Sunday, November 26, 2017

God in the Gravy {remembering Tom Terrill} [a repost]

{originally posted on threebythirty, Jan. 18, 2015}

"Friends are the family we choose for ourselves."

I can remember the first time I spent a holiday with Tommy Terrill.  I was filling a dual role: excited mommy-to-be, and bloated, beached whale.  Easter 2006 found me waddling up the driveway of my friend Sue's house, arms loaded with food {of course...what pregnant girl doesn't fit that stereotype?}.  My maternity clothes billowed around me, reminiscent of a partially filled hot air balloon, and my tree-trunk legs were still mourning the temporary loss of their slenderizing friend; the ankle.  Let's just say, I wasn't feeling like I had a snowball's chance at winning a pageant any time soon.

Not only did I look disastrous, my heart was hurting as well.  We had hardly been living in Colorado one year, and on our first Easter there, Randy was stuck logging wells in Utah.  I was feeling lonely, sorry for myself, and slightly excited about the idea that I could blame all of my candy-coated cravings on the baby.

So when I was invited to join the Terrill family in their home for Easter, I jumped for joy {not an easy, or attractive action at nearly 9 months pregnant}, because....people!  I would be surrounded by a family {albeit not mine--at the time}, but actual people with whom I could converse and laugh and feel included...and eat {score, pregnant lady...score}.

I don't exactly recall every detail of that Easter meal, but now I know it marked the beginning of a vital, comforting, God-given era in the lives of my family and me. 

Sue and I had worked together nearly an entire school year, and her presence in my life was integral those first few tender months of living so far from 'home': living as a new wife, living as a {surprised} expectant mom, living as a teacher who was feeling sub-par because of the 'newness', the unfamiliarity, the hard of education.  Sue and I became fast friends.  Her after-school hours were conducive to not only my loneliness while Randy worked, but also my loquacious personality.  Bless her heart for allowing me to spend countless hours, chattering her ear off while she worked hard to prepare her classroom for learning activities.  Her gift of time, along with a listening ear was one of the most generous gifts I could have ever received during that transitional time in my life.

Over the course of that school year, both Randy and I had been blessed to be introduced to the whole Terrill family.  Not only did Sue and Tommy; but Sue's husband Terry and their younger son Danny; serve as our 'movers' when we bought our first home in November, 2005, but Sue's dad Les had become a bright light I looked forward to seeing on the school days he volunteered his time to work with littles.

It was the way the Terrill family was--IS.  Giving, doing, sharing, listening, loving, volunteering, donating, serving.  Randy and I quickly became acquainted with--and fell in love with--their genuineness.  Over the course of our friendship, Randy and I have even taken to using the word 'Terrill' as an adjective for when we can't properly describe something that has a beautiful, wholesome, magnetic je ne sais quoi about it. 

Tommy was such a positive example amazing qualities his parents instilled in him, but even with all of that amazingness filling his soul, he still found room to fit more.  The unique blend of personality that Tommy possessed is one of those rare and beautiful finds that makes you pause for a moment to thank God for creating such a well-rounded, well-grounded, life-loving individual--and to pause for another moment to pray that He will create in you and others, more opportunities to be more Tommy-like.

That first Easter I shared with the Terrill family was life changing.  The laughs, inevitable.  The food, delicious.  The way Tommy made it feel so normal to have a random and overly-pregnant girl chattering away at his family's dining table; it's a quality that struck me and stuck with me.

When I was growing up, holidays were almost always spent with family.  Blood relatives, interspersed with the occasional 'outsider'.  It's not that my family wasn't accommodating to other people joining our celebration, it was more of a 'that's the way it is' type of mentality.  I had never really experienced a holiday with those who didn't fall under the umbrella of 'family tree material'. 

The course of that changed while I shared an Easter meal in the Terrill's home in 2006.  Welcoming arms, warm smiles, funny stories, and 'so forth'.  The era of the 'Terril-ley' holidays had begun.  Sharing time and stories, breaking bread, debating football, and Randy explaining to Les 'one more time' what his line of work entails {"that's a fact!"}.  Standard activities whenever we were all together.

