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The Missionary Left Behind

9 / 13 / 199 / 14 / 19

This missionary world is made up of very different, usually odd (I can say that because I am one of them), individuals and families who have been brought together by the Lord to serve His people in different parts of the world. These brothers and sisters aren’t always the friends I would have chosen for myself, and sometimes personality conflicts exist. But nevertheless we are all thrown together, and we call it family. We become a family because this group of people we serve with understands our life in a way that no friend or family member back home ever could. They are family because they have been through the similar struggles and triumphs of leaving loved ones, adjusting to culture, and experiencing trauma we can’t always write home about. So this group of odd individuals–odd because normal people don’t give up everything and live outside their comfort zone to tell the world about Jesus–is now our family, our missionary family.

This new family we have acquired is like every other family. Some members struggle to get along. Others love to be together. Some cause drama, and some keep to themselves. It is a large, messy family. Some of our family live close by and will be there when we need them to bring meals, take us to the doctor, babysit, and help in times of crisis. Some family members live half a world away, and we see them once or maybe twice a year. We love catching up with them, and our time together always goes too fast. Phone calls, messages, and video chats hold us over until the next time we get to be together. This is a family. This is our missionary family. 

But this missionary family is not like every other family. It is fluid. It existed before us, and it will exist after us. We are everything to these brothers and sisters–until we are not. There will come a day when our favorite sister or brother will leave the field. They will not be missionaries forever, and in reality, neither will we. We may be a part of this family for a year, three years, ten years, or more than twenty. We have seen family members come and go. And during the time they are our family, we will drop everything to help them out, to support them, to love them, and to care for them. They need us to survive, and we need them just as much. And then they will be gone. And our family dynamics will change once again. 

We live in this fluid family as our greatest weaknesses are exposed through culture shock and language learning. This family sees us at our very worst. They care for us when we are too sick to get out of bed. They sit by our hospital bed and help us translate devastating test results. They see us at our lowest moments and love us all the same.  And yet, we don’t always let them in.  

It is hard to build trust and transparency in this family.  We are all well aware that this family isn’t forever, and our hearts are already fractured from saying so many goodbyes in our home country. Is it possible to get close to new family members if we know more goodbyes are coming?  So we do what we can to protect ourselves. We don’t always let them in and probably not when we really should. We don’t let them in because we know the day is coming when another missionary will announce the decision to return home.

It only took about six months after we entered this family to come to this realization. The culture shock was wearing off, and we had said our first goodbye to a missionary family member. We felt the thoughts of sadness but noticed other missionaries experiencing emotions far more complicated and laced with anger. How could they be angry? If God has called every missionary to the mission field, then by that same reasoning, can’t He call them away? Shouldn’t we rejoice equally with each call from our Father?  

Years later, we get it. We are now the missionaries with the complicated emotions laced with anger.  The mission field has bruised us. We have been beaten down. Our hands and our hearts have callouses from the work we have been sent to do. The labor is tough. We have had more failures than triumphs, and we are tired. Oh, how we are tired! We know it’s coming. It happens about every six months. We don’t look forward to it. But we know it is coming because that has been the pattern since we entered this family: another goodbye is just around the corner.  

We spend all year working, toiling a ground that is hard and unforgiving. We go through challenges that are unimaginable and feel insurmountable. Our family loves us and cares for us the best they can, but it often feels as if it isn’t enough. And just the same, we love and care for our mission family that is made up of so many different people, each struggling with enormous challenges, each being spiritually attacked in different ways, each facing their own fears and weaknesses, each being beaten down by the logistical challenges of living in a foreign country, each dealing with health concerns big or small. We care for them as best we can, but we know it is often not enough. The mission family has a lot of members to care for each other but at the same time a lot of members need care. The scale is often tipped too far in the unfavorable direction. 

So we get it. We understand when it comes. We are no longer naïve and wearing rose-colored glasses in this missionary life. Our hearts grieve, and our feelings aren’t always supportive. But they are real, and they are honest. We aren’t always as supportive as we should be because it hurts to lose a family member. We go through this process each time. Sometimes some stages are stronger than others. But we still feel them.  

Here is what I have come to know as the ten stages of grief when losing a missionary:  

1.    Sadness – I like this family member. We had great times together. We were there for each other through struggles and hard times. We laughed together. We cried together. We made memories. Missionary life will be different without them.

2.    Happiness – I know this is something they want. Life has been hard and unfair. They have been beaten down. They haven’t had the help and care they needed. They could use rest. They need to feel safe again. They need to be closer to their family. They have been presented with an opportunity that will give them all these things, and I want them to be happy.  

