Posts tagged Perspective
THE WAGES OF GRIEF

We had just finished speaking at our son’s funeral and my little boy’s body was rolled to the vehicle that would lead us on the longest, slowest, most painful drive of our lives. 

It had only been an hour since I saw my son and the funeral director closed the casket, never to be reopened again. I longed so deeply to rescue my tired son from the cold.

There were so many layers to grief this day. Grief weighed heavy because I lost my son, who was in so many ways my best little friend. My grief was compounded because my wife, who has the most gentle and tenderhearted soul I have ever known, ached in ways I cannot comprehend. I grieved for her … for a mother’s love is unique … a mother’s love is deeper than deep. However much I was pained by the death of our son, I know this good mother ached infinitely more. I also grieved for my fallen son, who wanted so much to live but whose life was cut short. I grieved for my other children who, confused and full of sorrow, lost a dear brother they adored. 

As I looked at my wife, she seemed to stare into the horizon as if to wonder how life could possibly continue. In my heart, I felt that way, too. Ethan stood stoic, peering into the back of the hearse at his younger brother, his best friend, trying to make sense of loss. 

If ever I was tempted to feel like an utter failure, this day only amplified that. The days and months ahead would grow dark with grief. The pitch of night would, by comparison, seem light. 

All the provincial things I thought weighed heavy on my shoulders suddenly seemed light as a feather. Crushed by the gravity of grief, I found myself stumbling over pebbles and gasping for breath. There were days that would follow I even wished for death.

Grief? Grief is just a flimsy word to describe the unimaginable. The indescribable. Grief is a pebble of a word, a grain of sand, even … hewn from the mighty Everest of sorrow. It points to a pain that simply defies words. 

Ever since we lost little Mitch I have spent a great deal of time contemplating the wages of grief. At first, it felt like the wages of grief were only hopelessness and deep, dark sorrow. One can’t help but ask themselves “why my child?”, “why not me instead?”, “why in the first place?” The question I hear most often is “Why would a loving Father allow us to hurt so much?” I suppose we may never know (at least in this life) why some are required to suffer greatly while others are not. One thing I do know, for certain, is our Father loves us, and He loves us a whole lot. I know because I have felt it all along our journey, even deep in my wilderness of grief. In the darkest corners of my soul, He has offered me hope and peace.

The wages of grief are not always easy to see – especially when our vision is smeared by tears, pain and misery. Though painful beyond belief, grief is teaching me things I would have never learned in comfort and relief. Painfully, it is shaping me, and with heaven’s help it is not breaking me. And with each tear I shed, I am beginning to see things differently.

I still wrestle with grief every single day, but I am learning to carry my sorrows in a different way. Deep in the wilderness of grief I may be tempted to feel forsaken and alone … but when I quiet my soul and listen, I hear my Father and my little son leading me home. 

Leading me home.

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SEEING THINGS DIFFERENTLY

We didn't know it, but this was Mitchell’s last summer. As much as he enjoyed giant roller coasters, Mitch sometimes opted for the smaller ones so he could rest a little. Because generalized muscle weakness was settling in, riding the bigger coasters was hard for him. And, whenever he went on a big one, I would sit next to him, reach over and hold his head steady and do for him what his neck muscles no longer could. Mitch loved the thrill of rides.

On this occasion, Mitch and his brother Ethan were taking a ride on a much smaller roller coaster. I sat outside the perimeter and took photos with my larger lens. Though I was a distance away, it was almost as though I were sitting next to them. I have a bunch of photos from this series, each photo revealing different expressions of thrill, laughter, and surprise. 

With a rush of wind, the caterpillar shaped ride whipped by me at lightning speed – offering brief relief from the heat of the summer sun. Each time they passed where I was standing Mitch would make very deliberate eye contact with me and smile. I would always smile back as though to say, “I love you, son.” 

On this particular ride, I asked Mitch why he and Ethan closed their eyes. Mitch said he wanted to know if the ride would be different if he couldn't see. He said with great enthusiasm, “It worked! It was so fun. It was like a totally different ride.”

I love this photo on so many levels. I see two young brothers that loved each other with all of their hearts. Neither of them were peeking, but instead honorably doing what they agreed to do: experience the ride without sight. How easy it would have been to cheat and crack their eyes open a little, but as far as I can tell, they didn't. And what I know of these boys, they wouldn't. That is just like them: honest and true, through and through.

I am sure their memory of this experience may have faded quickly from their young minds, but I haven’t forgotten this moment. And at the time, I couldn't stop thinking about it. I thought to myself, “Perhaps little Mitch was on to something. How often do I go through life relying solely on the things that are plain to see? Perhaps, when I do, I’m cheating myself from life’s deeper mysteries.” I’ve always tried to look at life through spiritual eyes, but I’m still human and sometimes I forget.

This much I do know … when I look at my life with mortal eyes, I see sorrow and loss much differently … painfully. But when I close my lids, and listen with my soul to that quiet, heavenly bid, I know there’s more to life that I can possibly see. I am grateful for a loving Father who patiently waits as I learn to see things differently.

Who would have thought, two young boys on a rickety roller coaster ride would accidentally teach me something about seeing with my spiritual eyes? 

I am human. I am still blind. But more and more, I’m learning to see with my spiritual mind.