Needless to say, our family's move to Texas put to rest an ongoing tradition that had brought us comfort during our tenure in Colorado.  Holidays now carry with them the longing not only for time with our 'family tree family', but for our chosen blended Colorado family as well.  The kids had never known anything but holidays with the Terrills, so it was {and still is}, a feeling of 'offness' for all of us knowing we won't be eating Jell-o salad, playing with the beagles, being surrounded by the comforting blanket of love that is the Terrill family.  Thank you, God, for the memories of those times that we can carry in our heart.
~~~
Thanksgiving, 2014.

My heart shattered as I stirred the gravy and heard my sweet friend's wavering voice on the other end of the phone, confirming that Tommy's life had tragically been cut short in an accident the night before.  Physical ache took over, stealing my ability to speak and contain the tears that poured from my eyes like a river.  Our family, our blended and blessed family, had been cracked wide open, a wound too great to ever fully heal.

Tommy was a comedian.  An outdoorsman.  A talented athlete.  He carried with him an arsenal of quick-witted cracks, deadpan responses, and wise-ass comments that inevitably left anyone within a 30-foot radius with sore cheeks and a quasi ab workout from laughing so hard. 

Tommy was devoted.  Not just to his beautiful wife, Snowden, upon whom he believed the sun rose and set, but to his family, friends, animals, and the random stranger with whom he'd interact.  Tommy was the epitome of someone who truly loved, appreciated, and cherished the human experience.  His time on this earth was overflowing with his positive energy and inspirational outlook that influenced and motivated so many. 

Tommy brought a level of 'real' to any situation.  His natural charisma was a key tool he used to give everyone in the room a feeling of comfort.  He was approachable and welcoming.  He adored my kids.  And my kids adored him.  Gavin especially took a liking to both Tommy, and Danny as well, because when we spent time at the Terrills, he wasn't so outnumbered by sisters.  Both Tommy and Danny made my kids feel comfortable and welcome.  They would play with them.  Acknowledge them.  Enjoy them.  From a mom perspective, I was grateful for not only the respite from being their sole entertainer, but more importantly for the positive and loving influence Tommy and Danny provided for my kids.  And even though Tommy was a bit hesitant and nervous to hold a squishy newborn Raegan back in 2011, I saw in him a heart that I knew would make for the most incredible father any child could ask for.

While Tommy was not given the opportunity on earth to have his own children, it does not in any way mean that his legacy will not carry on.  Friendships forged because of Tommy's presence will be forever encouraged by his compassion.  Husbands who knew Tommy will be inspired to love on their wives more deeply and all-encompassing because of the way in which he loved Snowden.  Anyone with siblings will be more inclined to dedicate themselves fully to the unbreakable bond that God created when he gave us brothers and sisters, all because Tommy exemplified what it meant to not only be a brother, but a best friend.  And sons everywhere will want to deepen their relationship with their parents because of the way Tommy loved Sue and Terry.  He was a dedicated son.  Like every child, he didn't always make choices that were a perfect example of common sense, but he possessed within him the positive, Christ-like characteristics that Sue and Terry impressed upon him throughout his beautiful life. 

There are no words for when tragedies like this occur in the lives of those we love.  No one-trick-pony way to encapsulate the sadness and make it go away.  The hurt will be there, it will infiltrate daily lives; some days striking us down to rock bottom, while other days serving as a minor affliction while we choose to focus on the positive.  That this world was graced with the presence of a man, the likes of whom are a rare and beautiful find, is truly proof that God does not make mistakes.  Tommy confidently walked this earth and charmed his way into lives and infiltrated the hearts of so many.  The smiles and happy memories he has gifted those who knew him, I believe, were his way of leaving behind something that will pave the way toward a place of heart-mending. 

My heart is still shattered in many ways, shards of it fell into our Thanksgiving gravy as I stirred that day in shock and disbelief.  But even in that moment, even with that horrific news shaking the core of our family, I still experienced a bit of God's peace.
~~~
It was Gavin's second Thanksgiving, and we were gathered in the Terrill kitchen, helping with preparations for the meal, nibbling the appetizers Sue had prepared.  Tommy stood at the stove, methodically stirring the gravy that would soon enrobe the delicious smelling turkey, and cover mounds of fluffy, white mashed potatoes.  I couldn't wait.  Afterall, gravy is one of the food groups when it comes to holiday meals. 

