Sunday, March 17, 2019

I am a servant of the Secret Fire

"Prometheus," you know, means Foresight. It was his brother, Epimetheus, that gave away all the gifts to the other animals, leaving none for Man. That name means Hindsight. That brother's folly led to the infinite sacrifice of Prometheus, who stole for us the Fire Divine, only to be lashed to a rock in Hell, to have his organs ripped from his steaming body and devoured by eagles every day, to regenerate, to be eaten alive, again and again, forever. For us.

I'd go to Hell for my baby girl. I would give up Heaven in a heartbeat. Even knowing that Hell means the loss of love, the loss of the memory of love, the poisoning of everything love was. For her I would sacrifice everything I am, even the very love of her, even the ability to cherish the remembrance of her face. I would fall into everlasting hate for her. Eat my organs? Pfff. Don't even waste my time. My wife had her organs eaten every day of our HG pregnancy, just to bring Sonya into this world. For the love of my daughter, if only one of us could go to Heaven, I would suffer the eternal loss of love. I love her like nothing I ever imagined before she came into our lives.


And I can't even tell you what she's done to make me love her so much. I think about it, sometimes. What if she gets older and asks me why I love her? What can I say? Because you're my daughter. Because you're my girl. Because you're my Sonya from God. It's not anything she's done, it's justshe's Sonya. How can I ever love her enough?

It's been a year now since that harrowing night when she came out of my beautiful screaming wife. She walks now, just a bit. She can say "kitten," and (I'm like 85% sure) "tree." She has a powerful personality, and I'm so excited to see the woman she'll become. She's going through a clingy phase right now, and it's exhausting that I can't put her down without her fussing; but the second she goes to bed and I'm free to move about the house, I miss her. She fills me up and past capacity in a way that redefines everything I ever understood about the concept of love. I love her so much it's impossible, yet there it is.


And here's what it feels like, most days. Ellie's pregnant again, which is wonderful, but also terrifying and crippling. I'm unemployed and still fucked up on anxiety since the car crash, and I spend my days trying to keep the house clean against this avalanche of entropy that constantly multiplies the amount of dishes and laundry that we own by ten and makes it all dirty, while trying to keep myself and Ellen and Sonya fed, and also trying to pursue a writing career, and also trying to sleep every now and again.

I'm no Gandalf. My Secret Fire is writing stories about other people going out and having adventures. I did that shit once. My time is over. That's okay. Getting Sonya's pants on while she kicks her feet like a pissed-off Michael Flatley is my adventure now. And grappling with my eel-like daughter while trying to wipe shit off every nearby surface and get her spurting diaper out the cat-door into the trash before she gets her flailing hands on it, is like stepping into the Octagon with a blood-doping Balrog as far as I'm concerned.

I would not have it otherwise. I would not miss one day with this girl. Nor with my wife, whom I wished I could marry the very same evening we met. But I cannot see one day ahead right now. Right now I'm clinging to the rock and offering my organs for the women I love. I'm a Prometheus with no Fire to offer.

But none of that matters. The Fire was never mine. God loves Sonya. He loves her better than I ever, ever could. If I can just be the conduit for His love, if I can just be instrumental, or even just involved, in her receiving love, then that's enough. I just want her to be loved.

Saturday, December 15, 2018

KA-SMASH


We have cliches for a reason. Certain experiences are just endemic to the human condition; sooner or later, qua human, we all experience them. When ol’ Homes wrote the Iliad and the Odyssey, he wasn’t the first person to point out that war sucks and it’s good to come home: those are things we’ve never not known. He just said it better than anyone else. Great literature doesn’t tell us new truths—it revivifies ancient ones.

