I felt empty.
Steve and I had dreamt
about this weekend.
We had loved our time
at Keele University:
the campus, the
courses, the nightlife,
and the Christian
Union.
The CU weekends away
with inspirational teaching, relationship building and muddy football games
were an annual highlight.
We walked away after
graduation both wanting to go back and impart into students at a later date.
Knowing the CU
president and our return to England imminent, the stars seemed to have aligned
and opened an opportunity.
We were excited and
eagerly anticipated all the things we would do, the ways Father God would move.
Who would have known
that we would travel to that weekend, driving away from a house shrouded in
grief just less than three weeks previously.
Like I said, I felt
empty.
The weekend passed
like a blur.
We had planned and prepared as diligently as ever, but I looked back and questioned whether things were as creative as we could have made them,
We had planned and prepared as diligently as ever, but I looked back and questioned whether things were as creative as we could have made them,
whether we really
challenged them enough,
if our words were full
of Holy Spirit, or just read off of a paper.
I wondered if I had
really given my best,
if we had done the
right thing.
After the weekend, our
Facebook burgeoned with friend requests, comments about how much our talk spoke
to them. And I got the warm and fuzzies.
When you think you
don’t do well,
When things are super
hard,
But you step out in
faith regardless,
God can do great
things.
True.
But not the end.
The thing is
I don’t just want warm
and fuzzies.
I don’t just want to
experience the high of a temporary feeling.
To think I did
something good one day
And the next
Nothing substantial
has changed
More was in store:
Never would I have
imagined
That out of pouring
myself out
That weekend still
grieving
And being open to what
Father wanted to do
That now
Two years to the day
later
These girls who sat on
seats and listened
Politely taking notes
and clapping in the right places
Now
Sit at my table
Text me
Do lunch
Talk birth
Live chat through
Obsessive Compulsive Cleaners
And pour into my sweet
daughter
(with Petit Filous)
I don’t have much to
offer this great world
Just my stories
My inappropriate
humour
My meager words
And my love for people
But offer it I will
In the hopes that my
longevity
My sticking around and
involved
it makes some
difference
It changes some
directions
It makes Father God
bigger,
more visible,
more tangible,
in more lives.