Sue had just placed a Pyrex dish, piled high with delicious homemade mashed potatoes on the stove top, as counter space was quickly reaching capacity as the final components of the meal came together.  Randy was breaking off pieces of cheese and crackers for Gavin to mush into his crumb-covered face when all of the sudden we heard an explosion, of sorts.  The brief moments of flourished activity now blend together in my mind, but in the aftermath, what we discovered was this:  a cool Pyrex dish does *not* like to be placed atop a hot stove burner, even if that particular dish was placed there in an oversight due to too many cooks in the kitchen {literally}. 

The Pyrex shattered.  Not just into pieces.  No, no.  The shards of glass that were the result of this lesson learned were so insanely small, so well-scattered throughout Sue's kitchen, that if you went there today, you might still be able to find one {even though Sue keeps a very clean home!}.  Pryex was on the counter.  On the stove.  On the kitchen island.  The floor.  In the folds of our clothes {but thankfully not embedded in skin!}.  It was in the corn, interspersed throughout the plates of turkey, and in.the.gravy. 

It was a total loss.  There's no real way to bring gravy back after it's become 'chewable'.  All that work, the attentive stirring Tommy had done became a thing of the past as we cleaned up the mess of potato and Pyrex.  The memory of that serves as an ongoing joke, a happily recalled story for the Terrill-Conley family.

Tommy was a bit perturbed his hard work was all for naught as the last of crunchy gravy was poured into the trash; but Tommy being Tommy, he found the humor quickly, and laughed it off, embedding it in each of our memories as a happy one.

As I stood at my stove, just seven Thanksgivings later, my gravy had an added ingredient as well.  The tears that fell from my eyes were of course liquid, but the pain I felt in crying them hurt every bit as much as shards of glass in my eyes.  But while I stirred and cried, cried and stirred, I couldn't help but find God in that gravy. 
God gave Tommy to the world, and used him in ways that are so far-reaching we may never truly realize his impact.  He used Tommy in big ways, in funny ways, in comforting ways.  But perhaps one of my most special ways to remember the way God used Tommy, was in gravy ways.

Rest peacefully, Tommy, the hole you've left is one the world will never be able to fill.




Tuesday, April 11, 2017

planting

Seven years ago, our family experienced the kind of loss that settles deep down into your bones.  The kind that stays there and slowly eats away at your stability; weakening you from the inside out.  You feel the pain worse on the gloomy days; like an old sport's injury.   'Anniversaries', holidays, and new beginnings are all stained with the tears of this hurt; sometimes bitter, sometimes sweet.

My father-in-law left this earth far too soon for what's considered so by human standards.  At 52 years old, many would argue that he was plucked from us right in the prime of his adulthood.  A devoted husband and father; a doting grandfather; a loyal brother, uncle, friend.  He was well-loved by so many here on earth, yet for reasons beyond any of our understanding, he was called away to be with the Father in heaven, whom he loved and served.

I had the honor of meeting Rick back in the December 2002, when he and his wife Rhonda opened their home to me when I visited Randy over our winter break from Penn State.  I drove almost 7 hours across Pennsylvania; arriving long after dark, only to walk through the back door of the solid, 2-story farmhouse and practically right into the welcoming arms of a man who gave me a glimpse into what middle-aged Randy would resemble.

Getting to know Rick and Rhonda {as Uncle Mike said at Rick's memorial; there wasn't one without the other} felt to me like stepping into a storybook.  There was a rhythm to their interactions.  A natural flow of how things went in their day-to-day.  It looked easy and comfortable and comforting.  I had never personally observed a couple with such a relational style like that; and it intrigued me.

Growing up with parents in two different households and a lot {a lot} of issues that were never properly handled; what I brought to the table in relationships was jaded in every sense of the word.  It's not an excuse for the lackluster job that I do in being a mom, wife, daughter, sister, friend; but it did rest some pretty jagged foundation blocks in the construction of each of these entities.  Most of the cracks are the result of wounds that are self-inflicted and self-sabotaged; the result of my inability to properly handle turmoil, stress, trauma, and pain.  I shoot myself in the foot and then wonder why I don't have a good leg to stand upon.  And the infection that has grown from those wounds is travelling deep into the throes of my adult life.  The offshoots impacting the core of my relationships--my home.

