Restore. Renew. Reclaim.

Tag: Love

Chapter 30 (Easton)

My most painful experience in this lifetime has been the loss of my nephew, Easton. Easton was a beautiful, wonderful child. He became sick at the age of 11 months and fought a genetic disease for the next year and a half. He was a sweet, tough, amazing little boy with eyes bluer than the sky itself. 

He loved frogs, and if you’ve seen my frog tattoo, I may have told you the story behind it. (if you haven’t heard the story, ask me about it the next time you see me.)

We were connected, him and I, in this world and in the next. Sometimes when I think about the relationship that we had while he was here, it breaks me that I didn’t hold him more. It makes me terribly heartbroken that I won’t get a chance to be an aunt to him any longer on this side of heaven. 

However, my relationship with Easton grew in its intensity after he left us. I remember my first dream about him like it was yesterday. His face and the way he hugged me will be burned into my heart forever. 

Easton also inspired me to write. His first push was a poem. Things grew from there, and ultimately he led me to write this blog, but I’m getting ahead of myself. Let me explain my experience with loving him and losing him. 

When I first realized that Easton wasn’t going to get better, and that we were going to lose him, I was pissed. Excuse my language, but there isn’t a better word for it.  

I remember being in the hospital with family all around. I remember the crying and the comforting. I remember the hushed voices and the process of letting go, but I had none of that in me. I was just so mad. 

My anger stemmed from a few places. I couldn’t understand, at all, why a child would ever be subjected to going through the pain and turmoil he’d been through. I was mad that my life was, in that very moment, changing forever. (I had no idea how much, but I could feel it just the same.) I was angry that my sister had to be torn to pieces and that her heart would never be able to be the same. I was angry that my kids and nieces and nephew had to lose the sense of innocence that comes with being a child. I was pissed they had to lose a life with Easton. 

I was mad that my heart was broken and that, I too, had to lose a life with my sweet and precious nephew. 

The next 12 years would be a process of letting him go, and a process of learning a new way to “be” with him. In the beginning I felt a fog around life. I didn’t process much for about 6 months. The first time I had a dream about him, I was eviscerated. The 2nd, 3rd, and 20th times my evisceration lessened and my aching for more of those moments grew. 

12 years later, my ability to “see” him in my day to day is ever present. He is everywhere I am and his love is something I can feel every time my husband and I take a step closer to our dreams. 

Easton pushed Brad and I to a life of stepping outside of our comfort zone. His life, and his death, showed us that this life is precious, but the next one is even more so. Anything that we do here in this life, pales in comparison to what we get to witness and be a part of in the next. 

God made Brad and I Easton’s family for a very specific reason. Easton had a story to tell, and we were blessed enough to be able to listen up close. God knew that little curly headed, blue eyed boy would capture our hearts like no one else could, and He allowed us to be a part of Easton’s story. 

We keep his spirit alive within us each time we ignore our fear and embrace our faith.

Chapter 18 (The M-I-L)

So my mother-in-law is an incredible human. She will probably be embarrassed by the fact that I’m going to write this whole blog post about her, but I’m going to do it anyway. She has taught me one of the most important lessons of all…unconditional love. 

You know how most people roll their eyes when the word “mother in law” is spoken? Well, not me. I have no idea how or why I was so stinking lucky, but that woman is one of the coolest people I know. 

I’ve told you that her family is amazing, and their love is all encompassing, but I haven’t told you that she is the oldest of the 6 siblings that make up that family. Her parents, GG and Grandpa GG, are two of the most influential people not just for their children, but for many many people they may not know that they’ve touched. They were a strong presence in my life while they were here, and their daughter, Linda, carries that influence in the loving ways that they always did. 

I just recently realized that I had a front row seat to some of the most forgiving and fulfilling love that a person can bestow upon another person. 

You see, her son, her ONLY son, married a girl that was an outspoken atheist and that directly conflicted with the single most important part of her life. Jesus. 

Furthermore, I was raising her grandchildren!

Most grandparents know how precious grandchildren are, and how grandparents want only the best for their grandchildren. Here I was, raising her most precious gifts from God in a home where their mother didn’t understand or appreciate her number one priority. 

You know what she did with that knowledge for over 20 years? 

She loved me. 

She never once told me what I “should” do or how I “should” act. She never made me feel guilty or less than for anything at all. She never made suggestions as to how to raise her grandchildren. She never asked me to believe in God, or honor her religion. 

In fact, even when I would, point blank, ask her a question and want her opinion on raising her grandchildren, she would just say, “oh Callie. I think you’re doing great.” 

She’s ALWAYS had a smile, a hug, an ear, and an open kitchen table for me. She was and still is a reservoir of a human. Yes, I said, reservoir. Think about that word, and you’ll understand exactly the kind of person she is. 

About a year ago, when I was in the first few months of being able to believe in God, I had so many new emotions and concepts to think through. I realized what she has always been in my life, and I thanked her for her genuine kindness, patience, and unconditional love. 

It was when I was thanking her that I realized the gravity of true Love. Her firm foundation in the love of Jesus, has always been her greatest strength. Her love for me was a direct result of her love for Jesus. He has made her the person I’ve always longed to be.

…And He gave me her as a mother-in-law…

That gift is not lost on me. 