3.    Jealousy – It’s not us, and we are tired, too. I, too, want rest and recovery and to feel safe. I am struggling. My family is struggling. Our struggles seem just as big if not bigger. Why hasn’t God brought us a new path? Why can’t we live closer to our family and friends? I want help. I want to live closer to the things that are familiar. I want to be able to breathe again.  

4.    Guilt – for the jealousy. I shouldn’t feel jealous. I should trust God’s plan for us. I should trust His timing for our family. I should know that He has a reason for keeping us where we are right now. 

5.    Pride – It wasn’t me. It wasn’t my family. We are still here. We weren’t the next ones to leave. Oh, how there were days when I thought it would be us. I haven’t given up yet. I didn’t throw in the towel. We survived another six months, and we weren’t the next one to say goodbye to the family. We didn’t call it quits. Way to go us!  (Guilt with this one too – because I shouldn’t rejoice or pat ourselves on the back when someone else leaves.)

6.    Frustration – The needs of these missionaries didn’t get met. They were struggling. Life was hard. Couldn’t there have been something done to give them more help and support? Couldn’t there have been something done to keep them on the field longer?

7.    Judgment — Why couldn’t they have tried harder to stick it out? Don’t they know how much work there is left to do? Couldn’t they have made it longer? Don’t they know how others have survived in worse conditions?  (I can’t believe how ugly my thoughts can be at times!)

8.    Anger – There is still work to do. The work left undone, and the extra work that is involved in helping move a family home will be placed on the already heavy loads of the remaining missionaries. They can’t take on more work. They are already buckling under the loads they are currently carrying. We all are.  

9.    Defeat – It will take about two years to replace them–at least! I will have to get to know new family members. Maybe I won’t get along with them. The work will not continue, or others will carry the workload for two years until replacements can be found.  Will they be able to do that? Will it be too much for them?

10.  Hopelessness – The system is broken, and the cycle doesn’t seem to end.  It takes two years to bring a missionary to the field, two years for a missionary to learn language, culture, and become effective, and on average, a missionary leaves one year after that. There has to be a better way. There must be something that can be done.  The problem is so far beyond one person. So far beyond us. It all feels hopeless. 

What was it? What was the real reason they left? Would they ever be able to tell anyone? What could have been done to keep them longer? This has been a question I have wondered since we got here. I have tried so hard to search for this answer.  I want so badly to fix this cycle because it will be us someday. I am often surprised it hasn’t been us yet. I don’t want to leave before God is done using us here. If God calls missionaries to the field, doesn’t He also call them back home when He is ready? Why am I so quick to assume that those who have left are leaving early or before God is calling them home? Is it because the harvest is plentiful and the workers are few?  And no one feels that more than the missionary left behind, living half a world away from their comfort zone.

I don’t know the reason. But I imagine it is always very complicated. I imagine each missionary may even have trouble putting into words what could have made them stay longer. It may be vastly different for each missionary. So how do we, the church, keep missionaries on the field longer? Should we no longer expect missionaries to stay on the field as long as they did in previous generations? Do we embrace this as the new normal for a missionary term of service? And if that is true, then how do we replace missionaries faster?  

I don’t know what it is like to leave the mission field. I don’t know if we will be consumed with feelings of guilt and shame or feelings of relief and thankfulness. I don’t know if it feels like completing a job well done or feels like I just couldn’t take another step. I don’t know what it is like to leave the mission field, but one day I will. One day it will be us. We will be the ones leaving the family, the family that we love and care for so deeply, and they will be the ones left feeling abandoned, empathetic, devastated, and overwhelmed.  I hope we leave because God has set a new path before our family that He wants us to take and not because life became too hard and we could no longer continue.   

I don’t know what it is like to leave the field. But someday I will. It may be in a week, a year, or maybe ten years. 

I imagine leaving the mission field will be like crawling into my own bed after a long tiring day–exhausted, bruised, beaten down, in need of rest and recovery. It will be like crawling into a space that is safe and familiar, but then at the same time, we will be different. We will be changed. And our bed probably won’t fit quite as we remember.  

There are no profound conclusions here. Just questions, thoughts, and jumbled emotions. Mission work is messy. There are more problems than answers and more challenges than triumphs.  

This work and this life belong to God and are in His mighty and capable hands. My prayer is that the Lord will continue to be with those He has called to the mission field and that He will give them the grit to survive the impossible trials, surmount the insurmountable circumstances, and conquer the unconquerable challenges. I pray that our family members find a friend on the days where isolation grips their soul, they find comfort when their heart has been devastated, they find strength when their cup has been emptied, and they find hope when there doesn’t seem to be a way to journey onward. And, I plead with God to give our brothers and sisters all laboring in foreign countries the stamina that they will need to get up day after day, to continue on despite criticism from others, to fight the good fight, to run the race even while feeling weary and heavy-laden. 

