It's the first really warm day of spring. Warm as in you can wear shorts and feel the sun warming your skin causing your muscles to feel five years younger. The type of warmth where the grass lets off it's fragrance and trees blossom and life feels like it slows down for a bit and love fills the air and tiny little musicians sing sweet music in your ears.
I love the first days of Spring. These days feel like a recharge to my winter weathered soul. The cold, dark glum of January to mid-March just sucks the life out of me. I want to soak up all of today, so today I sit on a back porch, listening to the sounds of the world around me, smelling the aroma of some tree's white blossom, what it is I don't know, it's a tree with flowers, white flowers to be exact, white flowers that smell awesome, that's all I got.
Over my right shoulder I can see cop lights giving someone a speeding ticket and to my left the glow of a house that has started to sleep.
But I write not because the love of spring compiles emotions to burst forth into text and type but because in the midst of beautiful moments life can just suck. I'm not talking about little disappointments that in ten minutes you laugh about, I'm talking about questions that rattle your bones and questions your foundations and introduce you to regret, fear, sorrow, shame, and a host of other emotions that are nasty and cruel.
See, yesterday our son turned one, ONE, he also took his first three step shuffle. The weekend was filled celebrating his life, the joy he brings to the world with his smiles, giggle, and eye popping screams. We celebrated Zion and it was good, really good. Part of what made it so good was my family traveled to celebrate with us. My sister and her family traveled, as well as my Mom and Dad. Our family is rare in that we actually love and like each other, so traveling to be together, especially for weekends like this is normal for us. But what makes this trip so extraordinary this year is that it was also made by my Dad.
Dad this summer received a new lease and leash on life. After being diagnosed with a terminal lung disease he was given a new lease on life with a double lung transplant, but this gift of life also came with a leash on life. Dad's list of do's and don't would make an Olympic athletic stutter. The dietary restrictions, life restrictions, visitation restrictions, pet restrictions, etc are life altering to say the least but without them post-transplant life would be short lived. This is a necessary "new normal" for my family.
So with this "new normal" permission to travel from the medical experts 12 hours to our Son's birthday party was quite the big deal.
We relished our time together this weekend. We laughed, shared stories, smiled, played, ate, and simply enjoyed being a family and it was wonderful!
Yesterday Mom and Dad loaded up after a birthday breakfast, drove south and Pearl and I drove to work. We thought that was it, life back to normal. We worked, took walks as a family, connected with local friends and got back to doing what we do.
But tonight as Zion slept and Pearl and I played board games one call raised fears, questions and doubts about the unknown.
The call was from my sister and went something to the effect of, "Matt, have you talked to mom" No, "Well, dad is sick, he's had a massive headache all day and thrown up at least 30 times. The doctors want him in the ER right now for a spinal tap to check for meningitis. Mom's scared, crying, and trying to get him there. I'm headed to the ER to meet her. We'll keep you posted. Gotta go."
And like that one call, a couple of sentences, and a peaceful evening turned into a personal hell of questions.
Before the phone clicked I had questioned
- is this the last time Zion will meet his Papa?
- did we push him too hard to be a part of the party?
- If he dies can I forgive myself for not being there?
- is this all my fault?
And the questions flooded. I felt I needed to become emotional, not because I wanted to be, but because that was what I thought was expected of me.
But tears did not come at first but the questions rolled and raged stronger and I could feel them connecting to heart strings and tear ducts causing emotions to grow, I knew it was only moments before I would lose it.
Lose it.
But, Why?
What was causing these emotions? What was I responding to?
I realized that all I knew, and all that I know as of writing these words is that Dad is sick.
Is being sick as a transplant survivor bad, yes. Could this cause bad things to happen, yes.
But are those bad things realty now, NO.
No, these are not reality now.
What does reality now expect of me right now?
To be honest, I don't know?
But I think being honest is best.
I friend recently said, "when life is foggy and you don't know what's going on, simply stand on the ground you've got."
The words "Stand on the ground you've got" are now echoing in my ears.
We all have our own version of ER trips, unknowns answers, budget fears, job insecurities, relational strains, anxiety around raising our child, and the ever present big-bad-crazy-scary-unknown-freakin-future! All of these are amazing stress and fear catalyst but they often are not the ground we've been given to stand on. Their power and fear comes not from a current reality but from the crushing weight of the unknown future, a future that we do not hold, nor control.
So, as we worry about fears of tomorrow's budget numbers, we must stand on the current ground we've got.
As we question job roles and security, we must stand on the ground we've got.
As we question relationships and the strength they still have to stand the pressure of life, we must stand on the ground we've got.
As we wrestle with anxieties of raising a child, we must stand on the ground we've got.
As we look the the-big-bad-crazy-scary-unknown-freakin-future in the face with all of it's unknowns and fears, we must stand on the ground we've got.
So tonight as I eagerly wait for news from a doctor 700 miles away, I push off all the questions I do not have to yet answer and I fight to stand on the ground I've got.
Our lives are each different but our emotions are not. May we each show our faith and courage and choose to stand on the ground we've got.
May we answer the questions that actually come, make the choices that actually must be made, and carry the weight of life that actually is reality. May we stand on the ground we've got, with the life we've got, and not jump foolishly into the unknown reality of what has yet been revealed.
May we choose to stand on the ground we've got.
PS - 15 minutes after posting this, I received a text ruling out bleeding on the the brain and Meningitis. They are now looking at treating him for a nasty virus, a virus that is not good or normal, but also not as extreme as was feared. Some meds and some rest and he should be good.