The 'mom' part of me, like every other mother is subject to this increased levels of mom-shaming and mom-guilt that runs so rampantly through our society.  When met with a highly fractured foundation of self confidence; the effects produce countless negative outcomes.  Depression, bursts of anger, anxiety, lack of consistency, yelling, removal of joy.  The tone of the household is reminiscent of a frozen lake in spring; crackling and popping, faces riddled with caution, constantly on-edge for the unexpected break in the ice.  It's a frightening way for children humans to live.  I try to exit the spiral, yet the centrifugal force of my broken core draws me back in; erasing any positive progress I've made in changing myself and shoring up the ice.

But it's the true root of the home--my marriage--where I find my shortcomings have brought the deepest, hardest, realest, most damaging, relationship-ending kind of pain.  My flawed foundations, my broken shell, my poor decisions...all have brought about what feels like an inevitable ending to a marriage more times than I'm proud to admit.  But admit them, I will.  I lived a lot of years bound up by the gnarled, tight-fisted grip of shame.  And where has it found me?  I'm a 35 year old mom of four, married for nearly 12 years to a man who can't and doesn't even want to look at me because of the ways in which I've shattered his heart.  He sees me as dishonest, untrustworthy, manipulative, mean, and incapable of change.  Even these words I type; the truths I spill out for my children to one day read and know who their mom was will be spun into the depths of our dysfunction; viewed by some as a way to gain empathy.  When all they really are, are just truths.  And not the so-called truths I spent years and years, and years craftily weaving into the story I wanted people to believe about me. Real.  Genuine.  Truths.

When I met Randy's family; my guard was up in every sense of the word.  What I knew about them screamed 'ideal family'; and I was nervous.  I was a girl with raging insecurities and a nonexistent idea of my core set of values; and I was terrified.  I remember telling Randy's mom that I don't discuss religion or politics after being asked a {most likely} harmless question.  My brain couldn't wrap around those topics for no other reason than I hadn't been brought up with the knowledge of such.  It just 'wasn't discussed'; so rather than adding some well-roundedness to my identity, I shut the door and hammered a few boards across it.  And it wasn't unique to those two hot-button topics.  I shut and boarded up lots of doorways in my life's story; for fear I wouldn't be accepted.

Yet despite my own many, many issues, Randy's parents seemed to like me and didn't have vocal oppositions to me hanging around for what would become the long haul.  I grew to love them as a second set of parents.  The physical distance between us of course serving as a hurdle to our flourishing relationship; however I am rarely short on words so phone conversations filled in the gaps between our visits.

When we moved to Colorado shortly after arriving home from our honeymoon, the visits from family and friends became cherished treasures on the timeline of our lives; countless memories and quality time squished into the span of mere days, captured in a few snapshots for prosperity.

Shortly after Gavin was born, and just over a year into our marriage, Rick and Rhonda came to visit and meet their newest grandson.  Randy and I of course put on our best tour guide attire and proudly showed off a few of the little gems we had stumbled across in our short tenure in our new home state.
But it was the times when we were doing 'nothing'; or 'visiting', a more fitting term for the quality time spent; that stand out in my mind with the most prevalence.  There was one afternoon--I recall a couple of conversations that both Randy and I viewed for many years with a negative connotation.

We had been driving somewhere; lunch downtown, the Harley shop...the specifics aren't important; and there were some terse words exchanged between my husband and me.  Again, the attention isn't in the details; but there was just enough 'oomph' in our tones with one another that it raised a flag in the eyes {and ears} of my in-laws.

When we arrived back home, I sat in the living room to nurse a very hungry Gavin, and my mother-in-law sat to keep me company.  I'm not sure how it came to be, but Randy and Rick were in the basement, watching something on tv together.

Later on, Randy and I each discovered that in the conversations we each had with his parents; concerns were voiced in regards to the earlier interaction they'd observed.  My husband and I grew defensive; frustrated by what we felt was an attempt to stick their noses into our lives after just a couple of days in our presence.  Randy was not pleased.  And, because I had this inherent ability to mask myself behind shame, I was embarrassed that his parents saw the interaction and decided to step in the way they did; worried they'd think we were failing.

But what if they were right?  What if they saw something in that brief exchange that they recognized as a crack that could eventually topple a structure?  What if they weren't so much 'sticking their noses in' as 'imparting wisdom'?  What if their motives weren't meant to be moment-killing, but instead, to be seed-planting?  To take pieces of their past experiences and wrap them in a tender coat of concern; planting them deep in our hearts for chance they take root and grow and flourish.  And what if we, in our haughty naivete, squashed the seeds out of assumption that we knew what we were doing on our own.

