Thursday, December 10, 2015

God's Gifts

This little drawing reminded me of God's gift of Lynda in our lives.  When we were obedient to God's call to foster a special needs child and to ultimately give her a forever home, we received a gift of love.  We had to reach out our arms to welcome her and in doing so we were blessed with a life that we could not have imagined without her.  Lynda guided our life choices.  She painted our world in colors of acceptance of small accomplishments and taught us way more than we ever taught her.  All of God's gifts are like this really.  He is standing ready to give us blessings but we have to open our hearts to receive them.  The gift of salvation is the ultimate example of this love he has for us.  John 3:16 tells us that God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life.  He wants every single person ever born to be saved but it's up to us ti reach out and accept the gift.

For 42 years we had the gift of Lynda in our lives on this earth but as we had always known, this earth was not her home.  One day far to early for us, she went to be with Jesus.  As I held her body next to mine on that day in August two years ago, I knew that I would see her again.  I knew that she was with Jesus.  I knew this because the Bible has God's promises written for me to read.  It told me that he was preparing a place for me one day and that I'd see Lynda again.  

So like the figure in the drawing, I once again opened my heart and arms to Jesus and I released Lynda to him.  Freely he gave his life for us to live with him eternally and there was no way that Imy heart could not freely release Lynda back to our savior.  She will always be in my heart but God's gifts are not ours to keep.  Nothing we have is our own;  it all belongs to him.  So as the little heart looks like it is floating up, up to heaven...we released clear balloons up, up toward heaven the day we buried Lynda.  

Don't hold too tightly to anything but Jesus.  That's what I've learned through the years.  I loved Lynda and I enjoyed her.  Oh, how I miss her sweet touches.  Some days warm tears flow down my cheeks but that doesn't diminish my joy at all.  God gives and God takes away.  Glory to God in all things especially during the Christmas season.  I hope you know the savior.  He longs for you to accept his gift of salvation.

Wednesday, November 25, 2015

God is Good Every Day...His Love Endures Forever!


There is one thing I am always sure of and that is that God is good all of the time.  It's wonderful that our country has a day set aside to celebrate being thankful.  I hope that among all of the turkey and trimmings that Americans do truly stop and thank God for the blessings he has bestowed upon our country since it's beginning.  Truly God's hand is on America.  When we sing "God Bless America", I always want to change the words to "God Has Blessed America" for he truly has protected her and provided grace beyond anything a country could deserve.

My heart is overflowing because of the gift of salvation that Jesus provided for me on the cross.  I am more thankful than I have words to express that his promises are true and that he has prepared a place for us to live with him throughout eternity.  I know this because the Bible tells me this and it is real.  We Christians believe that Christ died and on the third day rose from the dead to live forever.  What could I be more thankful for?  Not a thing!  Except that he promises us that we too will live again if we trust in him.  Every day since Lynda died I have known without a doubt that when her eyes closed in death as I held her body next to mine...Jesus was right there to take her immediately to the place he had prepared for her.  Heaven has always been my destination.  I have longed to meet Jesus face to face and thank him on bended knees for giving his life for my sins.  Now I also can't wait to see Lynda again and talk to her for the first time ever where she can speak.  She and I can walk the streets of heaven and communicate in a way that will be brand new for us.  I am so thankful for God's promises that life here on earth is temporary and that this earth is not our home.  

I am so thankful God allowed me to be Lynda's mother for 40 years here on earth.  I don't know how many more years will separate us but I do know this time here is like a vapor.  Then our real lives begin with eternity stretching out forever.  So thankful for God's grace.  So thankful for my sweet Lynda. 

Saturday, October 24, 2015

I Played With Lynda in My Dream Last Night...

I haven't posted in a while.  Not because I didn't have anything to say and certainly not because Lynda hasn't been on my mind...there are just periods of time that I have to keep the memories to my self.  Just between God and me. 

Last night I dreamed about Lynda.  I don't remember all of the dream but when I woke up I knew she had been there.  There were details of where we were and what we were doing but the best part and the most vivid part was that I was stroking her hair and in my dream I could feel how soft it was.  She was touching my hair, too.  Then she kissed me on the cheek.  I could see her face.  It was a combination of the "young Lynda" with the really blond, blond hair and in the cut like Dorothy Hammil  but she was older like the age when she died.  There was a softness of her features when the two ages merged into the Lynda in my dreams and I wonder if that's the way she is going to look when I see her new body.  Maybe this was a "sneak preview" from God.  I looked into her beautiful blue eyes and I held her in my arms.  When I woke, I could still feel how soft her hair had felt to my hands.  I could still feel her kiss on my cheek. 

