Expression of sympathy

I am typing through tears.  Tears of pain and grief and helplessness.  I just learned of the the suicide of Rick Warren's son.  My heart is breaking. 

I didn't know Matthew Warren, age 27.  Neither do I know his parents nor amyone in his family.  But when I became a Mom, every Mother's pain is my own.  Every tragedy could just as well have happened to my family.  Every desperately needy child might as well live at my address. I hurt right along with them.

I don't pretend to feel the pain in the same way as those parents.  I know I don't.  And I know that, while my heart aches and my mind imagines what it would feel like, I recognize that I don't get it at all.  My son is across the room from me, watching basketball.  I can grab a hug, reach up for a kiss, and dream of watching his continued journey in adulthood. 

Rick and Kay Warren can't do that.

I have stood beside my friends as they did what no parent should ever have to do - bury a child.  I have sobbed with them until my body literally hurt.  But I could still go home and tuck my baby in for the night. Fix their favorite dessert. See my daughter graduate.  And get married. 

They can't.

As unbearable as the loss of a child must be, losing one by their own choice must be a pain beyond the scope of my vocabulary.  I cannot conceive it.  Add to the sorrow and grief feelings of guilt and helplessness and hopelessness.  Maybe even eventually anger and blame.  At somebody!

I don't know why I feel compelled to post.  Perhaps I am processing grief.  Trying in some pathetic way to do something that could help.  Somebody.  So I ask you to pray for this family.  This family who has blessed so many other people.  Ironically, the Dad who instructed so many of us on Life's Purpose.  And did it well.  At the end of the day, they are just parents like you and me.  Parents whose hearts are in ICU. Parents who are undoubtedly wondering "what if".   Parents who have two other children who need them, in spite of their pain. Please please please pray for this family.

And may we all become more mindful that the people we meet every day could be fighting the same battle.  I know we can't solve everyone's problems or pull everyone out of darkness.  I mean, seriously, if Rick Warren didn't have the right words to help his son, I surely can't have any. But maybe just maybe there is somebody we can help.  Maybe by talking about unconquerable despair like this we can disarm it.  For somebody.

Maybe if more people see the additonal casualties of these choices , some of them will cling a little longer to hope. I know that those in the clutches of mental illness or tethered in the pit of despair are unable to grasp what their choice will do to those who are left.  But maybe  we can get that message out before someone we love gets to that place.  And maybe just maybe, even in the darkest of darkness, a glimmer of truth might shine.  Just enough for hope to take a breath.  And love to discern a heartbeat. For somebody.

Somebody that might be my child.  Or yours.

I have been asked about our weekly chore list.  It's a little humbling to admit that we actually do so little but, we do, so here goes.  There are some excellent resources available that are much more detailed and extensive than what we are able to accomplish over here.  But, here is the list we use each week and it's what works for us.  A few times a year I get really motivated and we do some deep cleaning, but, honestly, I am pretty dirt-tolerant.  Clutter drives me batty but dirt I can live with.

Morning routine -
              Get up and get dressed (shower, whatever)
               Personal quiet time
               Breakfast (with family as much as possible)
              Chores
              School

Evening routine-
             Be sure room is straightened up
             Think through the next day and do whatever prep plans are needed (clothes, backpacks, etc)
             I often throw a load of laundry in and/or turn on dishwasher.  I also think through meal needs
             for the next day and do any advance prep work that I can.

Mondays - Laundry (wash, dry, fold/put away)
                  Bathrooms (toilets, sinks, floors - tubs/showers as needed...which often results in different
                                     interpretations of what "clean" means...)
                  Vacuum all floors
                   Dusting
                   Empty trash cans/ take trash to street

Tuesdays - just basic kitchen duty

Wednesday - basic kitchen duty

Thursday - laundry
                  empty trash cans

Friday - Bathrooms (same routine as Monday)
              Vacuum all floors
               Wash towels and bed linens (OK - in the spirit of full disclosure, my bed linens don't get
                washed every week - don't tell DFACS)

I recommend a website called flylady.net   This has really good lists of what all needs to be cleaned every week and lots of other info.  I aspire to it all but my above list is what we can actually accomplish. 

