As a tribute to Joshua, I wanted to post the journal I wrote a few weeks after he died. I posted it quite a while back on my CafeMom homepage. It is good to remember and not forget. The age diffrence between Michael and Elisabeth is so small. There is no noticable gap, but I always feel like there is someone missing. It hurts that everyone seems to think talking of him is taboo. It is true that it makes me emotional, but it almost feels like we dishonor him by never talking about him.
"Because I Said So"
There are qualities in our parents that we want to emulate, and there are some that we vehemently vow never to copy. I can remember as a child being given the answer, "because I said so." I hated that answer! I vowed never to respond that way to MY children because, as a child, I felt like it was a cop-out. My parents just didn't want to take the time to explain, or they didn't have a reason (or so I thought then.) With six living children, the oldest being ten, I have to admit that I have broken my vow more times than I can count. It didn't occur to me until I was a parent that "because I said so" is an answer that we must give when the explanation is beyond the comprehension of the one asking the question.
I was lying in bed, screaming from the depths of my soul WHY WHY WHY when that still small voice inside said…."because I said so." Now, please don't think that I have gone off my rocker so far as to think that God was "speaking to me." It was just a realization that God doesn't cop-out by not answering our WHY's. He just knows the answer is more than we can comprehend in the dim light of this world. Even if he offered us HIS reason, it would never be good enough for us while we still are at war with our flesh.
As the weeks pass, I still struggle to move past the "whys." I have had to admit to myself that they will never completely quit haunting me. I received a letter from a saint of 68 years. She recalled her loss as if it were yesterday. So my question after reading her letter was, "How do I move on?" Paul says in Philippians 3: 13, "Brethren, I count not myself to have apprehended: but this one thing I do, forgetting those things which are behind, and reaching forth unto those things which are before, 14 I press toward the mark for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus."
Joshua Caleb was born October 16th. God called him back to sing with the angels on Nov 19th. Five short weeks to enjoy a precious blessing from above didn't seem like enough time to me. Joshua was born with aortic stenosis (a heart defect). He had a heart cath when he was 6 days old which corrected the problem. The autopsy showed that he had suffered a heart attack (presumably caused by a blood clot from the procedure) several days later that went undetected (even though I took him to the emergency room suspecting something was wrong .) He died three weeks later from the build up of scar tissue. The cardiologist said that his heart literally exploded from the pressure. Even in his death God was merciful. Clay was home. We had just stopped in long enough to grab a bite to eat. I don't even like to think how I would have responded had we been on the road. God could have left us wondering if there was something else we could have done that day to save him. Calling 911 and performing CPR always works in the movies. The autopsy was clear that it was beyond human efforts to save him that day. So why didn't God intervene? Why does He allow His children to suffer such agony? You don't have to search the scriptures far to find where David and Job ask the same questions. The answer is clear…"because I said so." And that must be enough for we haven't the ability to comprehend the mind of God. We have had many people offer us verses of encouragement. (And they have all been encouraging.) However, knowing that he is able to worship God perfectly -without me there to enjoy it too… doesn’t' quench my selfish desire to be a mommy to him here on earth. Even knowing that God is going to use it for something good rings hollow when you ache to nurse the child you labored to give birth to. It is only when you stop to realize that it was God that breathed life into him in the first place that the healing begins. Isaiah gets to the heart of the matter when he says, "Hast thou not known? Hast thou not heard, that the everlasting God, the LORD, the creator of the ends of the earth, fainteth not, neither is weary? There is no searching of his understanding.." We have to give up on the idea of ever understanding why and learn to accept…"because I said so."
Penned December 1998
5 comments:
WOW! Very...oh what's a good word here...I'm not sure..but I am sorry for you loss. I just can't imagine it and definitely don't want to experience it. Thank you for sharing your pain and for your insight of "Because I said so". You are an awesome, strong women. God's Blessings xoxo
I wish I had more time and brain cells right now to tell you how much this post REALLY means to me.
THANK YOU! You inspire me, Mama :)
I keep trying to reply to this and I can't seem to find the right words. It's not taboo to talk about him. It's not taboo to miss him dreadfully. The passage of time may dull the ache some, but I'm sure it never really goes away.
I love you and I'm here if you need a shoulder.
Dee Dee, I followed your link on the georgia goats group to see pics of your goats and found this treasure. Thank you for sharing!---Helen
Thank you all for your kind comments. The Lord can use the most seemingly dark times in our lives to strengthen us and reveal to us the treasures he has created in us. It is true the pain never goes away, and unlike the pain of childbirth or broken bones, I can really FEEL the same pain in my chest when I dwell on my loss. I am thankful for my blessings, and thankful God has taught me to be content to wear the shoes he provided for me to walk in, even when they hurt terribly.
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