Head-on collision the other day. Thank God Almighty, Sonya's fine. Totally fine. The other car came all the way across our lane—cops said we can't tell you much, but the other driver seems to have been high—and smashed into the right-hand side of us. Our little girl was buckled in the back behind the driver's seat, so apart from a momentary scare, she's already moved on. Ellie's got a broken sternum. I'm physically fine (my guardian angel seems to have a real talent for car crashes, I keep walking away from them), but I'm more shaken up than I'm thrilled to admit. Jumping at noises a lot; lots of knots in the belly. Not quite the action hero calmly walking away from explosions in slow motion. Not yet.

Anyway, the cliches. As soon as our poor totaled car stopped spinning, I was out the door and clawing at Sonya's door handle. I think I can unequivocally file that under "worst single moment of my life to date." She's so, so lively—never not moving, never not kicking, barely still even when she's asleep; the idea of her lying motionless still makes me want to curl up in a ball. But she was okay. Crying a bit, from the shock; but as soon as I took her out and snuggled her up, she calmed right down. Tiny little scratch on one cheek, already faded by now. I think, I hope, that I appreciated her before. But now? Dear Lord Jesus, I love her so much, so much, so much. I've talked already, I think, about how having our girl has excavated our souls and given us greater capacity for love: this car crash did the same, and I think we now love her even more. But God, it hurts, that excavating. There's no anaesthetic, I guess, when they're bulldozing down through the floor of your immortality. But yeah, the old saying's true: you almost lose what you've got, you suddenly treasure it again.

Advent's always been a momentous time for me and Ellie. We fell in love during Advent. Almost split up during Advent, when I couldn't find work. Got married in Advent. Went to New York during Advent to deal with our fertility issues. And last year, during Advent, we bought the house where Sonya was born, mere weeks before Sonya was born. This year we're shaking off a car crash and trying to take care of our girl. Thank God for our family and friends, who keep coming around to help us. I think we would have starved to death by now. And thank God for God, Who keeps on patiently bashing us over the head with reminders that He's here to take care of us, over and over again.

I don't seem to have any profound observation to make about the state of the world right now. Just wanted to take a moment to say merry Christmas from the Toners, and thanks for all your prayers. We love you guys, forever and ever and ever.


Tuesday, July 17, 2018

Valediction

So, friends. This is my final post. At least for awhile. Partly, I feel that I've said everything I have to say right now and am beginning to repeat myself. Partly, I'm running low on the energy and time that it takes to maintain a weekly blogging regimen. And partly, 50 posts just seems like a good strong number to end on.

It was Father's Day of last year when I learned that Sonya was coming. (Or little James, as we initially thought.) It is imbecilically inadequate to say that a great deal has happened since then. But, a great deal has happened since then.

Part of being a writer is learning the limits of language. There are things that words can't do. The next part, of course, is trying to do those things anyway; but you remain aware that no matter how many digits you add, you'll never reach a numerical infinite. I can see as many pictures of charging lions as you please, but it won't truly convey the experience. Labor and childbirthsomebody cloned Scar from hyena poop, and he's pissed.

Ellie and I discovered [were smashed over the skull with] depths to our relationship that we'd never suspected. We found out stuff about taking care of each other and trusting each other that simply hadn't been asked of us before. It often makes me think of the old saying that God asks of you what He thinks you can handle, and just how crucially wrong that saying is. He knows exactly what you can handle, and He absolutely always asks more of you. Partly to make you learn; partly to make you lean. As hard as pregnancy was, I know and love Ellie's pride and strength, and I would not have missed the chance to be the one she allowed herself to lean on.

Even Sonya, at an age you could still conveniently count in hours, was asked to do more than she could. Eating, pooping, sleepingthings it no longer occurs to us to consider enterprisesthey were all Everest-scalingly difficult for her. Right now she's struggling to sit up, and it's taking every bit of power and determination she can muster. It's easy enough for a grownup to dismiss a child's strugglesoh gee, you have to learn the alphabet, your life is so hardbut watching my daughter grapple with gravity makes me glad adults don't have Seraphim dropping by to scoff at us. "Ooooh, someone fired a fifty-megaton thermonuclear warhead at your nation's capital, poor baby. Pfff, I could stop one of those with my theologically mysterious pinkie."

