Author note: The following was written as my guest post for my friend, author Emily Wierenga. I invite you to visit the original post on Emily's blog, and to spend some time there; she's doing amazing things and featuring some wonderful people! Original post can be found here: http://www.emilywierenga.com/2013/04/the-love-dare-on-how-god-sees-us-as.html
All my life I had dreamed of becoming a mommy. It wasn't my only dream,
but it was certainly the most important dream in my little girl heart. I was the
child who never went anywhere without a baby doll tucked under my arm -- and I
wasn't the type to toss my baby doll aside when the ice cream man came down the
street or when my favorite TV show came on. No, Annie came along with me, and I
included her in every detail. It mattered to me what Annie wanted from the ice
cream man (snow cones were her favorite) and if she understood the jokes in that
week's episode of Punky Brewster (and as I recall, I often had to explain them
to her).
Some women come into motherhood by accident, and others are
ambivalent throughout their young adult lives about whether or not they want
children. And both of these types of women can become amazing mothers despite
how they come into the role. But for me, as sappy as it may sound, I had
always believed I was born to be a wife and a mom, and I had it penned into my
life checklist early on: Finish undergrad (majoring in Music Education) by
22, by which time I would have met Mr. Right (who would also be an education
major so we could teach in the same school district, which would be adorable);
get married by 23, take two years for grad school, and be blissfully pregnant by
age 25 with my MA on the wall and my hunky husband at my side. Then we'd have
our second child two years later, and if we had the finances and the energy, a
third two years after that. Voila: two degrees, a fulfilling career, a healthy
marriage, and three kiddos -- and all in time for my 30th birthday. Nothin' to
it.
I once read a bumper sticker that said "If you want to make God
laugh, tell Him your plans." And while I don't believe for a minute that our
compassionate, perfect Father laughs at our dreams and plans, He certainly
doesn't seem to hesitate to rearrange them for our good.
My
carefully calculated life plan had derailed before I was even to have completed
step one. There was no undergrad degree by age 22, because the anorexia that had
chased me all my adolescent life had caught up to me by age 18 and nearly killed
me. Instead, I found myself hospitalized for most of 1996, with a tube in my
nose and a weight on my heart far heavier than the sad, sickly weight on the
scale. I left the hospital the day before my 19th birthday, owing around four
hundred thousand dollars in treatment costs. There would be no college -- and
worse, within six weeks of my discharge from treatment, I had lost thirty of the
forty pounds that had been put on me. I had gained the necessary weight, but
I had not learned to feed myself -- because I had not learned to love
myself.
Fast forward just a few years, to age 24. Steps one and two
of my checklist had not come to pass, and as I approached 25 -- the age by which
I HAD to be married and pregnant -- I panicked. I met a guy at church, and
figured that since my pastor approved of him and we quickly became the iconic
church couple, mascots almost, surely God would bless our union despite the fact
that we were completely wrong for one another and both brought unresolved
emotional baggage into the marriage. I mean, we met at church; if it didn't work
out, that would make God look bad.
For a few months, the courtship was
exciting. Even though I wasn't in love with my fiancé, I was madly in love
with the idea of marriage and family. My dream was coming true -- even if I
had to force it. And since I wanted children and felt I was running out of time
(according to my checklist), I began eating healthily and increased my food
intake enough to restore myself to a healthy weight. A grown-up weight. A mommy
weight. I absolutely hated my body during this time --but I believed this was
the one thing that meant more to me than the sense of control I felt from
starving myself. In exchange for the fulfilled dream of marriage and family, I
would surrender.
The naive little girl inside of me, still clutching
her original childhood dream for dear life, cried tears of grief and confusion
when the honeymoon ended before it had ever begun, and the marriage became
unsafe. This was not the plan. What had I done wrong? But in the midst of my
darkest hour, I was to meet my greatest joy. A month into our marriage, we were
expecting a baby.
Those around me were unsure how pregnancy would effect
me, having never made peace with my body image before the pregnancy began. But
to their surprise and my delight, I loved every minute. As I wrote years later
in my memoir, Hollow, "This expanding, itching, stretching, round, swollen body
of mine was suddenly a great pleasure to me. The same body I hated and despaired
of and punished and starved and cut and cursed for years was now doing me the
ultimate favor, by fostering life and turning me into something I had always
wanted to be: someone's mom."
The challenge to love the mom in the
mirror came after my son was born. By the time my son was eight months old,
his father and I had separated. And while we worked to reconcile through marital
counseling, it was becoming progressively clear to me that I was going to be a
divorced woman.
A divorced woman. A single mother. A divorced single
mother who never went to college. The checklist had been abandoned. And in my
rigid perfectionist mind, the same mind that had driven me to starve myself for
so many years, I was a failure. It was then that it became especially hard to
look at myself in the mirror.
But the story gets brighter. It always
does, at some point, friends -- because we have a God whose love pursues us
tenaciously and tirelessly.
In the darkest time of despair, when I
was hardest on myself for having seemingly ruined everything, God provided me
with moments of peace that were as overwhelming as they were fleeting. They
usually occurred in the quiet moments of nursing my baby boy. Nursing infants
have a way of communicating love to their mothers in such a way that even I
could not argue with the force of that love. My baby needed me -- but beyond
that, he longed for me. He was jealous for me. He wanted to be near to me, to
feel my heart beat next to his.
Credit the hormones if you must, but
those moments became spiritual experiences for me. They reminded me that God
Himself is jealous for me. Longs for me. Wants to be near enough that my heart
can begin to beat in sync with His. I could not love "the mom in the mirror"
on my own; I needed to borrow from the love that God had for me. I had made
terrible, life-altering mistakes -- and none of them had shaken or even touched
His love for me. My checklist had never mattered to Him, in that He had never
had such rigid standards for me as I had had for myself.
My baby boy,
Jaden, didn't care that his mommy only had a high school education. He didn't
care that his mommy was carrying a little post-baby weight; in fact, if
anything, he rather enjoyed it because those were the pounds of selfless love
which allowed him to be fed and nurtured. When Jaden looked at me, both then and
now, he didn't see an imperfect body to be tweaked and sculpted or a failure at
life in general. He sees his mom. He looks at me through
love.
When God looked at me, both then and now and forever and
always, he sees His daughter. He looks at me through love and through the blood
of Jesus, which has erased the sin of those life-altering mistakes of
mine.
My son is eleven years old now. I never had another child,
never remarried. I still get angry at the mom in the mirror sometimes -- and it
is in those moments that I know what has happened: I've moved away from God, and
I need to scoot back over to where I can hear His heart beat.
His
heartbeat always sounds the same: You. Are. Loved. You. Are.
Mine.
My part is simply to take His word for it.
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