Showing posts with label family. Show all posts
Showing posts with label family. Show all posts

Friday, August 30, 2024

Monarch Metamorphosis: The Broken Beauty of Transformation




Unobserved, the metamorphosed monarch breached her chrysalis.

My gaze focused instead on my mother, undergoing her own metamorphosis at the end of her Alzheimer's journey. In the prior week, she had stopped eating and drinking, stopped opening her eyes or responding to us. Every visit could be my last.

Watching her shoulders and sternum labor to pull air into her lungs, prayer words fled. In their absence, I clung to the old hymns we both loved. The nurse had told us that hearing was the last sense we lose, so I sang to Mom of the old rugged cross and amazing grace. I reminded her Jesus loves her and how sweet it is to trust in Him.

When voice failed, I tended Mom's dry skin, matted eyes, and crusty lips. Going to wash my hands, I saw her: a female monarch imago, wings still wet, wrinkled, and limp, feet clinging to the translucent shards of empty chrysalis.

Three times my husband and I have served as monarch midwives: the final two months of his father's life; the summer of his mother's passing; and this spring, the final six weeks of my mother's life. We only succeeded in saving one caterpillar from April predators. Once it had pupated and hardened into a chrysalis, we took the almost-not-yet butterfly in its cleaned habitat to my parents in hope that my father would behold the beautiful miracle of transformation in the midst of his great loss.

Then royalty emerged sight unseen while he was walking and my back was turned. We nonetheless marveled at her wings, which she now slowly opened and closed, drying them and stretching like an athlete warming up.

Mom's ragged, strained breathing and rapid pulse calmed enough that Dad sent me home so he could be alone with Mom until my sisters' afternoon visits.

Soon her struggle resumed. Dad summoned the nurse and the rest of us daughters. We sat close and held her hands, shoulder, foot— anything we could reach—as to a life preserver until the nurse came.

Nurse E made non-committal hmms as she took vitals and listened to Mom's heart, abdomen, and lungs. We helped clean her and salve her pressure sores in the tender awareness we might be preparing her body for those who would prepare her for burial.

Then the nurse told us it was hard to say how long remained. Mom could continue days like this, in this liminal struggle.

"It is a mystery. You are people of faith. It is in God's hands. We need to trust Him. It will happen in His time. Keep talking to her. She can hear you."

Hearts breaking with Mom's obvious suffering, we thanked her, told her we loved her, told her it would be ok (would it?), told her she could go Home to Jesus, told her it would be just a little while and she could rest.

Then, a miracle came: Mom opened her eyes. She gazed straight into Daddy's eyes, not through or past him at the visions and hallucinations of many weeks. She saw him and he her.

We gasped.

Seizing the moment as she held his gaze, Dad called her by her name and told her he loved her. He said she was his best friend, the love of his life, a wonderful wife and mother. He said that he was so thankful for all the adventures they'd had, that he'd miss her terribly, that he'd see her again soon.

He told her that fifty-five years ago her daddy had walked her down the aisle and given her to him, and now he was walking her down the aisle to give her to Jesus.

Even the nurse wept.

We sat in silence in the sacred moment until, praying through the taut suspense, I told the smart speaker to play the album Evensong by Keith and Kristyn Getty.

Their music had provided the songs of my mother's life's evening. We watched their Family Hymn Sings from the early pandemic hundreds of times. Mom delighted in seeing their young daughters on the screen. Their hymns played in the car and at home.

When Kristyn began to sing, "I heard the voice of Jesus say, 'Come unto Me and rest,'" I exhaled the breath I didn't know I was holding. Her lyric Celtic soprano voice enveloped us in comfort and anchored us to the presence of Christ. Encircling our beloved mother and wife letting our hands on her frail limbs, we waited and wept, speaking softly to her when words arose. Her eyes fluttered closed again.

