You know you’re
pregnant when you roll your eyes at the ringing phone across the room and
think, “I just poured myself a nice
cup of chocolate chips and settled on the couch. Does anyone merit my attention
right now?” That only happened once, I promise. And the cup wasn’t full. And I
did pick up the call, but it turned out to be Charter Communications, so I had
to reel myself in from throwing the phone straight through the window. Joe the
Salesman wasn’t ready for that jelly.
That is the picture of
pregnancy.
Of course, there is
this other picture of pregnancy that I gaze at several times a day. It’s a
13-week-and-4-day ultrasound of the most beautiful developing baby I have ever
seen. You guys, she is seriously, staggeringly beautiful. She is a picture of
my wildest dreams. She is grace: a gift I didn’t earn and don’t deserve that
was given to me anyway, to paraphrase Frederick Buechner. A hundred times a
day, the thought crosses my mind, “How did I get this lucky? I am the wife of
my favorite person, stepmom to two incredible children, and sixteen weeks
pregnant with a grace baby.” Wow. Big time wow. Because when I was guiding my own
life, I guided myself right into disaster. Repeatedly.
Barely two and a half
years ago, I was in the throes of addiction counseling for compulsive
overeating, a disorder that served as my prison warden for over 12 years. I ate
little around others – excepting only my best friend, around whom I felt
completely safe – but binged later in secret. I lied about how much I ate and
how little self-respect I had. I was terrified of painful feelings, like
loneliness and rejection, so I ate to smother them. After every binge, I felt
ashamed and helpless, which often led me to anticipation of the next one. It
was miserable and infuriating and dark.
Just over two years
ago, my first marriage was officially ending. Confusion and heartbreak washed over me
every morning, and I couldn’t find Jesus. Actually, I wouldn’t find Jesus. I didn’t really think He could help, as none
of this was His problem. Everything was a mess, and I remember telling my mom I
felt un-tethered, like my air hose had been cut and I was floating through
space without anything to ground me.
I finally gave up. I
don’t remember when, I just know that I did. There’s no sensational story of
sobbing or snake handling or a contract signed in blood. All that happened is
one day Jesus whispered, “Give me a try now?” And I said, “Yes, please,” and
that was it. Peace. And now, having relinquished the pilot’s controls, I have been
redeemed and made pure again. And there’s a life in me – both literally and
figuratively – that is so joyful and so foreign that I hardly recognize it. But
that’s what Jesus does. Every time, that’s what Jesus does.
My man and I have to
rely on Jesus every minute of every day because we both have gigantic, ugly
demons that don’t go away without a fight, even when the proverbial war has
already been won. I would say all Christians are to some degree in this boat,
since the Bible tells us Satan prowls like a lion, hoping and searching for someone
to devour (1 Peter 5:8). But when I say my man and I have to fight for our
freedom, I mean that my man and I have to
fight for our freedom. And the worst part of it is that neither of us is
perfect, or even holy. We have to borrow our victory from Jesus every single day. But most of the time, that’s what we choose to do. So in honor of our
Redeemer, in honor of our testimony, in honor of the blessed-beyond-all-reason life
we’ve been given, we’ve chosen to name our daughter grace like the sea. “Anna” means grace, and her middle name means “the sea.” We didn’t earn her, we don’t deserve her, but her beautiful self has
been given to us for safe keeping anyway. It takes a powerful, loving, compassionate
God to create something like that out of the broken, nasty selves we offered
him. But that’s all we had to do. And then there he was, with all the hope and
joy and trustworthy love we ever needed.
Also, happy four
months of married life to my strong, sexy, incredible man. Thank God for you,
my love.
No comments:
Post a Comment