I finally let
myself say it.
I've been waiting
for someone else to say it. Another mom. Another missionary. Anyone really.
But no one ever
did. They'd say, "Wow, how do you do it?" or watch while I fumble--oh
how I fumble--at trying to control screaming, whining, disobedient children, be
a “good” missionary, maintain my sanity.
A house full of
sinners just like me.
And all the while
I kept thinking, "I don't know how I do it. I just know I do because I
don't have a choice." I have been in survival mode for months now and I
just wanted someone to take my stubborn,
I-won't-ask-for-help-but-please-offer-it-and-I’ll-take-it-in-a-hartbeat hand
and say, "It's ok. This thing you're doing, it's hard work."
I wanted
permission to feel overwhelmed and burnt out. I wanted to hear that this
"if-I-can-just-get-through-the-day" mentality is normal at times—or
almost always—and does eventually pass.
But no one ever
said that. Which in my mind just confirmed that something was wrong. I should
be able to do this with a smile on my face and patience in my voice.
Then I read this book and I felt the greatest sense of relief because finally someone said it.
This is hard,
overwhelming, exhausting work.
And I'm doing
just fine.
I'm doing just fine because I realize I
can't do it right on my own.
And I'm learning—learning to lean on the One who can make all things right and
new.
There are days I
can muster up just enough strength to get out of bed after a long night with my
one year old who still wants to nurse and stumble to the kitchen as I remind my
whining, apparently famished older children that, yes, they will get breakfast
this morning, just like every morning.
I go through my
days of washing dishes piled high and sweeping the floors for the umpteenth time
and wiping noses and settling disputes and running to grab the laundry off the
line because its starting to rain again. Somewhere in there I mean to sit down
and practice the alphabet with my oldest and work on numbers again with my boy,
but my littlest is tired and now it's time for lunch and I need to pump more
water and my washer is beeping at me and a family of Indians just showed up and
well, I'll just remind myself that my kids won't be 30 years old and not know
their numbers and letters.
I look at my life
and remind myself of this:
Raising little
humans is hard work.
Being a wife is
hard work.
Living in the
jungle is complicated, hard, exhausting work.
Constantly
thinking and speaking in your second or third language is mentally exhausting.
Adopting a child
out of birth order, with a traumatic past, and that doesn't speak your first
language is exponentially challenging.
Rarely getting to
speak to or see family and friends is emotionally taxing.
Living in another
culture is frustrating, lonely, exhausting at times.
Now take all
these and add them up and you get a messy, tiring, hard job.
So I'm trying to
lighten up a little myself. Let myself mess up every now and then [or often, as
the case may be] and rather than beat myself up over it, I'm learning to slide
back under that umbrella of grace and say, "Thank you, Jesus, that your
mercies are new every day and that your grace endures forever".
I'm so thankful
that God is sovereign and that He has a plan for my children, my husband, and
me that can't be thwarted. I can freely
acknowledge my incompetence and failures and it is in that freedom that I find
the motivation to try again.
To lean on the
One who makes all things new.
To let my
failures be growing moments instead of defeating mountains.
To trust Him as
he takes me through the fire to make me pure as gold.
To stop worrying about
what others think and say, because God knows me.
God knows me.
This is hard
work. Just like Jesus promised it would be.
But oh how sweet to
know He also promised He'd walk us through it, patiently, lovingly, always.
Is it time you let
yourself say it, too?
“For it was You who created my inward parts;
You knit me together in my mother’s womb. I will praise You because I have been
remarkably and wonderfully made. Your works are wonderful, and I know this very
well. My bones were not hidden from You when I was made in secret, when I was
formed in the depths of the earth. Your eyes saw me when I was formless;
All my
days were written in Your book and planned before a single one of them began.”
I randomly stumbled across your blog and I am so glad I did! Mainly because your heart, is my heart. My husband and I just moved to Leticia (not a huge fan, my heart is deeper in the jungle) and will be working on our residency in february so that we may live in Brazil! We are currently in the states because our Org. wanted everyone to come home for the holidays, but plan on being back after the first of the year to start working on Portuguese. I would LOVE to meet you guys when we return. I am so happy to see updates on Shapu, we met him in 2011 & pray for him often. If you guys need anything from the states we can bring it for you too. Praying for you guys, I know how hard the days can be.
ReplyDelete-Breanne (& Kendall) Johnson