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Michael Hindes

Kingdom Living in a Post-Modern World
Michael Hindes
One Great Wife
Three Awesome Sons
A Beautiful Daughter-in Law
A Dog Afraid of Storms
A Passion for The Kingdom and Discipleship...
Completely Overwhelmed by GRACE!!!
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  • January 10, 2012 9:00 am

    20 Years

    This was one my favorite blog posts from 2011, it was written by Tina Essmaker.  Tina and Ryan are part of our spiritual family back in Michigan.  I’ll warn you it’s real, honest, and a tear jerker.  I pray it speaks to the deepest part of you about love and family…

    Today marks 20 years without Mom.

    I remember the day she left, the day I stood
    on our porch 
in a pink nightshirt,
    tears rolling down, down, down into
    a small circle on the fabric below my chin.

    I remember waking up that morning with a
    feeling of dread, 
I remember the way Dad’s
    face looked and the fear
 and uncertainty
    that formed into the pit in my stomach.

    I remember waiting for the ambulance on
    the front steps
 of our mobile home,
    I remember the 
long, drawn out breaths that
    filled my lungs, then left.

    I remember Mom and Dad driving away in the
    ambulance
 without me, without my brother.
    I remember waiting
 with a hope that makes
    the heart sick.

    And I don’t want to,
 but I remember when

    he came back without her.

    I don’t remember:

    how I was told.

    the days following.

    feeling anything.
    the faces, both familiar and strange, offering condolences.
    I couldn’t remember her favorite color to pick an
 outfit
    for the showing so my aunt suggested blue.

    I don’t remember how I was able to cry so much in the

    quiet hours of the night without waking my dad; maybe
    he couldn’t hear because he was crying too.

    I don’t remember how time

    kept going, how people kept living.

    I don’t remember burying the 
anger so deep
    that I couldn’t
 feel it or find it, and through

    the years I forgot where I put it. After a while,
    I didn’t remember
 how to be a good daughter,
    I didn’t remember how to care.

    I don’t remember laughing with Mom about cute
    boys,
 crying on her shoulder after my first break-up,
    or asking 
her for advice after a fight with a friend,
    so I drank until I
 couldn’t stand up, until I didn’t
    remember that I didn’t 
remember.

    I don’t remember Mom being there to soothe my
    growing
 pains, to comfort me, to guide me gently
    through the hard
 and awkward life of a teenager
    because I guided myself.

    I don’t remember the feelings of inadequacy, the
    jealousy 
of friend’s moms who were so endearing
    because I chose
 to forget those glaring reminders
    of my motherless years.

    I don’t remember Mom being there when I graduated
    from 
her alma mater, I don’t recall her proud smile,
    the sound of 
her hands clapping when my name was called.

    I don’t remember her affirming words and the confidence

    they instilled in me when I got my first real job, when I

    started college, when I began to make the difficult choices
    that would shape the rest of my life.

    I don’t remember her helping me as I prepared to move

    out on my own, as I sorted though my belongings alone,
    and 
packed my life into boxes not knowing what I’d need.

    I don’t remember the words of wisdom she shared with
    me
 on my wedding day when I married my best friend
    just like
 she had done 33 years earlier.

    Now I’m a wife, and I don’t remember being taught my

    way around a kitchen, how to patch up an old shirt, or
    how to keep plants alive.

    I don’t remember what it feels like to be her daughter,

    I don’t remember the convenience of calling her when

    I’m having a bad day or need a recipe for dinner.
    I don’t remember how our relationship turned to
    friendship over
 the years as I grew older and left my
    adolescence behind.

    I don’t remember how the last 20 years passed so
    quickly 
or how I grew up so fast, because some days
    I still feel like 
that 10 year old girl who just lost her
    mother.

    Here’s more of Ryan and Tina’s creative work - TGD