Okay, soobvious follow-upwhy don't you? Why allow Hiroshima, Nagasaki? Why do I have to give Sonya medicine she hates while she cries and wriggles and looks at me with hurt, betrayed eyes? Why can't I just carry her instead of forcing her to learn how to walk? And there's my answer, right in the question. Which, intellectually, one already knows, but it feels a lot more true now.

I wish I had more to say. Getting to the last post was a relief, but getting to the last paragraph is a little bit sad. I love you guys. Thank you for reading, and please pray for us. May God bless and keep you. May His Face shine upon you and be gracious to you. And when the war's over and we find our seats in the tavern at the end of the world, the first round is on me. So long for now, friends. Keep fighting.


Wednesday, July 11, 2018

On Roadtripping (or, To Whom Much Is Given)

So last week we took our first road trip with little Sonechka. Saw my folks, caught up with dear friends, went to a wedding. Had the best margaritas in the Western Hemisphere and did some almost halfway decent karaoke. Good times. But, alsoyeeshrough times.

She's four months old now, not counting time served in utero, and can often sleep through the night with only a few wake-ups for feeding and cooing; and so, we mostly drove at night. But on the way home, we got up early and tried to drive through the day in hopes of sleeping in our own bed before returning to work the next morning. Our beloved treasure did not assent to this undertaking.

A good marriage, of course, requires complementarity. My Ellabelle is a highly organized and motivated person, thank God, and part of her job is to poke me when I get scattered or lazy; and part of my job in turn is to soothe her when she gets a skosh or a soupçon too motivated. But a tolerable marriage also wants similarity, and she and I definitely share a rather sensitive temperament. So after listening to Sonya cry for approximately infinity, we were all three of us crying; and we ultimately got a hotel room two hours from home and drove the last stretch at 4 in the morning with Ellie in the back seat consoling our girl and me almost weaving across lanes for fatigue. In short, traveling was quite a bit easier before we became parents.

We love our cat. (Shut up, Dan.) It was awfully nice to come home and find him waiting for us. But it was also nice to stick a cat-door in the window, throw some food in a bowl, and leave him alone for ten days. It turns out you can't do that with an infant.

What manner of infant are you?


The soul-shaking, cosmos-changing gift of offspring comes with a hefty price tag. Whichtechnically, that's not exactly a gift, is it. I guess it's more like a sacred trust. Whichhonestly, not any less intimidating.

Road trips are kind of a parental rite of passage because there's no buffer, no refuge, no veil: it's just you and the kid(s) stuffed together in a tiny space for as many hours at a time as it takes to burn a tank of gas. Then you stretch your legs, buy some Dr. Pepper, and cram right back into the car. Hopefully you all like each other!

Luckily, we like Sonya rather a lot. Much will be expected of us in the way of sacrifice and shared pain; but if she had come with a receipt and a refund policy, we wouldn't have kept them. When she's having an easy day, she's the sweetest thing I've ever seen, and it makes me love her all the more. When she's hard and frustrating, it makes me practice loving all the more. Everything she does deepens our capacity for love and keeps on filling us to capacity.

Mind you, all that being saidnext trip, I think we're gonna fly.


Tuesday, July 3, 2018

On Storytelling (or What's A Heaven For)

Ever see Field of Dreams? If you're a man who ever played baseball and/or fought with his father, you should. Just be prepared to weep openly. It's all about a guy who goes on a sort of quest at the bidding of a mysterious voice in the corn. (The expression "If you build it, they will come" originates with this movie.) At the very end, and this isn't particularly a spoiler so don't worry, one of the characters enters the realm of the Voice, and that's basically the end of the film. Great, great flick. And we all understand: that which lies beyond the edge of the cornfield can't be captured in fiction.