I thank Him everyday for her.

Chapter 16 (The “Guy”)

I met Brad in college. He was a senior and I was a sophomore. We had a small campus and I always knew who he was but never really talked to him. He had been dating a girl for a long time and everyone told me that he was “basically married”. My friends were adamant that I find someone to date, though, and after several failed suggestions, they decided they were going to see if he was available. 

Turns out, he was. 

The first time I ever really talked to Brad was at a halloween party in his fraternity house. He was kind of shy and approached me with a Halloween mask on. Although I totally knew it was him, he introduced himself as “guy” and asked me if I wanted a cherry blow pop. He made me laugh. I should have known from that moment on, I would spend the next 20 years of my life with a guy who thought he was funny…

Somehow he won me over. I think it must have been that cherry blow pop. I always did like candy. Lucky for him, it was halloween, and he had some. 😉

On the first date he told me I was beautiful. It might have just been a line, but it was a good one. I had never heard those words before and somehow they meant so much. I still carry that moment with me. 

Although our relationship is special to me for many reasons, the most special thing was definitely how he handled my declaration of being an atheist. 

20 years ago I was a lot louder and more opinionated. I’ve always loved people well, always at an arm’s length as to not get hurt, but still, loved them- deeply.  I could also fight anyone about religion and God at any time. My defensiveness was worn like armor. I liked to be heard and had no problem having hard conversations. 

Brad was unphased.

Most people found some way to combat what I had to say. Most people took a lot of time trying to talk me into coming around to their way of thinking. He didn’t. He quietly listened, and his love for me was not shaken. I could visibly see that. 

His ability to be unshaken actually caught me off guard at first, and I came back even stronger. I think there was a part  of me that tried to push him away. He was too good to be true, and I wasn’t about to let ANYONE crush me.

 I found myself giving him my whole heart and that was scary. 

He taught me that loving someone is terrifying. Really, truly loving them unconditionally takes a whole lot of faith. Because I had no idea where to put my faith at the time, I put my faith in Brad, and because of that, I started to feel wholly dependent on how he felt about me. It was a slippery slope. 

He quietly and calmly waded through that with me as well. He understood from the moment we met that he couldn’t put all of his faith in me. He had a relationship with God and that is where he found his self worth and confidence. His faith allowed him to be patient with me. His understanding of love made loving easier for him. He didn’t guard his heart with anyone. Instead, he wore his heart on his sleeve and understood that no matter what society’s reaction to him, he would continue to be confident in who he was. In that way, he is still exactly the same as the day I met him.

I didn’t know this at the beginning, but he was only able to do that because he had his faith in something much stronger than I even knew existed. I wasn’t able to grasp what he was grasping for many, many years of our marriage. 

God knew exactly what He was doing when He created Brad. He also knew exactly what He was giving to me when I met him in college for the first time. It has all been orchestrated from the very beginning. It was all leading to one place, for one purpose.

At the time, I had no idea that I was following along the path laid out for me.

This song is written by Brad after a comment from me about him forgetting our life due to his family history of Alzheimer’s disease. The first verse references the content of this blog post. It can be purchased at the following link:

https://music.apple.com/us/album/let-go/1170978246?i=1170978273

Chapter 2 (The Foundation)

One of the first memories that I have is when I was 7 years old, being dropped off at vacation bible school, standing at the back of the church, and being completely confused as to why I was there. I remember thinking, “why do these people say things like this? Who made up this story? Why do we talk about it every year in the summer?” 

I promise I wasn’t judging (not that I’m not guilty of being judgmental). It was simply that I couldn’t and didn’t believe. But, my fascination wasn’t with my unbelief, it was more geared towards why humans put on this persona. Why did people tell this story, act like it gave them peace, and then preach it to others? 

At the time I probably just chalked it up to “this whole God thing” being a profession, so someone had to do it. It wasn’t unlike being a teacher or an electrician. Someone had to tell these unbelievable stories about this Jesus guy, and so the job was filled. 

It never occurred to me that it could be true, because the same people that preached about Jesus being love, and only love, would also criticize and dismiss unfortunate souls at school. That’s the reality I lived in.

So clearly, (I thought) it’s not truth.  I mean, that woman talking right now about love, literally just chastised a kid for not being clean when he came to school. 

Obviously love and outright dismissal of a human don’t go together. 

Jesus is clearly just a story that someone gets appointed to tell. 

My next thought was, “I’ll just go out and kick the ball now.” And there it went. The need to understand Jesus was pushed to the side for several years. I put it in the same mental folder as Santa and the tooth fairy because I was already beginning to understand that those things weren’t possible either. 

Over the next several years I filled that place within me that needed to understand things by observing and contemplating humans and human behavior. That need continues still. I am a lover of humans. I deeply care for people. Deeply. 

This may sound like I’m bragging on myself, I’m not. I just feel the need for you to understand that my reactions to pieces of my story are connected to this moment, and this experience of observing humanity. 

I quickly fell into the trap of trying to please humanity because of my first need to understand it.

Some of you might connect with that idea.

I have no way of tying this up with a pretty bow and allowing you to let go of the stress that comes with the need to please, but I will say this, you are not alone. I’ve been struggling with this need for over 40 years. 

I’m in the trenches with you.