Monday, December 29, 2014

The Reality of God: Seeing Creation for the First Time




But the basic reality of God is plain enough. Open your eyes and there it is! By taking a long and thoughtful look at what God has created, people have always been able to see what their eyes can’t see: eternal power, for instance, and the mystery of his divine being. So nobody has a good excuse.
                                                                                    Romans 1:20, The Message
           

           
            For three more days I arrived at the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit early in the morning and stayed into the evening, watching monitor numbers and lights, feeding and holding, singing and rocking. For diversion, I walked around the large medical center, visited the gift shop and obstetrics nurses, and occasionally napped in the parent’s lounge just around the corner from Cory’s room.
           
            Southern California’s normally mild spring weather turned vengeful and the first week of March brought rain and flooding to the area. I observed nature’s spectacle from the large window plates next to Cory’s bed. Actually, I not so much observed as absorbed, sitting and watching in wide-eyed rapture as immense puddles formed in the parking lot and the wind bent the thin, towering eucalyptus trees. Rain and wind performed in concert as they obscured the street and blurred traffic lights. Accompanying water droplets cascaded rapidly in vertical patterns down the slick, immense windows, looking at times like frantic, speeding motorists on a California freeway. At other times they looked like vehicles in a pileup.
           
            It was all so fascinating. Beautiful. And I kept asking myself: Why haven’t I observed it in such a way before? Or taken the time to observe it? The performance captured my attention as though I’d never before witnessed anything like its simple, mesmerizing choreography.
           
            I experienced the same potent emotion my first drive home from the hospital and on every morning’s return trip. The hills were so graceful and alluring, the vegetation so fresh and verdant. The wild lilacs were in prolific bloom due to the unusually abundant moisture, and the plants produced brilliant, purple clumps of showy exhibition for miles along the freeway. Our own bright yellow, orange and shock-pink ice plant had exploded into a spectacular botanical carpet attracting an assortment of iridescent butterflies and honeybees by the thousands.   
           
            And I continued to experience it all as though I’d never seen it before, like a child seeing and studying the wonder of God’s creation for the first time. I wanted to grab it, inhale it. Capture it! I found it impossible to be satiated by the display of beauty and life bursting forth in awakening after weeks of quiescent rest.
           
            I prayed fervently that I might never lose that feeling; that I might never again look complacently or indifferently upon a tree, a sunset, a quiet flurry of snowflakes or a single grass blade. I wanted to stop, deliberately drink in God’s creation, and be compelled to stand silent—to ponder Him and really know the One responsible for all of that stunning creation.
           
            It was such a perfect time to have a baby. A baby to celebrate the renewal of life! A baby to remind me of God’s promise: that as long as the earth remains, seedtime and harvest shall not fail.
           
            A reminder that God Himself forever remains the same.




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NEXT WEEK: Homecoming…
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Until next week,

Thanks for joining me!

Blessings,

Andrea

Bee on rosea ice plant photo credit: <a href="https://www.flickr.com/photos/napdsp/4869835181/">nate2b</a> via <a href="http://photopin.com">photopin</a> <a href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.0/">cc</a>


Orange and red ice plant photo credit: <a href="https://www.flickr.com/photos/parksdh/13373523955/">D.H. Parks</a> via <a href="http://photopin.com">photopin</a> <a href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/">cc</a>

Monday, December 22, 2014

Being a NICU Mom: Life Day-to-Day With Your Preemie





            I was about to be initiated into the mothers of premature infants society and learn what it was like to have a baby in the NICU. I'll be honest: it stinks having to stare at your fragile new baby through plexiglass and poke your hands through portals in order to caress a cheek or hold a delicate pinky. 
           