Likewise, the end of Voyage of the Dawn Treader: Reepicheep finally reaches the borders of Aslan's Country, and the story ends. The children go back to Earth, Lucy and Ed pass the torch to Eustace, and we don't see Reep again till the end of The Last Battle. (Which, if you're reading the books in THE CORRECT ORDER, is four volumes away.) Whatever's in there surpasses the limits of literature. Presumably.

But that's exactly where it gets interesting. I want to see what comes after the end. I want to see the thing that would break the story. I want them to show what can't be shown. What's inside of Barad-Dur? What do the aliens look like in 2001?

Dante did it, of course. Milton did it. The exceptions kind of prove the rule here, though: yeah, you can depict the transcendent, if you're one of history's great geniuses and devote an entire massive epic to the depiction. But most stories that try to show Hell or Heaven don't enlarge the reader's mind; they simply take what should be a beautiful or terrible thing and smoosh it into a petty frame, making God a big old white guy with a beard, making Lucifer a horned red jerk. Don't waste my damn time.

Thing is. Many people feel that the Inferno is the most interesting of the three Spheres visited by Dante, and it's easy to see why. I've been known to write some pretty dark shit myself, and it's largely because the Dark is mysterious and powerful, and more immediately evocative than nice stuff. Yoda called it the quick and easy way for a reason. But here's the point, and the question: How dark is too dark?

Every Catholic's go-to example is Flannery O'Connor. Again, for obvious reasons. But it was a rough century; we don't lack for good Christian writers who lavished their powers on showing us Evil. Charles Williams, Walker Percy, T. S. Eliot, Graham "for God's sake, somebody get this man a puppy" Greene. You could build a case that a (morally, as distinct from artistically) good story can show as much darkness as it likes, as long as it's clear that good is good and bad is bad. As long as you can depict evil without glorifying it.

Tricky. There's absolutely nothing easier than tipping that balance. Give the Devil his due, and don't pretend he's not attractive. Make him too attractive and you're suddenly doing his work. (C.S. Lewis argued that Milton fell into that trap.) But make him a clown with a pitchfork and you're making bad art. God creates, and created Man as a creator: to dismiss the importance of Art is a crucial and perilous mistake. But Salvation comes before all. But there are souls who would never find their way without the guidance of art. But woe to the artist who leads such souls astray. But, also, woe to him who hides his light beneath a bushel or buries his talents in the ground.

Short answer: you're probably screwing it up. But God knows you're trying. Schlep, man. Just keep schlepping.

Tuesday, June 26, 2018

On Self-Giving (or, What Is Love?)


Sonya: aaaaaaaa*plplplpl*babappplapla?
[Translator's note: Since leaving the womb, Miss Toner has naturally been exposed to dialectal influences from her own misguided generation, necessitating minor edits for clarity. For instance, "bro" and "dude" have been replaced with the preferred usages of "old sport" and "daddy-o."]
Sonya: What is love, old sport?
Me: To love is to will the highest good of another.
Sonya: That seems glib.
Me: Merely terse. I don't have room to cut and paste The Brothers Karamazov. But I grant you that there are nuances.
Sonya: I should say so. For example, I believe that I love you and Mother.
Me: We hope so.
Sonya: But with my ratiocinative powers being at such an early stage, I can scarcely be expected to understand the concept of your good as distinct from my own. I love you because you feed me and do silly things to make me smile.


Me: You do have a wonderful smile. But I take your meaning. Of course you can't yet pray for us or help with laundry or tend me in my age.
Sonya: Especially as you're so full of youthful vim.
Me: Why thank you.
Sonya: I get an allowance eventually, right?
Me: Well played. Point is: our highest good is to live out our vocation as your parents. So for right now, you love us by letting us love you. You keep eating and packin' chub onto those little legs, and figuring out speech patterns and all that stuff. Nothing makes us happier, or holier (funny how that works), than taking care of you. Now, since we're all equal creatures of God, there will no doubt be times when we can fully depend on each other, fully need each other, and truly sacrifice ourselves for one another.
Sonya: No greater love than this.
Me: Zackly. And before long, you'll be able to love actively, and give back to us in whatever way best suits the woman you're becoming. But remember that ultimately, none of us can give back to God. Everything we have is given to us by Him. So we're all in the position of loving Him solely by accepting His love. And of course by serving Him in one another. But like your mama said last week, what return shall we make to the Lord for all His gifts? We accept the cup of salvation and call upon His Name. And all the other loves flow from there.
Sonya: Trickle-down love-o-nomics!
Me: Was that a Reagan joke? Nicely done, old sport!
Sonya: Thanks, daddy-o.

