Saturday, September 13, 2014

Rearranging My Life after Goodbyes



It’s been quite the summer.  We've prayed over secrets and said more goodbyes than hellos.

A few weeks ago I told a friend that I've sat on so many of my kids’ secrets this summer that I had trouble remembering what information was classified from whom.  Sometimes I wasn't sure which one needed prayers the most.

Recently I told Rebekah that maybe we just have too many kids. (There’s an event at VT that she wants us to attend the same weekend we’ll be visiting Ben in Colorado.)

Then there is this thing of saying goodbye.  Goodbyes mean that I have to rearrange my life.  Just when I become comfortable with the way things are, along comes another good-bye.

I’m a little like my mama was when we wanted to rearrange furniture.  She liked things just the way they were and saw no need for change.  If it worked this way, why not leave it?  Her philosophy (minus incorrect grammar) was:  If it ain't broke, don’t fix it.

My sisters and I wanted variety.  We said she might like it, and You'll never know until you try!  She didn't appreciate the time it took to rearrange things or the upheaval of trying to find places for the disheveled pieces left when we were done! (Mama does get credit, however, for releasing three of her daughters to men or to ministry in Canada, Nebraska and Virginia as well as cheerfully rearranging her life as each of her girls left home.)

Now that I’m nearing the big 6-0, I’m there, too.  I rather like things to stay the same.  My kids don’t see it that way; so I’m kept busy praying over their activities and rearranging and finding places for their stuff.  In addition, I've helped move them home and assisted their packing to get ready for the next leg on their journey.  Sometimes I sit down at the end of the day and say, Whew!

"And how was your day?"
One can never give too many hugs.
We knew this would be the summer we said goodbye to a house full of kids.  We had one son moving west (one of those secrets while those Phone and Skype and They’re-Gonna-Fly-Me-Out-There interviews were being completed).

I tried to prepare myself to say goodbye to my oldest and my three youngest: two college girls and my high school senior. Plus, soon we’d be bidding farewell to the little nuggets who had wrapped their tentacles around our hearts for over a year.

That goodbye was coming first and would probably be the hardest because of its permanence.

Suffice it to say that the longer we love, the harder it is to say goodbye. The more we invest, the stronger the chords.  We invested time and energy, especially in those first weeks when nighttime kept us awake for hours.  Each bleary morning as I poured coffee, I wished for just one good night of sleep.  I’m just too old for this, I’d say to the morning dew as I sipped my coffee on the deck.  I survived.  Even though they weren't ours to keep, we claimed them as ours and they surely claimed us.  Now we had to say goodbye.

Tim gives a ride in his truck
The evening before, Tim came by to give them each one more ride in his truck.  He hung around afterwards for a long time.

On goodbye day, we packed their clothes, their toys, and their books.  We filled another bag with blankets and homemade pillow cases.

A deck party was planned, and we invited friends for supper. Mid-afternoon as we surveyed our not-so-clean house and their so-very-many-things-pile we had amassed, Sarah Beth commented, “Maybe it wasn't such a good an idea to have company for supper.”

“Oh, by tonight you’ll be glad we did,” I replied.

We said tearful good-byes.  We hugged and kissed and waved as they drove away for the last time.

Then we went inside and finished company preparations.  Instead of whining about our loss, we reminisced with friends and shared our pain in saying goodbye.  Instead of feeling alone, we leaned into our pain and felt supported because we were surrounded by friends who had loved them intensely as well.

Peeling apples
for apple dumplings
A few days later Sarah Beth and I headed “home” to Maryland.  We knew our house would be empty and quiet without little feet pitter-pattering and little hands pestering to help in the kitchen.  Plus, life wasn't going to get any easier if we sat around feeling sorry for ourselves.

As always, it was cooler in Maryland.  I failed to take a jacket, so I went to Mama’s bedroom closet to find a sweater. The gray sweater fit and still smelled like Mama, even though it had that musty odor of unworn clothes hanging in a closet.

