I have been ghosting all of you the past few months. What
started with giving some freedom to someone I thought I could trust . . . ended
in a reevaluation of what and who I want to be, and what I want this blog and
my non profit A Reason to Stand to become. I have never been surrounded by so
many “business” people driven by power and money, than I have the past six months; masked
in the form of genuine hearts willing to help.
It has been healing to step back and compare watching others
try to take something that didn’t belong to them, and realize that I still had
a lot of pain from another time someone came and took from me something that
didn’t belong to him. I have felt like my walls went back up, leaving me too
afraid to be vulnerable—and in protection mode all over again.
After a month of preterm labor, and now a few weeks engulfed
in all my efforts being used up in a desperate fight to no longer be pregnant .
. . it is no surprise to me that I sit here at six in the morning, feeling a
need to get out of my head what has been on my mind.
Protecting our children.
I am about to give birth to a child that is coming into a
different world than the other five have lived. The last time I was here, I
didn’t know it, but my world was about to shatter. There have been many moments
through the last nine months that I almost felt inadequate to give her a home
that she deserved. A pure—un-traumatized—baby why would she want a mother who
has been so broken? The dude in my head has had a great time brining me back to
the fear that I couldn’t protect my other kids . . . why would this time be any
different? He has been truly creative at bringing back inadequacy to a new kind
of level.
So I as I have pondered these fears, and worked through some
of the trauma I thought had long since passed, I have realized a few things . .
.
In this world—though she hopefully won’t experience first
hand what her brothers and sisters went through—she will still need to be
protected from it.
We live in a world obsessed with two things. Sex and Murder.
Glorified at every turn, our children are constantly bombarded with marketing
full of images depicting the Hollywood version of these two sins, but what they
don’t tell you is how murder really feels for the kids who live it every day.
What they don’t tell you is that both of these
choices—affairs and murder—shatter hearts. What they don’t tell you is that
these kids effected by losing someone close to them at the hand of another
person . . . lose their childhood—their innocence—in a single moment. What
Hollywood fails to portray is the years that follow. They want us to think that
murder is intriguing, they want our children to think that it is just part of
life. Little do they know is how it really feels when it happens to you.
So what does growing up in a world of murder feel like? It
feels like panic attacks at school when a Hollywood version book about murder
is read out loud to a group of 8th graders. It feels like anxiety
for weeks after a 12 year old plays a shooting game with all of his friends.
Haunting nightmares after accidently seeing a commercial during a football
game—a commercial about a cereal killer. Little kids scared to go up to their
room alone. Kids afraid to go to school after a lock in drill. Tears in the
night after someone says a simple phrase when not wanting to do a task at
school,
Just shoot me in the head.” Words that in any one else’s world seem so
simple—to children of murder—brings about an image that is all too real.
So to those in Hollywood who make light of taking a life . .
. I want you to know that murder isn’t just a cool topic that—as my daughter’s
eighth grade teacher put it—“keeps their attention because kids like this
stuff”. Kids only like this stuff, because we have let it become commonplace in
their life. I know for a fact that we wouldn’t let them read books about 10
different ways a sex addict raped someone—so why is it ok to have them read a
book about 10 different ways a serial killer murdered people?
Our kids are being told lies. They are playing games that
take away their view of the preciousness of every life. They are watching
movies that glorify and give power to sex and violence. They are surrounded by
images that take away the importance of fidelity and protection of life. Then
we wonder why young kids bring guns into schools; we wonder why they do it in a
way that they have no empathy for anyone else . . . it is because we have
taught them that it is ok . . . and not just ok—we have let them come to
believe that it is cool.
Our kids deserve more. They need us to care about what we
let the world put into their heads. We need to protect them from the numbing
effect of stories and games that fog their view of reality and fantasy. They
need us to filter out the world, and teach them right from wrong. They need to
learn empathy.
I learned the importance of this by parenting what the world
might call “broken children”. But guess what . . . the world is the broken one.
God wants us to have empathy. And my unlucky children learned that the day
their father was shot in the head. They care about what others are going
through and how things feel for them. They care about every emotion I
feel—sometimes to an obnoxious level. They cry when their friend’s parents get
divorced, because they don’t want them to hurt. They ask for an extra ten bucks
when their school is raising money for a student with cancer—not because they
know him well—but because they ache for another in pain.
Emapthy is what we have to teach our kids, to care about
every life that is around them. Empathy—heart for another person’s needs—is
what changes everything. Empathy is what this pure child who hasn’t felt the
effect of trauma is going to learn from her siblings who have lived a life full
of it.
So little baby. You are coming to a family that some days
has felt a little broken . . . but what I finally figured out: this was always
the plan. You won’t see them as your broken brothers and sisters—you will see
them as brothers and sisters who learned at a young age what it is like to
care. They will protect you on a fierce level at every turn, because they will
never want you to hurt. They will be your warriors, because they learned a long
time ago that life is precious. They will give you their hearts, because they
know what it feels like for hearts to be broken. You won’t see them as broken,
because it is in their broken past that they learned how to love.
Empathy is love—caring about the life and needs of another
person. In a world full of empathy there is no room for the world’s view of
what makes us broken. God doesn’t make any mistakes . . . so little baby, I am
ready to be your mom. I am worthy to be your mom. This was always the plan. My
heart is ready to do it again, and I have faith that this time it will be
different. It won’t be perfect—no life is—but what I can promise you is that it
will be beautiful. A perfect kind of mess. The world isn’t what we are bringing
you into . . . you are coming straight into our hearts—and we can’t wait.
God’s plan is beautiful . . . and I am so glad you choose
us. This was always the plan.