My prayer is that missionaries do not give up but only leave when God has truly called them home to do His work elsewhere. And that the rest of us left behind would rejoice with them as they continue on their new journey.  

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Our Story

11 / 1 / 1611 / 1 / 16

Each missionary and missionary family has their own unique story of how they came to the mission field.  I am sure every story is great, but our story is my favorite.  I don’t want to sound arrogant in picking our story to be my favorite, but I didn’t write our story.  God is the author of this story.  We are merely the characters He chose to include, and I am so thankful that we are in this story He is writing.Hebrews12v12

I would consider myself a homebody and would have been delighted to never live farther than five minutes from my parents for my entire life.  But in our young marriage, we chose to move across the country.  Delaware is a completely different world from California.  We were two California kids figuring out how to be homeowners, how to be grown ups, and how to salt a driveway (FYI: table salt and driveway salt are not the same thing, and table salt is not effective as driveway salt).

youngmarriageThat move was hard.  There was no cross-cultural training, but there was culture shock.  That move was also good for our young marriage.  It forced us to be independent from our parents and dependent on each other.  We grew closer together in Delaware.  We became a team in Delaware.  We also had our first daughter in Delaware.  And true to the “small wonder” state, our oldest is kind-hearted, reserved, and gentle.

After four years of growing (and the growing pains that go with the growing), four years of homesickness, four years of balancing work and family, we moved to Las Vegas.  Las Vegas was within driving distance to home.  Las Vegas was sunny.  Las Vegas was a transplant culture of families that were looking for close friends.  Most people hear Las Vegas and think “casinos and nightlife.” Most people don’t know the natural beauty of the Red Rock Mountains, the walking trails, and the family friendly suburbs.  We found a church in Las Vegas.  We found a family of friends in Las Vegas.  We found a home in Las Vegas.   Las Vegas was also where we had our second daughter.  And true to the glitz and glam of Vegas, she is a free-spirited, fun-loving, dance-in-the-grocery-aisle kind of girl.

Our church in Las Vegas quickly became our home.   We became involved.  We became invested.  I taught at the preschool, and we went to Bible studies and parenting classes.  Blake went on a mission trip.  He wanted to go to Liberia but that trip conflicted with the due date of our second daughter so he went to the Dominican Republic instead.  The trip was great.  He loved it.

Two years later the opportunity arose for both of us to go back together.  Our pastor asked me to help lead early childhood classes for teachers down there.  It was amazing.  It was great.  I loved it.  I never thought (NOT ONCE) that it would be our lives.  I thought serving God from the comfort of the suburbs was wonderful.  It was ideal.  I was serving Him by teaching preschool at a church; I was serving Him by leading parenting classes, and I was serving Him by supporting missions in the Dominican Republic.  But the emphasis on my life (which I didn’t realize at the time) was on the “I was…”   It was what I wanted, and what I decided my serving should look like.  I never asked God how I should serve Him, and I really didn’t turn over my life to Him.  

Three months later our church asked Blake and me to go down to the Dominican Republic  and be the representatives at the FORO.  WeekendAwaySo basically they said they would pay the expenses for my husband and me to go away together for a long weekend to the Caribbean, and we would be staying on the beach.  My sister could come watch my two girls.  Who would say no to that????

That’s when it happened.  That’s when God used the missionaries down there to stir our hearts.  That is when God gave us a desire and longing to REALLY serve Him, to put our lives in His hands, to give Him control, and to trust that He could use us to make a difference.  It took several missionaries saying, “You should be missionaries” for my response to go from a “No way” to a “Well…maybe.”  We prepared to head back to Las Vegas.  You won’t believe what happened.  My husband, who is organized and efficient, got the time of our flight wrong.  We were stuck in the DR for another day.  We went back to that resort and most of the missionaries were still there.  We had a whole day sitting in the Caribbean Sea, just the two of us.  We took our fruity drinks out there and talked about “what ifs” and “well…maybes.”

The “well…maybe” was enough when I left the next day to have a heart to heart with God after I got home.  My prayer went something like this:

Well God, you know I don’t do well outside of my comfort zone.  You know I am not social.  You know I don’t like to do new things.  Change scares me.  I am terrible at Spanish or any language.  I really enjoy serving you in here in Las Vegas…but… (sigh)… if you want to use me somewhere else, like, say overseas in a different country, for example, if you want me to follow You, if you want me to get out of the boat… call me like You called Peter.  I will go.  I will follow you.  I will trust You with my WHOLE life and YOU can use me and my family however You want.

That prayer gave me peace.  Peace I had not felt since returning from my weekend away.

Isaiah52 2

I texted Blake.   It went something like this:

me:  I don’t feel like I belong here anymore.

