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My Overthinking

Philly Area mom, Life forever changed by adoption

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love starts here

5.7.14

loveshartsherechina

He’s just about packed. One suitcase is full of clothes. One is full of all sorts of random supplies and gifts ranging from chocolate and freeze dried astronaut ice cream to a pair of overalls and a straw hat (that both fit him, mind you) and about 40 copies of If You Give a Mouse a Cookie. I wonder what airport security will think when that bag is scanned.

The family will pile into the minivan with those bags ever so slightly under the weight limit tomorrow at 7am. We’ll drive about 45 minutes to the airport where we’ll point out some big planes in the sky to the kids, talk about where they are heading, remind them all again where Daddy is going and why, and then we’ll say goodbye for 2 weeks.

Without even turning off the engine, we’ll hug and smile. I know I’ll tear up because that’s sorta my M.O. We’ll probably roll down the windows as we pull away so the kids can yell out one more goodbye to Daddy and all the other people entering that terminal at 8am. Then, we’ll go back the exact way we came, back to our day, to school, to goldfish crackers, to the playground, to our routine.

While Mark is there on the other side of the world, leading a team of 12 to a university, I’ll be in two places in one time. I’ll be home going to softball games, helping with homework, and eating ice cream (yes, I bought 5 containers of ice cream for our main food source just to start us out…), but I’ll be there too.

We may have met at a camp in Glen Spey, NY in August 1997 and declared our love for each other shortly thereafter. But, China? It’s where we fell in love again. It was there that we fell in love with a people and a place and each other and His call in our lives all over again. Some people’s second homes are at the shore; our second home is across the globe. We have our favorite restaurants complete with names we’ve made up to identify them since we cannot read or say their actual names. We have our favorite snacks and even specific clothes that always seem to go there with us. And, one day, who knows when, maybe we’ll travel there together at the same time again.

For now, it’s his turn. His turn to go work hard, love well, lead others to do the same, and play a lot of charades.

 

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Posted by Kelly the Overthinker
Filed Under: China, Mark, posts I can't really tag

For Pastors on Mother’s Day…

5.6.14

for pastor's on mother's dayThis Sunday is Mother’s Day. I know you know that already. It’s been on your calendar all year.

Moms are going to fill your pews this Sunday wearing pretty dresses. Some will have been served breakfast in bed. Some will have received bouquets of flowers already that morning. Some will be looking forward to children coming home that day to take them out for lunch. Some will be anticipating phone calls, hugs, kisses, crayon drawings, and homemade cards.

But, Mother’s Day isn’t always that pretty.

There will be women sitting before you this Sunday who are aching to become mothers. Some of those women are struggling to make it day-by-day as they endure infertility treatment. Some of those women are single and long to be married and wonder if they will ever have the joy of being a mother.

There will be some women sitting before you this Sunday who are mothers but not parents, women who have placed children in other families to be raised by other mothers. They may not look or feel like mothers; they may struggle to define who they are.

There will be some women sitting before you this Sunday who were mothers for a short time and didn’t consider themselves that at all, women who ended their pregnancies and motherhood through an abortion and now wonder what life would have been like had they made another choice and chosen life for their child.

There will be some women sitting before you this Sunday who are broken mothers, mothers whose relationships with their children are strained at best, mothers who haven’t spoken to their grown children in months or even years, mothers whose children are in rehab or prison or who knows where.

There will be some mothers sitting before you this Sunday who are divorced from their children’s father and who are tired, so very tired, whose little ones may not even know it’s Mother’s Day at all.

There will be people sitting before you this Sunday who have lost their mothers and people who still have their mothers but have been hurt by them.

And, all those people? They’ve had Mother’s Day on their calendars all year too. But, they aren’t coming to church dressed in their prettiest clothes ready to stand to be recognized. Instead, they wonder if they should come at all. Some are ashamed. Some are resentful. Some are full of grief. Some are angry at the mothers around them, you for pointing them out, and God Himself. Some are simply sad and have already put tissues in their purses in anticipation of the day.

The ones coming to church in their best with smiles on their faces really don’t need to stand for recognition or be publicly thanked. They’ll get all that elsewhere. It’s the others who need you this Sunday. Speak for them.

To the women who are celebrating this Mother’s Day as mothers for the first time, know that we celebrate with you. 

To the women who serve day in and day out to little ones, cleaning noses and bottoms and sippy cups and car seats, know that we applaud you and support you.

To the women who work outside the home to provide for their families, know that we honor you for all that you carry.

To the women who have been celebrated by their families already today or will be later today, know that we take joy in that with you.

To the women who are not yet mothers and who long to be, whose hearts are heavy with that desire today, know that we walk with you through whatever God calls you to today and for days to come.

To the women who wonder what life would be like if they were mothering now the child who could have been theirs, know that we want to hold your hand and encourage you.

To the women who are separated relationally with painful distance between you and your children, know that we hurt with you and pray for reconciliation and trust for you that there is hope for just that.

To the women who are mothers here who haven’t had the recognition from their children and feel forgotten, know that we remember you.

To those who have been hurt by their mothers in some way, who find this day a painful reminder of that hurt, know that we acknowledge your pain and want to offer hope for restoration to you.

To those who are watching their mothers grow older and change or who are grieving the loss of their mothers, know that we grieve with you and pray for comfort for you.

It’s a big day—Mother’s Day. It’s your challenge…privilege…to communicate God’s love to everyone in your church this Sunday as is your call every Sunday. As you do that, HE will meet each one just where they are and speak the words they need to hear.

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Posted by Kelly the Overthinker
Filed Under: parenthood, words about faith

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