He keeps jumping around me. He won’t stop asking for the Coke. But c’mon, it’s 9 pm. He knows better.
I only allow a little bit of the caffeinated poison, and only early in the day. And only when I’m feeling a little bit more gracious.
I remember wanting that stuff as a kid. My mom would only get it on holidays. Only one holiday, as I recall. It was a New Year’s Eve treat. That’s it.
He’s up late and he’s growing up fast. And they all said it would happen, but I didn’t really listen. I was too busy trying to figure out how to grow this little guy. How to start a garden and build it to flourishing.
I was too busy trying to live on no sleep, no sanity, and no idea what the next stage would bring. I was too busy trying to figure out the rules to this game. No one gives us the perfect gardening book when we plant the first seed. We have to learn by shoving our hands right into the dirt. We dig in and get our head into the task; but, really, it’s the heart that goes first.
I can still see his face the moment he breathed his first breath. I see the bow of his lips and the blue of his eyes. I looked into his face as his heart beat rapidly against my sweat-soaked chest. Our hearts beating separately for the first time. I remember looking into his expectant eyes as motherhood grabbed hold of my soul,
I’ll show you how to live.
The rules we grow up with – they root in our minds and plant themselves firmly in our plans.
It’s where we learn how we are going to do this whole thing. We have nothing else to go on. Just the patterns set before us and the familiar footsteps in the garden. We follow the steps and know they’ll take us somewhere we know by heart.
We follow the places our own moms and dads have gone. We follow because we trust they knew what they were doing. We keep tiptoeing along and watch the garden of our youth grow into a forest.
The forest out there sometimes overwhelms us and we wonder if mom and dad actually had any idea, or is it just us who have not one clue. I’m pretty sure we all get lost in the weeds here and there.
Some of us get tangled up and choked in the weeds for a good long time.
Then, one day, a Gardener comes along and cuts the thorny and wilting places from us. We breathe deep and find we are free.
We run past the places we grew up and high-five a few lifted hands along the way. We run and think we just might have an idea what this whole thing is about.
Then. We become parents.
Now we find ourselves tending our own garden and we see all the mistakes our parents made – the same ones we find pouring from our own lips, the things we judged with our I-am-so-going-to-do-better-than-that attitude, and the know-it-all smirk fades from our sun-parched lips.
We never knew gardening was so… hard.
Ours are now the footsteps being traced and followed and watched and studied and criticized and analyzed.
Ours are the steps these young trusting ones put more stock in than the sun itself. They just trust.
And we wonder if we have what it takes.
We keep walking. We keep weeding. We keep pruning and nourishing and trimming and watering. We keep on trying.
And if we have figured anything out, we know the only way to garden… the only way to grow something right… no matter what our footsteps may have looked like…
The only way to grow our garden well – is on our knees.
Matthew 13:31-32
He told them another parable: “The kingdom of heaven is like a mustard seed, which a man took and planted in his field. Though it is the smallest of all seeds, yet when it grows, it is the largest of garden plants and becomes a tree, so that the birds come and perch in its branches.”