The Hardest Days

I finally have a home, but it doesn’t feel right, because you’re not here.

I never thought this was something I would do without you.

Even as I lay out the space to my exact tastes and comfort, it feels incomplete.

Today I finished the small bedroom that our children will never sleep in. The children we never had.

I attended Grandmom’s burial last weekend, and you weren’t there. I came home from the luncheon afterwards to an empty home.

Last night I found out the dog I hoped would help fill the emptiness of your absence is not permitted to live in this neighborhood, and I felt so alone I almost couldn’t breathe.

Yesterday was my birthday. I turned 43. I went out to a lovely dinner with lovely friends. Some of them talked about their husbands, and all I could think about was all the birthdays that have come and gone without you, and all the years they represent. All the lost memories and adventures, moments and milestones. All the things I expected to share with you. All the things I will never experience at all. And even though I was surrounded by people who love and support me, I could feel the chill of the silence awaiting me at the end of the night while they all returned to their families.

I haven’t stopped crying today. I don’t feel like celebrating—not the birthday, not the home, not the stability that has been so long coming and so painfully achieved without you. All I can do is console myself that there is one less year to survive without you, one less move to start over on my own, one less crisis to weather with no one to hold me at night.

Tomorrow, I will try to convince myself again that I must not need the same companionship and connection that every other human being does. God must have made me differently, otherwise you would be here. I will tell myself that somehow the silence will not swallow me, that a dog will be enough to meet my social and emotional needs. And when that doesn’t work because I know it’s not true, I will convince myself again that I’m not being punished, that my needs do matter, but that I have no other choice but to keep putting one day in front of another, no matter how exhausted I am.

I want to be so angry with you for not being here. I feel betrayed and abandoned and forgotten. I feel ashamed that you left me alone, and ashamed that I still need you after all these years. And furious that there’s nothing I can do about either of those things. But on days like today, what hurts me the most is not that you are not here now. It’s that you never were.

I think if I had loved you for a time, and had been loved in return, that would carry me. I would still miss you, but part of you would be with me in some intangible way. I would still feel your love and see what you saw in me, remember your smile, your embrace, your touch. I would still feel connected to you as you await me in eternity, the way I am with Grandmom.

But I don’t even know what you look like because you didn’t reject me. You never found me, never even saw me. And I don’t know why.

So, I miss you all the way down to my marrow without knowing you at all. I miss the family we never had and the memories we never made. With no happy memories to sustain me, no mementos to cherish, no photos to turn to on days like today, no gravesite to visit, no anniversaries to explain why I am suddenly a shell of myself and cannot hold it together today. This is my life today. And you are not here.

Chapter 8 Desperate Measures

“You have taken account of my wanderings; put my tears in Your bottle. Are they not in Your book?” Psalm 56:8

            Emma smiled as she read the familiar verse in Abby’s e-mail that night. It had been her own go-to verse for friends suffering heartaches of various kinds since college. “Remember,” Abby had typed below, “God isn’t indifferent to your tears. He’s recorded every, single one. Love ya, Abs.”

            Emma copied the verse into her prayer journal before bed. Thank You that I can never wander beyond Your reach, Jesus. And thank You for noticing my tears, even when I don’t notice Your presence. Please help me get back to the place where I can feel You holding me. Amen.

            Sunday, Emma felt a little lighter from having unburdened herself to Abby. Not better, exactly, just lighter. Resolving that it was not healthy to self-isolate, Emma RSVP’d to a jewelry party a former student was hosting which she’d been invited to weeks ago. Sarah Kate had graduated several years earlier. Emma had attended her wedding almost two years ago. They had always gotten along well and had stimulating conversations about life, theology, current events, etc. Emma liked Sarah Kate because, although she was very much in love with her husband, she was not excessively girly or limited in her interests to homemaking and romance. She had always struck Emma as a very global thinker, and Emma was happy for an opportunity to catch up with her.

            The other invitees were mostly girls from church who were around Sarah Kate’s age. There were also two married women closer to Emma’s age whom she knew but not well (since she didn’t participate in the young marrieds Sunday school class or frequent social circles of families with young kids). Maybe this will be an opportunity to make some new friends, Emma suggested to herself.

            When Emma arrived at Jump and Java, however, she was not greeted by an encouraging sight. Everyone was hovering around Charlotte, one of the young 20-somethings Sarah Kate had grown up with, who was extending her left hand and beaming with a bridal glow. Emma’s stomach immediately dropped and she immediately assessed the possibility of escaping unseen. Sarah Kate graciously greeted Emma before she had a chance to sneak out. Darn. After thanking Sarah Kate for the invitation and setting her stuff down, Emma quickly retired from the private meeting room back to the main café to order a decaf chai whip—triple tall. Too bad they weren’t meeting somewhere that served alcohol. She needed time to steel herself emotionally for this, and she was going to need something to occupy her while everyone else chattered in high-pitched tones. Armed with 14 ounces of sugary caffeine, Emma took a deep breath to muster her nerve and returned to the party.

            She entered just in time to hear the picture-perfect proposal story—complete with personal, sentimental touches and a hidden photographer. Emma took a large swallow of her chai whip and seated herself toward the end of the table, the end nearest the door. As there were only eight women present, Charlotte was the center of attention and there was only one conversation to attend to. After sufficient admiration had been paid to Charlotte’s perfect love and future happiness, Sarah Kate officially began the party by introducing the jewelry created by her close friend, Anna Laura, and passing around samples.

            Anna Laura circled the table—accepting compliments, taking orders, and answering questions—while the guests talked amongst themselves. Unfortunately, Emma seemed to have placed herself at the younger, lovesick end of the table.

            “Wow that was such a romantic proposal story!” a girl named Ansleigh sighed. “I remember when Austin proposed to me. I still get goose bumps whenever I think about it.”

            “How did he propose?” another girl asked. Emma stifled a groan with another large gulp of chai whip.

            “I thought everyone knew that story. I never told you?”
            “I can’t remember.”

            “Oh, this is such a good story,” a third girl gushed with a highly unnecessarily high squeal.

            “Well, it was the second anniversary of our first date, and he took me back to the same restaurant. But he blindfolded me…” Ansleigh began.

            Emma began closely examining the beadwork on the necklace in her hands. To her chagrin, neither proposal story seemed terribly cliché or cheesy. They both sounded very sincere and meaningful, actually. So, she couldn’t entertain herself by secretly mocking or critiquing their movie moment as unoriginal or exaggerated.

            “Are you and Tyler talking about marriage yet, Heather?” Charlotte asked a fourth girl when Ansleigh had finished her story.

            “Yes. We both know we want to get married, but we’re going to wait until he finishes his internship to get engaged.” Emma realized that she had seen Heather on the arm of one of the youth interns at church, who was heading up a mission trip to somewhere that coming summer.

            “You two are so perfect together,” the third girl gushed again. Emma wondered if she ever got cavities from that sickeningly sweet tone of hers.

            “I know. It’s amazing how God matched us so well together. I knew I wanted to marry Tyler from the first time he shared his testimony. He had such a strong passion for working with kids. And he had no idea that I’ve worked at Camp Hope every summer since high school. Our goals are so in tune with one another.”

            “That’s important,” the gushing girl said.

            There was a brief pause, and Emma decided to try to change the focus of the conversation without rudely changing the subject entirely. “Are you and Tyler planning on going into full-time ministry?” she asked Heather.

            “Hopefully,” Heather nodded. “We’re exploring some different options right now with either another internship or a full-time position. We’ll just wait to see where God calls us.” Emma prepared a follow-up question about children’s ministry, but was interrupted.

            “I think you just know when it’s right. That’s why you have to wait until you’re really in love with someone. You know?” the saccharine voice gushed to Emma’s right. Emma was really beginning to dislike this girl.

            “I totally agree,” Ansleigh concurred. “Don’t marry someone you can live with; marry the one you can’t live without.”

Well, that’s helpful, thought Emma sarcastically. Glad you had lots of someones to choose from. What if you don’t even have someone you can live with? What if you haven’t met “the one” and you already can’t live without him?

            “I think Josh is the one,” the bubbly girl continued. “When he came back from school this May, we just couldn’t stand being apart anymore. We spend like every spare second together. There have been a couple of times when we’ve been holding hands and we’ll just look into each other’s eyes. You know those moments when you’re just totally sure of each other and it’s like the rest of the world just disappears. And you know he’ll always be there?”

            “Yes,” Ansleigh and Heather sighed, along with a couple of other girls.

            No. I have no idea what those moments feel like. I can’t even imagine someone looking at me that way without imagining myself as someone else, Emma thought.

            “I feel like God put Austin in my life to tangibly show me His love for me. There are so many times that Austin is an example to me of God’s extravagant and tender love. I never dreamed that God would have something so perfect in store for me. I can’t imagine myself without him,” Ansleigh reflected.

            Emma immediately called over Anna Laura to place an order for a necklace she had no real intention of wearing and couldn’t really afford on a private school salary. She excused herself from the party shortly afterwards, telling Sarah Kate she had some paperwork to get done at home but that the party was lovely.

            “Nothing, God. I have NOTHING to tell,” Emma began praying loudly as soon as she was in the car. “‘I went on this date once.’ ‘Wow, you’re so lucky, Emma.’” She mimicked an imaginary conversation with the girls about her own life. “‘Haven’t you ever been in love?’ ‘No. Can’t say that I have. Evidently, I’m the invisible woman.’” She huffed and then let out a mild, angry scream as she pulled out onto the street. After a minute or so of silence, she could feel God assuring her: I love you. “I know,” she replied somewhat unconvincingly. I’m here. “I know,” she conceded. “It’s just so frustrating. No one’s ever loved me like that, and probably no one ever will. I don’t feel like I even exist when I’m around those conversations anymore. Who is going to be there to witness my life and face hardship with me and tell me who I am when I forget? Because, I don’t know if You’ve noticed, but I’m pretty good at blocking You out, and I no offense, but You’re not the greatest for dates and romantic staring contests.”

