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Give Me Grace : Slow

Dec 27, 2014 19 Comments ~ Written by Lisha Epperson

Slow down. Take a deep breath. What’s the hurry?
    Why wear yourself out? Just what are you after anyway? – Jeremiah 2:25

Cease striving and know that I am God” Psalm 46:10

Christmas leaves in its wake an ease I find liberating. The days after, feel slow. The flip side of a whirlwind of preparation reveals a future open wide for reflection. The holy pause of contemplation. A generous helping of selah before the rush of a new year. Suddenly we have time.

A slower pace is perfectly matched for the way I’m hearing from God. Slowing down helps me see Him. When I realize He’s already here I notice Him everywhere. Sort of like my gold Honda odyssey. Since buying one a few years ago, they seem to be everywhere. I see four in a three block walk to the subway – regularly. Gold Honda Odyssey’s are apparently…a thing.

This revelation was an epiphany of sorts and one long in coming. It allowed me to relax into the season with fresh perspective. I can chill out about the to do list because I’ll find God in the middle of my dirty kitchen. He’d take that last-minute late night run to Target. Hold my hand when I feel frustrated. Nothing like a toy kitchen that takes 6 hours to assemble to help you remember the truly meditative process of slow.

Even my walk towards the chaos of Christmas was slow. My choice to “be joy”, make it happen – intentional. There were moments when I had to smile when I didn’t want to, areas of tension smoothed with a deliberate measure of grace…conversations I tried to avoid…that happened anyway. But it’s a choice. I want Him to be the river of peace I walk on.

I want to savor the season, let it linger long, simmering as it were, warm and tasty on my tongue. This season my usual 3,2,1 Jesus jump is a glide. It’s slow and thoughtful…a lyrical melding and continuous motion. It’s about finding myself adrift in quiet conversation – celebrating the flow of communion with God.

What better way to do that than to remember and reclaim family traditions that force me to slow down.

I remember outings with my godmother during the holidays. Every year she’d take us for a Christmas walk. We’d walk around our neighborhood to see holiday decorations. We’d peek in windows. We’d talk and laugh. A brisk walk during the holiday forced us to slow down. Sometimes we’d ride the subway to see the Christmas windows at Lord and Taylor. My husband has similar memories. Why haven’t we done this with our children?

Native New Yorker’s take for granted the beauty of NYC. If you stay here long enough a serious “been there done that” vibe can overtake you. That definitely happened to me. Thankfully, the arrival of LiChai and Ila put it in remission. I wanted to show them everything. Our decision to homeschool was largely influenced by where we live. LiChai and Ila grew up riding around in a double stroller hearing my “Manhattan belongs to me” mantra. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Central Park, 125th Street, Prospect Park, the Botanic Gardens…we saw and experienced it all. Regularly and on purpose.

More children meant less time. I lost a little of my zeal for all things New York. Mind you, I still loved it but I lost the drive needed to be the biggest promoter of all things New York. I never had the time. It’s a strange paradox. The busier I am the less I enjoy any of the things I’m doing. And the less productive I feel. Is it like that for you?

So living slow in New York means remembering and reclaiming all the things I love about it. Last night we relived a childhood memory and took a walk. No schedule. No appointment necessary and admission was free. Last night slow told a story. Last night I listened.

5th Avenue. Happy children. Department store windows. A cathedral. A door. A star.

Let your handmaiden find grace in your sight…#GiveMeGrace

♥

taking it slow 2014

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Posted in christianity, faith, Give Me Grace, life, parenting, uncategorized - Tagged #GiveMeGrace, Christmas, God, last night, New York, slow

Christmas : When You Realize Love Is Already Here

Dec 24, 2014 5 Comments ~ Written by Lisha Epperson

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We watch and do wait Lord we anticipate…the moment, you choose to appear.

We worship we praise until there’s no debate, and we recognize you’re already here.

Hallelujah, hallelujah, hal-le-lu-jah – Brian Courtney Wilson

We talked about racism after breakfast this morning. Over pancakes LiChai told me about a situation he encountered in class a few weeks ago. He and a few friends were discussing the “N” word. He also wanted to know why racism only involved African-Americans and whites. Why not Mexicans or Asians? I told him about Chris Rocks brilliant piece in the Hollywood Reporter. I reminded him of the shameful past we’re fighting to break free from, the wounds…that just won’t heal. I gave him the breakdown on the complexities of our love hate relationship with THAT word.

In all my dreams of motherhood and parenting I never imagined conversations like this would take up so much of our time. I think I dreamed the dream my parents probably had for me. I dreamed the dream of a better world. He’s 13. Still a little green and super geeky. He likes manga comics and still leans way in when I read to him. He’s old enough to know that the love-filled multi-cultural world of family and friends we created for him isn’t what he’ll always experience when he leaves the nest.

And so the questions, the conversations continue…

Trading the kitchen for the family room Ila opens up with how she overheard two lighter skinned girls call a darker skinned girl ugly. Specifically pointing out skin tone as the reason for her poor looks. Chailah and Ade’ floated in and out of the room dressed up as ninjas while we talked Disney and Barak Obama, the doll test and Native Americans.

