Nicole K. Twedt

Being Brave When Life Is Hard

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A Time to Mourn

02.23.2017 by Nicole Kristin Twedt //

Someone I know lost a parent over the weekend.  Her father’s death was unexpected.  I can’t say I’m super close to this person, but my heart aches for her and her sweet family.   The Bible teaches that in Jesus’s resurrection, death has lost its sting.  Yet as I write, someone I care about is experiencing loss like nothing she has ever known.

This can’t be happening.

I don’t know what it’s like to lose a parent unexpectedly.  But I know grief, I know it well.  I find it next to impossible to untangle what I’ve tasted and seen from what she’s experiencing today.  After all, I’m an INFJ in the realm of Meyer-Briggs, heavy on the F which stands for feeling.  I’m starting to think I lack the skills needed to set my feelings aside, at least for a while.  I can’t seem to remove myself from the situation and focus on something other than grief, hers or mine.

Knowing that another family is experiencing grief is like an emotional tidal wave, as suffocating today as it was twenty-something years ago.  I’m drowning in it as I fold clothes, unload the dishwasher and prepare an afternoon snack for the Tiniest Tiny.

I can’t stop thinking about dad.

Dad suffered six years.  When his life came to an end we knew it was happening.  There were no surprises.  We had more than enough time to say good-by, everyone did.  Sanguine to the end, his life wasn’t over until practically every one of his neighbors, friends and family members stopped by for one last visit.

The song If You Could See Me Now, not Eminem’s version or the 1980s cruise jingle, but the one by Truth, was playing on the CD player in the living room when he died.  It was rather loud because these hard-of-hearing ears of mine needed help unraveling the lyrics from instrumentals.  It was the middle of the night.

The song speaks of walking the streets of gold, of no longer being broken, of no more pain.  It is a song about releasing a loved one from a place of suffering to come face-to-face with Jesus, strong and whole.  I was seated next to dad, but almost missed that splendid moment when he took his last breath and slipped from his cancerous shell of a body into Jesus’ arms, victorious and cancer-free at last.

I’m thankful dad is with Jesus, I really am.  But I’d be lying if I told you I didn’t want him back for a little while.

Dad knew I loved children and wanted to be a teacher.  I would’ve given anything for him to see me graduate from college and set up my first kindergarten classroom.  I wish he’d been the one to walk me to meet Greg at the end of the aisle on our wedding day, though I will always cherish the moment I spent with Dave.  He was dad’s best friend.

And our three babies, his grand-babies.  It kills me that our kids will never meet their Grandpa Steve.  They will never hear his hearty laughter or sit through one of the many tall-tales from his childhood on the farm near Mt. Spokane.  On this side of heaven, our son Steven will never know the one he was named for.

One Father’s Day, when Greg and I were newly dating, our pastor preached a moving sermon.  He charged the fathers of our congregation to rise up, to be strong in the Lord and lead their families well.  That’s the kind of dad I had.  He loved the Lord with all of his heart and all of  his soul, and oh, how he loved his family.

I’m a private person by nature.  But even I could not contain the desire after church to ask Greg, my then boyfriend, to take me to the cemetery.  Greg was as distant as any one of his Norwegian ancestors would have been.  He kept his Oakley shades on and stood aside while I had myself a little moment.  I’m not used to breaking down in front of others.  The vulnerability of that afternoon was as new to me as our relationship.

Even though I shouldn’t have, I remember turning to Greg afterward and apologizing for the awkwardness of my crying fit, the grief that came out of nowhere.

“Yeah, that was awkward,” was Greg’s response.  The cruelty of his statement was out of character with the man I knew so swell, or as well as I could after only a few months dating.

He then removed his sunglasses and revealed a face streaked with tears, tears for a man he’d never met and for a woman who really missed her dad.  I knew for sure that afternoon that Greg loved me, and in his arms I could grieve.

I started a blog last June.  I love to write.  It’s the most tangible way I know to praise God and better understand my world.   In my mind’s eye, I saw my blog as a place to write about life and to bring the hope of Jesus to others.  An encourager by nature, it’s what I do best.  I didn’t really want a mommy blog, but I knew I was going to sprinkle a few kid stories into my writing from time to time to keep things light and entertaining.

