Category Archives: relationships

To My Aging Mom {A Letter}

Mom,

Today is Annalia’s 11th birthday. But you didn’t forget. She received a card in the mail from you yesterday, your perfect script on the front, a sticker on the back where the envelope folds onto itself. And within it, I bet, is the characteristic $5.00 check you send to each grandchild.

This morning I was thinking about when I was 11, and you must have been 53, and it was spring and you bought me my own dress, a matching pair of burgundy suede and patent leather mary janes, for my piano recital. In a closet full of hand-me-downs, that pretty cotton prairie-style dress with the lace-up bodice stood out like a rose in a weed patch. You knew that recital was hard for me, a newer student, less advanced at the piano than other boys and girls my age. And I was 11 and who at that age isn’t awkward? But I felt very grown-up and pretty and prepared because of my dress and shoes and I crossed the church stage and played my piece. Never one for the stage. In that way we are alike.

Remember the jasmine that bloomed in the shaded walkway to our little duplex in San Jose?

It lined the postage-stamp courtyard off the dining area, too. On warm nights, we’d turn off the air and push open the windows and let the Pacific Ocean air and the scent of jasmine breeze through the house. You and dad, as usual, made popcorn and watched an A’s game.

I loathed the lack of social life I had at 17, the new girl in a huge city, starting over my senior year, stuck at home with the American League announcers prattling on about statistics and the buttery salted smell of popcorn. Few friends, no siblings (so far from Spokane), no job or school commitments to keep me busy. I discovered Jane Austen and read while you two munched popcorn. I wondered why, all those years, I never knew you even liked baseball. But you love it, like I do, but I prefer the National League myself–Giant’s over A’s any day. You couldn’t get enough of Micky Gallego.

On Saturday mornings, if the day was free and the sky sparkled clear of fog and sea clouds, we’d decide to drive to Monterey by way of Moss Landing and we’d shop at antique stores and eat really great Mexican food or clam chowder at the Tinnery. I fell in love with you and daddy in San Jose. I saw you as real people and through my own eyes. I missed my sisters and my social life but I made the decision to move to California with you and I know, for so many reasons, that it was right for me, for us. I miss Capitola and the fancy restaurant we’d eat at sometimes on the pier in Santa Cruz. I know those memories are gifts that aren’t hand-me downs from the siblings. They are memories I need for now, for the future.

And that intensely warm spring day when we arrived home with Annalia, the tulips flung wide to the sun, the lilacs beginning their scented season, the world waking up and at the same time shuddering in the fear of terrorism. I needed pink, needed a bouquet of reminders that it’s okay to bring life into the world in the face of so much death. You had babies during the Korean and Vietnam wars, raised kids throughout the Civil Rights riots, the Cold War and the Arms Race.

You and dad made the long road trip that May 2002, so that you could give me the welcome you understood I needed. You had lunch waiting, the house cleaned, coffee in the pot. And in my home you were my home. Each baby of mine saw you with their newborn eyes and felt your soft, tan skin as you bathed them, with all tenderness, in the kitchen sink. Each one heard, with ears that didn’t really comprehend the meaning, but certainly felt the love, “Oh, come look, Alyssa, she’s changing everyday. They grow every single day, right before our eyes.” And you invited me to look at life, really look at it, and find the golden apples set in silver. You taught me the way of gratitude.

Your expectations were high, unattainable even. Your commitment to your husband, your family, your God, patent. It sometimes made you impossible to please, impossible to live with. But even with seven kids resisting, pushing, always picking at your integrity, you never ranted, rarely broke down, always sought that second cup of coffee in the morning, Bible in hand, looking at the Life.

You measured your words, and often, under pressure, said the wrong thing, silently feeling the guilt of the damage you may have caused. You figured out ways to apologize when you couldn’t trust your mouth to do the work. I get that now. I understand what drove you and what tore at you. I have my own brood of kids, my own Life-seeking habits, my own regrets. And I want to speak less and lean more.