We talked a river of words. It couldn’t be stopped. The volatile virus of earthly angst that’s permeated the city all but robbed us of a season of joyful expectancy. But we still want to believe. By His grace we’re a family that knows love wins.

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The time is right for Christmas. This world needs the undeniable truth of an unbelievably scandalous birth to remind us that God is here.

So we pick out and put up trees. We read the Christmas story and endure the labor of advent. We bake cookies and hang stockings. We buy presents and plan celebrations – because we still believe. We have to.

The atmosphere is littered with stories of hate, the threat of war and rampant disease. Racism, the dirty laundry of our American family drama is splayed across our collective consciousness. It is the current cloud that covers the story of love we cling to. But there is love. And love wins. I tell myself over and over – Love wins.

How I got over
How did I make it over
You know my soul look back and wonder
How did I make it over
How I made it over
Going on over all these years
You know my soul look back and wonder
How did I make it over – Mahalia Jackson

I watched Alex Haley’s Roots when I was 11 years old. And The Butler at 46. Huddled together around our floor model tv we watched the evil of slavery come to life on the big screen. Despite claims that Haley’s work is fiction it still exposed the horrors of slavery. Do you remember the whipping of Kunta Kinte or Mariah Carey as Hattie Pearl when the slave owner said he “needed her help in the shed”? The look on her face stays with me. And too, that of her emasculated husband. My children are a little embarrassed by slavery. They see themselves the way God sees them and resist a connection to anything less. They want it to be over and feel uncomfortable seeing images of people that look like them treated so unfairly. So do I. But I want them to know the beautiful history of a people that survived. I re-frame every conversation with “how we got over”.

I grew up with a father whose views were what you might call militant. From my mother, I learned the religion of love. I mourn the tragic loss of any life but I do stand with those who protest police brutality and racism. My faith is big enough to do both. But right now all I feel is peace. I’m quieted by a rumbling urgent wave of silence. God says hush. Growing up, my mother seemed unbearably passive but I see, especially now, the power in her quiet stance. Sometimes love is the only answer to live with. Sometimes love doesn’t say a word. And lately,  prayer-filled silence is all I can offer.

The worst thing that could happen in response to repeated cries for justice happened three days ago. Innocent police officers, serving their community were killed by a lone gunman. This man also took his own life.

Peace, like a river, come quick.

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We should mourn with those who mourn and in this God simply asks for our silence. No words. No debate. It’s the resolved silence, the very voice of death that shifts the paradigm of this battle. May this be the tipping point, where the crux of the message is driven home. Would that it could be finished.

Brian and Mahalia and Stevie are the balm for my soul today. My advent song has no words today. And that’s okay. My praise and worship is a lifting of hands to a holy God who simply says surrender. Maybe I’ll do this until I mean it. Maybe I’ll sit with love until I feel it.

I keep looking for the sweet softness of love swaddled as a baby in a manger. But Jesus isn’t a baby anymore. He’s all grown up. His love eclipses the facts of a familiar birth story. His love is truth. What we experienced as love come down in a manger has exploded – showering the world with fiery sparks. If we pay attention we’ll find burning bushes every where.

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When Jesus returns He’ll look like Michael Jordan. Or Chris Martin from Coldplay. Or maybe like Malala Yousafzai. Maybe Jesus comes now in the rocking chair wisdom of a grandmother when she admonishes us to remember that “two wrongs don’t make a right”. Maybe Jesus huddles with the hobos under the Metro North Tunnel at 106th Street. Maybe we can see Jesus in the tears of the mother of that gunman, as she laments her sons wrong choices and repeated cries for help. Maybe we’ll be about the business of kingdom living instead of creating our own. Maybe Jesus is on Facebook every now and then…disguised as hopeful status update. You know, that message that suggests we simply love one another. Maybe Jesus is in and about everything and if we could see him in all he’d actually be the all that we need.

Maybe..

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Maybe Jesus comes as the Eric Garners of the world. Martyred for a movement…a moment in His story.

We are a community of people groaning towards heaven. We are the weary who grope in the dark of night for a star. We are souls crying out for the union of our disjointed spirits. We crave a communal redemption. If we are not all saved then none of us are. None of us are.

And all I hear is praise. Because if we won’t do it the rocks will..they’ll cry out and sing a heavenly praise and redemption song. His word is for the fallen, the broken, the lame and the sick. His word is the gospel. His word is for the sinner. And that’s all of us. His word picks us up and puts us back together again. All of us.

He’s already here. Jesus is in the middle of the rally. He sits in the tension filled moments when we wonder what’s next. He is the thrill of hope for a jaded world. He is the peaceful resolution to this revolution. He is Jesus.

And He’s already here. He’s in the middle of every choice we make. This Christmas might we choose Him. Before we speak a word, write a post, unfriend a follower. May we not miss him in the middle of the madness.

