Showing posts with label kids. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kids. Show all posts

Sunday, 20 March 2016

The Tribe


Being a parent to a special needs daughter is, well, special.  I would have never chosen this for my family - or for Charlee - but now that’s it’s here, I would not un-choose it either.  

Days can be hilarious, or hard, or humbling… I rejoice over the small things (dressing herself is fun, yet ‘make-a-huge-mess’ new skill!) or get upset at the comments people feel at liberty to speak, just because she’s not your average almost-7-year-old… but mostly our days are filled with joy.  I’m convinced that more joy passes through her heart in an instant than some of us experience all year.

I had a meeting with her teacher this week.  And although its become easier over the years to hear that she’s / missed milestones / developmentally delayed / failed to achieve most of her school goals / she is a valued member of the class and is making good friends.  In fact, Mrs. Brown told me that Charlee has found her tribe.



Her tribe - I love this.  

These kids!  They love her, include her and save her a piece of cake from their sister’s birthday party… They make sure she’s OK when she falls, or is upset, and she absolutely adores them.  They are her warriors, standing up for her when she needs it, are forgiving when she is wrong and most importantly, they let her be Charlee.  

This band of little people has made me realize we’ve had a tribe all along.  She has brothers who cheer for her small victories.  She has aunties, cousins and grandparents who have held our hands, and just been there since the beginning.  Friends have been like family, done emergency runs and sat in hospital beds with us. We’ve had some of the most amazing teachers, assistants and kind little girls who help take off her rubber boots at school.  

Therapists, doctors and Special Olympics volunteers have gone way above and beyond - and people who take the time to get to know her, listen, and answer her questions (Dogs? Babies? Cake?!) can see that she has some real joy to spread.  She has Matt and I, who think she’s incredible no matter what.  


The tribe.  

She’s taught us to be gracious, understanding and compassionate. She’s taught me that anyone can be a warrior, if they need to be.  And most importantly, she’s shown us that everyone has something real to offer.  Charlee’s disabilities don't limit her - they make her perfect - just the way God intended her to be.

Thank you guys, for being her people.

“For you created my inmost being;
    you knit me together in my mother’s womb.

I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made;
    your works are wonderful,
    I know that full well.

My frame was not hidden from you
    when I was made in the secret place,
    when I was woven together in the depths of the earth.

Your eyes saw my unformed body;
    all the days ordained for me were written in your book

    before one of them came to be.” Psalm 119:13/16

Wednesday, 30 September 2015

Sometimes, loving my neighbour is actually pretty easy…

On one side of our house in Kampala, we have another lovely MAF family living.  They graciously return things my children launch over our shared garden wall (balls, tennis raquets, shoes) and will still invite us around for some cake :)  

Our other wall borders a group of smaller, Ugandan homes.  They have lots of noisy chickens, a baby that cries all night and sometimes they burn their garbage just as we are sitting down to dinner.  Better still, there is a huge boarding school on the corner - where the pitter-patter of little feet and clanging of wash basins starts at 5:15am, just as the call to prayer from the mosque below starts resonating up the hill and through my bedroom window.  

There are plenty of mornings when it would be easy to be annoyed while I chug sip my third cup of coffee - but I think it is actually easier to love my neighbours.

"And you shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind, and with all your strength."  The second is this " You shall love your neighbour as yourself.  There is no other commandment greater than these."  Mark 12:30/31


These are my people, the people I’m doing life with at this very moment.  How can I shut them out when God so clearly asks me to love them, despite things I view as inconvenient.  It would be easier if we were all the same and could get along no matter what - if my neighbours were all polite Canadians and we sat around apologizing, sipping coffee and sharing maple dipped doughnuts.  

BUT, we are all uniquely woven, wonderfully made in His perfect image: black, white, Christian, Muslim, rich, poor old and young.  We are called to love each other, and if we love Him first, surely the rest will follow.  God came to earth and walked among his people, especially those who he called the least of these…


Sometimes all we need to do to love our neighbours is open our doors and open up our hearts.  Sometimes its as simple as a smile and a wave or 3 bucks worth of ice cream, a skipping rope and a game of basketball.  And sometimes, its a little bit harder - but let’s pull up a chair, pass out the coffee and embrace our differences.  God doesn’t make mistakes, and we are in this together. Maybe all being the same would be easier, but it would not allow much room for us to grow and develop the LOVE that Christ came to model for us. Our differences are what make us unique, challenge us to stretch, and ultimately help us to develop His character.

“We cannot love God and despise people” - Beth Moore


"'Do not seek revenge or bear a grudge against anyone among your people, but love your neighbour as yourself.  Leviticus 19:18