Giving What You Have

Photo credit: Tracey Rees

The bald one forgot his age again, insisting that he was barely five – even though he’s nearly half way through six.

The oldest brother wants everything perfect and keeps losing his glasses.

The sister is worried for the election and significant things like human injustice, but she only ever wants to talk about it late at night.

The baby who isn’t a baby anymore only wants to wrestle and get in trouble.

And somehow we’re out of spoons again.

The days come and go with the monumental tucked in-between little fights and insignificant things that seem huge in the moment. Homework to be done, medicines to be taken, clean up the basement… again

How do we find significance in our mess and busy?

Photo credit: Tracey Rees
Photo credit: Tracey Rees

It was four years ago and a Good Friday. The house was cleaned, the children were cleaned, and dinner was almost prepared.

Those were the days in the condo and I feared having people over to the house because we had no storage and what you saw was what you got – everything was out on the surface. And with children ranging in ages from 5 years to 8 months, there always seemed to be stuff on every surface, half of it being decidedly gross. (those were in the days when Aid and Chase licked everything)

I was doubly afraid because my third-born was a wild card and didn’t fear the parental glare over bad behavior the way the others did. He was known for smiling, waving, and/or thumbing his nose in the general direction of manners and sanity.

Photo credit: Tracey Rees
Photo credit: Tracey Rees

And then Bob called and said he was running late and wouldn’t be home for dinner.

Great, just great.

I was making a desperate stab at hospitality and someone I didn’t know all that well was coming to dinner. Then we were going to have to try and make it out the door for the Tenebrae service – all the littles with only me to direct them. I was to be the herder of those with more energy than sense, those who were easily distracted by anything shiny. I could feel myself sweating.

And on top of that, what would this guest and I talk about? Having a conversation at dinner was an attempt at best and the chance of it being intelligible was severely lowered with only one parent at the table. I could just imagine the ensuing chaos. Ugh… People will post warnings about our family and our house. I’m just sure of it.

Then came the knock on the door and Tracey stepped into our lives.

She was already dressed up for the church service and I feared what would become of her beautiful light-colored outfit in my home. I could tell she was tentative and I was sure she probably thought we were crazy as I rushed around putting dinner on the table and the kids tried to be entertaining by putting together a series of banned activities for her amusement. “Miss Tracey! Watch me jump off this table!”, “Miss Tracey! Watch me stand on the chair!”

And then, as Tracey and I stood in the kitchen and made those first attempts at conversation between two people who don’t know each other yet, laying on a blanket near my feet; baby Karsten decided he would roll over.  

Photo credit: Tracey Rees
Photo credit: Tracey Rees

And that’s the moment everything changed. Suddenly, even though we didn’t know each other and the dinner was late and the kids were crazy, we were doing life together.

And then, as we sat down to our adventurous dinner, Chase leaned on Tracey’s shoulder and told her “I love you. I miss you.” And he repeated it throughout dinner, often leaning over to put his head on her shoulder. In those minutes, she became “his Miss Tracey” and to this day, both Tracey and I remember that time as one of blessing and also as one of his last more normal weekends before strange symptoms would indicate a brain tumor.

There is much to be said for the joy of shared experience in the knitting together of lives. I didn’t know Tracey before that day, but she was with me the first time my baby rolled over and one of the last times before Chase’s tumor started presenting itself. It’s taken a long time, but I’m slowly learning that these life-knitting connections are one of the most precious parts of opening my home or my life. What I have is yours (even the broken and battered stories) because all that I have is a gracious gift from God. I often hesitate and want to shrink from being around others because I want things perfect and neat before I invite someone in, and my life is rarely that way. So often, I seek to impress rather than to connect. But as I go through it all, I’m gently taught and re-taught that life and the living of it is a great gift and that I am most blessed in authenticity.

Never underestimate His beautiful plans for your broken life as you share it…

Moment by moment.

“What do you have that God has not given you?” 1 Corinthians 4:7a

(In addition to being a dear part of our family, Tracey is a gifted artist and photographer and has blessed our family with some of its most beautiful memories.)

