We are standing before the bathroom
mirror, when I
directed her attention to the tooth
brushes....
“Its time to brush.” and she
reaches to grab one of
the brushes and then proceeds to
vigorously brush her hair,
laughing. I'm smiling.
She
knows better,
and I think....
We can work with that.
I start to look for her top, and then
see it in the
small trash can near the sink...
She likes to put things, into
containers.
I guess this is better
than the floor, right?
We
can work with that.
One of the most significant things, I
have learned from
living with a special needs child/adult
is that what
you see, may not be perfect, but you
can always work
with it. And you both get changed in the
process.
Slow is the normal, and the greatest temptation I have, is to
get discouraged, grow weary, or looking
too hard
and long at what is not done.
There is nothing like seeing progress,
when after
one hundred or more times she does it
and you look
back and know, that every one of those
times, were
not to make her conform to your normal world, but to
perfect your own heart. It gives your
“heart muscles”
exercise in whats really important,
loving her and
living in hope. A perfect heart, might
look like,
perfectly loving every step you take
forward.
Smiling when she is clever with
the tooth brush and slam dunking
clothes in trash cans.:)
The goal is not what I see now,
but
what I'm becoming,
because of the process.
If I ever despise the process,
then we both lose ground.
This process produces something more
than what you
have accomplished or achieved, because
it could evade
you tomorrow. It's there, and then it's not, with these
special ones. So these little steps are celebrated,
for this day. And tomorrow, well,
that has not come yet!:)
Hope anchors my soul, and reminds me,
especially when progress is slow,
that it is not what I see, but
WHO I see, as I take
the next step....He can work with
that
"God is patient with the process. Think of the enormous leisure of God! He is never in a hurry." Oswald Chambers
One does not surrender a life in an instant. That which is lifelong can only be surrendered in a life time." Elisabeth Elliot
The above picture was when we welcomed Anna into our world. That was 27 years ago.
So good. Thank you for sharing!!
ReplyDeleteThank you blessed by "not despising the process" Yes and Amen.
ReplyDeleteOh, the lessons of God in our tight places! This reminds me of wise words of Spurgeon(Aug.30-Psalm 27)--"Never murmur against the second cause,," All is an orchestration. May we offer ourselves anew each day. Thanks, Dina!
ReplyDelete