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Love’s in need of love today
Don’t delay
Send yours in right away
Hate’s goin’ round
Breaking many hearts
Stop it please
Before it’s gone too far – Stevie Wonder

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Posted in Advent in the City, christianity, faith, life, parenting, uncategorized - Tagged #TellHisStory, Advent, Brian Courtney Wilson, Christmas, dream, God, grace, Jesus, love, Mahalia Jackson, Motherhood, racism, Stevie Wonder

Give Me Grace : Sarah Laughed

Aug 09, 2014 47 Comments ~ Written by Lisha Epperson
sarah laughed

“Sarah Laughed” by Rae Antonoff

11-12 Abraham and Sarah were old by this time, very old. Sarah was far past the age for having babies. Sarah laughed within herself, “An old woman like me? Get pregnant? With this old man of a husband?” (Genesis 19 11-12 MSG)

Sarah lied. She said, “I didn’t laugh,” because she was afraid. But he said, “Yes you did; you laughed.” (‭Genesis‬ ‭18‬:‭15‬ MSG)

Abraham was a hundred years old when his son Isaac was born. Sarah said, God has blessed me with laughter and all who get the news will laugh with me! (‭Genesis‬ ‭21‬:‭5-6‬ MSG)

 Sarah laughed. 

We were on our way home. 4 days 3 nights. A minivan, my love and lovelies. After a few days away we were on our way home. Camping at Lake George was beautiful but one can eat only so many grilled to perfection burgers. Besides, the morning run to the bathroom with Chailah was getting old. Note to self, next time? Bring a porta-a-potty.

South bound traffic on I87 crawled but the sound of laughter filled the car. It was the sound of children responding to a few days of fresh air, good food and extra loving. They were happy.  Punch drunk from marshmallows and late nights by a fire – our mini vacation had done them well.

Laughter. I laughed too. In that moment God reminded me how much my laughter has changed.

Pause. Rewind, freeze frame, flashback. Click. Click. Click. Remember. It was as if I’d dreamed the moment and in it, remembered Sarah.  Sarah’s laughter. At one time it was my own. Never mind what people said, for the most part they were encouraging. Months turned years sprinkled with baby showers and holidays found me holding little more than a dream. My empty arms foretold the story of the ones I lost. At least that’s how it felt to me. I ached for a child, felt my heart-break for a child.

It was me. I didn’t believe. I was my worst enemy, my only rival. Believing the god of fertility hadn’t done its magical dance over me, I pushed aside the one true God who said He loved me. Anyway.

It was easier to toy around with lesser gods than put my hope in the all-powerful. Part of me let go of believing. Because believing hurts. But I know the body shiver of concealed laughter, of the self-deprecating laugh Sarah gave. Part disbelief, part self preservation…sometimes we laugh to dull our senses. But each time I did it, I brushed aside my blessing. Dismissed His power. Believing is hard but doubt is harmful to your health.  Laughter hid the dis-ease of disbelief.

I did, I chuckled “yeah right” with Sarah. Sarah laughed and so did I.

And I would have lied about it too.

Yet, that moment was part of every longing for motherhood, every hope against denial, every reason for wanting. It was part of my souls song. My childhood memories, my destiny. And I heard it in their laughter.

Three boys and two girls. Gods great provision against my hopeless situation. Only He always knew. And held my broken winged body close whispering don’t give up, keep believing, time will heal, be willing to alter the dream, take a different path. To listen – even when I didn’t understand.

Their laughter filled me with joy. Ringing through my mother spirit as a dance I’ve known since the beginning of time. Rocking me gently, back and forth.

It was his promise manifested as a tickle in my throat. And I leaned forward to release it with a few tears. My delight in everything and nothing. The moment. I was made for it. My laughter transformed. Full and free. Lighthearted, unburdened. My doubt, like Sarah’s, redeemed as unbridled faith.

Three boys and two girls. I laugh within myself and I think God laughs too.

Let your handmaiden find grace in your sight…#GiveMeGrace
♥
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*** I found the beautiful work of Rae Antonoff on Etsy.***

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Posted in christianity, faith, Give Me Grace, infertility, life, motherhood, uncategorized - Tagged #GiveMeGrace, dance, dream, faith, Genesis 18:15, God, laughter, mother, rae antonoff, Sarah, sarah laughed

An Infertility Testimony: {a guest post by Ashlie Haddock}

Jul 31, 2014 13 Comments ~ Written by Lisha Epperson

I met Ashlie Haddock on her Facebook page dedicated to infertility awareness. I was delighted to wear a pink ribbon with her and her many followers in honor of infertility awareness month in April 2013. It wasn’t the first time I publicly supported efforts to bring this seemingly unspeakable struggle to the forefront – but it felt like it. I admire Ashlie’s committment to the cause…especially since she’s still in the trenches. Read her story. She shares the personal testimony of a marriage strengthened through solid lessons on faith.

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I believe any struggle or circumstance can be used to glorify God if we allow it to. As I have struggled with many heartaches, struggles, bitterness and suffering the past 5 years, God had laid it upon my heart to give my testimony. I pray my testimony can help others.