One day, when I truly have eyes to see, my heart won’t carry that constant ache that hurts so terribly. In fact, my mind and heart will see things so differently. For, all my pain will have been traded for spiritual gain. Then, with tears in my eyes, I will see my boy so differently. I was never really teaching him, you see, for he was teaching me.

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FOREVER AND MORE

Last night we went to Primary Children’s Hospital to visit a young girl who is battling cancer. She was one of Mitchell’s classmates the year he died and held a special place in our son’s heart because she was always so kind to him. 

Mitch often made references to Addie. I never met her, but I knew of her and how much Mitch appreciated her friendship. Natalie tells me that when she would pick Mitch up from school he would often talk about her and sometimes point out the window of the car and say "Look mom there's Addie, she played with me today during recess." Another evidence that the little things are indeed the big things. It was never lost on Mitch that she could have ran off with the healthy kids and left him behind pursuing any number of social agendas. Yet, she often chose to sacrifice regular play time to be with Mitch instead. I don't know if this young woman realizes what a blessing she was to our son. 

Mitch loved Addie; and by the sound of her voice and the things she said, she really loved him. Two childhood friends who taught each other what it means to be love and serve. I wish I could have been a fly on the wall when Mitch was alive so that I might have seen these two friends play outside during recess or giggle at a game of UNO when it was cold outside. My eyes well up with tears when I think about the tender mercy she was to our little boy.

Last year I posted an entry entitled “Nightfall” which was an account of the moment we realized Mitch had passed away. I described the pain and sorrow of losing our son and how the world was especially dark. I described how it wasn't until our spiritual eyes adjusted to the darkness, which darkness was beyond pitch, that we truly began to see. Only in the darkness did we begin to see the stars … little flecks of light, tender mercies that were given to our family from a loving Father. It didn't take long before we began to see the connections between these tender mercies and they began to serve as Heavenly constellations to guide our way. Evidence we are not alone, nor are we forsaken. I made a short video with an excerpt from that entry: vimeo.com/81861739

Along this journey of grief and darkness, I have also discovered the more we look the more we can see. Isn't that the point of anything we're meant to search out and study? Our eyes adjust, our mind finally understands and our souls begin to learn things far beyond the scope of man. 

So when I think of this sweet girl and what she did for our little boy, I see an exceedingly bright star. I see a tender mercy from a loving Father, an evidence He was never very far. That heavenly current of which I spoke a few weeks ago brought these two children together so they could learn to love and grow. For that, I am eternally grateful.

Anymore, I don't know that I know much about goodness or courage. Because when I see these young people face what I only witnessed as a spectator; to see them face death and hardship with such grace and courage, I am humbled to my core. I see what I want to become, and so much more. 

I don't know how to gather the words to describe how I felt as we left the hospital last night. My heart was overflowing with gratitude and a deep sense all is well. All is well.

To Addie, thank you for loving Mitch and lifting his little heart. I think I see it now … perhaps you were meant to know each other from the very start. 

Forever and more, dear Addie, you have our grateful hearts.

You can visit her page here: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Team-Addie-gofightwin/720147784689212

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THE OPPOSITE IS TRUE

When Mitch called out to me at the hospital and asked if I would cuddle with him my heart melted. As father and son, we cuddled all the time, but this time was different because I knew his heart was failing and I didn’t know if it would be our last. My sweet wife took a photo of us with her iPhone as I handed Mitch a teddy bear she gave him. My little boy smiled as I kissed his forehead and softly hugged him. I wouldn't have traded that moment with Mitch for all the money in the world. 

At this moment Mitch wasn't aware his life was at its end. That was a burden we would quietly carry for a few more weeks so Mitch could live as normal a life as possible. To our dismay, we couldn't protect him from the inevitable, but we could protect him from worry and fear – and in this instance, my wife and I felt that was best for Mitch. We eventually told him, but we wanted him to be happy for just a little while longer. That was our gift to him. 

In the coming weeks we began to witness the miracle of the afterlife – that our son was being spiritually prepared for his own transition. I will write of those experiences another time – but there is no doubt there is more to mortality than we can see with our mortal eyes. So much more.

Even still, I find myself wrestling with grief in the most unexpected ways. Just this morning I awoke at 4:30 in a sheer panic, wanting to save my son. When I realized he was gone and I couldn't save him, I wept. I used to wake up every morning in a heart-pounding panic … thankfully those mornings are less frequent. But they still happen, and when they do, they are soul crushing. I dislike those mornings because I have to relive the shock and horror of my son’s death as if it just happened. 

Just a few days ago Herriman City experienced some flooding and I was told it affected part of the cemetery. That evening, as I left work, I drove to the cemetery as quickly as I could, worried about how the flood affected Mitch. I couldn't get there fast enough and wanted to help my boy. I knew he wasn't there – but in my heart I wanted him to be. I was grateful his spot wasn't affected, but my heart went out to others who were. Even in death, I yearn to protect my son and am pained that I cannot.

Although I want so badly to protect my son, sometimes, when my soul is quiet and I’m listening with my heart, I realize the opposite is true … that now Mitch is protecting me.

One day, in what feels an eternity from now, I will see my little boy again. And I will weep. I will also realize that he is no longer a child – that, in fact, the opposite is true: the soul of my little boy is much older than I ever knew.

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