Photo credit: Tracey Rees
Photo credit: Tracey Rees

Rejoicing In Your Scars

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Recently, as I put the littlest boys into bed, Chase stripped his shirt as he often does, referring to his white chest as his “rockin’ body’.  As he passed across the room towards his bed, Karsten came to stand in front of him, stopping him, and asking with quiet interest, “Hey, Chase, what are those lines?”  His small, chubby hand raised energetically to point at the slashes of central line scars that cover Chase’s upper chest on both sides.

For one small second, I held my breath. I wanted to jump in and explain. I wanted to “make it better” and take it away as I watched Chase begin to recoil. He hates questions about his physical appearance.  And some days, I hate that all the kids know these strange and awful cancer-y things.  But then, Chase stood up a little straighter, pressing out of his curve and removed the hand he’d used to quickly cover the scars, bringing his chest into the light.

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“Karsten, do you know what these are?

Karsten shook his head and waited patiently as Chase puffed himself up with the self-importance of a sibling about to teach a great lesson.

“These are from my needles and surgeries.”

“Surgeries?”

“Yes. They’re from my cancer and my chemo. Do you know what chemo is?”

“Yes! He’s in the closet!” Karsten ran to the closet and scooped up Chemo Duck, bringing him back and placing him in Chase’s outstretched arms. “Here, Chase. Here’s Chemo. He’s probably a duck.” To Karsten, who was only 8 months old on the fateful day in 2012, “chemo” is just the name of a stuffed animal, not a torturous experience. I waited.  Knowing what to say next was best left to Chase. Sometimes the simple dialogue between brothers is a thousand times more useful than maternal wisdom could ever be.

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He nodded gravely. “Thanks, Karsten, but there was more chemo. From the doctors. And now look…” he flexed his arm in the air, looking up at it proudly. “Look at my muscles. Chemo gave me good muscles.”

At which point, I felt the need to interject and redirect. Some days memory doesn’t come easily for him. “Chase, the chemo killed your cancer cells.”

He nodded as if he’d known all along. “Yep. And my hair too. But now it’s coming back. See, Karsten?”

He flexed again as Karsten watched the whole show in somewhat awed silence. And then Chase stopped and looked at me.

“Hey, Mom? The doctors didn’t make me. I forget…who made me?”

I ruffled his whispy-soft head. “God did, my sweet boy.”

He nodded yet again. “Oh, that’s right. Good. I’m glad.”

Karsten jumped up and down at my side. “Me too! Me too!”

And then the moment of deep attention was lost and the boys went back to getting ready for bed and intermittently wrestling, for that is what most small boys love to do.

But I saw this amazing moment unfold before my eyes.  Our history and our scars can hurt, can be shameful, stressful, and sad, but in the rehearsing of them, the telling of them to others, the owning of them, they point us to God in such unique ways.

Rejoice in your scars . . . moment by moment.

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Too Many Shirts

He scrunched up his nose, the stronger side of his face muscles causing lips to curl angrily on one side. “Bof of them!” This did not bode well.

Some days, Chase is an old soul with wisdom that brings me to tears.  Other days, he has the logic and reasoning of a three-year-old, trapped in a body the size of a four-year-old, with the most of the physical abilities of a six-year-old.  This means that discussions of any kind are often like trying to hit a moving target.  At any given moment, he might need a pat on the head, a “quiet time”, or a higher-level discourse.  

On Sunday morning, I laid out his clothes for him and went to iron Bob a shirt.  Moments later, I returned to find Chase standing in the middle of the living room, his pants bustled and messed across the back where he’d failed to pull them up properly, and on his torso, he wore an undershirt, the shirt I’d laid out for him, another equally heavy long-sleeved shirt, and as I encountered him, he was attempting to frustratedly stuff his bulky arms into a navy zippered sweatshirt.  

His forehead was already beginning to glisten under the furnace of clothing he’d heaped on his body and he was so mad at not being able to get his arm in the sweatshirt that I could tell he was seconds from pitching it across the room with a scream.  And now, here I was gearing up to come at him with the sad truth that he couldn’t wear all the shirts in his drawer.

