"Childhood scenes rushed back at me out of the night, strangely close and urgent. Today, I know that such memories are the key not to the past, but to the future. I know that the experiences of our lives, when we let God use them, become the mysterious and perfect preparation for the work He will give us to do." - Corrie Ten Boom
I was mourning again for the children I don't have.
(But I thought I had gotten to "the other side" of that. I thought I had "come to terms.")
Ha.
As if it's something you ever get past. Despite that knowledge I am surprised at this involuntary emotional meltdown. I'm rethinking adoption. Foster adoption. I go back and forth. How does one ever really know?
And then, while amidst all the brothers, again, always feeling alone and separate, I know that they are men, plain and simple. They're not ignoring me. It, in fact, has nothing to do with me. Yet as I look around and find myself in the company of males, continually being the only girl, I am baffled by God's plan; the timing, the dynamics, the choices. And while sitting there amongst my siblings...
"Childhood scenes rushed back at me out of the night, strangely close and urgent."
And my life back home seemed far away and chaotic. Though I'd recently come to terms about my future and had been elated with my new decisions, my enthusiasm fell flat here, where I grew up. Because I know God, I know that He has a plan, and every time I think I've figured it out, I find myself in a cocktail of my past and my future, shaken—as well as stirred.
Glad you found the Coming2Terms site, Mary. It's the outwardly ordinary things that always manage to catch us off guard, isn't it?
ReplyDeleteVery close to my herat Mary! Sometimes I think I'm over it, then I wake up one day in the middle of the ongoing nightmare of having no kids! When will it ever stop? Probably when I'm in heaven!
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