Deep, Lasting Marks

It’s usually between two and four in the morning here in the third trimester. I awake from a semi-sound sleep for a normal bathroom break; a reminder that she’s now growing heavy enough to contribute, in more ways than one, to the over-functioning of my urinary system. She’s usually awake at this time, sometimes with small pokes from within and sometimes with sharp jabs at the mattress’ apparent intrusion on her space. Already announcing personality. Already influencing change. 😉

I’m a bit more tired in the daytime these days, understandably so. And the exchange rate for comfort this last trimester is a bit in the lacking. I see them studying me. They are taking it all in.

See, they’re not toddlers anymore. It’s funny how quickly seven years can pass. And even nearly thirteen years of their inquisitive eyes. Always studying, learning and absorbing. Forming ideas, theories and world views that will impact many in ways we cannot even imagine today while their primary school hands still fit in ours. But it is an opportunity for a daily lesson in honesty. I cannot and should not paint a picture of a fairytale exchange rate. Pregnancy is not always gentle. But it is a sheer privilege to get to carry a child, even when the exchange rate feels less rewarding in the moment.

See, they’re forming opinions on value. On worth of investment. And I want to be sure to be beyond clear, leaving no doubting. They are worth every sciatic nerve firing. Every round ligament zinger. Every reflux discomfort. Every varicose vein burn in my right leg. They are worth the sore back, pleading for a heating pad. The sometimes swollen ankles and feet. The indigestion, immediate need for bathroom trips and internal assault on organs.

I am not hiding the stretch marks, ladies. You continue to reach out and trace them with your fingers on lotion days. They’re the story of you that is permanently left on my body. Some of them are deep and sometimes they are even a lovely shade of purple. I’m not hiding the stretched out skin. The interest in my deformed belly button’s transformations over the months. Your fingers following the scars’ road as you discover firsthand how scar tissue stretches to accommodate your little sister’s growth. The thick texture contrasting the softer skin. We both remember what caused those scars. And I wear them with gratitude to be alive. I don’t ever want to stop taking time to show you those scars, even when you won’t see them in worldly definition of beauty. They’re reminders to us all of the gift of another day of life. And I agree, ladies, that it’s really fascinating to watch those scars stretch out and change. There’s an opportunity we never thought possible for the scars to join the other deep stretch marks and the new ones made by your littlest sister.

You were worth it, ladies. Every stretch mark story. Every tough exchange rate symptom. And your little sister is worth it too. I’m thankful that we can keep having that conversation for the next three months of stretching. I hope you remember these conversations if ever you get the privilege of carrying your own pregnancy marks. And I pray you too find a husband who calls them “honor marks”. It really is an honor that I do not deserve. Here, even right now in the middle of this reflux, leg cramp and sleepless night I am beyond grateful.

How deep and lasting these marks have been, ladies. May we never be the same.

And I feel you wiggling in there, little one. It’s already just you and me here in the quiet dark while everyone else sleeps. The beginning of what I hope to be many a night of just you and me hanging out together. Oh sure, I am tired. And you are wide awake. And gratitude could never be stronger.

~ ~ ~

Thank You, Father, for another night of interruptions. Thank You, Father, for more deep stretch marks. Thank You, Father, for the symptoms that teach me to strive to suffer well. Thank You, for the four pairs of eyes studying me. Thank You for the imperfection they see in me. Please may it draw them to You as they watch my dependence on Your provision in this third trimester. Thank You, Father, for giving us the gift of this little one’s strong heartbeat that we can now hear with a stethoscope from the outside – her own rhythmic pattern that You have created and are sustaining with each beat. What could I ever do or be to deserve such an honor? Lord, it is all You. You overflow my cup. And I am in awe at how You have chosen to redeem. How You are redeeming what once looked bleak and still. You had my praise every passing day of silence, Father. Four years of the ask. Four years of willingly yielding to Your Sovereignty. Your plan and timing are best. Your complete Authority to shape our family’s lives in whatever way You see fit. You have all my trust, Father. And yet You chose to redeem. To bring about healing we didn’t know we needed in a way of deeper edification than we even knew possible. To stir a deeper praise from our lips that can only come from experienced loss. And even if it all went away tomorrow and we never got to meet this little one face to face, I still stand in gratitude to get to lose sleep tonight over symptoms coupled with her wiggling. Over the hope that we may get to hold her, Your gift to us, for a little while.

Thank You, Father, for the deep stretch marks that have shaped my life. I truly cherish every one. I am humbled at the honor.

Please receive all the glory, honor and praise that You are beyond due.

Amen.