I remember in San Jose when you taped a message on your bathroom mirror that read, “I know I’m somebody, ‘cuz God don’t make no junk.” You taped that there for you. Your broken heart was healing as your turned a corner in age. Your sixties would be a decade of change. After forty years of hands-on mothering, you’d watch empty-handed and full of heart the seeds that you planted go off and grow.

It hasn’t been all pretty. We are a wild garden without your constant tending. I’m sorry for that, sad for the pain it’s caused. I know it’s time to give you pink, give you a season full of reminders that there is joy even in the darkening twilight.

Friends,

No mother is perfect. I’ve made so many mistakes just this week, I can’t count them.

So if someone asks a mom, “What do you want for mother’s day?” many times we demure and say, “Nothing” or “Just your love”. We know the work is hard and thankless, but oftentimes mom’s question the quality of what we’re doing. The legacy we dream of imparting to our pink-cheeked children often doesn’t match the results of our daily effort. We are afraid, we mom’s, of failing.

I wrote this letter as part of an assignment in a workshop I’m participating in, but I chose to share it because, I think we can all stand to be a little more honest with ourselves and our mothers. We can all go to God for grace and for the perfect love that he offers. We can love each other with God’s love. Our closest relationships, when broken, hurt us most deeply and its in those deep fissures that we can allow God’s perfect love to sink in and heal and mend. I pray that  for you.

Alyssa

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Brave Not Me {an essay}

{Friends,

I signed up for a memoir workshop with Tweetspeak Poetry. There are about ten brave souls taking courageous steps toward better understanding their own stories in order to share them with readers. But first, we are learning to share them with each other. It’s an online class, which eliminates the nervous in-person issues and could help us hide behind the distance of the world wide web. But, they are truth seekers and truth speakers and their bravery inspires me. Whatever your story is, there is beauty and redemption in it. The work to write our stories is hard and requires serious moxy. This little piece is dedicated to my memoir classmates. You bless me with bravery.}

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I was only eight.

Courage was something I knew nothing about, like sex and driving cars and reading my dad’s black, leather bound Bible.

Brave was not in my lunchbox or my coat-pocket. Brave was a higher branch on a tree. Higher than I ever needed to climb. Brave was taller than me.

I was books. I was reading. I was playing with my sister who,  aged thirteen seemed more interested in bravery than playing with me; I was only…me.

I was not brave.

But something about that age, being not yet a big kid and not a baby either, makes everything not fit quite right. Like tight seams pulling at the back of my arms, I knew I was being held back. But I didn’t know what lay ahead of me, what secret tree limbs lay beyond my reach. And the want of knowing what I might be missing tasted fresh in my mouth, like a berry, picked too soon — sharp with newness and juice. I did want to grow up, didn’t I?

I watched my sisters who all galavanted ahead of me at various stages of maturity well beyond my reach. Couldn’t I be like them? But then, I loved the sweet-from-the-bath scent of baby shampoo and my mom’s pitch-perfect voice reading some story as I drifted drowsy in her arms. I wanted to remain suspended beneath the night-quiet conversation of my parents discussing above my head grown-up things that didn’t concern me. I cared nothing for the subject matter, I only wanted the music of their  voices.

I craved safety like an infant. The womb of childhood cradled  me too lovingly for me to want to move on.

But brave girls can rise from the cradle of love. I didn’t realize that then. My bravest moments grew up from the culmination of all that security. My confidence lay not in my brave-heartedness but in knowing who I was and knowing who loved me. I know now that courage comes in many forms:

prosthetic-bound soldiers who still serve their country,

women who shave hair from heads and claim their brave-beauty,

children who push through a life of injustice and abuse,

friends who forgive,

and men who love their women well.

There’s bravery on every branch.

I still know so little of courage. I know I am brave, when I need to be, and I have to say that has to be enough.

