In the abyss between life and death
resides only faith. Experts call this abyss "Motherhood."
Lying on a cold, hard bed only six
months along with my first child, I faced the frightening implications of this
truth. My body shook uncontrollably as abject terror clutched at me. My only
lifeline was my husband's hand clutching mine over the abyss as love for life -
mine and the tiny, still-unseen child's - burned deep in our hearts. One after
another after another the nurses piled the bloody sheets into the corner until
the doctor pronounced those fateful words, "The baby's coming."
Only then, with control slipping
past me into a haze of drugs and fear, did I make that one, final leap - the
leap from control to faith - the leap from childlessness into motherhood. My
next recollection was my husband's hand once again holding mine as he said the
words that officially changed my life, "We have a little girl."
The images of the next two months
blurred together as ups and downs alternated at break-neck speed. One minute
spent holding my two-pound and yet weightless daughter in my arms versus the
next three weeks spent holding only tiny fingers through the isolet
window-waiting for the next opportunity to take my baby out of the incubator
again.
The drugs, powerful enough to keep
her safe from infection, again and again blew through her small veins while all
I could do was watch, pray, and hang onto the faith that somehow we would get
through this. If we could just make it to the next horizon, through the next
transfusion and the next round of drugs, then I could live again. Until then
survival was my only goal.
In the darkness of a soul in
crisis, my prayers became much deeper. No longer were they for selfish
requests. Now they were centered wholly on the tiny baby God had entrusted to
my care. The Lord has said, "Cast your burden upon the Lord, and He shall
sustain you" (Psalms 55:22), and during those long days, that was what
kept me going.
As good as that sounds, however,
reality was that my only real positives at the time were formed by the
negatives. "It's not pneumonia." "It's not an infection."
"We won't have to put the IV in her head-this time." The struggle to
live was being waged not only by the tiny baby lying helplessly in the
incubator, but by her mother's spirit as well. Fear laced every call to the
hospital, every question, every conversation. But always the faith remained.
Somehow we would make it. Somehow God sustained me. Somehow.
Then in one faltered heartbeat the
negatives became negatives again, and I faced a test of faith more terrifying
than my own journey through the abyss - my baby's journey to the edge of the
River Jordan. All her veins had been blown, and a new IV would have to go in
her head - all the other options had been exhausted.
In utter desperation my husband and
I left the hospital, and on a rain-soaked highway with the amber glow of the
streetlights flashing above me, I reached a place that I never even knew
existed - the place where faith no longer resides. "Why?" I asked the
darkness around me. "Why?"
But God has promised, "I will
never leave you, nor forsake you" (Hebrews 13:5), and I am here to tell
you, He does send messengers to help when you ask. Truth is, mine was sitting
right by my side - exactly where he had been through the whole ordeal. Slowly
my husband reached over, took my hand, and spoke the words that I would cling
to not only for this one night but for the rest of eternity. "She's going
to be okay. You've just got to have faith."
Every day for the next five years
that faith has been tested over and over again. Every time I let my baby-big
girl, now-off at play school. Every time my second daughter lets go of my hand
and walks off on her own. Every time one child or the other screams in pain or
in fear at two o'clock in the morning - the words come back to me, "She's
going to be okay. You've just got to have faith."
In the days to come, the phrase
will only become more powerful. During the long nights when the girls fail to
call and on the days when they experience their own grief, the words will be
there to help me through. Time and again as I hold my children for one brief
moment and then release them into the abyss, the words will be there.
Through school, best friends,
boyfriends, first dates, first heartbreaks, in partnership with God and my
husband, I will remain the rock on which these two girls can build their lives.
Until someday in some beautiful sunlit church, I will watch from a front pew as
they stand before God and pledge themselves to another forever. Then as they
turn, kiss me, and walk away into their own lives, the words will again be
there. "She's going to be okay. You've just got to have faith."
The day will come of course when
the abyss will stretch before me again "when Christ, who is our life,
shall appear, then shall you also appear with Him in glory". In some
darkened room on another cold, hard bed I will step toward the abyss to make my
final journey home. However, this time I will have not one but three sets of
hands to hold onto. Then, looking up into the eyes of the two beautiful women
my daughters have become, the sadness at our imminent parting will be there,
but a greater understanding will hold me also.
Beyond a doubt, I know that as I
slip from the darkness of this world into the light beyond, I will hear that
voice one more time: "They're going to be okay. You've just got to have
faith."
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