           
            For the next week, I rose early and packed snacks and frozen bottles of breast milk in the little diaper bag provided by the hospital. Then I took Parker to school and drove to the hospital. Once there, I maintained a daylong vigil in the NICU and returned home later in the evening. The hospital continued to provide three meals a day for breastfeeding mothers, so I stopped bringing a lunch after the first day and enjoyed the bountiful trays of food delivered to the unit. I read, listened to music, chatted with nurses and doctors, and observed—with awe—the dedication and love that permeated that special room.
           
            The nurses taught me how to open the isolette and extend Cory’s bed, maneuver the wires and change his diapers, carefully monitor his urine output, and recognize signs of stress (hiccupping being a prime indicator of system overload). I became proficient at removing him from his little clear plastic home for holding and feeding, first using the nasogastric tube held aloft, then the tube and bottle, then a bottle alone after he yanked the tube from his nose five days into his stay. Two days prior to that incident, they had removed his IV feeding and started relying only on what he would ingest from the tube and bottle. It was still too early to attempt breastfeeding, so I asked the nurse for a preemie pacifier, hoping it might help strengthen his sucking reflex.  I was determined to make a breast-feeder out of my baby, so he could get the best possible start on life, even if the odds were against us. (Preemies typically have weak sucking reflexes, so, once they get used to the ease of bottle-feeding, they resist having to work at breastfeeding.) I thought I’d won a major victory when he sucked viciously on the pacifier for several minutes. But within minutes he tired from the effort and was snoozing so deeply we couldn’t arouse him.
           
            On March 3, four days following his birth, one of the doctors announced that he was doing so well we would let him take the lead at breastfeeding. With much rejoicing on my part, we were successful for three feedings that day. I was ecstatic! 
           
            To compound the sucking reflex problem, the energy requirements it takes to breastfeed can deter preemies from sucking for the amount of time necessary to obtain adequate nourishment. Taking him out of the isolette to nurse was risky, since he still had difficulty maintaining his body temperature and keeping warm. Chris, Parker and I discovered that fact the hard way one night when we kept him out of his warm environment too long, causing him to lose a considerable amount of weight. We were firmly exhorted (chewed out) about it after the staff discovered his extreme weight loss.
           
            Quite simply, we had to look more and hold less. After that episode, when I did remove him for feedings, I pressed his little body next my warm skin and enveloped his exposed parts (which was just about all of him) in blankets. This arrangement almost seemed too comfortable for him, since he’d fall asleep and refuse to waken to continue feeding even when the nurse pinched the bottom of his foot in attempts to “pinch him awake.” That never worked, though. “Boy, he’s a laid back one!” they’d laughed. “You’re lucky; he’s going to be calm.” Little did they know…
           
            Then there was the blare of monitors signaling a potential problem with hear rate, oxygen saturation levels or sleep apnea. The machines monitored breathing, heart rate and other vital statistics every second of the day. Occasionally, a baby’s mere wiggle or position change dislodged a sensor, causing the alarm to sound. The first time Cory’s monitor made a shrill announcement of something awry, I gripped the seat and frantically looked around the room for someone to come running to his aid. Much too calmly for my satisfaction, a nurse calmly checked the leads and turned to offer me a smile. “Whenever that goes off, I always first look to see if they’re moving or breathing. If they are, I don’t get too excited. The machines are very sensitive; they go off all of the time.”
           
            Indeed, they did.  I never quite managed to get used to it, although I no longer felt compelled to bolt from the chair and roughly steer a nurse to his side.
           
            Since things seemed to be moving along so well, Chris and I decided we should shop for a car seat, although we still didn’t have a clue about when Cory would be coming home. I wanted the new super fancy model that allowed infants to recline and then reverted automatically to a more upright position if the car was involved in a collision. Our special baby required the top-of-the-line equipment, so we hunted for the right model and brought home the pricey- high-tech car seat. It looked so monolithic, though, too big for a baby to be comfortable. But then, car seats weren’t designed for comfort.
           