When the track changed to "Softly and Tenderly," we gradually joined the song, inviting Mom to her Home in Jesus. For months, she had spoken daily of going Home, needing to see her long-deceased parents, being on a journey. She was so near, almost at the threshold. We sang to tell her it was all right. It would be all right. She could go Home.

Youngest sister laughed through tears at the marvel that our reticent dad was singing too.

Mom's anguish slowly calmed, her breathing regulated. We waited and watched, uncertain, until the nurse said the crisis had passed for now and she could leave. She instructed Dad on care for the night ahead and assured us she would check in as soon as she possibly could in the morning.

Since Mom could linger days yet in these labor pains of struggle, Dad sent us girls home for the evening. My husband had arrived to pay his respects to Mom and inspect the butterfly. Under his guidance, Dad released the butterfly into the garden, her wings dry and body ready to drink deeply of spring's nectar. She fluttered to a shrub and soon soared out of sight, her transformation complete.

I kissed my mother and told her I'd see her soon.

That night I slept barefoot but fully clothed. The expected, dreaded call came in the 3 o'clock hour. My mother's beautiful spirit, itself reflecting the imago Dei, had taken flight. Her threadbare tent, translucent chrysalis of flesh, had served its present purpose. She was Home with Jesus awaiting the resurrection of her body also.

Our earthly home is less homely without her, but we will see her soon, when Jesus softly and tenderly calls each of us Home too, whether in death or at His soon appearing, when our mortal flesh is clothed with immortality and death is swallowed up in victory.

Come soon, Lord Jesus.

 

Christina R. Leone Moore, August 2024

 

Wednesday, May 22, 2024

In Memoriam: My Mother





In the early morning hours of May 10, the open-armed Savior my open-hearted mother loves* welcomed her Home from her long, fraught pilgrimage through the shadowed valley of Alzheimer's. Her spirit and soul are free from the threadbare body, and her mind is clear, clearer than it has ever been. One day (come soon, Lord Jesus) her body too will be raised and glorified to be like the risen Christ's.


In our caregiving, we received many beautiful graces, "thin places" of experiencing God's love more deeply. There was also much anguish. Some of the numinous stories need writing, and a few will be shared in coming months. Words are hard to come by just now.


We are grateful Mom is no longer suffering, grateful her desire to receive care at home to the very end was granted, grateful for the helpers the Lord sent, especially nurse Emmily, and grateful for protection from all kinds of infections so that she stayed with us all the way until Alzheimer's itself took her. Most of all, we are grateful that we who love both Mom and Jesus will see them someday. And I am grateful that, with Mom with Jesus, and Jesus living in me, and me "in Christ" (as Paul often said), I can never be so very far removed from her. The communion of the saints has never meant more.


If you also know and love the Lord, I can't wait for you to meet her too.


If you don't yet, she would want you to know that Jesus gave His life on the cross for sinners like us so that all who receive Him by trusting Him would be cleansed and forgiven of sin and clothed in His righteousness. He gives to all who trust Him the right to be called children of God, and He then comes to take up residence in our hearts. He transforms us from the inside out until our bodies die or He returns and calls us Home.


We don't have to get our acts together to come to Him. We don't have to earn His approval. He offers love, grace, and welcome to sinners and enemies deserving of wrath, if only we come to Him and ask for His rescue.


"The righteousness of God is through faith in Jesus Christ to all who believe, since there is no distinction. For all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God; they are justified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus."

‭‭Romans‬ ‭3‬:‭22‬-‭24‬ ‭CSB‬‬


*"Loves" because she still lives in spirit and loves the Lord better than ever now.

Other more coherent pieces about my dear mom:

Velveteen

Saturday, May 13, 2023

Sonnet from the Shadowlands


The sun declines in western sky. Withdrawn

Are clarity of light and hue; brought on,

Long shadows, foggy veils, the sacred hush


Of darkling valley, far from pastures lush.