I know for a fact that my in-law's marriage was not the 'ideal' I had labeled it as in my mind during those first few months of knowing them.  This isn't to point fingers and label and highlight any one thing; it's just a common fact.  And even if I never once heard it from the source, I would know it to be true because, humans.  We are all affected by the nature of human brokenness; and my precious in-laws are no exception.

So what if we missed the mark that day; met their intentions with frustrations, and fought against something meant for our good?

Ironically enough, on that fateful day; when Randy was approached by his father; I was sitting across from my mother-in-law, in an over-sized arm chair feeling both defensive {as is human nature, I suppose}, but also feeling receptive.  As a postpartum, brand new mom who was essentially considered a newlywed, I was smack dab in the midst of the reality of my new circumstances.  And as a perpetual people pleaser driven by the fear of shame; I wanted to get it right.

The specifics of our conversation are buried deep in the unreachable archives of the human mind; however, it was how we ended our talk, the words we spoke {well, she spoke...I was too 'new' and uncertain I'd do it right--hello?! confidence issues much?} did plant a seed.  The prayer Rhonda led me in that day planted a mustard seed.  I knew that day that she had faith in me.  That she was proud of me.  And that my father-in-law felt the same; because when Rhonda told Rick, I was once again welcomed into the arms that had hugged me that first night I met him.  It was as if HE were hugging me himself.  And even then, I remember feeling a bit embarrassed, feeling a bit of shame as my husband looked on.  I felt like I was showing weakness when really, HE was just getting me started on my pathway to strong.

My seed took some time to take root.  The forces necessary to bust through the hard coat and reach for the enriching soil didn't take effect over night.  And there have been many, many setbacks.  I've plucked my mustard seed from the ground at times; thinking I can do it on my own.  Events along the way have wreaked havoc on that little seed.  Floods have tried to wash it away; drought, threatened to waste it away.

I've made some really crappy choices in recent years.  I've kept my little seedling growing in the soil, hooked up to a self-watering device so that I could try to have it both ways.  Try to keep up appearances while following a self-fulfilling role.

And it has all but ended me.  My marriage is gripping the thinnest thread, some days with greased fingers.  My children.  Oh, I see the eyes of my children and I fear for what this season is writing on their hearts.  I fear for their confidence, for the way in which they identify themselves.  I worry they'll take on shame and wear it around like a coat that keeps the pulpy, vulnerable parts of them hidden away.  It's in those pulpy vulnerable parts where life is--when a seed grows, it busts through those hard shells.  Right through the coat and those feelings of insecurity or pride or shame or low self-esteem; and the stuff inside does its work.  Does its growing.

I didn't really begin knocking on that hard coat until a couple years ago.  And to be honest, if it weren't for Randy discovering my gross inequities in our marriage; I don't know if I'd be where I am today.  If I'd have the courage to let the pulpy vulnerable show.  The trouble is, the damage that's come from the little self-watering system I had set up is lifelong.  And I can't change it.  Or bring it under control.  There have been other seeds planted in that.  Seeds of doubt and distrust, of hurt, anger and indifference.  The coats of those seeds are much, much harder; nearly impossible to crack.  But I have a suspicion that the insides of those seeds are filled with the pulpy vulnerable stuff as well.  From the insides of those seeds, we find the salve of healing.  It's a deep and very carefully guarded treasure; the control of which lying in the hands of the offended, not the offender.  The harvest could take years.  Even a lifetime.

I wish my father-in-law were still with us for so, so many reasons.  I have found such comfort in conversations with Rhonda over the years; but my heart hurts for her knowing she isn't able to spend her remaining days with the man she chose to plant and harvest seeds with.  Their relationship may have been riddled with periods of flood and drought, they may have had times when their focus wasn't always on their own seeds; but when I met them, none of that showed on their faces.  Their faces reflected one another because they had tilled the ground and removed the weeds.  The hard-shelled seeds still hung out in the soil because, humans.  They didn't let those stubborn seeds choke out the land and render it useless, only to move on to greener pastures.  They tilled and tilled and broke down those hard, hard shells until the pulpy vulnerable eeked its way out and touched soil.  The seeds that were once hard and impossible gave way to healing and to life.