2 Corinthians 1:4 Who comforts us in all our tribulation, that we may be able to comfort those who are in any trouble, with the comfort with which we ourselves are comforted by God.

TESTIMONY

I believe God has given me much comfort through my journey and I feel I should share my story so that God may speak through me to help comfort others. I praise God for where I am today and how far I have come in our journey. I still have a long way to go but I must always look ahead and remember how far HE has brought me.

In 2003, I met Trent and he proposed in 2007. While dating, we had a 4 and a half-year long distance relationship which I will discuss later. While discussing our future, we talked about starting our family. We talked about if, for some reason we couldn’t have kids, we would adopt. We also talked about what type of church we would attend as we both came from different religions. We got married May 3rd, 2008 and on May 16th, 2009, we started trying to get pregnant.

After a year of no pregnancy we began wondering what could be wrong. We never imagined we couldn’t get pregnant as our families never struggled conceiving. We finally got a diagnosis and were told we were sterile. Trent was born with a congenital absence of the vas. After getting our diagnosis as we were leaving the doctor, I will never forget the look on Trent’s face and sound of his voice. Before we could even get sat down in the car to leave Trent asked, “Are you going to divorce me?” I always knew, but realized more in that moment, what a special marriage we had. I knew there was nothing that could break the marriage God had given us. Later you will see how I feel God was preparing and strengthening us while dating to endure infertility. Only 2 weeks after getting our diagnosis, an adoption fell into our laps. We were still grieving and trying to cope with our diagnosis. After many prayers, we couldn’t go through with it. It was devastating but we turned it down. We still had hopes that somehow we could carry our own child. In the middle of all the IUI‘s we did with known or donor sperm, we got approached with another adoption falling into our laps. The mother decided to keep the child. And then a third and forth potential adoption – and they fell through too. Here we are today 5 years after first trying to conceive, 3.5 years after our first diagnosis, 1 turned down adoption, 3 other potential adoptions that didn’t work out and 9 failed IUI’s later. We walked away with empty arms a year ago in February.

This journey has been the most painful thing we have ever experienced and is still something we battle but I have learned so much through our struggles and want to share some of God’s blessings. ~ read more ~

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Posted in adoption, christianity, faith, infertility, last girl on the hill (blog series on fertility and faith), relationships, uncategorized - Tagged 2 Corinthians 1:4, God, Infertility Support and Awareness Group, testimony

On the Work of Motherhood and Dreams

Jul 25, 2014 20 Comments ~ Written by Lisha Epperson
flickr cc : Ethan Hickerson

flickr cc : Ethan Hickerson

Lying across the “big bed”, an open window invites a breeze to tickle my spine. Stretching out like this feels good for the kink living in my lower back and I pour myself into the purr escaping my lips. Unplanned moments of self-care are welcomed and I melt into the lifetime of that heartbeat.

I hear the hum of a hospital generator and nothing else. I wanted to write, but when I sat down at the computer my littlest lovely called out. In the middle of working out his daytime drama in dreamland, he needs my touch, to sleep peacefully at night.

And that’s cool. Until it ain’t. My life feels interrupted and right now, parenthood is paralyzing. Every day it gets harder to keep up with what I consider my passion. I’m struggling with the chasm between what I have to do and what I want to do and the bridge connecting my dreams and reality is under construction. I can’t find my way over, back or through. Motherhood is an exhausting job and one I wanted most, but sometimes, I wonder if the work of parenting should trump everything else. And if there’s a way to do it all.

I recognize the holy hard work I do as an all-consuming calling. It colors my world, bleeding a hodge-podge of tie-dyed crimson. If asked, it’s the work I’m most proud of. But when I consider other dreams, even for a second, it jumps to the front of the line. Every time. Refusing to take second place, even temporarily, parenthood photo bombs my life. There’s very little space to carve out a cleft for writing or dancing or dreaming.

Number 3 at home is compulsory school age now and September will mark the beginning of my life as a homeschooling mama of many. I wonder if I can juggle it. Middle school math is a brain frazzler and the effort to launch my lovelies secure in their faith while focusing on pursuing their dreams is a full-time job.

I dream of advancing the kingdom beyond my 4 walls. Is that possible for a full-time parent/ educator? And, if I can’t is that enough? My reach, my parenting platform seems insignificant when I watch friends trot off to places of higher learning, successful second careers outside the home or life changing missionary journeys.

flickr cc : seyed mostafa zamani

flickr cc : seyed mostafa zamani

And then I’ll have a day like today. Motherhood affirming days where everything clicks and my tank of mommy juice is full. My children laugh and play well together. At least one of them will say something profound or flat-out funny, letting me know – I’m raising good people. A few words will flash dance on paper before getting lost in my heart. I’ll wake up feet firmly planted in the ground of my motherhood because I’m not trying to separate my calling and passion. I’ll know – I’m where I belong. The soil is rich and roots me. And there’s time. For all of it.

