in the dark

in the dark: it takes risk to learn (Copperlight Wood)

There’s this little area of our kitchen that I’m going to tell you about. I could show you a picture, but it’s just too gruesome and would probably traumatize you. So I’ll  describe it because I’m sure your own kitchen is spotless and you’ve never even thought of the possibility of this remotely existing in your house.

It’s the space between the stovetop and the counter. On both sides of the stove, there is this little bitty crack, just a millimeter or two wide. You know the spot?

Imagine every ingredient that ever existed in our kitchen, in varying amounts from mere crumbs to several tablespoons, being forcibly crammed into it. And then left to ferment. Oh, yes.

I take the sponge and wipe over it daily, which is excellent for cleaning the surface around it but probably only serves to send more debris into the abyss. The only way to clean it out is to go in there.

NOOOO!!! (insert freaky violin music) You can’t make me!!

Maybe we can talk Vince into it, instead.

There’s another area of our house I’m going to tell you about. We have a small bathroom, and it’s equipped with a light switch and perfectly good light bulbs. There is a little girl sitting on the floor of the bathroom, in the dark, refusing to…wait for it…turn on the light.

Weren’t we doing this two weeks ago with something else?

Children in orphanages have been conditioned to get more attention from caregivers when they appear helpless: the more independent children in an institutional environment are, the less attention they receive. Some post-institutionalized children have deeply internalized this behavior and manage to appeal to a wide audience with demonstrated helplessness.

This behavior has also been observed in abused children, who would rather have negative reinforcement than no attention at all.

– Boris Gindis, Ph.D.

She doesn’t have to sit in the dark. She has everything she needs to stand up and turn on the switch and move on with her day. It’s learned helplessness combined with a medley of other attachment issues. If she could pretend she didn’t know how to breathe, I think she might try it.

Jesus. What the heck?! Why does she do this?

Imagine every ingredient of neglect and abuse that ever existed in the first six and a half years of her life, being forcibly crammed into her. And left to ferment.

Oh.

You have to go in there with her. Join her in the dark place and shine light into it.

I open the cracked door, and she squints. I squat down in front of her, and she flinches. She’s been here over a year and still she flinches. Not as often, but she still does it. She knows she’s disobeying and she remembers being hit for it.

It would take less than 1 second for me to flip the switch on for her and then we could move on, but that would only serve to wipe more debris into the abyss. People did that for over six years, and clearly it did not help her, though I’m sure it seemed more convenient at the time, every time.

I can’t even walk her through the motions. She knows what the motions are. She must actually decide to make the move herself.

Many of these children actually have the needed skills or knowledge, but are resistant to any attempt to encourage them to act independently…

It can be open defiance or hidden sabotage, but it is rooted in their overwhelming need to be always in control, to be on known and manageable “turf.” This is an obstacle in their learning: to be a good learner means to take risks, to step into unknown territory, to be sure of one’s own ability to cope, and to be prepared to accept help.

– Boris Gindis, Ph.D.

I hold her for a while and then leave her to sit on the bathroom floor so I can make dinner.

Spaghetti and meatballs. Homemade sauce from scratch, piece of cake.

Hey Love, He says. Remember when you were in college, and didn’t even know how to make coffee?

Yeah. I couldn’t make anything that didn’t come out of a box or a can. Are You rubbing it in?

Remember when you were too intimidated to try making bread? Remember when knitting seemed too difficult?

I have no idea where He’s going here, but I’m paying attention.

Remember when you’d never read Jane Austen, and then you struggled though Sense and Sensibility? Remember when you knitted that first baby sweater? And do you remember a few months ago, when you tackled HTML and WordPress and fought until 3 am to convert this whole thing over? 

falling off a cliff, bored

“To be a good learner means to take risks, to step into unknown territory, to be sure of one’s own ability to cope, and to be prepared to accept help…”

keyboard

It took me another hour to figure out how to fix the keyboard.

You stopped being afraid of the unknown and the newness. You got tired of sitting in the dark.

I feel like I’ve spent most of my life overcoming unknowns. Ridiculous intimidations. Big and small fears, both real and non-existent. 

Yes, you have.

That’s why I chose you to be her mother.

wait and listen from Copperlight Wood

 

*This is day seventeen of the Wait and Listen series. The other posts are here.

anytime, anyplace

Well. 31 Dayers, we have made it to the halfway point and suruved.

I mean, surveeved.

I mean, survived. Bother.

I’m really looking forward to sleeping in November. I was talking to God about it.

Me: This is hard. Why did we pick this topic, anyway?

Him: Because you needed it, and I like talking to you. Anytime, anyplace.