I wish we had listened more that day in 2006.  I wish we had been receptive rather than rejecting.  I wish we would have seen that setting a good foundation; planting seeds in well-tended soil can't guarantee a good harvest, but the odds are in favor of such.  But our soil is rocky.  Dry; baked by a harsh sun, requiring nutrients so great it can seem impossible--even pointless to try acquiring enough.

But there's these four kids.  And their hearts.  So we slowly, slowly, slowly gather; only watering when we think of it--not nearly enough to encourage flourishing.  But thank goodness in this world there's a community of seed growers.  They support those seeds when the growers just can't.  Sprinkling nutrients, tipping a can over the fence to let water rain down from above.  Just enough to keep it going and growing.

I wish my father-in-law were still with us.  For so many reasons.  I would want to talk with him more.  To watch him with our children and my husband and hear his laugh and to watch in real-life the fruits of labor in a marriage pocked by pain, yet redeemed by rain.


Wednesday, March 8, 2017

whiskey rose

Just over a month ago, on February 6, 2017, our family welcomed baby number 4; our third daughter.  She arrived at 3:10 pm; wide-eyed, healthy, 7lb. 3 oz., 19 3/4", and a head full of hair.  A perfect blend of her older siblings, as well as her mama and daddy.

We didn't know whether we were adding another boy or another girl to our family until delivery day; something we had not done with any of the other three kids; and the experience is one I won't ever forget.  It felt like almost 90% of people who gave their 'weigh in' with their gender guess was team blue; so there were a lot of surprised people out there; myself included.

I didn't have a 'feeling' one way or the other throughout my entire pregnancy; however at some point in the final two weeks, I began to get these little inklings that I'd once again have the experience of bringing up a bouncing baby boy.  I had one, and only one, dream about the specific gender of the baby; and it was even on the same night that Raegan's teacher had a dream about the baby as well.  The consensus for both our dreams was a baby boy.

So when this lil miss arrived; needless to say, my eyes were wide and my jaw, dropped.

I was asked so often if I had a preference one way or the other; and my answer was that; honestly?  I didn't have one.  I really and truly would have loved to have the experience of another little boy, because it's been so very long since I've had a sweet bruiser of a boy come running to me with an armload of trucks and train cars; wanting to use my legs as mountains and tunnels for his imaginary adventures.  But, ohh...a little girl.  The bows, the ruffles, the whole idea of another little mini following in my footsteps {as well as the footsteps of two amazing older sisters}.  I  really loved that idea as well.  Because, #mostrecentexperience {and also; I love raising my girls to become strong and capable, kind and world-changing women}.

I remember telling Randy my reservations and fear that I'd have feelings of disappointment if the baby wasn't the gender I had 'felt' in my dream a few short days before delivery.  The phrase 'ultra surprise' was what he used to describe what I had pessimistically labeled disappointment.  I liked the positivity of that descriptor; and, as fate God would have it, at 3:10 pm on February 6th, I had the extraordinary opportunity to experience that 'ultra surprise' first hand.

Jameson Rose.


When we were thinking of names for the baby, Randy and I decided pretty quickly one evening during the first trimester.  We typed our choices for each gender into the pregnancy app I'd downloaded and kept them quiet from everyone.  We never really said the names out loud, because, with three other kids, our house literally has ears.

It wasn't until the third trimester hit that I really began to {silently} add the choices we'd made onto the roster of names I'd holler up the stairs when I needed the kids to fold laundry/come down for dinner/stop fighting.  I don't know what it was, but something about each of the names we'd chosen so many weeks earlier just wasn't quite grabbing me like they had done once before.  I really liked them, and I knew that whichever one we'd end up with would grow on me over time along with the sweet babe who owned it; but I just...I don't know.  Wasn't feeling it.  I began to re-scan list upon list of unique baby names, uncommon baby names, baby names that end with a short-vowel-n {the one clue we gave people about what the name would be}.  And that's when I remembered.

A name we had once tossed around when we were expecting {what we thought was our final} baby #3.  Jameson.  A name we both liked, but upon finding out we were expecting a girl, set aside for reasons led by worry that this seemingly more 'masculine' name would not be widely accepted for a little girl.  After all, if you do any sort of search on the name, the results are tied to the label 'boy names'.