            By the time she pulled into her driveway, Emma was getting a bit teary in spite of her best efforts to the contrary. “This is not a reflection on You,” she said toward the sun shining through the clouds. “I just can’t help it.” She made it inside before the tears broke. However, she only cried for about five minutes before it subsided. Then, she did a yoga routine and read Psalm 56 again before turning in for the night. After tossing and turning fretfully for over an hour, she finally had a glass of white wine and turned on her wave sound machine before finally falling asleep.

            Friday normally meant a lunch out with Shelley and Sharona, but Sharona was on vacation with her family. So, it was just Emma and Shelley this time. It had been a while since just the two of them had been out together. They decided to opt for a quieter sandwich shop rather than their usual—O’Charley’s.

            “So, how was the jewelry party?” Shelley asked as she mixed her Splenda, lemon, and unsweet tea. Emma just groaned. “That bad, huh? I thought Sarah Kate had pretty good taste.”

            “Oh, it wasn’t the jewelry that was bad. I mean, it wasn’t really my style, but it was good. It was the conversation revolving around the blushing new fiancé that was uncomfortable.”

            “Oh? Tell me all about it.” Emma smiled at Shelley’s apparent empathy. In reality, she was hoping to drink in all the juicy details. “Was it horribly sappy?”

            “No, actually. A bit traditional, I guess, but it sounded kind of perfect.”

            “Well, that’s good. At least you weren’t disgusted listening to the story.”

            “True. But then, for the whole rest of the night, no one could talk about anything else. It was all engagement stories, and love stories, and how wonderful their husbands and boyfriends are. I couldn’t get out of there fast enough. I even ordered some $20 necklace. I don’t even know what it looked like. I just bought it so I could leave without being rude.”

            Shelley laughed. “So you felt like a fish out of water as the single woman?”

            “The permanently single woman,” Emma added. “I swear I was the only one in the whole room who wasn’t in love and married or fixing to be. I felt like an impostor at the love convention or something, just holding my breath and praying not to be discovered.”

            “What did you think they were going to do to you if they found you out?” Shelley smirked.

            “I don’t know.” Emma rolled her eyes. “Stare at me in shock probably,” Emma reflected before adding, “or worse: pity.”

            “Ooo, that would be a fate worse than death,” Shelley commiserated, somewhat sarcastically.

            “It would be!” Emma insisted. “It would confirm what I already think—that I’m some sort of freak and that no one’s ever going to fall in love with me; that I’m never going to fit in with the ranks of womanhood; I’ll just die a sad, cautionary tale against focusing too much on personal growth and not enough on flirtation.”

            “Emma, you’re one of the most stable single women I know,” Shelley assured her. “You’re much more likely to be held up as a role model than as a cautionary tale.”

            “Well, I don’t feel so stable anymore,” Emma admitted. “I sort of feel like I’m fading into oblivion. It’s like I’m a man without country or a ship without harbor or something.”

            “I remember that feeling,” Shelley nodded sympathetically. “It’s a scary place to be.”

            “Yeah, it is.” Emma tried to picture Shelley in her young, single years and realized that she didn’t know very much about Shelley’s life between college and motherhood. “How old were you when you got married?”

            “Twenty-six,” Shelley replied before taking a long swig of her artificially sweet tea. “In retrospect, I was a bit young to be panicking, but all my friends were already hitched and I was itching to get out from my parents’ roof and start my own life. That’s how I wound up marrying Rob. He was the first one to really pursue me, and I was determined to not be alone. I knew he wasn’t God’s best for me, but I had sorta given up hope that God was going to provide a husband.”

            “You knew when you married him that he wasn’t the right guy for you?!” Emma asked, hand frozen in midair between her plate and her mouth. Emma knew the source of frustration and pain Shelley’s ex had been to her. They had two children together before he developed an addiction that eventually led her to pursue a divorce. Shelley practically had to guilt him into spending any time with the kids now, and felt conflicted whenever he did because he was such a poor example for them. He never supported her financially, which is why Shelley had returned to the workforce. Although she was completely at peace with her decision to divorce Rob, he was still a source of anxiety in her life. Emma had always assumed that Shelley had entered marriage with rose-colored glasses, thinking everything was perfect until it went horribly awry. “I thought you said you were blindsided by what happened with Rob.”

            “Well, I was in terms of his addiction. I was totally naïve and didn’t see the signs until he was pretty far gone. That was after we’d been married for a number of years. But, even in the beginning, I knew he wasn’t someone I was supposed to marry. I just thought that he seemed to love me, and I loved him, and it was better than nothing.”

            “How did you know you weren’t meant to marry him?” Emma put her sandwich back on her plate and took a sip of mint sweet tea instead.

            “I don’t know; I just knew. I mean he went to church with me and knew a lot of the Christian lingo, but I knew that he wasn’t really walking with the Lord. I remember standing in front of the mirror the night before my wedding. I was all decked out in my wedding gown and veil, and I felt uneasy. I remember praying, ‘God, should I go through with this and marry Rob tomorrow?’ I distinctly heard God answer, ‘No’—not audibly, of course, but clear as day.”

            Emma couldn’t keep her jaw from dropping open. “So, why did you go through with it, then?” She was completely aghast.

            Shelley shook her head and looked past Emma. “I thought, ‘Lord, I’m sorry, but You haven’t provided anyone else. This may be the only man that’s ever going to love me, and I’m not missing my chance. I’ve tried to wait for You, but I can’t wait anymore. This is my chance and I’m taking it.’ I was so afraid of being alone.”

            Emma managed to regain control of her jaw and break her piercing stare with a blink. She tried to absorb what Shelley was telling her. Shelley refocused her gaze and made eye contact again. “Wow,” was all Emma could think to say.

            “Yeah. Think of all the heartache I’ve brought into my life, and into my kids’ lives. I know it’s tough, Emma, but you have to just trust God and be patient. Maybe He’s got a man out there waiting for you. Maybe He doesn’t. But I guarantee you that His will is better than anything you can conjure up for yourself, believe me. You’ve got a good head on your shoulders. Don’t give into those feelings of hopelessness. They won’t lead you any place good.”

            “You’re right. I guess I should be thankful that I haven’t been pursued by any guys while I’m in this emotional state.”

            “Yes, you should,” Shelley emphatically agreed. “God is protecting you, sugar; even if it doesn’t feel like it.” They both took a bite of their sandwiches before speaking again.

            “It still stinks, though,” Emma admitted, smirking.

            “I know, sweetie,” Shelley laughed. “So, about that proposal story—”

            While Emma was walking through her neighborhood that afternoon, she kept reflecting on Shelley’s story. She could not imagine directly defying God’s voice in a clear, personal warning. But she had to admit, she could imagine not asking for His opinion at all. She could also imagine ignoring the biblical guidelines for a suitable mate if some “good guy” started pursuing her. She wasn’t quite at the point of Shelley’s youthful desperation, but if she was honest with herself, she’d have to admit that she wasn’t too far behind.

            Thank You for letting me hear Shelley’s story and thank You for not giving me an opportunity to do something stupid this past six months, Emma prayed. Please help me to trust You again and be strong. I guess no marriage is better than an unhealthy marriage. I’d rather be single and lonely than married and lonely. And, God, please provide Shelley with a godly husband at some point in the future. Amen.

            When she got home from her walk, Emma tried to be grateful that her house was empty of a hostile or distant mate rather than sad because it was just empty. It worked, until she finished her dinner and pondered what to do with the rest of her evening. She could go grocery shopping, but then she’d only have a larger chunk of open time to fill tomorrow. Just as she was about to resign herself to another movie rental, the phone rang. It was Abby.

            “Hey, they’re showing The Princess Bride at Piedmont Park tonight. Andy’s coming over and we’re driving down early for ice cream. Wanna come?”

            “Um, yeah. That actually sounds kinda perfect,” Emma replied. “What time are y’all leaving?”

            “In about an hour.”
            “Okay. I’ll head right over. I’ll bring a blanket and some lemonade.”

            “Great. See you soon.”

            The weather was perfect, and they had a great time watching the movie. Jackson and Andrew insisted on throwing sound bytes from the movie into the conversation the whole way home. It was actually somewhat impressive. They managed to paraphrase or directly quote a line for almost every comment they made. Abby and Emma gave up having a real conversation before they even reached the car; they insisted the boys sit in the back while the “grownups” talked up front.

            “As you wish,” Jackson replied while Andrew opened the front door for Abby with a bow. Jackson handed Emma the keys and got in back with Andrew. Emma and Abby rolled their eyes and laughed before getting in.

            “Thanks for providing me with surrogate family here,” Emma prayed as she drove home from Abby’s house. “I’m sorry I’ve been ignoring Your provision and protection in my life. I guess I’ve sort of been treating You like the neglectful, indifferent husband that You’ve been lovingly guarding me from acquiring. I’m so sorry for treating You like an ex. Help me see You as the attentive, compassionate God that You are. You are a husband to the husbandless, according to the Bible. And You’re far superior than any other husband could be. So, help me appreciate that more. Teach me how to let myself be loved again, Lord. And please send someone to love me.”

