







Kelly and her mom, Brenda.
I went to a funeral today. It was for a man I’ve never met, but I knew him through his grandson and his daughter. His is the story of a life well lived. As I listened to different family members tell their stories of life with him, I couldn’t help but drift back 19 months to my own Dad’s funeral. And the hard days that followed.
When Dad died I became Mom’s caregiver. Mom has several disabilities that make it impossible for her to live alone. Dad spent every hour of the day making her safe and happy. She wanted for nothing. It consumed his life, and I don’t think he would have had it any other way. I’m truly grateful that Dad died before Mom, because if it had happened the other way around, it would have destroyed him.
I always thought I was a good daughter. I spent time with my parents, did things for them, stayed out of trouble. But, transitioning from daughter to caregiver – decision maker, responsible party, power-of-attorney – changes everything. There was nothing good about me. I became impatient, abrupt, harsh. I lost my sense of humor. I became selfish and joyless. As I saw these changes happening in me with no ability to stop them, the spiraling decent accelerated until I was falling, out of control, into my self-dug pit of despair. My morning mantra was “I don’t want to do this again today. I can’t.” But I did it anyway, as people kept telling me what a good daughter I was. “Bulls**t,” I’d think. “If only you knew.” Add failure to my list. I don’t like to fail. I hate it. But I had failed at being able to take on this role that I was totally unprepared for. I had become everything I hated about people.
A few months ago a friend of mine asked me to join a contemplative practices group she was leading. I’d heard about these groups – not my cup of tea. But I trust her, so I said yes. I’m not sure when during the six or so weeks that we were together it happened, but at some point it hit me. I HAVE NO CONTROL. I’ve always understood that in theory. I go to church. Heck, I work there. Let go and let God, yada, yada, yada. But, oh the relief I felt, realizing all I have to do is love my mother. I can’t protect her. I can’t heal her. I can’t make her eat more vegetables and go to bed earlier. God has all of that covered and it was never my job to begin with. I’m not a failure. I am good. I am a good daughter. The days can still be hard. But at the end of that hard day, I can go to sleep knowing that His mercies will be brand new in the morning. And He will give me exactly what I need to get through it. If I will just let Him.
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Kelly and Brenda, sharing yet another “mountaintop” experience.
C
an I trust the only
O
ne who fully
U
nderstands my heart?
R
elentless love is what He gives.
A
bandon is what He wants
G
race is free.
E
verlasting is His promise.
(Kelly is a longtime friend and Director of Operations for my faith community, Warehouse 242. Her job description on the website reads, “Kelly makes sure the lights are on and the doors are unlocked so that we have an open home for our community. She also spearheads our move toward online database integration, to make all of our lives more seamless. In general, she crosses the T’s and dots the I’s for our whole team, and she lives for dark chocolate.” Yep, that about sums it up. She and her wonderful mother, Brenda, inspire all of us with their unique senses of humor and Kelly’s daily photos of her three Boston terriers have become quite a sensation on Facebook.)