Tuesday, June 19, 2018

MAMA CHIMES IN: A Mother's Consecration

by Ellen RM Toner

So. I’ve got two “holy” siblings: a nun and an almost-priest. Which is great, because not only do I never have to worry about getting myself to heaven (talk to me—I can hook you up), but every so often I get little custom-made bits of real spiritual wisdom from the two people who were nearest and dearest to me all through my childhood.

Something Sister Louise Marie said to me once was that suffering is the kiss of Christ. Sounds all very romantical and idealistic and kind of mushy on the surface, but it’s something that’s stuck with me because, at its heart, it’s deeply profound. As Jesus was the most innocent and holiest victim there ever was, when he chose to enter into suffering, it was of the acutest nature because it was so, well, unjust. But he made that choice, and so, in calling us to follow in his footsteps, to pick up our own crosses, he became the elixir. And suffering, when undertaken with our sights set on him, is our gold. So, in my words, what my Sister sister means is not that we should all go be a bunch of masochists, but that each time suffering is offered to us, or asked and even demanded, it is Jesus saying, hey, here are my shoes! I think you can walk in them. So, stand up, and show me what you got. Expect the Lord; do manfully.

Before I dive into this, I feel like I need to say something: I know I’ve talked a lot over the last couple years about how hard some things have been. While sympathy is helpful, and acknowledgement is healing, I hope that by sharing difficult personal things that the primary end is to share what I think are insights gained and to help other people to understand stuff that they’re wrestling with, or at least to know that they’re not alone and that it’s okay to suddenly be having a rough time of dealing with something that was “supposed” to be easy. One of the most helpful things for me in processing what happened the night Sonya was born was a conversation I had with a friend a few months ahead of time. Our labor stories, and our individual perceptions of our “performances” in them, are strangely similar, and so have helped me to put some things in perspective and not be so angry at myself. And though this is shared in a somewhat less personal arena than a living room couch over a cup of tea, I hope it can be just as helpful for some of you.


I want to talk about two things, both of which are front and center in my mind each time I go to mass these days. The words of the Consecration have gotten so much deeper over the last year, taken on a personal resonance that I didn’t know I was missing: This is My Body, which is given up for you. This is the Chalice of My Blood. Take, and drink. And I feel a bit like a little kid who thinks she’s jumping so high off the couch that she hollers for her daddy’s attention, and also, yes, like I’m putting on his shoes and clumping around, thinking they actually fit. But there’s only one way to grow up; little kids are ingenuous enough to reach for the stars and think they’ve actually touched them. That’s the only way to eventually get there.

First thing: what do pregnancy and childbirth have to do with Jesus, and, more specifically, the Consecration? Well, this is from a letter I wrote to a friend, shared with permission.

You’re allowed to hate being pregnant, you’re allowed to not be excited, you’re allowed to be angry and resentful and even a little shocked and horrified by how hard it is. Before I got so sick, I hadn’t really processed the fact that I was pregnant, and after I got sick there was only one day in my whole pregnancy that I felt all glowy and happy about it. One day. The rest, as I’m sure you know, totally royally sucked. Did I tell you I even prayed for a miscarriage? That’s how much I hated being pregnant. And I don’t think that means I’m a crap mom, and I know it doesn’t mean I don’t love Sonya loads right now. It just means that I felt trapped and foreign and so sick of being incapable. Pregnancy felt endless; I felt weak and tired, couldn’t sleep, got the most intense leg cramps, had a horrible shooting pain in my left side for the last half of the pregnancy, and Jamey trying to kiss me literally made me throw up. Being so incapacitated is absolutely the worst thing I’ve ever had to deal with, and I cannot tell you how many times I wanted to escape my own body/life/circumstances, and how many times Jamey and I talked about how we could never do this again.