Chapter 6: If You Play the Numbers, You Lose

            Emma’s contented glow from her birthday weekend sustained her through the next week. She even began to think that maybe all her months of burdensome thoughts and emotions had just been in dread of turning 30, and that the experience of being 30 and single might not turn out to be as bad as the anticipation.

            Abby and Emma spent their entire walk the following Saturday talking about the new baby. Would it be a boy or a girl? What on earth would Jackson do with a girl? Turn her into a tomboy, they both quickly decided. How would Abby’s life change? What was she excited about? What was she scared of? How many nights a week would Emma be allowed to baby-sit? Abby said she’d have to enter into negotiations with Uncle Andrew on that front, who was already claiming dibs as a sibling.

            They did not discuss how this new addition would alter their own relationship and routine. Abby wasn’t Emma’s first friend to get pregnant, so she knew what to expect. She just wasn’t sure she was ready to go through it with Abby—her main, go-to person whenever she needed moral support, girl time, or a “date” for a movie she wanted to see or a restaurant she wanted to try. As it was, she had to schedule things far in advance with Abby. Emma was not looking forward to Abby’s increased unavailability. She didn’t want Abby to join the ranks of the peripheral characters in her life—those who loved each other and kept each other updated but no longer actually shared their lives with one another. Emma had already decided that this was the loneliest part of being single—not the lack of a significant other of one’s own, but the dwindling circle of peers to witness and share one’s life. It wasn’t just a lack of romance; it was an increasing lack of intimacy of any kind. Single people of her age had to really fight to maintain any kind of consistent human connection. However, Emma consoled herself, I still have about seven months before the baby arrives to prepare.

            So, she was disappointed to receive a text from Abby the following Saturday at 8 a.m. which read, “sorry terrible am sickness not coming”. Emma sighed heavily and waited until she had washed her face to text back. She knew enough about pregnancies to realize that this would probably be the first of many missed outings, at least for the foreseeable future. It was already starting, then: Abby’s shift from supporting role to secondary character. Unfortunately for Emma, Abby had no understudy. Abby was her last “best” friend she could call on a whim. Emma would have to carry on the show alone now. Alone. That word seemed to pop up a lot in Emma’s consciousness this year.

It seems like the older I get, the more alone I become, she reflected while applying her moisturizer and staring into her own eyes in the mirror. Everyone else pairs off and becomes a family, while I’m still waiting to get started. First, they become couples, and then you lose even your couple friends when they have kids. I’m like a lost ship, separated from its fleet. All my friends have pulled into harbor, and I’m just drifting. The water hasn’t really changed, I guess. It just seems a lot more ominous when you’re the only one out there. By the time she had finished putting in her contacts, Emma’s lighthearted, carefree mood had evaporated and 30 was looming larger than ever in her mind’s eye.

            After changing, Emma texted back: “Okay. So sorry, babe. Hope you feel better soon. Praying for you.” She found her mp3 player in a dresser drawer and headed for the park with less vigor than usual. Once there, Emma selected a mellow playlist and made her way into the trees, gazing at the glimpses afforded of the lake. Despite her best efforts to focus on the lyrics, she could feel a wave of emotion coming. She tried to focus on the sunlight glinting off the lake. Rounding a bend in the trail, she saw a young woman who looked about five years her junior exploring some mushrooms with a boy who looked to be about three. Emma picked up her pace as she passed them. She tried very hard to concentrate on the rhythm of her feet or nothing at all, but it was too late. The numbers were already running through her head:

22—graduated college, falling in love

25—married or at least engaged

26—have first child

28—one or two more children

            That had been the plan. Well, maybe not a formulated plan exactly, but that was what she had basically expected of her life—the way one just expected to get a driver’s license at 16, or to have one’s first drink at 21. It seemed like the natural timeline of life, give or take a couple years. Most of her peers got married shortly after college and started having kids within a few years of getting married. But, somehow, the numbers didn’t add up for Emma. And try as she might, she could not comprehend the new math.

30—still single, not even dating

32—maybe get engaged or married? At the earliest, certainly.

34?—have first child, hopefully

36—have second child

38—have a third child nah, better not to risk pregnancy that close to 40

39—firstborn starts kindergarten?! Good grief!

52—firstborn graduates from high school

56—firstborn graduates from college, if he/she sticks to one major

60?—firstborn gets married

And that was the very best case scenario!

            What are the chances that I’m going to fall in love and get married in two, short years, realistically? Emma thought as she emerged from the wooded trail into the park proper. Pretty slim. So, I may only get to have one child. That’s if I get married. Even if I do have kids, I’m going to be one of the oldest parents around. My kids will not come close to being peers with my friends’ kids. And my kids’ friends will have parents 10 years younger than me. Emma felt anxious as she began circling the park toward the lake shore. She was face to face with the loss of another dream she hadn’t acknowledged to herself consciously—being a young parent. Emma had never relished the idea of being pregnant and found labor downright terrifying. Consequently, she’d never spent much time thinking about having kids. Now that she was down to 5 years of low-risk pregnancy potential, however, she found that the prospect of not having children at all devastated her.

            Have I just been in denial all these years about what I really want? Emma wondered as she passed a jogging couple and a family of four playing at the jungle gym. Have I really wanted marriage and kids this badly all along and was just too afraid to admit it? Can I have been so focused on the present that I’ve missed out on what I so desperately wanted for my future? Looking back, however, she didn’t know what she could have done differently. It was not like she had rejected any compatible suitors or been antisocial with the opposite sex. She had, perhaps, appeared very confident and content in life, but she couldn’t regret that. She still felt sure that focusing on her calling, her friendships, and growing as a person was the right way to spend one’s single years. She didn’t believe in spending one’s single years by obsessing about marriage. So, why couldn’t she stop obsessing now? What have I done wrong to make me wind up alone and unwanted at the age of 30? Or what was I supposed to do that I failed to do? she thought, looking up at the sky. Why am I being punished and rejected?

            These thoughts nagged Emma the rest of the day and continued to haunt her private hours throughout the following weeks. It didn’t help that Abby was unable to walk the following three Saturdays as well. Emma could hear a faint voice somewhere in her heart assert that her singleness was not a punishment for anything or a rejection. She heard this small voice, but she refused to listen to it. It certainly felt like she was being punished. Why else was she the only one who had never really been pursued or loved or claimed? She didn’t feel any less worthy than Abby, Lauryn, Caitlin, Janna, or Mary Grace. Well, okay, she certainly wasn’t the homemaker or cook that Mary Grace was, but still…  Emma had guarded her heart and had tried very hard not to play games with the hearts of others. She had tried to grow in her faith and to love and serve others (granted, not perfectly). She had striven so hard to be content and grateful for the wonderful relationships which she did have in her life. She had diligently chased away self-pitying thoughts and feelings of envy. She had refused to entertain musings about how much better her life would be if she were in love, or to let her hormones cloud her judgment. For 12 years! Was this her reward?! A small group of friends that continued to shrink until they were mere acquaintances and her own life contained no one but herself? Is this what she had waited so patiently for?! She was not only without a significant other. She was soon to be without others period.

            Emma imagined she could see her entire life stretching out before her—watching her friends’ lives grow and evolve while she was left behind in an ever-increasing solitude. So. this was to be her fate, then? An endless succession of students who would graduate and leave, college applications, transcripts, standardized test results, and evening television shows while eating meals for one in an empty house. It was overwhelming, suffocating even. Better to die young—in the prime of life, before reaching your full potential—than to watch it pass you by, unnoticed, unadmired, unshared, Emma thought despondently, —to spend your life in the waiting room, never to hear your name called until you die. If my life is only destined to contain itself, then what’s the point?! Why not just take me now, Lord?

            That final question summed up the state of Emma’s emotions, but she didn’t speak it out loud or write it in her journal because she wasn’t actually talking to God this time. She felt too hurt and betrayed to want to pray, and she was too ashamed of these feelings to face God. Secretly, unbeknownst even to herself, part of her was punishing Him. Don’t you dare touch me! she was unconsciously saying. You can be here and watch, but don’t touch me. I’m hurting so much and You don’t care enough to fix it. You put me here. It’s Your fault I’m still alone. Every self-absorbed and petty emotion which she had successfully avoided in her previous years of singleness suddenly flooded her like a tsunami, and she was unprepared.

Emma was overcome. She vacillated between bitterness and numbness. She did not know herself anymore. And yet, she somehow felt that she was being reunited with something central to her being which had been kept from her all these years. She felt she was entitled to withdraw from the world and hold the broken, weeping thing inside her. Clearly, no one else would.

            At work, she was her usual, efficient self. Perhaps she seemed more engrossed in her work than usual, but she still greeted everyone with a smile. She still chatted with Shelley and Sharona, although she interjected slightly less frequently into their banter. She still welcomed prospective students and returning alumni into her office. She still faithfully attended church on Sunday, though her Sunday school attendance had deteriorated from sporadic to nonexistent. While she was engaged in these activities, Emma came out of herself and attended to those around her. She still wanted to do a good job for her students and to be a good neighbor. However, she no longer felt like her authentic self in these settings. Her true self emerged at the end of the day, as soon as she was home alone and could collapse inside herself.

            No one asked Emma what was wrong, or even seemed to notice a change, and she was relieved. In part, she was making such an effort to continue on as normal because she wouldn’t have been able to explain her state without sounding crazy. The closest thing she could compare it to was grief over the loss of a loved one. In truth, she felt as if she had lost someone, but not just anyone. She had watched people go through the loss of a family member before, and she was pretty sure she was reacting the same way: shutting down emotionally, crying all the time, watching tv without seeing anything, soaking in the tub or lying under the covers for hours without moving, forgetting to eat some nights until her stomach started growling, pretending not to be home when the phone rang.