The Battle

We have been going through a spiritual battle lately. Ironically, returning to Mozambique to continue on with the Lord’s work, after having testified to God’s handiwork in the States, has resulted in some new waves of spiritual warfare for our family. (Go figure, right?) How the Deceiver loves to capitalize on our weaknesses. And while I am still a baby in the world of spiritual warfare, Matt and I are finding a renewed bracing on the Word of God itself.

We are too weak to fight. We are but broken people. But our Lord? Oh our LORD has ALL the victory. And we are learning to guild ourselves better with the Word of God. To arm ourselves better in His very armor. Taking Him at His Word. And using the Word to fight our battles. Literally taking His Word to the conflicts, praying His Words back to Him, meditating on His Words, journaling His Words and singing His Words. He is our defense. He is our everything. The Rock of our salvation will not be moved!

Lord, lead us into this battle, we are willing.

This song has become a theme song in my heart lately as I fall before Him.

He WILL win the battle. HIS is the victory.

Oh God Who makes the mountains melt, come wrestle us and win!

Lord of Hosts, You’re with us. With us in the fire. With us as a shelter. With us in the storm. You will lead us, through the fiercest battle. Oh where else could we go but with the Lord of Hosts!

Selah.

come and see what God has done…

I have been pretty quiet over here lately. Oh sure, I’ve posted some pictures and shared a small sample of our tiny slice of the world. But it has been a while since I have really written. —

This Christmas season leaves much to be chewed, much to be wrestled with.

This Christmas season has been filled with learning, growing …and surrendering.

By the utter grace of God, I get to see this Christmas season. I don’t ever want to pass by that truth lightly; nonchalantly, flippantly casting aside the fact that He literally sustained my life at this time last year. I am humbled, yielded and unworthy.

I can’t explain to you what it feels like to look at the scars in the mirror.

They are deep.

Forever changing me.

Christmas comes with a different taste for our family. When we think of last year.

When we think of last year…

I actually struggle to finish that sentence right now.

 

 

Christmas away from friends and family is tough, dear ones.

We passed “the other restaurant” in town the other day. [Yes, there’s really two restaurants in town, unless you want to pay way too much at the third one.] Much to the squealing delight of four little girls “the other restaurant” was the only place in the entire city to decorate their windows for Christmas. It was a wonderfully shocking surprise! One animated reindeer, fat white man in a red suit, snow man and a few unlit icicle lights, but still the girls wanted to circle the block to see it again. We couldn’t believe it. We saw any semblance of Christmas decorations in Mozambique for the first time in years, people.

Dear ones, we don’t believe in Santa Claus in this household. We haven’t since the beginning, but yes we hang the stockings like happy fools clinging to a little Christmas silliness. And our kids know we buy the stocking stuffers while they are told to go to one of the other 2 aisles in the convenience-store grocery shop. But who can resist that delight, you all? Gah, we’re addicted to those squeals when they receive the same candies the grocery always sells, but this time out of a stocking on Christmas Eve. It’s one of the few traditions we hold to make it feel like Christmas around here.

We make the best of it. It’s silly really to think that Christmas must come with cold weather, but when that’s all you’ve ever known, something just feels broken about Christmas if it’s over a hundred degrees Fahrenheit (41C to be precise).  There’s something wrong about watching the Polar Express when you all have headaches and upset stomachs from the heat because, try as you might, you couldn’t drink enough water to counteract the lost sweat. It’s just hard. And it makes us “homesick”, though honestly we use that term flexibly. Home is where we are. So yes, we leave home to go home all the time. Because when home has meant so many things over the years, you just need the word “home” to come with a reassurance and a security that we’ll be together. The location doesn’t really matter. We’re just together. If you ask any one of the six of us where home is you may get any number of answers. But “together” is always the heart of our response. And Christmas has always been a “together” tradition – just together used to mean more than the six of us during this time of year.

Maybe this is a small taste of Abraham’s cost. That part of the Word that calls us strangers and aliens in this world is more tender than it used to be. We relate more. Leaving it all for a nomadic life of obedience. That’s more raw than it used to be.

I remember it one day, sitting on the couch and realizing that to share the greatest story of Hope – very Immanuel come down to dwell among us – we had become “homeless”. When we left U.S. soil we gave up more than a permanent address… we gave up our people group. I was flooded with the stories of the disciples leaving it all at the drop of a hat to follow the Rabbi. If the Messiah’s specific “come” hadn’t so radically changed us too, we’d probably still be fishing in the boat beside our father. We’d still be with our people group. We’d still be in our meaningful, heartfelt Christmas traditions sitting around the table with our precious extended family who are obeying their own “come”. But the Messiah has said “come.” And we aren’t the same. With His “come,” our sacrifices instantly became our offering.