Because I know who I am in Christ. I know he loves me, he who bravely faced horror so indescribable. I know he did that for love and because he knew who he belonged to, who loved him most.

And I believe that I don’t know what I might have to face, how much courage I have in my pockets, until that day comes when brave becomes me.

***

This is linked up with Lisa-Jo. The word brave was the prompt today.

I didn’t feel like I could speak with any authority on the topic of bravery. It’s such a subjective concept. What is brave when we know of children who’ve persevered through famine and war and every imaginable abuse? What is brave when people have stood in trenches until their feet froze in the mud? What is brave when people survived Dachau?

I know little of bravery. I know a little about Jesus, who did a very brave thing in dying for me. And that’s where I rest. When brave needs to become me, then I know he’s with me, being my courage.

Bless you! You are dear to me,

Alyssa

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Six Steps to Victory {How to Outsmart the Prowling Lion, the Devil}

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I’ve been thinking about that old lion lately.

The one that prowls and scans the crowds, his insatiable hunger salivating, dripping as he looks for the perfect prey.

The perfectly easy-to-pick-off prey.

In these thousands of years, the lions in Africa have not changed their hunting habits. Nor have the big cats of India or North America. No evolution in their hunting style has been required – because picking off easy prey works for them.

Recently, one of my younger kids asked me about demonic possession – not a topic we discuss too much around here. “Mom?” she asked, “Do people get demon possessed anymore? It seemed to happen a lot when Jesus was here. Does it still happen?”

She didn’t realize that she was asking a question that could be the thesis of a dissertation, that whole books have been written on the subject. And, I tend to be a long-answer-mom. I’m the parent who launches a diatribe in response to simple questions. I’m learning that’s not the always the best course. I decided, in response to this query, to keep things simple, but honest.

I prayed a little prayer, asking for the best answer. This is what I gave her:

“The enemy, Satan, is like water. Water always seeks the path of least resistance. The easiest way down. Water can roll and thunder, move a mountain’s worth of dirt, but the big rocks, the solid, high boulders, it cannot move in a single rush.

Satan looks for the easiest route and he has limited resources. He has a certain number of demons – no more, no less. and they are limited in that they are not all-knowledgable or all powerful. And, population has grown tremendously over the past few thousand years. They are losing, not winning, the battles and the war. Whenever a team is losing, they have to re-strategize, look for easier, more efficient ways to try to win.

Satan will always look for the easiest win, the easiest take-down because he’s more aware than we are of his limitations, and of his real opponent: God.

Yes, there is still demon-possession, but when distraction, oppression, physical ailments and apathy (not caring) can get the job done, then why commit a few demons to one person? Satan will choose the easy course.

Our defense is to be rock-solid. To know and be known by God, to be in community with other rock-solid believers in Jesus Christ. To know that our strength to resist Satan’s God-given power is in seeking God’s strength every, single day.”

And I’ve been watching, friends, since that conversation with my daughter, who the enemy is taking down. It makes me angry. Like little David fighting Goliath, I know that it is God’s anger in me. When I pray for those I love, I get red-cheeked and mad about the enemy flooding his lies like putrid water over their precious souls.

Peter, Jesus’ friend, disciple and denier, knew firsthand the weakness of pride and self-sufficiency that results in utter failure (Matthew 26). On the night of Jesus’ betrayal and arrest, Peter asserts with all his ruffled feathers, “Everyone else may desert you, Lord, but not I – not ever!”

Oh, Peter.

Jesus knew. Jesus knew that Peter was going to be a mudslide, a disaster, a washed up heap of pride.

Thank God for Peter and his messed-up pride. Because in his failure and redemption, in his story and because of it he can say with authority (in 1 Peter 5:5-11) what losing a battle with Satan looks like and how to win the war with Christ.