The thing is, I’ve been running from writing lately.  I’ve been running because he (and by he I mean God) is prompting me to explore grief and write about the hard things in life.  It’s not a fun subject to tackle.  But I have to say, this little corner of the internet is serving its purpose.  I’m learning to be brave in this place.  I’m learning to air out some of the grief I’ve kept hidden all these years, grief I didn’t realize I had in me because everything was fine except it wasn’t.

I’m starting to think maybe, just maybe, I’m honoring God and giving him glory as I learn to take his hand and let him unpack the beautiful mess that’s called mothering in the midst of grief.

Categories // Being Brave, Family, Grief, My Story, Writing Tags // Death

Learning

02.23.2017 by Nicole Kristin Twedt //

Originally from a MOPS newsletter, winter 2012.  

When asked by my friend, Lea, to write a short essay about what I’m currently learning for the newsletter, my initial reaction was this: Are you kidding me, Lea?  I’m so tired I can hardly think straight, let alone write about learning something new.

I’m not usually such a downer, really I’m not.  It’s just that I’m aware of how little I’m retaining these days.  After all, I’m a mama to three young children, five and under, including an adorable baby girl.  I have trouble recalling lessons I’ve already learned.  I consider it a good day when I have enough mental energy to get dinner on the oak farm table in a timely manner.  It’s an even better day if the five of us are fed and I’ve not only washed, but put away our laundry.  Who am I kidding?  The laundry, even when folded, will be abandoned in the living room in piles for each family member on our caramel-colored couch.  I’m lucky to have my act together to bathe my kids more than once a week.

I’m may not be learning anything new, but I can tell you mindless things.  I can name how many half-gallon cartons of milk we go through a week (this was in the days before we went dairy-free), or how many of Lauren’s pacifiers should be in the pacifier jar by the garden window.  I can even tell you how much money I could be saving with coupons.

I don’t think Lea meant for me to write about such things.

Let’s redefine the question: What am I learning about God? 

Again nothing; or so I thought.

To be honest, I haven’t sat through an entire church service more than four or five times since Lauren’s birth in July.  These days I catch the sermon in the nursing lounge, surrounded by new and old mommy friends.  It’s not the same.  I get distracted.  It’s hard to worship before a TV monitor while my friends and I visit and feed our babies.

And it’s difficult to write about learning new lessons from God when you may or may not have a problem falling asleep during quiet times.  When I’m not falling asleep during sacred moments, God and I are usually interrupted by a certain cranky baby waking up early from her nap, or because my boisterous 3-year-old is trying to lick or bite his big sister.  Or because my tenderhearted 5-year-old found a bunny in our backyard.  The distractions go on and on; the learning doesn’t.

One early fall morning was no different.  I’m sure the scene is familiar to those who are in the trenches of motherhood.  I woke up (a little too) early by the baby.  She sleeps like a champ but decided not to this morning, which is the story of her now seven-and-a-half-month existence.  After coaxing Lauren back to sleep, I was tempted to go back to bed and hide under our warm down comforter with the Calvin Klein duvet.  But I decided to take advantage of the quiet house all to myself.  I picked up my Bible, the one with the worn black leather cover, with longing.  All I desired was to really hear from God, like I used to, coveting his presence sans interruptions from the little people in my life.  I began to read and pray, pouring out my guilt and frustrations to God about not having quality times with him anymore.  Instead of condemnation from him about what I could and should be doing, his tender voice spoke to my tired soul, reminding me that any time spent with him is quality time.  Come to me, he seemed to say to my heart. Come to me, covered in spit up, make-up less and tired.  Come to me anytime of the day or night.  Just come.

Just come.  Sigh.  I struggle with feelings of inadequacy, even as a child of God.   I often lose it with my kids, you see.  And I say things I should never say to my husband.  As I previously mentioned, I fall asleep when I attempt to pray or read my Bible.   I’m entirely too vain, I just know it.  I spend too much time worrying about the stretch marks that favor my right hip.  I waste hours of my life wondering if I’ll ever again fit into my pre-Lauren jeans before they fade out of style.  What’s more, my little house is constantly in a state of disaster.  If I have time to unload the dishes, the laundry is undone.  If I get to the laundry, then dishes take over my small kitchen.

But in all this negative self-talk, he reminds me to come.