It was as if the love of her life had died—only, she hadn’t met the love of her life. Only, unlike the grieving spouses she had observed, it wasn’t that Emma couldn’t picture the future without the love of her life. She could picture it—with excruciating clarity. It was empty. She missed him when she woke up to a silent house and no friendly good morning. She missed him when she did errands by herself, and when she went through the drive-thru because she couldn’t bear to spend another meal in the public eye by herself but had forgot to buy anything to cook. She missed him so much when she went to bed at night and the rest of the world had fallen asleep and ceased to provide her any distraction that she could barely breathe.

The problem was, when someone really lost a family member or loved one, their circle shared in the loss and gathered around to support them. People understood that grief; it was justifiable. It was visible. When you grieve over the severe absence of something you never had and likely never will have, you can’t tell anyone. It’s not socially acceptable or rational. It’s purely internal. People don’t know it’s happening. So, Emma pulled into a self-protective cocoon.

            Abby could tell that Emma was somewhat different, even though she hadn’t seen her in person for almost a month. Saturday afternoon phone calls had replaced their walks due to Abby’s persistent struggle with morning sickness. Although Emma sounded chipper and witty on the phone, Abby could tell something was a bit off. Her spark was gone. Emma gave briefer, less detailed responses to questions about her own life and redirected the conversations quickly back to Abby’s pregnancy and health. This wasn’t exactly unusual, as Emma usually focused conversation on the other person. Still, somehow, Emma just seemed to have less to say. Occasionally, Emma would repeat a question she’d already asked or seem to struggle to find a response. Abby couldn’t quite put her finger on it, but she knew Emma was keeping something from her.

            Emma, meanwhile, began to enjoy walking alone on Saturday mornings. It was a welcome chance to sweat out all her emotions and forget life for a while before facing the weekend. One Saturday, she found a voicemail from Abby on her cell phone when she got back to the car: “Call me as soon as you get in. I’ve got great news to tell you!” Abby gushed. Let me guess, Emma thought sarcastically, twins! Her endorphins were still pumping, however, so she rolled her eyes and dialed Abby’s number before pulling out of her parking space.

            “Hey! How was your walk?” Abby asked brightly.

            “Good, thanks. It wasn’t too humid today. So, what’s the good news?”

            “I went to see my OB-GYN again on Thursday since I’m still throwing up all the time.”

            “Uh-huh.”

            “Well, she wrote me a different prescription for nausea and it’s totally working! I started taking it Thursday night and I haven’t thrown up in like 36 hours!”

            “That’s great, Abs! I’m so relieved for you. I was beginning to worry about the baby’s nourishment and your own.”

            “I know. It was getting pretty scary for a while. If this keeps up, I can start walking with you again next week. And, barring any unforeseen relapses, we’re having our family dinner this coming Wednesday.”

            “Oh. Well that will be good. But, are you sure you’re up to it? 36 hours isn’t exactly a full recovery.”

            “Yeah. We might do take-out or something if I’m not sleeping well. I’ve been craving Chick-fil-A like you wouldn’t believe, but I’ve been afraid to get any because I couldn’t keep anything down.”

            Emma laughed. “Chick-fil-A sounds good to me. Do you want to just plan on me picking it up on the way, and then you don’t have to worry about planning the meal?”
            “Would you mind?”
            “Of course not. Besides, you’ve earned it.”

            “I can’t wait to see you! I’d come over right now if it weren’t for all the housework I’m behind on. Plus, I think Jackson’s looking forward to spending an evening with his wife that doesn’t involve clean-up.”

            “Yeah, I’ll bet he is!” Emma laughed. “Don’t worry about it. I can wait until Wednesday.”

            “How are you?” Abby asked, trying not to sound concerned.

            “I’m good. Things have been a little slow this week, but I’m catching up on renting all the movies I didn’t see over the semester.”

            “Well, that’s good. We’ll have to do a movie night together sometime.”
            “Sure…”

            Emma had mixed emotions after the call ended. She was happy Abby was feeling better, and she knew she would be better off with her best friend back in her life. However, she also knew that Abby would be much more observant in person than over the phone, and Emma wasn’t sure she was ready to share her struggle with anyone. She had been allowing herself to wallow in it—without judging herself or trying to conquer it—just grieving in the privacy of her own heart. If Abby somehow saw how depressed she was, she would try to comfort Emma, coax her, and fix her. Emma didn’t want to be comforted. She just wanted to be hurt. She knew it couldn’t be fixed—not without someone to be her person, someone to share her life with. She didn’t want to be cheered up or told how eligible she was. What the heck was the good in being eligible if no one ever proposed?! She didn’t want to be hovered over and worried about, or God-forbid told how lucky she was to have alone time. She just wanted to feel sorry for herself.

            On the other hand, she knew this grief was starting to consume her, and that she could lose herself completely in it if she stayed here much longer. Somewhere deep inside her—deeper even than the hurt, forgotten feeling—Emma was not willing to surrender her life completely to self pity. In the midst of all her confusion and turmoil, a part of her stubbornly refused to let her life be defined by who she wasn’t or what she didn’t have. Somewhere inside her, barely audible, a voice cried out to know and be known, to love and give, to make her life count for something. As much as Emma tried to embrace the unruly, raw emotion she had newly discovered in herself, she could tell it was choking the life out of her.

She knew she had to get some perspective on all this before seeing Abby. So, after showering, Emma faced what she had been avoiding for over a month. She got out her prayer journal and started writing. It doesn’t have to be pretty, she told herself. It just has to be honest.

Chapter 1–He’s Not My Date

by S. N. Martin

Having sorted through the morning’s paperwork, Emma decided to take a cell phone break. She had one new email from Abby entitled “don’t hate me.” What in the world? thought Emma as she opened the message.
Pleeeze don’t hate me, it began. We can’t go to Debbie’s wedding on Saturday. Jackson fractured his collar bone climbing yesterday, and he’s basically homebound for a while it heals. I have to stay here and look after him. But, don’t worry, Andy is still coming. I’m SO sorry to do this to you. I PROMISE I’ll make it up to you somehow. Emma groaned and got up to close her office door. She tried to remind herself that her primary concern should be Jackson’s injury and not the upcoming wedding, as she dialed Abby on her cell phone.
“Hello?” Abby sounded her chipper self, but slightly tired.
“Hey. I got your message,” Emma said, trying to sound as not disappointed as possible.
“Oh, Em! I would have called you, but we were at the hospital pretty late, and then we had to go the pharmacy, and get food, and call the family…By the time we got settled, we were so exhausted and—”
“Don’t worry about it,” Emma interrupted, forcing herself to focus on Abby and ignore the wedding. “How’s Jackson?” she asked genuinely. “Is he in terrible pain? What’s the prognosis?”
“Oh, he’s fine. He’s on some prescription pain killers, so he’s not too uncomfortable. But, they do make him groggy and he’s not supposed to move much. The doctor thinks he’ll heal quickly, but you know what a baby he is when he has to sit still. We have another appointment next week to check on his progress once the swelling has gone down.”
“I’m so sorry, Abs. You must have been scared to death for him.” Emma remembered the last incident, when Jackson had nearly torn his ACL on a trip with his college buddies, who had stupidly called Abby while Jackson was still moaning in the background. Emma and Abby had left Cirque de Soleil mid-show so that Abby could stay on the phone with Jackson until the doctor had seen him.
“Well, it’s not the first time we’ve been in the emergency room. At least this time he was smart and didn’t tell me he was hurt until they got back home from the park, and I could see he wasn’t horribly mangled or anything.”
Emma rolled her eyes and stifled a disapproving sigh. She knew she should feel sorry for Jackson. She loved Jackson. After all, he was like a brother to her; he helped her out all the time, and he was a terrific husband to Abby. But, did he have to keep up his dangerous, college hobbies like rock climbing and white water rafting? And why did he always seem to get injured when she and Abby had something special planned?
“Anyway, we’re really both fine,” Abby continued. “Just tired from waking up every few hours to give him his pain meds.”
“You should try to get some sleep this afternoon.” Emma realized this was a totally obvious and unhelpful suggestion as she was saying it. “Is there anything I can do?” she asked, equally unhelpfully.
“No, no, but thanks.” Abby didn’t seem to notice Emma’s cliché responses. “I just feel so terrible about Saturday. Andy offered to drive if you want.”
“No, no. I tend to get carsick, remember? I’ll drive. I’m just sorry you have to miss it,” Emma lied. She could think of nothing but endless repetitions of, Oh, Emma, who’s this?! I didn’t know you were seeing someone! The only thing more unbearable than everyone obviously avoiding the subject of her singleness was the humiliating exuberance of those who falsely assumed she had finally joined the ranks of mainstream humanity.
“You can introduce him as your adopted little brother,” Abby suggested sheepishly, guessing at Emma’s chagrin.
“Yeah,” Emma snorted, “right after everyone trips over each other to fawn over my new love interest.” She sighed. “Oh well. Don’t worry; I can handle it. I’m the champion single girl, right? But I am not going up for the bouquet toss!” Emma finished with her characteristically playful sarcasm. She always used this crutch when she felt put on the spot for being single or thought people suspected she wasn’t as tough as she appeared.
“Good for you!” Abby laughed, apparently satisfied that Emma was undaunted. “Well, call me when you get back and tell me everything. And take lots of pictures.”
“Will do,” Emma promised. “Tell Jackson I hope he feels better soon. Bye.”
“Bye, dear.”
Emma heard Abby’s line cut off and hung up her own phone, releasing another groan. Saturday had just become her worst nightmare. Couldn’t Jackson break something serious, like a tailbone, so she could claim obligation to remain behind for moral support? Maybe if she spent a lot of time in the nurse’s office and didn’t wash her hands for the next two days, she would come down with something. Hmm. Probably not. It was the week before final exams and most students had too much adrenaline from anticipating summer vacation to be sick.