I see the imprint of feet next to me and feel assured by women walking the same road. Their strength buoys my efforts. They may not offer to do my laundry but always, always breathe grace. I feel the melody of my story mingle with theirs. The God glimmer of his promise lies in the footprints I see ahead. He’ll walk this thing with us. We’re not alone. Our work matters. All of it.

Writing in community with The High Calling

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Posted in christianity, faith, life, motherhood, uncategorized - Tagged dreams, God, parenting, The High Calling, women, work

Mother’s Day Reflection {guest post by Renee Baron Donatich}

May 09, 2014 4 Comments ~ Written by Lisha Epperson

Renee and I met on a family day picnic for adoptive parents at Spence Chapin (an adoption agency in NYC). We’re Spence Mommies. Automatic sisters whether or not we ever clock in the hours one might imagine necessary to forge a bloodless bond. The shared experience of adoption ties us. Period. I asked Renee to write a piece for the Last Girl On the Hill series on motherhood and Mother’s Day after adoption. She offers a brave collection of words on the bittersweet challenge of finding and redefining oneself within the context of a personal journey. Reading her words made me remember the complex dance of reconciliation with God and ourselves. Renee shares her story. Listen.

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all photos :R.B.Donatich

When Lisha asked me to write about my first Mother’s Day after adoption, I eagerly agreed thinking of the charming anecdotes I could spin of a beautiful day with the babies I had always wanted. It’s funny how memory works though. When faced with the blank page, other memories eclipsed the ones I wanted to recall. I couldn’t remember much about the first Mother’s Day after my twins came home. I know it had to be pleasant: that my husband bought me flowers and there were phone calls from my friends and family. But I don’t remember the day as particularly special. What I can remember however, quite vividly, are the Mother’s Day before it; Mother’s Days where I was waiting, grieving, trying to put on a good face while family members struggled to say encouraging things, things I often took the wrong way. At first, I was consumed with my inability to have children biologically. Later, the anger seeped in when we did not quickly find a suitable match for adoption. I remember the waiting…the waiting….oh, the waiting.

There was more. My sons from my husband’s first marriage struggled with the absence of their biological mother, which compounded the issue. I knew that they saw me as a mother figure and loved me, but I also knew they yearned for her. Most of the time, we were happy forging ahead as a family. We created our own rites and rituals, but on Mother’s Day, I could tell they missed her. I felt like a fraud because I couldn’t make it better for them, and I was angry with her for relocating so far away. We just tried to make the best of what was clearly a complicated, emotionally-wrought day. I don’t know how we made it through those trying early years, but thankfully we did.

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By the time our babies did arrive, I had waited a very long six years. No one can sustain the amalgam of emotions accompanying infertility for that amount of time without coming to peace with it, even only nominally. In retrospect, I realize that I suffered from a rigid notion of what it meant to be a mother, and the only way to move forward was to challenge that notion and find an alternative way to think about motherhood.

In her inspiring 2009 TED talk, award-winning Nigerian novelist Chimimanda Ngozi Adichie notes that there is danger in the single story that keeps us away from seeing the realities of our and other people’s lives as they truly are; we see one thing — the “script” that society sets for us — and the power of that narrative casts a shadow over other, equally compelling experiences of the world. Despite witnessing many models of motherhood throughout my life, I always expected that mine would fit into the fairy-tale, cookie cutter mommy narrative.

When it didn’t, it took strength, faith, and prayers (not necessarily my own) to get to a place where I could recognize that holding on to that script had the potential to destroy me and my family. In the language of drug addiction, I had to “hit bottom” before I could move on to find my own story of motherhood wherein I could encourage my sons to resolve their issues with their biological mother and teach my twins to leave a space in their heart for theirs. In a space where there’s room for multiple narratives of motherhood, there is room for – no, there’s grace in — generosity of heart.

I had to learn that being myself, being my best self, was the only thing I needed to be a mother. I had to open my eyes and see that all around me there were other stories of mothering/motherhood. Here are just a few:

• The aunts, grandmothers, neighbors, and teachers, who babysit, feed, clothe, take in, and subsidize the children of their loved ones when those loved ones cannot do it by themselves.
• The mothers who love not because their children resemble someone in their family but because these children ARE.
• Fathers who are both mother and father to their children.
• The mothers who allow others to parent their children because they know they can’t.
The single story of motherhood gets a lot of attention on Mother’s Day, so I would like to salute the ones that don’t fit so easily into it – the ones, like me, who had to create another narrative.

20140510-051921.jpgHappy Mother’s Day!

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Posted in adoption, christianity, faith, infertility, last girl on the hill (blog series on fertility and faith), life, motherhood, parenting, uncategorized - Tagged Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Day, God, mother, mother's day, spence chapin, Ted talk

Motherhood is Hard Won {a guestpost by Marcy Hanson}

May 09, 2014 26 Comments ~ Written by Lisha Epperson

The Last Girl on the Hill series was a hit last month. For me, it was an answer to prayer. As my blog grew I knew I wanted a dedicated space for the treasured words of my fellow infertility warriors. As I invited women to share their stories God spoke, breathing fresh air on the heart of my vision. The Last Girl on the Hill series is the manifestation of a dream.