Happy Birthday, Betsy....Letter #4

Can it really be that 11 years ago today God sent our family a bonus blessing?  Baby Betsy.  The one who made our little tribe complete.  The one who filled the hole of a baby sister for Mary, a baby for Katie to "mother", and a sibling who elevated Chip to leader status.  The one who filled the little hole that was left in my Mommy heart. 

Oh, the questions and comments.  "Are you done?"  (Whose business is that???) "Was this planned?" (From the foundations of the world, you bet it was!) Since Chip was a baby, I wanted at least one more.  Just a little hole in my Mommy heart.  Who knew that God would time it just like He did.  Perfectly.  March 11, 2002.  Our family grew by two little feet. 


How to describe Betsy to the world?  Let me try.

Lovely.  Even as young as she is, it is evident that she is a beauty.  The words "grace" and "elegance" come to mind.  Long and lean, she is already enviably lovely.  Bright eyes, hair that waves just right, bone structure that people would pay a pretty penny for, and a physique that people would kill for.  She is really lovely.  When asked as a little one where she got her pretty looks from, she would reply "from my Mary".

Smart.  Folks tell me all the time how smart she is.  I just know it's really easy to homeschool her.  More of that self-sufficiency trait I love to cultivate.  She learns quickly and retains information like sponges retain water. Whether it's Latin or pre-Algebra or sewing or how to cook apple dumplings, she is a quick study.  Indeed, she's book smart.  But she has an advantage over those folks that are just book smart.  Betsy is relationally savvy.  She is the one explaining to me why we need to invite so & so or why she answered such & such in a given situation...because she's always considering how something will make somebody else feel.  Yep, she's smart alright.  More than could ever show up on a test.

Administratively gifted.  This is more than just being organized and planful, although she is both of those.  This is actually a gift from God - Betsy is able to assess a situation and understand what needs to be done to get to the goal in mind.  She gets herself ready and alerts the rest of us when we need to leave in order to get somewhere.  And she makes sure we all comply!  She plans all necessary steps for birthday parties, schoolwork completion, and even personal budget requirements. The amazing part is that she doesn't get bogged down in those details.  She intuitively understands that the details are a means to an end.  Not an end in themselves.  (Yes, she is only 11.  I know how incredible this is.  I live with her.)

Sweet.  Her Daddy calls her "Sweet Girl" and it is a fitting name.  This kid is just plain sweet.  She is friendly and kind and thoughtful. (OK siblings, nobody claims 100% performance rate!) Always wanting to make cookies for her AWANA leaders or take flowers to an elderly neighbor, she's just plain sweet.
But don't think for  a minute that she's a wimp.  Uh, that would be an emphatic NO. Which segues to the next description...

Competitive.  Whether it's completing 4 books of AWANA verses in two years (instead of the normal 4) or mastering breaststroke in swimming (as in, "Ya think I can beat the boys, Mom?") or beating Chip to the shower, Betsy loves to compete.  And to win.  Oh, yes, to win.  She has an internal advantage to her competitive edge that most of us - especially me - envy.  She doesn't quit.  Even if she gets knocked down...or out (see earlier post "Measure of a Champion")...she doesn't quit til she gets to where she wants to be.  She's awesome.

God took all this and more, packaged it in a tiny bundle,  stuck a label on it addressed for our home...and delivered it to our family on March 11, 2002, Elizabeth Jean Chambers.   My heart has been full ever since.  Happy Birthday, sweet Betsy.  I love you!

Post script from Betsy

Betsy told me emphatically that the reason she is good friends with her siblings is  mainly due to the fact that none of them are weirdos. 

Great point, Betsy.  Great point.  Makes my parenting you all alot easier.

Kudos.

Note to all Moms -- if you are blessed enough to have kids that are not weirdos, they will want to hang out together.  Just sayin....

Posting letter # 3 - to Chip

About ten years ago, I received a poem that I will cherish forever.  It ranks higher than any written by the great poets of the ages.  Cuz it was written and presented to me by my boy. Unabridged, unedited, here it is:

Mom, Mom, super Mom
Mom, Mom, your da bomb
Your as pretty as a pearl
I just hope that you don't hurl.







