One way that God is healing these wounds is that I am now a Mommy. We have two littles in our care...for now or forever, they will always be my firsts. The ones who made me a Mommy. They have been here two months now, and the time has flown.
I've told them, from the beginning, that I've wanted to be a Mommy for a long, long time, and that I am so happy that they are here. Now, they tell me, "Mommy, I'm so happy you are here." Amazing.
When they first came, they called us by our first names...sometimes, when they could remember. After a few days, I told them that they could call us Mommy and Daddy, if they wanted. And that afternoon, Little Boy told Sean, "My mommy said I could (do whatever I told him that he could do)." And now, we are Mommy and Daddy, no question.
We talk about how lucky they are to have three mommys and three daddys. It's not all that strange, I have two daddys. Although, I was always made to feel like I had to choose one or the other...actually, even now I believe that both of my dads want me to choose them and forget the other. I really don't see why any child should have to choose. More parents means more love, right?
Suddenly going from being a family of two adults for 13 years, and suddenly adding two (slightly unruly) preschoolers has been challenging to say the least. I didn't grow them in my tummy. I didn't go through labor and delivery. But, I'm going through my own labor now...as I learn to put into practice the knowledge that I've learned (and advice that I've dispensed to my clients' families), as I learn to share myself and my time, as I learn who these two little people are. Ann Voskamp's letter to Princess Kate really spoke to my heart today.
"So — what you’re doing right now in labor and delivery, what they teach you in those childbirth classes? Yeah — Breathe. It’s how life works. It’s the way beauty is always born —I didn't give birth to my littles, but I do need to remember to breathe. I am laboring....and I am delivering...repeatedly and constantly.
Breathe in: Lord, I receive what you give.
Breathe out: Lord, I give thanks for what you give.
That’s it right there.
That’s the prayer for people who can’t remember to breathe, the prayer for when you think you might hyperventilate, the prayer when you can’t remember what comes next — just these 7-8 syllables that perfectly settle into the rhythm of breathing.
It’s the syllables of sanctuary, a surrender to His sovereignty.
It’s the only cycle of sanity:
Breathe in: Lord, I receive what you give.
Breathe out: Lord, I give thanks for what you give."