Saturday, August 21, 2010

Possible

“Everything is possible for one who believes.” —Mark 9:23

We have friends a newborn baby, and last time we visited, my husband leaned close and smiled at the baby, talking in a voice I haven’t heard him use in years. As I watched him, I thought to myself with a pang, This is impossible. How am I supposed to look at him doing that and NOT want another baby? And yet, that, too, is impossible. I’m too old; there would be too much space between our now eleven- and thirteen-year-olds; we don’t have any baby stuff any more; we couldn’t adjust our lives to a baby schedule again.

So we ended our visit with the baby, and I came home and stared at my daughter’s teenage feet, which it seems just yesterday could fit entirely in my hand when she herself was a baby. And those lanky, impossibly large teenage feet hit me like a wave of sadness: some things are no longer possible.

It’s not possible to get back the days that are gone. Long summer days when entertainment was as simple as a popsicle and a wading pool and “making it better” as easy as a band-aid and kiss. Evenings with newly bathed kids in blanket sleepers snuggled beside me to read a story for the one hundredth time. Days that seemed impossibly long at the time, but now seem impossibly far away.

Even as I am grieving what I miss, I see in those big feet other things that are still possible. It’s possible to talk to my children about things in the world like floods and forest fires and poverty and wonder with them about why they happen. It’s possible to sit on the edge of their beds and night and hear their ideas and questions about the world without knowing, as I used to, how I can answer easily in response. It’s possible to love what someone else has without needing to possess it for yourself.

And this is the art of living by faith: finding what is still possible in a world that shuts us down from a delightful sense of openness. This is one reason I have joined the High Calling Blogs Network—to see, in the voices of others who struggle to walk the life of faith, what is still possible. And in hearing their stories, to trust the words of truth that everything is still possible for one who believes.

7 comments:

Lorraine said...

:''''''( baby Em . . .

but I agree that it's amazing to see where those feet will take her . . .

Mike Ferber said...

We've got lots of baby stuff to pass along to you should you decide it's not so "impossible." ;)

Cheryl Smith said...

I'm continually inspired by folks within the High Calling Blogs network. Glad to have you aboard!

Christina F. said...

Tessa is available any time you need a "baby fix."

Amy Sullivan said...

Just bouncing over from HCB, and so glad to read your post. Between your and the post there from Jennifer today, I officially have baby ache.

Nice meeting you!

deb colarossi said...

gorgeous way to share this ,
I've never really lost the baby love, nor has my husband , but there are seasons I guess.

thesavingmomparents said...

Popping over from HCB. I am still in the baby having stage, but I really enjoyed this post. It's so important to remember we all have different seasons and each one is to be celebrated in it's own way. ~Jessica