And now we find ourselves circling the block again to laugh at a restaurant’s fake icicles hanging in the sweltering Mozambique heat. A joyful giggle that even though the greatest message has yet to come, the hint of Christmas has begun. No, dear ones, we aren’t bitter or weary to see Santa Claus arrive first. It doesn’t surprise us in the least. Who doesn’t like generosity? Even if it’s packaged differently. But oh the revealed mystery of the Word come down to us, putting on flesh and dwelling with us. Immanuel has come. Let us search the Scriptures together, for they speak of Immanuel who gives Abundant Life.

 

This year, Christmas comes with scars, deep scars that tell of pains still raw in some moments. And it also tells of an overwhelming gratitude that’s hard to put into words. The sacrifices may catch in my throat sometimes, especially when I’m tired. But it’s the gratitude that wells up the tears. Immanuel. I am overwhelmed. GOD with us. How HE has proven to be Immanuel (“God with us”), Jehovah Jireh (“The Lord Provides”), time and time again.

 

Thank You, Lord, for sending Immanuel. Not just to some, but for all. I rejoice in the scraps that fall from the Master’s table. Thank You that “it is finished”, the Law is complete. Oh thank You, Lord. Thank You, Lord, that Immanuel is here all year long to hold my hand. To turn every sacrifice into an offering of heart-freeing gratitude. Help me, Lord. Christmas season comes with many Isaacs to be placed on the altar. And the hardest Isaacs are those I help my children lift. But thank You, Lord, that we can all step back and watch You come down like a consuming fire. Thank You, Lord, for receiving our offerings. May our faces glow as we walk through this life, changed by having spent time with You. Oh Lord, our faces do not glow for us to see, but that others may be encouraged to take up their Isaacs to the altar and be forever changed by Your consuming fire. 

*Noel, Noel… come and see what God has done. The story of Amazing Love!

The Light of the World given for us. Noel. 

Thank You, Lord. 

.Amen and amen.

 

 

*Noel – French word based on the Latin root: “birthday”. Later adopted as a yuletide but referring specifically to Christ’s birth announcement.

Pushing Through the Antinome

Not that I speak from want, for I have learned to be content in whatever circumstances I am. I know how to get along with humble means, and I also know how to live in prosperity; in any and every circumstance I have learned the secret of being filled and going hungry, both of having abundance and suffering need. I can do all things through Him who strengthens me.” – Philippians 4:11-13 (NASB)

You know sometimes I want the finality of it all. I want to arrive at the “I have learned” conclusion before putting in the time. I forget that for Paul to have spoken with such confidence that he is not speaking from want, he must have experienced speaking from want before. I forget that for him to state, through the Holy Spirit’s inspiration, that he has learned to be content, he must have known the antinome too.

It hit me as I ran beside my daughter. We were approaching her second-wind breaking point – that tension before her next burst of endurance. I had studied her face for the past half mile as the tension slowly built and I knew the challenge she was feeling. I remembered, all too well, the tension and pressure on your lungs, and that little stitch in your side that feels like it may swell to being unbearable. I remembered, all too well, how far your distance goal feels in that moment and how your mind lays out compelling evidence to stop.
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(A curve along our normal running route.)

“This is your moment,” I told her. “You want the joy of the finish line, then it comes during this push right here. Once you get past this push, the finish line distance becomes a reality.”

Distress wiped from her face. Determination set in her eyebrows. She clenched her teeth, organized her steps and set her gaze. She would win this race. This race in her mind. And she did- even commenting afterward that she still had more left to give.

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(The sun peeking over the trees in an early morning run.)

I want the “I have learned” so many times without the sacrifice to get there. I want the finish line without the work put in day after day to train up to my goal. I want the “I have arrived” without the stretch marks that prove that I can never go back to looking the same, evidence of having worked through that tension. Paul can’t say he knows how to get along if he didn’t wrestle through the “humble means”, “hunger” and “suffering need”. Oh, but I want to dance in the “prosperity”, “being filled” and “abundance” and just forget that the antinome exists.

But here when He calls me yet again to wrestle in the tension, here where He opens the door for reminders of sacrifices, here where I’m broken wide into the messy, here before the “I have learned”- this is where He has brought me. And here I can continue to chip away at each piece of the grand thesis statement. Here I can add another layer to the “I have learned” argument. And here I find that “I have learned” is indeed a lifestyle. Because His Strength has always been extended to me in my time of weakness.

Thanks be to God. He has always stood ready.

Distress is wiping from my face. Determination is setting in my eyebrows. I am clenching my teeth, organizing my steps and setting my gaze. I will win this race. In Christ, I will win this race in my mind.

