Recently a friend was describing to me one of her saddest
childhood memories. Every day she’d come home from school to an empty house and
relax on the couch in front of the TV for a while. Inevitably she’d hear the
unmistakable sound of her dad’s footsteps approaching the front door. She’d
jump up, turn off the TV, and try to look busy as he greeted her with the same
three questions every day:
“Did you do your homework?”
“Did you practice your music?”
“Did you do the dishes?”
That was it. No “How was your day?” No hug, no offering of a
cookie. No relaxing together in front of the TV show. Just the dry, daily drill, void of emotion and nurturing.
I was shocked at my friends words. Weren’t those the same
exact questions I ask a certain one of my daughters the minute she appears in
the kitchen after cyber class every day? Would she too grow up with the same
kind of memory? Something had to change while there was still time.
That evening I was determined to start making the change. I’d
been nit-picky for far too long with this dear daughter of mine. It had shown
in our relationship; the more I exacted perfection from her, the more distant
she’d grown.
“God, please show me how to reconnect with her,” I prayed that
day. I expected to receive some brilliant, heaven-sent idea on how to show her
my love. Some divinely inspired, creative gift, perhaps.
I was not expecting what happened instead.
It was the evening after Christmas, and Dave and I were
relaxing in the living room by the Christmas tree with glasses of eggnog. All
the kids were in bed. All except her. What
was she doing in the kitchen? Why was it always her lagging, lingering, fiddling, awaiting sure trouble?
I stopped short of asking her if she’d done the dishes and
remembered my prayer that day. This was it! This was my chance at forming a
healing bond with a girl whose wandering, creative mind and slight accident
proneness gets her in more trouble than she asks for. To her great surprise and
delight, I asked her to join Dave and me in the living room with some eggnog.
For a whole minute and a half, we enjoyed the blissful
company of our precious daughter. She savored the moment too, and the creamy,
nutmeg-sprinkled drink in her glass. She reached across the coffee table for some
more, and her glass of eggnog spilled
right
into
Dave’s
laptop
keyboard.
Every component was baptized in cream—every spreadsheet and work
document apparently gone to instant eggnoggy ruin.
The girl brought some towels and then quickly and quietly
exited the room and went upstairs to bed. I sopped up the oozy mess under the laptop
and Dave started unscrewing parts.
This was not exactly
what I had in mind for healing a relationship, Lord.
We got it cleaned up and overturned to dry, for what it was
worth, and went to bed. On the way I got a glimpse of redemption and stopped by my
daughter’s room and knocked. She opened.
I hugged her and softly said, “Accidents happen.” I kissed
her cheek and whispered, “I love you.” I saw a tear in her eye.
The next morning her step was lighter. She was singing. I
wasn’t blasting her with questions about undone chores and spilled eggnog,
causing her to hide away in the safety of her bedroom.
I realized my prayer had been answered after all. Healing
had come in a way more powerful than any creative gift or fun activity could
have brought. The accident had given me a chance to show my daughter what was
in my heart toward her in her weakest moment—something I’d failed miserably to
show her lately.
Two days later Dave put the laptop together to discover a
second miracle: it worked perfectly.
(For more stories revealing my Hitleresque parenting tendencies, stay tuned for my first book, on shelves April 2, 2013):
(Click book cover to order) |
5 comments:
Ooooh Faith... I do love you! Sooo glad to hear the laptop survived!
I really enjoyed this story. It was wonderful. Thank you for sharing.
Thx for sharing. I'm far too critical with my procrastinating daughter. I won't say lazy. I think some healing is in order in our house too.
Thank you all for your comments and kind words! <3
Good going, Faith. I can't wait to read your book from cover to cover. Your willingness to be transparent is encouraging to us moms as we parent our children and realize we aren't alone. Thank you for blogging about this experience. And thank your daughters for being willing to let their mama share the stories. :)
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