It was such a gift.  Such a peaceful experience.  I pray every night to God to please tell Lynda that I love her and that I miss her and I'm so proud of her and to enjoy heaven.  I believe this was God's way of answering my prayers to let Lynda tell me in her way that she loves me and she's real and alive in heaven...which of course I know is true.

Thank you God for letting Lynda visit me if only in my dreams.  It was so sweet and warms this nana's heart.


Monday, September 21, 2015

Happy Birthday, Lynda...

It's hard to believe that you would be 44 today.  Of course, it's even more difficult to wrap my mind around the fact that you have been in heaven for two years now.  In my heart you will always be my little girl who never grew up.  My "forever" child who would always keep the innocence of a child even as the years changed your body into that of an adult.

God blessed us with your presence and we always knew you were a gift.  We never took your time here with us for granted because we always knew your life was fragile.  Yet, God had plans for you that even we could not imagine the magnitude that those plans entailed.  We will never truly understand all of His purposes until we too are on the other side of heaven.  For this we are sure.  God made you perfect and shared you with us on this earth for many wonderful years.  To many you were just a child with severe disabilities but to those who knew and loved you...you were an inspiration and a joy.

I know you are celebrating in heaven on this day and all of the days that spread into eternity.  Angels join in the singing and I suspect there is clapping as the day of your birth on earth is honored in the heavenly realm.  My heart is filled with love as I remember your many birthdays here with me.  I cannot wait to join you in heaven to hear your sweet voice and talk with you in a way I have never been able to before.   Happy Birthday, Lynda! 

Monday, August 3, 2015

Two Years In Heaven...To God Be the Glory


Today marks the second year since Lynda's death.  To say that I have dreaded the week from July 30th (when Lynda first entered the emergency room) through August 3rd (the day she died) would be a huge understatement.   The days leading up to this week have been extremely emotional.  No matter how much I concentrated on her being in heaven and how thankful I was for that...being her mother who misses her just always won out and the tears would follow.  Last year school began on August 4th so I didn't have to be at school on "the" day.   I've known for a year that school would begin on August 3rd this year and that our group district meeting would be in the gym at South Pontotoc where we were when the hospital was calling us two years ago about Lynda's condition.  The very next day, we found ourselves having to make the decision to remove her from life support to hospice services.

So, you can see where I was emotionally and where I wanted to be was celebrating that Lynda was in heaven and thinking about all of the wonderful things that she could do now.  I did not want to relive every minute of the night she died.  So Sunday I began praying fervently to God to give me a miracle or supernatural strength to go to sleep Friday night and think only of heaven.  To give me joy and happiness to come back to school on Monday completely focused on my job and not fighting away the memories of two years ago.

I went to sleep last night thinking about God preparing green pastures for me as he explains in Psalms 23 and I imagined His love covering me like a warm blanket.  I slept better than I have in weeks.  I could feel the weight lifted from my shoulders and as I write this tonight I have no doubt at all that God answered my prayers because I could not have done this on my own.

To God be the glory for Lynda and for the influence she has had on so many lives.  I especially give Him the glory for turning my sadness today into joy.  What a mighty God we serve.

Tuesday, July 28, 2015

Inside My Heart...

It just blesses my heart to see how God can use  Lynda's story to touch other lives not only in the United States but just during this week alone there were page views from Germany, Ukraine, Mexico, Russia, Canada, Australia, Switzerland, Chile and France.  I could never have imagined when Lynda was little that one day technology would allow me to write about her life in English and with the touch of a finger, a reader could have the message translated into his or her language.  

August 3rd will mark two years since Lynda has been in heaven.  In those two years I have written  255 blog entries and there have been about 20,000 views.  I cannot even begin to explain to you all how much we appreciate your support and how much this has helped with the tremendous loss we feel.  We know that we are not the only family to have lost a child with special needs.  Although I don't know you personally or know your stories, I know there are many other moms and dads, sisters and brothers, grandparents and cousins who share the pain that we have felt.  We lift you up to our Father in heaven and ask for the peace that only he can provide.  

Philippians 4:7
And the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus. (NIV)
 

Monday, July 20, 2015

I Wasn't Expecting the Memories...


Saturday afternoon, Russ and I headed for Oxford to attend a memorial service for Mary Jo Ray, the wife of our three eagle scout sons' first scoutmaster, T.J. Ray and who was also the mom of Mark.  Mark and his wife have been those dear friends that you may be separated by miles but you can always pick right up where you left off.  We all exchanged information about what our kids were doing and how many grandkids we all had and congratulated Mark on being the author of the new scoutmaster's handbook.  It was hard to believe Mary Jo was gone.