“And do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, so that you may prove what the will of God is, that which is good and acceptable and perfect.” – Romans 12:2 (NASB)

 

 “Do you not know that those who run in a race all run, but only one receives the prize? Run in such a way that you may win. Everyone who competes in the games exercises self-control in all things. They then do it to receive a perishable wreath, but we an imperishable. Therefore I run in such a way, as not without aim; I box in such a way, as not beating the air; but I discipline my body and make it my slave, so that, after I have preached to others, I myself will not be disqualified.” – 1 Corinthians 9:24-27 (NASB)

 

 

Remember

This past Wednesday marked 8 weeks post-op (really 8 weeks second post-op) and I found myself remembering. In gratitude. In overwhelm in some moments. And in honor of my Father who reached down into the depths of my darkest moments and healed me. Here at eight weeks post-op I am finally past 98% of the symptoms and have much freedom to choose what to eat again, no longer based on pain levels thereafter. I no longer feel sick/dizzy regularly and can finally claim that this appears to be behind me. How thankful I have been as each symptom has slowly faded away into a past memory.

 

I remember.

And I am humbled.

Even when my eyes could not see.

You were always there with me.

 

These are not my words. This is not my melody. But at risk of being misunderstood in heart, I have chosen to share with you a song that has been healing to me throughout this journey. It expresses something so deep within me that I have failed to find my own words for at times. There have been hours of singing this song in my heart as I walked the Mozambican highway, the sun freshly breaking forth on a new morning. Nothing about this process has been easy, but such beauty my Father has brought from these ashes. I truly can’t stop thinking about His goodness.

 

So, I invite you into the deep. The vulnerable. The truth of the processing of all this. Welcome to my dining room. Literally. Come thank our Father alongside of me as He has walked through every step of this with me. That He would receive all the glory He is due.

…I remember… what an honor.

 

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I will never be able to do anything to deserve the Love God has extended down to this nobody through His grace. I cannot earn grace. It is a free gift from the Father, Who desires all of us. Why us? Why restore broken humanity? Why me? My mind is baffled. Yet still He reaches down through the perfect sacrifice of His Son to right our broken relationship with Him – that we may KNOW Him and know Him deeply as we are known by Him. That I could sit at the foot of a huge tree one fall day with tear-stained eyes over my sins, my inability to uphold His perfect law. And that I could approach the Father in the sincerity of my heart, praying my own words, and receiving the freeing gift of salvation in Christ. I cannot bear the weight of my own sin, but the chosen Messiah, Jesus, took my place as the perfect sacrifice. I will never get over this. The Messiah took MY place that I could be grafted into a right relationship with my precious, beloved Father.

 

He led me to those truths through His Magnificent Word. And those truths have spoken to the depths of me. He defines me. I am His.

 

What really have I done to deserve Love like this? A Love that He has extended to me time and time again, even in that darkness of an ICU room in Johannesburg. Still He breathed His Love into me, reviving me through His Word.

 

The following melody is not my own but has captured my heart in the overwhelming astonishment that such a deep Love would be offered to me. Nothingness me.

 

I am so thankful to get the honor to tell His story in my life. How He drew me up from dark waters and restored my soul. How He sees me. How He loves me. It’s a risk to share this song with you. Vulnerability is not easy. But I am reminded of 1 Peter 3:15: “but honor the Messiah as Lord in your hearts. Always be ready to give a defense to anyone who asks you for a reason for the hope that is in you.”

 

My defense, my account, is nothing other than the utter Love of God poured out on this undeserving nobody.

 

Such a Father.

 

Such a Love.

 

Extended to all.

 

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Soli Deo Gloria.

(All Glory be to God.)

 

 

Tales from the ICU and How I Got There

I had struggled in the past to relate to the desperate Psalms of David, those ones he cried out to the Lord from his wilderness of pain. I had always related more to the conquering tone he wrote, declaring God’s majesty, might and protection of the afflicted. And then I found myself lost in the time-warp of the ICU. No real understanding of time of day. Wrestling to focus long enough to read even a single verse. The medicine, the exhaustion, all the tubes and the physical weight of the Bible so hard to lift high enough to see. It all fought and pulled against me. But I kept raising my small Bible up and trying again. I needed it’s words. I did not even know what to pray for myself. I will just pray back the Word to my Father. He hears my heart. And there I found revival.

The Lord is a refuge for the oppressed, a stronghold in times of trouble. Those who know Your name will trust in You, for You, Lord, have never forsaken those who seek You.   (Psalm 9:9-10)

It started out with some unusual pain on December 7th that was diagnosed by a local clinic in Maxixe, Mozambique and I began a week of bed-rest. Originally we thought it was appendix related due to its sharp and centralized nature, but an ultrasound machine at a local clinic verified (some would put that word, verified, in quotes if they had witnessed the scanning process) that my appendix was fine. So bed-rest happened and I appeared to get a little better as we waited.