She was just going to have to figure out a way to dispel any assumptions about Andrew as she introduced him. Hey, y’all! Do you know Abby’s baby brother, Andrew? Emma rehearsed mentally. Hey, did I mention he’s single? So, if you see any 24-year-olds in need of a dance partner at the reception… Ugh. She would simultaneously look like a hopeless spinster and a maternal matchmaker. Emma made a mental note to swear off all weddings in the future, unless she was a bridesmaid. She decided to e-mail Andrew rather than call him about the arrangements for Saturday. She didn’t feel up to a chipper conversation.

When Emma arrived at Andrew’s apartment on Saturday, he was already waiting outside. She chuckled a little at the sight of his disheveled hair and the tie draped across his shoulders. No suit jacket, she observed. He looked more like a college kid than an eligible date for a 29-year old career woman. Maybe people wouldn’t jump to conclusions after all, or at least not everyone. “Hey, Andrew,” Emma said cheerfully as he placed Abby’s wedding gift in the back seat.
“Hey. Nice dress,” he replied climbing into the front seat.
“Thanks. Nice tie,” Emma raised her eyebrows slightly and flashed her playful, sarcastic grin.
“Oh, yeah. Well, I didn’t see the point in choking for an extra hour in the car. We’ve got a long day ahead of us,” he explained as he buckled his seat belt and ran a hand through his tousled curls.
“Hmm. I’ll have to remember that strategy for my high heels next time,” Emma replied casually. “You do know how to tie that thing, right? ‘Cause I’ll be no help.” She smirked out the front windshield as they approached the road.
“Yes. Do you know how to walk in those?” Andrew replied in kind.
“Only for about an hour,” Emma chuckled. “Then it becomes more of a hobble.”
The drive to Gainesville passed quickly. Andrew was always at ease with himself, and they played music between casual conversations. It really wasn’t that difficult to see Andrew as an adopted younger brother. He felt almost as much like family as Jackson did, even though she’d known him for a fraction of the time she’d known Abby and Jackson.

The wedding was beautiful. Emma had never seen Debbie so happy. Although she and Andrew did sit together, they were among a lot of other single people, so they didn’t necessarily look like a couple. Besides, Abby had already told several people about Jackson’s accident. Several guests greeted Andrew with, “You must be Abby’s brother. How’s Jackson doing?” This seemed to spread quickly through the rest of the college gang. Thank you, Emma prayed silently with a sigh of relief.
The reception was a little less painless, as expected. After half an hour or so of small talk, reliving college memories, and catching up on career and baby news, Dave decided to fill a pause with his typical oblivion to unwritten rules of etiquette. “So, Emma, are you dating anyone down in Atlanta?” he blurted out. Everyone at the table turned to Emma with a fairly convincing façade of casual interest, but she knew everyone was hanging on her answer.
“No, Dave. Not really.” Emma played with the icing on her plate, smiling thinly while she awaited the traditional, calloused follow-up.
“Why not? What are you waiting for? You’re perfectly eligible and you’re not getting any younger, you know.” The infuriating thing about Dave was that he truly didn’t catch on when someone politely brushed him off. He lacked the social grace of recognizing when someone was in an awkward position. Emma took a deep breath. “Aren’t there any eligible bachelors in Atlanta?”
“Probably, but most of the single guys I know are under 18. Christian school isn’t exactly a hot bed of eligible bachelors, and the guys my age in church are already married.” She threw in her playful smile on cue. “So there aren’t that many avenues to meet single people unless you resort to the stereotypical bar crawl, which isn’t exactly my scene.” Emma toyed with the idea of recording this on her cell phone to play back whenever the moment was called for. She was so tired of reciting this response to every dumbfounded idiot who got married straight out of college and couldn’t grasp the fact that there is no ready-made peer group anymore once you depart academia. Suddenly, Emma thought of a diversion. “Maybe I should ask Andrew for tips. He’s an Atlanta bachelor. How do you meet people, Andrew?” Success! All eyes turned to Andrew, who looked caught off guard slightly.
“Uh…” he began uncertainly. “Well, I’m not really sure. I mainly just hang out with my friends. There is a young adults group at our church, but no one there I’m really interested in. They’re mostly college students.”
“Yeah. That’s the case at my church, too,” Emma chipped in, feeling a slight twinge of guilt for putting Andrew on the spot.
“Guess the Internet’s the only viable option, then, unless we wanna rob the cradle,” Andrew quipped, prompting everyone to chuckle and change the subject. Yep, Andrew made a good younger brother.

“You know, no one’s looking. You can take them off now,” Andrew said as he and Emma made their way to her car.
“Huh?” she asked, turning to see Andrew removing his tie and unbuttoning his shirt collar. “Oh, the heels,” she laughed. “Yeah, that’s a good idea.” She threw her pumps in the back seat before taking the driver’s seat.
Andrew sighed as he kicked off his own dress shoes and reclined the seat a little. He ruffled his hair brusquely with his hands and scanned the radio as Emma pulled out of the parking lot. “So, do your friends always grill you like that?” Andrew asked casually.
“You mean Dave? Yeah, usually. At least once,” Emma admitted. “It’s a little easier with a wingman, though.” She winked at him and smiled.
“Glad I could be of service,” Andrew bowed with mock gentility. “I wonder if it would be different if you were a guy,” he mused.
“Good question. I don’t suppose I’ve ever thought about that,” Emma replied, turning onto the main road. “I imagine it might be worse since guys are supposed to be the pursuers. People probably pressure guys to make a decisive move.”
“I guess I’ll have to prepare some witty responses, then” Andrew replied reflectively.
“Or you could just date,” Emma laughed. “You boys have a little more control over that than we ladies do.” She stole a glance at Andrew to smile at him teasingly, but he was just staring forward thoughtfully. “Girls don’t bite, you know; well, not the nice ones anyway. They even say yes sometimes,” she continued, trying to draw him back to the conversation.
Andrew laughed. “Oh, I know. I’m just wondering when people start obsessing about your relationship status?”
“Well, you’re only 24. You have at least one more year before the pressure really starts, and then it’s a slow boil—until about 26; then it’s all over. Plus, you’re a pretty social guy. I bet you have dates all the time. One of them is bound to grow into something eventually.” Emma was trying hard not to mock Andrew’s totally unnecessary train of thought. He had to be one of the most datable guys at his church. He had no idea what it was like to actually be under scrutiny and to have no discernible options.
“Oh, I’ve dated plenty, but just for fun.” Andrew replied. “You know, casually. I’ve never actually been in love I don’t think. I had a few girlfriends in high school and college, but we were more like best friends who just got dressed up occasionally for special outings. None of my relationships have ever really developed into anything serous.” His tone was still lighthearted and casual, but Emma was somewhat surprised by his continuing the train of thought. Unsure what to say, she made some sound to indicate she was listening as she changed lanes to pass a slow car on the freeway. “What about you? Have you ever been in love?” he asked suddenly.

Emma was not accustomed to discussing this subject with guys. But before she could answer, Andrew had a sudden thought. “Gosh! I bet it would be positively excruciating to go through that ritual interrogation if you had been in love and it didn’t work out!” He was clearly speaking hypothetically, forgetting that she was the person in question, which made his bluntness all the more endearing.
Emma laughed. “I never really thought about it that way before. Weddings would be worse as a single person if you had been disappointed in love, I guess. But no, thank heaven. I’ve never even dated, to speak of, so I guess I have that to be thankful for.”
“Hold up,” Andrew said, twisting in his seat to face Emma head on. “You’ve never dated?!”
Oops. She hadn’t meant to let that slip out. Upon a moment’s reflection, however, and a quick glance to assess his reaction, Emma realized that she didn’t really mind Andrew knowing. He was just genuinely surprised, not judging. It didn’t feel like having a peer look at you like you’ve just admitted to some terminal tumor, or a married person looking at you like you’ve been a victim of gross neglect and cruelty. He was just curious. “Well, not really. I mean, you know, I’ve been on dates. And we did some group dating back in college and stuff. But, I’ve never had an actual dating relationship.”
“Get out! Really?! How did you swing that?” Andrew was still sitting sideways in his seat, staring at her fixedly. Emma felt slightly embarrassed and chuckled nervously as she felt her cheeks growing warmer.
“Um. I don’t know. In high school, I guess I was still self-conscious around guys and mostly focused on my studies. So, I didn’t really attract dates. In college, I hung out with a few guys, but we were just good friends. The guys who actually pursued me weren’t really compatible with my personality. And then…. I don’t know. It’s almost like a curse. The less dated you are, the less datable you become or something. I think I’ve completely fallen off the radar at this point. Plus, it’s true that I don’t really know any single guys who are eligible.”
“So, when you say you didn’t date in high school…you mean like, prom? Homecoming? School dances?”
“Nope. I went to Homecoming with groups a couple years, but never as a twosome. And prom isn’t really a group event.”
“And, college formals? The annual banquet?”
“Nope.”
“Wow. I can’t believe you didn’t get asked.”
“Gee, thanks.”
“Sorry, I didn’t mean it like that. What I meant was, I would have expected someone to ask you.”
“Well, there were a couple of unsuitable guys who may have asked…if I hadn’t warded them off with lots of mixed messages and playing totally aloof to their intentions. I tried to keep them too unsure of my feelings to actually take a chance on pursuing me in earnest.” Emma smiled to herself, remembering how hard she had worked to keep one guy in particular from asking her out.
“Yeah, I guess I could see you being intimidating,” Andrew reflected, turning back in his seat to face the front.
“What?” Emma laughed. “I don’t think I was intimidating, just an enigma. I didn’t give them any encouraging feedback or open windows of opportunity.”
“Mmm, I don’t know,” Andrew responded. “Even without encouragement, if a guy’s really interested in a girl, he takes a shot—unless he’s intimidated.”


