My Witching Hour and My Salvation

There are calls that crack you wide open. The ones that you remember forever where you were standing, what you were wearing, and the feel of the coffee mug growing cold in your hand. When too many of those calls once came in a month—the last filling my stomach with dread, I answered in dismay. “How did you know? Have you heard?” came the voice. “No,” I murmured. “But in the early light of Sunday morning,why else would you be calling?” “I think you should sit down,” came the reply.

Years and phone calls since that day, and now I’m the one with bad news dialing. Unsurprisingly, it hasn’t gotten any easier on the other end of the line. Slipping into my second decade of crisis counseling, but now at the helm—of a department, of a company—I look back on the path that led me here, the heartache and carnage I’ve witnessed, the things I’ve learned, the lessons I now know in my bones.

When my phone rings at 9am on a Sunday morning, my heart stops. This is my witching hour and those calls are never good. Just late enough to be polite, but too early for idle chatter, the day still new, coffee still warm in the cup. Or a message sliding into my texts as I stand on the church patio on a perfect Fall day. The mistake of looking down is a gut punch, and I know it before I see it.

Today, my phone rings once more. I nod my reply as my mind begins to work out the details. There once was a time that these calls set my mind spinning, reaching frantically for that emergency folder in the back of my drawer. There is no frantic reaching now, I know these systems all too well, wrote the innards of the folder even, and need only pull them up in my memory. Whom to call, what to say, special circumstances to consider. There are always special circumstances.

In every tragedy there are details, little poignant pieces of humanity, that no one wants to know. But I know them. 

The sound of grief. 

A note on a coroner’s report. 

The nature of the celebration interrupted by tragedy. 

The insidious threads that weave their way through the tight knit of community. 

Those hidden layers of connection, of circumstance, that allow the knife to twist more cruelly, slicing right through the bone and marrow of a place.

I know that sometimes it’s my job to know and see too much, and that when people ask how my day was, they don’t really want to know. To ugly cry at the funeral of a child I never met, to sit vigil with their family and friends on their very worst of days, to hold leaders as they weep. They say in the midst of tragedy to look for the helpers, and I’ve learned to look for them too. Which ones are tuned in, which ones are holding up, and which ones are cracking.

Bringing coffee and understanding to the first responders whose task was worse than mine, and whose load is heavier with the memories they can’t escape, I listen. To hear in hushed tones those confessions of the things they wish they’d never seen and I wish I’d never heard. “I’m sorry that you had to hear and I’m sorry that you know,” one whispered. I gulp. I’m sorry too.

I know which coffee mugs work best—the ones I can set down on my desk at 8 a.m. and will still be warmish at 4. I know to keep a comfortable pair of shoes in my car. Which waterproof mascara works best, and when not to bother. And that carrying the collective grief of a community in the wake of awful tragedy is not the same as the quiet work of therapy in the privacy of my counseling office.

Oh no. It is a different beast entirely.

There is a rhythm to tragedy, to crisis and response, that I’ve come to know too well. But it’s the quiet of the aftermath, when I finally have time to reflect, that can be my undoing. I’ve learned not to be surprised by the shrieking silence of the mundane when I at last return to the office. Meetings, emails, agendas await, the taskmasters I resent for intruding on my grief, yet welcome as distraction. I’ve learned that most people forget to check on those of us leading the charge, assuming that we’re okay, and not to take it personally.

It’s a compliment of sorts. Like they think that I’m unbreakable.

But I’m breakable.

And as much as I’ve worked, as hard as I’ve tried, knowing I’m built for this, have trained for this, I don’t always have an answer for what’s wrong. Sometimes it’s just hard. Sometimes this all feels too heavy, and I feel too soft, and it’s not just the stories I hear and can’t forget. It’s the numbers on the screen shining blue light in the dark that are the unexpected gut punch. The statistics that remind us of this fight that we’re not winning. Suicide, violence, mental health numbers soar, the youth of our country bleeding out before our eyes. And me with my mop bucket and partners in crisis, outstretched hands try to hold back the tide. Of hurt. Of heartache. Of overwhelming loss.

It’s my job to show up for you mentally prepared, and I know if I don’t put my oxygen mask on first, I’ll crash and burn. I know what it feels like to crash and burn.

But I’ve also learned how to pick myself up, to lean in, take a breath, and keep going. That just because it’s hard, doesn’t mean I’m not called. To practice what I preach and perhaps heed my own tenured advice.