The golden hour rays play hide and seek,


Illuminate her face with glorious peek


Of unveiled radiance. Then it flies away;


The light of smiling eyes fades, vesperal gray.


Sundowning steals her stories; details dim,


Degrade and recombine in moment’s whim.


The twilight of unknowing steals the one


Who knew me knit together, blood and bone.


In Shadowlands, I clasp my hands round hers,


Here, side by side, as gathering dusk sight blurs.





A poem in honor of dementia patients and those who love them ❤️‍🩹

Sunday, August 21, 2022

Unexpected Providence: a Love Story

A small silver photo album with a photo of bride and groom and the words "Allen and Christina" on the front. Beneath that some hardwood floor is showing around the edges, with a printed newsletter called "The Rose Garden Gazette" and scattered red rose petals

 Without regular excavation and remembrance, the miraculous origin story of a marriage can be buried like a time capsule at the heart of the snowball of days into weeks into months into decades that accumulate so quickly. Today, our anniversary, I take my spade of sentences in hand to dig through the accretion of mundane moments to remember where we started. 

 

The United States had soldiers in Vietnam. A new decade was learning to walk. The baby boom had subsided into a baby bust, but no one would know that from the first indignant cry of the second son and last child of Baptist missionaries in East Africa. He spent most of his childhood outside, barefoot, climbing avocado trees and running through tea plantations. He learned to sing and imagine, to improvise and hold plans loosely. Even though he had four older siblings, the demands of missionary life meant they were away at boarding school for most of his first decade. He had an imaginary friend and real friends at school, so he did not want for companionship. 

 

Nine months and two weeks after that boy’s first cry, on the other side of the world, the first daughter was born to an Irish Catholic mother and Italian Catholic father. She spent most of her childhood inside, in ballet slippers, practicing scales on the piano and making up dances to present to any adult she could convince to play the audience. She learned to sing and imagine, to read and snuggle into nests in corners and pillow forts and under the furniture. She had two sisters whose growing up was tightly intertwined with hers. She had a best friend at school and an imaginary friend named Pinky who once had a door slammed on her. The books on her shelves were teeming with fellowship as well, so she did not want for company. 

 

As the years passed, the boy confessed faith in Christ as his Savior and was baptized by his father. He had a beautiful voice that eventually opened doors to sing in public. He learned the Brahms Requiem for All-State Choir and made the cut. On the soccer pitch, he played goalie and earned state honors there as well. In adolescence he sensed the Lord calling him to music ministry, and his church affirmed that. He entered the renowned music school of a state university, intending to major in voice and become a church musician. 

 

As for the girl, she didn’t come to know Jesus as her Savior, Lord, and beloved Friend until high school. By this time her family had left the church of her infancy, but the instrument of her conversion was not her church but God’s Word, which she was reading in preparation for a choir solo. In adolescence she sensed the Lord calling her to music ministry, and her church affirmed that. She entered the sacred music program of a small, church-run liberal arts college, intending to complete that and a masters of sacred music to become a church musician. 

 

Neither path turned out as expected. 

 

The boy found he didn’t love practicing enough to sustain a music major at his school. He changed course and completed a degree that could incorporate his completed music classes and equip him with computer skills. And allow him to finish on time. While completing his degree, he discovered a Bible church nearby and immersed himself in its college ministry and short-term missions. His ministry dream shifted from music to missions, and he raised support, sold or gave away everything he owned, and prepared to move to Eastern Europe to share the gospel and make disciples. 

 

But that fell through, and he spent a year in ministry in Cambodia instead. 

 

Meanwhile, the girl faced heartbreak and disillusionment, discovering in her freshman year of college that her church didn’t believe what she thought it did. She tested its teachings against the Bible, which she was reading cover-to-cover for the first time. Try as she might, she could not make them reconcile. She changed course and left university. Bereft of church community and what she thought was God’s blueprint for her adult life, she couldn’t see a path forward in any other major. She did not finish on time. When the boy was in Cambodia, she was embarking on a new course of study in English  through the distance-learning programme of the University of London. While she studied, she worked in the public school system and dreamed of going to seminary and becoming a missionary. Through her sister, she discovered the same Bible church which had sent the boy overseas. She drove an hour each way on Sundays and at least once during the week to be as involved as she could be while working and studying for her degree. She never met the boy there, even after he returned from Cambodia and began seminary himself. 