After a week and symptoms not really changing enough to give us peace, we felt it most wise to get a second opinion and preferably this time not in a developing country.  The IMB agreed and thanks to Lottie Moon giving, our family of six set off for South Africa. It was an uncomfortable, to say the least, 13 hour drive (thanks to holiday border traffic) to the South African border. Needless to say, I was grateful when it was all over and we were settled in our air bed and breakfast in Nelspruit, South Africa.

The following day we had an appointment, bringing our four girls with us naturally since there was no other choice. We made a God-inspired decision to leave them in the waiting room with a bag of books that we brought. To this day I thank my God for that decision He laid on our hearts.

Sing praises to the Lord, enthroned in Zion; proclaim among the nations what He has done. For He who avenges blood remembers; He does not ignore the cry of the afflicted. (Psalm 9:11-12)

Once in the examining room, things went poorly and I was discovered to have a large mass of ?tissue?, bigger than an organ it was hiding behind. The doctor was in shock that I was still alive. And thus is the first time we realized God had literally sustained my life by the hour from December 7th to that appointment. I was quickly admitted to the hospital right then and there, and blood test results thankfully showed that while I had internal bleeding it was not significant at the time.

The following morning I went into emergency surgery. I remember nothing after the anesthesia count-down, thankfully. But I woke up in horrific pain and had to wait for what felt like an eternity before pain medication worked again.

The following day I got to see my family again, I was eating, even up walking and had my usual color back. I had a wound vacuum to finish cleaning out everything and then I was discharged from the hospital on Sunday mid-morning. With a “see ya in 6 weeks or so depending on when you can get back from Mozambique,” we returned to our bed and breakfast. And that night, quite late, I began vomiting.

A few calls to IMB medical had us headed to Johannasburg, a 4 hour drive, as I continued to go downhill. It all happened really fast, everything except the long, agonizing drive, filled with being sick and what felt like time moving backward. I could keep nothing down, no medication, no water, nothing. But I was trying so hard not to scare my precious girls. And it was beyond obvious that we needed help. Help with our girls, support from the IMB, nurses who knew more about this than us – help.

Keep me safe, O God, for in You I take refuge. I said to the Lord, “You are my Lord; apart from You I have no good thing.” (Psalm 16:1-2)

Christmas day I said goodbye to my kids as I lay half-conscious in our room here at the IMB campus in Johannasburg. Dear friends of ours picked up the girls so Matt could bring me to the ER. I was in so much pain, my stomach so distended, I could barely walk and I nearly broke down thinking about riding in a car again. I argued for Matt to just leave me alone in the bed. I’m so thankful he insisted. I could not think clearly beyond the pain.

A wheelchair brought me into the ER and I was quickly ushered back to a an ER room for vitals. I vaguely remember the hours we spent in the ER before being admitted. Morphine barely took the edge off of my pain. I endure great pain by “going to another place” staring off. I vaguely remember Matt explaining everything to various medical people. I also stopped vomiting in the ER, which I thought was a miracle until Matt informed me later that they had given me medicine for that very thing. I was so out of it. And then I was transported to a room.

That’s when I met a new face that I had no idea, but would be my surgeon and main care doctor for the rest of my hospital stay. They told me to drink some iodine fluid to get a CT scan of my abdomen. I couldn’t get more than 8 ounces in. That was a fourth of what they wanted. I just couldn’t do it. We learned why later. I remember just laying there in the table praying it was enough to get the scan.

Thankfully they got enough info on the CT scan and then they decided to put in an NG tube to relieve some stomach pressure and prep for the next day’s surgery. An NG tube goes in through your nose, down the back of your throat and into your stomach to “pump” things out through the tube. Oh my poor doctor and husband then witnessed why I could not stomach much of that iodine fluid. Out came “days” of, sorry to say it, bile that had built pressure and never been able to pass from my stomach. It was the first time Matt saw evidence that NOTHING was going through and said he knew right then that I was really, really sick. Days later I apologized for losing what looked like “two days worth” of stomach contents on the doctor. (I mean I still barely knew her name, what bad manners of me. 😏) She smirked and said “hey, it comes with the job!” Humor got us through the hard days easier.

He reached down from on high and took hold of me; He drew me out of deep waters. (Psalm 18:16)

After assembling a surgery team and three doctors, semi-exploratory and corrective surgery occurred early the next morning on December 26th. Afterward it was reported that the previous doctor in Nelspruit had made a mistake, failing to tie off a bleeding source, resulting in a large amount of internal bleeding that had coagulated itself, attaching onto and obstructing my bowel. Therefore, upon opening me up, the surgeons saw this more clearly, had to make a big T incision, correcting and fixing lacerations, internal bleeding, a hematoma, etc. I also got the nifty classification of being septic. Sepsis is a life-threatening condition in which the body is fighting a severe infection that has spread via the bloodstream. One doctor said it was critical that they intervened and she was amazed I was still alive. And once again we were reminded that God literally sustained my life hour by hour, guiding us to the help we needed.