Stuffing my hands in the pockets, I found two cough drops, three handkerchiefs, and three toothpicks.  Finding these items in her pockets was no surprise; this was my mama.  I can still see her with that toothpick in her mouth after a meal; remember us begging her to use tissues instead of a handkerchief when she had a cold; hear that gravel in her throat when she had a winter cold and cough.



I hugged the sweater to myself and went to visit my friend Pam.  After my massage, I decided that before I feel inclined to go for counseling for depression, I’ll opt to get a massage.  Pam listens to a lot of secrets as she massages weary muscles and tissues, and secrets are safe with her.  We talked about the therapy she gives by listening and by caring.  I think having someone to talk to helps alleviate depression.  Really, I’d be getting plenty of bang for my bucks!

[I am not saying counseling is never necessary; at times getting Christian, professional help is the best way to go. I’m saying that if we’d be more willing to share the cries of our heart with others, and if we’d be more open to bearing each other’s burdens and could be counted on for your-secret's- safe-with-me, we might need fewer counseling sessions down the road].



On the way home, I visited the graveyard. The sun was kinder on this late June day than it had been that cold, blustery day we trudged the shoveled path to bury our mama.

With summer rays beaming on the graves, I reckoned (again) that I can never understand the pain my half-siblings experienced when they buried a little sister and, exactly one year later, their mother.

I reckoned that I had no concept of the grief and burden my mother bore when she buried our father.

Only five, I didn't understand the pain of her loss nor the view on her horizon as she faced unknown widowed-years ahead.

Standing there in the graveyard I thanked God for the heritage I possess.  It is mine, not because of anything I've done, but because of the choices made by others, and because He is God. 

Saying goodbye is never easy. In our grief, there are poignant reminders that stir us along the way. We can try to slam the door on our grief and our goodbyes, or we can lean into the pain.  I have learned that leaning into the pain instead of avoiding it brings healing as well as hope.



one of my mama's
 homemade cape dresses
Soon after her death four winters ago, my sisters and I spent an afternoon sorting through Mama’s dresses. We chose some for ourselves and our daughters; then we then donated the rest for missions. The dresses I had chosen were still hanging in her closet and my plan was to finally do something with these dresses.

While I was tearing out seams in Mama’s dresses, Sarah Beth cut patches from her Virginia Tech t-shirts. And my dear sister Katharine, who spends more time helping others than doing her own things, revved up her sewing machine and joined the fray.

   
the pile of dresses

Katharine
My sister Barbara wandered into the dining room and helped diminish the pile of dresses that needed to be taken apart.  (There was a method to my madness in coming home to Grantsville for this project!)   As we ripped seams and sewed seams, I learned things about my father (who said goodbye to us fifty-four years ago) and his preference of colors.

 The next morning I picked blueberries next to the playhouse we played in as kids. My children spent hours in that playhouse yard; now great-grandchildren are making memories with the sandbox, the playhouse, and the swing. Every time I walk through that playhouse yard, I wax nostalgic and wish, for a moment, that I could be a child again when goodbyes are less frequent and poignant. I brought the blueberries and memories back to Virginia with me.
the playhouse, the sandbox, and swing hanging from the tree



Nostalgia seems to surprise me at unexpected bends.

Stopping at a roadside stand to purchase peaches, we were surrounded by barefoot children whose mother allowed us to hold their baby sister (who was child number ten).

Their innocence was pure delight and they were fascinated by our purses and cell phones.

You don't know how blessed you are, I wanted to tell them, thinking of our nuggets who had said goodbye and returned to a seemingly less safe world so unlike this one.


Sarah Beth holds
 the five-week old baby
We brought our sister Katharine back with us so she could fly to Canada for a visit.  (It’s a long story: we brought her south to fly north. We took advantage of having her with us, especially since we got up at 3AM to get her to the airport before I had to go to work.)


On our way home from Maryland, we stopped in Harrisonburg and spent part of a day, along with others, helping Dave’s sister Rhoda move. After all the furniture was moved (including The Monstrosity, as Dave referred to the piece that took six people to load), we unpacked the kitchen boxes and decided where we thought Rhoda wanted her kitchen items.

