic of our current home.

Despite the trouble of that first Christmas day together, we celebrated in newlywed euphoria and were very happy. We’ll be celebrating our 27th anniversary and Christmas together this year. 🙂

To read more favorite Christmas memories and share your own, please join us here.

Wordless Wednesday: The multipurpose Biblical play costume

I bought this robe either for my husband or older son years ago, but none of the males in my house ever wears a bathrobe. It has gotten use many, many times over they years, though, in Christmas plays. The boys have been shepherds and wise men in it, and here Jesse played Joseph two years ago. He is on his knees for the group photo.

Forgive me for not being wordless this week. 🙂

You can find more Wordless Wednesday pictures at 5 Minutes For Mom.

Wordless Wednesday: More brotherly love

Brotherly love

You can find more Wordless Wednesday pics at 5 Minutes For Mom and the Wordless Wednesday Headquarters.

Saturday Photo Scavenger Hunt: Growth

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1993:

Brothers in 1992

2005:

Brothers in 2005

Wordless Wednesday: Message in the snow

Message in the snow

See more Wordless Wednesday pictures at the Wordless Wednesday headquarters and 5 Minutes For Mom.

Works-For-Me Wednesday: Biblical Child-rearing Helps

“Works For Me Wednesday”

When my kids were younger we came across a resource that I just loved called Doorposts. Something brought it to mind recently, and I googled it to see if it was still in business, and was happy to see that it was.

It was begun by a home-schooling family who made up these resources for their own needs and then made them available for others. What I most love about them is the Scriptural focus and basis. One item that was really popular among my friends years ago was the “If-Then” chart. It was designed to help parenting be more consistent. It listed several offenses on one side, a Scripture verse illustrating why the behavior was wrong, and a place for you to put what the penalty would be. There’s also a Blessing Chart that follows a similar format except that it focuses on the positive: rewarding good behavior.

I enjoyed many of their books as well. One was A Day of Delight, about ways to make the “day of rest” special and enjoyable. If you want to be convicted to the core of your being, see A Checklist for Parents. Their book I consulted most often was For Instruction In Righteousness. It covers over 50 topics (like pride, anger, being a busybody, etc.), lists verses on that topic and verses about what happens to people who engage in those behaviors, ideas for discipline, how God blesses people who resist that sin, ideas for reward and encouragement when children show progress in overcoming, and stories and people in the Bible who obeyed or disobeyed in that area. It’s a wonderful resource not only when a problem area comes up in a child’s life, but also to use in family devotions.

There are also doll kits and coloring books.

Most of the books were originally written in the mom of the family’s calligraphy and cute illustrations which makes for a very homey resource.

See Rocks In My Dryer for more tips that work for others.

Saturday’s Photo Scavenger Hunt: Windows

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Longing for the great outdoors

This was from about 21 years ago when Jeremy was able to pull himself up and get around on foot a little bit. There was always something fascinating about looking out the window of the front screen door to the big wide world outside!

Jesse visiting with Jeremy

This was about 10 years ago. I think Jeremy (older now! 🙂 ) had some outside chore — cleaning the window or something. Jesse, then a toddler, loved to come and talk to him through the window.

View of the curtains

This was taken by Jeremy when he was about 3. It was supposed to be a picture of my sister, but he had not yet developed his photography-taking skills and got her somewhat out of the frame. 🙂 He did however, get a nice shot of my ruffled country curtains which were all the rage then!

Biltmore House

This is one of my middle son Jason’s pictures of the Biltmore house in Asheville, NC. His high school Junior-Senior banquet was there a couple of years ago. He has several great pictures of it, and several great window shots, but I’ll just use this one since I have several windows up already. 🙂