In tribute to all women, everywhere, and the various paths we take to find our way to the sacred calling of motherhood, I’m opening the space for a few special guest posts. Today, I’m blessed to share the words/work of my dear online buddy Marcy Hanson. Marcy is a spit-fire, go get it kind of girl. She’s filled through and through with the God kind of warrior heart. We met online through the shared experience of infertility and adoption and I got to hug her in real life at the Faith and Culture Writers Conference in March.  Marcy is the author of No Maybe Baby and is an advocate for policy change in foster care.  Show her some love in the comments and check out her blog here.

Happy Mothers’ Day!

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I have four children, but I’ve only been present for one birth. Now by present I don’t mean I wasn’t present, because mentally I was in my happy place – thanks to medication and good physicians. I mean present as in physically, mentally and emotionally present. My whole being. Only once. And I have four kids.

When I was a child I was under this impression that family came easy. I was the youngest of five kids. The surprise that followed three boys and a girl. By the time I was 8, my first niece was born. My family was big. It was loud and hugging and overflowing tables and mom hiding the M&Ms and chocolate chips. Family was Sunday afternoons at Echo Lake when summer slipped by like my dripping popsicle. Family was slow dinners by candle light and the big white Bible on Christmas Eve. Family was my mamma’s homemade bread and my daddy’s big work-worn hands. Family was mess-with-one-mess-with-all and always there. Family was easy.

Motherhood? Motherhood was not. I took fertility for granted.

When I walked down the isle at the tender age of 19, I thought the man with the crooked smile and I had the whole world ahead of us. In a way we did. But when it came to family, our family, the world would be cruel. We tried for eleven years to get pregnant. Eleven years of ovulation tests, hormone treatments and negative results. And we never got pregnant. But.

But I’m still the mother of four. Yes four. To say my road to motherhood was difficult is an understatement. But like all plans laid out by the father, it happened just and when it was supposed to. Looking back now, with hindsight at 20/20 and all, it really was expertly orchestrated. It all started with unemployment.

I had never had a difficult time getting a job. Not until we moved to Idaho and I was going to nursing school. Every single place I looked had just hired their perfect candidate and I was floundering for a job when I stumbled into one through school. We were doing our mental health rotation and our instructor took us to a residential treatment center for adolescents. I knew, deep down in my soul that I was supposed to work there. So I applied and was offered a job working in the girls’ home. Every girl that I worked with had two things in common: they had been or were in foster care, and they just wanted a family.

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When we moved to Montana and were finally settling down roots, we knew that there were so many kids out there like the girls I worked with. And we knew that we could meet their need: we could be a family. So we registered with our local social worker and began taking the classes to get licensed and finish our home study. Right off the bat our social worker told us of this little girl who would be perfect for us. She was a little older than what we had initially agreed on but we couldn’t say no. We had anticipated things to go quickly, but instead they moved like molasses. She went back and forth between two placements and we were told off and on that she needed a home and then that they had found a placement for her. This went on for nearly a year. During that time we submitted home study after home study for different kids.

One social worker didn’t think Montana would be a good place for the little boy she had as he was from Texas and didn’t we get snow? For other children we made it to the semi and final cuts, only to be dismissed for another family. Over and over again we were turned down. It was heartbreaking. And every now and then we’d hear about that little girl. Finally it was decided that the state was going to find a permanent placement for her other than where she had been and we were asked once again if we were still interested. About a month later we got the news: we were going to be parents! Our first born would come to us after a series of small meetings at the tender age of 7.

It was two years and a few more biological and adoption heartbreaks later when we took in our twins. They had just turned three and their battle was long fought. Though technically they were placed with us through foster care, they were not a typical case. With them, we started from scratch. We tracked down birth parents, attended placement meetings and won battles with the county attorney before they finally took our last name.

A year after their adoption was finalized we officially stopped trying to get pregnant. My body and my emotions were strained and beaten from the constant hope and let down. At 31 years old, they wheeled me into the surgical theater and I said goodbye to ever carrying my own child. As difficult as it was, I knew deep down that it was the right decision. That final step taken, my hubby and I thought we were done. We had moved to Washington and weren’t interested in doing foster care again, and private adoptions had never been in the cards. So we settled in to our life. Three kids was more than we had ever thought we would have. As for never having a baby? Well, some things just aren’t meant to be.

Nine months after my surgery I received a text from a friend, asking if we still wanted a baby. Puzzled, we asked what she meant and were shocked to find out that she knew of a situation in which a mother was not going to be able to keep her baby and might be interested in a private adoption. My hubby and I cautiously discussed it. Could we manage it? What if it didn’t work? Was it worth the risk? We decided it was and a few weeks later I met with my friend and the mother.