But this time.  This time the name wormed its way back into my mind, began to find its place at the end of the litany of names I shout out each day.  This time it nestled in well along side Gavin, Brynn, and Raegan.  It worked.  And the best part was I felt like it worked for both a baby boy or a baby girl {and also?  whiskey.  it works for whiskey.  and, yes.  we've been asked.  and no, whiskey is in no way linked to conception. [plus?  Randy's a Crown kinda guy]}.  I digress.

Back to the baby names yet again, only this time in search of middle names for each gender.  Really, we didn't take too long to decide--our conversations about baby names have always been pretty low-maintenance.  Rose became the top female contender pretty quickly for it's beauty and simplicity; and, in keeping with our arrow and 'fourward' theme, Archer became our choice for a boy.  I felt a resurgence of excitement for this new little person we were about to welcome into our family.  And it took a large amount of restraint to not go ahead and just add our self-proclaimed gender neutral baby name to the nursery decor or the litany of names I have tattooed on my arm.  Alas, the ink will wait for a little.

There are expectant parents who pore over lists of baby names; making selections based upon the meaning of the name.  A practice that I fully respect; and confidently acknowledge as 'not what works for me'.  I love words {obviously}, so to try and select meanings behind baby names that I'd want to define our child...?  The poor kid would probably have 7 names, because I just couldn't narrow it down.

So it was of no surprise to me when I looked up the meaning and discovered a little porthole pathway to the Bible.  Because, if ever there's a way to find God, it's in the miracle of a baby.  Especially in this baby.  Our unexpected surprise baby who steered us away from the pathway we had selfishly {and stupidly} tried to navigate toward--the divergent path of divorce.

{He used a baby to change the course of [our] future.  Hmmm.  Sounds familiar.}

It doesn't take a rocket scientist to make the inference that Jameson means 'son of James'.  James is derived from the Hebrew 'Yaakov', which is the origination of the name Jacob.  And now Jacob {stay with me} is often thought to be derived from the word 'akev'--the literal translation of which is 'at the heel'.

Jacob was the son of Rebecca and Issac, grandson of Sarah and Abraham {you know, the father of the Christian faith}.  Jacob was also a twin.  It is said in Genesis 25:26 that when he was born, he came out grabbing his twin {Esau} by the heel; thus his name.  Another name associated with Jacob is 'Supplanter'.   To supplant is to take the place of another, to replace.  In the Bible, Jacob was a supplanter, but eventually was willing to completely submit to God's will.  

When I read all of this {and more...because I always read more}, I couldn't help but smile at the way He was woven into the whole story behind a name we 'just happened to like', yet put on a shelf a while back only to bring it back out for such a time as this.

My pregnancy with Jameson was essentially grabbing the heel of a marriage that was on the brink of divorce.  It wasn't an easy road to traverse, but ultimately, those nine months were in some way, a suppplanter.  They replaced what we thought was our plan with His.  It took work, takes work, and will continue to take work; but the path toward divergence was replaced with a path toward reconciliation, and growth.

Jacob's life was one filled with struggle and poor decisions.  In the Bible, Jacob had been a liar.  He was deceitful to those closest to him.  He was self-centered. He thought he could find happiness apart from God; thought he could control his life.   But God didn't allow him to succeed without HIM.  He blocked Jacob's efforts to satisfy himself and led him back to HIM.   His family was somewhat of a mess, yet in the end, he was the one who set things straight.  God used him.  When Jacob was wrestling with God; he was persistent and refused to let go until God blessed him {Gen. 32:24-26}.  Persistence paid off; for God changed Jacob's name to Israel, which means 'he strives with God' {Gen 32:28}.

'Jacob', a man whose character changed so radically that God changed his name {as well as the course of his life} made way for 'James' which then opened the door for Jameson.  A name we so happened to choose for a child we were definitely not expecting; but through the grace of God has changed the course of our lives.  A name we so happened to choose for a child who came into our lives at a time when we thought we could control our lives and satisfy ourselves by breaking apart the thing that God had put together.

I know there are people who think that Jameson reads more masculine than feminine; and while that may seem to be true, if there's one thing I know it's that if this girl; this tiny little miracle is strong enough to grab the heels of her parents and bring their paths back toward each other again, she is definitely strong enough to carry her name.  And while we didn't have the opportunity to use Archer, she is definitely mommy and daddy's arrow.