That first Thanksgiving was hard, so hard that when I think
about it I still feel the pain that flowed through my weary body. I remember
how I felt that first Thanksgiving, achingly aware that my body was empty.
Empty of a baby that I wanted so badly. Empty of the hope of a baby any time
soon. I was surrounded by pregnancy in every sphere of my life, and I could
barely choke out the words “I’m thankful” when we all shared our Thanksgiving
joy around the dinner table. It felt like a lie. I didn’t know how to be
thankful when living felt like death and tears came too easily for my comfort.
Little did I know it would take two more years before I
would know the joy of pregnancy again.
I remember how I felt that second Thanksgiving. When
treatment was inevitable and I had no assurance I would ever hold a baby in my
arms this side of heaven. I spent my holiday battling hot flashes and mood
swings in a drug induced menopause all in an attempt to get my body to do what
I felt in my heart it was supposed to do—carry and sustain a baby. It was a
little easier to say the words “I’m thankful” that Thanksgiving. I had seen God
work. I could see, though dimly, that through the dark and heavy clouds of loss
and infertility, God was doing something in my sad heart. I just didn’t know
what it was yet.
I remember the fourth Thanksgiving, smack in the middle of
the baby years with twins, spending many hours pumping and feeding and going to
the doctor and therapy. I wondered why after all my longing for a baby God
would give me such difficulty with their lives. I wanted ease, not discomfort.
I wanted simplicity, not complication. I was so overwhelmingly thankful for
every ounce of them, yet I struggled with my circumstances that looked
different than I anticipated. Yet still, God was doing something.
Here I am on the sixth Thanksgiving. Lord willing, farther
along than I was in the beginning. Still waiting for prayers to be answered.
Still battling discontentment with the life I have been given with its mundane
struggles, sin, and sorrow, yet daily reminded of the rock solid truth that God
is a good and faithful God to his people. He doesn’t leave us. He gives us only
good things, even if our definition of good is different. This Thanksgiving, I
feel like I am coming to terms with the reality of life in a broken world and I
am thankful for it in all its complexity.
I’ve had Thanksgivings of want and Thanksgivings of plenty,
Thanksgivings of rebellion and Thanksgivings of restoration. It’s easier to say
“I’m thankful” than it was in the beginning, but not because I got what I
wanted. These children give me much to be thankful for, yes. But it is more
than that. I’m thankful that in my darkness and cynicism and unbelief God did
not forsake me. I’m thankful that when I wrestled through the lot he was giving
me he still pointed me upward and worked faith into my brittle heart. I’m
thankful for years of sorrow and loss, because in the loss of what was most
precious to me God was found to be infinitely better than any earthly thing.
I’ve learned in the wanting that God shows up, that he can be trusted, and that
even when the clouds hang low a break in them is coming.
So I’m thankful this Thanksgiving. As I kiss my boys
goodnight and tuck them in bed, I’m so very thankful that they are here with
me. I’m thankful for their boundless energy and middle of the night cuddles.
I’m thankful for the life they bring to our home that was once so strikingly
empty and quiet. But I’m equally thankful that God was here with me as he
taught me how to wait on his timetable.
3 comments:
Amen! God is so faithful in all circumstances. Thank you LORD!
Thanks so much for sharing this perspective, Courtney. May we keep delighting in His gospel grace.
Thank you so much for sharing your viewpoint. I support you. My prayers are with you.
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