“…Be submissive to those who are older. All of you, clothe yourselves with humility toward one another, because, “God opposes the proud but gives grace to the humble.” Humble yourselves, therefor under God’s mighty hand, that he may lift you up in die time. Cast all your anxiety on him because he cares for you. Be self-controlled and alert. Your enemy the devil prowls around like a roaring lion looking for someone to devour. Resist him, standing firm in the faith…” 

Peter gives the battle plan for resisting the devil and all his used-up, not-at-all-fresh schemes. Satan is a poseur, an impostor well-practiced but not at all able to really change his strategy. Remember, the old saying, “The more things change, the more they stay the same.” We need not be taken off-guard by Satan. But, we do need to stay fiercely connected to Jesus Christ, our only strong defense against this enemy, this prowling beast who seeks to devour.

1. Submit to one another.

Honesty in community. This is the connective force that Christians have been given because of the sacrificial and redemptive work of Jesus Christ. He is our grace glue, the force that makes us a fibrous, resilient community. Stop faking it and be honest with the people God’s given you, be transparent. This is the only wise course. Christianity is not a solo act.

2. Submit to the authority of God.

After we practice submitting to one-another, submitting to God’s sovereignty should be easy. But, we are prideful people, always thinking that we know better than God.

There is tremendous freedom in admitting our need for God — and really, who doesn’t need an all-powerful creator, sustainer, savior and friend on their side? I know I do.

3. Allow God to fight your battles, knowing he cares about you.

This is where the enemy muddles us. He isolates us through old hurts, lies, little deceits that mislead us, and leave us alone, vulnerable, away from the community he’s given us.

Denying yourself God’s love, cutting yourself off from his true and continual flow of concern and care for you (often shown best through the aforementioned community) will leave you vulnerable to the enemy, vulnerable to the destructive nature of your own pride.

This is dangerous territory, this going it alone, this finding friends who tell us what we think we want to hear instead of allowing the practice of humility in community to strengthen and protect us.

4. Open your eyes!

Be alert! Your background, your activities, your job, your goals – none of these guarantees that you’ll stay the straight and narrow.

Look at Peter: disciple, member of the inner circle, even. Total failure. His pride and self-sufficiency blinded him and he ended up wasting opportunities to testify of his knowledge of Christ and seeing God’s ability to protect him. He watered the earth with bitter tears.

Pride, independence, self-sufficiency -these will nail you every. single. time. There is forgiveness, always. You can always turn to community and Christ. But the scripture makes it clear: learn your lesson! Get humble! It works. Humility brings healing, opens your eyes to see the spiritual truths in your here and now.

5. Don’t play the pride game.

We resist the enemy best when we are standing firm in the faith. How do we stand firm in the faith? Repeat #1-5.

6. Repeat #1-5! 

///

Friend,

I am praying for you, my readers. I will pray for your protection from the enemy. Will you cooperate with God’s plan for victory? What areas of your life weaken you, isolate you, make you easy pickings for that old lion, that old silver tongued serpent? How can I pray for you so that you stay in community, stay in God’s care and win with Christ?

Alyssa

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Speaking Truth In The Dark {How to Pray Through the Fear}

I’m worried about Billy and I wouldn’t want to leave him behind.

It’s ten o’clock at night and I’m changing bedsheets. I’d forgotten earlier.

I’ve been distracted, looking at my computer screen changing words around, editing, writing this story of mine. I never made it down to his room to put new sheets on his bed.

What are you talking about? I ask, as I pile the menagerie of stuffed animals from his bed to the floor, pull off the comforter, unwrap the corners of the sheets from the mattress.

Billy, the frog. If we have a fire. I don’t want to leave him behind.

The most important thing if there’s a fire is to get out, I say looking at his face.

There is worry in his eyes.

Well, Mrs. Miller said we shouldn’t take the time to get any pets out. And Zuzu and Clarence can run out, but Billy’s in the tertarium. He always says it wrong.

Are you talking about fire safety at school? I ask.

Yeah, and I was thinking, we probably won’t have a fire, will we?

No, probably not. But, I add with motherly authority, it’s always best to be prepared because there’s always a possibility that something could go wrong.