            I continued my daily trips to the hospital, gaining strength each day I was up and walking around. The first day I arrived, however, laden with breast milk and meals, I made the mistake of parking some distance form the door I needed to enter to get to Cory’s unit. This poor planning required me to hike uphill before arriving at the desire location. At one point, I had to stop and lean against a wall, unsure whether I could go farther, breathing heavily and feeling dangerously weak and dizzy from the exertion.  My heart pounded fiercely in retaliation to the stress it was no longer prepared to handle. How embarrassing! I thought. I need a wheelchair just to get to the front door! Without one, I’m probably going to faint right here on the sidewalk, (pant), within visibility of the Life Flight helicopter!
           
            Three months of confinement to bed had taken a tremendous toll on my physical condition. The muscular deterioration and calcium depletion were so considerable that I wasn’t convinced someone my age could fully recover. I was only too aware of how difficult it could be for a woman—technically approaching middle age—to reverse the rapidly declining exponential curve. But at that moment, my goal was just to make it—paraphernalia and all—to the NICU. By taking slow, shuffling steps and frequent breaks, and praying, I arrived, panting heavily and exhausted, but happily at my son’s side.
           
            Chris and I were stunned, but elated, at Cory’s rapid progress. By the fourth evening after his birth, they moved Cory into a real crib in another room—out of the isolette. The final step before releasing him to go home. He looked so diminutive in the cavernous hospital crib, bundled like a bean encased firmly in a blanket pod; tiny knit cap adorning his barely visible head. He looked even more fragile and vulnerable in this setting, particularly because it began to register in our minds that he was going to be coming home with us. Coming home very soon.
           
            And that scared me. I’d begun to rely on the security of those annoying machines; rely on the information they continuously emitted. Without them we were unable to tell what was going on with Cory’s body. The machines that had so scared and repelled me now gave me peace of mind. And I needed them!
           
            Were Chris and I up to the task of caring for a premature infant, in our home? Alone?
           
            One way or the other, when the doctors felt he was ready—which they had told us would be when he weighed five pounds or met his gestational age—we would find out. Right now, he was neither, so I relaxed and dismissed the thought of preemie care happening any time soon.
           
            I shouldn’t have been so complacent…

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NEXT WEEK: Seeing life for the first time after confinement. What I had so taken for granted…
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Until next week,

Thanks for joining me!

Blessings,

Andrea

May all of you be tremendously blessed this Christmas season. I know for many of you, this will be a year full of broken dreams, pain and melancholy memories. I do pray that you find hope and peace in the promise this season brings us and reminds us of, and that you look to the One who is the reason behind and for all of it!

He came to pay a debt He didn’t owe.
Because you owe a debt you cannot pay.
                                                Unknown

Thank God for His tremendous grace toward the world!!!

Merry Christmas!        

photo credit: <a href="https://www.flickr.com/photos/atomicshark/316620916/">atomicshark</a> via <a href="http://photopin.com">photopin</a> <a href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/">cc</a> 

Monday, December 15, 2014

When God Moves Away From You...

         



           What’s really happening when you feel God moving away from you?

           
            Eventually Parker calmed, his exhausted, spent body lay drained and limp in the cradle of my arms. It was time for all of us to go to bed for a good night’s sleep. A good night’s sleep for Parker and Chris, but not for me. I would be pumping breast milk around the clock to deliver frozen to the NICU in the morning for use in Cory’s feedings. I didn’t want to keep Chris awake with a procedure needing to be repeated several times during the night, so, with great trepidation, I prepared to once again sleep in the place of my confinement the last three months. I hadn’t even wanted to look at that room, let alone enter and sleep there.
           
            Hesitantly, I walked back into it, then stopped and visually scanned the setting. It resembled a miniature memorial, everything left exactly the way it had been two days earlier when Chris frantically drove me to the hospital. Books and pre-school artwork were piled on the floor and bed, half-consumed drinks stood like monuments beside my hand-penciled calendar on the bedside stool. The monitoring device—with its snaking cables and strap—lay haphazardly discarded on one side of the mattress. A disarray of magazines, letters and bills littered the bed and floor. At least I don’t have to stay in bed if I don’t want to now, I thought. With a resigned sigh, I prepared for bed and the night’s labors.
           