I am not sure if he should set his sights on winning the Pulitzer Prize but I can promise you has already won my heart. This boy of mine.  Pretty much perfect.

Named for his father and grandfather, we call him "Chip".  I just knew that one day God would give me at least one boy and one girl so I had their names picked out before I got the engagement ring sized.  And, in a way that only another Mom would understand, I knew my children even before they were fighting me for space in my womb.  And I knew my boy would be "Chip".  Chip Chambers.  As in chip off the old block, he is very much like the men from whom he inherited his name.  Tall and handsome.  Warm and friendly.  Easygoing.  Funny.  Unquestionable integrity. Kind-hearted.  Well-respected by folks in all walks of life.  A leader. A wee bit stubborn.....

He also gets some traits from the males on his maternal side.  Studious.  Deep thinker.  Tenacious. Unimpressed by worldly things. Competitive.  Admired and respected.  Trustworthy.  Another dose of wee bit stubborn....

Mix all these things up, add a pinch of this and a smidge of that, and there you have it - my Chip.

Smart. This is undoubtedly one of the first words many people would use to describe my Chip.  And it is spot-on.  He is highly intelligent, curious about all things he has yet to learn, able to teach himself (this is actually a requirement for admission into my homeschool...), and deep.  Most importantly, he is wise.  More and more I am experiencing role reversal where Chip displays the insight and wisdom needed instead of me.  I keep reminding myself that my goal has always been to work myself out of a job...

Diligent.  Let's face it - there are an awful lot of really smart people in this world that never amount to a plug nickel.  Cuz they're lazy.  So I am especially grateful that God endowed this kid with a super-sized dose of diligence.  Whether it's basketball or his lawncare business or playing Risk or writing a research paper, he is intense about working hard to do all things excellently.  He doesn't believe in "this just doesn't matter much" - to him, it ALL matters.

Mature.  Actually, this is a word routinely used by other people to describe all four of my favorite tax deductions.  I will avoid the thought that perhaps their maturity is a response to the lack of the same trait in their mother..........Instead, I will just focus on their manifestation of it.  What do I mean by maturity?  Well, Chip is responsible.  He takes charge of his schedule and his time and his belongings.  If he is assigned a task, he does it.  I don't have to goad him or remind him - he just does it.  Well.  If he makes a mistake (and that, of course, is hypothetical since he's pretty much perfect!), he owns up to it and makes it right.  He understands that being a man is not about being macho; it's about being mature.  Responsible and accountable.  Which leads me to the next description.

Leadership. Chip embodies the leadership Christ exhorts us to in Scripture -- servant-leadership.  He cheerfully serves "the least of them" and is equally comfortable engaging "the greatest of these".  He doesn't view any task as being beneath him and he is confident enough to take charge of a situation and direct activity. He passionately rejects the attitude that many men today default to - passivity.  Instead, he is intentional and tenacious and he leads.  What's even more impressive is that he doesn't just lead....people follow.

Generous.  Lord knows this boy is generous.  With his time.  He serves and volunteers several times a week. With his talents.  Ditto.  And with his treasure.  His sisters know how generous and thoughtful he is...and creative - from wrapping up a live cat as part of his gift presentation to just the right (and costly) item for each sister at Christmas to dollar amounts that make me gulp when I happen to accidentally discover what he is giving away.  Truly only the Lord does know how generous this boy of mine is.

With all these sophisticated adjectives to convey my Chip, one might be tempted to assume that he isn't fun to be with.  Nothing could be further from the truth.  Fun is a preeminent label used to define him. Fun and funny.  Quick wit.  Keen sense of humor.  And he can even laugh at himself.  Like I said, he's pretty much perfect.

One day, some really lucky gal will receive the blessing of doing life with a hard-working, brilliant, mature, handsome leader.  She is going to have a bunch of fun and enjoy the benefits of a generous,  kind, wee bit stubborn man.  And I'll bet she gets a poem or two of her own.  What a lucky gal.  I'm praying she's pretty as a pearl.