While cleaning out the garage:
Roy: What are you going to do with those?
Miriam: Throw them out. (Roy saves everything. I do not.)
Roy: I think you should go through them first.
Miriam: Maybe. I'll take the tote inside.
Five days later I open the box. It is small tote, maybe 16x16x24. When I open it some of the contents fall out on the floor and I pick one and start to read it. A note from someone whose name I don't recognize. She is writing to thank me for something I said at a conference in South Dakota at least ten years ago, maybe fifteen, maybe more. Her words of gratitude touch me in deep places. Anytime I think God has used me to change lives through my speaking I am amazed, and deeply moved.
The same card reminds me that I don't do that anymore. I mean, I don't travel thirty weekends a year speaking. A sharp pang of grief shoots through my stomach--and my soul--as I remember those days of excitement, airplanes, more invitations than I could accept, lovely hotels and applause--lots and lots of applause.
I continue to pull cards out of the tote, reading each one. It takes three days to go through the entire box for I can only handle so many precious words at one sitting. Slowly, very slowly the grief dissipates and is replaced by tenacious faith that the messages I used to preach about "seasons of life" have come home to roost in my own experience!
The transition from traveler to full-time caregiver has required the help of some godly friends who have held me, let me cry, express my questions. I also have desperately needed, and received the wise words of a therapist who helps me make sense of my own questionable self. Most of all, I have had the constant presence of a Heavenly Father who lets me crawl up on His lap and just cry it out.
"Why are you downcast, O my soul? Why so disturbed with me? Put your hope in God for I will yet praise Him." Psalm 42:11
I take the box back to the garage and put it in the stack of things to keep.
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