Blake:  maybe that is a good thing

me:  I think that maybe we should think about this missionary thing

Blake:  I think so too.

me:  I think we should pursue this sooner rather than later

Blake:  I just printed out the application this morning

I have heard from several other families that one spouse had the desire and then presented the idea to the other spouse.  It was always a question others had asked us.  “Whose idea was this?”  “Who had to talk the other into it?”

That isn’t how it happened for us.  God gave us this longing at the same time.  I am so glad He did.  Because there wasn’t ever a doubt in my mind that this was God’s idea.  Two hearts changing at the same time… that isn’t coincidence, and that isn’t by accident.

So there we were ready to give it all up.  We were living the American dream.  You see, what I didn’t mention was Blake was climbing the corporate ladder – and quite quickly.  It was what moved us across the country and back.  We had everything you grow up saying you want: a house, kids, cars, friends, a church, a beautiful neighborhood, vacations – we had it all.

Blake worked for a casino.  And this is what makes our story my favorite.  It was a job he fell into after college.  He is just so brilliant (and modest, so he will hate that I said that), he would have worked his way up any corporate ladder.  He could have worked for a paper company, and we would have been living the American dream.

But God is the author of this story, and it only goes to show the power of God that He would take a guy working in a casino and a girl who is scared of everything and have them “throw down their nets” and follow HIM to serve in the mission field.

We did.

It hasn’t been easy, but it has been wonderful and rewarding.  I am still learning to trust Him for everything.  I am still scared of everything, but I have learned that HIS life for me is better.  It is better than I could have imagined.  It is better than the life I planned.  It is better than the ways I decided I should be serving. So, He can keep writing.  He is the author of my life, and I will continue to trust Him through the scary parts, lean on Him through the sad parts, and rest on the promise that our story will take me to a beautiful reunion in His Heavenly Kingdom. I anxiously await that reunion with my Savior and the reunion with my daughter. And I will know in that moment our story will have only just begun.

TenThousandYears

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The Waiting Season

9 / 4 / 16

I wish I could write this first blog post bubbling with excitement and tell you all the wonderful things going on in my life.  But dear friend, that is just not where I am right now.  If there is one thing I want to be with you, it is honest.  So right now I am not bubbling. I am not giddy. I am not bursting with any feels.  I am simply here.

I have come to realize something: this is my waiting season.  A close friend of mine used to refer to life in seasons.  How true and comforting that notion is right now.  A season does not last – whether it be good or bad.  Changes always come.  The last eighteen months have derailed my life.  That was a crazy, busy, chaotic season.  There was a lot of change, some good and some bad. 

In July 2015, we moved to the Dominican Republic to be missionaries.  In December we found out we were expecting our third daughter.  In February we moved back to the states due to the threat of the zika virus.  In May we lost our baby at 24 weeks.  In August 2016 we moved back to the Dominican Republic.  That was a season with a lot of ups and downs, a lot of feels, and ended with a lot of pain.  Now this new season is beginning and right now what I have left from the past year…is the pain.

So here I am after a whirlwind many months – waiting. I am waiting for healing.  I am waiting to feel like myself again.  I am waiting to be less broken.  I am waiting for my confidence to be restored.  I am waiting for my brain to start working again.  I am waiting to feel more joy than sorrow within a day.  I am waiting.

Maybe, my friend, you have been in a waiting season before.  Maybe you are in a waiting season right now.  Maybe you are waiting for healing like me.  Waiting for change.  Waiting for direction.  Waiting for littles to grow, or waiting for life to slow down.  Waiting is not as exciting as doing.  There aren’t always new things to “write home about” when you are simply waiting.  Waiting may be hard, especially when you see others going or doing.  Waiting is not easy, but there is peace in the waiting season.   There is peace because we know this is only a season.  It will not last.

Right now my life is simple.  Simple is all I can manage.  There is calm in simple.   My days are filled with mundane tasks.  I wash dishes; I fold laundry; I prepare meals; I mop floors.  I am a wife and a mother, and those are the vocations I focus on.  The mundane tasks are not exciting, but I can accomplish them (most days) . Tasks that are simple and accomplishable is what I need while I wait.   I wait on Him.  This season of waiting, where it feels that I am doing the bare minimum to get by, is the season where He is doing the most.  God is working hard in this waiting season.  He is my Healer, and He is putting broken me back together.  I don’t know how long this season will be, but I trust in His timing.

I have hope that there will be a time I can write to you and share oodles of joys and squeals with you, but you will have to be patient with me.   I have hope that God our Father is restoring me.  I am content in this season.  I am content to wait.   So if you are in a waiting season with me, take heart; He is still doing mighty things in our lives while we wait.

Waiting_for_the_Lord 2

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