Deep breath. Steady now. There’s work to be done. Plans to make, tears to dry, hands to hold. But at the moment, clanking dishes on the other side of the door pull me from my reverie. Looking at the clock, I’m surprised at the time that’s passed. Wiping my eyes I move through the motions of getting our family ready for church and out the door. Hair fixed, teeth brushed, shoes dug out from under a not-so-little one’s bed. The childish arguing in the car is a lifeline of sorts, tossed from the backseat unwittingly, but I grasp it nonetheless.

My pastor, having heard the news, meets me at the door. I collide into him with no words at all, hot tears I’ve held back spilling fast. This suffering—what is the point of all this senseless pain? Walking amidst the broken leaves me limping. Can they see it, do they know that I bleed too?

Composing myself, I sneak in the back while the lights are down, people all around me singing. I open my mouth croaking out the tune, and my broken song becomes a prayer, a supplication as I close my eyes and am transported to another place and pace. It drives me to my knees, and I realize: the veil is thin here at the foot of the cross. Where splintered suffering meets cold ground. In bowing low, I find Him. And I remember my purpose.

February 23

On this day…. after months of research and testing and anguishing over decisions to be made, I held my hands wide in the biggest surrender of my life, standing by weak-kneed as a lauded young surgeon cut into my husband’s brain. Mercy flowed like a river on that day, down this mountain we’d only begun to climb.

The road that followed left it’s scars- some on heads and some on hearts, but today he is driving, seizure-free, and the proud owner of his own private practice.

When I hold my hands high on Sunday morning- in prayer, or surrender, or praise- my fingers sometimes find their way to the curve of the back of his head. And like braille, I read the reminder that miracles still happen and hope blooms even here.

September 11th and the Moral Wound of a Generation

Where were you on that September morning? I remember it in sharp relief.

We were working at a boarding school in Indiana when my still-new husband called me at home to tell me that America was under attack. I still remember the feel of the floor beneath my shifting feet as I listened uncomprehending and told him that he must be mistaken. I tuned into the one station we had on our TV, adjusting the rabbit ears as the second plane hit, and proceeded to watch in horror for the next six hours. Fear became a palpable thing, seeping into my pores. Somewhere between home and work, I cried for my mother in the hallway when I thought no one was looking. All grown up but suddenly feeling so very small.

Our students had limited access to the news and outside lines, but through our whispers and grim expressions, they knew something was very wrong. How in the world do we tell these teens of the tragic magnitude we’ve yet to understand ourselves?

After some debate, it was decided that we would show them news clips that afternoon, and fill them in on what little we know. But first, a delicate piece of business. For one of our students this wasn’t some far away corner of America, seen in films but rarely visited. For her, it was home.

She hailed from Staten Island, NY, and her big heart and no-nonsense ways made her a fast favorite with all who knew her. As her mentor, the awfulness and sacredness fell to me to tell her of the gaping hole ripped into the heart of her hometown. I’d only just begun to learn what it is to sit with the broken, and the sound of her anguished cries stays with me still. Her aunt worked in the building she explained, and what do you mean calls can’t get through? If the raw pain and pure rage in that small body could’ve transported her, it would’ve carried her all the way home.

Sept. 11, 2001 was a Tuesday, and Eric and I had a road trip planned for Wednesday, our sights set on Niagara Falls. Those plans seemed small now, and an international tourist site no longer sounded like a good idea. So we went where we always went for comfort in those days, where we knew best: we went to the woods and disappeared into the trees. Letting the sunrises and sunsets, the wind in the treetops and gentle thunder of the waterfalls tend to the places in our broken hearts the trappings of civilization couldn’t quite reach. God met us there in those Ohio woods. By the cave and under the stars. By the river in our sandled feet, we poured out our grief, our fears, the innocence lost and the moral wound of a generation. What terror have we witnessed here, oh God Who Sees, and how will we carry on? For us, mere witnesses, but even more, those still searching for loved ones and choking out goodbyes?

Twenty years and we are here, facing fresh atrocities and uncertainties, the innocence of another generation lost. My children read about this day in their history books, not understanding that this particular page of history still echos in our bones. And for some, it still screams.
We Remember. We Remember.

Fear-Stained Heart

I have lived in fear of this day for over a decade. First in the abstract- a distant bridge to be crossed some day. When we’re older, wiser, more prepared. And then- in these last few months- as an end date. A day of unknown trepidation to which we were marching with ever gaining momentum. Could this really be the fix we’re looking for? That seemed too big a thing to hope. A promise too far away, and the cost too much to pay.


Was it worth the risk? How could we choose optional brain surgery? But was it really an option anymore? His seizures were getting worse, technology better, and we’d run the gamut of medications. Dare I trust my person- this wonderful husband of mine- to the lauded hands of the handsome young surgeon?
But then, it wasn’t just his hands at all. As the prayers and well wishes poured in, the wise words of a nurse and friend seeped into my fear-stained heart. “Good news is that the Lord has a steady hand.” Deep breath. We’re going to do this.