And I love hearing Him…but in our discussion, I confess that I may have mentioned that for next year, I’d like to do a series on 31 Days of Napping.

Or 31 Days of Tea and Coffee. Or – ooh, ooh! I know! 31 Days of Browsing Pinterest While Eating Ice Cream By The Fire And Getting A Footrub. That would be awesome.

But that’s a year away. This year, He’s been teaching me to listen to Him wherever, whenever.

And yet, tonight I want a little mid-series break. An intermission of sorts…so Vin helped me with this post.

anytime, anyplace: hearing God whenever, wherever (Copperlight Wood)

Because waiting and listening isn’t the only thing you can do anytime, anyplace.

Vince wrote this riddle for me a while back, just for fun – I think he had been compiling it for some time. And he is a rascal, but don’t be alarmed; it’s completely G-rated, of course.

So, enjoy. The answer is in the postscript.

She started doing it when she was twenty-three.

It took her awhile to get the hang of it, but now she is highly skilled at it.

She can do it while sleeping, or while having coffee with friends.

She’s done it in the front seat, and the backseat.

She’s done it on the back porch.

She’s done it before, during, and after church services.

She’s done in the cargo hold of a C-130.

She’s done it at the San Diego Zoo, and while stuck in traffic on the 405.

She’s done it in a rural cabin in the woods.

She’s done it under the wing of an F-15.

She’s done it Los Angeles, Ventura, and Seattle.

She’s done it in restaurants to the shock of young servers.

She’s done it in a Saturn, a mini-van, in rented cars, and in her beloved Jeep.

She’s done it tents, on park benches, on airplanes, in lawn chairs, and on picnic blankets.

She’s done it at the doctor’s office.

She’s done it in a parking garage in the L.A. ghetto.

She’s done it while praying on the sidewalk in front of Planned Parenthood.

She prefers to do it in Alaska.

She hasn’t done it since she was thirty-four.

She’s done it literally thousands of times.

She’s instructed others on how to do it better.

At times she’s agonized through it.

At other times, it’s filled her heart with joy.

She’s never regretted doing it, and it’s made her life better in ways that few could understand.

What is it?

Just think of all the crazy places you can wait and listen.

He longs to stretch our tent pegs and increase our capacity, and I’m feeling that growth and stretching as I write almost a year’s worth of posts in just one month. I’d love to hear some of the wild places you’re learning to hear His voice and how He’s stretching you, too.

P.S. The answer is…nursing a baby. And they’re all true. :)

wait and listen from Copperlight Wood

*This is day sixteen of the Wait and Listen series. The other posts are here.

at the water’s edge

at the water's edge - Copperlight Wood

There is this song. I’ve heard it at three very significant times in my life.

Come and listen

come to the water’s edge

all you who know and fear the Lord.

Come and listen

come to the water’s edge

all you who are thirsty, come.

The first time was Afton’s first bath. We meant for him to be born in that bathtub, but we were so…(ahem)…efficientthat I delivered him while the tub was still filling. So he and I took his first bath together when he was less than an hour old, and Vince turned on the music softly for us as I cuddled this new, chubby little person and washed birth muck off of both of us. It was the first song that played and the only one I remember.

at the water's edge - Copperlight Wood

Let me tell you what He has done for me.

The second time was Chamberlain’s birth. She was our fourth full-term delivery and our second experience at a midwifery, and thanks to Afton we knew the tub needed to be filled early. This song played while I labored in the water for this little girl that I somehow knew would have dark hair and eyes.

at the water's edge - Copperlight Wood

The third time was the Sunday after she was born…she was two days old and Vince took the older kids to church and I stayed home to rest. And little tiny dark-haired Chamberlain and I took a warm, shallow bath together, the sun streaming through the window in a house that was strangely quiet as we snuggled in the water…and this song played again.

Let me tell you what He has done for me,

He has done for you,

He has done for us.

I’m listening to it again right now. The sky is dark and there are no babies in our house, but it is still a time of labor and birth and washing.

Come and listen,

come and listen to what He’s done.

Praise our God for He is good.

– David Crowder Band

He is good.

He is good.

at the water's edge - Copperlight Wood

This is the eve of our wedding anniversary and we are at the water’s edge again, on the threshold of a new birth of all that He has for us in the days ahead. We are learning to listen like never before.

Alone and quiet.

Aloud and together.

at the water's edge - Copperlight Wood

And He speaks to us tonight as our kids are falling asleep and I look back on sixteen years and ahead to many more.

He says, I’m still doing. I’m not done yet.

wait and listen from Copperlight Wood

 

*This is day fourteen of the Wait and Listen series. The other posts are here.