“Why in the world would a girl who’s never dated be intimidating? It’s not like I was ever the hot chick on campus or the man-eater or anything.”
“Maybe they felt like no one had ever been able to catch your attention so your standards must be really high.”
“Or their standards must be too low, if no one else had tried before,” Emma laughed.
“Mmm, I don’t think so,” Andrew said lightly but sincerely, changing the channel on the radio.
Emma wasn’t sure how to respond to this and was getting a bit uncomfortable being the center of the conversation, so she decided to shift the conversation back to him. “So, who has you so intimidated that you haven’t dated anyone in Atlanta yet?” she asked teasingly, smirking at him and raising her eyebrows. “I’ve been to church with Abby. There’re several cute girls around your age who I’m sure would love to go out with you. You said you like casual dating. What’s the problem?”
“Casual dating doesn’t usually end well,” Andrew said somewhat seriously and quit fiddling with the radio. The abrupt change in his tone caught Emma’s attention and pulled her out of her panicked backpedaling.
“What do you mean?” she asked, sincerely confused.
Andrew ran his fingers through his curls absentmindedly, somewhat taming them in the process. “Well, when I say none of my relationships have turned into anything serious, it’s mainly because I’ve never felt serious about any of them. But, at some point, the girl always wants to get serious, and then she gets hurt when I don’t have the same plans.”

Emma had never seen Andrew burdened by something before. He sounded almost guilty. She glanced at him quickly to make sure she was correctly assessing his tone. He was playing idly with his tie in his lap, not looking at her. “I mean, I love making a girl feel special and planning fun dates and everything. I can get really creative, and we always have a great time. But, somewhere along the line, the girl starts seeing white dresses on the horzion, and I don’t know how to avoid that.” Andrew was still tracing the patterns on his tie.
Emma knew exactly what Andrew was talking about. “Ah, yes. The Prince Charming Syndrome,” she observed casually. “Close kin to the Knight in Shining Armor Syndrome, though somewhat less destructive.”
Now Andrew was looking up at her with an amused twinkle in his eye and a cautiously raised eyebrow. “Come again?” he asked, distracted from his pensive mood.
“It’s a very common pitfall among otherwise well-intentioned guys. I’ve seen it a thousand times. Guys like to play the role. You like dazzling a girl and giving her magical moments, sweeping her off her feet. You like to make her feel like a princess. Only, you think you’re just giving her a few magic moments. In reality, you’re giving her a long-term dream, with you at the dead center.” Emma had explained this so many times to girls that she fell into her didactic tone and continued with her familiar speech. “While the guy is enjoying playing a role, the girl’s casting him in the entire script. Every time he successfully pulls off the role of Prince Charming or Knight in Shining Armor (which is the more dangerous of the two), he creates a little emotional dependence in her. She now depends on him to make her feel special or safe and to believe that her dreams of love can come true. For every moment he gives her, she gives him a piece of her heart. As those moments accumulate, so does the fallout when she realizes that he’s not playing for keeps and she’s given her heart away in vain. ‘Casual’ dating in a guy’s mind is not the same thing as casual dating in a girl’s mind. ‘Casual’ to a girl does not involve Prince Charming or the Knight in Shining Armor. Those are both very permanent roles. ‘Casual’ to a girl is more like the faithful squire or the childhood playmate.”
Emma realized too late that she had not adapted this speech for a male audience before and had basically launched into a soapbox sermon, forgetting Andrew’s feelings. Andrew didn’t say anything, and she tried to quickly assess how condemning her little diatribe had sounded. “Sorry,” she said glancing at him apologetically. “That came out too harshly. Of course, the guy doesn’t usually mean to do any of that. He’s just trying to make the girl feel special and confident. I realize that. And, it’s not all the guy’s fault either. Girls aren’t very good at guarding their hearts or being conscious of who they give them to. Most of them are all too eager to give their hearts away to the nearest bidder. Especially in the South where they’re basically raised to get married as soon as the opportunity presents itself. A lot of times, you don’t even have to play the role of Prince Charming to get a girl’s heart.” Emma stole another glance at Andrew.
His eyebrows were slightly pinched together, and he stared absently at the dashboard. “Andrew,” she ventured. “Are you okay? Did I offend you?”


“Huh?” Andrew looked up distractedly. “No, I’m fine. Sorry. I was just mentally replaying my last few relationships. You’re totally right. My relationships always started out pretty Platonic, but the more creative I got with dates or did little things to brighten their days, the more the girls seemed to get attached. The relationships that ended the most amicably were the ones that were mainly just hanging out, not fancy dates or grand gestures. It never occurred to me that I was playing games with their emotions. How on earth did I miss that?”
Yep. She had overdone it. Emma shrugged slightly, trying to be generous without dismissing his revelation. “Well, you’re not a girl, and probably no one ever explained to you how girls’ minds work. Heck, probably half the girls you dated didn’t realize how their own minds work. It’s not like you did it intentionally. And the damage isn’t irrevocable or anything. I don’t want to scare you off dating altogether. Just, you know, don’t pursue a girl unless you’re actually serious about pursuing her. Otherwise, keep it in the hanging out category.” Emma was really regretting this entire line of conversation. Why couldn’t she just keep her mouth shut? Why did she always have to pry with questions? And why did she always feel the need to wax eloquent on this subject when she really didn’t know what she was talking about? Poor Andrew was looking very disillusioned and probably would be too scared to ever ask another girl out unless he was ready to buy a ring.
“You know?” he said finally, after a very tense few seconds for Emma, “for someone who has no dating experience to speak of, you sure have a lot of insight into the female dating psyche.” He looked over at Emma with a sincerely impressed look on his face. She heaved a huge, internal sigh of relief when his face broke into a half smile and a raised eyebrow. Maybe she wouldn’t have to explain to Abby why her brother was going to die a bachelor.
“Yeah, well, it’s one of the many perks of not having my own love life. I have been the primary confidante to countless girlfriends and even some of their boyfriends.” She rolled her eyes dramatically at the word ‘countless’ and smiled her sarcastic smile.
“I bet that’s been fun,” Andrew chuckled, regaining his normal cheerfulness. “Still, you must have proved a pretty good listener.” There was an awkward pause as neither of them was sure how to proceed now that this line of thought was concluded. “So, exactly how can you tell if a girl is just playing totally aloof to prevent you from asking her out?” They both laughed, and Emma shared a few stories of particularly persistent guys in college. Andrew shared some stories about his own overblown attempts to get a girl’s attention in high school. The rest of the drive was pleasant and casual again.
“See ya around, Emma. Thanks for driving.” Andrew shined his usual, carefree smile as he got out of the car at his apartment building.
“Hey, Andrew,” Emma called, leaning over before he closed the passenger door. His head bent down to meet her gaze. “You’re a really great guy, and any girl would be happy to date you. Really.” Shoot. Should she have said that? Maybe she should just have let it lie.
Andrew grinned. “Likewise,” he said. “Um, except the gender part, I guess.” They both laughed and Andrew closed the door. Emma drove home confident that their sibling camaraderie was fully intact.

My Life as a Vampire

Being single is a lot like being a vampire.

vampire bat

No, seriously. I know it sounds ridiculous, but think about it. Okay, forget about the whole blood sucking thing for a minute: what makes a vampire a vampire? Immortality, right? They never age.

I never used to see the appeal of vampires, honestly. I’m not really into fantasy or film noir. But, after deciding to explore a movie to figure out what all my female students were raving about a few years ago, I was surprised by how much the plight of the modern, youthful vampire resonated with me. It took me a while to figure out why, but then I realized that there are many similarities between being a vampire and being single, at least in my experience.