Initially we didn’t think it would really work. We weren’t sure that she would follow through, but we took the necessary steps on our end. We underwent another home study and retained a lawyer. I scheduled her doctor’s appointments and she wouldn’t show. Then one day, she did! And the most amazing thing happened: I got to hear the baby’s heartbeat, and was present for the ultrasound. Both were things I had given up on ever experiencing. The night he was born, I was there. I cut the cord and introduced my husband and our children to the newest member of our family-a beautiful baby boy.

motherhood

so much to love : motherhood

The funny thing is that my hubby and I always said we wanted four children. We just never anticipated how we would get them. But if there is one thing I have learned through this process it is this: family doesn’t always come to you how you expect it, but it always arrives exactly according to plan.

this post appears as part of the Last Girl on the Hill series on fertility and faith

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Posted in adoption, christianity, faith, infertility, last girl on the hill (blog series on fertility and faith), life, parenting, uncategorized - Tagged #LastGirlOnTheHill, family, fertility, foster care, Last Girl on the Hill, Montana, mother's day, Motherhood

When You Don’t Have Children {guest post by Dawn Hewitt for #NIAW}

Apr 22, 2014 11 Comments ~ Written by Lisha Epperson

Dawn and I have been friends for years. Cut from the same cloth, we share a love for fashion, art, nutrition and health. We have similar reproductive histories and bonded over that in late night conversations and long walks in the city.  We love God and clapped alongside each other on countless Sundays. She moved to Florida a few years ago and I miss her quirky sense of humor.  We reconnected on-line a year ago when we both started blogs. Hers is the opinion I look for when I doubt my words. She’s coached me through my most popular posts.  I’m honored to host her during National Infertility Awareness Week ( #NIAW ).  Today Dawn tells it.  And I promise, you’re going to want to meet and hug her after reading.  Show her some warrior love in the comments and get to know her better on her blog Tall Girl – Late Bloom

flickr cc : d. sharon pruitt

flickr cc : d. sharon pruitt

I love children and most kids that I know, love me. I love the way babies pull my hair and my earrings and pinch the mole on my face, how they laugh with their whole bodies. The way toddlers document their experiences with crayons and paper and try to do everything the adults around them do. They really do make my heart melt.

On the other hand I’m blessed because when I’m done playing with them I get to give them back to mommy and daddy and go home to a quiet house, go on vacation when I want, stay out late, whatever it may be, I only answer to myself.

I get to be the cool aunt, known for having the gift of extreme silliness. When one of my nephews was seven and was having a rough day, I took him in my lap and hugged and tickled him until he couldn’t help giggling. He said to me “Aunt Dawn you should have kids cause you sooo… nice and you know how to make kids feel better!!” I was struck by the sweetness of his words but I rationalized that I would rather not take the chance… It was too dangerous for me to be in charge of an actual human being.

No, other people had children; I am still trying to raise myself. I’m constantly asked, almost every day, why I don’t have children. I find that question very confusing, after all it’s not as if you can just create the perfect father out of thin air, outside of that who would I be having this baby with? Even if I wanted a baby… if there are no decent, single, father-material men anywhere in sight. I have no idea how to remedy that situation. I dated two guys one after the other, both of whom wanted me to have their babies, but neither of them wanted to call me their girlfriend, they both asked why I wanted to label the relationship. Needless to say neither one of these blossomed into anything serious.

When I did get married my husband also begged me to have a baby, good thing I never got pregnant, our marriage only lasted 2 years. I’m in my mid-forties and I’ve had serious issues with reproductive health and I haven’t yet been involved with a man who was actually father material.

But I have to admit, within the last few months I have felt like something is missing in my life. I try to look into the future and it seems very lonely, no husband or children… While I believe it’s possible I might meet someone great and get married again, I don’t see myself being able to give birth simply because of my age.

flickr cc : d. sharon pruitt

flickr cc : d. sharon pruitt

That thought doesn’t really upset me, what I do find disturbing is that due to the type of childhood that I had, I never saw myself as a mother. I wonder sometimes if that made me approach life in such a way that resulted in me not even considering having children.

I was five years old when I decided that not every person capable of giving birth should have children. My mother was days away from giving birth to my baby brother when her and my father started one of their fights, he quickly used his size against her, as usual, throwing her to the floor and kicking her in the belly over and over again, shouting that he had told her he didn’t want any more kids.

My sister and I tried to make him stop to no avail, we were too little. I recall the cold perspiration which made my clothes stick to me; I worried that the neighbors would be calling the cops any minute now and wondered if this time my father would actually get arrested and thought about how violent my mom could be to us kids after my dad beat her up. I knew this was no life for a kid, I was sick of being scared.

A few minutes later my father left, the loud slamming of the door made me jump. My mother slowly got up, brushed herself off and limped into the kitchen. For the rest of the day my mind asked itself “why him?” As in, of all the men in the world, why did she choose to marry and keep having babies for him? It puzzled me, taxed my brain.

I made a childish promise to myself… that would never be me. Never, ever, ever.