I hate when I know I’m right and for his own good, I need to intervene. Before I even start, nearly every time, there is the pricking sensation that it’s going to be an A++, super guaranteed, completely pitched, blood and guts battle. And on a Sunday morning too . . . because nothing says “getting ready for church” like a family fight.

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Kneeling down, I started in,  “Chase, honey, what happened? Why do you have all those shirts on?” 

Sometimes it’s easier if I don’t assume and let him tell me in his own words, but this part takes time.  And how I hate to take time.

He looked up at me simply. “Because I like them all.”

Fair enough. “Well then, why don’t you save one for school tomorrow? You may not wear both this morning. So, which is best for church?  The gray one with the green sleeves, or the brown one?”

His voice grew insistent as he sensed my purpose. He would have to sacrifice at least one shirt. “Bof of them.” 

“I’m sorry, Chase. That wasn’t a choice. You can wear one or the other, but not both.”

“Bof! Of! Them!” His voice raised to a scream and he played his trump card (which is only ever true about 50% of the time). “Daddy says bof of them!”

Bob’s voice came from the kitchen. “Chase, that isn’t true.”

“Bof of them! Bof of them! BOF OF THEM!!”  His voice was a scream, his face red as his lips curled oddly around the “f” he substituted for “th”.  

In moments like these, I want to get down on his level, and down in his face and say the four words that are always on the edge of my mind: “Because I’m the mom.” How I want to force obedience out of him as if it’s waiting to pop through just below the stubborn surface.  

But at its core, the argument isn’t ultimately about his shirt, though he would have to remove at least two. At it’s heart, the argument is about all of us. Damage or not, our need to be right – to get our own way. As I looked at the “tiny” bald boy stomping his foot in anger, I found that I secretly wished him to respond better than I would have in the much the same scenario.  

So often God confronts me much as I stood before Chase: Ellie , will you follow what I’ve laid out for you? I see the harm in this scenario that you do not. You can’t love me and these other things too . . . you must choose one or the other. There is sacrifice, yes, but my way is greater than you can wrap your mind around right now.

[mental angry foot stomp] No God, I want both of them! All of them! Why can’t I have everything? If you really loved me, you’d let me have what I think I want.

In the end, Chase only wore one shirt to church, the argument was diffused, and we all survived, but sometimes, in the myriad of daily battles, I find these rare moments of backing away to see my own heart in Chase’s stubborn stance.  Many times, so many more than I’d like to consider, I fail miserably, but in those brief flashes of heart, I grasp just a hint of God’s loving patience with me…

…moment by moment.

 For I know the plans I have for you,” says the Lord. “They are plans for good and not for disaster, to give you a future and a hope. Jeremiah 29:11

This Is Love

Seven years ago, right around this same time, I stood, holding Bob’s hand, Aidan kicking in my stomach, and stared at the stern, older gentleman behind the desk and dais in front of us.

His position in the room was raised to help indicate his position in the building – for he was a judge…the judge, to us. Our papers lay in front of him as he weighed the final decision in the case, and then his words came, directed to the husband at my side.
“This adoption is done now. It’s final. And you… [he waved the gavel in Bob’s general direction] I have words for you. You didn’t have to do this, but you did it anyway and I want you to know that you’re a man of exemplary character.” And then, turning to me, he made sure I had heard the words that Bob has jokingly said should be framed ever since – “You know that, don’t you?”


Bob had taken the daughter born into my arms alone and made her the apple of his eye and his firstborn with a knit beauty that surpasses even blood and DNA. And now, seven years later, it’s so strange to write those words because it’s as if he has always been her father – in fact, I believe he was destined to be that person for her.


And forever, there’s this living, breathing picture of adoption – one person to another saying…

“I don’t care where you came from or what you bring with you, but I LOVE YOU, and what’s more, I want you to be with me forever and I’m giving you my name.”

“For everything comes from Him and exists by His power and is intended for His glory. All glory to him forever! Amen.” Romans 11:36

Moment by moment.

Bob and Darcy - September 2008
Bob and Darcy – September 2008