I learned all this two days later when I woke up in the ICU. I remember nothing of surgery recovery, moving to the ICU, seeing Matt or others that visited after surgery, or even any of the ICU staff for the first, really, two days. My body was exhausted. I guess two emergency surgeries in five days will do that to you. My only two memories from the first few days of the ICU were waking up for literally less than a minute to Matt crying on my forehead before I immediately fell back asleep. And then I woke up for less than a minute one other time to Matt reading me God’s Word – which I vaguely recognized as a passage in the psalms before falling back asleep.

Later I was told that my infection was quite intense and it took two days of strong antibiotics (goodbye, good gut bacteria 😉) for it to be responsive.

You, O Lord, keep my lamp burning; my God turns my darkness into light. (Psalm 18:28)

Thus continued six more days in the ICU, a total of 8 days (or 7.75 if you’re a math major), trying to wake up my stomach and my bowels from shock and trying to teach them to process food again. That came with some trial and error (from my perspective, but I’m sure not from the doctor’s – ha!) and much pain, sadly. Various medicines, procedures and lots of tubes were needed.

One night the NG tube was removed and everything backed up again to result in a VERY awful long night of clutching a side table and not being able to lay flat or really move from pain. The next morning a 42 year experienced administrative nurse walked the ICU hallway and stopped dead in her tracks at my little ICU fishtank (What? Everyone always looked at me through the glass 😂). She took one look at me and said, “Absolutely not! This woman is in pain, we have to do something right now.” She NG tubed me so quickly and efficiently with what felt like a smaller tube size (maybe I was used to it by now) and I was able to talk and swallow without pain for the first time in days.

My doctor came for her regular visit a few hours later and appeared angry with the night nursing staff that she was not contacted the night prior when I was in pain. I, at that point, was fading in and out of consciousness because I was so exhausted from the night before, but I remember just thanking God that someone was fighting for me when I could not fight for myself.

But You, O Lord, be not far off; O my Strength, come quickly to help me. (Psalm 22:19)

To You, O Lord, I lift up my soul; in You I trust, O my God… Show me Your ways, O Lord, teach me Your paths; guide me in Your truth and teach me, for You are God my Savior, and my hope is in You all day long. Remember, O Lord, Your great mercy and love, for they are from of old. (Psalm 25:1, 2, and 4-6)

Slowly and inconsistently my body began to come out of shock. It was frustrating and hard and unpredictable. And all this time I could not see my girls and Matt could only visit for one hour segments a couple times per day. (Which was really challenging because we just do hard things better together, with his hand holding mine.)

I had no concept of time. There were no clocks. And I could only barely see out of a distant window when another ICU “room’s” curtains were not drawn to tell what time of day it was. (Man how I missed the sea breeze and that warm African sun!) There were no plugs to charge a phone so I got a few hours mid-day in which Matt would bring me my charged phone and I could listen to worship music and keep in contact with a few people before he would return at the next visiting hour and bring my phone home to recharge.

Be merciful to me, Lord, for I am faint; O Lord, heal me, for my bones are in agony. My soul is in anguish. How long, O Lord, how long? Turn, O Lord, and deliver me; save me because of your unfailing love. (Psalm 6:2-4)

I love You, O Lord, my strength. The Lord is my rock, my fortress and my deliverer; my God is my rock, in whom I take refuge. He is my shield and the horn of my salvation, my stronghold. (Psalm 18:1-2)

I learned the game of the ICU, how to tell vague periods of time by nursing staffs, shift changes, lunch breaks, visiting hours, and physical therapist visits. I got so good at it that I could almost predict visits from various medical personnel, Matt and those wonderful colleagues that came to see me, the doctor (who always seemed to visit on a 12 hour stretch at what I presumed was the start and close of her shifts – oh man or at least I hope so because I saw her well past dinner sometimes. The ICU is close to “the theatre” – where surgeries are done so I presumed her shift was ending), and even knowing extended lunch breaks some nursing staff took. I had to know all this info because I was reliant on these times to be able to be unhooked from all the machines and tubes to move in my room, finally grab the pencil I had dropped three hours before, get another round of blessed chapstick, go to the bathroom once the catheter was out, or reach that out-of-reach nurse call button that did not stretch to the physical therapy chair I was required to sit in for 4-6 hours daily.