No marriage, no babies, I would be free as soon as I got old enough to leave home. When my dad got home later, into the awkward silence he put on one of his Bob Marley records and played “No Woman No Cry.” I found his coded apology predictable, disgusting and pathetic.

As I grew I would often think that my mother and my father should be ashamed for bringing children into the unstable environment their passions and deficiencies had created. As for my mom, she was more concerned with how we looked to the outside world, beautiful home, ribbons in our hair. This is why as I grew up I became more and more invisible, transparent, like a ghost, staying under the radar made it easier to exist in such a negative environment.

Whenever I tried to get something out of life I was shot down.

Like when I was 14 and my guidance counselor asked me to be in a Miss Teen pageant, I was so thrilled, I took the form home to my mother to sign, she read it over quickly and with a smirk said “I’m not signing this… you’re not even pretty Dawn, you’ll just get your feelings hurt…” The crisp white paper made a sound like a zipper as she folded it in half then handed it back to me. Again I thought that if there was the slightest chance I would ever treat a child of mine that way… I would rather not have any. After all, don’t people parent the way they were parented, wouldn’t the tendency for cruelty and violence be baked into my character despite my best efforts?

I felt that the small chance I had of ever being a good mother was far outweighed by my conditioning and I felt that no child, including me, deserved to be parented by someone who’s understanding of children was limited to the circumstance of their own awful childhood.

flickr cc : d. sharon pruitt

flickr cc : d. sharon pruitt

But time has marched on and changed like a river imperceptibly re-routing itself. It’s been a hard conclusion to reach… but as bad as things were, I guess my parents did the best they could, certainly better than their parents. Through the years have met many people who have been through far worse things and still turned out to be fantastic parents. Maybe if I had my own children I could have been better than mine were…

Ultimately I feel ready to face the fact that even though my circumstances are not perfect… that I can adopt one day and give a loving and safe home to a deserving child of which there are too many in this world. If I have the pleasure, I will promise to be all about the business of helping them chase and attain their dreams.

Anything is possible.

a post for Last Girl On The Hill : a blog series on fertility and faith

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Posted in adoption, christianity, faith, infertility, motherhood, relationships, uncategorized - Tagged #NIAW, aunt, blog, child-free, childhood, father, Life, mother, national infertility awareness week

Going There:: Little Girl Blue {a guest post}

Mar 23, 2014 18 Comments ~ Written by Lisha Epperson
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photo: Flickr CC – cliff1066

 

Going there goes both ways and I have a story to tell you…about racism and hate. How it catapults inside itself, deftly back-tracking yet consuming everything in its path. Hate ricochets. We bring its sweeping evil encounters with us…it makes contact with everything we do, even things we love. We bring hate…home.

Home. My father ruled ours. His presence, felt all the more powerful in his absence. I loved him as a child and grew to respect him as an adult, but he taught me things I shouldn’t have learned. Things he’d learned from trusted leaders, father figures, men crafting their way through a relationship with the Almighty…hiding behind one man’s version of Islam. They didn’t understand. Men who felt the only response to a black and white world was to prepare for battle. He was…still green. I don’t blame him. But as a parent, he made the mistake of teaching hate. Hate he poured out on the children he sired as patriarch of 3 families.

I wrote this piece after reading an anonymous post in Deidras’ ” Going There ” series. In it, the writer spoke of seeds of racism, sown in a family. I cried. I grew up in a family that responded to this type of hate with it’s own brand of evil. The reciprocal effect of hate in response to hate is powerful. Praise God for love.

Read the rest here.

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Posted in christianity, faith, Guest Post, life, memoir, relationships, uncategorized - Tagged father, Going There, hate, home

For the Mama Of Many :: Rethinking Play

Mar 06, 2014 3 Comments ~ Written by Lisha Epperson
play 20140306-020721.jpg

It’s time to PLAY!

Rethinking Play

Jumping out of my lap after a round of loving, my son sped down the hall lightning fast. He didn’t expect me to chase him. With the younger two, I’ve become that mommy. I’m good for the love and hugs – that’s easy. What I don’t want to do – is the work of play.

There’s a line between motherhood and me….and I won’t cross it. But we face off with each other a lot lately…toe-to-toe, resistant…defiant. I feel her eyes narrow, when hands-on-hips she shakes a finger….”You’re half-stepping lady.” Her hollow comments follow me like a toddler after a snack. Between my doing and dreaming she’s there to point a finger or roll an eye. She with the yard stick. Ever comparing, always judging. Because I have two sets of children and I haven’t treated them the same.

Today I’m sharing my thoughts on play and my life as a mama of many at The High Calling. What a joy to be part of this community. You can read the rest of the post here.

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Posted in christianity, faith, Guest Post, life, motherhood, parenting, uncategorized - Tagged love, mama, play, The High Calling, work
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lisha epperson

lisha epperson

recipient of grace, lover of family, woman of God. Christian, homeschooling mama of 5, wife of 1. believer in miracles and the promise of redemption. passionate about parenting, adoption, women, nutrition, dance, fashion. a lover of words.....

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