            Between the demands of pumping Cory’s food, the sleep I had gratefully anticipated remained elusive, and I found myself wandering from the room in the middle of the night. Finally arriving absent-mindedly in the living room, I stopped at one of our large sliding glass doors to look heavenward. Almost involuntarily, I sank to my knees on the hard, cold tile and gazed with questioning intensity at the piercing sparkle of stars suspended in the velvet black winter sky. There was Someone in those heavens I ached to grasp. Someone at my fingertips who seemed to be moving away from me.
           
            “I will never be as close to You as I was then, will I Lord? Never as close as these last three months.” With a creeping sense that a sort of separation or change had begun—that God was becoming increasingly elusive—I was powerless to constrain the tears spilling softly down my cheeks. I desperately wanted to be able to reach out for Him, to pull Him back. He no longer seemed to have anything to say to me. He seemed so eerily silent.
           
            But I knew in my heart that it wasn’t God moving away. It was me. My heart ached from the subtle and annoying resurgence of my fierce, self-sufficient independence and complacency.  The notion of growing apart from the Lord—of possibly losing sight of Him—was far more agonizing than the vivid memories of the previous three months’ horrors. “God is never so close to the vine as when He is pruning it,” goes an old Scottish saying.
           
            At that moment, the vinedresser appeared to be moving on, and the thought of standing alone in the vineyard was intensely frightening.
           
            Over the past two years, I’d often felt as though I was being butchered. In reality, I was experiencing a re-shaping—a carefully planned cleansing—the dead, adverse, unproductive aspects of my life removed for transport to the incineration pile. They weren’t even material for a recyclable compost heap.
           
            God had brought me back to the “Peniel” of my life that began in April of 1993; brought me back to complete what had to be finished. He’d put me right where He needed me to be to get my attention. Without the ability to run and hide, or to do things my way, I’d been forced to look squarely into the face of God, and not shift my gaze. To hang on with a clutching grip. Like Jacob clinging desperately to God—begging for His blessing—I latched on so tightly I was unable to let go. Now, I didn’t want to release my grip.
           
            “How can ‘thank you’ ever suffice, Lord,” I whispered, “for what You have done for me; for what You have given me? Your grace and mercy are without bounds, and I don’t deserve Your love, or that grace.” I shook my head, in awe of the love I would not and could not—in this lifetime—fully comprehend. “Once again You have proven your faithfulness, even though You do not, and should not, have to prove a thing. Thank you, Lord. Thank you!”
           
            Reluctantly, slowly, I struggled to my feet. With one last aching search of the heavens, I returned to spend another night in the bed of my discipline. Jacob won a victory with God, not by fighting, but by yielding. Yielding to God’ power and perfect love; yielding to His divinity, authority, and mercy. A bed had been the site of my debility and my victory, the location where I’d become fully, acutely aware that I could not walk anyplace without God; that my life would always require His presence. Without Him, I was stagnant, lost, and disabled.
           
            Without Him, I was nothing.
           
            With intense gratefulness, thanksgiving and praise—and a curious feeling of regret—I slipped beneath the covers and fervently attempted to savor the sweet taste of grace and all it had to offer.




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NEXT WEEK: Life with a preemie in the NICU…
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Until next week,

Thanks for joining me!

Blessings,

Andrea

bed: photo credit: <a href="https://www.flickr.com/photos/dno1967b/5396498851/">dno1967b</a> via <a href="http://photopin.com">photopin</a> <a href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/">cc</a>


stars: photo credit: <a href="https://www.flickr.com/photos/thelotuscarroll/9471450469/">Lotus Carroll</a> via <a href="http://photopin.com">photopin</a> <a href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/">cc</a>