Exhibit A: Vampires themselves are not touched by time, yet they still inhabit a world inside of time. While they do not age or change, everything around them is constantly changing. Loved ones grow old, get sick, die, while they remain the same.
As a single person, my lifestyle has remained essentially the same since my early 20’s. Meanwhile, almost all of my friends from my early 20’s are now spouses, parents, homeowners, etc. I watch everyone else’s lives progress and change and develop new chapters, while mine remains more or less untouched.
Exhibit B: Vampires do not age along with everyone else. Consequently, they are usually mistaken for being much younger than they actually are.
Okay, so technically, I’m always aging. But, I never seem to change. The conversation that happens when people learn my real age is so consistent that I sometimes mouth the reactions while the latest person is having them. I can’t count the number of times someone has tried to share a reassuring story about how they didn’t meet their husband until they were like 29. (smirk and sigh) When I tell them how far past that I am, there is always, without exception, a loud gasp, followed by an eerie expression and intent examination of my face as if they just entered the Twilight Zone, followed by a, “No. You can’t be. Seriously?” Seriously. “I thought you were like 25!” It’s always the same number. I realize this is a problem a lot of women would kill to have. But, while I guess I’d rather be a stunningly youthful spinster than a wrinkly one, I sometimes think I would take the grey and the wrinkles if I got to have a family and make a home.
Exhibit C: Vampires must constantly change their society and find a new home or place to live.
Okay, so in the case of a vampire, this is self-inflicted in order to avoid detection. I’m not really afraid of anyone discovering that I’m single. But, my society still changes about every 3 years. I was complaining to another single friend once about how all my friendships were changing, and she said, “Well, you’re at the 3 year mark.” I had no idea what she was talking about, but she asserted that there is a 3 year rotation for social circles when you are single. I’ve paid attention ever since then and she’s totally right! You find a group that you can belong to. For me, it’s the young adults group at my church. You have people to “do life with” who are available to hang out and talk to and do things with. Then, over the course of 3 years, all of those people either get married, or the married people have kids, or they buy a house and start renovating, or the newlyweds decide they need to join a marriage bible study instead, and *PRESTO!* your social circle is gone. Now, usually, there is more of a trickle in and trickle out, so everyone doesn’t disappear at once leaving a void. But, still, it does get exhausting sometimes.
Exhibit D: Vampires do not really fit in anywhere. They just sort of cohabitate.
I frequently feel as if I do not quite fit in anywhere. Don’t get me wrong, I am thankful to say that I feel accepted lots of places, even pursued and known. But, I just can’t figure out where I fit. I don’t fit in with my chronological peers, because I am still living the life of a 24-year-old. I don’t quite fit in with my stage of life peers because it is not all new and exciting to me. I have been dealing with this for a long time, and I carry the weight of years that they have not yet known. Eventually, youth gets old. It’s not all it’s cracked up to be. What’s even more trippy is when my stage of life peers move on to the next stages, even though they are years younger than me. Am I the big sister still? The younger sister? I often feel like I have just fallen off the space-time continuum altogether, and it’s not freeing so much as disorienting. That’s the trouble with vampires. Immortality is only great if you live in an immortal world, and a much better one than this one.

I was festering over this one day a while back. You know, the whole “woe is me” and “nobody knows the trouble I’ve seen” head space. I even wrote a poem to express my temporal confusion. I started praying about it, and as I was mid-sentence, telling God “It feels like–” Jesus finished the sentence for me: “Like you have no place to rest your head?” I stopped dead in my tracks. Yes! That’s exactly what it feels like, and I suddenly realized, Somebody does know the trouble I’ve seen. Imagine being eternal, immortal, the only-wise God and then actually entering into Time, becoming a chronological being. Talk about disorienting! I worry about losing my chronology; Jesus took on the burden of chronology for me. If I think people don’t know what to make of me, I can only imagine how misunderstood He felt. Literally no one knew what He was going through or what His experience of life was like. Then, as if that wasn’t enough, He did not follow the expected timeline of His culture either. I’m sure he faced many a “When are you going to settle down?” question of His own. I assume most of his siblings got married, had kids. People maybe expected Him to take over the family carpentry business, settle down with a nice Jewish girl, raise a family. Instead, He was still travelling around as a homeless, itinerant rabbi at the age of 33. “Foxes have their holes, and birds of the air have their nests, but the Son of Man has nowhere to lay His head.” (Matthew 8:20) As the Son of God, He had the whole scope of eternity in which to lay His head (even though He didn’t need to), but when He became the Son of Man and actually had the need, there was nowhere. So, as it turns out, as much as being a vampire is disorienting and confusing, and lonely sometimes, I do have someplace to lay my head: squarely on the chest of Christ, my Savior. And, when necessary, He will hold me until I finish singing my dramatic dirges and collapse my head in exhaustion. He’s done it before.

The God of Perishing Hope

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The winter holiday season is always an interesting time for me emotionally. I look forward to seeing family, watching the littles open their presents and discover traditions, relaxing and taking time to just be with loved ones, sharing a meal or a desert or a cup of coffee. I feel thankful that God loved me enough, in spite of all my mess and idolatry and selfishness, to enter into time (more on that in a future post) and humanity and take on the burden of my brokenness Himself so that I would not be alone on this journey, and so that the end of this journey would involve reconciliation and homecoming and fulfillment instead of consequences and isolation and condemnation. I also enjoy just being able to stop and rest for a while. These are all blessings of the holiday season.

On the other hand, the Christmas to New Year time period is also a major time marker, a milestone, a time that naturally turns our minds toward reviewing the previous year (and years) and noticing that another year has come to a close. Milestones are dangerous when you are single. Probably they are dangerous for anyone whose life has not followed their expected timeline. Milestones tend to prompt the reviewing of all the things that did not happen–yet again–in the previous year (and years). The holiday milestones add the complication of gathering with family members and loved ones whose lives are progressing in those areas where mine seems to be at a permanent standstill. The fellowship is comforting, but the juxtaposition is sometimes acute.

This morning, I read an article about unexpected developments in life (http://www.desiringgod.org/blog/posts/when-god-messes-with-your-life-plan). It wasn’t quite the same as the unexpected lack of developments I am facing, but the spiritual struggle is the same. (It’s one of the amazing and beautiful things about humanity to me that no matter what circumstances our lives are wrapped in, the struggles inside are exactly the same once you open the package. It is comforting to me when I can’t see any other life packages that look like mine on the outside, and it is part of the way that we are never alone.) At any rate, I was struck once again by the example of Abraham being asked to sacrifice Isaac as I read the article. So, I decided to look it up in Genesis 22 for devotions, thinking maybe God was asking me to sacrifice my lack of children and spouse to Him–again; that just maybe the way to avoid depression and self-pity in this cycle of the grief would be to willingly sacrifice my lack of developments.

As I turned to Genesis 22, I found that the immediately preceding chapter contained the story of Hagar’s exile with Ishmael. Both familiar and favorite stories of mine, but a juxtaposition I had not noted before. This juxtaposition was also acute to me, and convicting. The stories struck me as two different pictures of a God-ordained sacrifice; two different journeys of disappointment and grief.

First, we have in Genesis 21:14-19, Hagar: Circumstances find Hagar and her son (Ishmael) cast out of their home into the wilderness by her master (Abraham). Sarah has decided she does not want Ishmael around (after she demanded that Abraham sleep with Hagar to give birth to an heir) now that she has her own son. But, God tells Abraham not to worry because He will watch over Ishmael, and to do as Sarah asks. So, Abraham sends Hagar off with nothing but food and a canteen of water to make her way in the world. I’m willing to bet that having a child by her boss’s husband probably wasn’t part of her original life plan either, and now she finds herself “wandering aimlessly” through the wilderness until her canteen is emptied and she has no resources left. To be fair, God’s hand is not overtly at work in this turn of events. I can’t blame her for failing to recognize His sovereignty or assuming this is the end of her sad tale. “When the water was gone, she left the child under a bush and went off and sat down 100 yards or so away. ‘I don’t want to watch him die,’ she said and burst into tears, sobbing wildly.” This is not a conscious sacrifice of obedience, a trusting journey of grief. This is a circumstance that was forced upon her unexpectedly and she does not know how to cope. I have been there–withdrawing by myself to burst into tears of despair and sit myself down in a heap, waiting for the end. It’s a very low place to be. She doesn’t see God at work. She doesn’t see the well nearby that He has already provided to refill her canteen. She can’t even look at her beloved son anymore. She can’t watch the death of her hope, her love, her dream. So, she leaves him alone to die. She feels abandoned, hopeless, desperate.

In Genesis 22:1-18, we find Abraham: Abraham’s circumstances are quite stable, prosperous, and peaceful by contrast. God directly speaks to Abraham and commands him to take his son (the only son with his wife Sarah, the miracle child who is the fulfillment of God’s promise to Abraham) and sacrifice him to the Lord as a burnt offering.  So, Abraham puts together a travel party and goes to the place God had told him to sacrifice Isaac. I am sure this was an equally heart-wrenching journey as Hagar’s, with the added knowledge that Abraham himself would have to actively sacrifice his son, and after he has already had to lose his first son, Ishmael. However, Abraham proceeds in obedience. He tells Isaac that God will provide the sacrifice they need. He builds the altar. He ties up Isaac. The knife is raised, the pyre is built. He intentionally, consciously prepares to sacrifices his child to a God that has just asked Him to kill the promise which that same God made to him. However, he is not without hope. Hebrews 11:17-19 tells us that he was able to obey out of faith in God, trusting in God’s promise to give him descendants through Isaac. “He considered that God was able even to raise him from the dead.” He doesn’t understand the command; it seems to contradict what God had done before. But, he trusts God to be faithful to His promises, despite all developments to the contrary. He trusts in God’s provision, not his own resources. The Angel of the Lord says to him, “I know that God is first in your life–you have not withheld even your beloved son from me,” and then God opens Abraham’s eyes to see the ram which God has already provided for the offering in Isaac’s place.

Me: I have no idea what it’s like to have to sacrifice a child because I have never had a child. I won’t pretend to even be able to imagine that. But, I have found myself on both sides of the juxtaposition when it comes to the grief caused by disappointment or seemingly defeated hopes for the future. How do I respond when my hopes for the future are out of water and I feel like I’m wandering aimlessly through the wilderness? How do I respond when God speaks to me and tells me to be willing to actually sacrifice my hopes for the future, surrender them completely to Him? Am I willing to make that sacrifice because I seek to honor God above myself, and trust Him more than what I can see? Is God first in my life? Or do I sob my eyes out as I wander in my own, personal wilderness, unwilling to lift my eyes to face my fears and consequently also unable to see God’s loving provision for me? [Let’s just say that there is a plentiful amount of juxtaposition in my responses as well. But, I’m afraid that at milestones, I tend more toward Hagar.]