Between our homecoming and Katharine’s flight, my sister Rhoda was admitted to ICU; we wondered if another goodbye was coming our way. Perhaps it wasn't wise to go south to go north? (She is is doing okay now but we’re still waiting on word about the possibility of heart surgery).
.
Moving The Monstrosity
When we got home from our Maryland journey it was our turn to finalize plans for the Slabach annual reunion at Camp Tuk-Away near Blacksburg, Virginia.  The rainy weekend didn't deter folks from coming or having fun.

This reunion was especially significant for our family. On the final day of the reunion, we hugged our oldest good-bye.  Ben was going back to Richmond and then heading west in forty-eight hours.

That weekend Jason told his siblings that he was working in the Ebola unit at Emory Hospital in Atlanta (another secret Dave and I prayed about but couldn't share).

From the reunion, Sarah Beth left us to go to Atlanta with Jason and Katie before flying back to Richmond to ride to Colorado with Ben.  It was one of those Whew! goodbye days.



Nine days later we picked Sarah Beth up at the airport, and then she and I picked grapes.  Grape juice, pickles and packing were on the agenda for the day.

Canned pickles, tomato juice, peaches, grape juice, and green beans filled my counter top and stayed there for two weeks until I had time to make room and organize the basement shelves.

Two days later we said goodbye to Sarah Beth (heading east to Richmond). The following morning we took Rebekah and Aaron northwest to Virginia Tech.  We unloaded furniture and belongings, drove to Jimmy John’s for lunch, and said goodbye.

From there I joined other women heading to a retreat.  It was another one of those Whew! days. When I got back Saturday evening, the house was tidy and clean. For the first time in twenty-eight years, it was just the two of us. I have said enough good-byes for now that mean rearranging my life!

We like the change of pace, the quiet house. Yet it doesn't mean we've done our time or that it’s time to retire.
One last goodbye at VT:
Rebekah and Aaron

We will never be done praying for our kids and their future.  Plus, there are other children to love and teach, youth to rub shoulders with, young folks to mentor, older folks to visit, and neighbors to feed.


my childhood home in Maryland
Going back to my childhood home and then coming home helps me realize again how much I have been given. Therefore, much is required.  (Luke 12:48)

My friend and mentor Rhoda was chided for wearing herself out babysitting other people’s grandchildren.  She and her husband babysat entire weekends for couples so they could get away to rejuvenate their marriages.

“This is Kingdom work,” she said.  “I’d rather wear out doing Kingdom work than wear out for any other reason.”

For that reason, and for this season, we’re not done. Although the goodbyes have been said and we spend more time praying over our kids than being with them in person, we’re not done.

We’ll never be done being parents (and keeping secrets and saying goodbye).

As long as we’re here on this earth, we’ll never be done with Kingdom work.  For this reason and for this season, I will keep rearranging my life.



Thursday, June 19, 2014

Riding to Remember



When the Children of Israel crossed the Jordan River, they were instructed to take twelve stones from their new land (Joshua 4:9) and place them in the middle of the river.  The stones were to be placed where the feet of the priests stood as they held the Ark of the Covenant while the Tribes crossed over to the Promised Land. 

They were also instructed (Joshua 4:1-8) to bring twelve stones out of the Jordan and place them in the new land – at Gilgal - as an altar.  This was so they would not forget where they had come from and all they had experienced as they entered the Promised Land.  

This ceremony was God’s way of helping them remember; thus it became a memorial.  God told them that the stones would make their children ask their fathers in time to come, "What do these stones mean?"  They would be able to answer them and tell them how God took them through the Red Sea at the beginning of their journey and through the Jordan River at the end - on dry ground.   The stones were to be their memorial.

Scripture says those stones placed in the Jordan River are still there to this day.  Sometimes I wonder just where in that river those stones were placed because I’d love to see that pile of stones after all these years!

During their forty years’ journey through the wilderness, the Children of Israel faced many trials and tests.  They experienced God’s might and His miracles.  They buried loved ones in the wilderness and in the desert.   Marriages were performed, and babies were born. And they lived with a pillar of fire at night and a cloud by day to lead the way.

They left many things behind as they crossed over Jordan; they also had many new experiences to encounter.  So placing twelve stones (one for each tribe) on the other side of the Jordan was a way to remember all of that.
 