 

Eight years after she graduated from high school, she earned the credential needed for acceptance to seminary. The same seminary where her pastor had studied. The same seminary, as it happens, that the boy attended. The summer before her classes began, she stayed with a friend near the church and was able to attend early-morning missions prayer one week. The boy was there too. After all, he worked for the missions office. He introduced himself and asked the usual questions. When he learned that she wanted to move to that town and didn’t yet have work, he picked up the phone and called his former employer to help her get an interview there. She was grateful but also unsettled. This seemed awfully friendly for a first encounter. She was not interested in a boy. Her heart belonged to Greek and Hebrew. 

 

By this time he was in his final year of a master's degree and eagerly anticipating life as one of the first missionaries sent out directly by their church after graduation. She was a new student, feeling like a deer caught in the open meadow during hunting season, desperately looking for one or two safe people to hide behind. In her first class on her first day, she discovered three other girls from her church were there too. Two of them knew her sister, so that gave instant connection. They shared the same second class too, so they all sat together again. Then came chapel, where the girls met up with some boy students from the same church and everyone sat together in a group. Then they all meandered as a unit to the cafeteria for lunch. The boy was part of that group, and sometimes they would end up next to each other in chapel. He held the hymnal and they harmonized. He had a beautiful voice. 

 

Even though the girl was not interested in dating, let alone anything more, ten years before, as a teenager reading Elisabeth Elliot’s Passion and Purity, she had determined that, if ever there was a boy for her, she wanted to follow the courting model and not the cultural norm of dating. She also, like Elisabeth, wrote out a list of qualities she considered important in her future mate, should such a one exist. 

 

As the weeks rolled by, lunchtime conversations—all in a group, mind you—ticked one item after another after another off that list. How unsettling. What could this mean? 

 

The boy was leading a book club for the church singles ministry. The first book planned was The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe. She still wasn’t interested in the boy, but she was very much interested in discussing that beloved book. She joined the book club, but only for the literary cameraderie, you understand. 

 

The next semester, everyone in the lunch group had classes on different days. Everyone, that is, except the boy and the girl. Another friend of the girl, not from their church, joined them sometimes, but many times she could only stay for part of lunch. Other people popped in here and there, but often the boy and the girl found themselves at the group table alone together in the crowded cafeteria. 

 

Boys generally made the girl nervous, but this boy didn’t. That freed her to engage in conversation without wanting to hide behind something. They became friends, good friends. Through these hours of conversation, they learned that they both held to a courting ideal, both felt called to missions in Asia, both loved old hymns and singing, and both had similar missionary ideals around support-raising and interacting with the people they would serve. The VENN diagram of their reading and musical tastes seemed to overlap more than it differed, and their theological convictions matched completely. Still, the girl’s heart belonged to Biblical languages, and the boy’s heart, as it turns out, belonged to one of the girl’s friends. 

 

As spring began to bloom on the trees and in the gardens, the girl began to realize that she would be happy talking like that for a whole lifetime of meals. It didn’t matter, though, because the boy had made it clear he only wanted friendship. 

 

Until he didn’t. As he told it, he woke up one morning and it was like a lightbulb went on overhead. His affections changed that quickly. 

 

The day before his birthday, he wasn’t at the lunch table. The girl was eating with her friend. She was, however, supposed to give the boy a ride to book club later. He stopped by long enough to hand the girl a missions article. “It might be interesting to talk about on the drive.” 

