Wednesday, July 20, 2016

There, but by the grace of God, go I.

As a mother of young children, I find my news feed continuously filled with horrific articles, most often with kids around my own babies ages ending up hurt or killed. I'm not sure the reason or cause of this, something about cookies or Google tailoring articles to little ol' me, but I find myself opening the articles, reading them, and feeling my heart break.

It breaks for these little ones, lives cut short or tragically altered, but sometimes, it hurts more for the parents. The mother I imagine holding her baby's blankets, laying in their beds, smelling their smells and weeping. I think on how they will go on, knowing their babies won't be there tonight to put to bed or tomorrow to wake up, bright-eyed before dawn. I ache for them. I cry silent tears for them. And, as I close the article, somehow I then end up on the comment section and I am shocked to find that, somehow, my feelings of pain and empathy for these parents are often in the minority and opinions of fault and blame over the parents' actions are covering the feed.


The headline reads:

Three Year Old Killed in Car Accident
And instead of heartache, sympathy and compassion I see:
Was this child properly restrained? Maybe if she were rear facing...

Child Hit by Vehicle
Where were the parents? Idiots. I'd NEVER let my child get into the street...

Infant Left in Hot Car
These people don't deserve to by parents! I couldn't forget about MY child!

Toddler Attacked by Animal
These parents deserve to die! How could they be so stupid?



Comment after comment, steeped in cruelty, anger, and harsh judgement. These parents, facing the empty room of their baby, living the nightmare that each of us as mothers and fathers dread with every fiber of our beings, they face public shame on top of the horror of moving on without their little ones. My heart more than breaks for them, knowing that one moment, one incident, one mistake, misstep or miss judgement has just ended their lives in the most dramatic of ways. And as I grieve for them from my noise-filled home, over the sounds of little feet and bursts of giggles, I am filled with a sense that none of us truly know how very close we are to experiencing the same kind of pain these parents are feeling.



There, but by the grace of God, go I


I remember that time her sweaty, little toddler hand wriggled free from mine in a busy parking lot, but I caught her before she ran too far...


There, but by the grace of God, go I


I remember when I heard the loud screen door creek and slam and realized with sudden horror that my two-year-old figured out how to unlock the deadbolt and let herself outside. But, what if I was in the shower, or vacuuming, or listening to music while doing the dishes and I'd missed it...


There, but by the grace of God, go I


There was that time, the first week of her life, when she had to go to the doctor to be weighed every single day, and I was so very tired and her sister was only two and she was potty training and had wet herself as we were heading for the car and I was running late and I got everyone ready and in their seats and as I pulled out of the driveway and my mother looked at me and asked, "Where's the baby?" and I realized with horror that I had left my newborn sitting just inside the house. Alone. In her car seat. And I burst into tears as I ran inside wondering how long it would have been before I realized I'd forgotten my child...


There, but by the grace of God, go I



Each of us tries. We cut up our kids' hot dogs and buy them expensive car seats. We plan out daily schedules and trips to the zoo to teach them as much as we can while they are still young enough to love to learn from us. We hold their hands. We tuck them in. We check on them as they sleep, smooth back their hair, kiss their plump, firm little cheeks. We are the good parents. The ones that try. And yet, we are tragically and profoundly human. We are flawed. And, it is only through the grace of God that we are able to wake up at the crack of dawn every day with our beautiful babies and witness them laugh and cry and grow and change. And, we are each kidding ourselves if we think we are too good for tragedies to strike, for our mistakes or oversights or missteps to be fatal.

So, instead of pointing fingers, let us join hands. Let us pray for one another and encourage one another. Let us step off of our perfect parents platforms and remember There, but by the grace of God, go I.

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