I think it’s a good idea to have memorials so that we don't forget our past.  It’s a good thing to have memorials so we can look back and realize how far we’ve come (or how much farther we have to go).  We did that on Saturday, June 14, 2014. 


For the third year, siblings, sons, nieces and nephews, cousins, and friends have revved their bikes, put on their helmets, and headed north to visit the places where angels met our loved ones.  A memorial helps people reminisce and remember. And that we did.  The grief is not as rampant as it once was, but visiting those places brings back memories – and tears.  It also brings healing.
   
   In October 1998 Paul Slabach left the office of the church he was pastoring in Lyndhurst, Virginia and headed home to his pregnant wife and three children.  He never made it.  A fire truck heading up the mountain with one last load of water for a forest fire lost control around a curve and hit Paul head-on.  Before he could be airlifted to UVA, he was gone.  Three months after Paul’s death, his widow Regina birthed their child by emergency C-section and a few weeks later was airlifted to UVA because of post-eclamptic seizures. 

 In the ensuing sixteen years, Regina married Myron Brubaker, and she and Myron are raising her (and his adopted) children.  Myron and Regina and their children are all a part of the Slabach family – and always will be.  Their children are growing up and getting ready to move out on their own.  Their oldest son has graduated from college, the second son will finish in a year, a daughter begins college this fall, and the unborn son at Paul’s death will be a high school sophomore this fall.   Paul was thirty-eight when he was called Home.  We have not forgotten him.  We miss him still.  And we will always wonder what life would be like had he not died when he did.

In December of 2011 Jerrel Good, his wife Joyce, and their youngest of seven children were traveling the back roads on their way to a meeting in Stuarts Draft, Virginia.  Coming around a curve on Rt.151, they were hit head-on by a young man on his way home from work.  The man, a diabetic, either fell asleep or had low blood sugar; he does not remember what happened.  He suffered a crushed heel and other injuries.  Jerrel’s Jetta was pushed off the road and came to rest at the edge of an embankment.  In the darkness, Joyce came to after a few moments of unconsciousness.  Jerrel was unresponsive, so she picked up her phone, which just happened to be within reach, and called her oldest son, a nurse.  

“We’ve been in an accident,” she told him.  “Your father is not responding.  It’s bad.”  It was bad all right.  Yet in those moments, Joyce saw a light and felt a Presence and a sense of peace and calm in the vehicle as she waited for help to arrive.  Little Tabi, only three, related to folks later, “The angels just came,” and she demonstrated by raising her hands in the air, “and took my daddy to Heaven.”  Jerrel was forty-eight.

Paul was Dave’s brother, and Jerrel was his cousin.  Paul was one of Dave’s greatest supporters and his friend.  Jerrel and Dave were friends and camping buddies and planned to grow old together.  They had a lot of things they were going to do when they got old – things they didn’t have time to do now.  They didn’t get that chance to grow old and do those things together.

In June of 2011 Dave and Jerrel and their boys spent a Saturday on a bike trip.  They didn’t have an agenda; they just wanted to ride with their boys, so they did.  And they decided they’d start a tradition: every year on Father’s Day weekend, they’d do a father/son bike trip on Saturday.  Six months later to the day, Jerrel went to Heaven.
 
Brothers of Paul and Jerrel, their nieces and nephews and Jerrel's four sons on the ride in 2013.
 
Come June, there was still a bike trip because Jerrel’s sons wanted to continue the ride.  Jerrel’s sons, brother, his cousins, and their sons and daughters joined the ride.  In memory of both Jerrel and Paul, the bike ride was completed.  Each year, more people have come, and more bikes participate.  Anyone who knew Paul or Jerrel is welcome to participate.

And they ride – not to memorialize Paul and Jerrel, but to remember the goodness of God and the blessings of lives well-lived and well-loved.  While the grief from losing Paul is not as painful as it once was, the grief from losing Jerrel is still strong. 


