I am raising a teenager. And she is my first child. God
bless her. I am learning, in increasing increments along the way, that I do not
have the answers. This is something I know in my mind. The reasonable part of
me is not unclear about this. But somehow, even still, I tend to live as if I
do.
I feel like if I can just figure out the perfect cocktail of
good words, appropriate amounts of holding close and pulling back, the winsome
blend of good humor and sage advice, that I can make it all turn out alright.
But, I am not doing any of that with great skill. I have some good words, but
they aren’t always great and they definitely aren’t always received as I hope
they will be. I feel like I am always either holding too closely or not closely
enough. The mother in me usually feels the “not enough” part more while the
daughter in her probably always feels the “too close” part more. I think I’m pretty good on the humor
part, but she definitely doesn’t think I’m as funny as she used to think. The
advice…well, I KNOW I am right about the advice but I also know it sounds
boring and irrelevant and churchy and old to her young ears.
Even with all of my good intentions, things don’t go as I
would have hoped much of the time. Like 60% of the time, it turns out.
Actually, that’s probably generous. And the thing is, even when it does, I
don’t have this sense of calm and “all is well” that I hope for. It feels
tenuous at best. Like it could all shatter at any moment. Tenuous is probably a
good synonym for teenager.
In the midst of it all, here is the only thing that brings
me peace. The nearness of Christ.
I know how simple that sounds and I also know that it is not
at all easy. For me, it has meant learning to spend the time I have each day
like a currency, instead of giving it away without thought. I am trying to be
aware of how my thoughts can run away from me. I am committed to wrangling them
back and talking to Jesus about them. I started trying to notice when I was
feeling anxious and then praying the words, “Yahweh Shalom (God of Peace), your
burden is light.” He gave me those words. He is so good at knowing exactly what
I need. When I talk to him, I can let it go. Because in that moment it seems so
ridiculous to hang onto it when he is right there offering to carry it for me.
Sometimes, I can only seem to give it to him for a few minutes before I start
to take it back again. So, I do it again. I feel like he gets it. And, when I
imagine him in my head, he is always smiling, always ready to take it back. No
shame, just grace.
Two things happen for me in those moments. First, I notice
that he is right there. That he is present and with me always. Secondly, I
realize that I need his presence more than I need him to fix whatever it is. It
turns out that his presence in the midst of our suffering or anxiousness or
sorrow is actually enough. I can endure as long as I have him. So, his nearness gives
me peace.
As he brings me peace, I am more able give my daughter a purer
version of the thing that comes more naturally for me in regards to her. Love. Gosh,
I just love her so much. I found the picture above when I was in Texas visiting
my parents and just stared at it. My face says everything. There was deep
contentment in just being her mom. I finally had the thing I had wanted and
hoped and prayed for, for so long. I still feel like that. I look at her
sometimes and think, “What in the world? How can my heart be filled with so
much love?” When I have peace, I can love her in wise ways that don’t require
anything of her, a kind of love she seems to welcome more than the grasping
kind that desperately wants her to just be safe and good.
I’m told that this phase of parenting is going to last for a
while, and probably get a little worse before it gets better. So, I guess I’ll
get a lot of practice on how to un-clench and be freed up to love. I’m down for
that. It seems as though the Holy Spirit’s work in my life is always pushing me
toward more freedom. It is always clearing out more junk to make space for more
of Him. He brings conviction so I can be free from sin. Rest so I can be free
from trying to earn my worthiness. Contentment and joy so I can be free to
enjoy Him and the life he’s given me. Security so I can be free to love. I want
that kind of freedom that makes space for more.
At the end of the day, I am like Paul or Apollos in my
children’s life. I plant the seed, or I water it. But it is God who makes it
grow. I can’t make anything grow. Believe me, I’ve tried. That’s best left up
to him, the Master Gardener. My prayer reminds me of this.
Yahweh Shalom, your
burden is light. You are doing all the heavy lifting here. Clear out more of my
junk so that there is more space to be filled with your living water. Lord, make
me a spring of living water, spilling over into the soil of my children’s hearts.