God: What I find to be very encouraging is what the two stories have in common–God’s response. In both situations (willing, obedient sacrifice and despairing, hopeless grief), God initiates an intervention. As Hagar is resigning herself to die in this place of hopelessness and abandonment, alone, forever (much more justified in her situation than in mine), God speaks. The Angel of the Lord interrupts the pity party: “Hagar, what’s wrong? Don’t be afraid! For God has heard the boy’s cries as he is lying there.” Then God opens her eyes to see a well. Did you get that? A well! In the middle of the wilderness! When Hagar’s resources are out, God miraculously provides a means to replenish them and to preserve her life and her hope for the future. As Abraham is preparing to take the biggest leap of faith in his life and commit his most costly act of obedience, God interrupts. The Angel of God shouts this time: “Abraham! Abraham! Put down the knife; don’t hurt the boy in any way, for I know that God is first in your life…” And then, for the first time, Abraham “notices” a ram caught by its horns in a nearby bush, perfect for a burnt offering to God. In this case, I find the juxtaposition encouraging. Redemption does not depend on the person, but on the Creator. God does not reward Abraham’s obedience and reject Hagar for her lack of faith. He does not punish Abraham for having Ishmael by taking Isaac. He rescues both of them. He provides for both of them. He shows unmerited favor and redemption to both of them. He preserves their hope and their future, for both of them.

God remains faithful, whether I am walking in intentional faith and trust or hiding behind a bush having a pity party. He loves me unconditionally when I believe that truth and when I doubt it. He provides a substitute sacrifice in my place to pay for my sins, and He provides sustenance for me on my journey which sometimes seems aimless. God’s faithfulness in the midst of my grief will not change with my response. My experience of that journey, however, will. When I find myself collapsed in the wilderness, I want to remember that God has already ordained miraculous provision that I can’t see yet, and that He hears my cries and has not abandoned me. But, I would prefer to spend less time sobbing my eyes out and more time putting one foot in front of the other as I follow God’s lead, trusting Him with my ultimate future and with my hopes for the future, regardless of how many times I find myself standing at the altar. I want God to be first in my life–whatever that life looks like.

What’s a Girl to Do with Happily Ever After?

“Happily Ever After”

The phrase permeates our culture, our narratives, our dreams, and our hopes. The concept either tantalizes or haunts us. This is especially true among the ranks of single women, where “happily ever after” seems to conjure one of two, very strong, emotional reactions:

1. Dogmatic hope and optimism, or

2. Bitter cynicism and disillusionment.

Those women who fall into the first category tend to consume romantic comedies like carbs, invest in online dating websites, write letters to their future husbands who have yet to materialize, and dvr every bridal show on TLC so they can draw up the blueprint for their own perfect weddings. Those who fall into the latter category tend to wear black on Valentine’s Day, listen to angry chick rock, hang dart boards with photos of exes on them, and avoid bridal showers like the plague. Okay, that’s a bit of an exaggeration, but the fairy-tale ending elicits exaggerated emotional reactions from single women fairly regularly–reactions which I sometimes find nauseating, even as a fellow single. To be fair, though, I can’t really blame them for having these reactions. I mean, the script of finding your identity, happiness, purpose, and general life fulfillment by finding the right guy to fall in love with is practically crammed down our throats at every turn: music, movies upon movies, novels, tv shows, advertisements–need I go on? “All you need is love! Do, do, do ,do , do…” Which is great, if you have found your one, true love. Otherwise, it sort of leaves you hanging without what you need. So, you either spend your energy chasing that need, or you’ve wised up to the fact that the script is a hoax and you spend your energy trying to surgically remove that need–much trickier than it sounds. I sometimes picture two groups of protesters: one group is dressed to the nines, carrying glitter-laden posters that say “Someday my prince will come!” The other group is wearing jeans and sweats and holding signs that say, “There is no Prince Charming! Wake up and get over it!”

Personally, I don’t really want to fit in with either group–although on my really tough days, I probably oscillate between visiting one or the other or both. Still, I’m pretty sure they’re both unhealthy worldviews.

Lately, I have gotten curious about something. I’ve wondered–after years of being weaned, teethed, and fed on “happily ever after”–what happens to the longing for a fairy-tale ending after one has secured a prince (however charming) and finished the frosted, ruffled, wedding day? So, I polled some of my married friends to find out whether they still longed for the perfect ending. And if so, what does it look like post-nuptials? Here’s what I found out: One can be married to a great, charming, prince of a guy who loves the Lord and his family, and still find oneself longing for a happily ever after. Most of my friends are happily married, and in that sense feel they are already living their fairy tale. But that doesn’t mean they don’t still find themselves in low moments of feeling like life is hard and overwhelming, or messy and exhausting. My single friends and I in those moments are always tempted to think, “If I just had a life partner to tackle this with and support me, and give me a shoulder to cry on, this would be bearable.” My married friends think, “If I just had a better job; if my husband had a better job so I didn’t have to work; if we could just get pregnant; if the kids were just potty-trained; if we could just buy a house; if we could just get a bigger house for our growing family; if I just had a remodeled kitchen; if the appliances just worked properly; if I just had a maid; if I could just lose my pregnancy weight….then life would be settled and manageable and I could really enjoy it.” I haven’t pursued this research further, but I suspect that married women may at times divide into two camps of optimists and cynics as well.

There’s one essential problem with the fairy-tale ending of happily ever after: the fairy tale actually ends almost immediately with the musical swell, the camera panning from the wedding reception to the stars overhead, and the fade to credits. In other words, the fairy tale just ends “happily,” whereas real life includes the “ever after” part. With very few, refreshing exceptions, the romantic fairy-tale movies do not show Cinderella and Prince searching for apartments, or Snow White and Charming tackling an economic depression in the kingdom, or Sleeping Beauty cleaning up the diaper poo that Junior has just slung all over his royal bedchamber. I think all of the married women I interviewed would say that life is better with a partner, and that they can’t imagine their lives without their husband. But, I think they would also all say that life is still life, even when you’re married. And because it’s still life in a fallen, broken world, and the prince and the princess are still fallen, broken people–it is not exactly the picture of ease, bliss, and perfection portrayed in the movies that we long for.

So, what’s a gal to do? Is it all just a culture-induced delusion?

I don’t think so. As C.S. Lewis once postulated, the only logical explanation for a deep, universal, inherent longing for something is that it does exist. And the only reasonable conclusion for such a longing that cannot be satisfied here in this life is that we were not meant to be fulfilled completely in this life. (I’m paraphrasing.)

So here’s the position I’ve come to on this very sticky topic: I am not giving up on happily every after. But, I’m also not looking for it anymore. I don’t need to, because I’ve already found it. I just haven’t taken possession of it yet. There will never be a point in my life on earth where everything works together perfectly, where all my needs are met perfectly, all my fears are abated, and all my hopes are come true. I will never be able to fully rest in this life, with the knowledge that all is as it should be and will remain that way. Not if I marry, not if I have children, not if I win the lottery, not if I become a best-selling authoress. I will never arrive at some plateau where all of my relationships, works, and environments are in perfect harmony. It doesn’t exist.

Not here. However, I do look forward to a day when all those things are true, and much, much more. There will be a day when all my needs are met, all my flaws turned beautiful, all my desires and longings fulfilled, all my hurts and fears erased, all my joys magnified, and everything in myself, my life, and my environment will work together in perfect harmony. In fact, it is promised to me. The One who promises it is eternal, unchanging, faithful, and He purchased that promise with His own precious blood. The best promise of all for that day is that I will be fully united with Him and see Him face to face–without my sin, or brokenness, or frailty getting in the way.

Then I saw a new heaven and a new earth….And I saw the holy city, new Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from God, prepared as a bride adorned for her husband. And I heard a loud voice from the throne saying, “Behold, the dwelling place of God is with man. He will dwell with them, and they will be His people, and God Himself will be with them as their God. He will wipe away every tear from their eyes, and death shall be no more, neither shall there be mourning nor crying nor pain anymore, for the former things have passed away.”  Revelation 21:1-4

No longer will there be anything accursed, but the throne of God and of the Lamb will be in it, and His servants will worship Him. They will see His face, and His name will be on their foreheads. And night will be no more. They will need no lamp or sun, for the Lord God will be their light, and they will reign forever and ever.” Revelation 22:3-5

Seriously? What fairy tale can compete with that? It’s okay to long for happily ever after. We’re supposed to. Life is not as it is supposed to be. The world is not as it is supposed to be. We are not as we are supposed to be. But, God knows that. He loved us anyway, and created a happy ending to undo all the pain of the story here. He sent His only Son to die in our place, and take the penalty of our sin and brokenness, so that we could live with Him in perfection and beauty. No Prince Charming can compete with Him. No house or remodel can compare with the beauty of heaven. Nothing we could possibly find, create, discover, build, buy, or accomplish here will ever even come close. So, here’s the great news of relief: We can stop trying to create happily ever after! God has already created, accomplished, secured, and granted it to those who place their trust in Him and realize that they don’t deserve it. We are now free to embrace the life that God has placed before us, and love the people that God has placed before us–in all their weakness, brokenness, and beauty, just as they are. We can work to make the world better by making His grace and love known, all the while knowing that the happy ending is not dependent (praise the Lord!) on us. We can be content right now–dare I suggest maybe even happy?–knowing that this is not our “ever after.”

I’ve resolved to stop expecting to arrive at some point or accomplishment or milestone where life will get easy. It won’t. But, I already have my happily ever after secured for eternity in Christ. So, I’m free to embrace my life and world as they are now–messy, incomplete, imperfect, full of longing, stress, and uncertainty. I already know this is not my happy ending. This is just my journey to get there.