Please hear me clearly, I am in NO WAY complaining or frustrated with my hospital care. But I do want to be honest in sharing that hospital care in Africa is not like the care in the United States. Compassion is not a consistent nursing trait, sadly. And compassion varies from doctor to doctor. God OVERWHELMINGLY blessed me with two extremely compassionate doctors and one administrative nurse that fought for me and went against what felt like the assumed reality that pain has to be a part of medical care here in southern Africa. I don’t know if it’s a part of the harsh realities of access (like in Mozambique) here in South Africa or just a cultural difference, but comfort appears to be variably valued in hospitals on this side of the world. It is NOT non-existent, but it really does depend on the compassion level of the individual doctor or nurse. And that was a culture I had to get used to.

I had to learn who to ask for what kind of care. And learn who to ask kindly to not provide some care (judging gentle hands) and hope they respected my wishes. But having said all that, please hear me CLEARLY – I am BEYOND THANKFUL to be alive and I accredit that to the many God brought alongside of me in the hospital who went out of their way to help this stranger.

But You are a shield around me, O Lord; You bestow glory on me and lift up my head. To the Lord I cry aloud and He answers me from His holy hill. I lie down and sleep. I wake again because the Lord sustains me. (Pslam 3:3-5)

I will lie down and sleep in peace, for You alone, O Lord, make me dwell in safety. (Psalm 4:8)

I was growing in strength now. I could hold the Bible up and focus on more verses without having to reread the same one over and over again countless times before it sunk in. I had even figured out how to hold a pencil around my IV cords. And I was building strength in how long I could hold my hand in a writing position before the IV needle pain became unbearable and I had to take a break.

My handwriting was laughable. I imagined my pupils, Rachael and Abi, giggling at this handwriting teacher’s chicken-scratch. But I needed the Word. How it breathed calm into the hurts. How it brought peace to the feelings I couldn’t find words for. How it breathed life into my weary soul.

One thing I ask of the Lord, this is what I seek: that I may dwell in the house of the Lord all the days of my life, to gaze upon the beauty of the Lord and to seek Him in His temple. For in the day of trouble He will keep me safe in His dwelling; He will hide me in the shelter of His tabernacle and set me high upon a rock. (Psalm 27:4-5)

The New Year came and passed. My physical therapist and I joked that last year ended pretty rocky in the ICU, so this year let’s aim for higher aspirations. 😉 I told her my resolution was to get out of the ICU. She smiled and said, “There you go! Now that’s a tangible goal!”

I was strong enough and independent enough (my doctor’s goals for a swamped post-holiday hospital) to move out of the ICU to the regular ward on Wednesday, January 2nd. I didn’t realize how strong I had gotten until I moved to the ward. In the ICU you’re so isolated and people come and go so quickly that you never really see much of a healing process. But in the ward is where people heal and then get discharge to go home. My doctor chose for my healing to be in the ICU since she wanted things extremely sterile due to my infection. (And later I learned that should something have gone poorly, I would have been close to the theatre for a further adventure that I’m thankful did not take place.)

The doctor was extremely serious about cleanliness; what tubes were permitted which medications and nourishment and I often joked with the friendlier nursing staff and the doctor, herself, that the nurses would be in trouble if they didn’t follow the rules. The doctor would get them. 😉 She wanted to run no risk and she wanted me as independent as possible before going to the ward. I am thankful for the wisdom in that doctor decision. She has a God-given kind heart and I told her of my gratitude many times. I didn’t want to miss an opportunity of expressed gratitude.

You are my hiding place; You will protect me from trouble and surround me with songs of deliverance. (Psalm 32:7)

from the icu

And sure enough, I did really well in the ward. I surprised some of the nursing staff at how little I needed after coming out of a week in the ICU. I even washed my hair by myself in the sink for the first time in over a week (I could have farmed grease from my hair, people!). The nurses were indeed swamped and stretched thin in the ward, but my independence didn’t seem to bring much added stress to their routine. I had the window seat so I spent a good deal of time just watching the beautiful sky, thanking God for another day.

I finished my antibiotic the day I moved to the ward and was only left on pain medicine through my IV. I cannot even begin to tell you how freeing it was as each tube and cord came off. Down to an IV only was incredible after a week of what felt like being tied down to endless machines. I thanked God for the freedom of that IV pole’s movement. No more did I need to push a nurse button to go to the bathroom! I could just go. Alone!!!

But the eyes of the Lord are on those who fear Him, on those whose hope is in His unfailing love, to deliver them from death and keep them from famine. We wait in hope for the Lord; He is our help and our shield. In Him our hearts rejoice, for we trust in His holy name. May Your unfailing love rest upon us, O Lord, even as we put our hope in You. (Psalm 33:18-22)

My sweet doctor learned that Rachael’s birthday was on Saturday, January 5th. She had come in when the girls were visiting and took the time to get to know the family some. She waited for shy Eden to come out of her shell and finally talk to her. She was not rushed for time. That is something I have admired about her. She made time for the important stuff like connecting. The doctor brought up Rachael’s birthday and chatted with Rachael about Rachael’s hopeful plans for that day. And the doctor later confided that she made it a focus to discharge me in time for Rachael’s 10th birthday, provided that I continued to do well. She was leaving for a weekend training a city away on Friday, January 4th, and she wanted to see me go home. She made it very clear that she was in no way pushing me out of the hospital if I felt that I needed to stay. But I think she saw the determination in my eyes.