About labor… I’m going to be straight with you, because one of the reasons it was hard for me is that I felt like no one had warned me about how brutal it could be. I went in thinking that I knew what it would be like, because I’ve seen it so many times before, but I was utterly, absurdly caught off guard, and I was super pissed at all the women in my life who had kept it a secret. Irrational? Yes. Because obviously there was no conspiracy to keep me in the dark, but still, why hadn’t they told me?! Maybe because there are no words. The only words I can think of to really get at the heart of it are from the Consecration: This is my Body, which is given up for you. I definitely thought a lot about those words during the pregnancy, for obvious reasons, but now each time I’m at mass I think about giving birth, and how everything hurt in ways I didn’t know existed, in blinding, searing, consuming pain that pushed every thought and image out of my head except the Crucifixion. At the very end, where they talk about feeling the ring of fire, I felt it all the way down to the soles of my feet. They were in the water, and they were burning. In between contractions I was alternately shaking, hyperventilating, whimpering and crying, and when each one started I was pleading and panicking to escape it. I felt trapped, cornered, outmanned and outgunned, and I didn’t have anywhere near enough time between them to gather myself and try to meet the next one. Cindy told me later that they were sometimes only 30 seconds apart. Labor started with my water breaking, and even then they were 2 minutes apart. It is unusual for them to be so close, especially for a first-timer; it’s very likely that you will have more breathing time.

After transition they did slow down, so much so that I kept falling asleep for a minute or two between them, was even having short snippet dreams, and I remember as each one pulled me back into reality I kept hoping against hope that the dreams were real and the contractions were a nightmare.

I was talking with M. about it, and she reminded me that even Jesus, before his Crucifixion, was in agony over what was to come, that even he begged and pleaded and prayed that he wouldn’t have to do it. It was really helpful for me to be reminded of that. One of the things that I’ve had a hard time with since the birth is looking back and feeling like I didn’t handle it well. I yelled and threw an ice pack across the room at one point because I was so mad at the whole damn thing, and I was hoarse for days afterwards because I bellowed and screamed so much. I felt like I didn’t do well with it at all, that I was a coward and honestly kind of a p**** about the whole process. Remembering the whimpering, panicking and wanting to hide is especially, well, shameful. But even Jesus himself didn’t want to do it. He gave up his Body, asking for a way out, though he did it anyway. And I didn’t really have a choice, and I couldn’t have gone back, and maybe my body was taken, not given, but at the end of the day it wasn’t mine and neither was his. Body and Blood painfully, atrociously surrendered, all for the good of another who has no conception of the astounding and terrific depths of the sacrifice made for them.

You want to know what went through my head when I held her for the first time? Never again. Never, never, ever in a million years will I ever do this again. And then, yes, I was mad again, super angry in my exhaustion, because the whole world had lied to me. It wasn’t worth it, and they were all hateful, idiotic, cruel deceivers.


But, the thing is . . . I can’t even describe to you how much I love her now. I look at her and want to eat her, hug her so tightly it hurts, and sometimes I start crying because she’s so beautiful. I could—and do—stare at her face for hours, learning her character, watching her learn the world around her, seeing Jamey and my siblings flitting across her face as she makes her crazy expressions. I have discovered that I don’t mind getting poop on me (at least, not much), because I’m so proud of her for accomplishing it, as it’s such an undertaking for her little person. A lot of the time I don’t mind getting up in the night for her, and I love it when she wakes up in the morning, because the first thing she does is coo and smile and wave her arms to show how much she loves us.