Then I tell him about Jesus saying that the Father in Heaven sees any sparrow that falls and dies. And how much more valuable are you than a sparrow?

I don’t get it, is his answer.

Okay, I begin again. God made the birds and there are millions and millions of them, yet he notices when even one bird dies. I have four kids, just four, but God knows everything about them. He knows how many hairs are on your head. He says that he cares about birds, but he cares about you more, because you belong to me, and to him. And I only have one Nikko, he’s worth more than a million frogs. Way more.

He smiles. That makes sense.

I pull the sheets taut and layer the blanket and comforter and say a silent prayer for safety. The orca and lion and tiger and bears and snakes and sixteen other furry friends go back to their spot on the foot of the bed where they will watch over him sleeping. I say goodnight, and dad takes over.

Upstairs I sit on the couch shoulder to shoulder with my oldest and watch the explosion at the fertilizer plant in Texas. Even on the ridiculously small screen of her smart phone, the blast shocks, reaches from the phone and takes our breath away.

Really, big fire. Many sparrows. And my heart breaks and cries out, will this week end? And I know it goes on and on, this destruction, and we go on, changing sheets and eating dinner and writing stories and saying our goodnights.

And I feel suffocated by the enormous loss we suffer every day. And I say, Jesus come soon. And I recite in my head the psalm that sustains me:

The Lord is my Light and my Salvation,

Whom shall I fear?

The Lord is the Strength of my life,

Of whom shall I be afraid?

It isn’t that these things aren’t frightening. They are. I do feel like Billy the frog, trapped in a terrarium, oblivious to the disaster that may befall me. I’m completely dependent, and I need to know, on what, on whom  I depend. Where is the source of hope when all around is panic and despair?

And I whisper these words from my bed and feel them cover the rooms of my house like clean sheets and tuck around those I love, that I can’t really protect. And I remind myself of the times My Lord has shown up to save me, to light the way, to give me strength to do the hard things.

Sure, it may be cliche that there are no atheists in foxholes, that conversion is the product of crisis. I’ve been accused of living, writing that cliche just recently. But no other option offers any hope; my imagination, my reason, cannot produce or contrive hope out of darkness. I need the Light. We need the Light.

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It’s Not Always Pretty, But It Is Always Good {My Story in Video}

I watched spring this morning. The robins hopped on greening grass. Goldfinch looked in the window as if to ask me, “Are you ever going to fill that feeder with thistle?” Cold blue skies, swept with light clouds promised the coming warm days.

I was struck again, anew, by the beautiful reality that I can go fill the feeder, dig in the soil of my own yard, walk to the tune of birdsong.

A year ago, I was recovering from a second surgery where the surgeons removed the titanium rod from my fibula and reamed a larger one through that leg-bone to aggravate my body to produce enough new bone cells to fill in the gaps between the breaks that had refused to heal.

I was struck again by the miracle of the incarnation of Jesus, the decision of a limitless God to take on the form and limitations of humanity, to trade infinite power for fragility. This flesh and bone grace of the incarnation of Jesus Christ makes all other miracles, including the resurrection from the dead, possible, meaningful even.

I am in wonder of the humanity of Jesus, our personal, human, savior.

My church is telling stories. The stories of key people in the Bible and the stories of average people in our town who have been awakened in soul by the love of Jesus, whose lives have been transformed by grace. I’m humbled to be included in the storytelling series.

Friend, our stories are always in the process of being written. Might I encourage you to courageously read the story of your life and see where God has, indeed, shown up along your life’s timeline. He is always working to reveal his truth to you, to grace your mistakes with forgiveness and give you purpose beyond your own scope of vision.

Story – Alyssa from Life Center on Vimeo.

linked with Emily’s love dare here. Emily is a beautiful, insightful writer with a new book coming out!

And, with Michelle De Rusha, for Hear It on Sunday, Use It on Monday.

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