She told me she wrote up discharge papers, signed them and left them with the nurse on Thursday night when she came in to see me. She gave me her personal cell number and told me to call her in the morning so we could talk before she’d call in the discharge authorization.

Friday, January 4th, I called at 7am. She chuckled when I told her I didn’t know if she was an early riser by choice or by trade. (I had been up since 4a tea was served – Ha!) I could hear her smile when she said she was as early riser by choice. She was in no hurry to get off the phone. She made time, despite having meetings and, you know, a personal life. 😉I thanked her for fighting for me when I had no voice. She spoke kind words that were lost in a bit of long distance static, sadly, but I received the heart of it and we talked about next steps. She told me to enjoy Rachael’s birthday and that she would see me Tuesday for my follow-up appointment. She also told me to call her any time if I had a concern or a question and she would be sure to get back to me, even if she had to take a minute to step out of a meeting.

I sought the Lord and He answered me; He delivered me from all my fears. Those who look to Him are radiant; their faces are never covered with shame. This poor man called and the Lord heard him; He saved him out of all his troubles. The angel of the Lord encamps around those who fear Him, and He delivers them. Taste and see that the Lord is good; blessed is the man who takes refuge in Him. Fear the Lord, you His saints, for those who fear Him lack nothing. The lions may grow weak and hungry, but those who seek the Lord lack no good things… The eyes of the Lord are on the righteous and His ears are attentive to their cry… The righteous cry out, and the Lord hears them; He delivers them from all their troubles. The Lord is close to the brokenhearted and saves those who are crushed in spirit. A righteous man may have troubles, but the Lord delivers him from them all; He protects his bones, not one of them will be broken. Evil will slay the wicked; the foes of the righteous will be condemned. The Lord redeems His servants; no one will be condemned who takes refuge in Him. (Psalm 34:4-10, 15, 17-22)

We took a picture as a family after just stepping through the hospital doors into the parking lot. Freedom. Step by step. I was out. In the glorious fresh air. In the sunshine again. A whole world I had missed so much that all the words I could muster slipped in a silent, thankful tear down my cheek.

Eden and Rachael held my hands and walked at my toddler pace. Gently. Carefully. With beaming smiles. I was back – even if only a slower version. I sent the picture of all six of us outside of the hospital to the Doctor. She replied, “beautiful picture. So happy to see you leaving!!”

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Recovery is still slow, a balance of medicines and side affects, and a rollercoaster of emotions as we process it all. We’re taking it one day at a time and not sure when we will be cleared to go back to Mozambique. I take comfort in the fact that the same doctor who took such compassionate care of me in the hospital has continued to stay in contact with me via phone as questions have come up. She is also familiar with some Mozambique roads and knows of the challenge of good medical care in our part of the country.

We are in no rush to leave an instant before it is best, but I take comfort in the fact that the doctor has opened herself to be availble to me even once we return to Mozambique. And while we still wait and heal, I continue to add Psalms to my notebook, now on page 17 of handwritten Psalms that the Lord has spoken to my heart through all of this.

O Lord my God, I called to You for help and You healed me. O Lord, You brought me up from the grave; You spared me from going down into the pit. Sing to the Lord, You saints of His; praise His Holy Name. For His anger lasts only a moment, but His favor lasts a lifetime; weeping may remain for a night, but rejoicing comes in the morning… to You, O Lord, I called; to the Lord I cried for mercy:.. “Hear, O Lord, and be merciful to me; O Lord be my help.” You turned my wailing into dancing; You removed my sackcloth and clothed me with joy, that my heart may sing to You and not be silent. O Lord my God, I will give You thanks forever. (Psalm 30: 2-5, 8, 10-12)

Thank you, thank you, thank you(!) to all those who prayed alongside of us, kept checking in and have walked this long and hard journey with us. We are OVERWHELMED by your love and support.

God sustained my life – twice – in a way that left some doctors marveling that I was still alive. I don’t deserve to be alive. But He chose to give life. And I am forever humbled and grateful. I deserve nothing. But still He chooses to give me everything. I will never stop being in wonder and awe of His gifts. Why? Why me?

But I do know that to much that is given, much is required (Luke 12:48). My life is not my own. I am humbled, once again, to offer my life to the very Lord who has and continues to sustain it day by day.

 

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