 In the two and a half years since Jerrel’s death, his family has experienced many changes.  Joyce’s daughter gave her a grandson – and then later buried a stillborn granddaughter.  One son has gotten married; another one recently announced his engagement.  A third son completed aviation mechanic training and is living in Canada.  Joyce is taking classes toward a nursing degree and has a part-time job.  It seems that Jerrel has missed so much in the short time he’s been gone.

Questions asked are not always answered.  But this we know:  God gives strength and courage to go on, even when life is unbearably hard.  God provides resources and people to help carry the load.  Riding up the mountains and around the curves reminds us of how far we’ve come since these tragedies have ripped us apart.   

Having the gentleman who hit Jerrel’s Jetta along on the ride the past two years has been both difficult and special.    Standing at the site where Jerrel lost his life, he shared his journey following the accident he caused that claimed this father’s life. There were many tears – not just his, but ours as well.  It has been poignant and painful – and healing.  In our grief, there is healing when we reckon that we’ll never understand this side of Heaven, but we know that God does all things well.

So we carry our stones out of our deep waters and place them on the ground for others to see and for us to remember.  They help us remember how He was there in those dark days and nights when we cried, “Why?” and there was no answer.

There are many different ways to remember loved ones.  For this extended family, it makes sense to do a motorcycle ride.  Paul and Jerrel both loved to ride.  The plan for an annual ride had been made before Jerrel’s death, and his boys wanted to continue the tradition after he died.


the place where Paul met Jesus on October 27, 1998
One person shared with Dave this year, “Thanks so much for doing this.  I was not prepared for the emotion that would hit me when I visited  Paul’s grave.  I hadn’t been there for probably ten years, but Paul was my best friend.  It was so good to be here today.”

Standing in the front yard of the place where Paul met Jesus, we remembered the faithfulness of God.  Having Regina standing there with us, affirming the faithfulness of God is like placing another stone on the altar – so that we do not forget how good (in spite of the tragedy) God has been.

the store across the road from the place
 Jerrel met Jesus on December 15, 2011



     The folks at the store across the road from where Jerrel met Jesus still remember.  They ask about his youngest daughter who was in the car with him.  When we leave that site this year, there is a cross on the tree that tells the story.   
On the white paint are the words, "I  U Tabi", written by that little girl.


 
Each year, the group is different.  This year was the first that all of Paul’s brothers participated.  One of Jerrel’s sons is in Canada, and this was his first year to miss the ride.  Cousins travel in to participate, and others wish they could.  Co-workers join the ride, remembering a fellow worker.





We ride, not as those who have no hope.  We ride because we have a reason to celebrate.  One day, we will be together.  For now, we ride and we remember.  God has been good, and we never want to forget.






Regina chose to have the words "God is good all the time - even now." put on the marque of the church over the time of Paul's funeral. This poem was written following that theme.

                                Even Now, Even Now, God is Good

Though my questions are unanswered and I’ve cried with no relief;
Though there is no human logic and I’m torn by fresh, new grief;
Though the voice of God is silent, I will not doubt; I still believe:
                Even now, even now God is good.

                 God is good all the time, and all the time God is good.
                 Even now?!
 Even now God is good.

He is my Lord, He is my Shepherd; in Him there’s nothing that I lack,
Though one I’ve loved is gone and is never coming back;
Though the darkness may surround me, I know God knows what He’s about.
                Even now, even now God is good.

Though the night is dark about me, I can’t see the light of day;
Though my heart is crushed within me, and it hurts too much to pray.
Yet I feel His arms around me, and I will not be afraid.
                Even now, even now God is good.

               God is good all the time, and all the time God is good.
               Even now?!
               Even now God is good.

I can claim the peace of Jesus; I’m hiding ’neath His wings,
And the Victory of my Savior gives me the power to sing.
Though I don’t understand His reasons, He’s still my King of kings.
                Even now, even now God is good.

Though the waters would o’er take me, He’s my rest, He is my calm;
Though the fire would consume me, He’s my strength, He is my balm.
I still believe that He is faithful in this darkness before dawn.
                Even now, even now God is good.

                   God is good all the time, and all the time God is good.
                   Even now?!
                   Even now God is good.

Gertrude Slabach
November 1998
written after the Homegoing of Paul Slabach