He wants me to come to him because he thinks I’m something special, redeemable, even lovable, no matter what my house looks like.  No matter what I look like.  I’m learning once again that he’s all that matters.  He wants my heart, even when it’s going in a thousand directions.  He just wants me to come.

I’m reminded of my friend Lorrie, and what she told me when Lauren was born.

“Seize those quiet moments with God,” she said.  “Snatch them up any way you can get them.”

As a mother of twins, she should know.

So that’s what I’m learning these days, to seize quiet moments with God.  And in the process, my time with him is taking on a less traditional look.  I’m learning not to approach God like he’s an item to check off from my list.  No, I’m going for authentic moments, organic even.  I’m learning to set aside Bible reading plans, at least for now, and just pour out my heart to Jesus as I read my Bible.  I’m learning to listen to him as he quiets my attention-deficit soul.

I may smell like soy formula spit-up.  My dirty-blonde hair is a mess.  The bags under my eyes cannot be camouflaged, even by the finest concealer.  Don’t think for a moment I haven’t tried.  The view beyond my computer screen is of our tiny kitchen.  I see our white porcelain sink, overflowing with dinner dishes from the night before, and of bottles needing to be washed.  I spy half a dozen pacifiers needing to be rounded up and returned to the pacifier jar.  But my heart is full.  Because I’m learning once again just to come.

Just come.

Categories // Family Tags // faith, Motherhood, mothering

The Beginning

02.22.2017 by Nicole Kristin Twedt //

Originally from June 2016

To make a long story fit into a tidy post, I’ll say that in the beginning I was a teacher.  To be precise (because I always like to be precise), I was a kindergarten and Pre-K teacher.  I loved being a teacher.  Teaching was life to my soul, it’s what I was created to do.

I’m a mama now.  I have three children, Emily, Steven and Lauren.   My husband is Greg.  I always wondered if I would return to teaching when our youngest went off to kindergarten.

After all, I worked my tail off to be a teacher.  I had a lot, and I mean a lot, of trouble getting into Woodring College of Education at WWU.   Due to a lethal combination of anxiety and test taking, I simply could not pass the teacher’s college entrance exam.

There’s always another way in.  I learned from a Woodring department advisor that if I changed my major from Elementary Education with an emphasis on English to just plain ol’ English, then I could reapply without taking the entrance exam after I earned my bachelor’s degree.

 

Something strange happened in the English Department.  I’d always been a voracious reader, and I’d always kept a journal.  But the writing aspect of being an English major both struck me and stuck with me.  Beyond analyzing plot structure and character development, I soon learned that writing is how I make sense of God, myself, people and the world around me.

Lauren, our youngest, is going into kindergarten in just a few short months.  I heard about a few teaching opportunities, one possible lead and a few actual job offers.  I still love teaching.  Why couldn’t I get excited about these teaching positions?

What I’m about to say will sound like I’m switching subjects.  Or I will come across as a crazy person.  Either way, I should mention that around the start of Lauren’s final year of preschool, God told me that it was time to call Mr. Turner and arrange for him to tune the old Betsy Ross Spinnet.  This tug on my heart to tune the piano went on for months.  But I didn’t do anything about it because it was so weird.   I didn’t think it could really be from the Lord.  I mean, come on, tune the piano? Why would God care about my old piano?  Yet I couldn’t shake the sense that I really was supposed to call Mr. Turner.  So I did.

Shortly after Mr. Turner tuned the piano, and I started playing again, the Lord spoke.

Sing a New Song.

What the heck?  I don’t sing.

Fast forward to a winter retreat in Seabrook with dear friends.   God took this tug on my heart, the one to Sing a New Song, and made it abundantly clear.

I never thought that Sing a New Song was supposed to mean whatever it meant in the Bible.

Except I was wrong.

Sing a new song to the LORD!  Let the whole earth sing to the LORD!  Sing to the LORD; praise his name.  Each day proclaim the good news that he saves.  Publish his glorious deeds among the nations.  Tell everyone about the amazing things he does (Psalm 96:1-3 NLT).

In other words, the time has come for me to bid farewell to teaching, at least for now.  It’s time for me to dream a new dream.

Now is the time to write.

N.

Categories // Family, Writing Tags // dreamer, Lauren, teaching, Word of the Year, Writing

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