Everything is so intense. The stakes are just way higher than I ever thought they could be, but because we have to get on with life we sort of get used to it and move right along. Every couple days or so, or maybe a couple times every day if it’s that sort of week, the enormity of it all, good or bad and oftentimes both tangled up together, comes roaring through the surface and leaves you crying and overwhelmed and astounded. People say you forget, once the baby is born, the difficulties of labor and pregnancy. I have not found that to be the case, but I do feel like I have two overflowing glasses now. The intensity of the joy and wonder at my daughter, whose very existence I resented and wanted to run away from, has risen up so high that it’s met the tribulations head-on. I’m still not able to say, yes, it’s worth it, with full confidence. But what I can say is that this little girl makes me happier than I ever thought I could be, and I think I do want to have another one. Just not anytime soon!

I don’t really have much to add to all that, expect to say that I’ve never before come close to being able to empathize with Jesus. And not to say that I can do so now; but, I have scaled a foothill that I thought was The Mountain, and now I feel like, from far away and at the very bottom, I suddenly have some nebulous notion of the magnanimity of something I didn’t even know existed. Some people offer each contraction in labor for a different person, an individual need, a special intention. I admire them immensely for it, and have to say that I have no concept of how that is even possible. There were two moments in particular where events occurred that made the pain tear through me in a roar; during one of them my arms were stretched out on either side of me, fingers stretched in an effort to not tense them into fists, and my head was thrown back. And though the words did not form in my head, there was only one image I knew: Eloi, Eloi, lama sabacthani? And, all at once, Calvary has become personal.



The second thing I want to talk about is trying to feed Sonya, which I hope is a far more straightforward illumination of the Eucharist. Something I’ve talked about somewhere before (I don’t remember where; don’t ask!) is that prayer the priest offers in between receiving the Body and receiving the Blood of Christ. What return shall I make to the Lord for all He has given to me? I shall take the Chalice of Salvation. How do we thank God for giving us one enormous huge out-of-this-world gift? Well, by taking another one, as often as it’s offered, as often as we can! He wants to feed and nourish us with his own person, just as a mother feeds her baby; he wants that personal, physical, intimate connection, and the best way to show him we’re grateful for it is to keep coming back for more.

Sonya didn’t take to breastfeeding, to put it mildly. She couldn’t at all when she was born, like, physically was not able to, because her poor little tongue was tied all the way down to the very tip. She couldn’t lift it even the least little bit, which meant she couldn’t get any milk from me, and also that she couldn’t “tell me” that she needed milk, which meant I never made enough for her. So we fed her with syringes and tiny little tubes and bottles and supplemental nursing systems and snuggles and galactogogues and shields and formula and pumps and frustration and tears (from her and us) and determination and confusion. Every single time I tried to feed her without any of the training wheels, she would choke and cough and spit on me, making faces like she was tasting something sour and bitter, and would invariably start screaming.


Finally, after almost 12 weeks of the struggle, Jamey and I were talking over the pros and cons of continuing to try to breastfeed, and we just didn’t know what to do. So we said, let’s pray about it, and hope that it comes clear. Two days later, I sat down to feed her, and she would. not. eat. I tried to breastfeed her three more times that day, and again the next several days; she made it clear that she was absolutely done with me and it. And, happening when it did, it was so clearly the answer to our prayers, and our life is so much more sane with bottles and formula, but oh the rejection. I was literally bruised, bleeding and lacerated for her, crying for her to accept. And she still didn’t want me. Here, Sonya! Here is my body! I’m giving it to you! Eat! Drink! And instead she coughed and spat and beat me with her little fists, with no conception of what she was rejecting or how much anguish she was causing.

What is that, what does that mean, if not the most clear illustration of what Jesus offers to us, and what we have given him in return? How can we recover, make it better, try to fix what we’ve broken in ourselves and heal the hurt we’ve given him? All we have to do is say yes and accept the help he wants to give us along the way. We can’t scale The Mountain without Lembas.

As always, I’m here if you want to talk.