It never occurred to me until I was closing the car door and stepping out onto the sidewalk beside the Episcopal Church that this was going to be an emotional journey for me far beyond the memorial service I was attending.  As my feet hit the concrete sidewalk beside the church I realized that this was the first time I had come face to face with the first location of the Lafayette Child Development Center (LCDC) where Lynda had attended school as a six year old after we returned to Oxford from Brewton, Alabama.  In fact, this was the place that I had come to volunteer in 1973 when I was introduced by Dr. Wanda Dean, the director of LCDC to the world of special education.  It was in the fellowship hall of this church that I met Jan Reynolds who would become my mentor and John Little, Gloria Saucier,  Amy Scott, and Walter Rogers, students who would make such an impression on my life that I would not only become a special educator but would within a year become the foster parent to a child with autism, become Lynda's mom through adoption and return to Oxford so she could attend the LCDC as a student herself.

As I made it to the front door of the church, I was already overcome by the memories that were flooding over me.  As I entered the sanctuary, I looked up to see that Wanda and Mike Dean were ushers for the memorial service.  Forty-two years later I sat in the sanctuary of the church that had so graciously opened their doors to the program for children with severe disabilities before schools were obligated by law to provide services.  The sanctuary is rich with tradition with deep burgundy velvet cushioned pews and prayer benches.  The dark wood is beautiful as are the exquisite stained glass throughout the sanctuary.  There are not many rooms preserved in the style and reverence that this sanctuary displays but all I could think about was how this building with the exception of the sanctuary (classrooms, the fellowship hall, the kitchen, the playground...every inch of the facility) had been opened to teachers, volunteers, families and students with special needs for years.  No one had been concerned about the fact that the walls might be scratched or the materials and equipment had to be moved out every Friday afternoon and put back into place each Monday morning for LCDC and later the Oxford Child Development Center (OCDC)...the church saw a need and they lovingly filled this need for my child with special needs and many of her friends. 

As I fought to regain my composure to participate in the memorial service I had come to be a part of, I knew that after the service, there was a reception in the parrish hall which would require me to walk down the halls I had walked so many times...by the classrooms and into the big fellowship hall where I could still see in my mind the memories of where I first saw John playing with a ball, learned to feed Gloria and quickly followed Walter to the bathroom where he regularly turned on the hot water...a mystery unsolved to this day as to why it was so appealing to him. 

I saw where Lynda took her naps and I have to admit it was overwhelming with the emotions that played in my mind faster than I could process them.  I took Russ from corner to corner telling him about the children who fascinated me so much I returned day after day to visit and learn more about.  I talked to Wanda about the memories and how I hadn't even thought of how this was going to affect me.  I have been back in the building many, many times through the years but this was the first time since Lynda's death two years ago.  That changed everything.  When she was living, it was one of many places special to her educational history.  With her gone, it took on special significance because it was her first school in Oxford.  It was the reason she was mine.  It was where God spoke to me and put the love of children with special needs into my heart using those children I previously named to introduce me to my life's passion.

I was exhausted when I left the service.  It was wonderful to catch up with old friends and see the importance of us getting together much more frequently.  It was a sad occasion when we are saying goodbye to a friend even though we knew she is in heaven and we will see her again.  It is hard to relive so many memories of my earliest times with Lynda and even the years that preceeded my visit to the welfare department and social services in Brewton after moving from Oxford to apply to be a foster parent of a special needs child. 


God blessed me Saturday with so many warm and wonderful memories and the reminder of how God had plans for me and my life that I could have never dreamed of on my own or never could have accomplished without His steadfast love and guidance.  I don't believe in accidents or coincidences.  I know without a doubt I walked into St. Peter's Episcopal Church in 1973 because God led me there.  I have nothing but warm and wonderful memories of Lynda's time there and could never begin to thank the church members in the 1970's for opening their hearts and facilities to a group of special needs children.  They demonstrated God's love in more ways than they will ever know this side of heaven.

The rooms were silent but I still heard the voices and laughter and saw the precious little faces as if they were being streamed across the air by some new technology.  Time frozen for a few moments.  And then I blinked and was back in the present year of 2015.  Lynda was no longer a little blond six year old streak giggling as she darted from place to place.  John was no longer sitting on the floor with me rolling a red ball back and forth.  Memories are wonderful.  They can be replayed over and over when the time is right.  The thing that was palatable was the love we felt in that room over 40 years ago.  I left felling the love of the past had been wrapped around me like a warm blanket just by being in that place.  It was good.  Very good.