And the one who formed the oceans knows my name. Who spoke the stars into existence steadies the hands of the healer, and heals the parts of us no surgeon’s hands can touch. “Lean in and trust, close your eyes and fall, I’ve got you,” His voice seemed to whisper. My knuckles clenched. I swallowed hard. Tossed and turned in the sleepless nights as fear turned to resolve. Ride the wave. Trust in Him. Stay the course.


The body of Christ rose up and around me. My tribe showed up and answered the call. Held my hand a 5am, cooked meals, and watched my children. Cried big tears with me, helped me laugh out loud, and made me feel sane, even when I broke apart. They sat the watch, held their breath, celebrated the victories, fed me, cared for me, and prayed over me with love. Peace descended. Fear deserted. Hope overcame, and I knew I was not alone.


And the surgery? It went great. He sleeps peacefully in his bed tonight. Vitals are good, wit and humor intact. His grip on my hand is strong, his steady breathing balm for my soul. “He’s still him,” I confided to a friend as I hugged him tight. His eyes glittered with quiet understanding as they looked back into mine. I’d whispered my fears to him days ago, and we’d both cried. Friends filled the room, laughter trickled down the hall, and the road to recovery began. With my heart a little braver, my faith a little deeper, my love a little stronger. And my gratitude- as wide as the sky.


As for physical healing? We shall see. But oh, how I believe! For He healed something sacred in me.

Plowing Forward in the Storm

This photo speaks to my heart. Female buffalo in a snow storm plowing forward, beautiful in determination and coming out the other side in victory and stronger than before. I’m not sure about what lies before us in the days ahead, but I do know that they are days I’ve prayed would never come.

A decade or more ago, I stared his brain surgery in the eye and we decided against it for a myriad of reasons. His seizures weren’t that bad, weren’t that often, there were other medications to try. We were too young for so drastic a measure. The list goes on.

And if the worst happened? Shouldn’t I be pregnant beforehand so a piece of him lives on? These last questions I asked quietly when the doctor and I were alone. He told me what I already knew- there are no guarantees. We decided to hold, to wait. He agreed.

And in the exhale, in the quiet hospital room I lay curled by his side, relief flooding in as the possibility of risky surgery was temporarily passed by. A worry for another day, or for someone else down the hall. “Not now,” came the whisper, “but one day you will have to cross this bridge. This cup is yours to drink, but it will wait. For a while.”

So we went home. We finished our counseling degrees. We built a home, a family, a life. The years passed, month after month we were lulled into a false sense of safety that this time, this time, we’d found the magic pill. And then another seizure would strike. Back to the drawing board. Again. The doctor called me up at work- they’d found a magic surgery that just might do the trick. “If he’s a candidate, I want you to do it,” the good doc said. We agreed. But he wasn’t. Whether we sighed with relief or disappointment, I’m not sure. Maybe both.

And then a year ago, in a heartbeat, everything changed. I found him on the floor, unresponsive. Oh he came right around, thank God, breathing normally before I was, but the spell was broken. It was time.

His gentle doctor retired, and we were pointed in the direction of the latest and greatest by a wise friend in the position to know. “What do you want?” asked the new doctor. He wasn’t one for beating around the bush. “If it’s seizure freedom you’re after, then you need to have surgery. The pills have lost their magic.”

So they lined up a year’s worth of testing and pokes and imaging. We made it through that obstacle course with flying colors and several tears, looking up to see the prize just there, on the other side of the bridge.

Like a mirage.

So here we are. With our hearts in our hands and the bridge now here- right in front of us, ready for us to step on the creaking boards. Will it hold us? Will we fall? Oh, but what if we fly? I can scarcely imagine it.

In the medical circles we’ve travelled here lately, the surgeon’s peers speak of his skills in quiet awe. “That’s a special set of hands he’s got there. You’re lucky to have him.” Lucky indeed.

The internal war continues to wage. God’s led us here, there’s no doubt. But he leads people lots of places. This is a blessing, an opportunity few receive. The chance for healing. But first, the test. This isn’t mine to control.

I open my hands to surrender, let go. Focus ahead with steely resolve and knocking knees to plow through this thing with courage despite my fear. To take the bull by the horns, so to speak. Bring on the storm, here we go.

“What is life? It is the flash of a firefly in the night. It is the breath of a buffalo in the wintertime. It is the little shadow which runs across the grass and loses itself in the sunset.” – Crowfoot, Blackfoot Chief