 

That proved to be his final test of missiological compatibility before he asked a question that changed life for both of them in the most unexpected ways. His courage failed when they stopped for a quick supper, though. They continued to book club the same as always. Afterward, when she drove him to where he’d parked to catch his morning carpool, he suggested stopping for coffee or tea. Even though they’d just had book club at a coffee shop. (It’s a good thing that town abounded with them.) 

 

There he asked to court her. She said, “I couldn’t think of a nicer honor.” He said, “What?” (Coffee shops are loud, even on the porch outside.) She repeated herself. He said, “Well, I guess I need to talk to your parents now.” She handed him the brick of a mobile phone she used when she would be driving late at night. 

 

Their courtship was brief, not quite 5 months from that evening until their marriage. The boy was sure they would have adequate support to spend the new year in India, their designated home base, and they wanted as much time as possible to adjust to marriage before that. They planned a small wedding that was really a worship service, complete with congregational singing and a gospel presentation. That August Saturday was as hot and bright as expected in Texas, but no one minded, or if they did they didn’t complain. 

 

The missions pastor emeritus visited the bride before the service and commented on her lack of nervousness. She said, “Why should I be nervous when I’m in the center of God’s will?”  The pastor would then tell the assembled family that before his opening prayer. The girl would later learn how very painful the center of God’s will may be, but not that day. That day went almost entirely smoothly, and the couple’s first act as man and wife was to take the Lord’s Supper together. 

 

Being almost as poor as the proverbial church mice, they agreed to exchange wedding gifts that didn’t cost money. The girl force-fed herself coffee until she could tolerate it without gagging, and they both presented, with no prior arrangement, framed original poems with roses as accents to each other on their wedding eve. 

 

This unexpected marriage has continued to unfold in unexpected ways. Instead of India they moved to Thailand. Instead of moving overseas by the next January, they needed an additional year to build a support team. Life on the field involved many, many more medical appointments than anyone expected. By the end of that year, instead of homesick they were back home, the girl sick with what turned out to be autoimmune disease. 

 

The theme song of their friendship and courtship was “Great Is Thy Faithfulness.” It seemed to appear in every worship gathering, formal and informal. In this unexpected twist of providence, it proved true again. The Lord provided a new job and career at the same company the boy had called to get the girl a job interview at their very first meeting. Instead of earning his living in gospel ministry and doing a little computer work on the side, he earned his living at the computer and taught Bible studies at church on the side. 

 

The Lord has been with him, as He was with Joseph and Daniel, and given him success in this field he never would have pursued on his own initiative. It has allowed him to keep his promise to provide for the girl and ease that one burden as much as he can. It has allowed him to bless others with career assistance they didn’t expect. 

 

Instead of training church leaders in Asia, they served together in adult Sunday school. When the unlikely opportunity arose to help disciple a small group of gifted and delightful high school students, they decided it wouldn’t hurt just to meet the youth, even though obviously youth ministry was not their calling. Three and a half years later, they celebrated the group’s graduation from high school. The boy even co-led the students on a mission trip to Guatemala. One of them is in vocational ministry today. They never would have chosen that for themselves, but God’s providence led in unexpected ways to the most joyful and fruitful shared ministry of their marriage. 

 

Instead of writing a missionary newsletter together, the girl now writes her blog alone. (It was the boy’s idea.) She still has far more medical appointments than she ever thought possible. She still loves God’s Word and missions and dusts off her Greek as needed. She gave up Hebrew for the boy. 

 

So much has changed in 23 years. They would not have believed the hairpin turns and dead ends on that first day, even if the prophet Samuel himself had told them. Some of them have been almost unbearably painful. Others have been almost unbearably sweet. But through all the unexpected providences, God’s faithfulness has been the starlight and shepherd’s crook guiding them. He has not left them or forsaken them, even in the darkest of storms, and He will not forsake you who belong to Him. 

 

Happiest of anniversaries to my one and only. You are still my favorite person to harmonize with. 

I love you. (You know.) 

c